Disruptive, Impulse-Control, and Conduct Disorders: A Comprehensive Guide

Core Definition

This diagnostic category (DSM-5) includes conditions characterized by problems with emotional and behavioral self-control, where individuals violate societal norms and/or the rights of others. These disorders lie on a continuum from mild emotional dysregulation to severe antisocial behaviors.

Disorders in This Category

  1. Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD)
  2. Conduct Disorder (CD)
  3. Intermittent Explosive Disorder (IED)
  4. Pyromania
  5. Kleptomania
  6. Other Specified/Unspecified Disruptive Disorders

1. Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD)

Essential Features:

  • Pattern of angry/irritable mood, argumentative/defiant behavior, or vindictiveness
  • Duration: ≥6 months
  • Frequency: More severe than typical for age/developmental level

Symptom Clusters:

  • Angry/Irritable Mood: Often loses temper, touchy/easily annoyed, angry/resentful
  • Argumentative/Defiant Behavior: Argues with authority, defies rules, deliberately annoys others
  • Vindictiveness: Spiteful at least twice in 6 months

Key Statistics:

  • Prevalence: 1-11% (average 3.3%)
  • Typically appears by age 8
  • Boys > girls before puberty; equalizes in adolescence

Differential Diagnosis:

  • ADHD (hyperactivity vs. defiance)
  • Mood disorders (irritability from depression)
  • DMDD (chronic irritability)

2. Conduct Disorder (CD)

Essential Features:

  • Repetitive/persistent pattern violating basic rights of others or major societal norms
  • Four Main Categories:
    1. Aggression to people/animals
    2. Property destruction
    3. Deceitfulness/theft
    4. Serious rule violations

Specifiers:

  • Childhood-onset (<10 years): Worse prognosis
  • Adolescent-onset: Better prognosis
  • Limited prosocial emotions (callous-unemotional traits)

Key Statistics:

  • Prevalence: 2-10%
  • Boys > girls (3:1)
  • 40% develop Antisocial Personality Disorder

Neurobiological Factors:

  • Reduced amygdala response to distress cues
  • Low cortisol reactivity
  • MAOA gene variants (with maltreatment)

3. Intermittent Explosive Disorder (IED)

Essential Features:

  • Recurrent outbursts representing failure to control aggressive impulses
  • Outbursts are disproportionate to provocation/stress
  • Not premeditated (distinguishes from CD)
  • Causes distress/impairment

Key Features:

  • Verbal aggression/assault ≥2x/week for 3 months
  • Three behavioral outbursts/year causing injury/destruction
  • Average onset: Late childhood/adolescence

Treatment:

  • SSRIs (fluoxetine)
  • Mood stabilizers (lithium)
  • CBT (anger management)

4. Pyromania

Rare condition characterized by:

  • Deliberate fire-setting on multiple occasions
  • Tension before act → pleasure/relief after
  • Fascination with fire
  • Not done for monetary gain, ideological reasons, or to conceal criminal activity

5. Kleptomania

Essential Features:

  • Recurrent failure to resist impulses to steal unneeded items
  • Increasing tension before → pleasure/relief during act
  • Not motivated by anger/vengeance

Treatment:

  • SSRIs
  • Naltrexone (for impulse control)
  • CBT (exposure/response prevention)

Etiological Factors

Biological:

  • Low serotonin activity
  • Prefrontal cortex dysfunction (poor impulse control)
  • Genetic predisposition

Psychological:

  • Harsh/inconsistent parenting
  • Childhood trauma
  • Social-cognitive deficits

Social:

  • Poverty
  • Peer rejection
  • Neighborhood violence

Evidence-Based Treatments

Psychosocial Interventions

  1. Parent Management Training (PMT): For ODD/CD (teaches consistent discipline)
  2. Multisystemic Therapy (MST): Intensive family/community-based for CD
  3. Cognitive Problem-Solving Skills Training: Teaches conflict resolution
  4. Anger Coping Therapy: For aggression

Pharmacological Options

  • ADHD meds (if comorbid ADHD)
  • Mood stabilizers (for aggression)
  • Atypical antipsychotics (risperidone for severe CD)
  • SSRIs (for impulsivity/irritability)

Differential Diagnosis

  • ADHD (impulsivity without defiance)
  • Mood disorders (irritability from depression)
  • Substance use disorders
  • Antisocial Personality Disorder (age ≥18)

Prognostic Factors

Poor Prognosis:

  • Early onset
  • Callous-unemotional traits
  • Family history of antisocial behavior
  • Comorbid substance abuse

Protective Factors:

  • High IQ
  • Positive peer relationships
  • Early intervention