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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case-control study was undertaken of volumetric computerized tomographic scan measures in 216 consecutive admissions for functional psychosis and 67 healthy community controls. Odds ratio analysis demonstrated significant linear trends in the association between increasing lateral and third ventricle volumes, and both
RDC
schizophrenia
(N = 121) and schizo-affective disorder (N = 41); cases were consistently associated with larger volumes than controls. There was an association between larger third, but not lateral, ventricle size in affective psychoses (N = 54). These associations were statistically independent of intracranial volume, sex, social class and ethnicity, factors which were significantly associated with ventricular measures in the controls. There was no evidence of a threshold corresponding to the notion of normal versus enlarged ventricles. Within the
schizophrenia
group, there were no large or significant associations between ventricle dimensions and age at onset, duration of illness or pre-morbid social functioning. Neither obstetric complications nor a family history of
schizophrenia
or other psychiatric illness was associated with large ventricles in these cases.
...
PMID:Cerebral ventricle dimensions as risk factors for schizophrenia and affective psychosis: an epidemiological approach to analysis. 789 67
Twenty-six patients with
RDC
bipolar disorder were compared with a previously reported group of 48
RDC
schizophrenics and 34 healthy controls, using volumetric MRI measurements of cerebral, cortical and sulcal volumes. The bipolar group appeared no different from the controls, and both of these groups had significantly larger cerebral and cortical volumes than the schizophrenics. Our previous report of a significantly reduced cortical volume in the schizophrenic group, with a corresponding increase in the volume of sulcal fluid is, therefore, not a generalized feature of psychotic illness but may be more specific to
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Volumetric MRI measurements in bipolars compared with schizophrenics and healthy controls. 799 51
This paper discusses the nosographic significance of schizoaffective disorder. Follow-up studies, genetic and familial studies, response to treatment studies, and neurobiological data are summarized and analysed. Methodological issues and importance of diagnostic criteria are also examined. Current opinion supports heterogeneity of schizoaffective disorder, among which
schizophrenia
variants or affective disorder variants. Some patients could present another disease. In that case, they are categorized in the sub-type "other" of the
RDC
classification for schizoaffective disorder.
...
PMID:[Schizoaffective disorder: its nosographic significance]. 803 40
Previous studies have shown high rates of
schizophrenia
among the Afro-Caribbean population in Britain. In order to assess the role of genetic factors in the aetiology of this phenomenon, we have used a standardised family history method (FHRDC) to compare lifetime morbidity risks for first-degree relatives of Afro-Caribbean and white patients with
RDC
schizophrenia
admitted in Central Manchester between 1982 and 1988. Lifetime morbidity risk for parents of Afro-Caribbean subjects was 8.9%, and for parents of white patients 8.4%. For the siblings of black probands, however, the risk was 15.9%, as compared with 1.8% for white siblings (P < 0.05). Among siblings of UK-born Afro-Caribbean probands, morbid risk was even higher at 27.3% (P = 0.001). High rates among siblings of younger Afro-Caribbean patients are consistent with previous reports of a higher incidence in the UK-born. These observations suggest that
schizophrenia
among Afro-Caribbeans is no less familial than for the remainder of the population, but that the increased frequency of the disorder is due to environmental factors which are most common in the Afro-Caribbean community, and capable of precipitating
schizophrenia
in those who are genetically predisposed.
...
PMID:Schizophrenia in the Afro-Caribbean community. 803 35
With a polydiagnostic approach of
schizophrenia
in mind, the authors present, in french language, a computer-diagnostic instrument, essential for any research at the present time. This includes a 183-item checklist constructed from 14 diagnostic systems for
schizophrenia
and from Chronic Hallucinatory Psychosis (CHP), a typically french diagnostic entity, not recognized by English-speaking countries which do not individualize it from
schizophrenia
. This study tested the reliability in interviewing the patients simultaneously by 2 examiners with the checklist. The interrater agreement was excellent (Kappa from 0.75 to 1) for schizophrenic diagnoses under the systems CATEGO, DSM III-R, Feighner, ICD9, Langfeldt, Pull, Schneider and Taylor-Abrams. It was good (Kappa from 0.40 to 0.75) for the 6 other schizophrenic systems, Bleuler (k = 0.52; p > 0.01), Carpenter with a cut-off at 6 (k = 0.52; p < 0.05), ICD10 (k = 0.70; p < 0.01), New-Haven (k = 0.58),
RDC
(k = 0.59; p < 0.01), Vienne (k = 0.68; p < 0.01), and the Chronic Hallucinatory Psychosis (Pull) (k = 0.71; p < 0.01). The validity of the computer program was tested by the concordance (Cohen's Kappa) between the diagnoses established by a medical examiner and by computer, both obtained from the same collected data (the checklist). The tests show that the concordances were excellent for the 15 diagnoses for
schizophrenia
and CHP (Kappa form 0.75 to 1) and always above those obtained by the tests of interreliability.
...
PMID:[Polydiagnostic approach to schizophrenia. Validation of a computerized checklist (Diagnostic and Prognostic Scales)]. 805 Mar 83
Fifty-nine psychotic patients with acute onset of illness, who had been interviewed about their experience of stressful life events before the episode, were followed up for an average of 42 months. Thirty patients (51%) had experienced a stressful life event in the 3 months immediately before onset (EV+), 29 had not (EV-). In patients with an
RDC
diagnosis of affective disorder or unspecified functional psychosis, the presence of stressful life events was associated subsequently with milder symptom severity, less time spent in hospital, more treatment for depressive symptoms and less for psychotic symptoms. In
schizophrenia
, differences were less apparent, but patients with event associated episodes had less need of anti-psychotic maintenance medication over the follow-up period and tended to have spent more time in complete remission. EV+ schizophrenic subjects also had higher morbid risk for
schizophrenia
in their first degree relatives, and tended to be female and to have less typical symptoms than EV- schizophrenic patients.
...
PMID:The influence of life events on the subsequent course of psychotic illness. A prospective follow-up of the Camberwell Collaborative Psychosis Study. 808 44
In a case-record study, all first-contact patients with non-affective functional psychosis from a defined area over 20 years were diagnosed according to operational criteria of varying stringency and emphasis, and incidence rates for each set of criteria determined by sex and age at onset; data on premorbid adjustment were also analysed by sex and age at onset. The overall first-contact incidence of non-affective functional psychosis was approximately equal in men and women; however, the ratio of male to female incidence rates rose progressively when
RDC
(1.2), DSM-III-R (1.3), DSM-III (2.2), and Feighner (2.5) criteria for
schizophrenia
were applied.
Schizophrenia
was most common in young males and least common in older males, with females occupying an intermediate position.
Schizophrenia
in young males, particularly when stringently defined, was especially likely to be associated with single status, poor work and social adjustment, and premorbid personality disorder. The results suggest that
schizophrenia
syndrome is heterogeneous, and young males are especially prone to a severe neurodevelopmental form of illness associated with premorbid deficits.
...
PMID:Sex and schizophrenia: effects of diagnostic stringency, and associations with and premorbid variables. 814 18
The MRI scans of 48 schizophrenic patients, fulfilling
RDC
criteria, were compared to those of 34 healthy controls matched for age, ethnicity and parental social class. The volume of the frontal and anterior parietal lobes was significantly reduced in the schizophrenic group as a result of a selective decrease in cortical volume, with a corresponding increase in the volume of sulcal fluid. Reduction in the volume of the temporal grey matter was more marked on the right, but was not in excess of the loss of volume observed in other areas of the cortex. MRI abnormalities correlated poorly with clinical parameters, although both unemployment and poor pre-morbid adjustment predicted reduced cerebral volume and increased sulcal volume. These results question whether the medial temporal lobes are the only site of structural pathology in
schizophrenia
.
...
PMID:Reduction of cortical volume in schizophrenia on magnetic resonance imaging. 823 67
The psychiatric assessment by structured interview and family history of mental disorder in normal volunteers recruited by advertisement for a study of brain structure and function in psychosis is described. Nine of 51 volunteers (17.6%) who passed a phone screen were excluded after a structured interview for major psychopathology. Of 35 completers, 10 (28.6%) had subthreshold mood or substance use but were included in the study. Only 16 subjects (45%) had a negative family history by FH-
RDC
. Diagnoses in family members included substance abuse (31%), mood disorder (11%), psychosis (9%), and other/undiagnosed (14%). Ventricular enlargement was evaluated by magnetic resonance imaging in two planes. Ventricular size was bimodally distributed in the males, and the group with larger ventricles was more educated and had higher scores on the 8 (
Schizophrenia
) scale of the MMPI (F = 5.44, p = .0099). Our results suggest that 'normal' volunteers for psychiatric research have personal or family psychopathology which motivates them to participate. As the sensitivity of biological instrumentation increases, the characteristics of the control group must be anticipated in the design and recruitment.
...
PMID:Are controls in schizophrenia research "normal"? 834 94
The aim of this study was to examine whether specific forms of formal thought disorder distinguish
schizophrenia
from schizophreniform and schizoaffective psychoses. The sample was composed of 82 consecutively admitted patients with schizophrenic symptoms. Of these, 28 had a diagnosis of
schizophrenia
by
RDC
and DSM-IIIR criteria, 28 a diagnosis of
schizophrenia
by
RDC
but not DSM-IIIR (consequently they were labeled schizophreniform), and 26 a diagnosis of manic schizoaffective disorder by
RDC
criteria. They were assessed by a semi-structured interview for
schizophrenia
, by scales for positive and negative symptoms (SAPS and SANS) and by prognostic indicators. The assessment of thought disorder was carried out by using the Thought, Language and Communication scale (TLC). The schizophrenic patients showed higher global scores on formal thought disorder, and some of its subtypes were 'most specific' to
schizophrenia
(poverty of speech, poverty of content of speech, illogicality, tangentiality and perseveration). Schizophrenics had more loose associations than schizophreniforms. Manic schizoaffectives had higher scores on positive versus negative formal thought disorder than schizophreniforms. We suggested that the assessment of disordered thinking by the TLC may facilitate the differential diagnosis of psychotic disorders during the acute phase of the illness.
...
PMID:Does formal thought disorder differ among patients with schizophrenic, schizophreniform and manic schizoaffective disorders? 839 47
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