Fifteen patients (4 females and 11 males) with hypothalamo-hypopituitary dwarfism underwent extensive psychiatric investigation in 1962-1965. A follow-up study of the personality development and social conditions was made in 1977. The age of the patients ranged from 31 to 56 years (the average being 40). As before, the main finding was an infantile personality with a defective psychosexual maturity. Only a few patients had reached a somehat adult, independent personality in spite of hormonal deficiencies. Several patients had continued to grow and attained a stature slightly below average. However, this subsequent growth scarcely influenced personality development. Depressive moods are now more frequent than before and among the more differentiated patients, the neurotic symptoms are mainly phobic fears. Almost all of the patients have discontinued treatment with hormonal substitutes (androgenes, cortison, thyrotropic hormone) inspite of persistent deficiency symptoms, because the outcome did not match their high expectations. The symptoms of the endocrine psychosyndrome seem of minor importance compared with the psychic infantilism and the reactions to the experience of dwarfism and missing puberty. One female has suffered several psychotic episodes which were understood as being partially of endocrine origin.
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Ryoikibetsu Shokogun Shirizu
January 2004
Department of Psychiatry, Mie University School of Medicine.
Rom J Physiol
January 1995
Carol Davilla University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Department of Pathophysiology, Bucharest.
Out of a great number of cases with chronic psychoorganic syndrome studied by us, we have selected, for investigation, a number of 100 cases which presented common symptomatology: a psychosyndrome showing, by a large number of manifestations such as asthenia, fatigability, adynamia with various degrees of intensity building up to reaction latency, diminution or even absence of initiative, basic-negativism, tendency to depression with feeling of futility, anxiety, lowered affective tonus. The intellectual activity is largely diminished, the stream of ideas is poor, and there is a limited domain of preoccupations. All these symptoms alongside with somatic, muscular, renal, respiratory, digestive and cardiovascular disorders have led us to the hypothesis of chronic deficiency of the hormones in the adrenal glands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe clinical, genetic, and morphological features of a previously unknown progressive neuropsychiatric disease are presented. By genealogical investigation of the background of an uncharacteristic case of presumed organic psychosis, we traced 71 relatives from four generations. The anamnestic data showed various combinations of psychiatric symptoms (depression, anxiety, aggressiveness, and severe dementia), neurological symptoms (impaired balance with retropulsion, hyperkinesia, and epilepsy), and somatic symptoms (gastrointestinal disorders, arthritis, and gynaecological problems) in 17 (11 dead and 6 living) members of the family.
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