A Brief Discussion on Childhood Disintegrative Disease
Received Date: Nov 26, 2022 / Published Date: Dec 20, 2022
Abstract
Childhood disintegrative complaint (CDD), also known as Heller’s pattern and disintegrative psychosis, is a rare condition characterized by late onset of experimental detainments or severe and unforeseen reversals - in language, social function, and motor chops. Experimenters haven’t been successful in chancing a cause for the complaint. CDD has some similarity to autism and is occasionally considered a low- performing form of it. In May 2013, CDD, along with other sub-types of PDD (Asperger’s pattern, autism, and PDD- NOS), was fused into a single individual term called” autism diapason complaint” under the new DSM- 5 primer.
Citation: Walker J (2022) A Brief Discussion on Childhood Disintegrative Disease. J Child Adolesc Behav 10: 478. Doi: 10.4172/2375-4494.1000478
Copyright: © 2022 Walker J. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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