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Query: UMLS:C0917816 (
mental retardation
)
15,867
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The new Care Act will come into force on 1 January 1992. It will abolish guardianship by reason of mental disease,
mental deficiency
, prodigality, habitual drunkenness and
drug addiction
as well as guardianship of persons of full age and curatorship of infirm adults. Legal provisions relating to care will take the place of guardianship, and these provisions will no longer have any automatic effect on the affected person's capacity to enter into legal transactions, to marry, or to make a will. Where there is encroachment upon the rights of such persons, there must be strict observance of the principle of necessity. The new law will strengthen personal care. As far as possible, there must be compliance with the wishes of the person under care. As a rule, a natural person should be appointed as curator. The Act has special provisions on important matters relating to the care of persons, for instance on consent in respect of therapeutic treatment, on sterilisation, on committal and on the dissolution of households. The rights of affected persons will be substantially strengthened in standardised proceedings under noncontentious jurisdiction. Expert reports must always be obtained. The expert presenting a report will have to take due account of other aspects in addition to medical matters. Present cases of guardianship and of curatorship will automatically be converted into cases of care under the new law, and they will be reviewed in the light of the latter within certain time limits.
...
PMID:[The Welfare Act and its predictive effects in Public Health Service]. 214 70
One hundred and twenty patients presenting for admission were randomly allocated into two groups. Control patients received standard psychiatric hospital care and aftercare. Experimental patients were not admitted, if possible; they and their relatives were provided with comprehensive community treatment, including a 24-hour crisis service. Patients with a diagnosis of alcohol or
drug dependence
, organic brain disorder, or
mental retardation
were excluded. The great majority of patients were diagnosed as suffering from one of the functional psychoses--mainly schizophrenia. During the study year, control patients spent an average of 53.5 days in psychiatric hospitals, experimental patients spent an average of 8.4 days. Psychiatric patients were treated more effectively and economically in the community, without shifting the burden onto the relatives. Nearly all the relatives of experimental patients preferred community treatment; they considered it to be significantly more helpful to the patients and themselves than standard psychiatric hospital care and aftercare.
...
PMID:The relatives of the mentally ill. A comparative trial of community-oriented and hospital-oriented psychiatric care. 608 34
One hundred and twenty patients presenting for admission were randomly allocated into two groups. Controls received standard hospital care and after-care. Projects were not admitted if this could be avoided; instead they and their relatives were provided with comprehensive community treatment and a 24-hour crisis service. Patients with a primary diagnosis of alcohol or
drug dependence
, organic brain disorder or
mental retardation
were excluded. During the 12 months study period, 96% of controls were admitted, 51% more than once. Of the projects, 60% were not admitted at all and only 8% were admitted more than once. Controls spent an average of 53.5 days in psychiatric hospitals; projects spent an average of 8.4 days. Community treatment did not increase the burden upon the community, was considered to be significantly more satisfactory and helpful by patients and their relatives, achieved a clinically superior outcome, and cost less than standard care and after-care.
...
PMID:Psychiatric hospital versus community treatment: the results of a randomised trial. 657 88
The principal reason for this epidemiological study was the lack of psychiatric morbidity studies in a predominantly urban population, by psychiatrists in direct interviews. The psychiatric examination, covering 1970-71, included a representative selection of 2,283 persons, 18-65 years old from "former" Stockholm County, and the 12-month prevalence of mental disorders was measured. The total of non-participants was 12%. Forty-seven percent had a psychiatric diagnosis - significantly more women (54%) than men (40%). Excluding the psychosomatic diagnoses, 31% of the population received a psychiatric diagnosis, which agrees closely with other contemporary studies of mental disorder in the Nordic countries. The primary diagnoses were: neuroses 26%, psychosomatic diagnoses 16%, schizophrenic/paranoid conditions or other psychoses 0.6%, affective disorders 0.2%, psychoorganic syndromes 1.2%, psychopathy 0.2%, character neurosis 1%,
drug dependence
0.2% (as a primary or a secondary diagnosis 0.6%), alcoholism 1.4% (as a primary or a secondary diagnosis 3.1%) and
mental retardation
0.4% (as a primary or a secondary diagnosis 0.8%).
...
PMID:Prevalence of mental disorder in an urban population in central Sweden. 661 Oct 17
One hundred and twenty patients presenting for admission to a state psychiatric hospital were randomly allocated into two groups. Control patients received standard hospital care and after-care. Experimental patients were not admitted if this could be avoided; instead they and their relatives were provided with comprehensive community treatment and a 24-hour crisis service. Patients with a primary diagnosis of alcohol or
drug dependence
, organic brain disorder or
mental retardation
were excluded. Most patients were suffering from psychotic disorders--more than half specifically from schizophrenia. During the 12 months study period 96% of the control patients were admitted--51% more than once. Of the experimental patients 60% were not admitted at all and only 8% were admitted more than once. Control patients spent an average of 53.5 days in psychiatric hospital, experimental patients spent an average of 8.4 days. Community treatment did not increase the burden upon the community, was considered to be significantly more satisfactory and helpful by patients and their relatives, achieved a clinically superior outcome, and cost less than standard care and after-care. The ingredients differentiating comprehensive community-based care from prevailing methods of psychiatric care are discussed.
...
PMID:Community orientated treatment compared to psychiatric hospital orientated treatment. 674 Mar 35
The development of the fetal central nervous system can be effected by drugs. In this paper we review the neurological consequences of intrauterine exposure to alcohol, cocaine, opiates and marijuana. Ethanol causes the fetal alcohol syndrome:
mental retardation
, intrauterine and postnatal growth retardation, and peculiar dysmorphic features. Is pathogenesis has been explained on the basis of maternal nutritional deficiencies or due to abnormalities in the conversion of ethanol to aldehyde, or abnormalities in the metabolism of prostaglandins or retinoic acid, the neurotransmitter systems, the neuronal excitotoxic activity, the development of the white matter, the production of gangliosides, and/or genetic regulation cell-cell adhesion. Cocaine has been related to congenital malformations, neurologic abnormalities during the neonatal period and psychomotor and cognitive development deficits. Characteristic dysmorphic features and a higher incidence of the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) have also been described. The following mechanisms have been implicated in the pathogenesis: vascular effects, superoxide formation, chelation of calcium ion channels, and abnormalities in the production of glycosphingolipids, the synthesis of DNA, the functioning of neurotransmitter systems, the neuronal growth and differentiation, the neuronal excitotoxic activity and/or the expression of early immediate genes. Opiates produce intrauterine and postnatal growth retardation, neonatal abstinence syndrome, and deficits of the psychomotor and cognitive development. They also increase the incidence of SIDS. The pathogenesis has been related to abnormalities in the sensitivity of the locus ceruleus, the functioning of the neurotransmitter systems, and/or the expression of early immediate genes. Marijuana has been associated with intrauterine growth retardation, dysmorphic features, and abnormalities of the behavior during the neonatal period, the psychomotor and cognitive development, and the sleep. The pathogenesis is thought to be due to an action upon specific receptors, or upon the neurotransmitter systems, and/or to an increase in the production of carbon monoxide. The best treatment of the syndrome of intrauterine exposure to drugs in the prophylaxis. The identification of emotional and
drug addiction
problems in the mother can avoid disastrous consequences. The care of these children is complex and requires a good pediatric follow-up and an early intervention program while the mother on the parents continue with the
drug addiction
therapy. The coordinations of all the necessary services with the active participation of social workers, physicians, educators and teachers is crucial for a successful treatment.
...
PMID:[Intrauterine exposure to drugs]. 920 93
The article summarizes the 3-year (1998-2000) consulting and treatment experience of a psychotherapeutic unit in one Moscow general hospital. Psychiatrists realized emergent and planned consultations of the mentally-ill patients in all hospital departments, conducted, in addition to general treatment, psychopharmacotherapy and psychotherapy or directed them, on demand, to psychiatric hospitals. For the 3-year period, the psychiatrists have consulted 4685 somatic patients with comorbid mental diseases (5% of the total amount of the patients admitted to the hospital at that period), 1360 patients (29%) being affected with psychotic disorders. One hundred eighty two patients were diagnosed to have schizophrenia, 784--arteriosclerosis and old-age psychosis and dementia, 45--reactive psychosis, 16--epilepsy (disphoria and psychotic episodes), 67--
mental retardation
with inadequate behavior, 266--delirium of alcoholic and
drug addiction
genesis. In some cases, usage of psychotropics, in combination with psychotherapy, has resulted in recovery or considerable psychic state improvement in 9.1% of the patients, improvement in 52% ones, insignificant improvement in 36%. In 2.9% of the cases, the effect of treatment has not been achieved.
...
PMID:[Psychiatric service in general hospital]. 1191 10
Many excitatory synapses express Group 1, or Gq coupled, metabotropic glutamate receptors (Gp1 mGluRs) at the periphery of their postsynaptic density. Activation of Gp1 mGluRs typically occurs in response to strong activity and triggers long-term plasticity of synaptic transmission in many brain regions, including the neocortex, hippocampus, midbrain, striatum, and cerebellum. Here we focus on mGluR-induced long-term synaptic depression (LTD) and review the literature that implicates Gp1 mGluRs in the plasticity of behavior, learning, and memory. Moreover, recent studies investigating the molecular mechanisms of mGluR-LTD have discovered links to
mental retardation
, autism, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and
drug addiction
. We discuss how mGluRs lead to plasticity of neural circuits and how the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of mGluR plasticity provides insight into brain disease.
...
PMID:Group 1 mGluR-dependent synaptic long-term depression: mechanisms and implications for circuitry and disease. 2018 50
Epigenetic chromatin remodeling, including reversible histone methylation, regulates gene transcription in brain development and synaptic plasticity. Aberrant chromatin modifications due to mutant chromatin enzymes or chemical exposures have been associated with neurological or psychiatric disorders such as
mental retardation
, schizophrenia, depression, and
drug addiction
. Some chromatin enzymes, such as histone demethylases JARID1C and UTX, are coded by X-linked genes which are not X-inactivated in females. The higher expression of JARID1C and UTX in females could contribute to sex differences in brain development and behavior.
...
PMID:Reversible histone methylation regulates brain gene expression and behavior. 2081 65
Chronic and degenerative disorders are a major, and growing, human health burden, and current treatments are in many cases inadequate or very expensive. Epigenetic therapies are attractive options for treating such disorders because they manipulate the processes that maintain cells in an abnormal transcriptional state. The challenges lie in identifying the most appropriate diseases and the enzymes that should be targeted. This review describes the different approaches that can be used to address this problem, focusing particularly on CNS disorders (especially
mental retardation
, neurodegenerative disease, psychiatric disorders and
drug addiction
), diabetes and diabetic complications, and autoimmunity and inflammatory diseases.
...
PMID:Epigenetic therapies for non-oncology indications. 2097 84
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