| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
The DSM-IV-TR, the latest version of the diagnostic manual of the American Psychiatric Association (see also: DSM cautionary statement), lists three necessary criteria for a diagnosis of body dysmorphic disorder:
Note that, according to the DSM criteria, a BDD diagnosis cannot be made if another disorder accounts for the preoccupation with a perceived defect. For instance, people who worry excessively about their weight are not considered to have BDD if this preoccupation is accounted for by an eating disorder. Body dysmorphic disorder is also considered to be different from gender identity disorder and transsexualism, even though the desire to modify one's body is also reflected in people who are judged to have these disorders. Some paraphilias also involve a wish to modify one's body. For example, people with apotemnophilia are convinced that a part of their body needs to be amputated.
In the medical community, some make links between BDD and obsessive-compulsive disorder because there are some similarities between these disorders. For instance, obsessive thoughts are a common symptom of both disorders.