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1.
BACKGROUND: Motivated by a previous study among male veterans [Allen, D.N., Frantom, L.V., Strauss, G.P., van Kammen, D.P., 2005. Differential patterns of premorbid academic and social deterioration in patients with schizophrenia. Schizophr. Res. 75, 389-397], the present analysis examined: (1) patterns of premorbid academic and social functioning during childhood, early adolescence, and late adolescence, and (2) associations between these premorbid functioning dimensions and a number of clinical variables. METHODS: Data on premorbid functioning were collected using the Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS) in 95 hospitalized first-episode patients. Analyses were similar to those conducted by Allen and colleagues (2005). RESULTS: Deterioration was evident in both academic and social functioning from childhood to early adolescence, along with a pronounced/accelerated deterioration in academic functioning from early adolescence to late adolescence, occurring in both male and female patients. Age at onset of prodromal symptoms was predicted by childhood/early adolescent/late adolescent academic functioning scores, and age at onset of psychotic symptoms was significantly associated only with childhood academic functioning. Severity of negative symptoms was predicted by childhood and late adolescent social functioning scores, and severity of general psychopathology symptoms was predicted by late adolescent academic functioning, as well as childhood and late adolescent social functioning scores. CONCLUSIONS: Consistent with prior findings, deterioration in premorbid functioning appears to be more pronounced in the academic than social dimension of the PAS. Some PAS scores are predictive of ages at onset of prodrome/psychosis and severity of psychotic symptoms. Ongoing research on premorbid adjustment in schizophrenia may have implications for future prevention goals.  相似文献   

2.
There is growing evidence for a relationship between the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) and the prognosis in schizophrenia. The objective of this study is to evaluate whether DUP and premorbid level of social functioning are related to treatment response in acute treatment of first-episode schizophrenia. Seventy-nine first-episode schizophrenia patients were assessed with BPRS, SAPS, and SANS on admission and discharge during their first hospitalisation. Percentage of the difference between admission and discharge in total scores of all scales were taken as measures of absolute symptom reduction. The median DUP was 6 months (mean=8.6). DUP was correlated with reduction in BPRS and SAPS scores but not SANS scores. Patients with a short DUP (n=41) also showed a higher reduction in BPRS, and SAPS scores than those with a long DUP. Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS) scores were inversely correlated with age at onset and positively correlated with BPRS scores at admission. We did not find any relationship between PAS scores and response to treatment. Our findings suggest that DUP may be an important predictor of response in acute treatment of first-episode schizophrenia and thus, attempts for early diagnosis may also have a positive effect on acute treatment response.  相似文献   

3.
OBJECTIVE: Investigating the relationship between premorbid and prodromal status and the clinical manifestations of the first psychotic episode is relevant for understanding the pathophysiology of psychosis and for improving management of the disease. This study examined patterns of premorbid functioning of persons interviewed during their first episode of psychotic illness and examined the relationship of premorbid characteristics with symptom severity and cognitive functioning during the first illness episode. METHOD: The data were derived from the baseline assessments of a multicenter international drug trial that enrolled 535 patients in their first episode of psychosis. Subjects' scores on the Premorbid Adjustment Scale were used to assign them to groups according to whether their premorbid functioning was stable-good, stable-poor, or deteriorating. The three groups' scores on the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, Clinical Global Impression (CGI) severity scale, and a cognitive battery were compared. RESULTS: Almost half of the patients (47.5%) had stable-good premorbid functioning, 37.3% had stable-poor premorbid functioning, and 15.1% had initially good, but later deteriorating, premorbid functioning. Compared to the stable-poor and deteriorating groups, the stable-good group had lower (better) negative syndrome and general psychopathology scores on the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale and a lower CGI severity scale score. Differences between the stable-poor and stable-good groups were also found on some cognitive measures and on the positive syndrome subscale of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. CONCLUSIONS: More than half of the subjects, who were interviewed during their first episode of psychotic disorder, had evident premorbid behavioral disturbances. Poor premorbid functioning before onset of psychosis was associated with more severe symptoms and more severe cognitive manifestations of illness during the first illness episode.  相似文献   

4.
Numerous studies indicate that social dysfunction is associated with negative symptoms of schizophrenia during the chronic phase of illness. However, it is unclear whether social abnormalities exist during the premorbid phase in people who later develop schizophrenia with prominent negative symptoms, or whether social functioning becomes progressively worse in these individuals from childhood to late adolescence. The current study examined differences in academic and social premorbid functioning in people with schizophrenia meeting criteria for deficit (i.e., primary and enduring negative symptoms) (DS: n = 74) and non-deficit forms of schizophrenia (ND: n = 271). Premorbid social and academic functioning was assessed for childhood, early adolescence, and late adolescence developmental periods on the Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS). Results indicated that both DS and ND participants showed deterioration in social and academic functioning from childhood to late adolescence. However, while ND schizophrenia demonstrated greater deterioration of academic compared to social premorbid functioning from childhood to late adolescence, the DS group exhibited comparable deterioration across both premorbid domains, with more severe social deterioration than the ND group. Findings suggest that people with DS show poorer social premorbid adjustment than those with ND as early as childhood, and are particularly susceptible to accelerated deterioration as the onset of schizophrenia becomes imminent. Thus, poor premorbid social adjustment and significant social deterioration from childhood to adolescence may be a hallmark feature of people who later go on to develop prominent negative symptoms and a unique marker for the DS subtype of schizophrenia.  相似文献   

5.
The impact of premorbid social and intellectual functioning in childhood and early adolescence on the developmental course of schizophrenia is not sufficiently understood. In a retrospective case study (93 consecutive in-patients, 43 males and 50 females) of first-episode psychosis occurring in adolescence, the relationship between premorbid adjustment and short-term therapeutic outcome under treatment conditions was examined. All of the patients had a DSM-111-R diagnosis of schizophrenia (n=56) or schizoaffective disorder (n=37). The mean age of the patients at the time of the study was 15.8 (SD=1.0). Premorbid functioning during childhood and early adolescence was assessed by using the Cannon-Spoor et al. Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS) and studied with respect to its prognostic relevance for short-term therapeutic outcome (eight weeks) under neuroleptic treatment (350–700 mg Chlorpromazin dose equivalent). Criteria for clinical outcome were obtained from the study by Pearlson et al. (1989) which defines three grades (complete remission, partial remission and no response), according to the degree of positive symptomatology. Statistical analysis was based on nonparametric variance analysis. Patients with complete remission of positive symptoms after eight weeks of therapy had experienced far better premorbid adjustment in early adolescence and in childhood. Diagnosis and gender did not bias this result. Our data suggest that premorbid social functioning is a crucial variable with regard to therapeutic outcome in first-episode psychosis. Previous studies have reported a relation between poor premorbid functioning and negative symptoms. We found premorbid adjustment related to the course of positive symptoms.  相似文献   

6.
Approximately 60% of patients with a first episode of psychosis will significantly reduce the severity of their positive symptomatology with antipsychotic drugs. The aim of this study was to investigate predictors of response to antipsychotic treatment during the first episode of non-affective psychosis. 172 patients (107 male) with a diagnosis of schizophreniform, schizophrenia, schizoaffective, brief reactive psychosis, schizotypal personality disorder or psychosis non-otherwise specified entered the study. Sociodemographic, premorbid and clinical data at baseline were evaluated. Unpaired t-test for continuous and chi2 for categorical data, respectively, were used to compare responders and non-responders selected variables. Multivariate logistic regression was used to establish a prediction model. 57.6% of study subjects (99 of 172) responded to antipsychotic treatment. The following variables were significantly associated with less likelihood of response: 1.--lower severity of general psychopathology, positive symptoms and disorganized symptoms at baseline; 2.--earlier age of onset; 3.--diagnosis of schizophrenia; 4.--longer DUP; 5.--poorer premorbid adjustment during adolescence, and 6.--hospitalization. Multivariate logistic regression demonstrated that differences between responders and non-responders were largely accounted for by BPRS total score, age of onset, premorbid adjustment at early adolescence, and diagnosis. Patients with an early age of onset of schizophrenia, a poor premorbid adolescent functioning, and with a lower severity of psychopathology at intake seem to have a decrease likelihood of responding to antipsychotic treatment. Helping clinicians to identify non-responders is meant as a first step to optimise therapeutic effort to benefit individuals in this vulnerable group.  相似文献   

7.
The aim of this study was to identify the predictors of outcome at one year follow-up after the first psychotic episode of schizophrenia. Seventy-nine first-episode schizophrenia patients were assessed monthly with the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), Scale for Assessment of Positive Symptoms (SAPS), and Scale for Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS) after discharge from their first hospitalization. Outcome measures were presence of relapse and rehospitalization, level of global functioning, employment status and severity of symptoms at one year. A total of 33% of the patients had a relapse, and 12.1% were rehospitalized during one year follow-up. Premorbid childhood functionality was worse in patients who had relapse, but there was no correlation between premorbid adjustment scores and BPRS, SANS and SAPS scores at one year. There was no difference in duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) between patients who had relapse and not; however, the patients who had double relapse, had longer DUP than those without relapse. The time period between discharge and rehospitalization was shorter in patients with longer DUP. Functionality in childhood and noncompliance to the treatment independently contributed to the relapse rate. Functionality in late adolescence independently contributed to the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scale score at one year and the GAF score at discharge appeared as a predictor of employment. The results of the present study suggest that treatment compliance and early premorbid adjustment level seem to be important predictors of relapse rate in first episode schizophrenia.  相似文献   

8.
Premorbid functioning in first-episode psychosis has been reported to be associated with poorer outcome. We assessed premorbid functioning in a sample of 306 subjects newly admitted to an early-psychosis program. Using cluster analyses, we identified four patterns: stable-good, stable-moderate, deteriorating and poor-deteriorating. Results were that relative to the stable-good group, the deteriorating and the poor-deteriorating groups had more negative symptoms, poorer social functioning and some evidence of poorer cognitive functioning. The deteriorating group had increased positive symptoms compared to the stable-good group. These results suggest that prior to the onset of the acute psychosis those who have poor social and interpersonal functioning premorbidly present initially with increased social impairment and negative symptoms compared to those who have better premorbid functioning.  相似文献   

9.
Poor insight is a ubiquitous phenomenon in psychosis with great repercussions on clinical practise and the outcomes of patients. Poor insight comprises "state" and "trait" components. This paper targeted predictors of global insight and insight dimensions at baseline in the drug-na?ve status of first-episode psychosis patients and during a 6-month follow up after episode remission. Seventy-seven consecutive and previously unmedicated patients with first-episode schizophrenia-spectrum disorders (FESSD) completed baseline and 6-month insight, premorbid, symptomatological and neuropsychological assessments. Insight measures served as dependent variables for a set of hierarchical multiple regression models. Premorbid personality abnormalities and duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) significantly predicted 'state' and 'trait' insight global scores. Duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) significantly predicted 'state' insight, measured as refusal of treatment at baseline. Moreover, premorbid personality abnormalities and DUP with minor contributions of demographic variables, cognitive functioning and psychopathological dimensions predicted 'trait insight', defined as insight after remission of the psychosis episode 'Insight improver' FESSD patients showed better late adolescent premorbid adjustment, lower personality disturbances (sociopathic, schizoid and schizotypy dimensions), shorter DUP, and lower positive, negative and disorganisation symptoms and better cognitive performance on the Trail Making B test at the 6-month follow-up assessment. Premorbid personality abnormalities and DUP were predictors of 'state' and 'trait' insight, both at global scores and dimension levels. Moreover, insight improvement in patients with FESSD was related to premorbid abnormalities (in both adjustment and personality), shorter DUP, fewer positive and negative symptoms and better performance in cognitive tests at the 6-month follow up.  相似文献   

10.
Gender differences in age at first onset, duration of untreated psychosis, psychopathology, social functioning, and self-esteem were investigated in a group of 578 young adults with a first-episode schizophrenia spectrum disorder. The mean age at first-onset of symptoms, age at first contact, and duration of untreated psychosis were similar for men and women. Men had more severe negative symptoms, poorer premorbid functioning, and poorer social networks, whereas women had more severe hallucinations. More men than women were substance abusers, were unemployed, and lived alone. Women had poorer self-esteem than men, in spite of better scores in functioning. Premorbid social adjustment was significantly related to the level of negative symptoms and number of friends. Conclusion is that men and women with first-episode psychosis showed different psychopathological characteristics and different social functioning, which cannot be explained by older age of onset for women. Women make more suicide attempts and experience lower self-esteem in spite of better social functioning.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the contribution of premorbid function, duration of untreated psychosis (DUP), age of onset, severity of symptoms at presentation, and number of subsequent hospitalisations to the outcome of early onset schizophrenia (EOS; onset before 17th birthday). METHOD: Twenty-three EOS patients (mean age at onset 15.16 +/- 1.39 years) were re-assessed after a mean interval of 4 +/- 1.08 years. At baseline and follow-up clinical diagnoses were confirmed using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I Disorders and symptoms were assessed with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. Premorbid function, as measured with the Premorbid Adjustment Scale, age of onset and DUP were assessed at baseline only. Outcome was evaluated using the Social Adaptation Self-Evaluation Scale (SASS) and the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) Scale. RESULTS: Mean DUP was 2.95 +/- 3.59 months and mean total PAS score was 6.65 +/- 3.02. They had an average of 2.09 +/- 1.44 hospitalisations and their mean SASS and GAF scores were 37.27 +/- 6.5 and 54.19 +/- 18.99, respectively. Poor childhood premorbid function and the severity of negative symptoms at baseline were correlated with worse SASS and GAF scores. No other significant associations were found. CONCLUSIONS: Poor childhood function is the most significant predictor of outcome in EOS.  相似文献   

12.
Schizophrenia is a heterogeneous disorder, and early signs of disorder such as poor premorbid adjustment (PMA) are often present before the onset of diagnosable illness. Differences in PMA between patients may be suggestive of differing aetiological pathways. Poor PMA in schizophrenia has repeatedly been reported to be associated with male sex, earlier age at onset, illness severity, negative symptoms, and poor outcome. Studies of schizophrenia patients systematically assessed for PMA have used small patient samples and have rarely used controls. OBJECTIVE: To investigate possible correlations of PMA, as measured with the Cannon-Spoor Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS), with such meaningful clinical characteristics as sex, age at onset, negative symptoms etc. using one of the largest samples of schizophrenia inpatients as well as controls characterised for PMA to date. METHOD: PMA, diagnosis and lifetime symptoms were assessed in 316 inpatients with schizophrenia and 137 population based controls using the PAS and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM. RESULTS: Controls demonstrated better PAS scores than inpatients with schizophrenia. Earlier age at onset and negative symptoms were found to be associated with poorer PAS scores. There was no difference in PAS ratings between males and females in patients with schizophrenia. Among the control probands, females showed significantly better PAS scores than males. CONCLUSION: PAS scores are worse in individuals who eventually develop schizophrenia, and the distribution of these scores among schizophrenia inpatients is correlated with specific clinical features. Earlier findings, which had reported an association with age at onset and negative symptoms in small patient samples, were substantiated. The widely reported association of poor PMA with male sex, if genuinely present, does not appear to be disease specific. Our findings suggest that PMA is in itself a valuable phenotype characteristic and that it may represent a specific biological phenotype which may be of value in sub-sample selection.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Studies have found Cannon-Spoor's Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS) to be a useful measure of premorbid function and an effective predictor of outcome in patients with chronic schizophrenia. Despite its widespread use, the applicability and reliability of the scale for use with young patients who experience their first episode of schizophrenia have not been thoroughly examined. We review the studies that used the PAS to assess premorbid function in patients with either chronic or first-episode schizophrenia. Difficulties that have been encountered with the use of the PAS in first-episode patients are presented, and modifications that have been made to the scale by various research groups are described. Finally, we make recommendations to enhance the use of the PAS when evaluating patients who have experienced their first episode of schizophrenia.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: To identify factors associated with substance misuse in first-episode patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. METHOD: Twenty-seven patients with a past or current history of substance misuse were compared with 91 patients with no history of misuse on demographic and psychopathological measures before being treated for their first episode of psychosis, and on cognitive measures after 6 months of treatment. RESULTS: There were no statistically significant differences between groups for sex, schizophrenia subtype, marital status, education, family history of schizophrenia, course of illness, age of onset, baseline symptoms, time to treatment response, medication side effects, attention span, memory and executive functioning. However, dual diagnosis patients were found to have a higher parental social class, better premorbid cognitive functioning, higher IQ and better language skills. CONCLUSION: First-episode patients with a history of substance misuse have higher intellectual functioning, which may be associated with higher premorbid socioeconomic status and cognitive functioning.  相似文献   

16.
Premorbid functioning seems to be a phenomenological marker that possibly distinguishes a subtype of schizophrenia. The Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS) is an instrument for measuring premorbid functioning. It has gained international acceptance, although little is known about the reliability and validity of the test. Here data on the reliability and validity of the test derived from a German sample of schizoaffective and schizophrenic subjects (n = 86) and their healthy parents (n = 38) is presented. The DSM-IV diagnosis, PAS and Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) data were used as well as data on the course of the disorder. The estimation of the reliability per scale by internal consistency showed high positive values of Cronbach’s α between 0.809 and 0.931. High scores in PAS representing a bad premorbid social adjustment correlated significantly with a low age of onset, high PANSS scores, an insidious onset and a long period of hospitalisation. The disorganised DSM-IV subtype of schizophrenia showed a trend towards higher mean PAS scores. In the presented sample, the threshold between schizophrenics and healthy individuals is at 0.23. The PAS values higher than 0.53 appeared in patients with an unfavourable course of the disorder. These findings correspond with previous reports in the literature. Received: 15 September 1997 / Accepted: 14 July 1998  相似文献   

17.
Schizophrenia is a neurodevelopmental disorder that is characterized by a number of behavioral abnormalities that are present prior to onset. These premorbid abnormalities may serve as unique markers for the disorder. The current study examines academic and social functioning prior to schizophrenia onset in a group of 58 males diagnosed with schizophrenia. The pattern of deterioration for social and academic functioning was examined across three age periods including childhood, early adolescence, and late adolescence, using the retrospective Premorbid Adjustment Scale (PAS). Results indicated that while increasing deterioration was present for both social and academic adjustment across age periods, there was a significant difference in deterioration between academic and social functioning (p<.05) during late adolescence, with greater deterioration in academic functioning. Results of the current study suggest that premorbid academic functioning is particularly susceptible to deterioration during late adolescence, with accelerating deterioration as schizophrenia onset becomes imminent. When considered together with results from other studies, the present findings suggest that deterioration in premorbid academic functioning from early to late adolescence may be a unique premorbid marker for schizophrenia.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: As both premorbid neurodevelopmental impairments and familial risk factors for schizophrenia are prominent in childhood-onset cases (with onset of psychosis by age 12), their relationship was examined. METHOD: Premorbid language, motor, and social impairments were assessed in a cohort of 49 patients with childhood-onset schizophrenia. Familial loading for schizophrenia spectrum disorders, familial eye-tracking dysfunction, and obstetrical complications were assessed without knowledge of premorbid abnormalities and were compared in the patients with and without developmental impairments. RESULTS: Over one-half of the patients in this group had developmental dysfunction in each domain assessed. The patients with premorbid speech and language impairments had higher familial loading scores for schizophrenia spectrum disorders and more obstetrical complications, and their relatives had worse smooth-pursuit eye movements. The boys had more premorbid motor abnormalities, but early language and social impairments did not differ significantly between genders. There were no other significant relationships between premorbid social or motor abnormalities and the risk factors assessed here. CONCLUSIONS: Premorbid developmental impairments are common in childhood-onset schizophrenia. The rates of three risk factors for schizophrenia (familial loading for schizophrenia spectrum disorders, familial eye-tracking dysfunction, and obstetrical complications) were increased for the probands with premorbid speech and language impairments, suggesting that the pathophysiology of schizophrenia involves the abnormal development of language-related brain regions.  相似文献   

19.
Bailer J, Bräuer W, Rey E-R. Premorbid adjustment as predictor of outcome in schizophrenia: results of a prospective study. Acta Psychiatr Scand 1996: 93: 368–377. © Munksgaard 1996. The present prospective follow-up study of 163 schizophrenic patients admitted to hospital for the first time examined the relationship between premorbid adjustment and different measures of the 3-year course and outcome. The same instruments had been used in all phases of the study. The Premorbid Adjustment Scale was used to assess premorbid social functioning. Outcome measures were positive symptoms, negative symptoms, social disability and number of rehospitalizations. The results of the multiple regression analyses showed that premorbid adjustment was the strongest overall predictor of outcome. Premorbid adjustment was significantly associated with negative symptoms and social disability over the 3-year course of illness. In a further step, we examined the relationship between good, moderate and poor premorbid adjustment and the course of positive symptoms, negative symptoms and social disability within the first 3 years after index admission. The most important finding was that premorbid functioning showed a stronger correlation with the course of negative symptoms and social disability than with the course of positive symptoms. Poor premorbid social functioning implies a poor social course of the illness. Female subjects showed better premorbid functioning than male subjects. Good premorbid adjustment was strongly associated with an acute onset of the illness, and poor premorbid adjustment with an insidious onset.  相似文献   

20.
《European psychiatry》2014,29(6):371-380
PurposeIn patients with schizophrenia, premorbid psychosocial adjustment is an important predictor of functional outcome. We studied functional outcome in young clinical high-risk (CHR) patients and how this was predicted by their childhood to adolescence premorbid adjustment.MethodsIn all, 245 young help-seeking CHR patients were assessed with the Premorbid Adjustment Scale, the Structured Interview for Prodromal Syndromes (SIPS) and the Schizophrenia Proneness Instrument (SPI-A). The SIPS assesses positive, negative, disorganised, general symptoms, and the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF), the SPI-A self-experienced basic symptoms; they were carried out at baseline, at 9-month and 18-month follow-up. Transitions to psychosis were identified. In the hierarchical linear model, associations between premorbid adjustment, background data, symptoms, transitions to psychosis and GAF scores were analysed.ResultsDuring the 18-month follow-up, GAF scores improved significantly, and the proportion of patients with poor functioning decreased from 74% to 37%. Poor premorbid adjustment, single marital status, poor work status, and symptoms were associated with low baseline GAF scores. Low GAF scores were predicted by poor premorbid adjustment, negative, positive and basic symptoms, and poor baseline work status. The association between premorbid adjustment and follow-up GAF scores remained significant, even when baseline GAF and transition to psychosis were included in the model.ConclusionA great majority of help-seeking CHR patients suffer from deficits in their functioning. In CHR patients, premorbid psychosocial adjustment, baseline positive, negative, basic symptoms and poor working/schooling situation predict poor short-term functional outcome. These aspects should be taken into account when acute intervention and long-term rehabilitation for improving outcome in CHR patients are carried out.  相似文献   

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