
LSD



Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (Flashbacks) The essential feature of Hallucinogen Persisting
Perception Disorder (Flashbacks) is the transient recurrence of disturbances in perception thaat are
reminescent of those experienced during one or more earlier Hallucinogen Intoxications. The person must
have had no recent Hallucinogen Intoxication and must show no current drug toxicity (Criterion A). This
reexperienceing of perceptual symptoms causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social,
occupational, or other important areas of functioning (Criterion B). The symptoms are not due to a general
medical condition (e.g., anatomical lesions and infections of the brain or visual epilepsies) and are
not better accounted for by another mental disorder (e.g., delerium, dementia, or Schizophrenia) or by
hypnopompic hallucinations (Criterion C). The perceptual disturbances may include geometric forms, peripheral-field
images, flashes of color, intensified colors, trailing images (images left suspended in the path of a
moving object as seen in stroboscopic photography), perceptions of entire objects, afterimages (a same-colored
or complementary-colored "shadow" of an object remaining after the removal of the object), halos around
objects, macropsia, and micropsia. The abnormal perceptions that are associated with Hallucinogen Persisting
Perception Disorder occur episodically and may be self-induced (e.g., by thinking about them) or triggered
by entry into a dark environment, various drugs, anxiety or fatigue, or other stressors. The episodes
may abate after several months, but many persons report persisting episodes for 5 years or longer. Reality
testing remains intact (i.e., the person realizes that the perception is a drug effect and does not represent
external reality). In contrast, if the person has a delusional interpretation concerning the etiology
of the perceptual disturbance, the appropriate diagnosis would be Psychotic Disorder Not Otherwise Specified.
Diagnostic criteria for 292.89 Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (Flashbacks): A. The
re-experiencing, following cesssation of use of a hallucinogen, of one or more of the perceptual symptoms
that were experienced while intoxicated wiht the hallucinogen (e.g., geometric hallucinations, false
perceptions of movement in the peripheral visual fields, flashes of colors, intensified colors, trails
of images of moving objects, positive afterimages, halos around objects, macropsia, and micropsia. B.
The symptoms in Criterion A cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational,
or other important areas of functioning. C. The symptoms are due to a general medical condition (e.g.,
anatomical lesions and infections of the brain, viual epilepsies) and are not better accounted for another
mental disorder (e.g., delerium, dementia, Schizophrenia) or hypnopompic hallucinations.
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