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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The author examined 60 patients with attack-form
schizophrenia
whose clinical picture was predominantly characterized by definite compulsions (dromomania, kleptomania, suicidomania, homicidomania, compulsive sexual disturbances,
compulsion
in relation to eating).
Compulsions
were most often first manifested at the age of 14 to 30 years. The results have shown that in the majority of cases compulsions developed in the presence of affective states in the form of melancholic, dysphoric, apathetic or adynamic depression, less commonly in the structure of affective delirious syndromes.
...
PMID:[Psychopathology and clinical picture of impulsive tendencies during schizophrenia]. 342 83
In a sample of 120 long-stay in-patients who fulfilled DSM-III-R criteria for
schizophrenia
, chronic akathisia and pseudoakathisia were relatively common, with prevalence figures of 24% and 18%, respectively. Compared with patients without evidence of chronic akathisia, those patients with the condition were significantly younger, were receiving significantly higher doses of antipsychotic medication, and were more likely to be receiving a depot antipsychotic. Patients who experienced the characteristic inner restlessness and
compulsion
to move of akathisia also reported marked symptoms of dysphoria, namely tension, panic, irritability and impatience. The findings support the suggestion that dysphoric mood is an important feature of akathisia. Male patients appeared to be at an increased risk of pseudoakathisia. No significant relation was found between chronic akathisia and tardive dyskinesia, although there was a trend for trunk and limb dyskinesia to be commonest in patients with chronic akathisia while orofacial dyskinesia was most frequently observed in those with pseudoakathisia. Akathisia may mask the movements of tardive dyskinesia in the lower limb. There was no evidence that akathisia was associated with positive or negative symptoms of
schizophrenia
nor with depression.
...
PMID:Akathisia: prevalence and associated dysphoria in an in-patient population with chronic schizophrenia. 790 11
A 13-year-old boy with psychotic, depressive, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms initially presented with auditory and visual hallucinations and a lifetime of excessive worries about contamination. Family history was significant for
schizophrenia
and
compulsive behavior
. When treated with clomipramine 100 mg daily (plasma level 85 ng/mL), obsessive-compulsive symptoms but not the hallucinations improved significantly, and racing thoughts and grandiosity developed later. Haloperidol 0.5 mg daily reduced the psychotic symptoms but was poorly tolerated, and then trifluoperazine 3 mg daily was ineffective, so clomipramine was discontinued (without worsening of OCD symptoms). Trifluoperazine in combination with lithium 1500 mg daily (0.9 meq/L), and then with the addition of carbamazepine 250 mg daily (3.7 micrograms/mL), was only partially helpful. Dose reductions in any medication led to increased psychotic symptoms within days. Trifluoperazine was then replaced by risperidone 3 mg twice daily. Within 2 weeks of starting risperidone, psychotic symptoms ceased but the patient experienced an incapacitating exacerbation of obsessive-compulsive symptoms, experiencing the most severe symptoms in his illness. Sertraline 50 mg reduced the OCD symptoms only briefly. After 5 months on risperidone, risperidone and sertraline were discontinued, and the obsessive-compulsive symptoms significantly decreased within 2 weeks. These clinical observations suggest that even when risperidone has a therapeutic antipsychotic effect, it may exacerbate obsessive-compulsive symptoms in predisposed adolescents.
...
PMID:Differential response of psychotic and obsessive symptoms to risperidone in an adolescent. 923 6
Freud's intrapersonal concept of anal-sadistic regression is set against the interpretation of obsessive-compulsive neurosis as a structural ego deficit. The interpersonal dimension that comes to the fore as a result of this, becomes clear if we focus on obsessive-compulsive behavioral disorder: Persons suffering from obsessive-compulsive neurosis lack the self-assessment factor. It needs another person as part of their own ego who accepts and supports them in their behavior. A clinical example illustrates this narcissistic function of
compulsion
together with the changes in the psychodynamic approach and resulting therapy. Against DSM-classification with the concept of obsessive-compulsive disorder, which contains an unspecific symptomatology that occurs both in neurosis,
schizophrenia
, melancholia, and organic psychosis, this article advocates the specific and differentiated concept of obsessive-compulsive neurosis.
...
PMID:The narcissistic function in obsessive-compulsive neurosis. 1129 Nov 92
The purpose of the present study was to investigate gender-related sociodemographic and clinical differences among Turkish patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). A total of 169 patients diagnosed with OCD by DSM-III-R or DSM-IV criteria were included in this study. Male (n = 73) and female (n = 96) OCD patients were compared with respect to the demographic variables and the scores obtained from the Hamilton Rating Scale for Anxiety (HRSA), the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) and the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS). We found a significantly earlier age at onset in male patients. No significant difference in terms of HARS, HDRS, and Y-BOCS scores was detected between the two groups. We observed a significantly higher frequency of contamination obsessions in females, and that of aggression and sexual obsessions in males. There was no significant difference in terms of the frequency of compulsions between the two groups. We also found that
compulsion
severity on obsessions/compulsions was higher in females and comorbidity rates of social phobia and
schizophrenia
were higher in males. Considering our results in combination with those of other studies, similarities rather than differences in gender-related sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of OCD patients across different populations seem to be present.
...
PMID:Gender-related differences among Turkish patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder. 1533 99
The messy house syndrome (Diogenes syndrome) is present when, owing to a disordering of the personality structure, a person is unable to keep order, for example, in the household or his finances. Such persons are also referred to as "messies". Useless objects are hoarded in such quantities that the apartment can no longer be lived in. In many cases, the disorder is due to an underlying mental problem such as dementia,
schizophrenia
, ADHS or obsessive-compulsive disorders. The Prader-Willi syndrome is also associated with an unusual
compulsion
to hoard things or food. In the first instance, treatment is aimed at the underlying condition (neuroleptic agents, SSRI). New studies appear to suggest that the particular concomitant cognitive and emotional disturbances associated with hoarding respond to cognitive behavioral therapy.
...
PMID:[Messy house syndrome]. 1558 Nov 3
This study was conducted to compare attitudes of psychiatrists, other professionals, and laypeople towards compulsory admission and treatment of patients with
schizophrenia
in different European countries. Three case reports of patients with
schizophrenia
were presented to N=1,737 persons: 235 in England, 622 in Germany, 319 in Hungary, and 561 in Switzerland; 298 were psychiatrists, 687 other psychiatric or medical professionals, and 752 laypeople. The case reports presented typical clinical situations with refusal of consent to treatment (first episode and social withdrawal, recurrent episode and moderate danger to others and patient with multiple episodes and severe self-neglect). The participants were asked whether they would agree with compulsory admission and compulsory neuroleptic treatment. The rates of agreement varied between 50.8 and 92.1% across countries and between 41.1 and 93.6% across the different professional groups. In all countries, psychologists and social workers supported compulsory procedures significantly less than the psychiatrists who were in tune with laypeople and nurses. Country differences were highly significant showing more agreement with
compulsion
in Hungary and England and less in Germany and Switzerland (odds ratios up to 4.33). Own history of mental illness and having mentally ill relatives had no major impact on the decisions. Evidence suggests that compulsory procedures are based on traditions and personal attitudes to a considerable degree. Further research should provide empirical data and more definite criteria for indications of compulsive measures to achieve a common ethical framework for those critical decisions across Europe.
...
PMID:Compulsory admission and treatment in schizophrenia: a study of ethical attitudes in four European countries. 1613 46
A substantial proportion of
schizophrenia
patients also exhibit obsessive-compulsive symptoms (OCS). We sought to determine whether the revealed symptom dimensions in OCD exist in
schizophrenia
patients with comorbid OCD. One hundred and ten patients who met DSM-IV criteria for both
schizophrenia
and OCD were recruited. Exploratory factor analysis of the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) checklist was conducted. The inter-relationship between the resulting factors and
schizophrenia
symptom dimensions, as assessed by the Schedule for the Assessment of Positive (SAPS) and Negative (SANS) Symptoms, was examined. The principal component analysis of 13 Y-BOCS checklist categories yielded a five-factor solution and accounted for 58.7% of the total variance: (1) aggressive, sexual, religious obsessions and counting, (2) symmetry and ordering/hoarding compulsions, (3) contamination and cleaning, (4) somatic obsession and repeating
compulsion
, (5) hoarding obsession and checking/repeating compulsions. The Y-BOCS symptom dimensions did not correlate with
schizophrenia
symptom dimensions. The five symptom dimensions are comparable to those revealed in "pure" OCD, and suggest the involvement of universal mechanisms in the pathogenesis of OCD regardless of the presence of
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Obsessive-compulsive symptom dimensions in schizophrenia patients with comorbid obsessive-compulsive disorder. 1944 55
This review gives an overview of those in vivo imaging studies on synaptic neurotransmission, which so far have been performed on patients with mental and affective disorders. Thereby, the focus is on disease-related deficiencies within the functional entities of the dopaminergic, serotonergic, cholinergic, histaminergic, glutamatergic, or GABAergic synapse. So far, in vivo investigations have yielded rather inconsistent results on the dysfunctions of specific synaptic constituents in the pathophysiology of the diseases covered by this overview. Among the more congruent results are the findings of increased synthesis (8 out of a total of 12 reports) and release of dopamine (4 out of 4 reports) in the striatum of schizophrenic patients, which supports the dopamine hypothesis of
schizophrenia
. Results on both dopaminergic and serotonergic neurotransmission are inconsistent in both major depressive disorder and bipolar illness, and fail to clearly agree with the dopamine and/or serotonin hypothesis of depression. The majority of in vivo findings suggest no alterations (25 out of a total of 50 reports on serotonin synthesis, transporter as well as receptor binding) rather than a deficiency (merely 13 out of these 50 reports) of cortical serotonergic neurotransmission in major depression, whereas a decrease of cortical serotonergic neurotransmission (3 out of a total on 5 reports) can be assumed in bipolar illness. In borderline personality disorder, an increased binding of serotonin transporter binding was observed (merely 1 report). Due to the limited evidence, this result only with due caution may be interpreted as an indication for increased availability of serotonin in the synaptic cleft. Patients with Tourette syndrome exhibited increases of DAT binding in the neostriatum (5 out of 10 reports) increases of dopamine storage and dopamine release in the ventral striatum (1 report, each). Moreover, striatal D2 receptor binding was found to be decreased in advanced stages of the disease. Results, tentatively, may be interpreted in terms of an increased dopaminergic neurotransmission in the mesolimbic system. There is limited evidence of decreased dopamine synthesis in both children and adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (4 out of a total of 10 reports). These findings as well as the reduction of striatal dopamine release observed in adults (merely 1 report) are in line with the notion of mesocortical dopaminergic hypofunction in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Thereby, however, in children, results on dopamine synthesis indicate a deficiency in the ventral tegmentum rather than in the prefrontal cortex, whereas, with increasing age, the prefrontal cortex rather than the sites of origin of DAergic innervation become predominantly affected (merely 1 report, each). In anxiety disorders, varying results have been obtained for both pre- and/or postsynaptic dopaminergic, serotonergic and GABAergic binding sites. Thereby, results on posttraumatic stress disorder are homogenous reporting a decrease of GABA A receptor binding in all investigated brain regions including striatum, thalamus, neocortex and limbic system (2 out of 2 reports, each). Moreover, patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder displayed increases of dopamine transporter binding (2 out of 4 reports) and decreases of both D1 (merely 1 report) and D2 receptor binding (4 out of 5 reports), respectively. These findings, tentatively, may be interpreted in terms of an increased availability of synaptic dopamine in the neostriatum, which is compensated for both pre- and postsynaptically by increasing dopamine reuptake into the presynaptic terminal, and decreasing (inhibitory) signal transduction of efferent fibers. The observed reduction of GABA A receptor binding in frontocortical neurons (in 11 out of a total of 21 reports on anxiety disorders) is in line with this assumption. The inconsistency (and, partially, also incompleteness) of in vivo findings on mental and affective disorders constitutes a major result of this overview. Discrepancies indicate that the regulation state of synaptic constituents may not only vary between the subtypes of disorders but also between subject cohorts and, even, individual patients depending on variables such as the predominance of symptoms, medication status or onset and duration of disease. This, for the time being, limits the application of in vivo imaging methods for differential diagnosis of mental and affective disorders. In vivo imaging results on anxiety disorders, however, are of possible interest with regard to psychoanalysis, as they offer a neurochemical correlate for Freud's theories on the pathogenesis of anxiety- and
compulsion
-related disorders.
...
PMID:In vivo imaging of synaptic function in the central nervous system: II. Mental and affective disorders. 1952 95
The presence of obsessive compulsive symptoms (OCSs) in
schizophrenia
was recognized as early as the first descriptions of the illness. Studies investigating the association between OCSs and
schizophrenia
have defined their co-occurrence in terms of co-morbidity and compared
schizophrenia
patients separated into groups according to whether they presented OCSs or not. However, most of these studies did not take both the complexity of the
schizophrenia
phenomenology and that of OCSs into account. The present research investigates the relationship between
schizophrenia
symptoms and OCSs using a correlational approach with a dimensional perspective in order to determine how the OCSs contribute to symptom expression in
schizophrenia
. Fifty nine
schizophrenia
patients were rated for
schizophrenia
symptoms (SAPS-SANS) and OCSs (Y-BOCS).
Schizophrenia
symptoms scores were collapsed into four dimensional scores and OCSs into for other dimensional scores. The latter were entered as explanatory variables to determine their associations with
schizophrenia
dimension scores using series of stepwise regression models. The results showed a strong positive relationship between Delusions and Obsessions consistent with the view that they reflect manifestations of the similar mechanisms. Similar results indicate an association between Auditory hallucinations and
Compulsions
also suggesting that they share common mechanisms. On the other hand, there were inverse relationships between Somatic Obsessions and Disorganization and between Hoarding/Collecting
Compulsions
and Delusions or Auditory hallucinations. These results may reflect that these OCSs have a protective effect against disorganization and psychotic symptoms respectively.
...
PMID:Relationship between psychotic and obsessive compulsive symptoms in schizophrenia. 1956 Mar 21
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