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

We established first-contact rates of schizophrenia in the defined area of Camberwell between 1965 and 1984. The rate of schizophrenia, whether defined by ICD, RDC, or DSM-III criteria, rose over the period under study. This finding is at odds with reports of an overall decline in first-admission rates for schizophrenia in England, over the same period. The discrepancy was largely accounted for by the influx into Camberwell of individuals of Afro-Caribbean origin, who showed rates of schizophrenia between four and eight times that of their Caucasian counterparts.
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PMID:The incidence of operationally defined schizophrenia in Camberwell, 1965-84. 152 96

Relationships between alcoholism and anxiety disorder are well known by clinicians. Studies have recently shown that the prevalence of alcohol abuse or dependence is very high in patients with panic disorder with or without agoraphobia (Thyer et al., 1986; Bibb and Chambless, 1986). The aims of this study were to determine the prevalence and comorbidity of alcohol abuse and dependence in a population of panic outpatients who were consecutive referrals for treatment of panic disorder (PD) in an anxiety clinic. Patients were interviewed with the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime Version Modified for the study of anxiety disorders (SADS-LA) which is a standardized and semi-structured interview allowing to make diagnoses according to RDC, DSM III and DSM III-R criteria. One hundred and three panic patients (39 males and 64 females) were included in the study. Their mean age was 38.5 years (SD: 11.6). In this sample, 24.3% met the DSM III-R criteria for alcohol abuse and 8.7% those for alcohol dependence. Among these patients, 26.2%, abused of benzodiazepines and 16.5% of them of other substances. We found a high comorbidity rate. In fact, 6.8% of the patients met diagnostic criteria for PD alone, 31.0% for one more diagnosis, 29.1% for two more and 33.0% for three or more besides PD. In this study, we found an association between alcohol abuse and the presence of a lifetime diagnosis of major depressive episode and/or other addictive behaviors. Otherwise, alcohol abuse did not occur more often in patients suffering from panic disorder associated with agoraphobia and/or social phobia.
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PMID:[Panic disorder and alcoholism]. 180 60

A polydiagnostic computerized diagnostic system for psychosis was used in a Swedish family complex, and 51 patients with psychiatric symptomatology were examined with eight main diagnostic systems for schizophrenia and three systems for schizophrenic subgroups. All patients fulfilled the criteria for schizophrenia according to Taylor et al., 50 according to Carpenter, 41 according to RDC, and 31 of the 51 according to DSM-III and DSM-III-R. The hypothesis that the patients in the Swedish family complex differ from other phenotypes of schizophrenia must be refuted based on the data of the present study.
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PMID:Clinical polydiagnostic studies in a large Swedish pedigree with schizophrenia. 182 6

Cognitive abnormality has long been regarded as a core feature of schizophrenia, but its nature and etiopathology have been poorly understood. Predicated on new tests that characterize fundamental cognitive impairments, we investigated their relationship to four neuroradiological markers that have been previously implicated in schizophrenia: choroid plexus calcification, cerebellar atrophy, third ventricle enlargement, and pineal calcification. Twenty-three chronic schizophrenic inpatients meeting RDC and DSM-III diagnostic criteria were stabilized on chlorpromazine and assessed independently on a cognitive battery and on CT scan. The results indicated that all four neuroradiological variables were independent of one another and of demographic, historical, and general intellectual measures. The neuroradiological assessments, however, correlated significantly with different cognitive parameters, implying separate pathophysiological bases for distinct profiles of cognitive abnormality. The findings support a "dual-process model" of cognitive dysfunction that posits developmental and arousal-related components which may, more generally, underlie the positive-negative dimension of schizophrenia.
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PMID:Neuroradiological facets of cognitive abnormality in schizophrenia. 193 77

Two hypotheses were tested concerning the nature of the cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia: (a) that there is a broadening of selective attention; and (b) that there is an impairment in associational learning. RDC-diagnosed acute and chronic schizophrenics and normal controls carried out a choice reaction time (RT) task in which conflict between the correct response to a target (a letter in the centre of a computer screen) and that cued by simultaneously presented flankers (two letters either side of the target) increased RT. For 80 ('valid') trials, flankers and targets were consistent in the response cued (pressing a button with either left or right hand); on 8 ('invalid') trials they conflicted. On invalid trials there was a slowing of RT, and an increase of errors for left-hand responses. Chronic schizophrenics showed the same reactions to cue validity as normal controls, both groups differing significantly from acute schizophrenics. For the latter, the RT data supported hypothesis (b), but the error rates appeared to support hypothesis (a).
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PMID:Contextual effects on choice reaction time and accuracy in acute and chronic schizophrenics. Impairment in selective attention or in the influence of prior learning? 195 53

Thirty-two epileptic patients with RDC diagnoses of schizophrenia were tested for handedness on the Annett Handedness Schedule, and handedness was assigned on the basis of Annett-Maudsley criteria. They were compared with three other groups of patients. Five (15.6%) of the epileptic schizophrenic patients were mixed or left handed. The prevalence of mixed and left handedness did not differ between the samples studied. However, there was a significant reduction of mixed and left handedness in male epileptics with schizophrenia. Mixed or left handedness in male epileptics appears to be protective against the development of psychiatric illness in general.
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PMID:Handedness and epileptic schizophrenia. 231 27

One hundred and eighty-three patients suffering from functional psychoses were diagnosed according to ICD-8, RDC, and DSM-III criteria, and the concordance rates for the diagnoses compared. The heterogeneity of the diagnosis 'schizoaffective psychosis' as defined by these systems became clear. With respect to prognosis, the DSM-III diagnosis of schizophrenia was most closely related to poor outcome. Affective psychoses and schizoaffective psychoses, as well as DSM-III 'schizophreniform disorders', demonstrated a favourable prognosis.
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PMID:The classification of functional psychoses and its implications for prognosis. 259 Jul 77

Ventricular size was measured from CT scans in 48 patients meeting RDC for schizophrenia who had a first-degree relative with a history of treatment for major psychiatric disorder, in 48 age- and sex-matched schizophrenic patients with no such history in first- or second-degree relatives, and in 48 matched, healthy controls. There was no difference in ventricular size between those with and without a positive family history, although both groups showed ventricular enlargement with respect to normal controls. Ventricular enlargement was demonstrated in the subgroup of 23 patients with a family history of schizophrenia, but not in the subgroup of 18 patients with a family history of affective disorder. These observations provide further evidence that schizophrenics with a family history of affective disorder may constitute an aetiologically distinct subgroup.
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PMID:Family history and cerebral ventricular enlargement in schizophrenia. A case control study. 259 55

A family study was carried out in two groups of patients fulfilling RDC for schizoaffective disorder: in one, a full affective and a full schizophrenic syndrome were simultaneously present; in the other, affective and schizophrenic features appeared within a polymorphic and rapidly changing clinical picture, with depersonalization/derealization and/or confusion. In the first-degree relatives of patients of the former group, the risk of major psychiatric disorders was not significantly different from that of relatives of schizophrenics, whereas in the first-degree relatives of patients of the latter group a low risk for both schizophrenia and major affective disorders, and a relatively high risk for schizoaffective disorders, were observed.
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PMID:A family study of two subgroups of schizoaffective patients. 259 57

It has been suggested that collections of affected sib pairs, or their nuclear families, may be an efficient method for screening for genetic linkages in schizophrenia. We present the data collected in five years from 15 hospitals in the state of Maryland in an effort to determine if such a collection scheme will be feasible. Probands in our sample were eligible for inclusion in the sample if they were white, were age 16 years or older, and carried a research diagnosis of schizophrenia. Family data are reported for 258 probands. Using the most stringent category of affected (RDC schizophrenia) revealed ten families with two or more affected sibs. The broadest category of affected (any psychotic disorder or psychiatric hospitalization) identified only 36 families with two or more affected sibs. We conclude that, if schizophrenia is a heterogeneous disorder with decreased penetrance, an effort to collect multiplex nuclear families is unlikely to provide enough data to identify genetic linkage. Alternatively, an effort to seek out and collect larger multiplex, multigenerational families rather than a collection of affected sib pairs may be more efficacious.
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PMID:Availability of schizophrenic patients and their families for genetic linkage studies: findings from the Maryland epidemiology sample. 260 40


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