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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a discussion of the article on genetic determinants of borderline conditions by Siever and Gunderson, a phenotypic continuum between pure schizotypal and pure affective conditions is postulated. Many "borderline" cases are seen as attenuated forms of
schizophrenia
, schizoaffective psychosis, or manic-depression. A Venn diagram illustrates differences among syndromes described by Gunderson, Kernberg, Spitzer, and Klein ("hysteroid dysphoria"). Evidence is presented suggesting that Gunderson's borderline syndrome contains more schizotypal individuals than Kernberg's, whereas hysteroid
dysphoria
is nearer the affective pole of the continuum. A second diagram illustrates how the strength and nature of the genetic factors vary according to the syndrome.
...
PMID:Assessing vulnerability to schizophrenia or manic-depression in borderline states. 44 84
Recent studies of the effect of gender on the familial risk for
schizophrenia
have shown that relatives of females have a higher risk for
schizophrenia
than relatives of males. This study attempts to explain the effect by examining factors found to differentiate schizophrenic men and women and found to be related to the familial risk for
schizophrenia
. Cox proportional hazard regression model was used to examine the simultaneous effects of age at onset, season of birth, and premorbid history, controlled for symptoms that have been found to differ by gender (
dysphoria
, paranoia, and flat affect). Results showed that the effect of gender on the transmission of
schizophrenia
could not be explained by gender differences in age at onset, symptom expression, premorbid history, and winter birth. However, premorbid history had an effect on familial risk independent of gender, indicating that probands with a poor premorbid history had a lower familial risk for
schizophrenia
than those with a good premorbid history. Implications of the findings are discussed.
...
PMID:Gender and the familial risk for schizophrenia. Disentangling confounding factors. 151 74
The relationships between depression, anxiety and positive and negative symptoms of
schizophrenia
were examined in a study of 95 schizophrenic patients who were receiving out-patient care. Various measures of depression and anxiety showed a pattern of interrelationships which suggested that they were measuring a general state of
dysphoria
rather than separate dimensions of anxiety and depression.
Dysphoria
was found to be more reliably related to level of positive symptomatology than to negative symptoms.
...
PMID:Dysphoric mood and symptomatology in schizophrenia. 178 Apr 2
Comorbid alcohol use disorders are common in
schizophrenia
. Although a variety of explanatory hypotheses involving self-medication have been proposed, few data available regarding schizophrenic patients' subjective experiences while using alcohol. We report interview data from 75 DSM-III-R schizophrenic outpatients regarding their subjective responses to alcohol. Over half of our sample reported that alcohol improved social anxiety, tension,
dysphoria
, apathy, anhedonia, and sleep difficulties. Other nonpsychotic experiences were frequently improved as well. In contrast, no more than 15% of subjects reported that alcohol relieved any specific psychotic symptom; similar proportions of subjects reported that alcohol aggravated psychotic symptoms. Reporting that alcohol had a positive effect on nonpsychotic experiences was associated with having lifetime alcohol use disorders. Reporting that alcohol relieved psychotic symptoms was associated both with having lifetime alcohol use disorders and with the number of psychotic symptoms reported. We discuss the implications of these findings for understanding alcohol abuse and dependence among schizophrenics.
...
PMID:Subjective experiences related to alcohol use among schizophrenics. 155 69
Depressed patients and suicidal patients are common Emergency Department patrons with the potential for serious morbidity or death.
Dysphoric mood
, vegetative symptoms, and negative perceptions of oneself, the environment, and the future are characteristic of depression. Often, the patient is unaware of the depression and presents with a variety of somatic complaints, chronic fatigue, or pain syndromes. In these instances, the physician must consider the diagnosis of depression and ask the patient about any history of depressive symptoms. In all depressed patients, a careful history and physical examination are needed to identify any drugs or concurrent medical illnesses which might cause or exacerbate the depression. If depression is suspected or if the patient presents after a suicide attempt, then a thorough evaluation of suicide potential is mandatory. Several risk factors for completed suicide exist. Male sex, age under 19 or over 45, few social supports, and a history of previous suicide attempts are all factors associated with increased suicide rates. Concurrent chronic or severe medical illnesses and certain psychiatric illnesses, notably depression,
schizophrenia
, and substance abuse, also increase an individual's risk for suicide. The method of suicide attempt and the chance for rescue must also be considered when determining risk as well as the presence of an organized plan. Acute psychosis in the suicidal patient is an ominous finding and these patients should be admitted to the hospital. The physician must adopt an empathetic and nonjudgmental attitude when caring for potentially suicidal patients. Disposition can be determined after careful evaluation of risk factors, circumstances surrounding the attempt, and the patient's current feelings. Consultation with a psychiatrist or another mental health professional is desirable for any potentially suicidal patient. Many such patients can be safely treated as outpatients with proper referral; certain high-risk individuals will need to be admitted to the hospital. The decision to either hospitalize or discharge can be difficult and the emergency physician should admit the patient if doubt exists.
...
PMID:Depression and suicide assessment. 200 61
Past literature suggests that schizophrenic men and women may be at different risks for developing different subtypes of
schizophrenia
. This hypothesis was tested using data from the well-known retrospective cohort family studies, the Iowa 500 and the Iowa non-500. The sample consisted of 171 male and 161 female DSM-III schizophrenic patients and 713 of their first-degree relatives. First, bivariate tests for gender differences were conducted regarding family morbidity, age of onset, premorbid history, season of birth, and expression of deficit and affective symptoms. Restricted maximum likelihood latent class analysis was then used to test whether there was a subgroup of schizophrenic men who were more likely to have a low familial risk for
schizophrenia
or
schizophrenia
spectrum disorders, deficit symptoms, poor premorbid history, and birth in the winter months, suggesting possible early environmental insults, compared to schizophrenic women. Results showed that although men were more likely to meet these criteria, women also met them, thus suggesting gender differences in the prevalence of the subtype. Schizophrenic women were more likely to express a form of the illness characterized by
dysphoria
, persecutory delusions, and a higher family morbidity risk for
schizophrenia
than schizophrenic men. Results for spectrum disorders among relatives were equivocal with regard to gender.
...
PMID:The role of gender in identifying subtypes of schizophrenia: a latent class analytic approach. 237 84
Depression is a common complication of
schizophrenia
and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Contrary to traditional clinical wisdom, depressive symptoms occur during all phases of
schizophrenia
and are not restricted to the postpsychotic period. In this review, the authors summarize current empirical research and offer a practical approach to the identification of depressive subtypes in
schizophrenia
. The following subtypes are considered: (1) depressive symptoms occurring secondary to organic factors (caused by medications, substance abuse, or underlying medical problems); (2) nonorganic depressive symptoms occurring with acute psychotic symptoms (intrinsic to the acute psychotic episode or schizoaffective disorder); and (3) nonorganic depressive symptoms occurring without acute psychotic symptoms (prodromal symptoms, negative symptoms, acute
dysphoria
, secondary depressive syndrome, or chronic demoralization). The authors discuss each of these entities and offer guidelines for diagnosis.
...
PMID:Depressive symptoms in schizophrenia: comprehensive differential diagnosis. 305 27
The comorbidity of depression and borderline disorder was studied in 39 symptomatic borderline inpatients defined by the Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines using three independent methods for assessing depression and three definitions of depression. Evaluations were conducted by the Schedule for Affective Disorders and
Schizophrenia
interviews for Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) depressive disorders, by clinical ratings for atypical depressive disorder, and by self-rated questionnaires for hysteroid
dysphoria
. Diagnoses of an RDC depression were made in 25 (64.1%), atypical depressive disorder in 16 (41%), and hysteroid
dysphoria
in 25 (64.1%) of the borderline patients. Two depressive diagnoses were present in 64.1% of patients, while 17.9% of patients met criteria for all three depressive disorders. No one method accurately characterized depression in borderline patients.
...
PMID:Characterizing depression in borderline patients. 355 27
New uses are still being discovered for a number of psychotropic agents that have been available for some time. Among the more important recent discoveries are the efficacy of the tricyclic antidepressants for panic disorder and agoraphobia with panic attacks; the use of the monoamine oxidase inhibitors for the above disorders and for atypical depression and hysteroid
dysphoria
; the use of propranolol for anxiety disorders and for uncontrollable violent outbursts; the antianxiety and antipanic effects of clonidine; and the usefulness of lithium in treating
schizophrenia
and schizoaffective disorder and for emotionally unstable character disorders. In addition to strengthening the therapeutic armamentarium, the author says, the discovery of new drug response patterns helps generate or strengthen hypotheses about the pathophysiology of various psychiatric disorders.
...
PMID:Newer uses for older psychotropic medications. 612 38
The phenomenology of 96 depressive paroxysms in 56 preschool and early school age children suffering from paroxysmal
schizophrenia
and cyclothymia was studied. It was concluded that the major characteristics of child depressions included their "masked" character with the prevalence of ideational disturbances and the predominance of anxiety and fear, a tendency toward excessive fearfulness, rarity and naivity of self-condemnation ideas, a pronounced nature of the dysphoric mood tone, a tendency toward paroxysmal episodes of fear,
dysphoria
, restlessness, somatoalgetic crises, changeable nature of depressive symptomatology, its liability to environmental influence, a peculiar diurnal rhythm of affect, and a reactive nature of the development of depressive disturbances. Six clinical variants of endogenous depression in children were identified.
...
PMID:[Endogenous depression in children]. 665 86
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