Violence against professionals and the syndrome of burnout, or the professional exhaustion of health personnel, has acquired enormous significance in recent years, especially in emergency care. Only a small proportion of the aggressions against the health personnel come to light, but there is a great volume of submerged violent incidents that are not recorded anywhere. Protocols and registers of aggressions have been created in different autonomous communities to make precise data available so that more suitable and opportune decisions can be taken.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe neurodevelopmental hypothesis of schizophrenia suggests that adverse genetic loading in conjunction with environmental factors early in fetal life causes a disruption of neural development, decades before the symptomatic manifestation of the disease. Neurocognitive deficits have been observed early on the course of schizophrenia, and their association with an early developmental brain lesion has been postulated. Dermatoglyphics have been analyzed in schizophrenia as markers of prenatal brain injury because of their early fetal ontogenesis and susceptibility to the same environmental factors that can also affect cerebral development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol
May 2005
Background: A lengthy delay often exists between the onset of psychotic symptoms and the start of appropriate treatment. However, the causes of this long delay remain poorly understood, and there is a need to search for the factors involved in such a delay in order to reduce the time of untreated psychosis. This study aimed at examining the influence of premorbid social networks on the duration of untreated psychotic illness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Using a sample of sibling pairs discordant for psychosis, the authors attempted to replicate the findings of previous studies suggesting that the functional genetic polymorphism Val158Met in the catechol O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene influences prefrontal cognitive function and increases the risk for schizophrenia.
Method: Eighty-nine sibling pairs discordant for psychosis were genotyped for this polymorphism and were assessed with the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, a measure of prefrontal function. Additionally, the preferential transmission of alleles for this polymorphism was analyzed in a sample of 89 nuclear families in order to examine the genetic association.
Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet
January 2004
Interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), as well as other cytokines, has been classically implicated in the pathophysiology of major psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and major depression, and recent studies have implicated the IL-1beta gene and schizophrenia. Nevertheless, new approaches to this complex phenotype are necessary to clarify the risk conferred by this gene, either to the disorder or to its clinical manifestations. The aim of the present study was to explore the effect of a genetic polymorphism of the promoter region of the IL-1beta gene, in schizophrenia defined with: (i) a categorical diagnosis and (ii) a multidimensional symptom approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF