Reliability of a Procedure for Measuring and Classifying “Present Psychiatric State”

1967 ◽  
Vol 113 (498) ◽  
pp. 499-515 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. K. Wing ◽  
J. L. T. Birley ◽  
J. E. Cooper ◽  
P. Graham ◽  
A. D. Isaacs

It is generally agreed that psychiatric illnesses can fairly reliably be categorized into four broad groups—organic psychoses, functional psychoses, neuroses and personality disorders. Cases are assigned with greatest confidence to the first group and with least confidence to the fourth. The reliability of specific diagnoses within these classes is much less secure and decreases in the same order. The best recent reviews of the literature are by Kreitman (1961) and Foulds (1965).

1977 ◽  
Vol 131 (5) ◽  
pp. 448-452 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. J. Fleminger ◽  
R. Dalton ◽  
K. F. Standage

Eight hundred psychiatric patients and eight hundred controls completed a handedness preference questionnaire. There was no significant difference in handedness between the two samples, but, contrary to some previous reports, excess of sinistrality was not associated with male sex. The distribution of handedness was similar in neurotics and controls, but among psychotics in general there was a higher proportion of fully right-handed subjects. Among schizophrenics there was a significantly higher proportion of left-handed writers among males than females. There were relatively few left-handed writers of either sex among patients with affective psychosis. Female patients with personality disorders had a significantly higher proportion of mixed handedness than controls. The findings are considered in relation to suggestions that functional psychoses may be associated with asymmetrical cerebral dysfunction, and that poorly lateralized function may be related to anomalous psychological development.


2017 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Saavedra ◽  
Marcelino López ◽  
M. Eva Trigo

AbstractPsychosis has been associated with committing violent crimes. However, it has been reported that the association is mediated by toxin consumption, personality disorders, and positive symptoms. This study will examine the relationship between different psychological disorders and sociodemographic variables, and violent crime perpetration in a sample of 472 men serving prison terms in Andalusia, Spain. A correlation-based, retrospective study was conducted and data were analyzed through logistic regression. The sample is representative of the Andalusian prison population, with a 95% level of confidence and .02% precision. Inmates were sampled and diagnosed by expert clinicians using the SCID-I and the IPDE-II. We computed bivariate correlations between the aforementioned variables and perpetration of violent crimes (murder, homicide, attempted murder, and injury) to later apply logistic regression and find adjusted odds ratios. We confirmed the association between diagnosis of functional psychoses and violent crime, with a significant adjusted odds ratio in the last model (OR = 3.71; p = .010). Other significant variables that acted like risk factors include suicide attempts (OR = 2.04; p = .046), having received care at a mental health facility in the year before imprisonment (OR = 3.83; p = .008), and more strongly than the psychosis diagnosis, low level of education (OR = 10.32; p = .029). Toxin consumption and personality disorders were not significant in the final model.


Author(s):  
Panos Roussos ◽  
Larry J. Siever

Recent advances in neurobiology have increased our understanding of the role of neurotransmitters, genetics, and brain networks in the regulation of normal behavior, individual differences in personality, and psychopathology of personality disorders. Individual differences in the regulation and organization of cognitive processes, including the experience of psychotic-like perceptual distortions and deficit symptoms, are typical in Cluster A personality disorders or schizophrenia spectrum personality disorders, such as schizotypal. Personality dimensions such as affective instability, emotional information processing, aggression, and impulsivity are typical for borderline personality disorder and other Cluster B personality disorders. A low threshold for anxiety and presence of compulsivity may contribute to the avoidant, dependent, and compulsive behaviors observed in Cluster C personality disorders. It is widely accepted that an endophenotypic approach will provide a better understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms and clarify the underlying candidate genes contributing to these behavioral dimensions, as well as susceptibility to major psychiatric illnesses.


1968 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-82
Author(s):  
William E. Powles ◽  
E. David Burk

We have drawn on a number of sources in discussing the shared nature of various psychotic states, with a debt particularly to the psychoanalytic and cybernetic points of view. Clinical psychiatry does have some problems with its classifications of states of illness. At present there seems to be some disagreement between the point of view which sees all psychiatric illnesses in mutually exclusive syndromes, and the point of view which sees mental health and equilibrium as existing along a continuum. Psychotic states occupy one end of such a continuum or spectrum: they are far enough removed from normality that the two are mutually exclusive, and they differ quantitatively and qualitatively from neurotic states. The concept of psychosis appears to have operational value. We must however disentangle several kinds of definitions or we have semantic chaos. Socially, insanity is defined as behaviour beyond the social norm and carrying with it certain connotations of danger to the social fabric. Clinically, the diagnosis of psychosis implies a serious disorganization of mental health or adaptation with a guarded prognosis and requiring special drastic treatment methods. Psychopathologically how can the psychotic state be defined? We have devoted some space to the discussion of the concept of the cognitive and executive ego, since psychosis is seen primarily as a disordered ego state. The nature of this disorder appears to be that of a rupturing or disarticulating of certain fundamental organizations of memory, which have been welded together into the primordium of the ego. In architectural language we might call these foundations, in computer language programs, in cybernetic language guidance systems, and in everyday language, character. The nature of the bonds and energies which hold such collections of experience together as guidance systems is not understood. We must assume that it has a neurophysiological substrate. Both under conditions of extreme psychic stress and of bra:n-tissue disturbance these fundamental operating patterns are disrupted, resulting in certain characteristic symptoms of hallucinosis, extremely severe affective change, and disorders of thought and logic. This model his some implications for treatment, particularly for psychotherapeutic treatment, including the management of ‘organic’ psychoses. There are, further, certain interesting contradictions between the social, clinical and psychopathological frames of reference which we have touched on only briefly.


2020 ◽  
pp. 81-84
Author(s):  
Peter Buckley ◽  
Brian Miller

“Psychosis” and “schizophrenia” are descriptive terms. They are not synonymous with each other. Now somewhat paradoxically, “functional” psychoses such as schizophrenia are distinguished from “organic” psychoses by the absence of brain pathology and/or a likely contributory medical condition. This approximates to a tautology, since ample research confirms brain changes in schizophrenia and medical comorbidities are common in patients with schizophrenia. That said, this chapter enumerates general considerations in the realm of organic psychosis and focuses on specific psychoses that may be particularly noteworthy, autoimmune encephalitis.


1982 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 301-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.A. Stein ◽  
K.C. Elliott ◽  
M.J. Mckeough

Clinicians are reluctant to diagnose severe mental disturbances in adolescents. The psychoanalytic literature on adolescent turmoil has de-emphasized the phenomenology of the clinical picture leading to diagnostic difficulties. Several studies have shown that symptomatic adolescents for the most part continue to demonstrate disturbances in adulthood. This paper reports on the population of adolescents admitted to an inpatient unit and compares it with a population admitted three years earlier. There was an increase in the number of referrals indicating a greater demand for service by the community. The patient population showed a significant trend toward more serious psychiatric disturbance, psychoses and personality disorders, with far fewer adjustment reactions. There was also a great increase in the number of re-admissions which again reflects severity of illness. Antidepressants continue to be infrequently used. Major tranquilizers were used less frequently and with greater specificity in both psychoses and personality disorders. Major implications for identifying and treating recurrent psychiatric illnesses in adolescents are discussed.


1985 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 439-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M. Anaf ◽  
S. J. Rosenman

This study assessed the extent of alcohol use among casualty attenders at a metropolitan psychiatric hospital. Seventeen of 97 patients showed measurable alcohol levels at the time of presentation. Patients with functional psychoses used alcohol excessively, but the heaviest and most frequent use was among women, especially those with personality disorders. It is suggested that routine alcohol testing is worthwhile and inexpensive, and it may lead to earlier detection and treatment of alcohol abuse.


2005 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 139-151 ◽  

The identification of endophenotypes in the personality disorders may provide a basis for the identification of underlying genotypes that influence the traits and dimensions of the personality disorders, as well as susceptibility to major psychiatric illnesses. Clinical dimensions of personality disorders that lend themselves to the study of corresponding endophenotypes include affective instability, impulsivity, aggression, emotional information processing, cognitive disorganization, social deficits, and psychosis. For example, the propensity to aggression can be evaluated by psychometric measures, interview, laboratory paradigms, neurochemical imaging, and pharmacological studies. These suggest that aggression is a measurable trait that may be related to reduced serotonergic activity. Hyperresponsiveness of amygdala and other limbic structures may be related to affective instability, while structural and functional brain alterations underlie the cognitive disorganization in psychotic-like symptoms of schizotypal personality disorder. Thus, an endophenotypic approach not only provides clues to underlying candidate genes contributing to these behavioral dimensions, but may also point the way to a better understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document