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

Dr. Brown traces the history of America's federal mental health program from its beginning in the early 1900s. NIMH, the institute he currently directs, was established in 1946 for the treatment and prevention of mental and emotional illnesses through research,training, and services. It is now one of the institutes of the Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Dr. Brown describes its continuous progress toward providing high-quality mental health care to the entire population, and discusses priorities for the future that include continuation of research on schizophrenia and depression and research that will benefit children and the elderly.
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PMID:The federal mental health program: past, present, and future. 17 35

A sample of 2,115 persons responded to an article in a popular magazine by taking the Sensation Seeking Scale (SSS) and supplying personal information by mail, including data about past treatment, hospitalization, and diagnosis of psychiatric disorders. Subjects falling into certain diagnostic categories were closely matched with controls from the same sample who reported no history, treatment, or diagnosis of disorder. SSS scores were not related to general psychopathology, unipolar depression, schizophrenia, or neurosis, but were found to be elevated in persons reporting a history of manic-depressive or sociopathic spectrum (including alcoholism and drug abuse) disorder.
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PMID:Sensation seeking and psychopathology. 29 53

1. The meaning of the consistently high estimates of heritability of psychiatric disorders such as affective disorders and schizophrenia is that a small proportion of families accounts for a very large proportion of the population diagnostic variance. 2. This implies that the classic community mental health services model of a randomly distributed risk in a geographically defined catchment area population is inappropriate, and that efficient case finding and follow-up would result from tracing illness within pedigrees of known cases. 3. Application to clinical practice of family study methods developed in genetic research enables efficient identification of unrecognized and untreated cases, and early provision of care (secondary prevention). The use of family study methods will also uncover milder and variant ("spectrum") forms of illness in relatives of known patients, which then become accessible to treatment. 4. A family study of affective illness at the United States National Institute of Mental Health, demonstrated how additional ill persons including previously untreated cases could be identified. Starting with 86 Bipolar probands, we interviewed all available first degree relatives, and saw second degree relatives if there was indicated psychopathology by history. 5. Of the 405 living first degree relatives of 86 Bipolar I patients, the study found 1.2% had lifetime diagnosis of untreated Bipolar illness, 2.7% had untreated Unipolar illness, 4% had less severe personality disorders and 2% suffered from behavioral disorders such as drug abuse or alcoholism.
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PMID:Genetic methods and preventive psychiatry. 40 51

Of 54 male psychiatric patients undergoing dexamethasone suppression tests in a clinical setting, 40% of those with a major depressive disorder showed escape from suppression over the 24 hours after dexamethasone administration, while all of the patients with schizophrenia, neurosis, alcoholism,and drug abuse showed normal pituitary-adrenal suppression. Only 10% of the depressed patients showed resistance to suppression 8 hours after dexamethasone administration. There was no difference between depressed patients who did and did not show escape from suppression in type of previous episodes, family history, symptoms, or medication. However, those who showed escape tended to respond better to treatment and to be rated as having a more severe depression. The theoretical and clinical implications of these findings are not yet clear.
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PMID:The 24-hour dexamethasone suppression test in a clinical setting: relationship to diagnosis, symptoms, and response to treatment. 42 40

The authors compared 48 adult psychiatric patients (27 men and 21 women) who had been hyperactive as children with two groups of patients who had not. Both comparison groups were matched for age and sex and the second was also matched for economic status. Although closer matching narrowed the gap somewhat, the formerly hyperactive subjects still showed significantly more personality disorder of all types, more sociopathy, more alcoholism, and less affective disorder than controls. Schizophrenia and drug abuse occurred no more often in these subjects than in the comparison groups.
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PMID:Diagnosis of adult psychiatric patients with childhood hyperactivity. 45 59

The relationship between schizophrenia and drug abuse has been approached using physiopathological, psychopathological, and cybernetics communicational techniques. The hypotheses which have been proposed with regard to the physiological mechanism involved in schizophrenia and drug abuse all have in common, among other things, the idea that neurotransmitters play a role in the development of these behaviors. Likewise, the psychopathological symptoms presented by schizophrenia and drug abuse offen many similarities. The mechanism by which drug abuse may lead to schizophrenia is discussed. The analysis of the communicational system reveals the correlation between there two syndroms. None of the three techniques which have been described should be exclused from clinical practice.
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PMID:[Schizophrenia and addiction]. 74 40

In a series of 103 psychotic patients with evidence of drug abuse, the following facts came to light. 1. A definitive diagnosis was made in 94%. In 6% of these cases the diagnosis remained unclear even after having been admitted for a second time. 2. Seventy-four percent (72 of 97) of the patients, who abused various drugs, usually in combination had organic psychoses, and 26% (25 of 97) were diagnosed as schizophrenics. 3. Of 36 patients, who suffered psychotic episodes due to the abuse of cannabis, or LSD, or heroin, 21 (= 58%) were schizophrenics. 4. In those cases showing organic psychoses, thought insertion, thought withdrawal, and thought broadcasting were not found. However all other first- (and second-) rank symptoms (Kurt Schneider) of schizophrenia were found. Perhaps this might be of help as a differential criterion. 5. The fact of drug abuse at the outset of a schizophrenia is dependent on the schizophrenic symptomatology. The use of and attitude to the drug as well as the experiencing of the drug's effects changes in the further course of the psychosis. This last point might also be of value in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:[Drug abuse and schizophrenia (author's transl)]. 99 96

Blood platelet monoamine oxidase (MAO) activity was evaluated in twenty-four anergic, schizophrenic outpatients during a double-blind study comparing a chlorpromazine-imipramine combination to thio-thixeneplacebo. Platelet MAO activity was determined on blood samples drawn after a two-week drug-free washout and once weekly over a four-week on-drug period. Schizophrenic patients could be classified according to their blood platelet MAO activity into either a low-MAO or a high-MAO group. In neither group of this population of schizophrenics did blood platelet MAO activity correlate with any of the primary or secondary symptoms of schizophrenia. Ten alcoholics and seven volunteer non-patients could similarly be divided into low- and high-MAO groups. Mean blood platelet MAO activity for these groups was not significantly different from the mean values of the low and high-MAO groups of the schizophrenics. These findings do not support published reports of low blood platelet activity as a genetic marker for schizophrenia. Discriminate function analysis of symptomatology ratings at baseline was used to characterize the low- and high-MAO schizophrenic patient groups. Individuals in the low-MAO group were distinguished by hyperactivity, anergia and sleep disturbance.
Natl Inst Drug Abuse Res Monogr Ser 1975 Nov
PMID:Blood platelet monoamine oxidase activity in anergic schizophrenics. 123 83

We have previously reported that, from a phenomenological standpoint, the behavioral manifestations of cats chronically intoxicated with amphetamine parallel the evolution of the paranoid psychosis induced by the drug in humans. However, certain manifestations in the cat, such as frozen postures, disjunctive behaviors and postures, cataleptic-like phenomena, obstinate progression, loss of righting reflex and pupillary changes, did not appear to be consistent with the phenomenology of the paranoid psychosis. Since treatment of schizophrenic patients with disulfiram, an inhibitor of norepinephrine synthesis that acts at the level of the enzyme dopamine beta-hydroxylase, thereby leading to increased dopamine concentrations, had been found to profoundly exaggerate psychotic symptomatology, amphetamine behavioral syndrome in the cat as it is modified by pretreatment with disulfiram. Following such pretreatment, a faster development of certain end-stage components of the amphetamine syndrome was obtained. Thus, on the first day, development of a Reactive attitude and of more prominent behavioral disjunction occurred with the combined drug administration as compared with amphetamine alone. In contrast with the facilitation of these behaviors was the absence of dyskinesias and hyperreflexia on that day. Stereotyped behavior, loss of motor initiative and hyperkinetic activity were markedly enhanced and appeared with a shorter latency period on subsequent days of the intoxication cycle. Loss of righting reflex was an early manifestation in these animals. During the later days, the particularly high level of compulsive activity was evident from the occurrence of an obstinate progression syndrome and the performance of stereotyped movements of the head in the presence of a crucifixion posture. In general, modification of the amphetamine effects on behavior was in a direction consistent with comparable features in experimental catatonia and the catatonic form of schizophrenia. The need to integrate such phenomena in any amphetamine model of psychosis is stressed and analogies are drawn with similar features reported in animals treated with bulbocapnine or other psychotogenic compounds and with symptoms of human amphetamine psychosis and schizophrenia.
Natl Inst Drug Abuse Res Monogr Ser 1975 Nov
PMID:Effects of disulfiram on the amphetamine-induced behavioral syndrome in the cat as a model of psychosis. 124 12

An examination of the primary and secondary diagnoses of 1195 defendants admitted to an urban forensic service was carried out. This indicated that personality disorders dominated the referral patterns from the court. Of those conditions which could produce thought disorders, schizophrenia dominated. An analysis of the prevalence of schizophrenia among defendants charged with homicide in St. Louis revealed a rate of schizophrenia similar to that found in the general population. Organic brain syndromes resulted in a large proportion of assaultive behavior, and these cases also involved a large number of secondary diagnoses. Alcohol and drug abuse were the most common secondary diagnoses. In general, no correlation between psychiatric diagnosis and types of criminal activity was found.
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PMID:Forensic psychiatry: diagnosis and criminal responsibility. 127 Oct 48


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