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

The availability of short-stay beds for brief admissions to a Psychiatric Emergency Service (PES) is a model that meets a variety of patient and system needs, allowing time to develop alternatives to hospitalization or gain diagnostic clarity, serving a respite function, providing a hospital setting that does not gratify dependency needs, and relieving inpatient census pressures. An eight-bed service for brief inpatient stays of up to 3 days was developed on a PES which serves a large nine-country catchment area in northeastern New York State. Admissions to this unit would otherwise have gone to a medical school teaching hospital psychiatric unit or a state psychiatric center. Fifty-one consecutive admissions were studied. The majority of patients were dischargeable in the short time frame and did not require transfer for longer-term care. The patients as a group showed improvement in psychiatric symptomatology and rated high satisfaction with the program. Most patients were diagnosed with schizophrenia or personality disorder (PD). Suicidality and substance abuse were frequent. The PD patients had a strong association with suicidality and some association with substance abuse, whereas the schizophrenics had more psychiatric symptomatology. PD patients were more likely to be discharged, leading us to propose a rationale for why this group may be uniquely suited to this approach. The study was replicated after a year on another sample of 51 consecutive admissions, confirming the earlier results and providing a 1-year follow-up on the program.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Crisis hospitalization on a psychiatric emergency service. 830 44

In this survey, 274 patients were sent a questionnaire concerning satisfaction with psychiatric treatment and the ward 1 month after their discharge from hospital. Fifty-two percent of the patients responded. Answers to the 56 items of patient satisfaction were analyzed in relation to patient diagnoses and treatment given. Patients who were diagnosed as suffering from affective disorders or from reactive psychoses were more satisfied than patients with schizophrenia or paranoia or with transitory adjustment reactions. Patients who had no personality disorder diagnosis and patients with character neurosis were more satisfied than patients with antisocial or borderline personality disorders. Patients on antidepressant medication were much more satisfied than other patients. The results of the study are discussed with regard to the need of further research in this area and to quality assurance.
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PMID:Satisfaction with care reported by psychiatric inpatients. Relationship to diagnosis and medical treatment. 835 87

This study examines the frequency of DSM-III-R personality disorders in parents of 58 patients who were admitted consecutively to a New York State psychiatric hospital with a first admission for a schizophrenia-like psychosis. For comparison, a control group of 65 families were randomly recruited who were in the same age group and denied any psychiatric history in their immediate families. Significantly more parents of the patients had a diagnosed personality disorder than controls. These were classified as schizoid, schizotypal, histrionic, and sadistic types by DSM-III-R criteria. While paranoid personality disorder was frequent, it was equally distributed among both groups of parents. These data suggest that the genetic boundaries to a "schizophrenia spectrum" disorder may extend further than previously thought and particularly the specific characteristics that are common to a wide variety of these disorders need to be examined in further analyses.
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PMID:DSM-III-R personality disorders in parents of schizophrenic patients. 835 38

The association between developmental defects of the corpus callosum and major psychiatric disturbance is discussed with a review of published cases. Seven new cases are presented, of which four had clear psychotic symptoms, two receiving a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Of the remainder, one had a developmental disorder affecting social interaction and speech which could be classed as Asperger's syndrome, one had a personality disorder with depressive and conversion symptoms, and the last was an adolescent boy with severe behavioural problems. The difficulties in determining the precise relevance of the callosal anomalies to these clinical manifestations are discussed especially since the prevalence of such anomalies in the population is uncertain.
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PMID:Severe psychiatric disturbance and abnormalities of the corpus callosum: review and case series. 827 Sep 44

As a prelude to a prospective study of personality functioning in chronically psychotic patients, the medical records of 736 hospitalized schizophrenic and schizoaffective disorder patients were retrospectively reviewed. The authors found much higher rates of Axis II personality disorder (PD) diagnoses among patients on extended-care inpatient units, which was consistent with their belief that clinicians on these units were using Axis II labels to document concurrent as well as premorbid personality factors. In addition, patients with PD diagnoses had significantly different courses of inpatient treatment, as documented by length-of-stay data. Level of function at discharge did not differ between those with and without PD diagnoses. The authors posit various hypotheses about these findings and discuss difficult conceptual and methodological issues regarding the influence of personality factors in schizophrenia.
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PMID:The role of personality in the treatment of schizophrenic and schizoaffective disorder inpatients: a pilot study. 844 19

This study examines the stability over a five year follow-up of first admission psychiatric diagnoses assigned in New Zealand psychiatric hospitals in 1980 and 1981. Diagnostic stability is a measure of the degree to which psychiatric diagnoses remained unchanged at a later hospital admission. Reasonably high levels of stability were found for the initial diagnoses of substance abuse disorders (86% stable), anorexia nervosa (70%), schizophrenia (67%), and affective disorder (67%). Poor levels of stability were noted for the initial diagnoses of personality disorder (36%), other psychosis (excluding schizophrenia and affective psychosis) (22%), and other neurosis (excluding neurotic depression) (20%). The major trends in diagnostic change are described. Factors influencing diagnostic instability are also examined. For patients with an initial diagnosis of schizophrenia, a change in hospital is found to be the strongest factor causing diagnostic instability, with time between admissions and age at first admission also having a significant influence. The implications of these findings are discussed.
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PMID:Stability of psychiatric diagnoses in New Zealand psychiatric hospitals. 848 Nov 65

Three hundred fifty-three psychiatric inpatients and their 192 living spouses and 98 control subjects and their 54 living spouses were examined and interviewed for affective, schizoaffective, schizophrenic (Research Diagnostic Criteria [RDC]), and personality disorders (DSM-III-R) using the Lifetime Version of the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (SADS-L) and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-Personality Disorders (SCID). The morbid risks of spouses for unipolar depression were between .15 and .25, and those for other major disorders were below .03. The morbid risks of spouses of bipolar patients for unipolar depression exceeded those of other spouses by 50% without reaching statistical significance. Personality disorders were found in 44.6% of patients, in 8.4% of patients' spouses, and in 9.8% of healthy controls. There was only one couple in which the husband and wife had each had a major disorder before marriage. Only four husband-wife pairs suffered the same personality disorder. Spouses of patients do not have significantly more psychiatric disorders than healthy controls; therefore, assortative mating can only be of minor relevance in family studies.
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PMID:Morbid risks for major disorders and frequencies of personality disorders among spouses of psychiatric inpatients and controls. 848 83

The clinical features and outcomes of 51 pregnancies (47 patients) complicated by psychotic disorders were studied. These patients were diagnosed as having the following psychotic disorders: 7 schizophrenias, 8 atypical psychoses, 6 mood disorders, 25 epilepsies, 4 anxiety disorders, and 1 personality disorder. The mean delivery age of women suffering from schizophrenia, atypical psychosis, and anxiety disorder was over 30 with deliveries 7-10 years after the onset of their psychoses. The predominant obstetrical complications for schizophrenias, atypical psychoses, and mood disorders were gestational toxicosis, threatened premature birth, and premature birth, respectively. Six out of eight (75.0%) patients with atypical psychosis, 4 out of 6 (66.7%) patients with mood disorder, and 2 of 4 patients with anxiety disorder became worse during pregnancy and/or postpartum. The rate of deterioration of the patients with schizophrenia was 14.3% (1/7) during pregnancy. An increasing rate of epileptic attack during pregnancy and/or postpartum were observed in 40.0% (10/25) of patients. Nine cases underwent cesarean section not due to their mental disorders but for obstetrical reasons. The present study suggests that the cooperation between obstetrician and psychiatrist, and the existence of a key person who knows the patient very well is required for a desirable outcome of the treatment.
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PMID:[Clinical study of pregnant women with psychotic disorders during last 14 years in Osaka Medical College]. 850 71

Two case-reports highlight the problems of co-morbidity of schizophrenia and borderline disorder. On the other hand, borderline disorder in schizophrenia can represent a pre-existent, lasting personality disorder, on the other hand it can be temporary syndrome in the course of illness. The assumption that a borderline syndrome can be a recompensation stage in the course of schizophrenia seems evident by clinical and psychodynamic points of view (concerning a coping strategy). The present categories of DSM III-R and ICD-10, however, do not allow an adequate diagnostic classification of this syndrome.
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PMID:[Borderline disorder and schizophrenia. Still a diagnostic problem]. 919 91

Styles of regulation were assessed with the Serial Color-Word Test in a group of 35 compensated DSM-III--R bipolar patients (Bipolar) and in 3 control groups: Major Depression (n = 35), Schizophrenia (n = 50), and self-rated Personality Disorder (n = 40). On several measures of nonlinear change (V), patients in the Bipolar group had mean scores between those of the Personality Disorder and the Schizophrenic groups, and overlapped with those of the Major Depression group. Patients in the Bipolar group with clearcut temperaments (hyperthymic or depressive) were significantly more dissociative and less stabilized than other patients in the same group. A further group of nonclinical subjects with hyperthymic temperament (n = 20) was significantly more dissociative than the Personality Disorder group.
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PMID:Styles of regulation in the bipolar spectrum. 857 Mar 35


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