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Neuropsychopharmacology Reports Sep 2023Patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are prone to develop overt psychosis and share symptom presentations with those with schizophrenia (SZ). This study aimed to...
AIM
Patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are prone to develop overt psychosis and share symptom presentations with those with schizophrenia (SZ). This study aimed to explore differences in the distributions of psychotic symptoms among first-visit patients with ASD, SZ, or a nonpsychiatric diagnosis (N-PD).
METHODS
Data from first-visit patients were retrospectively collected from medical records from the Department of Psychiatry, Dokkyo Medical University Hospital between June 2019 and May 2021. A total of 254 patients with data on the PRIME Screen-Revised (PS-R) assessments were included in our analysis. In the hospital, all psychiatric diagnoses were based on the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria.
RESULTS
In the ASD, SZ, and N-PD groups, endorsements of perplexity and delusional mood were 15.6% (7/45), 41.5% (44/106), and 1.1% (1/88), and those of perceptual abnormalities were 11.1% (5/45), 40.6% (43/106), and 2.3% (2/88), respectively. Trend analysis clarified that the endorsement of these psychotic symptoms increased from N-PD to ASD and SZ. In the multivariate-adjusted multinomial logistic regression analysis, the ASD and N-PD groups were compared with the SZ group. Higher age and the presence of perceptual abnormalities were associated with lack of an ASD diagnosis, whereas male sex, lack of perplexity and delusional mood, and lack of perceptual abnormalities were associated with N-PD.
CONCLUSION
Our results are preliminary; however, a detailed assessment of positive symptoms might facilitate differentiation between ASD and SZ.
Topics: Humans; Male; Schizophrenia; Self Report; Autism Spectrum Disorder; Retrospective Studies; Psychotic Disorders
PubMed: 37605491
DOI: 10.1002/npr2.12374 -
BMC Psychiatry Jul 2023Cotard's Syndrome (CS) is a rare clinical entity where patients can report nihilistic, delusional beliefs that they are already dead. Curiously, while weight loss,... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
Cotard's Syndrome (CS) is a rare clinical entity where patients can report nihilistic, delusional beliefs that they are already dead. Curiously, while weight loss, dehydration, and metabolic derangements have been described as discussed above, a review of the literature revealed neither a single case of a severely underweight patient nor a serious metabolic complication such as Diabetic Ketoacidosis. Further, a search on PubMed revealed no articles discussing the co-occurrence of Cotard's Delusion and eating disorders or comorbid metabolic illnesses such as diabetes mellitus. In order to better examine the association between Cotard's Delusion and comorbid eating disorders and metabolic illness, we will present and discuss a case where Cotard's delusion led to a severe metabolic outcome of DKA and a BMI of 15.
CASE PRESENTATION
Mr. B is a 19 year old transgender man admitted to the hospital due to diabetic ketoacidosis secondary to Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus. Mr. B had a history of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Major Depressive Disorder, and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The primary pediatric team discovered that Mr. B had not been using his insulin appropriately and was severely underweight, and they believed this could be due to his underlying mental illness. The psychiatric consultation/liaison service found that Mr. B was suffering from Cotard's delusion leading him to be noncompliant with his insulin due to a belief that he was already dead. Cotard's delusion had in this case led to a severe metabolic outcome of DKA and a BMI of 15.
CONCLUSIONS
This case provides clinical insight into the interactions of eating disorders and Cotard's delusion as well as the potential medical complications when Cotard's delusion is co-morbid with medical conditions such as Diabetes Mellitus. We recommend that clinicians routinely screen patients for Cotard's delusion and assess whether the presence of which could exacerbate any underlying medical illness. This includes clinicians taking special care in assessing patient's caloric and fluid intake as well as their adherence to medications both psychiatric and medical. Further research could be conducted to explore the potential overlap of Cotard's delusion and eating disorder phenomenology.
Topics: Humans; Male; Child; Young Adult; Adult; Delusions; Insulin; Diabetic Ketoacidosis; Depressive Disorder, Major; Body Mass Index; Thinness; Syndrome; Diabetes Mellitus
PubMed: 37525179
DOI: 10.1186/s12888-023-05039-6 -
BMC Medical Research Methodology Jul 2023Care pathways are increasingly being used to enhance the quality of care and optimize the use of resources for health care. Nevertheless, recommendations regarding the...
BACKGROUND
Care pathways are increasingly being used to enhance the quality of care and optimize the use of resources for health care. Nevertheless, recommendations regarding the sequence of care are mostly based on consensus-based decisions as there is a lack of evidence on effective treatment sequences. In a real-world setting, classical statistical tools were insufficient to consider a phenomenon with such high variability adequately and have to be integrated with novel data mining techniques suitable for identifying patterns in complex data structures. Data-driven techniques can potentially support empirically identifying effective care sequences by extracting them from data collected routinely. The purpose of this study is to perform a state sequence analysis (SSA) to identify different patterns of treatment and to asses whether sequence analysis may be a useful tool for profiling patients according to the treatment pattern.
METHODS
The clinical application that motivated the study of this method concerns the mental health field. In fact, the care pathways of patients affected by severe mental disorders often do not correspond to the standards required by the guidelines in this field. In particular, we analyzed patients with schizophrenic disorders (i.e., schizophrenia, schizotypal or delusional disorders) using administrative data from 2015 to 2018 from Lombardy Region. This methodology considers the patient's therapeutic path as a conceptual unit, composed of a succession of different states, and we show how SSA can be used to describe longitudinal patient status.
RESULTS
We define the states to be the weekly coverage of different treatments (psychiatric visits, psychosocial interventions, and anti-psychotic drugs), and we use the longest common subsequences (dis)similarity measure to compare and cluster the sequences. We obtained three different clusters with very different patterns of treatments.
CONCLUSIONS
This kind of information, such as common patterns of care that allowed us to risk profile patients, can provide health policymakers an opportunity to plan optimum and individualized patient care by allocating appropriate resources, analyzing trends in the health status of a population, and finding the risk factors that can be leveraged to prevent the decline of mental health status at the population level.
Topics: Humans; Critical Pathways; Schizophrenia; Consensus; Data Mining; Health Status
PubMed: 37516839
DOI: 10.1186/s12874-023-01993-7 -
Journal of Clinical Medicine Jul 2023Although the influence of the weather on the well-being and mental health of psychiatric patients has been widely seen, the relationships between various seasonal...
Although the influence of the weather on the well-being and mental health of psychiatric patients has been widely seen, the relationships between various seasonal weather factors and depressive, manic, anxiety, and psychotic states have not been systematized in the literature. The current article describes the seasonal changes in weather-related immune responses and their impact on the development of episodes of depression, mania, psychosis, and anxiety, highlighting the T-helper 1 (Th1) and Th2 immune balance as their potential trigger. In autumn-winter depression, the hyperactivation of the Th1 system, possibly by microbial/airborne pathogens, may lead to the inflammatory inhibition of prefrontal activity and the subcortical centers responsible for mood, drive, and motivation. Depressive mood periods are present in most people suffering from schizophrenia. In the spring and summertime, when the compensating anti-Th1 property of the Th2 immune system is activated, it decreases the Th1 response. In individuals immunogenetically susceptible to psychosis and mania, the inhibition of Th1 by the Th2 system may be excessive and lead to Th2-related frontal and subcortical hyperactivation and subsequent psychosis. In people suffering from bipolar disorder, hyperintense changes in white matter may be responsible for the partial activation of subcortical areas, preventing full paranoid psychosis. Thus, psychosis may be mood-congruent in affective disorders.
PubMed: 37510730
DOI: 10.3390/jcm12144615 -
Schizophrenia Research Aug 2023
Topics: Humans; Schizophrenia; Paranoid Disorders
PubMed: 37480719
DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2023.07.016 -
Schizophrenia Bulletin Nov 2023Auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) are central features of schizophrenia (SZ). However, AVH also occur in a small percentage of the general population who do not have...
BACKGROUND AND HYPOTHESES
Auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) are central features of schizophrenia (SZ). However, AVH also occur in a small percentage of the general population who do not have a need for care, termed nonclinical voice hearers (NCVH). We sought to determine the degree to which the experience of AVH was similar in NCVH and in people with schizophrenia (PSZ) and evaluate the degree to which NCVH shared other features of SZ such as delusional beliefs, cognitive impairment, and negative symptoms.
STUDY DESIGN
We recruited 76 people with a DSM-V diagnosis of SZ/schizoaffective disorder (PSZ; 49 with current AVH, 27 without), 48 NCVH, and 51 healthy controls. Participants received a broad battery of clinician-administered and self-report symptom assessments and a focused cognitive assessment.
STUDY RESULTS
The AVH of NCVH and PSZ shared very similar sensory features. NCVH experienced less distress, had greater control over their AVH, and, unlike PSZ, rarely heard 2 voices speaking to each other. NCVH demonstrated a wide range of deeply held unusual beliefs, but reported less paranoia, and fewer first-rank symptoms such as passivity and alterations in self-experience. NCVH showed no evidence of cognitive deficits or negative symptoms.
CONCLUSIONS
The AVH in NCVH and PSZ demonstrate important similarities as well as clear differences. Specific features, rather than the presence, of AVH appear to determine the need for care. NCVH do not share the cognitive and motivational deficits seen in PSZ. These results suggest that AVH and unusual beliefs can be separated from the broader phenotype of SZ.
Topics: Humans; Hallucinations; Psychotic Disorders; Schizophrenia; Voice; Cognition
PubMed: 37350507
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbad083 -
Schizophrenia Bulletin Sep 2023While the evolution of our modern concepts of mania and melancholia over the 19th century is relatively well-understood, no such clear narrative exists for the...
While the evolution of our modern concepts of mania and melancholia over the 19th century is relatively well-understood, no such clear narrative exists for the nonaffective psychotic syndromes that culminated in Kraepelin's concept of dementia praecox in 1899. These narratives were relatively distinct in Germany and France. An important milestone in the French literature is the 1852 essay by the alienist and polymath Charles Lasègue which contained the first detailed modern description of a persecutory delusional syndrome. Lasègue was a careful clinical observer who emphasized a symptomatic approach to psychiatric nosology and was less concerned with course and outcome. He details the evolution of persecutory delusions from increasing referential observations of real events, to the resulting anxious confusion and then the emergence of explanatory delusional beliefs. Once formed, these beliefs, he notes, are relatively impervious to correction. Lasègue was unusual for his time in emphasizing a "first-person perspective" on psychotic experiences, and quotes from his patients in his case history, of which he presents 15. Of these, 12 had auditory hallucinations and 4 passivity phenomena. While conceptualized differently than mid-19th century pre-Kraepelinian German writing on delusional syndromes, and unique on its focus on persecutory delusions, Lasègue's important essay shared a common view on the key features of a broad nonaffective delusional-hallucinatory syndrome. It was this syndrome that Kraepelin, over multiple drafts in the first 6 editions of his textbook from 1883 to 1899, was to divide into his mature concepts of paranoia and the paranoid subtype of dementia praecox.
Topics: Humans; History, 19th Century; Delusions; Syndrome; Psychiatry; Paranoid Disorders; Hallucinations; Schizophrenia
PubMed: 37318157
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbad086 -
Palliative Medicine Sep 2023People with diagnoses of intellectual disability or serious mental illness have higher mortality rates due to physical comorbidities; better understanding is needed to... (Review)
Review
Challenges and opportunities for improvement when people with an intellectual disability or serious mental illness also need palliative care: A qualitative meta-ethnography.
BACKGROUND
People with diagnoses of intellectual disability or serious mental illness have higher mortality rates due to physical comorbidities; better understanding is needed to guide best practice in provision of palliative care for these populations.
AIMS
To identify multivoiced perspectives, drawn from lived experience of: what works, and what does not, in palliative care for people with intellectual disability or serious mental illness; challenges in, and opportunities to improve, palliative care.
DESIGN
A systematically constructed qualitative meta-ethnography. Protocol published (PROSPERO: CRD42021236616).
DATA SOURCES
MEDLINE, PsychINFO, CINAHL PLUS and Embase used without date limitations. Papers published in English, containing qualitative data on palliative care provision for people with a diagnosis of intellectual disability or serious mental illness were included. Global five-point strength score applied for relevance/quality appraisal.
RESULTS
Familiarity (of location, people and/or things) is important for good palliative care. Assumptions and misunderstandings about the role of mental capacity assessment to appropriately involve the patient in decision-making are common. Adapting training for palliative care staff to address concerns and beliefs about mental illness is one of the methods that helps avoid diagnostic overshadowing. Proactive identification of service arrangements to meet needs of persons with personality, psychotic, delusional and bipolar affective disorders will help optimise care.
CONCLUSIONS
Evidence, including the voices of people with intellectual disability or serious mental illness is urgently needed to guide efforts to improve their access to and experience of palliative care. More evidence is especially needed to understand, develop and implement best practice for people with psychosis, bipolar affective disorder, mania and personality disorder.
Topics: Humans; Palliative Care; Intellectual Disability; Anthropology, Cultural; Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing
PubMed: 37294100
DOI: 10.1177/02692163231175928 -
Psychological Medicine Dec 2023Prevalence of (PLEs) - reports of hallucinations and delusional thinking not meeting criteria for psychotic disorder - varies substantially across ethnoracial groups....
BACKGROUND
Prevalence of (PLEs) - reports of hallucinations and delusional thinking not meeting criteria for psychotic disorder - varies substantially across ethnoracial groups. What explains this range of PLE prevalence? Despite extensive research, the clinical significance of PLEs remains unclear. Are PLE prevalence and clinical severity differentially associated across ethnoracial groups?
METHODS
We examined the lifetime prevalence and clinical significance of PLEs across ethnoracial groups in the Collaborative Psychiatric Epidemiology Surveys ( = 11 139) using the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) psychosis symptom screener. Outcomes included mental healthcare use (inpatient, outpatient), mental health morbidity (self-perceived poor/fair mental health, suicidal ideation or attempts), and impairment (role interference). Individuals with outcome onsets prior to PLE onset were excluded. We also examined associations of PLEs with CIDI diagnoses. Cox proportional-hazards regression and logistic regression modeling identified associations of interest.
RESULTS
Contrary to previous reports, only Asian Americans differed significantly from other U.S. ethnoracial groups, reporting lower lifetime prevalence (6.7% 8.0-11.9%) and mean number (0.09 0.11-0.18) of PLEs. In multivariate analyses, PLE clinical significance showed limited ethnoracial variation among Asian Americans, non-Caribbean Latinos, and Afro-Caribbeans. In other groups, mental health outcomes showed significant ethnoracial clustering by outcome (e.g. hospitalization and role interference with Caribbean-Latino origin), possibly due to underlying differences in psychiatric disorder chronicity or treatment barriers.
CONCLUSIONS
While there is limited ethnoracial variation in U.S. PLE prevalence, PLE clinical significance varies across U.S. ethnoracial groups. Clinicians should consider this variation when assessing PLEs to avoid exaggerating their clinical significance, contributing to mental healthcare disparities.
Topics: Humans; Clinical Relevance; Hallucinations; Mental Disorders; Psychotic Disorders; Ethnicity; Racial Groups; United States
PubMed: 37272381
DOI: 10.1017/S0033291723001496