Cognitive inflexibility in a young woman with pyromania
- PMID: 29464963
- PMCID: PMC6035016
- DOI: 10.1556/2006.7.2018.09
Cognitive inflexibility in a young woman with pyromania
Abstract
Background Pyromania is a rare disorder that is characterized by multiple episodes of deliberate and purposeful fire-setting. It is typically associated with significant psychosocial dysfunction and legal problems. Even so, little research has examined cognitive aspects of the disorder. Case presentation/study In this study, we compared a 24-year-old woman with pyromania with 19 age- and gender-matched healthy controls using a battery of computerized neurocognitive tasks. Our participant affected by pyromania showed impaired cognitive flexibility but intact functioning on measures of impulsive action and decision-making. Discussion Although pyromania shares phenomenological similarities with other urge-driven disorders, our results suggest that pyromania may have features of compulsivity as well. Conclusions Pyromania is relatively understudied from a neurobiological perspective. Further research is needed to understand the pathophysiology, classification, and treatment of pyromania.
Keywords: forensic; impulse control disorders; neurocognition; pyromania.
References
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- Burton P. R. S., McNiel D. E., Binder R. L. (2012). Firesetting, arson, pyromania, and the forensic mental health expert. The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 40(3), 355–365. - PubMed
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- Grant J. E., Odlaug B. L. (2011). Assessment and treatment of pyromania. In Nathan P. E. (Series Ed.), Grant J. E., Potenza M. N. (Vol. Eds.), The Oxford library of psychology: Oxford handbook of impulse control disorders (pp. 353–359). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
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