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

The aggression theory of schizophrenia is a psychoanalytic theory which proposes that schizophrenia results from uncontrolled, deprivation-induced aggressive impulses. An animal model of the aggression theory is presented using predatory aggression as the source of arousal. Although neurochemical control of predatory aggression is nonspecific, anatomic control is located in the lateral hypothalamus across species. The lateral hypothalamus also controls schedule-induced polydipsia which has been implicated in schizophrenia. The aggression theory could be empirically evaluated by determining if schizophrenics respond differently than normals to scheduled feedings. Implications of the aggression theory are discussed.
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PMID:The aggression theory of schizophrenia: revisited. 155 5

Carbamazepine-induced hyponatremia has been reported in 21.7% of 61 patients with mental retardation who received the medication for a variety of reasons. We studied 40 patients with mental retardation receiving carbamazepine to determine the prevalence of hyponatremia. Overall, hyponatremia was found in only 5.0% of these patients. Correlations with sodium level and carbamazepine dose, serum drug level, and concomitant neuroleptic and anticonvulsant polytherapy were also examined. Treatment with carbamazepine resulted in a statistically, but not clinically, significant decrease in serum sodium levels in patients receiving anticonvulsant polytherapy. Decreases in serum sodium were not related to carbamazepine dose or blood levels. Only one patient with underlying schizophrenia and psychogenic polydipsia demonstrated clinically significant hyponatremia during carbamazepine therapy.
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PMID:Carbamazepine-induced hyponatremia in patients with mental retardation. 156 11

Many mentally ill patients, particularly those with schizophrenia, have idiopathic or medication-induced disorders of water balance, which include excessive water intake, excessive water excretion, and impaired water excretion. Patients with these disorders manifest polydipsia and polyuria with or without symptomatic hyponatremia (low serum sodium concentration). Other serious sequelae include life-threatening water intoxication. The author reviews the physiology of normal water balance and the mechanism, causes, clinical presentation, and diagnosis of disorders of water balance. Interventions must first focus on identifying reversible factors. Medication-induced water imbalance can usually be reversed without compromising treatment of the underlying psychiatric disorder. A fully effective treatment for idiopathic polydipsia has not been found, although providing optimal treatment for the underlying psychiatric disorder often helps. Monitoring changes in body weight, in conjunction with measures of serum sodium, prevents water intoxication.
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PMID:A rational approach to disorders of water balance in psychiatric patients. 157 22

A 34-year-old black male with hemoglobin AS was admitted for renal failure, polydipsia, hypertension, schizophrenia, mental confusion, and visual hallucinations. Abnormal electrolytes were corrected by dialysis, but blood specimens were reported as hemolyzed with hyperkalemia. Peaked T waves on electrocardiographic analysis were followed by cardiac arrest. An autopsy revealed sickled cells in the visual cortex and other symptomatic organs, but normal erythrocytes in most of the vascular tree. These findings suggest true progressive sickle cell crisis in a hemoglobin AS patient.
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PMID:Crisis in sickle cell trait. 186 94

A cross-sectional survey of the drinking habits of 877 mentally handicapped in-patients revealed 31 patients (prevalence 3.5%) who, in the opinion of nurses, drank five litres or more daily. Low urine specific gravity was a less useful indicator of polydipsia. Polydipsia appeared to be significantly associated with a borderline level of handicap and with a diagnosis of schizophrenia, autism or severe personality/behaviour disorder. Of five cases of water intoxication associated with polydipsia, one was fatal. In two cases excess drinking improved with increased neuroleptic medication. Lithium and demeclocycline were used in two cases to prevent hyponatraemic episodes.
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PMID:Intoxicated by water. Polydipsia and water intoxication in a mental handicap hospital. 175 59

In a long-term psychiatric setting, self-induced water intoxication may be a life-threatening situation. At first glance, the symptoms or behaviors of self-induced water intoxication are similar to schizophrenia, i.e., inappropriate behavior, delusions, hallucinations, confusion, and disorientation. In some cases, the symptoms of water intoxication mimic schizophrenia and thus, are disguised as a part of the psychoses. Affected individuals develop polydipsia, which is accompanied by overhydration and dilutional hyponatremia. If untreated, the symptoms may progress from mild confusion to acute delirium, seizures, coma, or death (Ripley, Millson, & Koczapski, 1989). Under normal circumstances there is a delicate balance of water requirement and water intake. If the balance of water is altered, electrolyte imbalance can occur. The recognition of water intoxication or self-induced water intoxication and psychosis among chronic, institutionalized patients may prevent their death or the development of neurological damage (Arieff, 1985). Because self-induced water intoxication often goes unrecognized in its early stages and may have irreversible or fatal complications, early detection is crucial. This article will discuss the etiology, nursing assessment, and interventions associated with patients suffering from self-induced water intoxication.
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PMID:The water-intoxicated patient. 226 Aug 89

Among patients with psychiatric disorders, especially schizophrenia, a pattern of extreme polydipsia and polyuria sometimes emerges, usually without readily identifiable medical causes. Hyponatremia may develop and progress to water intoxication, with symptoms including restlessness, confusion, seizures, or even death. We review the clinical features and pathophysiology of this syndrome and discuss nursing roles in identifying and managing patients with polydipsia and hyponatremia. While the causes of polydipsia and hyponatremia are unclear, relevant factors seem to include a possible dysfunction in central nervous system (CNS) thirst and osmoregulatory centers, the inappropriate secretion of or sensitivity to antidiuretic hormone (ADH), and psychoactive drugs. Management techniques for affected patients concentrate on careful observation, fluid restriction, and the minimization of possible exacerbating factors such as high neuroleptic dosage and cigarette consumption.
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PMID:Polydipsia and hyponatremia in psychiatric patients: challenge to creative nursing care. 235 13

As most diet therapy texts provide little information about psychiatric illnesses and their treatment, this article is intended as a brief introduction for dietitians. Several psychiatric illnesses, including schizophrenia, mood disorders, eating disorders, and substance abuse, may adversely affect food intake and nutritional status. The drugs used to treat those disorders similarly have effects on appetite and gastrointestinal function and interact with food and nutrients. Antipsychotics, antidepressants, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) cause dry mouth, constipation, and weight gain. Lithium may cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, polydipsia, and weight gain. MAOIs have well-known interactions with foods containing tyramine. Lithium interacts with dietary sodium and caffeine; decreasing dietary intakes of those substances may produce lithium toxicity. Despite claims to the contrary, major psychiatric illnesses cannot be cured by nutritional therapies alone. Dietitians can, however, play an important role as part of a multidisciplinary team in the treatment of patients with psychiatric illness. Such a role includes nutrition assessment and monitoring, nutrition interventions, patient and staff education, and some forms of psychotherapy, including supportive and behavioral therapies for patients with eating disorders.
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PMID:Nutritional aspects of psychiatric disorders. 267 98

Nine patients (seven men and two women, mean age 36.3 +/- SD 6.7 years), six of whom had schizophrenic disorders, two of whom had bipolar disorder (manic-depressive illness), and one of whom had schizoaffective disorder, manifested psychosis, intermittent hyponatremia, and polydipsia (PIP syndrome). Their stable pattern of hyposthenuria allowed us to predict 24-hr urinary volume on the basis of estimated daily urinary creatinine and early morning urinary creatinine concentration. Lithium and carbamazepine (Tegretol) had little, if any, effect on polyuria. Correlations of parameters of urinary excretion with serum osmolality among our nine PIP patients failed to implicate water consumption as the exclusive cause of serum hypoosmolality and attendant complications usually ascribed to "water toxicity" in the PIP syndrome. Discussed, also, is the overlap of the clinical and laboratory features of the PIP syndrome with the clinical and laboratory features of both diabetes insipidus and the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis.
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PMID:Correlation of parameters of urinary excretion with serum osmolality among patients with psychosis, intermittent hyponatremia, and polydipsia (PIP syndrome). 339 94

Of 2201 psychiatric patients in public facilities in a single metropolitan area evaluated for polydipsia, 34 (1.5%) were found to have a history of self-induced water intoxication. Among them, they had 101 episodes of water intoxication. Their mean age was 48.2 years, and they were predominantly white. Most had the primary diagnosis of schizophrenia. Compared with a matched control group, they had received more multiple courses of ECT but there were no significant differences in their use of psychotropic medications. Among nonpsychiatric medications, only phenytoin sodium and hydrochlorothiazide showed a trend toward significance.
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PMID:Self-induced water intoxication: a comparison of 34 cases with matched controls. 372 33


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