Search results for "Psychotic"

showing 10 items of 360 documents

T108. ANALYTICAL AND PREDICTIVE VALIDITY OF HALLUCINATIONS IN FIRST PSYCHOTIC EPISODES

2018

Abstract Background Some studies of first psychotic episodes have suggested the association between childhood trauma, such as sexual abuse, and the risk of hallucinations.1 Furthermore, other studies indicated that environment can alter the phenomenological presentation of first psychotic episodes.2 However, there are no studies about the association between hallucinations in first psychotic episodes and the prognosis of the disease. This is the main objective of this study. We also compared the phenomenological differences between hallucinations in first episode psychosis and persistent hallucinations in patients with chronic psychosis. Methods Naturalistic, longitudinal follow-up study in…

Predictive validityPsychiatry and Mental healthAbstractsText miningPoster Session Ibusiness.industryPsychologybusinessPsychotic episodesClinical psychologySchizophrenia Bulletin
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Continuity and discontinuity of affective disorders and schizophrenia. Results of a controlled family study.

1993

Background: It is widely acknowledged that the genetic diatheses for schizophrenia and affective disorders are independent. However, there are increasing doubts about this classic view, and empirical evidence for a dichotomy of these two prototypes of functional psychoses is limited. A controlled family study of consecutive admissions was conducted to determine whether familial risks for schizophrenic (SCZ) and affective disorders were independent or overlapping. Methods: Index probands met Research Diagnostic Criteria for SCZ (n=146), schizoaffective (SA [n=115]), bipolar (BP [n=80]), or unipolar major depressive (UP [n=184])disorder. Comparison probands met Research Diagnostic Criteria fo…

ProbandAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyBipolar DisorderPopulationResearch Diagnostic CriteriaComorbiditySex FactorsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Risk FactorsmedicineHistory of depressionPrevalenceHumansFamilyBipolar disordereducationPsychiatryDepression (differential diagnoses)education.field_of_studyDepressive DisorderModels GeneticAge FactorsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseComorbidityPsychiatry and Mental healthPhenotypePsychotic DisordersSchizophreniaSchizophreniaFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyArchives of general psychiatry
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The risk of minor depression in families of probands with major depression: sex differences and familiality.

1992

Currently it is not clear whether minor forms of unipolar depression not matching the criteria of “major depression” should be considered as a separate diagnostic category. A controlled family study examined the familial aggregation of minor depression among probands with unipolar major depression. In the families of these probands the relative risk for minor depression was elevated by a similar magnitude to the risk for major depression. Threrefore, the diagnostic category “minor depression” would not increase diagnostic sensitivity at the expense of diagnostic specificity as far as familiality is the criterion. In agreement with recent epidemiological studies, minor depression did not rev…

ProbandAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyMinor (academic)Sex FactorsRisk FactorsEpidemiologymedicinePrevalenceHumansPharmacology (medical)Risk factorPsychiatryBiological PsychiatryDepression (differential diagnoses)Family HealthPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesDepressive DisorderFamily aggregationGeneral MedicinePsychiatry and Mental healthPsychotic DisordersRelative riskSchizophreniaFemalePsychologySex ratioEuropean archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience
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The Role of Attitudes Toward Medication and Treatment Adherence in the Clinical Response to LAIs: Findings From the STAR Network Depot Study

2021

Background: Long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotics are efficacious in managing psychotic symptoms in people affected by severe mental disorders, such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The present study aimed to investigate whether attitude toward treatment and treatment adherence represent predictors of symptoms changes over time.Methods: The STAR Network “Depot Study” was a naturalistic, multicenter, observational, prospective study that enrolled people initiating a LAI without restrictions on diagnosis, clinical severity or setting. Participants from 32 Italian centers were assessed at three time points: baseline, 6-month, and 12-month follow-up. Psychopathological symptoms, att…

Psychiatrypsychotic symptomtherapeutic allianceRC435-571drugantipsychoticPsychiatry and Mental healthantipsychoticsadherence; antipsychotics; attitude; drug; long-acting injectable; psychotic symptoms; therapeutic alliancepsychotic symptomsattitudeadherencelong-acting injectableOriginal ResearchFrontiers in Psychiatry
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Psychosis, symbol, affectivity 1: etiopathogenesis and treatment through analytical psychology

2021

This is the first of two papers concerning our study into an integrated approach to psychotic disorders, conducted at the University of Palermo's Psychiatry Unit Polyclinic over approximately 15 years. Here we will explore and reflect upon the acute psychotic condition mainly from a theoretical and conceptual perspective, while in the second paper we will explore the clinical perspective. From the point of view of psychopathology, and in the light of C.G. Jung's conceptualization of analytical psychology, as well as calling on contributions from other authors from the systemic-relational and post-psychoanalytic field, we will clarify the ideas developed over these last few years by our team…

PsychoanalysisJungian Theorymedia_common.quotation_subjecttreatment of psychosesPsychoanalysisPsychicJ.W. PerrySettore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia Clinicapsychotic symbolismHumansSettore MED/25 - Psichiatriamedia_commonConceptualizationPerspective (graphical)Analytical psychologyPsychodynamicsPsychotherapyClinical PsychologySymbolPolyclinicaffectivity in psychosisPsychotic Disordersanalytical psychologyPsychologyaffective neurosciencePsychopathology
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Psychopathology, Dissociation and Somatic Symptoms in Adolescents Who Were Exposed to Traumatic Experiences

2018

Background: The direct and long-term effects of children’s exposure to traumatic events can be seen in a complex continuum, based first of all on the type of trauma. Children’s reactions to trauma may have different manifestations from the clinical picture of the PTSD, exhibiting dissociative, somatic, depressive or anxiety symptoms, and/or disruptiveness. Aim: we conducted a cross-sectional study in a psychiatric patients sample to determine the extent to which complex trauma history is associated with disease-related characteristics (diagnosis, dissociative symptoms, somatic symptomatology, impairment degree). Methods: We have enrolled 107 subjects, aged between 12 and 18 years, who conse…

Psychology (all)medicine.drug_classmedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:BF1-990CBCLdissociationDissociative03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePsychoticismmedicinePsychologyPersonalitysomatic symptomsadolescentsGeneral PsychologyAdolescents; Complex trauma; Dissociation; PTSD; Somatic symptoms; Psychology (all)Original Researchmedia_commonPTSDmedicine.diseaseComorbidity030227 psychiatrycomplex traumaMoodlcsh:PsychologyAnxietymedicine.symptomPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPsychopathologyClinical psychologyFrontiers in Psychology
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Psychosis Is Not Illness but a Survival Strategy in Severe Stress: A Proposal for an Addition to a Phenomenological Point of View

2018

Phenomenology often looks at psychosis as a defined pathological state. In this paper, psychosis is not seen as a (pathological) state but as a way to respond in extreme stress. It is psychological functioning of the embodied and relational mind, and psychotic experience can be seen as one form of affective arousal among any other affects. Taken the point of views of Emmanuel Levinas and Mikhail Bakhtin about the primacy of living in responsive relationships, psychotic behavior is seen as emerging in relationships that do not guarantee adequate responses and thus the subject is imposed to isolate from social relationships and developing odd behavior. If dialogical responses are guaranteed, …

PsychosisDialogical selfmedicine.disease030227 psychiatryExtreme stressArousalPhenomenology (philosophy)03 medical and health sciencesPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical Psychology0302 clinical medicinePsychotic DisordersEmbodied cognitionSurvival strategySocial relationshipmedicineHumansPsychologyStress Psychological030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyPsychopathology
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The influence of risk factors on the onset and outcome of psychosis: What we learned from the GAP study

2020

The GAP multidisciplinary study carried out in South London, recruited 410 first episode of psychosis patients and 370 controls; the aim was to elucidate the multiple genetic and environmental factors influencing the onset and outcome of psychosis. The study demonstrated the risk increasing effect of adversity in childhood (especially parental loss, abuse, and bullying) on onset of psychosis especially positive symptoms. Adverse life events more proximal to onset, being from an ethnic minority, and cannabis use also played important roles; indeed, one quarter of new cases of psychosis could be attributed to use of high potency cannabis. The “jumping to conclusions” bias appeared to mediate …

PsychosisHypothalamo-Hypophyseal SystemVulnerabilityMultidisciplinary studyEthnic groupPituitary-Adrenal SystemPsychosi03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsLondonmedicineEthnicityHumansFirst episodeChildBiological PsychiatryMinority GroupsOutcomeFirst episodeMarkersFirst episode; Markers; Outcome; Psychosis; Schizophreniabiologybusiness.industryMarkermedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationPsychosis030227 psychiatryFirst episode; Markers; Outcome; Psychosis; Schizophrenia; Child; Ethnicity; Humans; London; Minority Groups; Pituitary-Adrenal System; Risk Factors; Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System; Psychotic DisordersPsychiatry and Mental healthIncreased riskPsychotic DisordersJumping to conclusionsSchizophreniaCannabisbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryClinical psychology
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The prevention of relapses in first episodes of schizophrenia: The 2EPs Project, background, rationale and study design.

2021

Up to 80% of first-episode psychosis patients suffer a relapse within five years of the remission. Relapse should be an important focus of prevention given the potential harm to the patient and family. It threatens to disrupt their psychosocial recovery, increases the risk of resistance to treatment and has been associated with greater direct and indirect costs for society. Based on a previous project entitled "Genotype-phenotype and environment. Application to a predictive model in first psychotic episodes" (PEPs Project), the project "Clinical and neurobiological determinants of second episodes of schizophrenia. Longitudinal study of first episode of psychosis" was designed, also known as…

PsychosisLongitudinal studymedicine.medical_specialtyIndirect costs03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRecurrenceIntervention (counseling)medicineHumansLongitudinal StudiesPsychiatryFirst episodebusiness.industryNeuropsychologyGeneral Medicinemedicine.disease030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthPsychotic DisordersSchizophreniaSchizophreniabusinessPsychosocial030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFollow-Up StudiesRevista de psiquiatria y salud mental
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Textbook descriptions of people with psychosis – some ethical aspects

2018

Background:Textbooks are central for the education of professionals in the health field and a resource for practitioners already in the field.Objectives:This article focuses on how 12 textbooks in psychiatric nursing and psychiatry, published in Norway between 1877 and 2012, describe and present people with psychosis.Research design:We used qualitative content analysis.Ethical considerations:The topic is published textbooks, made available to be read by students, teachers and professionals, and no ethical approval was required.Findings:The analysis shows that all 12 textbooks describe and present people who are considered as psychotic from a ‘perspective from above’. In this perspective, th…

PsychosisMedical education030504 nursingNorwaymedia_common.quotation_subjectPerspective (graphical)Psychiatric NursingEmpathyCompassion06 humanities and the arts0603 philosophy ethics and religionmedicine.disease03 medical and health sciencesIssues ethics and legal aspectsResource (project management)Psychotic DisordersmedicineProfessional ethicsHumansTextbooks as Topic060301 applied ethics0305 other medical sciencePsychologyQualitative Researchmedia_common
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