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Delusional disorders: boundaries of a concept

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

CF Fear
Affiliation:
North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine, BangorLL57 2PW, UK
T McMonagle
Affiliation:
North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine, BangorLL57 2PW, UK
D Healy*
Affiliation:
North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine, BangorLL57 2PW, UK
*
*North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine, Bangor LL57 ZPW, UK
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Summary

In 1987, DSM-III introduced the term delusional disorder. In so doing they gave new life to a concept that had predated but was delineated in its modern form by Kraepelin and developed most notably in France in the second and third decades of this century. While the current concept of delusional disorder is defined in a manner that distinguishes it from schizophrenia, a consideration of the evolution of thinking about delusional syndromes in France suggests that current distinctions are based on descriptive convenience rather than any understanding of the mechanisms that might produce phenotypic variations. If the purpose of accurate descriptions is to assist research, this state of affairs would seem unsatisfactory.

Type
Original article
Copyright
Copyright © Elsevier, Paris 1998

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