7,585 research outputs found
INCIDENCE OF PSYCHOTIC DISORDERS IN PALERMO: PRELIMINARY DATA
Background: The incidence of psychotic disorders varies in different geographical
areas (McGrath 2004). Recent data suggest that the incidence is
higher in males, migrant minorities and in urban areas. There aren\u2019t many
available epidemiological data on the incidence of psychotic disorders in
Italy. This is the first incidence study on psychotic disorders carried out in
Palermo, the capital of Sicily.
Methods: we screened all patients presenting with their first episode of
psychosis to the mental health services of our catchment area (5 inpatient,
5 outpatient units and 3 private psychiatric hospitals) over a period of
three years (2008-2011). The diagnosis of psychosis was defined using the
Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry (SCAN Wing, J. K., et
al., 1990).The main socio-demographic data were collected using the MRC
Social Data Schedule. When subjects were not available (did not consent)
for interview, information was collected from clinical notes. The population
at risk referred to the people aged from 18-65 who were resident in
the same catchment area (Palermo Municipality) in the period considered,
according to the data of the Statistic Office of Palermo Municipality).
Results: we identified 216 patients affected by a first episode of psychosis
(FEP): 135 M (62.5%) and 81 F (37.5%), mean age 31.42 years (SD: 11.44).
77.1% of FEP had a diagnosis of non affective psychosis, 12.8% of affective
psychosis and 10.1% received a diagnosis of other psychosis. 204 subjects
were Caucasian, 12 non Caucasian belonging to various ethnicities and they
were all first generation migrants (4 Indian, 3 African, 2 Bangladeshi, and
3 Mixed). Population at risk is 425.194 people. The mean age of onset
was lower in men than women M: 29.98 years (SD: 10.41) vs. F: 34.28
(SD:12.64) (p=0.013)The incidence of psychotic disorders in our catchment
area is 16,9 per 100.000 person years. It was higher in men 21,9 per 100.000
than women 12,2 per 100.000.
Discussion: Our study is the first epidemiological study in Sicily investigating
the incidence of psychotic disorders. In our population men have a higher
incidence of psychotic disorders than women and an earlier age of onset
Does clinical or cognitive insight predict outcome in psychosis? Findings from a longitudinal first episode cohort
The copy number variant involving part of the \u3b17 nicotinic receptor gene contains a polymorphic inversion.
The \u3b17 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor gene (CHRNA7) is located at 15q13\u2013q14 in a region that is strongly linked to the P50 sensory gating deficit, an endophenotype of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Part of the gene is a copy number variant, due to a duplication of exons 5\u201310 and 3\u2032 sequence in CHRFAM7A, which is present in many but not all humans. Maps of this region show that the two genes are in opposite orientation in the individual mainly represented in the public access human DNA sequence database (Build 36), suggesting that an inversion had occurred since the duplication. We have used fluorescent in situ hybridization to investigate this putative inversion. Analysis of interphase chromosomes in 12 individuals confirms the occurrence of an inversion and indicates that CHRFAM7A exists in both orientations with similar frequency. We showed that the 2\u2009bp deletion polymorphism in exon 6 of CHRFAM7A is in strong linkage disequilibrium with the inversion polymorphism (r2=0.82, CI 0.53\u20131.00, P=0.00003), which can therefore be used as a surrogate marker. Previous associations of endophenotypes of schizophrenia with the 2\u2009bp deletion might therefore be due to the orientation of the duplicon containing CHRFAM7A
Association Between Continued Cannabis Use and Risk of Relapse in First-Episode Psychosis: A Quasi-Experimental Investigation Within an Observational Study
IMPORTANCE: Cannabis use after first-episode psychosis is associated with poor outcomes, but the causal nature of this association is unclear. OBJECTIVE: To examine the precise nature of the association between continued cannabis use after the onset of psychosis and risk of relapse of psychosis. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This prospective cohort study followed up for at least 2 years after the onset of psychosis 220 patients who presented to psychiatric services in South London, England, from April 12, 2002, to July 26, 2013, with first-episode psychosis. Longitudinal modeling (fixed-effects analysis, cross-lagged path analysis) was used to examine whether the association between changes in cannabis use and risk of relapse over time is the result of shared vulnerability between psychosis and cannabis use, psychosis increasing the risk of cannabis use (reverse causation), or a causal effect of cannabis use on psychosis relapse. INTERVENTIONS: Exposure to cannabis within the first and second years after onset of psychosis. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The main outcome measure was relapse of psychosis, defined as subsequent hospitalization for psychosis. Effect of cannabis use status in the first year (Ct1) and second year (Ct2) and pattern of cannabis use continuation in the first year and second year were modeled for risk of relapse in the first year (Rt1) and risk of relapse in the second year (Rt2) after psychosis onset. RESULTS: A total of 220 patients with first-episode psychosis were included in the analysis (mean [SD] age, 28.62 [8.58] years; age range, 18-65 years; 90 women [40.9%] and 130 men [59.1%]). Fixed-effects models that adjusted for time-variant (other illicit drug use, antipsychotic medication adherence) and time-invariant (eg, genetic or premorbid environment) unobserved confounders revealed that there was an increase in the odds of experiencing a relapse of psychosis during periods of cannabis use relative to periods of no use (odds ratio, 1.13; 95% CI, 1.03-1.24). Change in the pattern of continuation significantly increased the risk (odds ratio, 1.07; 95% CI, 1.02-1.13), suggesting a dose-dependent association. Cross-lagged analysis confirmed that this association reflected an effect of cannabis use on subsequent risk of relapse (Ct1→Rt2: β = 0.44, P = .04) rather than an effect of relapse on subsequent cannabis use (Rt1→Ct2: β = -0.29, P = .59). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: These results reveal a dose-dependent association between change in cannabis use and relapse of psychosis that is unlikely to be a result of self-medication or genetic and environmental confounding
Quasi-selective ultrafilters and asymptotic numerosities
We isolate a new class of ultrafilters on N, called “quasi-selective” because they are intermediate between selective ultrafilters and P-points. (Under the Continuum Hypothesis these three classes are distinct.) The existence of quasi-selective ultrafilters is equivalent to the existence of “asymptotic numerosities” for all sets of tuples A ⊆ N^k. Such numerosities are hypernatural numbers that generalize finite cardinalities to countable point sets. Most notably, they maintain the structure of ordered semiring, and, in a precise sense, they allow for a natural extension of asymptotic density to all sets of tuples of natural numbers
Measurements of the Absolute Branching Ratios for the Dominant KL Decays, the KL Lifetime, and Vus with the KLOE Detector
From a sample of about 10^9 Phi mesons produced at DAFNE, we have selected KL
mesons tagged by observing KS->pi+pi- decays. We present results on the major
KL branching ratios, including those of the semileptonic decays needed for the
determination of Vus. These branching ratio measurements are fully inclusive
with respect to final-state radiation. The KL lifetime has also been measured.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Lett.
Charged kaon lifetime at KLOE
Preliminary result on the charged kaon lifetime, obtained by the KLOE
experiment operating at DANE, the Frascati -factory, is presentedComment: 3 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of 42nd Rencontres
de Moriond on Electroweak Interactions and Unified Theories, La Thuile, Aosta
Valley, Italy, 10-17 Mar 200
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