466 results on '"First rank symptom"'
Search Results
2. Shall we really say goodbye to first rank symptoms?
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Anissa Abi-Dargham, Undine E. Lang, Martin Voss, J.H. Krystal, Michael Bauer, Aaron L. Mishara, Juergen Gallinat, Stephen M. Lawrie, Silvana Galderisi, Georg Juckel, Peter Falkai, Andreas Heinz, Werner Strik, Michael A. Rapp, Heinz, A., Voss, M, Lawrie, S. M., Mishara, A., Bauer, M., Gallinat, J., Juckel, G., Lang, U., Rapp, M., Falkai, P., Strik, W., Krystal, J., Abi Dargham, A., and Galderisi, Silvana
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Psychosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming) ,Schizoaffective disorder ,Context (language use) ,Self-disorder ,Delusions ,First rank symptom ,DSM ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Delusion ,International Classification of Diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Psychopathology ,Mental Disorders ,ICD ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology ,Diagnosis of schizophrenia - Abstract
BackgroundFirst rank symptoms (FRS) of schizophrenia have been used for decades for diagnostic purposes. In the new version of the DSM-5, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) has abolished any further reference to FRS of schizophrenia and treats them like any other “criterion A” symptom (e.g. any kind of hallucination or delusion) with regard to their diagnostic implication. The ICD-10 is currently under revision and may follow suit. In this review, we discuss central points of criticism that are directed against the continuous use of first rank symptoms (FRS) to diagnose schizophrenia.MethodsWe describe the specific circumstances in which Schneider articulated his approach to schizophrenia diagnosis and discuss the relevance of his approach today. Further, we discuss anthropological and phenomenological aspects of FRS and highlight the importance of self-disorder (as part of FRS) for the diagnosis of schizophrenia. Finally, we will conclude by suggesting that the theory and rationale behind the definition of FRS is still important for psychopathological as well as neurobiological approaches today.ResultsResults of a pivotal meta-analysis and other studies show relatively poor sensitivity, yet relatively high specificity for FRS as diagnostic marker for schizophrenia. Several methodological issues impede a systematic assessment of the usefulness of FRS in the diagnosis of schizophrenia. However, there is good evidence that FRS may still be useful to differentiate schizophrenia from somatic causes of psychotic states. This may be particularly important in countries or situations with little access to other diagnostic tests. FRS may thus still represent a useful aid for clinicians in the diagnostic process.ConclusionIn conclusion, we suggest to continue a tradition of careful clinical observation and fine-grained psychopathological assessment, including a focus on symptoms regarding self-disorders, which reflects a key aspect of psychosis. We suggest that the importance of FRS may indeed be scaled down to a degree that the occurrence of a single FRS alone should not suffice to diagnose schizophrenia, but, on the other hand, absence of FRS should be regarded as a warning sign that the diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder is not warranted and requires specific care to rule out other causes, particularly neurological and other somatic disorders. With respect to the current stage of the development of ICD-11, we appreciate the fact that self-disorders are explicitly mentioned (and distinguished from delusions) in the list of mandatory symptoms but still feel that delusional perceptions and complex hallucinations as defined by Schneider should be distinguished from delusions or hallucinations of “any kind”. Finally, we encourage future research to explore the psychopathological context and the neurobiological correlates of self-disorders as a potential phenotypic trait marker of schizophrenia.
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- 2016
3. Phenomenological study of thinking and perceptual disorders in schizophrenia.
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Baruah, Aparajeeta and Chaudhury, Pranit Kumar
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SCHIZOPHRENIA , *COGNITION disorders , *PERCEPTUAL disorders , *DELUSIONS , *HALLUCINATIONS - Abstract
Background: The diagnosis of schizophrenia is entirely dependent upon its symptom cluster or phenomenology and there lies the importance of studying the disease from this angle. Materials and methods: Seventy patients with schizophrenia fulfilling the revised third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM III R) criteria were the subjects of this study. The principal objective was to study thought and perceptual disorders in schizophrenia. Besides the sociodemographic data, a selected questionnaire (Assamese version) was prepared from the Present State Examination schedule (ninth edition) for investigating the patients. Results: The phenomenology was studied under three headings: First rank symptoms, types of delusions and hallucinations. Twenty six patients had first rank symptoms. Auditory hallucinations in the form of voices arguing and voices commenting topped the list followed by somatic passivity and volitional acts. Audible thoughts were the most infrequent ones. Delusions of reference scored highest. Delusions of persecution and misinterpretation were next followed by religious and grandiose delusions. Delusions of pregnancy, sexual and fantastic delusions scored the minimum. In morbid jealousy or delusion of infidelity, females outnumbered males. Auditory hallucinations were highest among the hallucinations followed by visual, tactile, olfactory and gustatory hallucinations. In tactile hallucinations, the percentage frequency was quite high in females. Conclusion: In the phenomena of delusions and hallucinations, sociocultural factors played the primary role. This study is a proof to the .universality. theory of schizophrenia in relation to its phenomenology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
4. Commentary hallucination in the elderly: three case reports.
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Kobayashi, Toshiyuki, Kato, Satoshi, Osawa, Takuro, and Shioda, Katsutoshi
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HALLUCINATIONS , *PERCEPTUAL disorders , *DELUSIONS , *SENILE dementia , *BRAIN diseases , *PSYCHOSES - Abstract
Three elderly females with commentary hallucinations are presented. Here, the term‘commentary hallucination’ is used as a comprehensive term describing a condition where the subject hears voices that comment on, command, or describe the subject's actions or behavior. According to the DSM-IV, the three cases presented here met the criteria for a psychotic disorder not otherwise specified, a schizoaffective disorder, and schizophrenia, respectively. All three cases showed no evidence of abnormalities when examined using neuroimaging techniques but might have had some senile brain changes that were under the threshold of the neuroimaging studies. Although the commentary hallucinations in the three patients were not distinctively different from the hallucinations that are characteristic of schizophrenia, the subjects were able to keep some distance from the hallucinations; in other words, the hallucinations were not ego-invasive. The commentary hallucinations in the present patients might be explained as resulting from exhaustion caused by stressful life events, subtle senile organic brain changes, and a subsequent decline in psychological tension. These hallucinations may have originated from the pathological appearance of a background-inner speech accompanying the patients’ behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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5. Cariprazine and clozapine combination for the treatment of psychosis in a young, female patient with schizophrenia: a case report.
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Dmuhovskis, Anzejs and Taube, Maris
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VENLAFAXINE ,CLOZAPINE ,PATIENT safety ,PEOPLE with schizophrenia ,WOMEN patients - Abstract
The task of a psychiatrist is to select the most appropriate medication or combination of drugs to treat the symptoms of schizophrenia while minimizing the risk of side effects and ensuring the patient achieves the highest level of functioning possible. This is a challenging task as the action of each drug or group of drugs is different. The efficacy of cariprazine, which affects D3 receptors as a D3/D2 receptor partial agonist, has been extensively studied and is one of the first medication choices by practicing psychiatrists when treating patients with negative symptomatology. In this clinical case, we demonstrate the effective and safe treatment of a patient's positive and affective symptoms using a combination of cariprazine, clozapine, and venlafaxine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Tokophobia: Psychopathology and Diagnostic Consideration of Ten Cases.
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Kitamura, Toshinori, Takegata, Mizuki, Usui, Yuriko, Ohashi, Yukiko, Sohda, Satoshi, Takeda, Jun, Saito, Tomomi, Kasai, Yasuyo, Watanabe, Hideki, Haruna, Megumi, and Takeda, Satoru
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CHILDBIRTH & psychology ,FEAR ,PHOBIAS ,BIPOLAR disorder ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,OBSTETRICIANS ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERVIEWING ,CONTENT analysis ,PREGNANT women ,OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder ,RESEARCH methodology ,PANIC disorders ,WOMEN'S health ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Tokophobia is regarded as the intensive fear of childbirth that some pregnant women have. However, little is known about the psychopathological details of tokophobia (fear of childbirth). Between 2020 and 2021, a total of 10 pregnant women (nine nulliparae and one multipara) with a strong fear of childbirth were referred by obstetricians. Semi-structured psychopathological interviews were conducted, and two cases were judged to have obsession, three an overvalued idea, and one secondary delusion. Three were characterised by both obsession and overvalued idea and one by both obsession and secondary delusion. In total, six cases had features of an overvalued idea. All of the participants except one had a lifetime history of a specific phobia. In addition, their history included social phobia in two cases, panic disorder in one case, obsessive–compulsive disorder (other than tokophobia) in two cases, depressive disorder in two cases, bipolar disorder in two cases, and PTSD in six cases. To conclude, this study showed that tokophobia was not a phobic disorder but a kind of overvalued idea that requires specific assessment and treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Does consciousness entail subjectivity? The puzzle of thought insertion.
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Billon, Alexandre
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CONSCIOUSNESS ,SUBJECTIVITY ,THOUGHT insertion ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,CARTESIANISM (Philosophy) - Abstract
“There is a thought in me which is not mine.” This is, roughly, the complaint of patients suffering from thought insertion. This first-rank symptom of schizophrenia is particularly puzzling for it seems to challenge a very well entrenched principle to the effect that our conscious thoughts are necessarily subjective, that we necessarily have a sense of ownership for them (Cartesian principle). Despite their wide disagreement, classical accounts of the symptom save the Cartesian principle by interpreting thought insertion as a problem of the sense of agency for thought rather than as a problem of subjectivity. I argue that those accounts fail and that thought insertion really is a problem of subjectivity. We can nevertheless save the Cartesian principle if we realize that the presupposition, shared by classical accounts, to the effect that inserted thoughts are unequivocally conscious, is ill-grounded. Distinguishing between reflexive awareness and phenomenal consciousness, and relying on a careful comparison between thought insertion and other pathologies of agency, I propose a novel account of the symptom which is compatible with the Cartesian principle and which allows to take the patient's reports seriously. This account, I conclude, opens up novel perspectives on the comprehension of schizophrenia, and reveals a common confusion between two different dimensions of the mind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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8. Schneider's first rank symptoms and continuous performance disturbance as indices of dysconnectivity of left- and right-hemispheric components of language in schizophrenia
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Ceccherini-Nelli, Alfonso, Turpin-Crowther, Karen, and Crow, Timothy J.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA , *DIAGNOSIS , *CEREBRAL dominance , *PSYCHOSES - Abstract
Background: Here we investigate pathophysiological dimensions (language disturbance, negative symptoms, lateralisation and the continuous performance test) in relation to ICD-10 and DSM-IV concepts of diagnosis.Methods: A total of 32 consecutive psychotic patients with at least one Schneider's first rank symptom (SFRS), 15 depressed patients without SFRS and 17 normal volunteers were assessed with the Clinical Language Disorder Rating Scale (CLANG), SFRS, "pure defect" Huber's basic symptoms (HBS), handedness (Annett's pegboard task), and the A-X Continuous Performance Test (AX-CPT).Results: CLANG total score (an index of severity of language disorder) was correlated with the severity of SFRS, a higher leftward shift of handedness, and poorer performance on AX-CPT. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis showed that only CLANG and AX-CPT variables had adequate predictive validity in separating cases of ICD-10 schizophrenia from other diagnoses. The logistic regression model predicting the presence of ICD-10 schizophrenia was statistically significant using CLANG and AX-CPT variables, but not SFRS or other variables. HBS did not correlate with other variables and did not predict ICD-10 diagnosis.Conclusions: A cross-sectional diagnosis based on language disturbance and CPT performance yields a diagnostic construct largely overlapping with the ICD-10 definition of schizophrenia. We suggest that Schneider's first rank symptoms (that play a large role in the DSM-IV concept) can be considered an index of left hemisphere dysconnectivity for language whereas CPT dysfunction reflects dysconnectivity of the right hemisphere for those remoter ("spatial") associations that are closer to Bleuler's core defect and to the chronicity implicit in the ICD definition. Thus the dimensions of language disturbance in psychosis can be traced to specific cortico-cortical dysconnectivities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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9. Catatonia-like behavior and immune activation: a crosstalk between psychopathology and pathology in schizophrenia.
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Messina, Antonino, Caraci, Filippo, Aguglia, Eugenio, and Signorelli, Maria Salvina
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BIOMARKERS ,RESEARCH ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,COGNITIVE processing speed ,CATATONIA ,NEUTROPHIL lymphocyte ratio ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,DISEASE duration ,EMOTIONS ,STATISTICAL correlation ,MONOCYTE lymphocyte ratio ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Background: In Kalhbaum's first characterization of catatonia, the emotional symptoms, such as decreased or restricted expression of feelings and emotions, which is described as blunted affect, are related to the motor symptoms. In later years, the affective domain was excluded from the concept of catatonia and was not included among the diagnostic criteria in the various Diagnostic Statistical Manual (DSM) versions. In recent times, some authors have proposed the proposition of reevaluating the notion of catatonia through the reintroduction of the affective domain. The objective of this study was to examine the correlation between catatonic-like behavior (CLB), such as emotional withdrawal, blunted affect, and psychomotor slowing, and inflammatory markers, namely the neutrophil/lymphocytes ratio (NLR) and lymphocytes/monocytes ratio (LMR), in individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia. Method: A sample of 25 patients with schizophrenia (10 females, 15 males) was recruited, and the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) was used to assess the severity of emotional withdrawal, blunted affect, and psychomotor slowing. Findings: The correlation analysis (Spearman ρ) revealed a robust direct association between blunted affect and psychomotor slowing (ρ = 0.79, P = 0.001), and a significant direct correlation between CLB (emotional withdrawal, ρ = 0.51, P = 0.05; blunted affect ρ = 0.58, P = 0.05; motor retardation, ρ = 0.56, P = 0.05) and LMR (ρ = 0.53, P = 0.05). In addition, patients with a duration of illness (DOI) older than five years had a higher presence of CLB and a higher LMR than patients with a more recent diagnosis of the disease. Likely, patients with positive symptoms and in the prodromal and active stages of the disease have a different immune profile than patients in the residual stage and with a predominance of negative symptoms. Conclusions: Psychomotor slowing and blunted affect are two significantly related features, representing the two-faced Janus of immobility. Furthermore, aggregating them in CLB is more predominant the longer the duration of schizophrenia and is associated with different a specific pattern of immune activation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Phenomenology yesterday, today, and tomorrow: a proposed phenomenological response to the double challenges of contemporary recovery-oriented person-centered mental health care.
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Messas, Guilherme, Stanghellini, Giovanni, and Fulford, K. W. M. (Bill)
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MENTAL health services ,DIALECTICAL behavior therapy ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,PATIENT-centered care ,CLINICAL medicine ,HUMANISM ,DIALECTIC - Abstract
This paper argues that a dialectical synthesis of phenomenology's traditional twin roles in psychiatry (one science-centered, the other individual-centered) is needed to support the recovery-oriented practice that is at the heart of contemporary person-centered mental health care. The paper is in two main sections. Section I illustrates the different ways in which phenomenology's two roles have played out over three significant periods of the history of phenomenology in 20th century psychiatry: with the introduction of phenomenology in Karl Jaspers' General Psychopathology in 1913; with the development a few years later of structural phenomenological psychopathology; and in the period of post-War humanism. Section II is concerned with the role of phenomenology in contemporary mental health. There has been a turn to phenomenology in the current period, we argue, in response to what amounts to an uncoupling of academic psychiatry from front-line clinical care. Corresponding with the two roles of phenomenology, this uncoupling has both scientific aspects and clinical aspects. The latter, we suggest, is most fully expressed in a new model of "recovery," defined, not by the values of professionals as experts-by-training, but by the values of patients and carers as experts-by- experience, specifically, by what is important to the quality of life of the individual concerned in the situation in question. We illustrate the importance of recovery, so defined, and the challenges raised by it for both the evidence-base and the values-base of clinical decision-making, with brief clinical vignettes. It is to these challenges we argue, that phenomenology through a synthesis of its twin roles is uniquely equipped to respond. Noting, however, the many barriers to such a synthesis, we argue that in the current state of development of the field, it is by way of a dialectical synthesis of phenomenology's roles that we should proceed. From such a dialectic, a genuine synthesis of roles may ultimately emerge. We conclude with a note on the wider significance of these developments, arguing that contrary to 20th century stereotypes, they show psychiatry to be leading the way for healthcare as a whole, in developing the resources for 21st century person-centered clinical care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Acute and transient psychotic disorders: A review of Indian research.
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Grover, Sandeep and Kathiravan, Sanjana
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DRUG therapy for psychoses ,ONLINE information services ,NOSOLOGY ,PSYCHIATRIC drugs ,PSYCHOSES ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,ELECTROCONVULSIVE therapy ,DISEASE relapse ,MEDLINE ,ACUTE diseases ,MEDICAL research ,ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Background: Acute and transient psychotic disorder (ATPD) was recognized as separate from other psychotic disorders and described in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) tenth revision for the first time. A lot of research on ATPD has been conducted in India over the last six decades, but a review focusing exclusively on Indian research on ATPD is not available. Aim: This paper aims to review the literature on ATPD emerging from India. Methodology: A combination of search terms "Acute and Transient Psychosis," "acute psychosis," "non-affective psychosis," "non-affective psychotic disorder," "reactive psychosis," "first-episode psychosis," and "India" were searched on various search engines like PUBMED, Medknow, Hinari, and Google Scholar. We also did a hand search for additional relevant articles, including published abstracts of the Indian Journal of Psychiatry from 2007 to 2023. Relevant papers were selected. Results: The prevalence of ATPD varies across different study settings, and it tends to have an abrupt to acute onset, and is primarily associated with stress. Few studies have assessed the subtypes of ATPD, and symptom profile has been inconsistently reported. There is a lack of trials on the effectiveness or efficacy of antipsychotics in ATPD patients. In a large proportion of patients initially diagnosed with ATPD, the diagnosis remains stable, with recurrence varying from 10% to 46.6% based on the duration of follow-up. Conclusion: There is a need for more multicentric studies, studies with larger sample sizes, and consistency in data about risk factors. There is a need to evaluate symptom profile, course, outcome, and treatment outcomes in patients with ATPD using validated instruments to improve our understanding. Further, there is a need for comparative studies to evaluate the risk factors for ATPD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Mismatch negativity generation in subjects at risk for psychosis: source analysis is more sensitive than surface electrodes in risk prediction.
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Aeberli, Tina, Müller, Mario, Theodoridou, Anastasia, Hagenmuller, Florence, Seifritz, Erich, Walitza, Susanne, Rössler, Wulf, Kawohl, Wolfram, and Heekeren, Karsten
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PSYCHOSES ,ELECTRODES ,PEOPLE with schizophrenia ,FORECASTING - Abstract
Background: Deficits of mismatch negativity (MMN) in patients with schizophrenia have been demonstrated many times and there is growing evidence that alterations of MMN already exist in individuals at risk for psychosis. The present study examines differences in MMN between subjects fulfilling ultra-high risk (UHR) or only basic symptoms criteria and it addresses the question, if MMN source analysis can improve prediction of transition to psychosis. Methods: The MMN to duration, frequency, and intensity deviants was recorded in 50 healthy controls and 161 individuals at risk for psychosis classified into three subgroups: only basic symptoms (n = 74), only ultra-high risk (n = 13) and persons who fulfill both risk criteria (n = 74). Based on a three-source model of MMN generation, we conducted an MMN source analysis and compared the amplitudes of surface electrodes and sources among the three groups. Results: Significant differences in MMN generation among the four groups were revealed at surface electrodes Cz and C4 (p < 0.05) and at the frontal source (p < 0.001) for duration deviant stimuli. The 15 subjects from the risk groups who subsequently developed a manifest psychosis had a significantly lower MMN amplitude at frontal source (p = 0.019) without showing significant differences at surface electrodes. Low activity at frontal MMN source increased the risk of transition to manifest disease by the factor 3.12 in UHR subjects. Conclusion: MMN activity differed significantly between subjects presenting only basic symptoms and subjects which additionally meet UHR criteria. The largest differences between groups as well as between individuals with and without transition were observed at the frontal source. The present results suggest that source analysis is more sensitive than surface electrodes in psychosis risk prediction by MMN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Susanne K. Langers "Mind: An Essay on Human Feeling." Eine späte Wiederentdeckung.
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Andersch, Norbert
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WORK experience (Employment) ,RITES & ceremonies ,HUMAN beings ,MENTAL health - Abstract
It is about 100 Years ago that the German-American philosopher Susanne K. Langer started a bold and courageous appearance on the stage of consciousness-research - until then exclusively dominated by male and paternalistic figures. This contribution is to highlight SK Langers work and impact on the theory of consciousness, especially on her final three volume publication: "Mind. An Essay on Human Feeling" (1967, 1972, 1982) which, until now, has not been translated into German. What stands out in Langer's work is her intuitive closeness to many Gestalt-theorists and the overriding importance she attributes to symbolization in the specific make-up of the human mind. Her main focus is centered on presentative symbolics; meaning those early forms of human expression (prior or along the development of human language) in magic rituals, rhythm, music, painting and sculpturing, early collective work experience, formalized playing or funeral activities. Langers view on symbols goes far beyond the typical meaning of reference towards a much more sophisticated intertwinement of form, event and being in a matrix of "living tensions". I would like to point out that her research is of important value to a revised thinking on mental health and mental crisis in reshaping the complex interaction between image, Gestalt and Symbol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Personal narratives and the pursuit of purpose and possibility in psychosis: directions for developing recovery-oriented treatments.
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Wiesepape, Courtney N, Lysaker, John T, Queller, Sarah E, and Lysaker, Paul H
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The experience of psychosis involves changes in an individual's sense of self and their understanding of others and the world around them. Studying life narratives and narrative identity offers one way to better understand these changes. Narratives of persons with psychosis display alterations in their themes, structures, and processes. These narratives often portray the person as possessing relatively little sense of agency, without meaningful connections to others, and often describe events in a negative emotional tone. The structure of these narratives often lacks temporal cohesion, unfolding in a disjointed manner. The overall structure and content of narratives further appear to struggle to respond to experience, suggesting that individuals with psychosis may have difficulty incorporating new information into their narrative, leading to a lack of narrative evolution. This body of research illustrates how psychosis reflects the interruption of an unfolding life in which sense of self is compromised and cannot be understood as a collection of symptoms and skill deficits. There is a need for treatment to address disruptions in personal narratives among persons with psychosis to promote a sense of purpose, possibility and meaning. As our understanding of psychosis continues to evolve and we emphasize first-person life stories, the authors believe that stigma in providers will decrease and the importance of subjective recovery will be further revealed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration.
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Bertaccini, Riccardo, Ippolito, Giuseppe, Tarasi, Luca, Zazio, Agnese, Stango, Antonietta, Bortoletto, Marta, and Romei, Vincenzo
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TRANSCRANIAL magnetic stimulation ,ALPHA rhythm ,AMPLITUDE modulation ,HALLUCINATIONS - Abstract
Multisensory integration is quintessential to adaptive behavior, with clinical populations showing significant impairments in this domain, most notably hallucinatory reports. Interestingly, altered cross-modal interactions have also been reported in healthy individuals when engaged in tasks such as the Sound-Induced Flash-Illusion (SIFI). The temporal dynamics of the SIFI have been recently tied to the speed of occipital alpha rhythms (IAF), with faster oscillations entailing reduced temporal windows within which the illusion is experienced. In this regard, entrainment-based protocols have not yet implemented rhythmic transcranial magnetic stimulation (rhTMS) to causally test for this relationship. It thus remains to be evaluated whether rhTMS-induced acoustic and somatosensory sensations may not specifically interfere with the illusion. Here, we addressed this issue by asking 27 volunteers to perform a SIFI paradigm under different Sham and active rhTMS protocols, delivered over the occipital pole at the IAF. Although TMS has been proven to act upon brain tissues excitability, results show that the SIFI occurred for both Sham and active rhTMS, with the illusory rate not being significantly different between baseline and stimulation conditions. This aligns with the discrete sampling hypothesis, for which alpha amplitude modulation, known to reflect changes in cortical excitability, should not account for changes in the illusory rate. Moreover, these findings highlight the viability of rhTMS-based interventions as a means to probe the neuroelectric signatures of illusory and hallucinatory audiovisual experiences, in healthy and neuropsychiatric populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Convergence model of AI and IoT for virus disease control system.
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Sim, Sungho and Cho, Myeongyun
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VIRUS diseases ,PREVENTIVE medicine ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,INFORMATION technology ,INTERNET of things - Abstract
Recently, virus diseases, such as SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV, and COVID-19, continue to emerge and pose a severe public health problem. These diseases threaten the lives of many people and cause serious social and economic losses. Recent developments in information technology (IT) and connectivity have led to the emergence of Internet of Things (IoT) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) applications in many industries. These industries, where IoT and AI together are making significant impacts, are the healthcare and the diagnosis department. In addition, by actively communicating with smart devices and various biometric sensors, it is expanding its application fields to telemedicine, healthcare, and disease prevention. Even though existing IoT and AI technologies can enhance disease detection, monitoring, and quarantine, their impact is very limited because they are not integrated or applied rapidly to the emergence of a sudden epidemic. Especially in the situation where infectious diseases are rapidly spreading, the conventional methods fail to prevent large-scale infections and block global spreads through prediction, resulting in great loss of lives. Therefore, in this paper, various sources of infection information with local limitations are collected through virus disease information collector, and AI analysis and severity matching are performed through AI broker. Finally, through the Integrated Disease Control Center, risk alerts are issued, proliferation block letters are sent, and post-response services are provided quickly. Suppose we further develop the proposed integrated virus disease control model. In that case, it will be possible to proactively detect and warn of risk factors in response to infectious diseases that are rapidly spreading worldwide and strengthen measures to prevent spreading of infection in no time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Schneider's first-rank symptoms have neither diagnostic value for schizophrenia nor higher clinical validity than other delusions and hallucinations in psychotic disorders.
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Peralta, Victor and Cuesta, Manuel J
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DIAGNOSIS of schizophrenia ,HALLUCINATIONS ,DELUSIONS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PSYCHOSES ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,SOCIAL adjustment ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HOSPITAL care ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) - Abstract
The validity of studies on the diagnostic significance of first-rank symptoms (FRS) for schizophrenia has been put in doubt because of a poor compliance with Schneider's criterion for their definition and the lack of use of the phenomenological method for their assessment. In this study, using a rigorously phenomenological approach to elicit FRS, we examined (a) the degree to which unequivocally present FRS differentiated schizophrenia (n=513) from other psychotic disorders (n=633), and (b) the comparative validity between FRS and other reality-distortion symptoms against 16 external validators in the whole sample of psychotic disorders (n=1146). Diagnostic performance indices (with 95% CIs) of FRS for diagnosing schizophrenia were as follows: sensitivity=0.58 (0.54−0.61), specificity=0.65 (0.62−0.67), positive predictive value=0.57 (0.54−0.60) and negative predictive value=0.65 (0.63−0.68). While the overall association pattern of FRS and non-FRS scores with the validators was rather similar, three validators (premorbid social adjustment, number of hospitalizations and global assessment of functioning) were significantly related to non-FRS scores (p < 0.006) but not to FRS scores (p > 0.05). Furthermore, no validator was significantly related to FRS scores and unrelated to non-FRS scores, all of which indicates an overall better predictive validity for non-FRS delusions and hallucinations. These findings suggest that FRS do not have diagnostic value for diagnosing schizophrenia and that they do not meaningfully add to the external validity showed by other delusions and hallucinations. We believe that much of the misunderstanding about the diagnostic and clinical validity of FRS for schizophrenia is rooted in Schneider's confusing concept of the disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Delusional Perception Revisited.
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Nielsen, Kasper Møller, Nordgaard, Julie, and Henriksen, Mads Gram
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SYMPTOMS ,INTERNATIONAL Statistical Classification of Diseases & Related Health Problems ,DELUSIONS ,SCHIZOPHRENIA - Abstract
Delusional perception designates a sudden, idiosyncratic, and often self-referential delusion triggered by a neutral perceptual content. In classical psychopathology, delusional perception was considered almost pathognomonic for schizophrenia. Since delusional perception has been erased from ICD-11 and always been absent in DSM, it risks slipping out of clinical awareness. In this article, we explore the clinical roots of delusional perception, elucidate the psychopathological phenomenon, and discuss its two predominant conceptualizations, i.e., Schneider's well-known two-link model and Matussek's lesser known one-link model. The two-link model posits that delusional perception amounts to an abnormal interpretation of an intact perception, whereas the one-link model posits that the delusional meaning is contained within a changed perception. Despite their differences, both models stress that delusional perception is a primary delusion that takes place within an altered experiential framework that is characteristic of the psychopathological Gestalt of schizophrenia. We discuss the role of delusional perception in future psychopathological and diagnostic assessment and argue that such assessments must be conducted in comprehensive manner, eliciting the psychopathological context within which symptoms and signs are embedded. Finally, we discuss the compatibility of the two models of delusional perception with contemporary cognitive models on delusion and cognitive psychotherapeutic approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. Malingering of Psychotic Symptoms in Psychiatric Settings: Theoretical Aspects and Clinical Considerations.
- Author
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Bellman, Val, Chinthalapally, Anisha, Johnston, Ethan, Russell, Nina, Bruce, Jared, and Saleem, Shazia
- Subjects
MALINGERING ,SYMPTOMS ,COMORBIDITY ,MENTAL illness ,PHYSICIAN services utilization - Abstract
Malingering is the intentional production of false or grossly exaggerated physical or psychological symptoms motivated by external incentives. Although the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM–5) does not list malingering in its diagnostic section and therefore does not identify it as a formal mental disorder, malingering and verified mental illness commonly coexist. Some subtypes of feigning behaviors, such as partial or pure malingering, dissimulation, and false imputation, can be suspected when patients have marked discrepancies between reported stressors and objective findings. The article discusses these three theoretical concepts with their possible clinical aspects, illustrating each phenomenon by clinical case with self-reported and/or observed psychotic symptoms. We summarized relevant findings and provided a review of clinical considerations that physicians can use to aid in the evaluation of psychotic symptoms in the context of those three concepts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Prevalence of First Rank Symptoms in Mania.
- Author
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Prasad, Shobhit Kumar, Sethi, Sujata, and Karahda, Aarti
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MANIA ,SYMPTOMS ,NUCLEAR families ,UNEMPLOYMENT statistics ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: First rank symptoms (FRSs) are seen frequently in mania. There has been a scarcity of data published in consideration with the Indian population on the prevalence of FRS in mania. Aim: The aim of this study is to explore the pattern of occurrence of FRS and assess association between the presence of FRS and severity of mania. Subjects and Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in the psychiatry department of tertiary care institution of North India. Fifty patients selected by convenient sampling, diagnosed with mania as per Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition (DSM-5) classification. Informed consent taken, semi-structured per forma used, present state examination-9 Hindi version used for FRS, Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) to assess severity of mania. Descriptive statistics were used. The Chi-square test was used for the comparison between the groups. Mann-Whitney U-test was used for the comparison between individual FRS and YMRS score. Results: Mean age FRS + was 35.32 years (±13.85), 71% were males; majority belonged to urban locality, married, residing in nuclear family, educated up to matriculation, and unemployed. There was no significant association of these variables with FRS. The Presence of =1 FRS was 62%; voices commenting on one's action (83.9%), voices arguing (77.4%), thought broadcast (38.7%), delusional perception (23.8%), thought withdrawal and thought echo (both 12.9%), made volitional acts, somatic passivity, and thought insertion (in 3.2% each). None had the presence of made feelings and made impulse/drives. Mean YMRS was 40.16 ± 7.91. No statistical significance found between FRS and YMRS scoring, except for thought withdrawal. Conclusions: The present study confirms FRS in substantial cases of mania. FRS in mania can lead to misdiagnosis of schizophrenia, leading to inadequate management, delayed appropriate treatment, and poor prognosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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21. FIRST RANK SYMPTOMS IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF SCHIZOPHRENIA.
- Author
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Idrees, Mohammad, Khan, Imran, Irfan, Muhammad, and Sarwar, Robina
- Subjects
- *
DIAGNOSIS of schizophrenia , *SYMPTOMS , *SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment , *INTERVIEWING in psychiatry , *STATISTICAL sampling - Abstract
Objectives: To determine the usefulness of Schneider's first rank symptoms of schizophrenia. Methodology: Patients suffering from schizophrenia, admitted to the Psychiatry Ward Khyber Teaching Hospital, Peshawar during the year 2009 were selected by non probability purposive sampling. It was a descriptive study and the diagnosis was made according to DSM-IV criteria. Patients were interviewed by using a semi structured questionnaire based on Present State Examination and first rank symptoms were assessed. Results: Out of 100 patients suffering from schizophrenia, there were 58 males and 42 females. Thirty four (34%) (22 male & 12 females) reported having one or more first rank symptoms while Sixty six (66%) patients although diagnosed with schizophrenia on DSM IV criteria did not show first rank symptoms. The most often found individual first rank symptoms in these 34 patients were voices commenting (n=14, %), made impulses (n=12, %), and voices arguing (n=12, %). None reported delusional perception. Conclusions: The reliability of the presence of first rank symptoms in Schizophrenia should be taken cautiously as only one third of the patients diagnosed with schizophrenia as per the DSM IV criteria showed any first rank symptom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
22. White matter abnormalities and neurocognitive deficits associated with the passivity phenomenon in schizophrenia: A diffusion tensor imaging study
- Author
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Sim, Kang, Yang, Guo Liang, Loh, Donus, Poon, Lye Yin, Sitoh, Yih Yian, Verma, Swapna, Keefe, Richard, Collinson, Simon, Chong, Siow Ann, Heckers, Stephan, Nowinski, Wieslaw, and Pantelis, Christos
- Subjects
- *
BRAIN abnormalities , *COGNITION disorders , *PEOPLE with schizophrenia , *DIFFUSION tensor imaging , *BRAIN imaging , *PASSIVITY (Psychology) , *BRAIN function localization , *BIOLOGICAL neural networks - Abstract
Abstract: The passivity phenomenon is a distressing Schneiderian first rank symptom in patients with schizophrenia. Based on extant data of functional and structural cerebral changes underlying passivity, we sought to examine cerebral white matter integrity in our subjects. We hypothesised that the passivity phenomenon would be associated with white matter changes in specific cortical (frontal, parietal cortices, and cingulate gyrus) and subcortical regions (thalamus and basal ganglia) and correlated with relevant neurocognitive deficits, compared with characteristics in those without the passivity phenomenon. Thirty-six subjects (11 with passivity and 25 without passivity) with schizophrenia were compared with 32 age-, gender- and handedness-matched healthy controls using diffusion tensor imaging. Neuropsychological testing was administered. Patients with passivity were associated with increased fractional anisotropy within the frontal cortex, cingulate gyrus, and basal ganglia and decreased fractional anisotropy within the thalamus when compared with patients without passivity. Within patients with passivity, fractional anisotropy in the frontal cortex correlated with the age of onset of illness and neurocognitive deficits related to attention and executive functioning. The findings suggest distributed involvement of cortical and subcortical regions underlying passivity and support the notion of neural network models underlying specific psychiatric symptoms such as passivity. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
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23. A comparison of symptoms and family history in schizophrenia with and without prior cannabis use: Implications for the concept of cannabis psychosis
- Author
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Boydell, J., Dean, K., Dutta, R., Giouroukou, E., Fearon, P., and Murray, R.
- Subjects
- *
MARIJUANA , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *GENEALOGY , *PSYCHOMOTOR disorders , *HALLUCINATIONS , *HYDROCARBONS , *PSYCHOLOGY , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICS , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *COMORBIDITY , *ACQUISITION of data , *CROSS-sectional method , *SUBSTANCE-induced psychoses , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: There is considerable interest in cannabis use in psychosis. It has been suggested that the chronic psychosis associated with cannabis use, is symptomatically distinct from idiopathic schizophrenia. Several studies have reported differences in psychopathology and family history in people with schizophrenia according to whether or not they were cannabis users. We set out to test the hypotheses arising from these studies that cannabis use is associated with more bizarre behaviour, more thought disorder, fewer negative symptoms including blunted affect, more delusions of reference, more paranoid delusions and a stronger family history of schizophrenia.Method: We used a case register that contained 757 cases of first onset schizophrenia, 182 (24%) of whom had used cannabis in the year prior to first presentation, 552 (73%) had not and 3% had missing data. We completed the OPCRIT checklist on all patients and investigated differences in the proportion of people with distractibility, bizarre behaviour, positive formal thought disorder, delusions of reference, well organised delusions, any first rank symptom, persecutory delusions, abusive/accusatory hallucinations, blunted affect, negative thought disorder, any negative symptoms (catatonia, blunted affect, negative thought disorder, or deterioration), lack of insight, suicidal ideation and a positive family history of schizophrenia, using chi square tests. Logistic regression modelling was then used to determine whether prior cannabis use affected the presence of the characteristics after controlling for age, sex and ethnicity.Results: There was no statistically significant effect of cannabis use on the presence of any of the above. There remained however a non-significant trend towards more insight (OR 0.65 p=0.055 for "loss of insight") and a finding of fewer abusive or accusatory hallucinations (OR 0.65 p=0.049) of borderline significance amongst the cannabis users. These were in the hypothesised direction. There was no evidence of fewer negative symptoms or greater family history amongst cannabis users.Conclusion: We found few appreciable differences in symptomatology between schizophrenic patients who were or were not cannabis users. There were no differences in the proportion of people with a positive family history of schizophrenia between cannabis users and non-users. This argues against a distinct schizophrenia-like psychosis caused by cannabis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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24. Ethnicity and first-rank symptoms in patients with psychosis
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Arnold, Lesley M., Keck Jr., Paul E., Collins, Jacqueline, Wilson, Rodgers, Fleck, David E., Corey, Kimberly B., Amicone, Jennifer, Adebimpe, Victor R., Strakowski, Stephen M., and Keck, Paul E Jr
- Subjects
- *
ETHNICITY , *PSYCHOSES , *SYMPTOMS , *DIAGNOSIS of schizophrenia , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis , *ETHNIC groups , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders , *MENTAL status examination , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *PSYCHOLOGY , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *SEX distribution , *ETHNOLOGY research , *PSYCHOLOGY of Black people , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EVALUATION research , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Previous studies suggested that African-American patients with psychotic disorders present more commonly with first-rank symptoms. However, it was unclear whether these results reflected true differences among African- and Euro-Americans in symptom presentation or instead resulted from raters being more likely to assign first-rank symptoms to African-American patients. In this study, a total of 195 African- and Euro-American patients presenting for hospitalization with psychosis were evaluated using structured diagnostic and symptom rating instruments; this evaluation was audiotaped. The tapes were transcribed and all cues indicating the patient''s ethnicity were edited from the transcript and from medical records. Two board-certified psychiatrists then evaluated the transcripts and medical records in order to make consensus expert diagnosis and rate first-rank symptoms. Ratings of first-rank symptoms in African- and Euro-American patients were compared between ethnicity-blinded expert consensus assessments and the unblinded structured interview. African-American men received higher first-rank symptom ratings than the remaining patient groups by both ethnicity-blinded expert consensus and unblinded structured interview. African-American men also had significantly more total psychotic symptoms than Euro-American men. However, the ethnically blinded expert consensus did not find an increased rate of schizophrenia in the African-American men. These findings indicate that psychotic symptom presentation should be evaluated in the context of other symptoms (e.g., affective symptoms) in diagnostic assessments in order to prevent misdiagnoses of schizophrenia. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
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25. Disintegration of the components of language as the path to a revision of Bleuler's and Schneider's concepts of schizophrenia. Linguistic disturbances compared with first-rank symptoms in acute psychosis.
- Author
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Ceccherini-Nelli, Alfonso and Crow, Timothy J.
- Subjects
SCHIZOPHRENIA ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PSYCHOSES ,DEVELOPMENTAL disabilities ,AUTISM ,COMMUNICATIVE disorders ,COGNITION disorders ,HALLUCINATIONS ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: The 20th century ended without a resolution of the debate about the supremacy of Schneider's psychopathological conceptualisation of schizophrenia (the first-rank symptoms) over Bleuler's 'four As' (disorders of association and affect, ambivalence and autism).Aims: To examine the relationships between linguistic deviations and symptoms in patients with acute psychosis.Method: We assessed language disturbances and first-rank symptoms with the Clinical Language Disorder Rating Scale (CLANG) in 30 consecutive patients with acute psychosis, selected for the presence of at least one active first-rank symptom, and 15 control participants with depression but no psychotic symptoms.Results: Strong positive correlations were found between the CLANG factor 'poverty' and first-rank delusions of control and between semantic/phonemic paraphasias and verbal auditory hallucinations [corrected]. Language disturbances were superior to nuclear symptoms in discriminating ICD-10 schizophrenia from other psychoses.Conclusions: Evaluating the features of psychosis as deviations in the cerebral organisation of language paves the way to a concept of psychosis that supersedes these traditional but competing categorical concepts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2003
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26. A Phenomenological Exploration of the Voices Reported by Borderline Personality and Schizophrenia Patients.
- Author
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Barrera, Alvaro, Bajorek, Tomasz, Dekker, Romanie, Hothi, Gurjiven, Lewis, Alexandra, and Pearce, Steve
- Subjects
SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder ,AUDITORY hallucinations ,PEOPLE with schizophrenia ,BORDERLINE personality disorder ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL scaling ,GENDER - Abstract
Introduction: Over time, there have been different views regarding the verbal auditory hallucinations (VAHs) reported by borderline personality disorder (BPD) and schizophrenia patients. More recently, their similarity has been emphasized, a view that undoubtedly has significant implications in terms of differential diagnosis and management. To explore this important issue, we undertook a detailed phenomenological assessment of persistent VAH reported by BPD and schizophrenia DSM-IV participants. Methods: The Psychotic Symptoms Rating Scale (PSYRATS), the Revised Beliefs About Voices Questionnaire (BAVQ-R), the Multidimensional Scale for Hallucinations (MSH), and a detailed clinical interview were administered to 11 BPD and 10 schizophrenia DSM-IV participants. Results: The VAHs of both groups were similar regarding intensity, reported as located inside or outside the head, and frequency in which they were described as a third-person phenomenon. However, the patients' stance towards their VAH was clearly different. Whilst BPD patients identified them in a clear way in terms of gender and age and disliked them, schizophrenia patients identified them more vaguely, reported them both as more disruptive but at the same time engaged with them more positively; schizophrenia patients also integrated their VAH more into delusions. Discussion: Whilst reporting similar intensity of their VAH, the 2 groups' stance towards them were strikingly different in that BPD participants regarded them as identifiable and unequivocally unpleasant whilst schizophrenia participants regarded them in a rather vague and ambiguous manner. Methodologically, this preliminary study suggests that in-depth phenomenological assessment can help to elucidate the differential diagnosis of VAH in these, possibly other, clinical groups. Further research is warranted to establish whether these preliminary findings are replicated on a bigger clinical sample. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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27. The prevalence and diagnostic significance of Schneiderian first-rank symptoms in a random sample of acute psychiatric in-patients.
- Author
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O'Grady, John C. and O'Grady, J C
- Subjects
PSYCHIATRIC hospital patients ,SYMPTOMS ,DIAGNOSIS of schizophrenia ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,PSYCHIATRIC hospital admission & discharge ,PSYCHODIAGNOSTICS ,DIAGNOSIS ,HALLUCINATIONS ,HOSPITAL care ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,PSYCHOLOGY ,STATISTICAL sampling ,TIME ,DISEASE prevalence ,ACUTE diseases - Abstract
Ninety-nine acute in-patients were interviewed within four days of admission to hospital. The interview included items concerning all 11 first-rank symptoms. Two definitions (wide and narrow) of each first-rank symptom were employed. Three definitions of schizophrenia and a research diagnosis of major affective disorder were used to determine their relationship with first-rank symptoms. Of subjects with schizophrenia, 73% had first-rank symptoms, as had five (14%) of 34 subjects with affective disorder. The results do not support the hypothesis that first-rank symptoms are specific to schizophrenia, although the specificity of first-rank symptoms for schizophrenia increased if a narrow rather than a wide definition of symptoms was employed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1990
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28. First-Rank Symptoms as a Diagnostic Clue to Multiple Personality Disorder.
- Author
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Kluft, Richard P.
- Subjects
DISSOCIATIVE identity disorder ,PATIENTS ,SYMPTOMS ,DISSOCIATIVE disorders ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Thirty patients with multiple personality disorder had one or more of Schneider's 11 first-rank symptoms at initial assessment (mean = 3.6; range=1-8). The author describes these symptom categories, eight of which were noted in the patients he interviewed, and illustrates them from the patients' case material. He suggests that inquiry about first-rank symptom phenomena may be a valuable diagnostic clue to the presence of multiple personality disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1987
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29. 12.4 THE BODILY SELF IN PSYCHOSIS: SENSORIMOTOR INDUCTION OF AUDITORY MISATTRIBUTION IN PSYCHOSIS IS LINKED TO NEURAL DISCONNECTIVITY.
- Author
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Salomon, Roy, Progin, Pierre, Griffa, Alessandra, Rognini, Giulio, Do, Kim Q, Conus, Philippe, Marchesotti, Silvia, Bersconi, Fosco, Hagmann, Patric, Serino, Andrea, and Blanke, Olaf
- Subjects
POSITIVE psychology ,SENSORIMOTOR integration ,PSYCHOSES ,LARGE-scale brain networks ,AUDITORY perception ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Background Psychosis is often depicted as a disruption of the self-model. Patients suffering from psychosis report many symptoms relating to deficiencies in the minimal self, including loss of the sense of control over their actions (Sense of Agency) as well as numerous disturbances of body representation (e.g. Body Ownership). Positive symptoms of psychosis such as passivity symptoms and auditory hallucinations (termed first-rank symptoms) are characterized by a diminished demarcation of self-other boundaries, causing misattribution of self-generated actions to external sources. It has been suggested that this deficiency in self-monitoring in schizophrenia is due to abnormal sensorimotor prediction mechanisms, causing a loss of agency for actions and thoughts. While the neurobiological underpinnings of schizophrenia are yet unclear, many studies have reported aberrant neural connectivity in schizophrenia patients which may impact sensorimotor prediction and integration. Methods Recently, we have shown that introducing sensorimotor conflict (SMC) can induce psychosis like symptoms in healthy patients. Employing a master-slave robotic system we induced a conflict by introducing a delay between the participants' movements and the haptic feedback. The SMC caused a feeling of a Presence (FoP) which is a first rank symptom of psychosis. The FoP is also found in neurological patients with lesions in cortical regions of the temporoparietal cortex, insular cortex and fronto-parietal cortex related to abnormal bodily self-representation. Here, we tested if SMC may cause misattribution of auditory stimuli and if this is related to neural connectivity. We tested first episode psychosis patients (N=31) with and without first rank symptoms (related to the sense of control over actions and thoughts) as well as healthy participants (N=20) on an auditory attribution task while inducing conflict with the master-slave robot. Results We found that when a SMC was introduced patients with first rank symptoms showed a decrease in their ability to judge if the auditory stimuli were in their own voice or the voice of another person. Resting state functional connectivity analysis indicated that the first rank patients had reduced connectivity in the network related to the SMC, but not in other control regions. Furthermore, the reduced functional connectivity correlated with the rates of auditory misattribution. Conclusions Our results show that induction of SMC can cause auditory misattributions, and that this is related to reduced cortical communication in regions related to sensorimotor body representation. These findings connect two influential theories of psychosis linking cognitive theories of sensorimotor prediction error in schizophrenia with systems level theories of neural disconnectivity. Understanding these neurocognitive mechanisms underlying the disruption of the self-model in psychosis may allow novel approaches in early diagnosis and treatment of these conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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30. Commentary in response to Andrew Scull's 'American psychiatry in the new millennium: a critical appraisal'.
- Author
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Carpenter Jr, William T.
- Subjects
HISTORY of psychiatry ,MENTAL illness - Abstract
The article presents commentary on participants often including psychiatrists with organized psychiatry as the responsible participant. Topics include expense of treatment and failure to build community therapeutic networks to replace mass reduction in state sponsored hospitals; and Personal financial situation is a primary determinant for who receives high-quality clinical care.
- Published
- 2021
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31. A major flaw in the diagnosis of schizophrenia: what happened to the Schneider's first rank symptoms.
- Author
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Moscarelli, Massimo
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of schizophrenia ,DELUSIONS ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders ,PATIENT compliance ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,SCHIZOPHRENIA - Abstract
Kurt Schneider introduced in the definition of the first-rank symptoms (FRS) the criterion that, where unequivocally present, the FRS are always psychological primaries and irreducible. This criterion, grounded on 'phenomenology' (description of subjective experiences), cannot be applied, according to Schneider, to delusions, either two-stage FRS delusional perception, or second-rank delusional notions. The Schneider's key criterion was neglected since the initial adoption of the 'Schneider's FRS' in the subsequent international literature (e.g. PSE, RDC, DSM, and ICD). The 'Schneider's FRS' (e.g. thought insertion, thought withdrawal, passivity, and influence) were persistently equivocated as 'delusions', in spite of the Schneider's FRS exclusion criterion. The internationally equivocated 'Schneider's FRS' (only homonymous of the original 'Schneider's FRS'), were eliminated in the DSM-5 and de-emphasized in ICD-11. However, the diagnostic value of the original 'Schneider's FRS', assessed on the basis of the strict compliance with the Schneider's criterion for their definition, was never determined. The 'damnatio memoriae' of the original Schneider's FRS may be premature. The definition and assessment of the 'experienced' symptoms of schizophrenia, only directly observed and reported by the patients, represent a specific, crucial, irreplaceable domain of psychopathology, to be carefully distinguished from the domain of the 'behavioral' symptoms observed by the clinician. Contemporary psychopathology research is aware of the absolute need for psychiatry to enhance precision and exactness in the definition of the experienced symptoms of schizophrenia, through the formulation of unequivocal inclusion and exclusion criteria (descriptive micro-psychopathology), in order to determine their value in research and care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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32. Demons of the mind: satanic thoughts in seventeenth-century England.
- Author
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Oldridge, Darren
- Subjects
DEVIL ,MIND & body ,MENTAL health - Abstract
This article explores the widespread belief in Stuart England that the Devil could intrude thoughts into the human mind. Drawing on medical and religious literature, it argues that this idea was accepted throughout the seventeenth century, and remained largely unchallenged by naturalistic theories of mental illness. Indeed, contemporaries often combined demonic and physiological explanations for conditions such as "melancholy". The article argues that the concept of satanic thoughts survived because it was consistent with wider aspects of Protestant doctrine, and its effects were socially and politically unthreatening. Finally, it considers the relationship between the early modern belief in satanic incursions in the mind and modern understandings of mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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33. Assessing Voice Hearing in Trauma Spectrum Disorders: A Comparison of Two Measures and a Review of the Literature.
- Author
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Shinn, Ann K., Wolff, Jonathan D., Hwang, Melissa, Lebois, Lauren A. M., Robinson, Mathew A., Winternitz, Sherry R., Öngür, Dost, Ressler, Kerry J., and Kaufman, Milissa L.
- Subjects
AUDITORY hallucinations ,LITERATURE reviews ,DISSOCIATIVE disorders ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,RECEIVER operating characteristic curves - Abstract
Voice hearing (VH) can occur in trauma spectrum disorders (TSD) such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and dissociative disorders. However, previous estimates of VH among individuals with TSD vary widely. In this study, we sought to better characterize the rate and phenomenology of VH in a sample of 70 women with TSD related to childhood abuse who were receiving care in a specialized trauma program. We compared the rate of VH within our sample using two different measures: 1) the auditory hallucination (AH) item in the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV-TR (SCID), and 2) the thirteen questions involving VH in the Multidimensional Inventory of Dissociation (MID), a self-report questionnaire that comprehensively assesses pathological dissociation. We found that 45.7% of our sample met threshold for SCID AH, while 91.4% met criteria for MID VH. Receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analyses showed that while SCID AH and MID VH items have greater than chance agreement, the strength of agreement is only moderate, suggesting that SCID and MID VH items measure related but not identical constructs. Thirty-two patients met criteria for both SCID AH and at least one MID VH item ("unequivocal VH"), 32 for at least one MID VH item but not SCID AH ("ambiguous VH"), and 6 met criteria for neither ("unequivocal non-VH"). Relative to the ambiguous VH group, the unequivocal VH group had higher dissociation scores for child voices, and higher mean frequencies for child voices and Schneiderian voices. Our findings suggest that VH in women with TSD related to childhood abuse is common, but that the rate of VH depends on how the question is asked. We review prior studies examining AH and/or VH in TSD, focusing on the measures used to ascertain these experiences, and conclude that our two estimates are consistent with previous studies that used comparable instruments and patient samples. Our results add to growing evidence that VH—an experience typically considered psychotic or psychotic-like—is not equivalent to having a psychotic disorder. Instruments that assess VH apart from psychotic disorders and that capture their multidimensional nature may improve identification of VH, especially among patients with non-psychotic disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Toward a Phenomenological Psychotherapy for Schizophrenia.
- Author
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Škodlar, Borut and Henriksen, Mads Gram
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,PSYCHIATRIC hospitals ,CARDIAC patients ,UNIVERSITY hospitals - Abstract
During the last decades, research in phenomenological psychopathology has provided a vast array of insights that are invaluable for understanding the experiential worlds of patients with schizophrenia. Precisely, knowledge of patients' experiences is a necessary basis for a sound and thoughtful psychotherapy. This is especially important in psychotherapy for schizophrenia, where patients' experiences may not always be easily accessible or understandable. In the available literature, we found only scattered suggestions for a translation of insights from phenomenological psychopathology into psychotherapeutic practice. The aim of this article is to offer a preliminary translation. First, we outline characteristics of the experiential worlds in schizophrenia, highlighting what we call "core experiences" and "experience-near concepts." Then we explore the psychotherapeutic methods and strategies that can be developed and elaborated on the basis of the accumulated research in phenomenological psychopathology, drawing also on experiences from a phenomenologically informed psychotherapy unit at the University Psychiatric Hospital of Ljubljana. Here, we propose principles of a phenomenological psychotherapy for schizophrenia, dividing them into the following subgroups: (1) overall goals, (2) general attitudes, (3) main domains, and (4) therapeutic strategies. The unique value of phenomenological psychotherapy seems to lie in its ability to capture the heart of the patients' experiences and their inherent vulnerabilities and then use these insights to inform psychotherapeutic interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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35. Overgeneral autobiographical memory bias in clinical and non-clinical voice hearers.
- Author
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Jacobsen, Pamela, Peters, Emmanuelle, Ward, Thomas, Garety, Philippa A., Jackson, Mike, and Chadwick, Paul
- Subjects
AUTOBIOGRAPHY ,AUDITORY hallucinations ,HEARING ,LEARNING assessment ,MEMORY ,MEMORY testing ,PSYCHOSES ,PSYCHOTHERAPY patients ,HUMAN voice ,CASE-control method - Abstract
Background: Hearing voices can be a distressing and disabling experience for some, whilst it is a valued experience for others, so-called 'healthy voice-hearers'. Cognitive models of psychosis highlight the role of memory, appraisal and cognitive biases in determining emotional and behavioural responses to voices. A memory bias potentially associated with distressing voices is the overgeneral memory bias (OGM), namely the tendency to recall a summary of events rather than specific occasions. It may limit access to autobiographical information that could be helpful in re-appraising distressing experiences, including voices. Methods: We investigated the possible links between OGM and distressing voices in psychosis by comparing three groups: (1) clinical voice-hearers (N = 39), (2) non-clinical voice-hearers (N = 35) and (3) controls without voices (N = 77) on a standard version of the autobiographical memory test (AMT). Clinical and non-clinical voice-hearers also completed a newly adapted version of the task, designed to assess voices-related memories (vAMT). Results: As hypothesised, the clinical group displayed an OGM bias by retrieving fewer specific autobiographical memories on the AMT compared with both the non-clinical and control groups, who did not differ from each other. The clinical group also showed an OGM bias in recall of voice-related memories on the vAMT, compared with the non-clinical group. Conclusions: Clinical voice-hearers display an OGM bias when compared with non-clinical voice-hearers on both general and voices-specific recall tasks. These findings have implications for the refinement and targeting of psychological interventions for psychosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Self-disorders in schizophrenia-spectrum disorders: a 5-year follow-up study.
- Author
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Nordgaard, Julie, Nilsson, Lars Siersbæk, Sæbye, Ditte, and Parnas, Josef
- Subjects
SCHIZOPHRENIA ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHOSES ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Self-disorders have been hypothesized to be an underlying and trait-like core feature of schizophrenia-spectrum disorders and a certain degree of temporal stability of self-disorders would therefore be expected. The aim of the study was to examine the persistence of self-disorders measured by the Examination of Anomalous Self Experiences over a time span of 5 years. 48 patients with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders were thoroughly assessed for psychopathology at baseline and 5 years later. Self-disorders were assessed by the Examination of Anomalous Self Experiences. The level of self-disorders was same at the two occasions for the full Examination of Anomalous Self Disorders and for four out of the five domains. For one domain, the level of self-disorders increased slightly from baseline to follow-up. The correlations between baseline and follow-up were moderate. 9 out of the 13 most-frequently rated items at baseline showed equal frequencies at follow-up. The baseline level of self-disorders predicted global symptomatic, but not functional outcome. Self-disorders measured by the Examination of Anomalous Self Experiences show a high level of temporal persistence over 5 years and predict symptomatic outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The MHC/HLA Gene Complex in Major Psychiatric Disorders: Emerging Roles and Implications.
- Author
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Debnath, Monojit, Berk, Michael, Leboyer, Marion, and Tamouza, Ryad
- Published
- 2018
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38. Bayes and the first person: consciousness of thoughts, inner speech and probabilistic inference.
- Author
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Knappik, Franz
- Subjects
CONSCIOUSNESS ,COGNITION ,THOUGHT & thinking ,SELF-talk ,PROBABILISTIC inference - Abstract
On a widely held view, episodes of inner speech provide at least one way in which we become conscious of our thoughts. However, it can be argued, on the one hand, that consciousness of thoughts in virtue of inner speech presupposes (unconscious) interpretation of the simulated speech. On the other hand, the need for such self-interpretation (even if unconscious) seems to clash with distinctive first-personal characteristics that we would normally ascribe to consciousness of one’s own thoughts: a special reliability; a lack of conscious ambiguity and incomprehensibility; and a sense of causal agency. I try to resolve this puzzle by proposing an account for the requisite self-interpretation of inner speech in terms of Bayesian probabilistic inference. Drawing on “perceptual loop” accounts of speech control, I argue that such interpretive probabilistic inferences are used for the control of inner speech, and that as a consequence of this function, they are biased toward the correct interpretations. I conclude by showing how this model can explain the first-personal characteristics of consciousness of one’s own thoughts. In the case of the sense of causal agency, the resulting explanation yields novel accounts for “audible thoughts” and thought insertion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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39. CHARACTERISTICS OF HALLUCINATIONS ARISING FROM SCHIZOPHRENIA AND OTHER PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS DURING CHILDHOOD AND ADOLESCENCE.
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Tatsuhiko YAGIHASHI, Takashi NAGASAWA, Mari KASAHARA, and Nana HOSOGANE
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SCHIZOPHRENIA ,HALLUCINATIONS ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,CHILD psychiatry ,ADOLESCENT psychiatry - Abstract
Background: The occurrence of hallucinations can suggest the presence of various psychiatric disorders. Objective: The aim of this study was to identify differences between hallucinations in children and adolescents with and without schizophrenia. Methods: Among 356 patients under 20 years of age, patients with hallucinations were enrolled through retrospective review of their medical records. Results: Thirty-one patients (8.7%) had experienced some form of hallucination. Fourteen of the 31 patients were classified into a schizophrenia group, seven in a stress-related disorder group, nine into a developmental disorder group, and one into an other disorders group. Sixteen patients (51.6%) had experienced some type of traumatic event. Five patients with schizophrenia had at least one of Schneider’s first-rank symptoms. Some hallucinations in patients without schizophrenia included command or criticisms, but none experienced voices commenting on the individual’s actions. Conclusion: Detailed descriptions regarding psychiatric symptoms might aid in rendering differential diagnoses in clinical settings of child psychiatry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
40. Neurological Soft Signs in Schizophrenia: An Update on the State- versus Trait-Perspective.
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Bachmann, Silke and Schröder, Johannes
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SCHIZOPHRENIA ,MENTAL illness ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Background: Neurological soft signs (NSS) represent minor neurological signs, which indicate non-specific cerebral dysfunction. In schizophrenia, their presence has been documented extensively across all stages of the disease. Until recently, NSS were considered an endophenotype or a trait phenomenon. During the past years, however, researchers report fluctuations of the NSS scores. Aims: To further clarify the question whether NSS exhibit state or trait components or both, studies that have investigated NSS longitudinally were reviewed. Method: Studies which have assessed NSS longitudinally in adults suffering from schizophrenia, were searched for. The time frame was January 1966 to June 2017. Studies on teenagers were excluded because of interferences between brain maturation and pathology. Results: Twenty-nine follow-up studies were identified. They included patients during different stages of their illness and mainly used established instruments for NSS assessment. Patients with a first episode or a remitting course predominantly show a decrease of NSS over time, whereas a worsening of NSS can be found in the chronically ill. It was shown that change of NSS total scores over time is predominantly caused by motor system subscales and to a lesser extent by sensory integration scales. With respect to medication, the majority of studies agree on a relationship between medication response and improvement of NSS while the type of antipsychotic does not seem to play a major role. Moreover, where information on side-effects is given, it does not favor a strong relationship with NSS. However, NSS seem to correlate with negative and cognitive symptoms. Conclusion: Studies manifest a conformity regarding the presence of NSS in schizophrenia patients on the one hand. On the other hand, fluctuations of NSS scores have been widely described in subgroups. Taken together results strongly support a state-trait dichotomy of NSS. Thus, the usage of NSS as an endophenotype has to be called into question. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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41. Listening to the Voices People Hear: Auditory Hallucinations Beyond a Diagnostic Framework.
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Longden, Eleanor
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AUDITORY hallucinations ,EMOTIONAL trauma ,MENTAL illness ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment ,PSYCHOSES ,SCHIZOPHRENIA - Abstract
While voice hearing (auditory verbal hallucinations) is closely allied with psychosis/schizophrenia, it is well-established that the experience is reported by individuals with nonpsychotic diagnoses, as well as those with no history of psychiatric contact. The phenomenological similarities in voice hearing within these different populations, as well as increased recognition of associations between adversity exposure and voice presence/content, have helped strengthened the contention that voice hearing may be more reliably associated with psychosocial variables per se rather than specific clinical diagnoses. Evidence is examined for understanding voice hearing as a psychological response to environmental stressors, and the implications of this for clinical practice. Consideration is also given to the impact of the International Hearing Voices Movement, an influential survivor-led initiative that promotes person-centered, nondiagnostic approaches to the voice-hearing experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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42. BackMatter.
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Jansson, Lennart and Nordgaard, Julie
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- 2016
43. Memory and Voices: Challenging Psychiatric Diagnosis through the Novel.
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Waugh, Patricia
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- 2016
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44. Exploring social cognition in schizophrenia.
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Revsbech, R., Mortensen, E., Nordgaard, J., Jansson, L., Saebye, D., Flensborg-Madsen, T., Cutting, J., and Parnas, J.
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SOCIAL perception ,PEOPLE with schizophrenia ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,INTELLECT - Abstract
The aim of the study was to compare social cognition between groups of patients diagnosed with schizophrenia and healthy controls and to replicate two previous studies using tests of social cognition that may be particularly sensitive to social cognitive deficits in schizophrenia. Thirty-eight first-admitted patients with schizophrenia and 38 healthy controls solved 11 'imaginary conversation (i.e., theory of mind)' items, 10 'psychological understanding' items, and 10 'practical understanding' items. Statistical tests were made of unadjusted and adjusted group differences in models adjusting for intelligence and neuropsychological test performance. Healthy controls performed better than patients on all types of social cognitive tests, particularly on 'psychological understanding.' However, after adjusting for intelligence and neuropsychological test performance, all group differences became nonsignificant. When intelligence and global cognitive functioning is taken into account, schizophrenia patients and healthy controls perform similarly on social cognitive tests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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45. Basic Self-Disturbances beyond Schizophrenia: Discrepancies and Affinities in Panic Disorder - An Empirical Clinical Study.
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Madeira, Luís, Carmenates, Sergio, Costa, Cristina, Linhares, Ludgero, Stanghellini, Giovanni, Figueira, Maria Luísa, and Sass, Louis
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PHENOMENOLOGY ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,PERSONALITY disorders ,ANXIETY disorders ,PANIC disorders - Abstract
Background: Anomalous self-experiences (ASEs), presumably involving alterations in "core" or "minimal self," have been studied as manifest in schizophrenia and its spectrum, in contrast with mood disorder and personality disorder samples. This is the first study to examine ASEs in panic disorder (PD), beginning the exploration of these disturbances of subjectivity in anxiety disorders. We aimed to clarify what might, or might not, be specific to the schizophrenia spectrum domain - which, in turn, could be useful for developing pathogenetic models for various disorders. Sampling and Methods: 47 hospital outpatients with PD and no other medical and psychiatric comorbidity and 47 healthy control (HC) subjects were assessed with the Examination of Anomalous Self Experiences (EASE) and Cambridge Depersonalization Scale (CDS). Results: All our PD patients had overall ASE and EASE scores significantly higher than our HCs (mean ± SD 17.94 ± 11.88 vs. HC 1.00 ± 1.81), approaching levels found in previous schizophrenia spectrum samples. The distribution of particular EASE items and subitems in the PD sample was heterogeneous, varying from rare (<10%) or absent (termed "discrepancies" with schizophrenia spectrum: 29 items) to being present in >50% of subjects ("affinities" with schizophrenia spectrum: 7 items). EASE and CDS scores were highly correlated ( r = 0.756, 95% CI 0.665-0.840). Conclusions : PD patients scored higher on items suggesting common forms of derealization and depersonalization, perhaps suggesting "secondary" and defensive psychological processes, while lacking indicators of more profound ipseity disturbance. Our study supports the basic-self-disturbance model of schizophrenia, while suggesting the possibility of transnosological "schizophrenia-like phenomena," which might require careful phenomenological exploration to be distinguished from those of true psychotic or schizophrenic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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46. The impact of HLA-G 3′ UTR variants and sHLA-G on risk and clinical correlates of schizophrenia.
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Rajasekaran, Ashwini, Shivakumar, Venkataram, Kalmady, Sunil V., Narayanaswamy, Janardhanan C., Subbana, Manjula, Venugopal, Deepthi, Amaresha, Anekal C., Venkatasubramanian, Ganesan, Berk, Michael, and Debnath, Monojit
- Subjects
- *
HLA histocompatibility antigens , *AUTOIMMUNITY , *MAJOR histocompatibility complex , *SCHIZOPHRENIA risk factors , *GENOTYPE-environment interaction , *PREGNANCY complications - Abstract
The Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC)/Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) is known to influence the pathogenesis of several complex human diseases resulting from gene-environmental interactions. Recently, it has emerged as one of the risk determinants of schizophrenia. The HLA-G protein (a non-classical MHC class I molecule), encoded by the HLA-G gene, is shown to play important role in embryonic development. Importantly, its genetic variations and aberrant expression have been implicated in pregnancy complications like preeclampsia, inflammation, and autoimmunity. Converging evidence implicates these phenomena as risk mechanisms of schizophrenia. However, the functional implications of HLA-G in schizophrenia are yet to be empirically examined. The impact of two functional polymorphisms [14 bp Insertion/Deletion (INDEL) and +3187 A > G] and soluble HLA-G (sHLA-G) levels on schizophrenia risk was evaluated. In this exploratory study, the Ins/Ins genotype of 14 bp INDEL was found to confer a strong risk for schizophrenia. Further, low levels of sHLA-G were shown to have a significant impact on Clinical Global Impression (CGI) severity in people with schizophrenia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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47. Autism and new media: Disability between technology and society.
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Pinchevski, Amit and Peters, John Durham
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DIGITAL media ,AUTISM spectrum disorders ,SOCIAL media ,INTERNET ,TELEMATICS ,DISABILITY studies - Abstract
This article explores the elective affinities between autism and new media. Autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) provides a uniquely apt case for considering the conceptual link between mental disability and media technology. Tracing the history of the disorder through its various media connections and connotations, we propose a narrative of the transition from impaired sociability in person to fluent social media by network. New media introduce new affordances for people with ASD: The Internet provides habitat free of the burdens of face-to-face encounters, hightech industry fares well with the purported special abilities of those with Asperger’s syndrome, and digital technology offers a rich metaphorical depository for the condition as a whole. Running throughout is a gender bias that brings communication and technology into the fray of biology versus culture. Autism invites us to rethink our assumptions about communication in the digital age, accounting for both the pains and possibilities it entails. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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48. Understanding causes of and developing effective interventions for schizophrenia and other psychoses
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Jesus Perez, Debra A Russo, Jan Stochl, Gillian F Shelley, Carolyn M Crane, Michelle Painter, James B Kirkbride, Tim J Croudace, and Peter B Jones
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early intervention ,epidemiology ,psychosis ,primary care ,risk ,schizophrenia ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Early-intervention services (EISs) offer prompt and effective care to individuals with first-episode psychosis (FEP) and detect people at high risk (HR) of developing it. Aims: We aimed to educate general practitioners about psychosis and guide their referrals to specialist care; investigate determinants of the transition of HR to FEP; and predict numbers of new cases to guide policy and service planning. Incidence of psychosis in socially and ethnically diverse settings: We studied the incidence of new referrals for psychosis in a well-established EIS called CAMEO [see www.cameo.nhs.uk (accessed 18 January 2016)] and built on other epidemiological studies. The overall incidence of FEP was 45.1 per 100,000 person-years [95% confidence interval (CI) 40.8 to 49.9 per 100,000 person-years]. This was two to three times higher than the incidence predicated by the UK Department of Health. We found considerable psychosis morbidity in diverse, rural communities. Development of a population-level prediction tool for the incidence of FEP: We developed and validated a population-level prediction tool, PsyMaptic, capable of accurately estimating the expected incidence of psychosis [see www.psymaptic.org/ (accessed 18 January 2016)]. The Liaison with Education and General practiceS (LEGS) trial to detect HR: We tested a theory-based intervention to improve detection and referral of HR individuals in a cluster randomised controlled trial involving primary care practices in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough. Consenting practices were randomly allocated to (1) low-intensity liaison with secondary care, a postal campaign to help with the identification and referral of individuals with early signs of psychosis, or (2) the high-intensity theory-based intervention, which, in addition to the postal campaign, included a specialist mental health professional to liaise with each practice. Practices that did not consent to be randomised included a practice-as-usual (PAU) group. The approaches were implemented over 2 years for each practice between April 2010 and October 2013. New referrals were stratified into those who met criteria for HR/FEP (together: psychosis true positives) and those who did not fulfil such criteria (false positives). The primary outcome was the number of HR referrals per practice. Referrals from PAU practices were also analysed. We quantified the cost-effectiveness of the interventions and PAU using the incremental cost per additional true positive identified. Of 104 eligible practices, 54 consented to be randomised. Twenty-eight practices were randomised to low-intensity liaison and 26 practices were randomised to the high-intensity intervention. Two high-intensity practices withdrew. High-intensity practices referred more HR [incidence rate ratio (IRR) 2.2, 95% CI 0.9 to 5.1; p = 0.08], FEP (IRR 1.9, 95% CI 1.05 to 3.4; p = 0.04) and true-positive (IRR 2.0, 95% CI 1.1 to 3.6; p = 0.02) cases. High-intensity practices also referred more false-positive cases (IRR 2.6, 95% CI 1.3 to 5.0; p = 0.005); most (68%) of these were referred on to appropriate services. The total costs per true-positive referral in high-intensity practices were lower than those in low-intensity or PAU practices. Increasing the resources aimed at managing the primary–secondary care interface provided clinical and economic value. The Prospective Analysis of At-risk mental states and Transitions into psycHosis (PAATH) study: We aimed to identify the proportion of individuals at HR who make the transition into FEP and to elucidate the common characteristics that can help identify them. Sixty help-seeking HR individuals aged 16–35 years were stratified into those who met the criteria for HR/FEP (true positives) according to the Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States (CAARMS) and those who did not (false positives). HR participants were followed up over 2 years using a comprehensive interview schedule. A random sample of 60 healthy volunteers (HVs) matched for age (16–35 years), sex and geographical area underwent the same battery of questionnaires. Only 5% of our HR sample transitioned to a structured clinical diagnosis of psychosis over 2 years. HR individuals had a higher prevalence of moderate or severe depression, anxiety and suicidality than HVs. In fact, psychometric analyses in other population samples indicate that psychotic experiences measure the severe end of a common mental distress factor, consistent with these results. HR individuals also experienced significantly more traumatic events than HVs, but equivalent distress. Almost half of HR individuals had at least one Schneiderian first-rank symptom traditionally considered indicative of schizophrenia and 21.6% had more than one. HR individuals had very poor global functioning and low quality of life. Conclusions: This National Institute for Health Research programme developed our understanding of the social epidemiology of psychosis. A new theory-based intervention doubled the identification of HR and FEP in primary care and was cost-effective. The HR mental state has much in common with depression and anxiety; very few people transitioned to full psychosis over 2 years, in line with other recent evidence. This new understanding will help people at HR receive appropriate services focused on their current mental state. Trial registration: The primary LEGS trial is registered as ISRCTN70185866 and UKCRN ID 7036. The PAATH study is registered as UKCRN ID 7798. Funding: The National Institute for Health Research Programme Grants for Applied Research programme.
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- 2016
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49. The Spectra of Soundless Voices and Audible Thoughts: Towards an Integrative Model of Auditory Verbal Hallucinations and Thought Insertion.
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Humpston, Clara and Broome, Matthew
- Abstract
Patients with psychotic disorders experience a range of reality distortions. These often include auditory-verbal hallucinations (AVHs), and thought insertion (TI) to a lesser degree; however, their mechanisms and relationships between each other remain largely elusive. Here we attempt to establish a integrative model drawing from the phenomenology of both AVHs and TI and argue that they in fact can be seen as 'spectra' of experiences with varying degrees of agency and ownership, with 'silent and internal own thoughts' on one extreme and 'fully external and clearly audible voices' in the absence of a speaker on the other. We believe a spectral model will add emphasis to the continuity of experience and help to better understand how one type of psychotic symptom may interact with another, and put forward the argument that the experience of TI itself is not sufficient to classify as a delusion. In addition we aim to discuss some of the conceptual issues surrounding AVHs and TI with first-person accounts and current philosophical and neuropsychological theories in mind. We propose that the mechanisms behind AVHs and TI are more complex than source-monitoring deficits; indeed, to understand such phenomena one must appreciate that their very 'existence' and 'reality' as experienced by the individual have much deeper implications and meaning, both philosophically and clinically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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50. Implicit Timing as the Missing Link between Neurobiological and Self Disorders in Schizophrenia?
- Author
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Giersch, Anne, Lalanne, Laurence, and Isope, Philippe
- Subjects
SCHIZOPHRENIA ,NEURAL transmission ,MILD cognitive impairment ,NEUROBIOLOGY ,DOPAMINE ,GLUTAMIC acid ,PATIENTS ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Disorders of consciousness and the self are at the forefront of schizophrenia symptomatology. Patients are impaired in feeling themselves as the authors of their thoughts and actions. In addition, their flow of consciousness is disrupted, and thought fragmentation has been suggested to be involved in the patients' difficulties in feeling as being one unique, unchanging self across time. Both impairments are related to self disorders, and both have been investigated at the experimental level. Here we review evidence that both mechanisms of motor control and the temporal structure of signal processing are impaired in schizophrenia patients. Based on this review, we propose that the sequencing of action and perception plays a key role in the patients' impairments. Furthermore, the millisecond time scale of the disorders, as well as the impaired sequencing, highlights the cooperation between brain networks including the cerebellum, as proposed by Andreasen (1999). We examine this possibility in the light of recent knowledge on the anatomical and physiological properties of the cerebellum, its role in timing, and its involvement in known physiological impairments in patients with schizophrenia, e.g., resting states and brain dynamics. A disruption in communication between networks involving the cerebellum, related to known impairments in dopamine, glutamate and GABA transmission, may help to better explain why patients experience reduced attunement with the external world and possibly with themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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