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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous studies indicated that for two subgroups of patients, schizophrenics with premorbid asociality (SPA) and individuals with emotionally unstable character disorders (EUCD), central nervous system damage may have etiologic significance. It was hypothesized that these two patient groups would also have an increased number of neurologic soft signs. The relationship of neurologic examination, tests of auditory-visual integration, and intelligence quotient, and diagnoses was studied for 350 patients. Tests of reliability and persistence for all observed signs were performed. The EUCD and SPA groups had increased evidence of neurologic soft signs. Differences in patterns of IQ scores also suggest that different forms of brain damage may be present in these two groups. When the two groups were removed from the larger patient sample, those patients with other types of
schizophrenia
and
character disorder
did not exhibit evidence of neurologic impairment. This study of neurologic soft signs adds to the validity of considering SPA and EUCD as separate diagnostic entities.
...
PMID:Neurologic soft signs in schizophrenia and character disorders. Organicity in schizophrenia with premorbid asociality and emotionally unstable character disorders. 94 89
A survey was made of all female admissions to the State Hospital, Carstairs, between the time of the first female admission in 1959, and 31 December 1973. There were 66 female admissions, constituting 7-1 per cent of the total admissions over the same period. The females fall into two separate sub-groups. The first consists of persistently violent patients transferred from other hospitals, suffering from mental subnormality or
personality disorder
; they have a poorer prognosis than the second group, who are sent from Courts or prison because of single serious acts of violence often directed at a member of the family, and who suffer from a
personality disorder
or from
schizophrenia
. Some features of the two groups are compared and contrasted. There may be an increase in the proportion of pateints in the first group being admitted to the State Hospital, and some implications of this trend are discussed.
...
PMID:A fifteen-year review of female admissions to Carstairs State Hospital. 120 34
The classical notion of neurosis as the prototypical form of nonpsychotic personality disturbance must be rejected in favor of the categories of (a) personality pattern disturbance and disorder of life style, and most especially, (b)
character disorder
. Category (a) would include schizoid, paranoid, and cyclothymic personality pattern disturbances and compulsive and hysteroid personality as disorders of life style. Each of these would occupy one end of a 'psychotoid' continuum, at the other end of which would be a familiar type of psychosis such as paranoid schizophrenia or pseudoneurotic
schizophrenia
. The most numerous of the nonpsychotic disturbances (in the tens of millions in the USA alone) come under category (b), the character disorders, involving a special sort of failure to inhibit impulse and unsocialized self-seeking. Character disorders are seen by us as turning on an eccentric axis, alternating between the two foci of 'dependency' and 'aggression'.
...
PMID:Nonpsychotic personality disturbances: a re-evaluation and reclassification. 123 19
A cumulative psychiatric case register was utilized to examine patterns of psychopathology in 1,334 adolescent patients. Consistent with studies of adult patients, seriousness of disorder was weighted toward being seen in an inpatient rather than outpatient settling;
schizophrenia
and
personality disorder
were relatively more common amoung lower-class patients and neurosis and situational disorder among middle- and upper-class patients; neurosis was more commonly diagnosed among female patients, and
personality disorder
more commonly diagnosed among males. A ten-year follow-up revealed 54.1% reasonable diagnostic stability on subsequent contacts and 62.2% complete subsequent agreement among patients originally diagnosed as schizophrenic. Aspects of the data demonstrate continuity in adolescent and adult psychopathology, the mythical nature of "normative adolescent turmoil," and what appears to be excesive use of situational disorder in diagnosing adolescent patients.
...
PMID:Psychopathology in adolescence. 125 95
Current and lifetime psychiatric diagnoses were compared in 229 female patients seeking treatment for current episodes of anorexia nervosa (N = 41), bulimia nervosa (N = 98) and mixed anorexia nervosa and
Schizophrenia
-Lifetime Version, which was modified to include a section for DSM-III-R eating disorders, the Longitudinal Interval Follow-up Evaluation, and the Structured Interview for DSM-III
Personality Disorders
. Seventy-three percent of the anorexia nervosa subjects, 60% of the bulimia nervosa subjects, and 82% of the mixed anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa subjects had a current comorbid Axis I diagnosis. Major depression was the most commonly diagnosed comorbid disorder. Low rates of alcohol and substances abuse disorder were diagnosed, and
personality disorder
occurred in a minority of the sample. The subjects with mixed disorder manifested a higher lifetime prevalence of kleptomania than either the anorexics or the bulimics. High levels of comorbidity were noted across the eating disorder samples. Mixed disorder subjects manifested the most comorbid psychopathology and especially warrant further study.
...
PMID:Psychiatric comorbidity in treatment-seeking anorexics and bulimics. 140 Jan 11
The total number of adults with Down's syndrome living in Leicestershire, ascertained by widespread enquiry, was found to be 378. Of these, 371 were matched with adults with mental handicap due to other pathologies, on the basis of age, sex, and type of residence. Those with Down's syndrome were found to have a different spectrum of mental disorders from those without the syndrome. In particular, Down's syndrome patients were more likely to have been diagnosed as having depression and dementia; the controls were more likely to have been diagnosed as suffering from conduct disorder,
personality disorder
, or
schizophrenia
/paranoid state. The same proportion of each group had been given a diagnosis of autism.
...
PMID:Differential rates of psychiatric disorders in adults with Down's syndrome compared with other mentally handicapped adults. 833 Jan 25
A total of 196 nonspecialty state hospitals in the U.S. each identified one patient--referred to as the hospital's "worst" recidivist--admitted to the hospital in 1987 who had the most lifetime admissions to that hospital. Persons admitted for mental retardation or substance abuse detoxification were excluded. The mean age of the recidivists was 42.2 years; their mean age at first admission was 24.7. The number of admissions per patient ranged from five to 121, with a mean of 31. Compared with the national population of state hospital admissions, significantly larger proportions of recidivists had diagnoses of
schizophrenia
, bipolar disorder, and
personality disorder
. More research is needed to determine actual community tenure of patients who receive revolving-door care and whether alternative approaches would be more effective.
...
PMID:A report on the "worst" state hospital recidivists in the U.S. 142 98
Diagnostic profiles of 400 adolescent and 1159 adult Navajo Indians consecutively admitted to a psychiatric unit between 1980 and 1989 are presented in this paper. The major discharge diagnoses for adolescents were as follows: adjustment reaction, mixed, and depression, not otherwise specified (NOS), with females accounting for two-thirds of either diagnosis;
schizophrenia
, with males accounting for 68% of all diagnoses, and
personality disorder
, NOS, with no gender differences. The four major discharge diagnoses for adults were
schizophrenia
and depression, NOS, in which there were no gender differences; alcohol withdrawal, syndrome, in which males accounted for 76% of those discharged; and adjustment reaction, mixed, in which females constituted 60% of those discharged. Over the 10-year period, there was a decrease in adult and an increase in adolescent admissions. During the last 2 years (1988 and 1989) adolescents accounted for almost 30% of all admissions compared with 14% during the first 2 years (1981 and 1982).
...
PMID:Psychiatric diagnostic profiles in hospitalized adolescent and adult Navajo Indians. 143 95
Standardized structured interview personality scales are now available that provide better reliability than clinician interview, but are still imperfect. These scales diagnose DSM III-R personality disorders, which are more illness-oriented than Freudian notions. Use of these scales has found that the majority of patients with OCD have at least one Axis II
personality disorder
, with most falling in cluster C. Obsessive compulsive personality disorder, as described in DSM-III-R, is, in most samples studied, present in the minority of patients with OCD, and is often less common than other personality disorders such as mixed, dependent, avoidant, and histrionic. The prevalence of this
personality disorder
as modified in DSM-III-R (making it easier for a patient to qualify for this
personality disorder
diagnosis) appears to be higher, although still present in a minority of patients with OCD. Obsessive compulsive personality disorder (along with the other cluster B and C personality disorders) has not been reported to have a consistent relation to treatment outcome. There is evidence that in some cases, obsessive compulsive personality disorder may be secondary to OCD. Swedo et al hypothesized that some children may develop compulsive personality traits as an adaptive mechanism to deal with OCD. This hypothesis is in accord with our finding that OCD often predates compulsive personality disorder and that mixed
personality disorder
may develop over time, possibly secondary to OCD. We found in our sample of 96 adult patients with OCD that the presence of mixed
personality disorder
was more likely with longer duration of OCD, suggesting that patients who do not have premorbid personality disorders may develop significant personality traits (especially avoidant, compulsive, and dependent), which may be related to behavioral and life-style changes that are secondary to OCD. This hypothesis is strengthened by our finding that patients with one of these personality disorders at baseline tended to no longer meet criteria for them following successful treatment of their OCD. It now appears that schizotypal personality disorder, which is thought to be related genetically to
schizophrenia
(e.g., in three male identical twin pairs concordant for OCD but discordant for
schizophrenia
or schizoaffective disorder, the nonpsychotic co-twins all had schizotypal personality disorder), is the only consistent
personality disorder
predictor of poorer outcome in OCD. These traits may help explain other proposed poor predictors of treatment outcome such as overvalued beliefs, poor compliance, and chaotic family situations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Personality disorders in obsessive compulsive disorder. 146 97
A total of 2090 treatment episodes from 1977 to 1990 at a therapeutic community for acute patients were assessed for group psychotherapy participation and its associations with some patient and program characteristics, based on polytomous logistic regression analysis. Nonparticipation (4% of all episodes) or passivity (14%) were associated mainly with the program properties (such as the quality of the ward policy, first treatment episode and short treatment time), a diagnosis of
personality disorder
or typical
schizophrenia
and inferior outcome (assessed by attainment of treatment goals). The associations of moderate activity (45%) were very active (37%) as a reference, mainly personal properties (such as male gender, young age, low social and professional background and a diagnosis of
schizophrenia
) and inferior outcome. The results suggest that group participation, therapeutic program, patient properties and attainment of treatment goals are interrelated. The therapeutic program and leaders' skills should be developed to facilitate individualized group participation.
...
PMID:Participation in group psychotherapy in a therapeutic community for acute patients. 147 45
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