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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Violent
behaviour has a strong association with antisocial personality disorder (APD) and
schizophrenia
. Although developments in the understanding of socio-environmental factors associated with violence should not be ignored, advances in prevention and treatment of violent behaviour would benefit by improved understanding of its neurobiological and cognitive basis. The authors, therefore, investigated prepulse inhibition (PPI) of the startle response in APD and
schizophrenia
in relation to a history of serious violence. The neural substrates of PPI, especially the hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus and basal ganglia, are implicated in violence as well as in APD and
schizophrenia
. The study included four groups: (i) patients with APD and a history of violence, (ii) patients with
schizophrenia
and a history of violence, (iii) patients with
schizophrenia
without a history of violence, and (iv) healthy subjects with no history of violence or a mental disorder. All subjects were assessed identically on acoustic PPI. Compared to healthy subjects, significantly reduced PPI occurred in APD, violent
schizophrenia
and non-violent
schizophrenia
patients. Although PPI did not significantly differentiate the three clinical groups, high ratings of violence were modestly associated with reduced PPI across the entire study sample.
Violent
patients with impulsive and premeditated violence showed comparable PPI. The association between violent behaviour and impaired PPI suggests that neural structures and functions underlying PPI are implicated in (inhibition of) violence.
...
PMID:Association between violent behaviour and impaired prepulse inhibition of the startle response in antisocial personality disorder and schizophrenia. 1568 Feb 3
Previous research has reported cognitive impairment in patients with
schizophrenia
and antisocial personality disorder (APD), the two psychiatric illnesses most implicated in violent behaviour. Previous studies have focused on either group exclusively, and have been criticized for procedural inadequacies and sample heterogeneity. The authors investigated and compared neuropsychological profiles of individuals with APD and violent and nonviolent individuals with
schizophrenia
in a single investigation. The study involved four groups of subjects: (i) individuals with a history of serious violence and a diagnosis of APD, (ii) individuals with a history of violence and
schizophrenia
, (iii) individuals with
schizophrenia
without a history of violent behaviour and (iv) healthy control subjects. All study groups were compared on a neuropsychological battery designed to assess general intellectual function, executive function, attention, and processing speed. Cognitive deficits were more widespread among individuals with
schizophrenia
regardless of history of violence, compared with those with APD. Significant impairment in patients with APD was limited to processing speed.
Violent
individuals with
schizophrenia
demonstrated poorer performance than their nonviolent
schizophrenia
peers on a measure of executive function. Different cognitive impairments are manifested by individuals with APD and
schizophrenia
with violent behaviours, suggesting differences in underlying pathology. Furthermore, cognitive impairment appears to be more a feature of
schizophrenia
than of violent behaviour, although there is evidence that a combination of
schizophrenia
and violent behaviour is associated with greater cognitive deficits.
...
PMID:A neuropsychological investigation into violence and mental illness. 1569 49
Violent
and aggressive behavior in preschizophrenia adolescents has been described in several studies. Our aim was to investigate the extent to which violent conviction in late adolescence predicted later
schizophrenia
in a cohort of young criminals. We performed a 9-year register-based followup of a complete national cohort of young convicted criminals. A total of 780, 15- to 19-year-old subjects identified in 1992 were followed up in 2001 with register linkage of the Danish Psychiatric Central Register, the Danish National Criminal Register, and the Danish National Cause of Death Register. Analyses with Cox regression were performed to identify predictors of later
schizophrenia
. We found at followup that 3.3 percent of the cohort had been diagnosed with
schizophrenia
and 4.5 percent with any psychosis. Conviction of violence in late adolescence was significantly associated (odds ratio = 4.59 [95% confidence interval (1.54; 13.74)]) with future diagnosis of
schizophrenia
.
Violent
behavior can thus be seen as part of the preschizophrenia phase of young criminals.
...
PMID:Violence of young criminals predicts schizophrenia: a 9-year register-based followup of 15- to 19-year-old criminals. 1612 29
Violent
behavior is associated with antisocial personality disorder and to a lesser extent with
schizophrenia
. Neuroimaging studies have suggested that several biological systems are disturbed in
schizophrenia
, and structural changes in frontal and temporal lobe regions are reported in both antisocial personality disorder and
schizophrenia
. The neural substrates that underlie violent behavior specifically and their structural analogs, however, remain poorly understood. Nor is it known whether a common biological basis exists for aggressive, impulsive, and violent behavior across these clinical populations. To explore the correlates of violence with brain structure in antisocial personality disorder and
schizophrenia
, the authors used magnetic resonance imaging data to investigate for the first time, to the authors' knowledge, regional differences in cortical thickness in violent and nonviolent individuals with
schizophrenia
and/or antisocial personality disorder and in healthy comparison subjects. Subject groups included right-handed men closely matched for demographic variables (total number of subjects=56). Violence was associated with cortical thinning in the medial inferior frontal and lateral sensory motor cortex, particularly in the right hemisphere, and surrounding association areas (Brodmann's areas 10, 11, 12, and 32). Only violent subjects with antisocial personality disorder exhibited cortical thinning in inferior mesial frontal cortices. The biological underpinnings of violent behavior may therefore vary between these two violent subject groups in which the medial frontal cortex is compromised in antisocial personality disorder exclusively, but laminar abnormalities in sensorimotor cortices may relate to violent behavior in both antisocial personality disorder and
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Regional cortical thinning in subjects with violent antisocial personality disorder or schizophrenia. 1772 28
Violence committed by acute psychiatric inpatients represents an important and challenging problem in clinical practice. Sociodemographic, clinical, and treatment information were collected for 1324 patients (677 men and 647 women) admitted to Italian public and private acute psychiatric inpatient facilities during an index period in 2004, and the sample divided into 3 groups: nonhostile patients (no episodes of violent behavior during hospitalization), hostile patients (verbal aggression or violent acts against objects), and violent patients (authors of physical assault). Ten percent (N = 129) of patients showed hostile behavior during hospitalization and 3% (N = 37) physically assaulted other patients or staff members. Variables associated with violent behavior were: male gender, <24 years of age, unmarried status, receiving a disability pension, having a secondary school degree, compulsory admission, hostile attitude at admission, and a diagnosis of
schizophrenia
, bipolar disorder, personality disorder, mental retardation, organic brain disorder or substance/alcohol abuse.
Violent
behavior during hospitalization was a predictive factor for higher Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale scores and for lower Personal and Social Performance scale scores at discharge. Despite the low percentage of violent and hostile behavior observed in Italian acute inpatient units, this study shed light on a need for the careful assessment of clinical and treatment variables, and greater effort aimed at improving specific prevention and treatment programs of violent behavior.
...
PMID:Violent behavior in acute psychiatric inpatient facilities: a national survey in Italy. 1982 7
Violent
and suicidal behaviors are most serious mental health problems. In Japan, there are national mental health service systems for preventing violent and suicidal behaviors now: One is the Medical Control Law, which seems to aim at only treating
schizophrenia
as a mental health problem, and another is the Basic Act on Suicide Countermeasure, which seems to aim at treating depression. However, it is strange that these mental health policies have never referred to substance use problems including substance use disorder. In this paper, we reviewed previous studies on associations of substance use with violent and suicidal behaviors, and indicated that the importance of substance use problems for mental health promotion to prevent violent and suicidal behaviors may be overlooked, and denied by the Japanese mental health professionals.
...
PMID:[Associations of substance use with violent and suicidal behaviors]. 2038 40
The recent school shootings in Europe and the USA have raised the question of whether victims of bullying run an increased risk of committing violent crimes later in life, but scientific research in this area is scarce. The aim of this work was to investigate whether bullying behaviour is associated with later criminal offences committed in adolescence and young adulthood. We studied a sample of 508 Finnish adolescents (age 12-17 years) admitted to psychiatric inpatient care between April 2001 and March 2006. Data on crimes committed and the age of onset of criminal activity were extracted from the official criminal records of the national Legal Register Centre in October 2008. The Schedule for Affective Disorder and
Schizophrenia
for School-Age Children, Present and Lifetime (K-SADS-PL) was used to define bullying status, and to obtain DSM-IV-based psychiatric diagnoses for the adolescents.
Violent
crimes were statistically significantly associated with bullying behaviour, but not non-violent crimes. Furthermore, being a bully was predictive of an early onset of severe violent offences. When controlled for the psychiatric diagnoses of the adolescents, we observed decreased likelihood of criminality among victims. Thus bullying others may increase the risk of violent offences, while being a victim is not a risk factor for criminality.
...
PMID:Bullying behaviour and criminality: a population-based follow-up study of adolescent psychiatric inpatients in Northern Finland. 2094 34
Previous research has highlighted increased risk for
schizophrenia
in Afro-Caribbeans as well as over-representation in the prison population. This small-scale study examined the relationship between criminality, ethnicity, and psychosis-proneness in a male prison sample. Twenty British Caucasian and 20 Afro-Caribbean prisoners were divided into equal sub-groups of violent and non-violent offenders. Participants completed measures of schizotypy, delusional ideation, and hostility. Afro-Caribbean offenders scored more highly on negative schizotypy and delusional ideation than their Caucasian counterparts.
Violent
offenders scored more highly on the positive symptoms of schizotypy than non-violent prisoners. Both ethnicity and violent offending may be relevant factors when considering vulnerability to psychosis in the offending population.
...
PMID:Ethnicity, violent offending, and vulnerability to schizophrenia: a pilot study. 2290 6
Violent
offenders with
schizophrenia
have a particularly poor performance level in facial affect recognition. Nineteen male
schizophrenia
patients, who had been committed to psychiatric hospital detention because of violent offences and lack of criminal responsibility, were recruited to receive the Training of Affect Recognition (TAR). Performance in the Pictures of Facial Affect (PFA)-test and event-related potentials (ERPs) were registered in a pre-post-treatment design. TAR was feasible with a very high treatment effect (Cohen's d = 1.88), which persisted for 2 months post-treatment. ERPs remained unchanged post- vs. pre-treatment, while low resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (LORETA) revealed activation decreases in left-hemispheric parietal-temporal-occipital regions at 172 msec and activation increases in right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate at 250 msec. Possibly, violent offenders with
schizophrenia
are particularly amenable to TAR because of a high level of dysfunction at baseline. Post- vs. pre-treatment changes of neural activity (LORETA) may mirror a gain of efficiency in structural face decoding and a shift towards a more reflective mode of emotional face decoding, relying on increased frontal brain activity. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-fMRI) -data from another study further supports this notion. TAR treatment might enable subjects with
schizophrenia
and a disposition to violence to reach a higher degree of deliberation of their reactive behavior to facial affect stimuli.
...
PMID:Training of affect recognition in schizophrenia patients with violent offences: behavioral treatment effects and electrophysiological correlates. 2387 68
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe brain disease that is associated with a significant risk for suicide. Recent studies indicate that altitude of residence significantly affects overall rate of completed suicide, and is associated with a higher incidence of depressive symptoms. Bipolar disorder has shown to be linked to mitochondrial dysfunction that may increase the severity of episodes. The present study used existing data sets to explore the hypothesis that altitude has a greater effect of suicide in BD, compared with other mental illnesses. The study utilized data extracted from the National
Violent
Death Reporting System (NVDRS), a surveillance system designed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC). Data were available for 16 states for the years 2005-2008, representing a total of 35,725 completed suicides in 922 U.S. counties. Random coefficient and logistic regression models in the SAS PROC MIXED procedure were used to estimate the effect of altitude on decedent's mental health diagnosis. Altitude was a significant, independent predictor of the altitude at which suicides occurred (F=8.28, p=0.004 and Wald chi-square=21.67, p<0.0001). Least squares means of altitude, independent of other variables, indicated that individuals with BD committed suicide at the greatest mean altitude. Moreover, the mean altitude at which suicides occurred in BD was significantly higher than in decedents whose mental health diagnosis was major depressive disorder (MDD),
schizophrenia
, or anxiety disorder. Identifying diagnosis-specific risk factors such as altitude may aid suicide prevention efforts, and provide important information for improving the clinical management of BD.
...
PMID:Altitude is a risk factor for completed suicide in bipolar disorder. 2449 65
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