Background: The length of stay in asylum centres is generally mentioned as a possible health risk to asylum seekers. Medical staff working with asylum seekers has claimed that long lengths of stay in asylum centres might cause or aggravate mental disorders. We used records from a large, multiethnic group of asylum seekers to study if the incidence of mental disorders increased with length of stay.
This study has focussed on a 10-item Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) subscale for the quantification of schizophrenic states. Seven psychiatrists interviewed jointly patients who all fulfilled the DSM-III criteria of schizophrenia, and in a subsequent pencil-and-paper procedure a judgment analysis was performed. The reliability analysis showed that less experienced BPRS raters made less consistent judgments implying the cautionary statement that the proper use of a scale for schizophrenia requires specialized training with the scale. The validity analysis showed that the BPRS items had an additive relationship implying that the sum of these items is a sufficient statistic for the measurement of severity of schizophrenic states. Finally, the results seem to indicate, that the underlying dimension defined by the 10-items BPRS subscale includes hierarchically the negative and positive symptoms of schizophrenia.
Sixteen out of 25 hebephrenic and paranoid schizophrenic patients completed a double-blind cross-over study with sulpiride and haloperidol. The patient sample was relatively chronic: Median age was 35 years (range 26-53 years), median duration of illness 10 years (4-35 years), and median duration of neuroleptic treatment 5 years (1-28 years). Each patient was treated with sulpiridelhaloperidol in random order for 12 weeks with a drug-free period before each treatment phase.Mean total BPRS (Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale) score was reduced from 25 to 15 (P (0.05) during sulpiride (SWZSOO mg/day, median 1600 mg/day), and from 28 to 15 (P < 0.01) during haloperidol (6-18 mg/day, median 12). There were no significant differences between the groups with respect to total BPRS score, single items or symptom clusters. However, in a few, very "chronic", disturbed, and long-term treated patients, haloperidol appeared more beneficial than sulpiride. Autonomic side effects and parkinsonism tended to occur more frequently during haloperidol than during sulpiride, but no significant differences were found. It is concluded that sulpiride, a specific dopamine-2 receptor blocker, has antipsychotic effect, not significantly different from haloperidol, but may produce slightly less side effects.
A case is reported of a 29-yr-old female with attacks of aphasia/dysphasia over a period of several months which lasted days to weeks accompanied by a dysphoric state. The patients was for long regarded as endogenous depressive with a hysterical speech disorder. However, the diagnosis of epilepsy was finally made based on generalized attacks, appropriate EEG changes, and the response to anti-epileptic therapy.
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