| Literature DB >> 28931400 |
Simone Pisano1, Pietro Muratori2, Chiara Gorga3, Valentina Levantini2, Raffaella Iuliano4, Gennaro Catone3, Giangennaro Coppola1, Annarita Milone2, Gabriele Masi2.
Abstract
Conduct Disorder (CD) is a psychiatric diagnosis characterized by a repetitive and persistent pattern of behaviour in which the basic rights of others and major age-appropriate social norms or rules are violated. Callous Unemotional (CU) traits are a meaningful specifier in subtyping CD for more severe antisocial and aggressive behaviours in adult psychopathology; they represent the affective dimension of adult psychopathy, but they can be also detected in childhood and adolescence. The CU traits include lack of empathy, sense of guilt and shallow emotion, and their characterization in youth can improve our diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic abilities. A strong genetic liability, in interaction with parenting and relevant environmental factors, can lead to elevated levels of CU traits in children. We pointed out that CU traits can be detected in early childhood, may remain stable along the adolescence, but a decrease following intensive and specialized treatment is possible. We here provide a narrative review of the available evidences on CU traits in three main domains: aetiology (encompassing genetic liability and environmental risk factors), presentation (early signs and longitudinal trajectories) and treatments.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Callous unemotional traits; Children; Conduct disorder; Psychopathy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28931400 PMCID: PMC5607565 DOI: 10.1186/s13052-017-0404-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 2.638
Fig. 1Graphical representation of the concept of developmental psychopathy, from a personality-based psychopathology (upper side) as well as a DSM-5 oriented (lower side) perspectives. GM: grandiose-manipulative, DI: daring-impulsive, CU: callous-unemotional
Currently available psychotherapeutic treatments for children with conduct disorder and high CU traits
| Name | Age range | Treatment target | Time range | Directed to (children, parents, teachers etc.) | Main references |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CARES Module | 3.5–8 | Improvement of emotion recognition and labelling; enhancement of pro-social and empathic behaviour; increase of child’s frustration tolerance. | 6 weeks | Children | Datyner et al., 2016 |
| ERT | 6–16 | Enhancement of emotion recognition and interpretation; improvements of empathic abilities. | 4 sessions (90 min each) | Children | Dadds et al., [ |
| Mental Models | Adolescents | Increase positive emotion and reduce negative affect; improvement of decision-making skills; reduction of psychopathic features. | 12 weeks | Children | Salekin et al., [ |
| CP Program | 7–14 | Improvement of emotion recognition, especially anger; increase of child’s ability to cope with anger arousal; enhancement of perspective taking ability and problem solving skills; improvement of parenting skills. | 12 months | Children and parents | Lochman and Wells, [ |
Legend: CARES coaching and rewarding emotional skills, ERT emotion recognition training, CP coping power