Athymhormia

Athymhormia
Classification and external resources

Athymhormia is a disorder of motivation, one of that class of neuro-psychiatric conditions marked by abnormalities or deficiencies in motivation. Symptoms include the loss or reduction of desire and interest toward previous motivations, loss of drive and the desire for satisfaction, curiosity, the loss of tastes and preferences, and flat affect. In athymhormia, however, these phenomena are not accompanied by the characterizing features of depression nor by any notable abnormality in intellectual or cognitive function.

Origin of diagnostic category

The diagnostic category was coined in 1922 by the French psychiatrists Dide and Guiraud, originally in reference to the behavior identified in some schizophrenic patients.

Cause

The cause of this condition has been hypothesized to derive from abnormalities in the limbic frontal cortex, the striatum, globus pallidus, and dorso-medial thalamic nucleus. In the context of the theory of those who propose the existence of a distinct neural pathway for mood and interest, or the "hormothymic" system, athymhormia may be a disorder of this system.

See also

References

    Further reading

    • Patrick Verstichel and Pascale Larrouy. "Drowning Mr. M." Scientific American Mind. April 2005.
    • Habib M, Poncet M (1988). "[Loss of vitality, of interest and of the affect (athymhormia syndrome) in lacunar lesions of the corpus striatum]". Rev. Neurol. (Paris) (in French). 144 (10): 571–7. PMID 3194605.
    • Carota A, Staub F, Bogousslavsky J (February 2002). "Emotions, behaviours and mood changes in stroke". Curr. Opin. Neurol. 15 (1): 57–69. doi:10.1097/00019052-200202000-00010. PMID 11796952.
    • Bogousslavsky J (April 2003). "William Feinberg lecture 2002: emotions, mood, and behavior after stroke". Stroke. 34 (4): 1046–50. doi:10.1161/01.STR.0000061887.33505.B9. PMID 12649523.
    • Habib M (2004). "Athymhormia and disorders of motivation in Basal Ganglia disease". J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 16 (4): 509–24. doi:10.1176/appi.neuropsych.16.4.509. PMID 15616180.
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