Parathymia

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When Parathymie ( affective inadequacy ) is a disorder in expressing emotions emotions (emotions). It expresses itself through a disproportion between the current inner experience and the external emotional expression or the external situation (e.g. laughter and cheerfulness at a funeral). According to Eugen Bleuler, this disturbance of the emotional and emotional life is one of the five basic symptoms of schizophrenia .

According to the AMDP system, parathymia is recorded in a standardized manner when collecting the psychopathological findings . It occurs especially in Hebephrenic schizophrenia , just like paramimia . This is a mismatch between experienced feeling and facial expression ( affect incongruence ). In contrast to this, the terms synthymy and holothymy denote a behavior that corresponds to the mood ( affect- congruent ).

classification

According to Stark falls under the umbrella term dysthymia (emotional illness)

  • hyperthymia
  • the hypothymia
  • and parathymia

See also

Related terms that describe different affect states are

literature

  • Christian Scharfetter: General Psychopathology. Thieme, Stuttgart / New York, NY 2002, ISBN 3-13-531505-3 .
  • Rainer Huppert, Norbert Kienzle: Schizophrenia . Hogrefe, Göttingen u. a. 2010, ISBN 978-3-8017-2051-3 .

Web links

Wiktionary: parathym  - explanations of meanings, word origins , synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. Parathymia. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on October 7, 2017 ; accessed on October 6, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.zentrale-deutscher-kliniken.de
  2. healthcare social and private insurance . Springer-Verlag, 2013, ISBN 978-3-642-90725-8 , pp. 301 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  3. Encyclopedic Lexicon for the Latest Literature and History of Philosophy . Volume A-L. . Brockhaus, 1838, p. 115 ( limited preview in Google Book search).