Background: In up to 5% of pregnancies, ultrasound screening detects a "soft marker" (SM) that places the foetus at risk for a severe abnormality. In most cases, prenatal diagnostic work-up rules out a severe defect. We aimed to study the effects of false positive SM on maternal emotional status, maternal representations of the infant, and mother-infant interaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Animal studies have shown sex differences in the impact of prenatal maternal stress on the offspring. The aim of this prospective case-control study was to assess the effect of prenatal depression on newborn and 1-year-old infant characteristics as related to gender, controlling for confounding variables.
Method: We screened 205 pregnant women from April 2004 to November 2006 for depressive symptoms.
Infant Ment Health J
March 2010
Infants ages 0 to 1 year consecutively referred for psychiatric treatment during the year 2005 were followed, and variables associated with diagnosis and short-term outcome were assessed. Infants were evaluated using the Psychiatric Infant Navigator Chart and Evaluation that includes nosological diagnoses [Diagnostic Classification of Mental Health and Developmental Disorders of Infancy and Early Childhood, (DC 0-3), Zero to Three, 1994] as well as risk and protective factors, treatment procedure, and outcomes. Seventy-six percent of the infants had an Axis I diagnosis, with anxiety disorders and a mixed disorder of emotional expressiveness being the most frequent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Can Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry
August 2006
Introduction: The aim of this study is to address the complex psychopathologic factors involved in treatment refusal observed in adolescents suffering from a severe chronic illness.
Method: We report on five chronically ill adolescents (2 diabetes mellitus, 1 maple syrup urine disease, 1 bird fancier's lung, 1 HIV infection) who were consecutively admitted to an inpatient psychiatric service as a result of a life-threatening refusal to comply with outpatient management of their medical illness. Case material is analyzed and discussed in the context of a review of the literature.
Reading therapy has been shown to be effective in treating reading disabilities (RD) in dyslexic children, but little is known of its use in subjects with mild mental retardation (MR). Twenty adult volunteers, with both RD and mild MR, underwent 60 consecutive weeks in a cognitive remediation program, and were compared with 32 untreated control subjects. The experimental group showed a significant improvement in word identification, as measured by oral production (p=0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Child Adolesc Psychopharmacol
August 2005
This paper reviews all reports of Cotard's syndrome (délire de négation) in adolescents and young adults and summarizes four consecutive cases seen at our institution during the past 10 years. Cotard's syndrome occurs infrequently in young people (19 cases have been reported so far, including a 15-year-old boy who died at hospital) but appears to be a severe syndrome in adolescents of both genders. Ten patients received electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) despite their young age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Failure to resist chronic obsessive-compulsive symptoms may denote an altered state of cognitive control. We searched for the cerebral regions engaged in this dysfunction.
Method: Differences in brain regional activity were examined by event-related functional magnetic regional imaging (fMRI) in a group of adolescents or young adults (n = 12) with childhood-onset obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), relative to healthy subjects.
The paper examines the phenomenology, diagnosis, and course of catatonia in children and adolescents. From 1993 to 2003, 21 boys and 9 girls, aged 12 to 18 years, were admitted for a catatonic syndrome (0.6% of the total inpatient population).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutism is a heterogeneous disorder that can reveal a specific genetic disease. This paper describes several genetic diseases consistently associated with autism (fragile X, tuberous sclerosis, Angelman syndrome, duplication of 15q11-q13, Down syndrome, San Filippo syndrome, MECP2 related disorders, phenylketonuria, Smith-Magenis syndrome, 22q13 deletion, adenylosuccinate lyase deficiency, Cohen syndrome, and Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome) and proposes a consensual and economic diagnostic strategy to help practitioners to identify them. A rigorous initial clinical screening is presented to avoid unnecessary laboratory and imaging studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Child Adolesc Psychopharmacol
August 2004
We report the case of a 17-year-old-boy with schizophrenia who developed tardive dystonia after 9 months of treatment with olanzapine. This case and the relevant literature show that when neuroleptic treatment is indicated, switching to another atypical neuroleptic might be helpful for both tardive dystonia and schizophrenia. In such a case, clozapine appears to be the first-line therapeutic option.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Child Adolesc Psychopharmacol
August 2004
Antidepressant agents are widely prescribed for adolescents, although specific data regarding their efficacy in this age range are limited. The aims of the present article are to review research findings regarding the use of antidepressant drugs for adolescent depression and to discuss the main results in light of our clinical experience. Only 13 controlled trials on the use of antidepressant drugs for adolescent major depression are available in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry
April 2003
Catatonia is a rare but severe condition in adolescents that can be associated with both psychiatric and organic causes. The present report notes that systemic lupus erythematosus should be considered among possible causes of catatonia and shows that plasma exchange could be an efficient treatment option for such neuropsychiatric manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus, to avoid the use of electroconvulsive therapy in young patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough conduct disorder (CD) is the most common psychiatric disorder in youth from the community and encompasses one third to one half of all referrals to child and adolescent clinics, there is no licensed drug, to date, for treatment of CD, neither in Europe nor in the US. The aims of this paper are to review research data available on the use of medication for CD in young people and to identify future directions for research. We review 17 controlled studies and six open trials.
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