Category: D

  • Detachment

    A behavior pattern characterized by general aloofness in interpersonal contact; may include intellectualization, denial, and superficiality. The process of separating or the state of being separated.  

  • Desyrel

    Desyrel

    Brand name (now discontinued) for the atypical antidepressant drug trazodone. A commercial preparation of trazodone.  

  • Desvenlafaxine

    A synthetic form of an active metabolite of venlafaxine (an atypical antidepressant of the serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor [SNRI] class) approved for the treatment of major depressive disorder. Marketed under the brand name pristiq.  

  • Desoxyn

    Brand name for the longer-acting, legally produced form of the psychostimulant drug methamphetamine. A commercial preparation of methamphetamine.  

  • Desmopressin acetate

    A synthetic analogue of the natural hormone 8-arginine vasopressin (an antidiuretic hormone that reduces urine production by limiting the amount of water eliminated in the urine) that is used to treat primary nocturnal enuresis, a disorder believed to be caused by inadequate release of this hormone by the pituitary. Marketed under the brand name SSAVP.…

  • Desipramine

    A tricyclic antidepressant medication used in the treatment of depression. Marketed under the brand name norpramin. Heterocyclic antidepressant Norpramin is a brand name. An antidepressant drug. Desipramine (Norpramin) is prescribed to treat depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and bulimia nervosa, an eating disorder. A tricyclic antidepressant drug administered by mouth or injection; common side-effects are dry mouth,…

  • Designer drugs

    Addictive drugs that are synthesized or manufactured to give the same subjective effects as well-known illicit drugs. Because the process is covert and illegal, tracing the manufacturer to check the drugs for adverse effects is difficult. Common examples are ecstasy and “Eve,” both of which are similar to amphetamines. A drug that has been modified…

  • Descriptive psychiatry

    A system of psychiatry based on the study of readily observable external factors. Often used to refer to the systematized descriptions of mental illness formulated by emil kraepelin (1856–1926). Contrast with dynamic psychiatry.  

  • Dermatillomania

    A disorder (classified as an impulse-control disorder not otherwise specified [nos] in dsm-iv-tr) in which the patient inflicts excessive scratching, picking, and squeezing on healthy skin. May be a symptom of a variety of psychiatric disorders, including stereotypic movement disorder, body dysmorphic disorder (bdd), and tourette’s disorder. Many patients with dermatillomania have a comorbid mood,…

  • Dereistic

    Referring to mental activity that is not in accordance with reality, logic, or experience. Thinking in which the person ignores reality and logical organization. A term often applied to irrational schizophrenia fantasies.