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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0011551 (
depersonalization
)
1,117
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From a sample of 1,005 patients admitted to the Psychiatric Hospital in Aarhus for the first time during the period 1950-1959 and diagnosed as suffering from manic-depressive psychosis or endogenous depression (affective psychoses), a subsample of 104 manic-depressive patients with anancastic symptoms in the history was selected. The 104 probands were individually matched with 104 non-anancastic probands with affective psychoses. The study was designed as a follow-up study, and the patients who were still living were seen personally. In the search for factors which could be used to distinguish affective psychoses with anancastic symptoms from affective psychoses without these traits, the incidence of a number of psychopathological features was evaluated based on the case histories and the information given by the patients at the follow-up. There was no difference as far as atypical, schizophrenia-like symptoms were concerned between the anancastic probands and the controls. Manic and hypomanic features were more frequent among the controls, corresponding to a greater number of bipolar psychoses among them. At the same time, the controls showed a significant preponderance of decidedly psychotic symptoms such as disturbances of consciousness, delusions and delusion-like ideas and hallucinations. Furthermore, retardation was more frequent among the controls. There was no difference in the suicidal behaviour of the two groups. Symptoms which were more often met among the anancastic depressives were: anxiety, agitation, diurnal variation of mood and early awakening. Seasonal variation in symptomatology was also more frequent among the anancastic probands. The same held true for
depersonalization
. The anancastic probands showed a significant preponderance of anancastic premorbid personality features. A positive correlation was found between the number of
anancastic personality
features and the following symptoms: agitation, anxiety, diurnal fluctuation, seasonal variation, hypochondriacal attitude and
depersonalization
. On the other hand, objective retardation or flight of ideas showed a significant negative correlation. The pattern of the anancastic symptoms was rather uniform; aggressive obsessions, mostly in the form of suicidal and homicidal obsessions, were present in more than two thirds of the cases. The anancastic depressions were often less severe than non-anancastic depressions in that the latter were more often complicated by decidedly psychotic symptoms. It is possible to interpret the symptomatology of anancastic depressions as a pathoplastic influence of the
anancastic personality
, but it cannot be excluded that some of the symptoms like anxiety and agitation are linked to the presence of anancastic symptoms as such.
...
PMID:The psychopathology of anancastic endogenous depression. 119 73
Description of psychasthenia by P. Janet (1903) sets up at the end of a double reflection, with on the one hand a theorization of asthenia, the notion of which already occupied the medical concepts of the 18th and 19th centuries, and on the other hand a progressive attribution of neurosis to the psychiatric field. Its clinical characteristics (feelings of non-fulfillment in action and emotion, experiences of oddness and
depersonalization
, obsessions, phobias...) makes psychasthenia a fully-fledged illness, the psychopathological organization of which results from a decrease of psychological tension and from a loss of reality function. Since P. Janet, the term of psychasthenia has not ceased to be used, although its etiopathological references blurred behind the psychoanalytic work, and it is usually synonymous with obsessional neurosis, even with
obsessional personality
. Description of psychasthenia appears in these rubrics of the DSM III, even though the term itself is ignored.
...
PMID:[Psychasthenia: history and evolution of the P. Janet concept]. 784 50