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      Conduct disorders and psychopathy in children and adolescents: aetiology, clinical presentation and treatment strategies of callous-unemotional traits

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          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.

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          Most cited references108

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          Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders

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            Research review: the importance of callous-unemotional traits for developmental models of aggressive and antisocial behavior.

            The current paper reviews research suggesting that the presence of a callous and unemotional interpersonal style designates an important subgroup of antisocial and aggressive youth. Specifically, callous-unemotional (CU) traits (e.g., lack of guilt, absence of empathy, callous use of others) seem to be relatively stable across childhood and adolescence and they designate a group of youth with a particularly severe, aggressive, and stable pattern of antisocial behavior. Further, antisocial youth with CU traits show a number of distinct emotional, cognitive, and personality characteristics compared to other antisocial youth. These characteristics of youth with CU traits have important implications for causal models of antisocial and aggressive behavior, for methods used to study antisocial youth, and for assessing and treating antisocial and aggressive behavior in children and adolescents.
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              The determinants of parenting: a process model.

              Jay Belsky (1984)
              This essay is based on the assumption that a long-neglected topic of socialization, the determinants of individual differences in parental functioning, is illuminated by research on the etiology of child maltreatment. Three domains of determinants are identified (personal psychological resources of parents, characteristics of the child, and contextual sources of stress and support), and a process model of competent parental functioning is offered on the basis of the analysis. The model presumes that parental functioning is multiply determined, that sources of contextual stress and support can directly affect parenting or indirectly affect parenting by first influencing individual psychological well-being, that personality influences contextual support/stress, which feeds back to shape parenting, and that, in order of importance, the personal psychological resources of the parent are more effective in buffering the parent-child relation from stress than are contextual sources of support, which are themselves more effective than characteristics of the child.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                pisano.simone@gmail.com
                pmuratori@fsm.unipi.it
                chiaragorga@gmail.com
                Valentina.Levantini@hotmail.it
                dott.raffaella.iuliano@gmail.com
                catoge@libero.it
                gcoppola@unisa.it
                amilone@fsm.unipi.it
                gmasi@fsm.unipi.it
                Journal
                Ital J Pediatr
                Ital J Pediatr
                Italian Journal of Pediatrics
                BioMed Central (London )
                1824-7288
                20 September 2017
                20 September 2017
                2017
                : 43
                : 84
                Affiliations
                [1 ]ISNI 0000 0004 1937 0335, GRID grid.11780.3f, Department of Medicine and Surgery, Clinic of Child and Adolescent Neuropsychiatry, , University of Salerno, ; Baronissi, SA Italy
                [2 ]IRCCS Stella Maris, Scientific Institute of Child Neurology and Psychiatry, Calambrone, Pisa, Italy
                [3 ]Department of Mental and Physical Health and Preventive Medicine, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Division, University of Studies of Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
                [4 ]Department of Pediatrics, Hospital “F. Veneziale”, Isernia, Italy
                Article
                404
                10.1186/s13052-017-0404-6
                5607565
                28931400
                065faace-5c67-4a43-bd22-d74b9c50beba
                © The Author(s). 2017

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver ( http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

                History
                : 1 July 2017
                : 12 September 2017
                Categories
                Review
                Custom metadata
                © The Author(s) 2017

                Pediatrics
                conduct disorder,callous unemotional traits,psychopathy,children,adolescents
                Pediatrics
                conduct disorder, callous unemotional traits, psychopathy, children, adolescents

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