General Information of Disease (ID: DIST148I)

Disease Name Intermittent explosive disorder
Synonyms explosive personality disorder
Disease Class 6C73: Intermittent explosive disorder
Definition
A disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of serious assaultive acts or destruction of property due to a failure to resist aggressive impulses; the degree of aggression during these episodes is grossly out of proportion to any psychosocial provocation. The aggressive episodes are not etiologically linked to another mental disorder, a general medical condition, or substance use.
Disease Hierarchy
DISRIYJ5: Impulse control disorder
DIST148I: Intermittent explosive disorder
ICD Code
ICD-11
ICD-11: 6C73
Disease Identifiers
MONDO ID
MONDO_0001521
MESH ID
D007174
UMLS CUI
C0021776
MedGen ID
7116
SNOMED CT ID
40987004

Drug-Interaction Atlas (DIA) of This Disease

Drug-Interaction Atlas (DIA)
This Disease is Treated as An Indication in 1 Clinical Trial Drug(s)
Drug Name Drug ID Highest Status Drug Type REF
SRX246 DMKOTUJ Phase 2 Small molecular drug [1]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Molecular Interaction Atlas (MIA) of This Disease

Molecular Interaction Atlas (MIA)
This Disease Is Related to 2 DTT Molecule(s)
Gene Name DTT ID Evidence Level Mode of Inheritance REF
DRD2 TTEX248 Strong Biomarker [2]
DRD3 TT4C8EA Strong Biomarker [2]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This Disease Is Related to 1 DOT Molecule(s)
Gene Name DOT ID Evidence Level Mode of Inheritance REF
FOSB OTW6C05J Strong Biomarker [3]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

References

1 ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02055638) Safety, Tolerability and Activity of SRX246 in Adults With Intermittent Explosive Disorder (AVN009). U.S. National Institutes of Health.
2 Dopaminergic network differences in human impulsivity.Science. 2010 Jul 30;329(5991):532. doi: 10.1126/science.1185778.
3 Increased impulsivity during withdrawal from cocaine self-administration: role for DeltaFosB in the orbitofrontal cortex.Cereb Cortex. 2009 Feb;19(2):435-44. doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhn094. Epub 2008 Jun 6.