joeylittle
Sponsor
I'm guessing they don't use anhedonia specifically because it's such a keystone symptom of depression. Just a guess, but makes me think the DSM writers are trying to avoid some kind of overlap.
So, with anhedonia, you would struggle to motivate yourself to sex, let alone be able to enjoy it. I don't think it would serve us for PTSD, it's much more specific to MDD, some personality disorders, schizophrenia.
It's only nagging at me that they are so very close. But I think that bit needs to be added back into the second half of D4, in order to make it specific to PTSD.
The definition of anhedonia I can find that is specific to the DSM is "Lack of enjoyment from, engagement in, or energy for life‟s experiences; deficits in the capacity to feel pleasure or take interest in things." It's a little broader than only inability to experience positive emotion - you also lack the capacity to be interested in activities that would generate that.D7 is really anhedonia: inability to feel pleasure in normally pleasurable activities - Maybe should simply be called this instead of confusing between mood state and emotional state? Maybe even just use the definition of anhedonia to keep it simple as is, yet correctly reflect with more accuracy?
So, with anhedonia, you would struggle to motivate yourself to sex, let alone be able to enjoy it. I don't think it would serve us for PTSD, it's much more specific to MDD, some personality disorders, schizophrenia.
True - I can see that now. And this bit really does separate them:D4 is a mood state and D7 a cognitive one.
, meaning that you need to rule it out if that was the mental state prior to the trauma event.D4 - A persistent negative mood state (fear, horror, anger, guilt, shame) either began or worsened after exposure to the event.
It's only nagging at me that they are so very close. But I think that bit needs to be added back into the second half of D4, in order to make it specific to PTSD.