[Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in adults in the clinical description and classification of Emil  Kraepelin].

This study presents descriptions of symptoms specific to the adult form of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in the 8th edition of the Textbook on Psychiatry by Emil Kraepelin (1856-1926). To identify whether ADHD is a new, fashionable phenomenon in adults or whether early psychiatrists also saw such patients and how they classified them, this textbook is an essential source. Published between 1905 and 1915, it can be perceived as the culmination and at the same time terminal point of Kraepelin's conceptual and nosological work, which in turn marked the beginning of present-day psychiatric classification. Kraepelin did not perceive ADHD as a psychiatric entity of its own, which is either due to the fact that he saw no necessity to do so or that he did not recognize this. If the latter, Kraepelin may have been misled by the manifold psychiatric comorbidities typical for ADHD, which may have masked ADHD. Kraepelin seems to have grouped patients obviously suffering from the adult form of ADHD into two groups: on the one hand into the so-called basic constitution (Grundzustand) of manic-depressive disorder, which he called manic disposition or constitutional excitement (manische Veranlagung oder konstitutionelle Erregung) and on the other hand into the so-called group of anchorless people (Haltlose), which he perceived as a special form of psychopathic personality. It seems that Kraepelin grouped milder grades of ADHD with predominantly ADHD-associated mood swing...
Source: Der Nervenarzt - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Nervenarzt Source Type: research