This is a bibliometric analysis of the most-cited articles on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) with the objective of identifying citation patterns for researchers, journals, centers, periods, topics, and nations. A search was conducted in Thomson Reuters' WoS Core Collection employing the expression TI = (posttraumatic stress disorder OR post-traumatic stress disorder OR PTSD). The 100 most-cited articles were downloaded, and the relevant data were extracted and analyzed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCompr Psychiatry
November 2018
Objective: The goal of this study was to compare the clinical and functional status and the trauma-related characteristics of PTSD patients with comorbid OCD whose onset predated the index traumatic event (pre-traumatic OCD) with those of PTSD patient whose comorbid OCD only emerged after the exposure to the traumatic event (post-traumatic OCD).
Methods: Sixty-three individuals with PTSD and comorbid OCD were evaluated with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV AXIS I Disorders and completed the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist - Civilian Version, the Beck Depression Inventory, the Beck Anxiety Inventory, the Trauma History Questionnaire and the 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey.
Results: A history of childhood abuse was significantly more frequent among PTSD patients with pre-traumatic OCD (45.
Childhood abuse and PTSD are independently associated with severe psychiatric comorbidity. We hypothesized that among patients with adult-onset PTSD, a history of child abuse was associated with increased prevalence and severity of comorbid mental disorders. Participants were 109 adult treatment-seeking patients, 23.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe DSM-IV-TR postulates that PTSD symptoms are organized into 3 clusters. This assumption has been challenged by growing number of factor analytical studies, which tend to favor 4-factor, first-order models. Our objective was to investigate whether the clusters of PTSD symptoms identified in North American and European studies could be replicated in a Brazilian sample composed of 805 primary care patients living in hillside slums.
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