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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The relation between surgery and the loss of reality testing (LRT) in Japanese patients with malignant tumors were examined, taking into account the influence of the tumor sites and age groups. The patients were comprised of 277 men and 225 women with malignant tumors in Kyushu University Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan, who underwent a check-up at the Department of Neuropsychiatry for the first time using the consultation-liaison system. Those with known schizophrenia, dementia,
mental retardation
, and paranoid or schizoid (schizotypal)
personality disorder
were excluded. Surgery was statistically significantly associated with LRT in elderly men (> or =65 years of age), and in men with malignant tumors of the digestive organs (odds ratio [OR], 9.7; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 3.2-29.3). Even after adjusting for tumor site and age, surgery was statistically significantly associated with LRT in men (OR, 2.6; 95% CI, 1.4-4.6) and nearly significantly associated in women (OR, 1.8; 95% CI, 0.9-3.6). There were no material associations between surgery and LRT in patients with malignant tumors of sex-specific organs or the head and neck area. The present study showed a positive relationship between surgery and LRT in Japanese men and women with malignant tumors. The association was stronger in elderly patients. As for tumor site, surgery was most strongly associated with an increased risk of LRT in patients with malignant tumors of the digestive organs.
...
PMID:Relation of surgery, tumor site, and age group to the loss of reality testing in Japanese patients with malignant tumors: a study of a hospital-based sample with a consultation-liaison service. 1589 18
A total of 283 patients with somatoform disorder (SFD) seen in a psychiatry clinic were surveyed and their diagnostic subtypes, demographic features, and comorbidities, analyzed. The results indicate that: (i) SFD comprises 5.8% of first-visit outpatients; (ii) undifferentiated SFD (USFD) and SFD not otherwise specified (SFD-NOS) account for the majority of patients; (iii) there are 1.7-fold more women than men; (iv) age of onset is lower in patients with somatization disorder or body dysmorphic disorder and higher in patients with hypochondriasis or pain disorder; (v) the mean number of years of education was 11.2 years; and (vi) comorbid illness were seen in 24.8% of patients, and included mood disorder, anxiety disorder, and
personality disorder
, as well as borderline intellectual functioning and
mental retardation
. The data indicate that the majority of patients with SFD are given a diagnosis of residual category, such as USFD or SFD-NOS, and that the age of onset varies depending on the diagnostic subtype. SFD was more frequently seen in women, associated with comorbidities.
...
PMID:Diagnostic classification and demographic features in 283 patients with somatoform disorder. 1747 97
Self-mutilation is form of self-injurious behavior which is either low intensity, high frequency form seen in
personality disorder
and
mental retardation
or low frequency, highly destructive form which occurs in the context of psychosis or acute intoxications. We report a 32 yr-old male with bipolar affective disorder presenting with multiple acts of major self-mutilation during an episode of psychotic depression. At presentation he had broken upper central incisors, circular burn scar on right palm, crush injury of left index finger with avulsed nail and cut injury over glans penis. In view of his extreme self-mutilating behavior, he was administered electroconvulsive therapy on second day following which self-mutilating behavior improved after fourth ECT. After 8 ECT sessions, he was started on lithium carbonate with a serum level of 0.82 meq/L and haloperidol 15 mg/day and there was no recurrence of self-mutilating behavior during follow up after four months.
...
PMID:[Electroconvulsive therapy for multiple major self-mutilations in bipolar psychotic depression]. 1856 Oct 53
Concerning the discussion about the connection of personality traits, personality disorders, and mental illness, this study focused on the personality profiles of male forensic patients, prison inmates, and young men without criminal reports. The main topic centered on group-specific personality profiles and identifying personality facets corresponding with mental illness. The authors therefore used the Rasch model-based Trier Integrated Personality Inventory. They individually tested 141 German forensic patients with different crime backgrounds, 122 prison inmates, and 111 soldiers of the German army. Within group differences they found that the individuals with
mental retardation
differ from patients with a
personality disorder
or psychosis. Patients with
mental retardation
displayed higher neurotic and/or paranoid personality accents and tended to be low organized and self-confident.
...
PMID:Violence and personality in forensic patients: is there a forensic patient-specific personality profile? 1868 40
Violence committed by acute psychiatric inpatients represents an important and challenging problem in clinical practice. Sociodemographic, clinical, and treatment information were collected for 1324 patients (677 men and 647 women) admitted to Italian public and private acute psychiatric inpatient facilities during an index period in 2004, and the sample divided into 3 groups: nonhostile patients (no episodes of violent behavior during hospitalization), hostile patients (verbal aggression or violent acts against objects), and violent patients (authors of physical assault). Ten percent (N = 129) of patients showed hostile behavior during hospitalization and 3% (N = 37) physically assaulted other patients or staff members. Variables associated with violent behavior were: male gender, <24 years of age, unmarried status, receiving a disability pension, having a secondary school degree, compulsory admission, hostile attitude at admission, and a diagnosis of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder,
personality disorder
,
mental retardation
, organic brain disorder or substance/alcohol abuse. Violent behavior during hospitalization was a predictive factor for higher Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale scores and for lower Personal and Social Performance scale scores at discharge. Despite the low percentage of violent and hostile behavior observed in Italian acute inpatient units, this study shed light on a need for the careful assessment of clinical and treatment variables, and greater effort aimed at improving specific prevention and treatment programs of violent behavior.
...
PMID:Violent behavior in acute psychiatric inpatient facilities: a national survey in Italy. 1982 7
All around the world, the potential consequences of the increasing use of psychoactive substances during pregnancy are a major public health concern. It is estimated that 20 to 30% of pregnant women use tobacco, 15% use alcohol, 3 to 10% use cannabis and 0.5 to 3% use cocaine. The estimation of tobacco consumption during pregnancy is better known as compared with alcohol and substance use prevalence during pregnancy, which remains under estimated or unknown. For example, in France, the prevalence of cannabis and cocaine use during pregnancy is unknown. In general, the prevalence of drug or alcohol use during pregnancy is estimated by extrapolating data from epidemiological studies conducted in the general population (in France or in other countries). However, drug or alcohol use in the general population may dramatically vary from one country to another. Even if some studies have reported the prevalence of alcohol or substance use in different countries around the world, most of them were based on the mother's interview. In most cases, the mother did not report exactly the amount of drugs or alcohol used. Further studies measuring alcohol or substance use in the mother's blood, hair or in the newborn's meconium are needed. In addition, different methodologies have been used in the literature (different types of interview, with or without biological measurements; different subjects included (in- or out-pregnant women, psychiatric comorbidities or not, different economic status, etc). Despite these methodological biases, the prevalence of drug or alcohol use increases in pregnant women, and in most cases, several drugs are associated. Most of the studies have used structured or semi-structured interviews such as the addiction severity index (ASI) or the alcohol use disorders identification test (AUDIT) to assess alcohol or drug consumption. In addition, the identification of risk factors for substance or alcohol use during pregnancy would allow the early detection of these high-risk pregnancies. Environmental factors such as low economic status or marital status may play an important role.
Personality disorders
may also contribute to substance or alcohol use during pregnancy. In fact, in most studies the quality of the obstetrical survey is lower in pregnant women using drugs or alcohol but it remains difficult to describe a specific at-risk profile in these pregnant women. Consumption of alcohol or of one or more psychoactive substances during pregnancy may have serious consequences on the pregnancy and on the child's development. Fetal alcoholism syndrome is the main etiology of
mental retardation
in France. We need to improve our knowledge of alcohol and substance use during pregnancy in order to target information for prevention campaigns and to implement specific mother and child medical care in high-risk populations.
...
PMID:[Psychoactive substance use during pregnancy: a review]. 2015 94
We examined whether a leading instrument for the prediction of future violence in those with a mental disorder. The Historical, Clinical, Risk Management-20 (HCR-20) was equally effective across a wide range of mental health diagnoses. Records at the time of discharge from secure psychiatric services were used to score the HCR-20 risk assessment scheme. Patients were stratified according to whether they had received a particular mental health diagnosis. Reconvictions within 2 years of discharge were obtained from official sources and classified as to whether the offence was violent or not. Those with a diagnosis of either
personality disorder
or substance abuse were most likely to be reconvicted, whilst those with either a diagnosis of schizophrenia or
mental retardation
were the least likely. The HCR-20 was a statistically significant predictor of future violence in all groups; however, it returned only weak effects for the personality disordered group, but strong effects for those in the schizophrenia or
mental retardation
group. The HCR-20 risk assessment scheme is effective across a wide range of diagnoses. Nevertheless, the prediction of future events appears more difficult in those disorders characterized by impulsive behaviors and further research efforts are needed to understand how such prediction can be improved.
...
PMID:Predicting violence using structured professional judgment in patients with different mental and behavioral disorders. 2109 13
Few studies focused on the long-term outcome of Dravet syndrome in adulthood are available in the literature, but all are concordant. In this article, we consider the outcomes of 24 patients followed at the Centre Saint-Paul, Marseille, up to the age of 50, and compare them to the patients reported in the literature. Five patients (20.8%) died, at a mean age of 24.8 years, one by status epilepticus, three by sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP), and one of unknown cause. Epileptic seizures tend to become less frequent and less severe after childhood. Fever sensitivity (temperature variations) persists throughout the clinical course of DS, but its impact on seizure frequency and severity is milder than in infancy. Generalized convulsive seizures, mostly reported as generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS), were the only seizure type observed in almost all of the patients, often with a focal onset. They are less frequent than in childhood and mostly nocturnal. Some of these major convulsive seizures have less typical aspects, for example, bilateral or asymmetric tonic posturing, followed in some cases by a tonic vibratory state or clonic movements (Oguni et al., Brain Dev 2001;23:736-748; Akiyama et al., Epilepsia 2010;51:1043-1052). Other seizures like myoclonic seizures, atypical absences, and complex partial seizures (CPS) are less common in adulthood: Among our 24 patients, only 6 had atypical absences, and one myoclonic and one complex focal seizures. Electroencephalography (EEG) also changes with age but is still multiple and heterogenous, interictally and ictally. Photosensitivity and pattern sensitivity also showed a tendency to disappear before the age of 20. Motor abnormalities are common. Cerebellar features, including ataxia, dysarthria, intention tremor, and eye movement disorder, become more prominent. Walking is markedly impaired, often due to orthopedic signs such as kyphosis, kyphoscoliosis, flat feet, or claw feet. This symptomatology was minor during childhood and worsened during and after adolescence, despite physiotherapy.
Mental retardation
ranged from moderate to severe, with predominance of language impairment, and some patients had a major
personality disorder
, labeled autistic or psychotic. Dependency in adulthood is nearly constant: Only 3 of our 24 adult patients lived independently.
...
PMID:Dravet syndrome: the long-term outcome. 2146 79
To identify the pattern and determinants of psychiatric illness and the predictors of long stay among long-stay patients at the Mental Health Hospital, Taif, Saudi Arabia, we examined a total of 430 records of patients who had been admitted during the period January 1999-January 2009 and had stayed for > 9 months. More than half these patients had a history of drug addiction (60.7%). The majority were diagnosed with schizophrenia (88.8%) and
mental retardation
was reported in 17.7%.
Personality disorders
and epilepsy were diagnosed in 3.7% and 1.9% of the participants respectively. The mean duration of hospital stay was 6.16 (standard deviation 2.32; range 1-10) years. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that patients diagnosed with schizophrenia accompanied by
mental retardation
, those with lower education levels, and those with a history of co-morbid chronic diseases stayed for more than 2 years.
...
PMID:Pattern of psychiatric illnesses among long-stay patients at Mental Health Hospital, Taif, Saudi Arabia: a 10-year retrospective study. 2352 Sep 4
We conducted a survey of alcohol-dependent patients at the time of their first visit and physicians in regard to the goals of treatment of alcohol dependence. There were 99 replies from patients, and replies from physicians related to 64 of the patients' replies were also received, and in 25.0% of them it was judged possible to make reducing the amount of alcohol consumed a temporary or final goal. Having a mild drinking problem, the absence of a
personality disorder
or
mental retardation
, the presence of a strong motivation in regard to treatment, etc., were cited as reasons for the physicians' judgments. In addition, the number of diagnostic criteria of the ICD-10 for dependence syndrome that applied was shown to be significantly related to the judgments regarding treatment goals. However, as for Alcohol Dependence Scale (ADS), there was no significant relationship with the treatment goal.
...
PMID:[Survey of physicians and alcohol-dependent patients in regard to the goals of treatment of alcohol dependence]. 2365 7
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