Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 63 year old female, who was admitted to a psychiatric hospital for schizophrenia, was referred to our emergency room because of sudden loss of consciousness and convulsions. On arrival, she was drowsy and hypoxemic. Her chest X-ray showed cardiomegaly with pulmonary edema. ECG showed marked ST depression in precordial leads and serum chemistry revealed marked elevation of CPK, GOT and LDH along with hyponatremia and hypochloremia. She was immediately admitted to CCU on suspicion of acute non-transmural myocardial infarction complicated with congestive heart failure. After fluid restriction and intravenous infusion of dopamine she passed large amount of urine, and her consciousness level, electrolyte imbalance and ECG change, improved gradually. Although serum CPK level increased as high as 32,307 IU/ml, there were no signs of left ventricular asynergy on UCG and CPK isozyme analysis performed later revealed more than 99% of serum cCPK was MM-type. We concluded that water intoxication was the cause of the ECG change and the elevated serum CPK, GOT and LDH levels. There are few reports on elevated CPK level in association with water intoxication, in which rhabdomyolysis is speculated as the cause of CPK elevation. But there is no report on ECG change complicated with water intoxication. In our case, electrolyte imbalance caused by water intoxication seemed to play a major role in ST depression and QT prolongation. Although water intoxication is a rare disorder in the general population, it is not infrequent among patients with psychiatric diseases. Care must be taken when such patients present ECG change and serum enzyme elevation mimicking ischemic heart disease.
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PMID:[A water intoxication patient who showed remarkable ST depression and suspected ischemic heart disease]. 152 80

To study formation of the internal picture of coronary heart disease (CHD), 116 patients with schizophrenia and manic depressive psychosis who suffered angina pectoris attacks and myocardial infarction were followed up. The control group was made up of 106 CHD patients treated at the cardiological hospitals. Of these, 88.6% manifested borderline neuropsychic disorders due to the underlying heart disease. It has been established, that in patients suffering from psychoses, the hyponosognosic and anosognosic types of CHD survival (79.3% of cases) prevailed as compared to the control group (4.8% of cases). Unlike the control group patients, in patients with endogenous psychoses, the psychological and social factors lose their crucial importance in formation of the internal picture of CHD. Correct assessment of interrelations between the mental and somatic disease may contribute to improvement of the diagnosis and treatment of CHD as well as to the carrying out of rehabilitation measures.
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PMID:[Characteristics of forming internal picture of ischemic heart disease by patients with endogenous psychoses]. 165 4

American former prisoners of war (POWs) are an aging group who seek health care with increasing frequency. To examine the prevalence of long-term physical and emotional consequences of captivity in this population, the authors analyzed medical and psychiatric examination data for 426 former POWs. Detailed psychiatric diagnostic criteria were used to assess the POWs' mental health. Compared with general population groups, POWs had moderately elevated lifetime prevalence rates of depressive disorders and greatly elevated rates of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), although their rates of hypertension, diabetes, myocardial infarction, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and alcoholism were not elevated. POWs who lost more than 35 percent of their body weight during captivity had higher rates of anxiety disorder, depressive disorders, PTSD, and schizophrenia, compared with other POWs.
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PMID:Prevalence of somatic and psychiatric disorders among former prisoners of war. 189 54

The author analyzes the results of an experimental study into sense regulation of the activity of patients with the hypochondriac syndrome. Three groups of patients were examined: with neurosis, slow-progressive schizophrenia, and myocardial infarction. Four types of self-regulation were distinguished: related to the attitude towards the world, to oneself, to other people, to the characteristic features of the mediation of the relations indicated. It has been discovered that the egocentric tendencies, impoverishment, narrow motivation sphere, rigidity of senses, valuables are psychological causes of the derangement of higher sense regulation in hypochondriac conditions.
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PMID:[Characteristics of sensory regulation of the activities in hypochondriacal conditions of different etiologies]. 217 48

First- and second-year medical students rated 35 diseases (e.g., cancer, heart attack, herpes, schizophrenia, alcoholism) on nine different rating scales (e.g., prognosis, ease of management). In order to uncover the underlying dimensional structure, mean ratings were subjected to multidimensional scaling analyses in which both diseases and rating scales were placed in the same configuration. The results indicated that a two-dimensional solution, accounting for 97% of the variance, was most appropriate. The first dimension distinguishes between diseases that appear to be more physiological in nature and those that have some psychological involvement as well. The second dimension seems most related to fear, seriousness, prognosis, patient desirability, and ease of management.
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PMID:The dimensional structure of medical students' perceptions of diseases. 317 90

The direct and indirect costs associated with schizophrenia in Australia were calculated using the incidence approach and compared with similar costings of myocardial infarction in Australia and the United States. In Australia schizophrenia affects one-twelfth as many people as does myocardial infarction, yet costs half as much. This is because the stream of costs associated with each case of schizophrenia is six times the stream of costs associated with myocardial infarction. To illustrate the utility of this costing approach, the information was used to estimate the cost-benefit ratio likely to follow the introduction of social intervention strategies. The information also showed that Australian support for research in schizophrenia is inadequate when compared with that for myocardial infarction and quite out of proportion to the cost of schizophrenia to the community.
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PMID:The economic costs of schizophrenia. Implications for public policy. 392 97

The economic costs of schizophrenia in New South Wales, Australia, were estimated using an incidence-based approach. The incidence of the disease was obtained from a case register. Direct treatment costs were calculated from length of stay data, the probability of readmission, and a direct costing of inpatient and outpatient care. Indirect costs were calculated from tables of average weekly earnings and work-force participation rates modified for the expected types of outcome. The prodrome was costed similarly. Costs were $139 million (in 1975 U.S. dollars), or $29 per head of the population of the State. A sensitivity analysis indicated that the likely margin of error of the estimate was plus or minus 15 percent. Comparison with the costs of myocardial infarction (in the same State at the same time and costed by the same methods) demonstrated that schizophrenia is a costly disease.
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PMID:Estimating the economic costs of schizophrenia. 408 54

Psychological reactions and their 'hierarchies' regarding the own health status were analysed in a sample of 81 survivors of the Bonn Longitudinal Study on Aging and in different clinical samples (patients suffering from hemophilia, renal failure, heart infarction, stroke, and schizophrenia). The longitudinal analysis of the health-related response hierarchy points to a high degree of consistency of these reactions over time. Comparing the response hierarchies of the aged sample as related to different areas of life stress (such as housing, income, family, health problems), the author finds a high degree of discriminative competence in coping with stress. The same is true for the response hierarchies of the patient groups. This high degree of situation-specific selectivity in patterns of responses to chronical disease should be studied more intensively from theoretical as well as clinical-practical points of view.
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PMID:[Reactions to health stress in middle and advanced adulthood]. 648 77

We had already made a report on outcome of schizophrenia (1986). The patients, 129 typical schizophrenia, were continuously observed over 30 years in the Kawagoe Dojinkai Hospital. Recently, we again evaluated their prognoses according to the same criteria as adopted in the first report, and divided them into the following five groups. [symbol: see text]: completely remitted group (21 persons, 16.3%), [symbol: see text]: almost remitted cases now holding jobs (23 persons, 17.8%), [symbol: see text]: Slightly remitted group showing good adjustment at home or hospital (41 persons, 31.8%), [symbol: see text]: maladjusted cases always showing an unfavorable condition (25 persons, 19.4%), x : incurable cases (19 persons, 14.7%). 1) In the last 8 years, there were 30 persons (23.3% of the whole patients) who showed prognostic changes (10 persons improved, 20 persons worsen). While the second group ([symbol: see text]) has seen fewer persons (12 persons down) than previous study, the third group ([symbol: see text]) has seen more persons (9 persons up). Each three groups, that is, the first two groups ([symbol: see text] + [symbol: see text], 44 persons, 34.1%), the third group ([symbol: see text], 41 persons, 31.8%), and the forth and fifth groups ([symbol: see text] + x, 44 persons, 34.1%) accounted for a third of the whole patients. It is after 32 years on the average (extending from 21 to 50 years) from the onset of illness that they showed prognostic changes. 2) Generally speaking, catatonic patients had favorable prognoses, hebephrenic patients unfavorable ones, and paranoid patients medium ones. But 4 improved persons in the forth and fifth groups were all hebephrenic type. 3) 17 among the 30 persons who showed prognostic changes were unstable type. They took a wave-like course. 4) 27 of all the 129 patients were dead. 25 were dead from disease mentioned below. Malignancy (8 persons), Cerebral vascular disease, Pneumonia and Diabetes (3 persons), Heart-failure (2 persons), Ileus, Myocardial infarction, Hepato-cirrhosis, Gastric ulcer, Tuberculosis and Natural death (1 person). 2 persons committed suicide. 5) Outcome of 45 patients who discontinued our medical therapy became clear as follows. [symbol: see text] + [symbol: see text]: 18 persons (40.0%), [symbol: see text]: 9 persons (20.0%), [symbol: see text] + x : 18 persons (40.0%). A smaller percentage of the patients belongs to the third group ([symbol: see text]) than that of our patients who were continuously followed by us.
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PMID:[Outcome of schizophrenia--extended observation (more than 30 years) of 129 typical schizophrenic cases [III]]. 773 53

Based on recent quantitative EEG findings of increased slow activity in negative schizophrenia indicating organicity, it was hypothesized that neuroleptics decreasing delta/theta activity should be beneficial for schizophrenics with predominantly negative symptoms. Thus, a double-blind, clinical, psychometric and neurophysiological study was carried out in 40 hospitalized patients with unproductive schizophrenia (mean age: 31 years; ICD diagnoses: 295.0, 295.1 and 295.6) who were treated randomly either with the benzamide amisulpride (AMI; n = 19) or low doses of fluphenazine (FLU; n = 21). In the first 2 weeks the daily doses were 50 mg AMI or 2 mg FLU, respectively, from the third week on up to the sixth week 100 mg AMI and 4 mg FLU. Clinical evaluations, psychometry and EEG mapping were performed on day 1 (hours 0 and 4--acute effect), on day 14 (hour 0--subacute effect) and on day 42 (hours 0 and 4--chronic and superimposed effects). Three AMI patients discontinued therapy prematurely because of productive symptoms (days 14, 28 and 35), while in the FLU group 2 patients dropped out due to depressive symptoms (days 21, 28), 1 due to productive symptoms (day 35), 1 due to ineffectiveness (day 28), and 1 because of an akinetic crisis (day 6). Statistical evaluation demonstrated a significant improvement in the AMDP apathy and Andreasen SANS score in both groups with the patients remaining severely ill as rated by the CGI. FLU-treated patients needed significantly more anticholinergic medication than the AMI-treated group. Psychometric evaluation showed in regard to the noopsyche significant improvement after subacute, chronic and superimposed AMI, while FLU-treated patients showed significant improvement only after subacute treatment. AMI was significantly superior to FLU at the hours 0 and 4 of day 42. The thymopsyche improved after subacute, chronic and superimposed administration of both compounds with a significant superiority of AMI on days 14 and 42 (4 h postdrug). EEG mapping showed a decrease of delta/theta and increase of beta activity as well as an acceleration of the centroid after acute and superimposed AMI on day 42 as compared with baseline; FLU patients exhibited a decrease of delta/theta activity and an acceleration of the total centroid too, while alpha activity was augmented and beta activity tended to be reduced. Our study demonstrated that, in addition to the new benzamide AMI, FLU in low doses may also be regarded as a neuroleptic with activating properties and may be utilized in the treatment of schizophrenics with predominantly negative symptoms.
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PMID:Clinical, EEG mapping and psychometric studies in negative schizophrenia: comparative trials with amisulpride and fluphenazine. 791 19


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