scholarly journals First and third person perspectives in psychotic disorders and mood disorders with psychotic features

2011 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. e153-e154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Islam Lucrezia ◽  
Demartini Benedetta ◽  
Selle Valerio ◽  
Gambini Orsola ◽  
Scarone Silvio
2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Lucrezia Islam ◽  
Silvio Scarone ◽  
Orsola Gambini

Lack of insight, very frequent in schizophrenia, can be considered a deficit in Theory of Mind (ToM) performances, and is also found in other psychiatric disorders. In this study, we used the first- to third-person shift to examine subjects with psychotic and psychotic mood disorders. 92 patients were evaluated with SANS and SAPS scales and asked to talk about their delusions. They were asked to state whether they thought what they said was believable for them and for the interviewer. Two weeks later, 79 patients listened to a tape where their delusion was reenacted by two actors and were asked the same two questions. Some patients gained insight when using third-person perspective. These patients had lower SAPS scores, a lower score on SAPS item on delusions, and significant improvement in their SAPS delusion score at the second interview. Better insight was not related to a specific diagnostic group.


BJPsych Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alyson Zwicker ◽  
Lynn E. MacKenzie ◽  
Vladislav Drobinin ◽  
Emily Howes Vallis ◽  
Victoria C. Patterson ◽  
...  

Background Basic symptoms, defined as subjectively perceived disturbances in thought, perception and other essential mental processes, have been established as a predictor of psychotic disorders. However, the relationship between basic symptoms and family history of a transdiagnostic range of severe mental illness, including major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, has not been examined. Aims We sought to test whether non-severe mood disorders and severe mood and psychotic disorders in parents is associated with increased basic symptoms in their biological offspring. Method We measured basic symptoms using the Schizophrenia Proneness Instrument – Child and Youth Version in 332 youth aged 8–26 years, including 93 offspring of control parents, 92 offspring of a parent with non-severe mood disorders, and 147 offspring of a parent with severe mood and psychotic disorders. We tested the relationships between parent mental illness and offspring basic symptoms in mixed-effects linear regression models. Results Offspring of a parent with severe mood and psychotic disorders (B = 0.69, 95% CI 0.22–1.16, P = 0.004) or illness with psychotic features (B = 0.68, 95% CI 0.09–1.27, P = 0.023) had significantly higher basic symptom scores than control offspring. Offspring of a parent with non-severe mood disorders reported intermediate levels of basic symptoms, that did not significantly differ from control offspring. Conclusions Basic symptoms during childhood are a marker of familial risk of psychopathology that is related to severity and is not specific to psychotic illness. Declaration of interest None.


2010 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 1189
Author(s):  
L. Islam ◽  
B. Demartini ◽  
O. Gambini ◽  
S. Scarone

Psychology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deborah J. Walder ◽  
Marta Statucka ◽  
Maureen Daly ◽  
Beril Yaffe

The term “psychotic disorders” refers to a broad conceptualization of conditions including primary psychoses, such as schizophrenia and psychotic mood disorders, other disorders that are sometimes marked by psychotic features (e.g., borderline personality disorder, body dysmorphic disorder), and secondary psychotic disorders due to medical conditions or substances (e.g., alcohol withdrawal delirium). As addressed in Ketter, et al. 2004 (“Psychotic Bipolar Disorders: Dimensionally Similar to or Categorically Different from Schizophrenia?,” cited in the Debate of Dimensional versus Categorical), controversy regarding relationships among mood disorders (particularly bipolar and depressive disorders with psychotic features) and schizophrenia is ongoing. The authors argue that while the respective dimensional (e.g., psychotic bipolar disorder as intermediate between non-psychotic bipolar and schizophrenia spectrum disorders) versus categorical debate persists, a mixed dimensional/categorical approach may best help elucidate pathophysiology and treatment options. Schizophrenia, specifically, is a severe and persistent form of mental illness often marked by positive symptoms (such as excesses and distortions in thoughts and sensory/perceptual experiences such as hallucinations and delusions), negative symptoms (behavioral deficits such as avolition, asociality, anhedonia, blunted affect, and alogia), disorganized symptoms (such as disorganized speech and behavior), movement symptoms (or grossly abnormal psychomotor behavior such as catatonia), and impairments in cognition (such as memory and frontal/executive functions that include, for example, planning ability and initiation). Kring, et al. 2014 (Abnormal Psychology, cited under the Schizophrenia Spectrum) provides an excellent introductory-level overview of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. The etiological (or causal) basis of schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders remains not wholly determined. Prevailing theories, however, ascribe to a diathesis-stress model, whereby biological factors (e.g., predispositions such as genetic liability) are believed to interact with adverse environmental factors (e.g., obstetric complications; adverse, stressful life events) over the course of development toward the manifestation of illness. This article offers a historical perspective of psychotic disorders, a review of etiological/theoretical models, a description of illness epidemiology and issues pertaining to sex differences and comorbidity, an outline of diagnostic considerations, a description of the schizophrenia spectrum, an examination of available assessment tools, the role of cognition/social cognition, a review of current evidence of neurobiological disruptions in psychosis (e.g., genetics, structural and functional neuroimaging, hormones, neurotransmitters, other aspects of maldevelopment in the central nervous system), other laboratory markers (e.g., perceptual and attentional abnormalities, smooth-pursuit eye movement dysfunction), environmental factors (such as stress, toxins, and familial-expressed emotion), the importance of gene-environment interactions in psychotic disorders, and, finally, current directions pertaining to prevention and treatment (pharmacological and psychosocial). While various psychotic-related disorders are addressed, this article focuses on the schizophrenia spectrum.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. e154
Author(s):  
Lucrezia Islam ◽  
Valerio selle ◽  
Benedetta Demartini ◽  
Orsola Gambini ◽  
Silvio Scarone

Author(s):  
Daniel R. Strunk ◽  
Katherine Sasso

In this chapter, we provide an overview of the phenomenology of the mood disorders, including attention to both symptoms and functional impairment. Our overview emphasizes the heterogeneity among those with these disorders, as well as the most influential approaches to describing this variability across and within bipolar and depressive disorders. We discuss the degree of overlap between bipolar and depressive disorders, paying special attention to the clinical significance of low levels of manic symptoms. We also review several influential symptom-based specifiers, including those that refer to melancholic, atypical, anxious, and psychotic features. Having considered variability in the symptoms of these disorders, we then consider the course of these disorders. We survey the remarkable variability in course as well as current approaches to characterizing these differences. We conclude with a discussion of future directions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor Peralta ◽  
Gustavo J Gil-Berrozpe ◽  
Julián Librero ◽  
Ana Sánchez-Torres ◽  
Manuel J Cuesta

Abstract Little is understood about the symptom network structure of psychotic disorders. In the current study, we aimed to examine the network structure of psychotic symptoms in a broad and transdiagnostic sample of subjects with psychotic disorders (n = 2240) and to determine whether network structure parameters vary across demographic, sampling method and clinical variables. Gaussian graphical models were estimated for 73 psychotic symptoms assessed using the Comprehensive Assessment of Symptoms and History. A 7-cluster solution (reality distortion, disorganization, catatonia, diminished expressivity, avolition/anhedonia, mania, and depression) best explained the underlying symptom structure of the network. Symptoms with the highest centrality estimates pertained to the disorganization and, to a lesser extent, negative domains. Most bridge symptoms pertained to the disorganization domain, which had a central position within the network and widespread connections with other psychopathological domains. A comparison of networks in subgroups of subjects defined by premorbid adjustment levels, treatment response, and course pattern significantly influenced both network global strength and network structure. The sampling method and diagnostic class influenced network structure but not network global strength. Subgroups of subjects with less densely connected networks had poorer outcomes or more illness severity than those with more densely connected networks. The network structure of psychotic features emphasizes the importance of disorganization symptoms as a central domain of psychopathology and raises the possibility that interventions that target these symptoms may prove of broad use across psychopathology. The network structure of psychotic disorders is dependent on the sampling method and important clinical variables.


1983 ◽  
Vol 34 (7) ◽  
pp. 595-596
Author(s):  
Janet B. W. Williams ◽  
Robert L. Spitzer

Author(s):  
Allison G. Harvey ◽  
Edward Watkins ◽  
Warren Mansell ◽  
Roz Shafran

This chapter examines recurrent thinking, thought suppression, and metacognition across psychological disorders. It discusses intrusions, recurrent negative thinking (worry and rumination), and the evidence for their presence across psychological disorders (anxiety disorders, somatoform disorders, eating disorders, mood disorders, psychotic disorders, and substance-related disorders).


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