Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Most descriptive studies of the psychopathology of schizophrenia have focused on the period following illness onset. Little attention has been paid to the assessment of psychopathology before onset of psychotic symptoms. In this study, 71 first-hospitalization patients diagnosed with schizophrenia, schizoaffective, or schizophreniform disorder using DSM-III-R criteria were assessed on measures of premorbid adjustment, clinical history, and presenting symptomatology. A pattern of progressive decline was characteristic of 21 percent of the cases--primarily males with a long-term history of psychotic symptoms before first hospitalization and a trend for more severe negative symptoms at hospital admission. Patients who had a stable pattern of good premorbid adjustment experienced symptom onset and first hospitalization at a later age than those with a chronically poor premorbid adjustment. Time from onset of first psychotic symptom to first hospitalization varied from less than 1 month to over 20 years and was not associated with symptom severity or age of first psychotic symptoms. Systematic characterization of the earliest manifestations of schizophrenia may be important in identifying subgroups of patients with a similar course of illness, and may ultimately facilitate diagnosis, treatment, and understanding of the pathophysiology of schizophrenia.
...
PMID:Premorbid and onset features of first-episode schizophrenia. 141 28

Reactive psychosis is a common diagnosis in the Nordic countries (Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Iceland) and in several other parts of the world. In ICD-9 and DSM-III-R, the concept is defined more narrowly than in the Nordic tradition. In this study we examined the interrater reliability of the Nordic concept by the case-summary method between clinicians from 9 university departments in the Nordic countries. The results show that Nordic psychiatrists have a reasonably reliable concept of reactive psychosis, and that this psychosis can be diagnosed as reliably as schizophrenia and affective psychosis.
...
PMID:The Nordic concept of reactive psychosis--a multicenter reliability study. 141 2

Thirty cases of post-partum psychotic disorders occurred between 1973 and 1987 and hospitalized at the Psychiatric Ward of Florence University were studied and followed up. A structured diagnostic interview was used, which explored DSM Ill-R diagnosis both for mood disorders and for psychotic features. The psychotic symptoms had started within 8 weeks of parturition in all cases. Only 36.7% of the patients showed no subsequent pathology after the puerperal symptoms. The diagnoses, both at the index episode and at the follow-up, revealed a great predominance of mood disorders and the absence of schizophrenia. The follow-up survey showed a greater proportion of bipolar disorders than it appeared at the puerperal onset of the disease. A high frequency of puerperal psychotic relapses has also occurred after subsequent deliveries during the follow-up period.
...
PMID:Puerperal psychoses: a clinical case study with follow-up. 143 Jun 65

Several recent studies have examined the manner in which social information is processed in an attempt to better understand the interpersonal functioning deficits of schizophrenia. In this study, the manner in which schizophrenic subjects represent social information, and the relationships between these social representations and measures of information processing, are examined. Specifically, 30 DSM-IIIR patients with schizophrenia and 15 normal controls were assessed on measures of social schema processing, information processing, and symptomatology. Results showed that schizophrenic patients earned significantly lower schema processing scores than the normal comparison group. Schema deficits of the schizophrenic group were significantly associated with recall memory and vigilance. These findings suggest that deficits in the representation of social information provides a unique perspective for understanding the interpersonal dysfunctions of schizophrenia.
...
PMID:Deficits in social schemata in schizophrenia. 145 91

The National Adult Reading Test (NART) has achieved popularity as a measure of pre-morbid intellectual ability, based on the premises that pronunciation of irregular words is unaffected in many clinical disorders and that performance is highly correlated with general intellectual ability. Recently, schizophrenia research studies have begun to appear in the literature, where the NART has been used to estimate pre-morbid ability. However, this use has preceded the basic required demonstration that, in fact, NART performance is unaffected by the schizophrenic process. In the present study, NART performance was compared across three groups; 20 acutely ill unmedicated DSM-IIIR schizophrenics, 10 other unmedicated acute psychotics, and 20 control subjects. When demographic variability between the groups was controlled for, there were no group differences in terms of NART performance. NART performance was not correlated with Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale scores, and in all three groups, no significant differences emerged when demographically predicted intelligence quotients were compared with NART estimated intelligence quotients. NART performance (predicted on the basis of demographic variables) was not significantly different from observed NART performance in any of the three experimental groups. However, within the sample with schizophrenia, NART estimated pre-morbid IQ was significantly higher than currently measured intellectual abilities. These results suggest that the National Adult Reading Test provides a reasonable estimate of pre-morbid ability in acutely ill, unmedicated schizophrenic patients.
...
PMID:Selecting controls for schizophrenia research studies: the use of the National Adult Reading Test (NART) is a measure of premorbid ability. 145 92

Standardized structured interview personality scales are now available that provide better reliability than clinician interview, but are still imperfect. These scales diagnose DSM III-R personality disorders, which are more illness-oriented than Freudian notions. Use of these scales has found that the majority of patients with OCD have at least one Axis II personality disorder, with most falling in cluster C. Obsessive compulsive personality disorder, as described in DSM-III-R, is, in most samples studied, present in the minority of patients with OCD, and is often less common than other personality disorders such as mixed, dependent, avoidant, and histrionic. The prevalence of this personality disorder as modified in DSM-III-R (making it easier for a patient to qualify for this personality disorder diagnosis) appears to be higher, although still present in a minority of patients with OCD. Obsessive compulsive personality disorder (along with the other cluster B and C personality disorders) has not been reported to have a consistent relation to treatment outcome. There is evidence that in some cases, obsessive compulsive personality disorder may be secondary to OCD. Swedo et al hypothesized that some children may develop compulsive personality traits as an adaptive mechanism to deal with OCD. This hypothesis is in accord with our finding that OCD often predates compulsive personality disorder and that mixed personality disorder may develop over time, possibly secondary to OCD. We found in our sample of 96 adult patients with OCD that the presence of mixed personality disorder was more likely with longer duration of OCD, suggesting that patients who do not have premorbid personality disorders may develop significant personality traits (especially avoidant, compulsive, and dependent), which may be related to behavioral and life-style changes that are secondary to OCD. This hypothesis is strengthened by our finding that patients with one of these personality disorders at baseline tended to no longer meet criteria for them following successful treatment of their OCD. It now appears that schizotypal personality disorder, which is thought to be related genetically to schizophrenia (e.g., in three male identical twin pairs concordant for OCD but discordant for schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, the nonpsychotic co-twins all had schizotypal personality disorder), is the only consistent personality disorder predictor of poorer outcome in OCD. These traits may help explain other proposed poor predictors of treatment outcome such as overvalued beliefs, poor compliance, and chaotic family situations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Personality disorders in obsessive compulsive disorder. 146 97

The relationship between premorbid schizoid traits and the positive and negative symptoms assessed by the Andreasen's SANS and SAPS scales was studied in a sample of 115 DSM-III-R schizophrenics. For the assessment of the schizoid traits the abbreviated Philip's scale of premorbid social-personal adjustment was employed. Negative symptoms, excepting the attentional scale, but no positive symptoms were significantly correlated (p < or = .01) with the Philips's scale. These results suggest that the schizoid traits are the behavioral precursors of schizophrenic negative symptoms. The implications of the results for the genetic and vulnerability/stress models of schizophrenia are discussed.
...
PMID:[Premorbid adjustment and negative schizophrenic symptoms]. 146 7

Delta sleep-inducing-peptide (DSIP) has been reported to increase sleep in subjects with insomnia. The authors studied cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) DSIP-like immunoreactivity (DSIP-LI) in 15 drug-free male subjects with a DSM-IIIR diagnosis of schizophrenia. The subjects underwent a lumbar puncture and three nights of polysomnography. CSF DSIP-LI was significantly correlated with polysomnography the night before the LP: with stage 3 sleep (p = 0.05), stage 3 and delta (stages 3 + 4) sleep during the first nonrapid eye movement NREM period (p = 0.02 and p = 0.05, respectively) and the ratio of the first and second NREM period (p < 0.05), and negatively with stage 2% sleep (p < 0.05). Whether this first report of a potential relationship between CSF DSIP-LI and slow-wave sleep in man might be generalized to sleep in nonpsychiatric subjects awaits further study.
...
PMID:Delta sleep-inducing-peptide-like immunoreactivity (DSIP-LI) and delta sleep in schizophrenic volunteers. 147 66

Over a period of 3 years, 340 patients (199 men and 141 women) who met DSM-III-R criteria for schizophrenia and who knew their exact date of birth were interviewed to determine the age at onset of illness. The immediate family's first awareness of psychotic symptoms was used as the index of onset. Men had a significantly earlier mean age at onset (24 +/- 6) than the women (27 +/- 8). By the time they were 30 years of age, 83% of the men and 66% of the women had become ill. The findings are remarkably similar to those of an earlier report in the same cultural setting, and add to the evidence of sex differences in age at onset of schizophrenia.
...
PMID:Age at onset in a cohort of schizophrenics in Nigeria. 148 21

A follow-up and family study was carried out of 16 first episode, DSM-III-R schizophreniform disorder patients with good prognostic features. Mean length of follow-up was 52.3 months. It was found that 62.5% had affective episodes, 31.2% had schizophreniform episodes. No case of schizophrenia was observed. Outcome was good. Morbid risk for affective disorder among first degree relatives was 25%, morbid risk for schizophrenia was 0%. These findings suggest a link between DSM-III-R schizophreniform disorder with good prognostic features and affective disorder, and no relationship with schizophrenia.
...
PMID:A follow-up and family study of DSM-III-R schizophreniform disorder with good prognostic features. 148


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>