Search results for "Mental disorder"

showing 10 items of 1586 documents

Examining the Dynamics of the Implicit and the Explicit Self-Concept in Social Anxiety: Changes in the Implicit Association Test–Anxiety and the Soci…

2008

In this study, we analyzed changes in the strength of self-anxiety associations—as measured by the Implicit Association Test–Anxiety (IAT–Anxiety; Egloff & Schmukle, 2002) and the Social Phobia Anxiety Inventory (SPAI; Turner, Beidel, Dancu, & Stanley, 1989)—following treatment of social anxiety. We assessed socially anxious participants (N = 24) prior to and following a group-based treatment; and we assessed healthy controls (N = 24) at matched time points. Results showed (a) higher implicit and explicit anxiety in socially anxious participants (as compared to controls) prior to treatment and (b) reductions in IAT–Anxiety and SPAI scores of socially anxious participants following treatment…

AdultMalePersonality InventoryPsychometricsHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedia_common.quotation_subjectSelf-conceptDevelopmental psychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)GermanySurveys and Questionnairesmental disordersmedicineHumansPersonalitymedia_commonSocial anxietySocial environmentImplicit-association testmedicine.diseaseSelf ConceptClinical PsychologyTreatment OutcomePhobic DisordersCase-Control StudiesPsychotherapy GroupAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyAnxiety disorderFollow-Up StudiesJournal of Personality Assessment
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Subjective Perception of Cognitive Deficit in Psychotic Patients

2006

The objective of this study is to evaluate the subjective perception of cognitive deficit and how it relates to the perception of patients' relatives. Differences between the subjective perception of cognitive deficits in 107 DSM-IV-diagnosed psychotic patients and that of their relatives or caregivers were evaluated using the GEOPTE Scale. Fair agreement was observed between patient and family perception of cognitive functions, although there were important differences on those items that correspond to social functioning. A high degree of correlation was detected between the scores on this scale and clinical global impression scores, as well as the physicians' global impression of cognitiv…

AdultMalePersonality Inventorygenetic structuresPsychometricsAttitude of Health PersonnelHealth Statusmedia_common.quotation_subjectbehavioral disciplines and activitiesDevelopmental psychologySurveys and QuestionnairesPerceptionmedicineHumansCognitive deficitmedia_commonFamily HealthPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesPsychiatrySocial perceptionCognitive disorderCognitionAwarenessmedicine.diseaseDiagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental DisordersPsychiatry and Mental healthCaregiversPsychotic DisordersSocial PerceptionSchizophreniaClinical Global ImpressionFemalemedicine.symptomCognition DisordersPsychologyAttitude to HealthSocial Adjustmentpsychological phenomena and processesJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease
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Using Implicit Association Tests for the assessment of implicit personality self-concepts of extraversion and neuroticism in schizophrenia

2013

There is evidence from research based on self-report personality measures that schizophrenia patients tend to be lower in extraversion and higher in neuroticism than healthy individuals. Self-report personality measures assess aspects of the explicit self-concept. The Implicit Association Test (IAT) has been developed to assess aspects of implicit cognition such as implicit attitudes and implicit personality traits. The present study was conducted to investigate the applicability and reliability of the IAT in schizophrenia patients and test whether they differ from healthy individuals on implicitly measured extraversion and neuroticism. The IAT and the NEO-FFI were administered as implicit …

AdultMalePersonality TestsAdolescentgenetic structuresImplicit cognitionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)Developmental psychologyAssociationExtraversion PsychologicalYoung AdultCognitionmental disordersHumansPersonalityBiological Psychiatrymedia_commonImplicit personality theoryNeuroticismExtraversion and introversionReproducibility of ResultsImplicit-association testMiddle AgedAnxiety DisordersNeuroticismSelf ConceptPsychiatry and Mental healthFemaleSchizophrenic PsychologyImplicit attitudePsychologyPersonalityPsychiatry Research
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Avoidance behaviour: A predictor of the efficacy of pharmacotherapy in panic disorder?

1991

The impact of the avoidance behaviour on the psychopharmacological treatment of panic disorder was explored in the Cross National Collaborative Panic Study (n = 1134 patients); in this double blind randomized trial alprazolam, imipramine and placebo were compared during an 8-week treatment period. Patients with extensive avoidance behaviour (agoraphobia) had the most profit from the active drugs. Counter expectancy these specific drug effects were most pronounced in avoidance behaviour. Active drugs (in particular imipramine) were especially more effective than placebo if the patients presented with associated avoidance behaviour. The results suggest that agoraphobia defines more a particul…

AdultMalePersonality TestsImipraminemedicine.medical_specialtyPlacebobehavioral disciplines and activitiesImipraminelaw.inventionDouble-Blind MethodRandomized controlled triallawmental disordersmedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Social BehaviorPsychiatryAgoraphobiaBiological PsychiatryAlprazolamPanic disorderPanicFearGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasePanichumanitiesPsychiatry and Mental healthAlprazolamPanic DisorderFemalemedicine.symptomArousalPsychologyAnxiety disordermedicine.drugAgoraphobiaClinical psychologyEuropean Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
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Chronology of panic and avoidance, age of onset in panic disorder, and prediction of treatment response. A report from the Cross-National Collaborati…

1991

The relevance of the chronology between panic disorder and avoidance behavior and of an early, medium or late onset of panic disorder was tested. Groups from the sample of the cross-national collaborative panic study (CNCPS) were compared for differences in basic characteristics and for the ability to predict treatment response. Patients who developed avoidance behavior before the full syndrome of panic disorder had less often a full agoraphobia but were not different in their response to treatment. Patients with an early onset of panic disorder suffered more often from agoraphobia. The treatment response was similar in the groups with early, medium or late onset of panic disorder. Neither …

AdultMalePersonality Testsmedicine.medical_specialtyImipramineLate onsetbehavioral disciplines and activitiesImipramineDrug Administration Schedulelaw.inventionRandomized controlled triallawmental disordersmedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)PsychiatryBiological PsychiatryAlprazolamGeneral NeurosciencePanic disorderAge FactorsPanicGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePrognosisAnxiety DisordersPanichumanitiesPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyAlprazolamFemalemedicine.symptomAge of onsetPsychologyArousalmedicine.drugClinical psychologyAgoraphobiaEuropean archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience
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Escitalopram causes fewer seizures in human overdose than citalopram

2010

Seizures are a recognized complication of acute overdose with the racemic (1:1 ratio of R- and S-enantiomers) selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressant citalopram.We tested the hypothesis that escitalopram (the therapeutically active S-enantiomer of citalopram) causes fewer seizures in overdose than citalopram at comparable doses of the S-enantiomer.Multicenter retrospective review of cases with citalopram and escitalopram overdose reported to German, Austrian, and Swiss Poisons Centers between 1997 and 2006.316 citalopram and 63 escitalopram cases were analyzed. Somnolence, nausea, vomiting, tachycardia, QT prolongation, and tremor occurred with similar frequency in both groups…

AdultMalePoison Control CentersAdolescentNauseaSerotonin reuptake inhibitor610 Medicine & healthCitalopramCitalopramToxicologyDrug overdosebehavioral disciplines and activitiesQT intervalYoung AdultSeizuresGermanymental disordersmedicineHumansEscitalopramAgedRetrospective StudiesAged 80 and over3005 ToxicologyStereoisomerismGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.disease10199 Clinic for Clinical Pharmacology and ToxicologyAustriaAnesthesiaVomitingAntidepressantFemaleDrug Overdosemedicine.symptomPsychologySelective Serotonin Reuptake InhibitorsSwitzerlandmedicine.drug
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Alcoholism and panic disorder: co-occurrence and co-transmission in families

1993

The co-occurrence of alcoholism and anxiety disorders in epidemiological and clinical samples is well established. Self-medication of anxiety disorder probands with the anxiolytic substance alcohol might be one reason for this association. Common susceptibility factors of both disorders might be alternative explanations. Controlled family studies recruiting probands with panic disorder and alcoholism are powerful tools to answer this question. A family study of this kind, however, is not available. The present study investigated 113 families of probands with either panic disorder or alcoholism or both (but without affective or psychotic disorders) and 80 families of healthy controls in orde…

AdultMaleProbandmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classModels PsychologicalAnxiolyticPrevalence of mental disordersmedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Risk factorPsychiatryBiological PsychiatryPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesModels GeneticPanic disorderPanicGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseAlcoholismPsychiatry and Mental healthPanic DisorderAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyAnxiety disorderEuropean Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
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Meaning in life buffers the association between clinical anxiety and global maladjustment in participants with common mental disorders on sick leave.

2018

Abstract An important goal of mental health specialists is to improve the quality of life and the adaptation of people with common mental disorders on sick leave. Meaning in life is a protective factor for people adjusting to distress and negative events. This study explores the buffering role of meaning in life in the relationship between clinical anxiety or negative affect and maladjustment in participants with common mental disorders on sick leave. The sample was 167 participants with Adjustment, Anxiety and, Depressive Disorders; n = 115 were women and n = 52 men. Participants’ mean age M = 42.16 (SD = 9.91) years. We performed zero-order correlations and hierarchical regression analyse…

AdultMaleProtective factor03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineHumansMeaning (existential)Association (psychology)Biological PsychiatryMental DisordersMultilevel modelMiddle AgedMental health030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthDistressAffectSick leaveQuality of LifeAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomSick LeavePsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychologyPsychiatry research
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Irregular assimilation progress: Reasons for setbacks in the context of linguistic therapy of evaluation

2012

The assimilation model suggests progress in psychotherapy follows an eight-stage sequence described by the Assimilation of Problematic Experiences Scale (APES). This study sought to reconcile this developmental stage model with the common but superficially contradictory clinical observation that therapeutic advances alternate with setbacks. Setbacks (n=466) were identified in therapy transcripts of two clients and classified using a preliminary nine-category list of possible alternative reasons for setbacks. Most of the setbacks involved switches among the multiple strands of a problem due to (a) therapists exceeding clients' therapeutic zone of proximal development, (b) therapists guiding …

AdultMalePsychiatric Status Rating ScalesDevelopmental stageTime FactorsPsychotherapistCognitive Behavioral TherapyZone of proximal developmentMetaphorMental Disordersmedia_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)Professional-Patient RelationsModels PsychologicalYoung AdultClinical PsychologyTreatment OutcomeScale (social sciences)HumansFemalePsychologyProblem Solvingmedia_commonPsychotherapy Research
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Psychometric properties of the General Self Efficacy-12 Scale in Spanish: general and clinical population samples.

2014

The General Self Efficacy Scale (GSES-12) is a short version of the Sherer’s Self-Efficacy Scale, and evaluates a general dimension and three aspects of self-efficacy: initiative, persistence and effort. The aim of this study is to explore the factorial structure, reliability, and criterion validity of the Spanish adaptation of the GSES-12 in general and clinical populations. The sample was composed of 714 volunteers (332 from the clinical population). Results of the principal components analysis yielded a 3-factor structure that was later confirmed through Confirmatory Factor Analysis. Moreover, this study shows good internal consistency and testretest values, and differences in self-effic…

AdultMalePsychometricsPersonality InventoryPsychometricslcsh:RC435-571PopulationSample (statistics)Validitylcsh:PsychiatryCriterion validityHumansTranslationseducationReliability (statistics)Psychiatric Status Rating Scaleseducation.field_of_studyMental DisordersReproducibility of ResultsGeneral self-efficacyMiddle AgedReliabilityConfirmatory factor analysisSelf EfficacyPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyPsychometric propertiesSpainScale (social sciences)Quality of LifeFemalePersonality Assessment InventoryPsychologySocial psychologyClinical psychologyComprehensive psychiatry
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