39 results on '"Lineberry TW"'
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2. Practical suicide-risk management for the busy primary care physician.
- Author
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McDowell AK, Lineberry TW, Bostwick JM, McDowell, Anna K, Lineberry, Timothy W, and Bostwick, J Michael
- Abstract
Suicide is a public health problem and a leading cause of death. The number of people thinking seriously about suicide, making plans, and attempting suicide is surprisingly high. In total, primary care clinicians write more prescriptions for antidepressants than mental health clinicians and see patients more often in the month before their death by suicide. Treatment of depression by primary care physicians is improving, but opportunities remain in addressing suicide-related treatment variables. Collaborative care models for treating depression have the potential both to improve depression outcomes and decrease suicide risk. Alcohol use disorders and anxiety symptoms are important comorbid conditions to identify and treat. Management of suicide risk includes understanding the difference between risk factors and warning signs, developing a suicide risk assessment, and practically managing suicidal crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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3. Poor care, not poor protocols, for alcohol withdrawal.
- Author
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Lineberry TW and Lineberry, Timothy W
- Published
- 2008
4. Mortality in schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder: an Olmsted County, Minnesota cohort: 1950-2005.
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Capasso RM, Lineberry TW, Bostwick JM, Decker PA, St Sauver J, Capasso, Rebecca M, Lineberry, Timothy W, Bostwick, J Michael, Decker, Paul A, and St Sauver, Jennifer
- Abstract
Introduction: Increased mortality in people with schizophrenia, compared to the general population, has been consistently reported worldwide. This mortality has been attributed predominantly to "unnatural" deaths-suicide, accidents, and homicide. Recent studies have shown an increase in natural causes of death. Our objective is to compare the mortality of schizophrenic and schizoaffective subjects to the general US population.Methods: 319 Olmsted County residents meeting DSM-IV-TR criteria for schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder seen at the Mayo Clinic between 1950 and 1980 were followed until February 2005 for a median of 23.5 years.Results: At the end of follow-up, 44% of patients were deceased. Mortality was significantly (p<0.001) increased compared to the Caucasian population in the US for persons of like age, gender, and calendar year of birth. The median survival following diagnosis was 36.2 years. Death certificate cited cause of death was cardiac (29%), cancer--including lung (19%), and pulmonary disease (17%). Concerningly, there was no association with the year of diagnosis to survival.Conclusions: Tsuang and colleagues showed in 1975 that mortality in schizophrenics and later, those with schizoaffective disorder was significantly increased compared to the US general population. Thirty years later, with a demographically similar population, we have found the same pattern of increased mortality. In light of continued improvements in the general population's lifespan, the survival gap in schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder appears to be increasing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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5. Patients who inappropriately demand electroconvulsive therapy.
- Author
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Rasmussen KG and Lineberry TW
- Published
- 2007
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6. Methamphetamine abuse: a perfect storm of complications.
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Lineberry TW and Bostwick JM
- Abstract
Previously restricted primarily to Hawaii and California, methamphetamine abuse has reached epidemic proportions throughout the United States during the past decade, specifically in rural and semirural areas. Particular characteristics of methamphetamine production and use create conditions for a 'perfect storm' of medical and social complications. Unlike imported recreational drugs such as heroin and cocaine, methamphetamine can be manufactured locally from commonly available household ingredients according to simple recipes readily available on the Internet. Methamphetamine users and producers are frequently one and the same, resulting in both physical and environmental consequences. Users experience emergent, acute, subacute, and chronic injuries to neurologic, cardiac, pulmonary, dental, and other systems. Producers can sustain life-threatening injuries in the frequent fires and explosions that result when volatile chemicals are combined. Partners and children of producers, as well as unsuspecting first responders to a crisis, are exposed to toxic by-products of methamphetamine manufacture that contaminate the places that serve simultaneously as 'lab' and home. From the vantage point of a local emergency department, this article reviews the range of medical and social consequences that radiate from a single hypothetical methamphetamine-associated incident. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
7. Taking the physician out of 'physician shopping': a case series of clinical problems associated with Internet purchases of medication.
- Author
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Lineberry TW and Bostwick JM
- Abstract
In the United States, psychoactive prescription medications rank second only to marijuana as drugs of abuse (if tobacco and alcohol are discounted). Physician shopping--visiting multiple physicians simply to procure prescriptions--has been a traditional method for acquiring drugs illicitly. As community-based efforts to curtail physician shopping have expanded, drug abusers have turned increasingly to the Internet. Illegal Internet pharmacies, increasing rapidly in number during the past decade and requiring neither prescription nor physician oversight, offer minimal interference to obtaining drugs. With no physician involved, patients cease to be patients. Instead, they become consumers able to buy prescription medications, even controlled substances, from anonymous providers offering no ongoing treatment relationship and taking no responsibility for the drugs dispensed. When complications occur, these consumers become patients, turning back to the traditional medical system to manage overdoses, addictions, and drug adverse effects and interactions. We present a case series illustrating some of the medical problems that resulted from drugs bought on-line illegally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
8. Impact of the FDA black box warning on physician antidepressant prescribing and practice patterns: opening pandora's suicide box.
- Author
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Lineberry TW, Bostwick JM, Beebe TJ, and Decker PA
- Abstract
After a decade-long decline, annual suicide rates in American children and adolescents increased in 2004. A report released in February 2007 described an 18% increase in the suicide rate in persons aged 1 through 19 years between 2003 and 2004. The incidence of suicide, the third-leading cause of death in 15 to 19-year-old Americans, increased from 7.3 to 8.2 per 100,000 persons in 2004. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
9. Editorial on 'Inpatient suicide: preventing a common sentinel event'.
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Bostwick JM and Lineberry TW
- Published
- 2009
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10. An opportunity for parity: health care reform vis-à-vis behavioral health and substance abuse treatment.
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Lineberry TW, Bostwick JM, Cortese DA, and Smoldt RK
- Published
- 2006
11. Hair analysis for detection of psychotropic drug use.
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Mieczkowski T, Lineberry TW, and Bostwick JM
- Published
- 2006
12. Anticipating potential linezolid-SSRI interactions in the general hospital setting: an MAOI in disguise.
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Sola CL, Bostwick JM, Hart DA, and Lineberry TW
- Abstract
Linezolid, a novel antimicrobial with activity against gram-positive bacteria including pathogens resistant to traditional antimicrobials, also inhibits monoamine oxidase. This latter property can cause potentially lethal adverse interactions with antidepressant medications. Long known to psychiatrists, monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) and complications of their use may be unfamiliar to medical and surgical practitioners who may thus unwittingly precipitate a hypertensive crisis or serotonin syndrome. We review the pharmacology of MAOis and describe 3 clinical situations In which linezolid-selective serotonin inhibitor (SSRI) interactions, actual or potential, figured prominently. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
13. Acute suicidal affective disturbance: Factorial structure and initial validation across psychiatric outpatient and inpatient samples.
- Author
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Rogers ML, Chiurliza B, Hagan CR, Tzoneva M, Hames JL, Michaels MS, Hitschfeld MJ, Palmer BA, Lineberry TW, Jobes DA, and Joiner TE
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- Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depressive Disorder complications, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Self-Injurious Behavior complications, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide psychology, Young Adult, Depressive Disorder psychology, Inpatients psychology, Outpatients psychology, Self-Injurious Behavior psychology, Suicide, Attempted psychology
- Abstract
Background: A new clinical entity, Acute Suicidal Affective Disturbance (ASAD), was recently proposed to characterize rapid-onset, acute suicidality including the cardinal symptom of behavioral intent. This study examines the proposed ASAD criteria factor-analytically and in relation to correlates of suicidal behavior and existing psychiatric disorders in samples of psychiatric outpatients and inpatients., Methods: Two samples of psychiatric outpatients (N=343, aged 18-71 years, 60.6% female, 74.9% White) and inpatients (N=7,698, aged 15-99 years, 57.2% female, 87.8% White) completed measures of their ASAD symptoms and psychological functioning., Results: Across both samples, results of a confirmatory factor analysis supported the unidimensional nature of the ASAD construct. Additionally, results provided evidence for the convergent and discriminant validity of ASAD, demonstrating its relation to, yet distinction from, other psychiatric disorders and correlates of suicide in expected ways. Importantly, ASAD symptoms differentiated multiple attempters, single attempters, and non-attempters, as well as attempters, ideators, and non-suicidal patients, and was an indicator of past suicide attempts above and beyond symptoms of depression and other psychiatric disorders., Limitations: This study utilized cross-sectional data and did not use a standardized measure of ASAD., Conclusions: ASAD criteria formed a unidimensional construct that was associated with suicide-related variables and other psychiatric disorders in expected ways. If supported by future research, ASAD may fill a gap in the current diagnostic classification system (DSM-5) by characterizing and predicting acute suicide risk., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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14. How does active substance use at psychiatric admission impact suicide risk and hospital length-of-stay?
- Author
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Miller KA, Hitschfeld MJ, Lineberry TW, and Palmer BA
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Drug Overdose epidemiology, Drug Overdose psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Suicide psychology, Young Adult, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Suicide statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Despite their high prevalence, little is known about the effects of substance use disorders and active substance use on the suicide risk or length-of-stay of psychiatric inpatients. This study examines the relationship between active substance use at the time of psychiatric hospitalization and changes in suicide risk measures and length-of-stay. Admission and discharge ratings on the Suicide Status Form-II-R, diagnoses, and toxicology data from 2,333 unique psychiatric inpatients were examined. Data for patients using alcohol, tetrahydrocannabinol, methamphetamines, cocaine, benzodiazepines, opiates, barbiturates, phencyclidine, and multiple substances on admission were compared with data from 1,426 admissions without substance use. Patients with substance use by toxicology on admission had a 0.9 day shorter length-of-stay compared to toxicology-negative patients. During initial nurse evaluation on the inpatient unit, these patients reported lower suicide measures (i.e., suicidal ideation frequency, overall suicide risk, and wish-to-die). No significant between-group differences were seen at discharge. Patients admitted with a substance use disorder diagnosis had a 1.0 day shorter length-of-stay than those without, while those with a substance use disorder diagnosis and positive toxicology reported the lowest measures of suicidality on admission. These results remained independent of psychiatric diagnosis. For acute psychiatric inpatients, suicide risk is higher and length-of-stay is longer in patients with substance use disorders who are NOT acutely intoxicated compared with patients without a substance use disorder. Toxicology-positive patients are less suicidal on admission and improve faster than their toxicology-negative counterparts. This study gives support to the clinical observation that acutely intoxicated patients may stabilize quickly with regard to suicidal urges and need for inpatient care.
- Published
- 2016
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15. Time to Remission for Depression with Collaborative Care Management (CCM) in Primary Care.
- Author
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Garrison GM, Angstman KB, O'Connor SS, Williams MD, and Lineberry TW
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Ambulatory Care Facilities, Cohort Studies, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Female, Health Services Research, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Patient Care Team standards, Patient-Centered Care standards, Proportional Hazards Models, Remission Induction, Retrospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Time Factors, Workforce, Young Adult, Depressive Disorder therapy, Patient Care Team organization & administration, Patient-Centered Care organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Collaborative care management (CCM) has been shown to have superior outcomes to usual care (UC) for depressed patients with a fixed end point. This study was a survival analysis over time comparing CCM with UC using remission (9-item Patient Health Questionnaire [PHQ-9] score <5) and persistent depressive symptoms (PDSs; PHQ-9 score ≥10) as end points., Methods: A retrospective cohort study of 7340 patients with depression cared for at 4 outpatient primary care clinics was conducted from March 2008 through June 2013. All adult patients diagnosed with depression (International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision [ICD-9], codes 296.2-3) or dysthymia (ICD-9 code 300.4) with an initial PHQ-9 score ≥10 were included. CCM was implemented at all clinics between 2008 and 2010. Kaplan-Meyer survival curves for time to remission and PDSs were plotted. A Cox proportional hazards model was used to adjust for expected differences between patients choosing CCM versus UC., Results: Median time to remission was 86 days (95% confidence interval [CI], 81-91 days) for the CCM group versus 614 days (95% CI, 565-692 days) for the UC group. Likewise, median duration of PDSs was 31 days (95% CI, 30-33 days) for the CCM group versus 154 days (95% CI, 138-182 days) for the UC group. In the Cox proportional hazards model, which controlled for covariates such as age, sex, race, diagnosis, and initial PHQ-9 score, CCM was associated with faster remission (hazard ratio of the CCM group [HRCCM], 2.48; 95% CI, 2.31-2.65)., Conclusions: This study demonstrated that patients enrolled in CCM have a faster rate of remission and a shorter duration of PDSs than patients choosing UC., (© Copyright 2016 by the American Board of Family Medicine.)
- Published
- 2016
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16. CRAFFT as a Substance Use Screening Instrument for Adolescent Psychiatry Admissions.
- Author
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Oesterle TS, Hitschfeld MJ, Lineberry TW, and Schneekloth TD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression diagnosis, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Female, Humans, Illicit Drugs analysis, Male, Psychological Trauma epidemiology, Research Design, Risk Factors, Suicidal Ideation, United States epidemiology, Alcoholism diagnosis, Alcoholism epidemiology, Alcoholism psychology, Inpatients psychology, Inpatients statistics & numerical data, Risk Assessment methods, Substance Abuse Detection methods, Substance-Related Disorders diagnosis, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Suicide, Attempted prevention & control, Suicide, Attempted psychology
- Abstract
Background: Adolescent use of alcohol and illicit substances is quite common among pediatric psychiatry inpatients; however, little data exist on substance use screening instruments that can be used to augment thorough psychiatric diagnostic interviews. CRAFFT is a screening tool for adolescent substance use that has been validated in outpatient general medical settings. This is the first study to examine its use in adolescent psychiatric inpatients., Methods: We performed a chart review of records from adolescents admitted to our inpatient psychiatric unit who completed a CRAFFT screen on admission. We compared CRAFFT scores with other measures of substance use, including urine drug screens and the diagnosis of a substance use disorder at discharge. We also examined measures of depression and suicidality in individuals with elevated CRAFFT scores (≥2 positive answers out of 6) and compared them with measures in those with normal CRAFFT scores., Results: Elevated CRAFFT scores were correlated with other measures of alcohol and substance use, including the diagnosis of a substance use disorder at discharge (P<0.0001), and laboratory screening for alcohol (P=0.0048) and marijuana (P<0.0001) on admission. Previous suicide attempts (P=0.005) and "psychiatric trauma" (P=0.0027) were also positively associated with elevated CRAFFT scores., Conclusions: CRAFFT scores in adolescent inpatients were correlated with other measures of substance use, supporting its efficacy as a screening tool in this population. CRAFFT scores were also positively correlated with a history of psychiatric trauma and past suicide attempts, which is consistent with the results of previous studies associating pediatric substance use and traumatic life events with an increased risk of suicide.
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- 2015
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17. Minority Primary Care Patients With Depression: Outcome Disparities Improve With Collaborative Care Management.
- Author
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Angstman KB, Phelan S, Myszkowski MR, Schak KM, DeJesus RS, Lineberry TW, and van Ryn M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cultural Competency, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Racial Groups statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Depression therapy, Depressive Disorder therapy, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Minority Groups statistics & numerical data, Primary Health Care organization & administration
- Abstract
Background/objectives: Racial and ethnic disparities in depression incidence, prevalence, treatment, and outcomes still persist. The hypothesis of this study was that use of collaborative care management (CCM) in treating depressed primary care patients would decrease racial disparities in 6-month clinical outcomes compared with those patients treated with usual primary care (UC)., Research Design/subjects: In a retrospective chart review analysis, 3588 (51.2%) patients received UC and 3422 (48.8%) patients were enrolled in CCM. Logistic regression analyses were used to examine disparities in 6-month outcomes., Results: Minority patients enrolled in CCM were more likely to be participating in depression care at 6 months than minority patients in UC (61.8% vs. 14.4%; P≤0.001). After adjustment for demographic and clinical covariates, this difference remained statistically significant (odds ratio=9.929; 95% CI, 6.539-15.077, P≤0.001).The 568 minority UC patients with 6-month follow-up PHQ-9 data demonstrated a much lower odds ratio of a PHQ-9 score of <5 (0.220; 95% CI, 0.085-0.570; P=0.002) and a much higher odds ratio of PHQ-9 score of ≥10 (3.068; 95% CI, 1.622-5.804; P<0.001) when compared with the white, non-Hispanic patients. In contrast, the 2329 patients treated with CCM, the odds ratio for a PHQ-9 score of <5 or ≥10 after 6 months, demonstrated no significance of minority status., Conclusions: Utilization of CCM for depression was associated with a significant reduction of the disparities for outcomes of compliance, remission, or persistence of depressive symptoms for minority patients with depression versus those treated with UC.
- Published
- 2015
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18. Gender differences in the association of agitation and suicide attempts among psychiatric inpatients.
- Author
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Bryan CJ, Hitschfeld MJ, Palmer BA, Schak KM, Roberge EM, and Lineberry TW
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Comorbidity, Female, Humans, Inpatients statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Psychiatric Department, Hospital, Sex Factors, Young Adult, Anxiety epidemiology, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Psychomotor Agitation epidemiology, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide, Attempted statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To determine if the relationship of agitation with suicide ideation and suicide attempts differed between men and women., Method: Self-reported severity of agitation and other suicide risk factors was obtained from 7698 consecutive patients during admission for inpatient psychiatric treatment during a 5-year period., Results: Agitation was highest among men with a history of suicide attempts. Agitation was significantly associated with frequency of suicide ideation and history of suicide attempt, but the gender-by-suicide interaction was only significant as a predictor of suicide attempt history. For men, agitation was associated with significantly increased risk for suicide attempt, but for women, agitation was not associated with risk for suicide attempt history. Results were unchanged when analyses were repeated among the subgroup of patients with suicide ideation., Conclusions: Agitation is associated with history of suicide attempt among male but not female psychiatric inpatients. Agitation differentiates between those men who have only thought about suicide and those who have made suicide attempts., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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19. A feasibility study of varenicline for smoking cessation in bipolar patients with subsyndromal depression.
- Author
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Frye MA, Ebbert JO, Prince CA, Lineberry TW, Geske JR, and Patten CA
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- Adult, Depression physiopathology, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Varenicline, Benzazepines therapeutic use, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Nicotinic Agonists therapeutic use, Quinoxalines therapeutic use, Smoking Cessation methods
- Published
- 2013
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20. Use of the Suicide Status Form-II to investigate correlates of suicide risk factors in psychiatrically hospitalized children and adolescents.
- Author
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Romanowicz M, O'Connor SS, Schak KM, Swintak CC, and Lineberry TW
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Health Status Indicators, Hospitalization, Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Stress, Psychological, United States, Adolescent, Hospitalized psychology, Child, Hospitalized psychology, Suicide psychology
- Abstract
Background: Suicide is the third leading cause of death in the United States for youth 12-17 years or age. Acute psychiatric hospitalization represents a clear worst point clinically and acute suicide risk is the most common reason for psychiatric admission. We sought to determine factors associated with differences in individual suicide risk assessment for children and adolescents during acute psychiatric admission., Methods: Study participants were 1153 youth consecutively admitted to an inpatient psychiatry unit who completed a self-administered Suicide Status Form (SSF) within 24h of admission. Additional information on suicide risk factors was obtained through medical chart abstraction., Results: Females reported significantly greater psychological pain, stress, hopelessness, and self-hate on the SSF and were significantly more likely to have made a suicide attempt just prior to the index hospital admission (OR=1.59, SE=0.29; CI=1.12-2.26), report a family history of suicide (OR=2.02, SE=0.33; CI=1.47-2.78), and had experienced a greater number of inpatient psychiatry admissions related to suicidal ideation (RR=1.33, SE=0.13; CI=1.10-1.61). High school aged youth and those with a primary diagnosis of depression displayed consistently elevated SSF scores and risk factors for suicide compared to comparison groups., Limitations: Diagnosis was determined through chart abstraction. Responses to access to firearm question had missing data for 46% of the total sample., Conclusions: Systematic administration of a suicide-specific measure at admission may help clinicians improve identification of suicide risk factors in youth in inpatient psychiatry settings., (© 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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21. People with mental health disorders are at increased risk of death from homicide.
- Author
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Lineberry TW
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Crime Victims statistics & numerical data, Homicide statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders mortality
- Published
- 2013
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22. Serial infusions of low-dose ketamine for major depression.
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Rasmussen KG, Lineberry TW, Galardy CW, Kung S, Lapid MI, Palmer BA, Ritter MJ, Schak KM, Sola CL, Hanson AJ, and Frye MA
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- Adult, Aged, Antipsychotic Agents adverse effects, Drug Administration Schedule, Female, Humans, Infusions, Intravenous, Ketamine adverse effects, Male, Middle Aged, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Young Adult, Antipsychotic Agents administration & dosage, Depressive Disorder, Major drug therapy, Ketamine administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background: Single infusions of ketamine have been used successfully to achieve improvement in depressed patients. Side effects during the infusions have been common. It is not known whether serial infusions or lower infusion rates result in greater efficacy., Methods: Ten depressed patients were treated with twice weekly ketamine infusions of ketamine 0.5 mg/kg administered over 100 min until either remission was achieved or four infusions were given. Side effects were assessed with the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS) and the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS). Patients were followed naturalistically at weekly intervals for four weeks after completion of the infusions., Results: Five of 10 patients achieved remission status. There were no significant increases on the BPRS or YMRS. Two of the remitting patients sustained their improvement throughout the four week follow-up period., Conclusions: Ketamine infusions at a lower rate than previously reported have demonstrated similar efficacy and excellent tolerability and may be more practically available for routine clinical care. Serial ketamine infusions appear to be more effective than a single infusion. Further research to test relapse prevention strategies with continuation ketamine infusions is indicated.
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- 2013
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23. Suicide in the US Army.
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Lineberry TW and O'Connor SS
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- Combat Disorders psychology, Humans, Risk Factors, Suicide, Attempted statistics & numerical data, United States epidemiology, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans statistics & numerical data, Military Personnel statistics & numerical data, Suicide statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Suicide in the US Army is a high-profile public health problem that is complex and poorly understood. Adding to the confusion surrounding Army suicide is the challenge of defining and understanding individuals/populations dying by suicide. Data from recent studies have led to a better understanding of risk factors for suicide that may be specifically associated with military service, including the impact of combat and deployment on increased rates of psychiatric illness in military personnel. The next steps involve applying these results to the development of empirically supported suicide prevention approaches specific to the military population. This special article provides an overview of suicide in the Army by synthesizing new information and providing clinical pearls based on research evidence., (Copyright © 2012 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2012
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24. A cross-sectional investigation of the suicidal spectrum: typologies of suicidality based on ambivalence about living and dying.
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O'Connor SS, Jobes DA, Yeargin MK, Fitzgerald ME, Rodríguez VM, Conrad AK, and Lineberry TW
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- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Discriminant Analysis, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Psychological Tests, Risk Assessment, Suicidal Ideation, United States, Attitude to Death, Suicide classification, Suicide Prevention
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the validity of assigning suicidal individuals into differing typologies of suicidality based on their reported wish to live and wish to die., Methods: One hundred five inpatients who reported suicidal ideation in the previous 48 hours completed a battery of assessments during inpatient psychiatric hospitalization. An algorithm was used to assign participants into 1 of 3 typologies of suicide: wish to live, ambivalent, or wish to die. Discriminant function analysis and group classification were used to predict group membership, followed by multiple analysis of variance and follow-up contrasts to measure between-group differences., Main Results: Group classification resulted in 76% accuracy for predicting typology of suicidality based on scores from suicide-specific measures. Self-perceived risk of suicide and hopelessness were the strongest variables at differentiating between the 3 groups. Patients in the wish to die typology were less likely to report having never made a suicide attempt., Conclusions: Creating typologies of suicidality may prove useful to clinicians seeking to better differentiate among suicidal patients within a limited period of assessment., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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25. Alcohol, violence, and the media.
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Buskirk MC, Janish CD, and Lineberry TW
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- Adult, Age Factors, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Female, Homicide psychology, Humans, Male, Racial Groups psychology, United States, Young Adult, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Television, Violence psychology
- Published
- 2012
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26. Reconciling the risk of QT interval prolongation in antidepressants.
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McKean AJ, Sola CL, Galardy C, Kung S, and Lineberry TW
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- Female, Humans, Male, Antidepressive Agents adverse effects, Arrhythmias, Cardiac chemically induced, Death, Sudden, Cardiac etiology
- Published
- 2012
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27. The association between the Kessler 10 and suicidality: a cross-sectional analysis.
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O'Connor SS, Beebe TJ, Lineberry TW, Jobes DA, and Conrad AK
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Anxiety psychology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide psychology
- Abstract
Objective: The aims of this study were to test the psychometric properties of the Kessler 10 (K10) in a clinical setting and to investigate the utility of the K10 as a means for identifying suicidality., Methods: One hundred forty-nine inpatients at an inpatient psychiatric hospital completed a battery of assessments during their inpatient hospital stay. Factor analysis provided information suggesting multiple factor loadings present within the K10. A series of t tests examined differences of group means between suicidal participants and a control group, whereas multiple regression models examined the correlation between the K10 and several suicide-specific assessments., Main Results: The K10 seems to be composed of 2 primary factors (depression and anxiety) and differentiated suicidal and nonsuicidal inpatients and was associated with several measures related to suicidality., Conclusions: The observed results indicate that the K10 may be an effective screener to measure occult suicidality in a clinical setting., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2012
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28. Self-harming behavior and suicidality: suicide risk assessment.
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Schechter M and Lineberry TW
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Self-Injurious Behavior psychology, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide Prevention, Self-Injurious Behavior diagnosis, Suicide psychology
- Published
- 2011
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29. The base rates and factors associated with reported access to firearms in psychiatric inpatients.
- Author
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Kolla BP, O'Connor SS, and Lineberry TW
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Medical Audit, Middle Aged, Minnesota, Retrospective Studies, Suicide, Attempted statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Firearms, Inpatients psychology
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to define whether specific patient demographic groups, diagnoses or other factors are associated with psychiatric inpatients reporting firearms access., Methods: A retrospective medical records review study was conducted using information on access to firearms from electronic medical records for all patients 16 years and older admitted between July 2007 and May 2008 at the Mayo Clinic Psychiatric Hospital in Rochester, MN. Data were obtained only on patients providing authorization for record review. Data were analyzed using univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses accounting for gender, diagnostic groups, comorbid substance use, history of suicide attempts and family history of suicide/suicide attempts., Results: Seventy-four percent (1169/1580) of patients provided research authorization. The ratio of men to women was identical in both research and nonresearch authorization groups. There were 14.6% of inpatients who reported firearms access. In univariate analysis, men were more likely (P<.0001) to report access than women, and a history of previous suicide attempt(s) was associated with decreased access (P=.02). Multiple logistic regression analyses controlling for other factors found females and patients with history of previous suicide attempt(s) less likely to report access, while patients with a family history of suicide or suicide attempts reported increased firearms access. Diagnostic groups were not associated with access on univariate or multiple logistic regression analyses., Conclusions: Men and inpatients with a family history of suicide/suicide attempts were more likely to report firearms access. Clinicians should develop standardized systems of identification of firearms access and provide guidance on removal., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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30. An investigation of emotional upset in suicide ideation.
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O'Connor SS, Jobes DA, Lineberry TW, and Michael Bostwick J
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- Adult, Bipolar Disorder diagnosis, Comorbidity, Depression epidemiology, Depressive Disorder epidemiology, Female, Humans, Inpatients statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Midwestern United States, Personality Assessment, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Somatoform Disorders diagnosis, Stress, Psychological epidemiology, Suicide, Attempted statistics & numerical data, Depression diagnosis, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Stress, Psychological diagnosis, Suicide, Attempted psychology
- Abstract
The Suicide Upsetness Assessment (SUA) was used to measure the phenomenological experience of emotional upset during active states of suicidal ideation. Forty-nine inpatients with a history of suicide-related behaviors at a Midwestern inpatient psychiatric hospital completed a battery of assessments during their inpatient hospital stay. After reviewing theories regarding suicidality by the research team, 6 separate categories related to suicidal ideation were created, which were then subdivided into groups. Chi-Square and Fisher Exact Tests provided information regarding characteristics of emotional upset most often associated with such suicide-related behaviors as frequency and lethality of past attempts. Emotional upset is a heterogeneous construct in suicidal individuals, the properties of which may provide for a more thorough risk assessment.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Brief report: why suicide? Perceptions of suicidal inpatients and reflections of clinical researchers.
- Author
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Kraft TL, Jobes DA, Lineberry TW, Conrad A, and Kung S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Behavioral Symptoms diagnosis, Clinical Coding, Female, Humans, Individuality, Inpatients, Intention, Male, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders psychology, Middle Aged, Qualitative Research, Surveys and Questionnaires, Behavioral Symptoms etiology, Behavioral Symptoms psychology, Mental Disorders complications, Self Concept, Suicide, Attempted psychology
- Abstract
Qualitatively oriented research (e.g., studies of suicide notes) has shed valuable light on the phenomenology of suicidal states. However, one draw back to this approach is that conclusions drawn from such data are inferential. In the current study, we took a more direct approach by having a sample of 52 suicidal inpatients provide written responses to the following query: Why suicide? A reliable coding system was developed that captured seven distinct response types to our prompt (i.e., suicide was seen as: the easy way out, a permanent solution, an escape from pain, the only option, self-oriented, related to hopelessness, and relationally-focused). In our discussion, we further reflect on these patient perceptions of suicide in terms of theory, research, and practice.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Population-based prevalence of smoking in psychiatric inpatients: a focus on acute suicide risk and major diagnostic groups.
- Author
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Lineberry TW, Allen JD, Nash J, and Galardy CW
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Chi-Square Distribution, Female, Humans, Inpatients psychology, Male, Middle Aged, Minnesota epidemiology, Mood Disorders psychology, Personality Disorders psychology, Prevalence, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Smoking Cessation psychology, Smoking Cessation statistics & numerical data, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Young Adult, Mental Disorders psychology, Smoking epidemiology, Suicide psychology
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of the study was to define the extent of current and lifetime smoking by diagnostic groups and suicide risk as reason for admission in a geographically defined psychiatric inpatient cohort., Design: The study used a population-based retrospective chart review., Methods: Smoking status and discharge diagnoses for Olmsted County, Minnesota, inpatients aged 18 to 65 admitted for psychiatric hospitalization in 2004 and 2005 were abstracted from the electronic medical record. Diagnostic groups were compared to each other using chi(2) tests and Fisher exact test to analyze smoking status within the inpatient sample with significance defined as P
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Suicide rates in 2009. Do the economy and wars have an effect?
- Author
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Lineberry TW
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Cause of Death, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Military Personnel statistics & numerical data, Minnesota, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Suicide statistics & numerical data, Unemployment statistics & numerical data, United States, Young Adult, Suicide Prevention, Afghan Campaign 2001-, Economics, Iraq War, 2003-2011, Suicide trends
- Abstract
Suicide is a public health problem that claims the lives of approximately 1 million people around the world each year. This article describes suicide rates in the United States and Minnesota and discusses potential effects of the economy on the rate, concerns regarding suicides in the Army, and what clinicians can do to make a difference in the lives of patients who may be at risk.
- Published
- 2009
34. A psychometric investigation of the Suicide Status Form II with a psychiatric inpatient sample.
- Author
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Conrad AK, Jacoby AM, Jobes DA, Lineberry TW, Shea CE, Arnold Ewing TD, Schmid PJ, Ellenbecker SM, Lee JL, Fritsche K, Grenell JA, Gehin JM, and Kung S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Risk Assessment, Suicide, Attempted prevention & control, Young Adult, Suicide Prevention, Mental Disorders psychology, Patient Admission, Personality Inventory statistics & numerical data, Suicide psychology, Suicide, Attempted psychology
- Abstract
We investigated the psychometric validity and reliability of the Suicide Status Form-II (SSF-II) developed by Jobes, Jacoby, Cimbolic, and Hustead (1997). Participants were 149 psychiatric inpatients (108 suicidal; 41 nonsuicidal) at the Mayo Clinic. Each participant completed assessment measures within 24 hours of admission and 48-72 hours later. Factor analyses of the SSF core assessment produced a robust two-factor solution reflecting chronic and acute response styles. The SSF core assessment had good to excellent convergent and criterion validity; pre-post SSF ratings also demonstrated moderate test-retest reliability. The results replicated previous research and show that the SSF-II is psychometrically sound with a high-risk suicidal inpatient sample.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Do patients with schizophrenia receive state-of-the-art lung cancer therapy? A brief report.
- Author
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Mateen FJ, Jatoi A, Lineberry TW, Aranguren D, Creagan ET, Croghan GA, Jett JR, Marks RS, Molina JR, and Richardson RL
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Attitude of Health Personnel, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung diagnosis, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung epidemiology, Carcinoma, Small Cell diagnosis, Carcinoma, Small Cell epidemiology, Comorbidity, Ethics, Medical, Evidence-Based Medicine, Female, Humans, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis, Lung Neoplasms epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prejudice, Prognosis, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychotic Disorders epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Schizophrenia epidemiology, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung psychology, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung therapy, Carcinoma, Small Cell psychology, Carcinoma, Small Cell therapy, Healthcare Disparities ethics, Lung Neoplasms psychology, Lung Neoplasms therapy, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Patients with schizophrenia sometimes receive substandard medical care. This study explored such disparities among lung cancer patients with underlying schizophrenia., Methods: This retrospective study focused on patients with pre-existing schizophrenia (or in some instances schizoaffective disorder) and a lung cancer diagnosis made between 1980 and 2004. 'Disparity' was defined as a patient's having been prescribed less aggressive therapy for a potentially curable cancer based on state-of-the-art treatment standards for the time and for the cancer stage. Qualitative methods were used to assess healthcare providers' decision-making., Results: 29 patients were included. The median age was 59 years; 38% were men. Twenty-three had non-small cell lung cancer and 6 small cell lung cancer; 17 had potentially curable cancers. Five of 17 had a 'disparity' in cancer care: (1) no cancer therapy was prescribed because of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; (2) no cancer therapy was prescribed because of infection; (3) no chemotherapy was prescribed because the patient declined it; radiation was provided; (4) no chemotherapy was prescribed because of the patient's schizophrenia symptoms; radiation was administered; and (5) no surgery was performed because of disorientation from a lobotomy; radiation was prescribed. Comments from healthcare providers suggest reflection and ethical adjudication in decision-making., Conclusion: Schizophrenia was never the sole reason for no cancer treatment in patients with potentially curable lung cancer. This study provides the impetus for others to begin to assess the effect of schizophrenia on lung cancer management in other healthcare settings., ((c) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. ECT in patients with psychopathology related to acute neurologic illness.
- Author
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Rasmussen KG, Hart DA, and Lineberry TW
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Brain Diseases etiology, Brain Diseases psychology, Catatonia diagnosis, Catatonia psychology, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Male, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Treatment Outcome, Brain Diseases complications, Catatonia therapy, Electroconvulsive Therapy, Psychotic Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Psychiatrists are occasionally called upon to assist in the management of patients with severe psychopathologic syndromes resulting from acute neurologic illness. In the absence of other options for treating the underlying neurological disorder or with persistence of the psychopathology after resolution of the neurologic illness, electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) may be considered. The authors treated four such patients, two of whom experienced no benefit and two of whom experienced dramatic benefit. The authors provide recommendations for the approach to acutely ill neurologic patients with regard to the use of ECT.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Creatine kinase elevation associated with bipolar disorder and ephedrine abuse.
- Author
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Borgerding LA, Lineberry TW, and Bostwick JM
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Bipolar Disorder blood, Bipolar Disorder epidemiology, Creatine Kinase blood, Ephedrine, Substance Abuse Detection methods, Substance-Related Disorders blood, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Do cheap internet drugs threaten the safety of the doctor-patient relationship?
- Author
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Bostwick JM and Lineberry TW
- Subjects
- Humans, Internet standards, Safety standards, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions, Internet economics, Pharmaceutical Preparations economics, Physician-Patient Relations, Safety economics
- Abstract
During traditional office visits, trusted physicians give their patients careful and leisurely diagnostic attention, communicate sound and understandable clinical impressions and, more often than not, write prescriptions that can be filled at convenient neighborhood pharmacies. Or do they? In reality, harried doctors rush through appointments, leaving patients confused about prescriptions they cannot afford, either because their insurance plans do not cover the recommended medication or because they lack the cash to pay out of pocket for obscenely priced products. Internet pharmaceutical acquisition offers a cheap alternative. Or does it?
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Bupropion-induced erythema multiforme.
- Author
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Lineberry TW, Peters GE Jr, and Bostwick JM
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Adult, Aftercare, Anti-Inflammatory Agents therapeutic use, Delayed-Action Preparations, Disease Progression, Drug Monitoring, Erythema Multiforme classification, Erythema Multiforme diagnosis, Erythema Multiforme drug therapy, Female, Humans, Prednisone therapeutic use, Antidepressive Agents, Second-Generation adverse effects, Bupropion adverse effects, Depressive Disorder drug therapy, Erythema Multiforme chemically induced
- Abstract
The high rate of dermatologic adverse effects associated with bupropion use may extend to its sustained-release preparation, currently prescribed extensively for smoking cessation as well as for treatment of depressive conditions. We report what we believe to be the first case, in a 31-year-old woman, of erythema multiforme after administration of sustained-release bupropion (Wellbutrin SR) for treatment of depression. This report emphasizes that prescribers must aggressively follow up their patients who have rashes or urticaria, discontinuing the medication as soon as erythema multiforme is suspected and watching closely for the emergence of potentially life-threatening dermatologic conditions.
- Published
- 2001
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