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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chronically suicidal persons with chronic psychiatric disorders (dysthymia, recurrent depression, alcoholism/addiction, schizophrenia, personality disorders) challenge the experience and resourcefulness of psychiatrists. The author reviews his 30 years of experience with these patients and makes six recommendations for long-term treatment: (1) a team approach using consultants and ancillary therapists, (2) flexible therapeutic plans combining medication with psychotherapy, (3) care in monitoring transference and countertransference, (4) brief hospitalization at turning points in the patient's life or in the treatment, (5) decisions based on risk-benefit evaluation, and (6) appropriate record keeping. He also summarizes effective treatment approaches with patients who have chronic psychiatric disorders.
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PMID:Long-term treatment of chronically suicidal patients. 265 88

A number of risk factors have been associated with the etiology and pathogenesis of psychiatric disorders in children of psychiatrically ill parents. The author reviews the evidence for genetic transmission of psychopathology in families, particularly depression, schizophrenia, and alcoholism. Genetic factors appear to play less of a role in transmission than the characteristics of the child and the environmental consequences of the parent's illness. Some risk factors, such as ineffective parenting, poor communication patterns, and chaotic environments, may be modified by preventive interventions. Such interventions can improve family stability, foster the parents' ability to meet the child's needs, and minimize the pathology to which the child is exposed. Broad-based preventive interventions for the general population are also discussed.
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PMID:Children of psychiatrically ill parents: a prevention perspective. 268 49

Combined clinical neurological study was performed in 111 schizophrenic patients with acute, subacute psychotic signs and at the end of psychosis. Techniques included echoencephalography, eye fundus study, spinal puncture. None of the patients had a history of craniocerebral trauma, neuroinfections, chronic alcoholism, severe somatic diseases. In 53.1% of the patients intracranial hypertension syndrome was detected with the highest rate in patients with acute psychotic signs. Besides, the hypertension syndrome was found to be related to the type of schizophrenia course: it was twice as frequent in attack forms as in permanent ones. The authors suggest that intracranial hypertension has a distinct role to play in the pathogenesis of acute schizophrenic attacks.
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PMID:[The hypertensive-hydrocephalic syndrome in the clinical picture of schizophrenia]. 271 73

One hundred and seventeen biological mothers and 63 biological fathers of depressed and nondepressed, psychiatrically disturbed children and adolescents were interviewed with the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime Version. Diagnostic information was also obtained on 54 biological fathers who were unavailable for interview. Histories of depressive disorders and other forms of psychopathology were reported at high rates in the parents. Major depression was the most commonly reported disorder in interviewed parents of both sexes, but it was reported more often in mothers. Substance abuse and antisocial pathology was more prevalent in fathers. Depression in parents did not distinguish depressed from nondepressed probands, but maternal history of anxiety disorders, alcoholism and/or drug abuse, and suicidality did. Depressed probands were more likely than their nondepressed peers to have two parents with histories of depression. Mothers of younger patients had more substance abuse and suicidality in their histories than mothers of adolescents. They also reported earlier age of onset of depression and earlier age of entry into treatment.
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PMID:Psychopathology in parents of depressed children and adolescents. 273

We studied the parameters of suggested posthypnotic amnesia (initial deficit in recall, reversibility, and temporal disorganization of the initial material partially recalled during amnesia) in 132 psychiatric inpatients with DSM-III diagnoses of schizophrenia (N = 25), eating disorders (N = 77), alcoholism (N = 12), and major affective disorder (depression) (N = 18). We compared the findings on these patients with normal student control groups on the Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale (SHSS:C) posthypnotic suggestion item. In general, the small patient subgroups showed posthypnotic amnesia on each of these criteria in similar fashion to normal student populations. Highly hypnotizable patients were more likely to recall their hypnotic experiences in a more random order than the temporally more accurate sequence shown by low-hypnotizable subjects. Schizophrenic patients initially recalled fewer of their hypnotic experiences (indicating some cognitive deficit), and eating disorder patients initially recalled more of their experiences than other patient groups or normal subjects. Nevertheless, all patient subgroups showed significant additional recall after the reversibility cue. The results support the robustness of posthypnotic amnesia in psychiatric patients.
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PMID:Suggested posthypnotic amnesia in four diagnostic groups of hospitalized psychiatric patients. 277 18

We assessed psychiatric states in 223 men at first entry to New York, NY, municipal men's shelters, overall and differentiated by prior experience of homelessness. Instruments included a diagnostic interview (Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R: Psychotic Disorders), the Short Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test, and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies of Depression Scale. The use of a "first timer" sample, and of a clinical diagnostic interview, had not, to our knowledge, been previously attempted in studies of psychiatric problems in the homeless. The majority of men had a history of mental disorder or of heavy substance use. On diagnostic interview, 17% of the men had a definite or probable history of psychosis, and another 8% had a possible history of psychosis. A confident diagnosis of schizophrenia was made in 8%. A history of alcohol or other drug abuse was evident in 58%. Cocaine was already (in 1985) the drug of choice; 27% of the study sample had used it more than 50 times. One third of the men were in extreme distress, much of it apparently acute and associated with the transition to the shelter, and 7% reported suicidal thoughts at the time of the interview. The newly homeless, compared with those who had been homeless for much of the 5 years prior to shelter entry, were younger and had fewer psychiatric problems.
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PMID:Psychiatric problems in homeless men. Lifetime psychosis, substance use, and current distress in new arrivals at New York City shelters. 277 50

Alcohol dependence and abuse have been commonly found to coexist with other psychiatric disorders. In order to further investigate this relationship two populations with combined dysfunctional alcohol use and psychiatric illness were studied, one at an alcohol treatment centre and one at a general hospital psychiatric service. Sixty of the 63 people screened at the alcohol treatment centre and 41 of the 43 people with an alcohol problem at the psychiatric unit, met the combined criteria, thus confirming that a very high proportion of people with alcohol problems, and who present for treatment, also have additional psychiatric disorders. The two sample populations were similar on sociodemographic variables. There were differences in the types of psychiatric disorders occurring at the two treatment centres with depression predominating at the psychiatric unit and anxiety disorders occurring more frequently at the alcohol treatment facility. Both samples showed a high rate of schizophrenia. The sample at the alcohol treatment centre showed higher levels of alcohol consumption and had higher rates of problems associated with alcohol. Service delivery issues are discussed in relation to these results. The importance of psychiatric symptoms in both the genesis of dysfunctional drinking and in service utilisation are highlighted.
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PMID:Alcoholism and psychiatric disorder in patients who present to different services in Wellington. 281 92

Description among Zhenjiang Psychiatric Hospital (ZPH) Taipei City Psychiatric Center (TCPC), and New York State Psychiatric Hospital, Rockland Psychiatric Center (RPC) admission cohorts during the identical year indicates that the RPC cohort demonstrates different frequencies of major psychiatric illness than the ZPH and TCPC cohorts which are remarkably similar. Schizophrenia is more prevalent among RPC public admissions than ZPH and TCPC. Mania exceeds depression in ZPH and TCPC samples while depression exceeds mania in RPC. Females predominate among ZPH and TCPC admissions, in contrast to male predominance in RPC. Wherease alcoholism is almost non-existant among ZPH and TCPC admissions, over half the RPC sample had a diagnosis of substance abuse.
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PMID:Inpatients of Taipei City Psychiatric Center, Zhenjiang Psychiatric Hospital and New York State Mental Hospital, Rockland Psychiatric Center: comparison of the diagnostic distribution and sex ratios. 281 78

Of 99 consecutive male patients studied at the North Chicago VA Tardive Dyskinesia Program, 58 had tardive dyskinesia and 41 did not. Factors that were significantly related, singly and in combinations, to tardive dyskinesia were 1) diagnosis of affective disorder with alcoholism and/or drug-induced parkinsonism, and 2) diagnosis of schizophrenia with advanced age (over 50) and/or prolonged hospitalization (over 14 years). A diagnosis of schizophrenia in patients under age 50 with short hospitalizations was not significantly associated with the presence of tardive dyskinesia.
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PMID:Vulnerability to tardive dyskinesia. 286 57

Trazodone, a non-tricyclic molecule, represents the first of a new generation of antidepressants. It is currently marketed in a number of European countries, in the United States and in Latin America. The pharmacological and biochemical data, the mechanism of action and the preferential indications of trazodone are presented and compared to those of imipramine and other tricyclics. Unlike imipramine, trazodone inhibits the adrenergic system. The two molecules have anti-nociceptive properties, similar effects on the serotoninergic system and, after repeated administrations, they both reduce the density of beta-receptors. The clinical implications of the alpha-blocking activity of trazodone are reported. Trazodone is preferable to tricyclic anti-depressants in the treatment of depression in elderly subjects in general, and especially when they present closed angle glaucoma, prostatic hypertrophy, tremor or cardiovascular problems due to hyperactivity of the adrenergic system, as well as in organic depressions and in depression secondary to schizophrenia, alcoholism and in patients with Parkinson's disease.
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PMID:[History and pharmacology of trazodone]. 288 Jul 11


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