Hmmm? The reason that psychiatric patients receive comorbid diagnoses, is that psychological constructs lack construct validity. It's like measuring disappointment vs. sadness---the two ideas are not separate and cannot be used as independant variables. In fact, there is no inte-rater reliability between dsm constructs anyway. If you line up 100 clinicians and have them assess the same person, you will not receive any scientific agreement. Also, brain networks, energy, electricity, whatever you want to call it, is merely another way of measuring the same observation. So in other words, if I wake up everyday and tell you that I have a strong worry that I ran over someone, I will possibly be diagnosed with ocd, if I meet all criteria and I present consistently, and remember that no two clinicians agree on this and then if we measure the brain, guess what we will see.......that same pattern. That basically says nothing. And if you doubt that, would you want to live in a world, where we could use some quick intervention to make a brain stop worrying?? I suppose if you're depression is bad enough, the answer is "yes". But rest assured that it will return in a different flavor, because most of the causes of these disorders are due to trauma, misattunment, relational rejection, and basically fear. If you keep chasing all these symptoms and concepts around in circles, you will either have fun like a dog and it's tail or maybe finally tire and re-think things. Just my two cents.