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showing 10 items of 7948 documents

Cognitive impairment in schizoaffective disorder: a comparison with non-psychotic bipolar and healthy subjects.

2007

Objective:  Only a few studies have examined specifically the neuropsychological performance of schizoaffective patients. Method:  The sample consisted of 34 euthymic DSM-IV schizoaffective patients, who were compared with 41 euthymic bipolar patients without history of psychotic symptoms and 35 healthy controls. Euthymia was defined by a score of 6 or less at the Young Mania Rating Scale and a score of 8 or less at the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale for at least 6 months. Patients were compared with several clinical, occupational, and neuropsychological variables such as executive function, attention, verbal and visual memory and the two groups were contrasted with 35 healthy controls on…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtyBipolar DisorderHealth StatusSchizoaffective disorderNeuropsychological TestsYoung Mania Rating ScaleSeverity of Illness IndexSurveys and QuestionnairesmedicineVerbal fluency testHumansBipolar disorderPsychiatryDemographyCognitive disorderBrainmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthCross-Sectional StudiesPsychotic DisordersFemaleVerbal memoryPsychologyCognition DisordersNeurocognitiveClinical psychologyActa psychiatrica Scandinavica
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Neurocognitive diagnosis and cut-off scores of the Screen for Cognitive Impairment in Psychiatry (SCIP-S)

2009

To demonstrate the ability of the Screen for Cognitive Impairment in Psychiatry (SCIP-S) to discriminate between cognitively-impaired individuals and those with adequate functioning in a sample of schizophrenic and bipolar patients, as well as in a control group.The SCIP-S, together with a full neuropsychological battery, was administered to three groups: patients with schizophrenia, patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder I, and controls. The battery scores were used to perform a standardization with respect to the control group and this served to determine the comparison groups (cognitively impaired versus unimpaired) for each of the subtests of the SCIP-S. A full analysis of decision va…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtyBipolar DisorderNeuropsychological TestsSeverity of Illness Indexmental disordersmedicineHumansBipolar disorderPsychiatryBiological PsychiatryCognitive deficitPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesReceiver operating characteristicCognitive disorderCognitionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthROC CurveSchizophreniaSchizophreniaFemalemedicine.symptomCognition DisordersPsychologyNeurocognitiveClinical psychologySchizophrenia Research
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The relevance of cognitive, clinical and premorbid variables in predicting functional outcome for individuals with first-episode psychosis: A 3 year …

2013

Real-world functional deficits are common and persistent in individuals with psychosis. Cognitive deficits have been shown to compromise functioning. We aimed to study the predictive values of premorbid, sociodemographic, and baseline clinical and neurocognitive factors on long-term functional outcome for individuals with first episode non-affective psychosis. We failed to demonstrate a significant relationship between cognitive deficits at baseline and functional disability at 3 year follow-up. Diagnosis of schizophrenia (OR=2.457, p=0.011), shorter education (OR=1.177, p=0.005) and poor premorbid social adjustment (OR=1.628, p=0.013) emerged as the strongest predictors for the 114 subject…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtyLongitudinal studyAdolescentNeuropsychological TestsOutcome (game theory)Disability EvaluationYoung AdultPredictive Value of TestsmedicineHumansLongitudinal StudiesPsychiatryBiological PsychiatryRetrospective StudiesFirst episodeCognitionMiddle AgedPrognosismedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthLogistic ModelsPsychotic DisordersSocioeconomic FactorsSchizophreniaFemaleCognition DisordersPsychologyNeurocognitiveAntipsychotic AgentsDiagnosis of schizophreniaPsychiatry Research
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Early age of onset, brain morphological changes and non-consistent motor asymmetry in schizophrenic patients.

1999

Previous data suggest abnormalities in the consistence of motor dominance in schizophrenia (e.g. mixed-handedness, poor correlation between hand, eye and foot preferences and an increase of hand-eye crossed dominance). The aim of this work is to examine the clinical significance of hand-eye and hand-foot crossed dominance in a sample of 61 right-handed schizophrenic patients. The application of multivariate analysis revealed that 23 right-handed and non-right-eyed patients (crossed hand-eye dominant group) had a significant earlier clinical onset and smaller brain size, global and frontal area, than 38 right-handed and right-eyed schizophrenics (consistent hand-eye dominance group). These f…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtyMultivariate analysisgenetic structuresCentral nervous systemAudiologyNeuropsychological TestsFunctional LateralityDevelopmental psychologymedicineHumansClinical significanceBiological PsychiatryDominance (genetics)Retrospective StudiesAge FactorsBrainmedicine.diseaseeye diseasesPsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structureMotor SkillsBrain sizeLateralitySchizophreniaFemalesense organsAge of onsetPsychomotor DisordersPsychologySchizophrenia research
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Cognitive impairment is related to oxidative stress and chemokine levels in first psychotic episodes.

2011

Abstract Introduction This study measures the levels of various markers of oxidative stress and inflammation in blood samples from first-episode psychosis (FEP) patients, and examines the association between these peripheral biomarkers and cognitive performance at 6 months after treatment. Methods Twenty-eight FEP patients and 28 healthy controls (matched by age, sex and educational level) had blood samples taken at admission for assessment of total antioxidant status, superoxide dismutase (SOD), total glutathione (GSH), catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase, lipid peroxidation, nitrites and the chemokine monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1). A battery of cognitive tests was also app…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtyNeuropsychological Testsmedicine.disease_causeStatistics NonparametricLipid peroxidationSuperoxide dismutasechemistry.chemical_compoundYoung AdultInternal medicinemedicineHumansBiological PsychiatryChemokine CCL2Nitriteschemistry.chemical_classificationFirst episodePsychiatric Status Rating ScalesGlutathione PeroxidasebiologySuperoxide DismutaseGlutathione peroxidaseCase-control studyGlutathionemedicine.diseaseCatalaseGlutathionePsychiatry and Mental healthOxidative StressEndocrinologychemistryPsychotic DisordersCase-Control StudiesImmunologybiology.proteinLinear ModelsFemaleLipid PeroxidationPsychologyCognition DisordersOxidative stressSchizophrenia research
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Are there specific neuropsychological deficits underlying poor insight in first episode psychosis?

2011

Insight in psychosis is a multi-dimensional phenomenon, and has been hypothesised to have some sort of neuropsychological basis. It is unclear to what extent specific neuropsychological abilities are able to predict insight beyond the effect of generalised cognitive ability. We aimed to test this, alongside the relationship of insight with illness duration and diagnosis, in a sample of first episode psychosis patients. We recruited 102 patients experiencing their first episode of psychosis and assessed their insight, symptoms, diagnosis as well as administering a full neuropsychological battery. Low insight was related to worse performance in a variety of neuropsychological tasks. Regressio…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtyNeuropsychological functionAdolescentNeuropsychological TestsVerbal learningYoung AdultCognitionMemorySettore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia ClinicamedicineHumansYoung adultPsychiatryAssociation (psychology)Settore MED/25 - PsichiatriaBiological PsychiatryAnalysis of VarianceNeuropsychologyAwareneCognitionAwarenessMiddle AgedVerbal Learningmedicine.diseaseFirst episode psychosiPsychiatry and Mental healthPsychotic DisordersdupRegression AnalysisFemaleVerbal memoryInsightCognition DisordersPsychologyDiagnosiSchizophrenia Research
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Abnormal motor asymmetry only during bimanual movement in schizophrenic patients compared with healthy subjects.

2003

In schizophrenia, research on motor asymmetry has focused on the direction and the degree of handedness using unimanual motor tests and tasks. However, typically both hands collaborate in the production of most manual movements. This study explored motor asymmetry exhibited during unimanual and bimanual tasks in schizophrenic and healthy subjects using a new experimental motor battery. Specifically, the authors investigated the motor indices of laterality during finger-tapping and hand-turning tasks in four unimanual and four bimanual conditions in 84 schizophrenic and 31 healthy subjects, all right-handed. The schizophrenic patients showed reduced motor asymmetries only during bimanual tap…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtyPsychometricsPsychometricsMotor ActivityNeuropsychological TestsLateralization of brain functionFunctional LateralityPhysical medicine and rehabilitationReference ValuesSchizophrenic PsychologymedicineHumansMotor asymmetryBiological PsychiatryBody movementmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthSchizophreniaLateralitySchizophreniaFemaleSchizophrenic PsychologyPsychologyCognitive psychologySchizophrenia research
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Theory of Mind and Emotional Awareness Deficits in Patients With Somatoform Disorders

2010

To explore whether deficits are present in the mental representation of emotion signals and whether these are related to more general deficits in Theory of Mind (ToM) functioning test. To test this hypothesis in patients suffering from somatoform disorders, we used the Frith-Happé-Animations Task (AT)-an established ToM measure. We previously demonstrated that somatization in psychiatric patients is associated with decreased emotional awareness as measured by the Levels of Emotional Awareness Scale (LEAS). These findings suggest that individuals with decreased emotional awareness often fail to experience affective arousal as feelings and instead experience emotional distress somatically.We …

AdultMalePsychotherapistEmotionsMotion PerceptionTheory of MindModels PsychologicalNeuropsychological TestsAlexithymiaTheory of mindTask Performance and AnalysismedicineHumansIn patientAffective SymptomsSomatoform DisordersApplied PsychologyAwarenessmedicine.diseaseTest (assessment)Facial ExpressionHospitalizationPsychiatry and Mental healthSocial PerceptionMental representationEmotion awarenessFemaleCognition DisordersPsychologySomatizationStress PsychologicalPsychosomatic Medicine
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Is there a group effect? It depends on how you ask the question: Intraclass correlations for California Psychotherapy Alliance Scale–Group items.

2014

California Psychotherapy Alliance Scale-Group (CALPAS-G) data were collected from 1,138 group sessions attended by 248 group members in 16 counseling groups. Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) was used to derive between-groups, between-member, and between-session variance components and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) for the 12 CALPAS-G items. Using Ledermann and Kenny's (2012) descriptions of variable types, we examined differences in between-groups variance for the 6 CALPAS-G items classified as "Individual" items and the 6 CALPAS-G items classified as "Group" items. A Related-Samples Wilcoxon's Signed Ranked Test showed that the ICCs for the Group items were significantly lar…

AdultMalePsychotherapistSocial PsychologyWilcoxon signed-rank testGroup effectIntraclass correlationmedicine.medical_treatmentModels Psychologicalbehavioral disciplines and activitiesCaliforniaGroup psychotherapymedicineHumansCooperative BehaviorIntraclass correlation coefficientGroup (mathematics)Multilevel modelHierarchical linear modelingGeneral MedicineVariance (accounting)Middle AgedGroup ProcessesGroup therapyTest (assessment)Psychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyResearch DesignPsychotherapy GroupFemaleComponent (group theory)Group alliancePsychologySocial psychologyClinical psychologyJournal of Counseling Psychology
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Bronchoconstriction induced by inhaled adenosine 5′-monophosphate in subjects with allergic rhinitis

2001

Adenosine and its related nucleotide, adenosine 5′-monophosphate (AMP) induce bronchoconstriction in asthmatics, probably caused by histamine release from airway mast cells. The objective of this study was to determine the effect of inhaled AMP on lung function in subjects with allergic rhinitis.A total of 52 adults (28 subjects with allergic rhinitis, 14 asthmatics and 10 healthy subjects) were challenged with increasing concentrations of AMP and methacholine. Airflow was assessed after each concentration and the response to each bronchoconstrictor agent was measured by the provocative concentration required to produce a 20% fall (PC20) in forced expired volume in one second (FEV1).All 14 …

AdultMalePulmonary and Respiratory MedicineAdenosine monophosphateRhinitis Allergic PerennialBronchoconstrictionVital CapacityBronchial Provocation TestsBronchoconstrictor Agentschemistry.chemical_compoundForced Expiratory VolumeAdministration InhalationmedicineHumansMethacholine ChlorideLung functionRhinitisbusiness.industryHealthy subjectsRhinitis Allergic Seasonalrespiratory systemAdenosineAdenosine MonophosphateAsthmachemistryImmunologyFemaleMethacholineBronchoconstrictionBronchial Hyperreactivitymedicine.symptomAirwaybusinessHistaminemedicine.drugEuropean Respiratory Journal
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