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Current Psychiatry Reviews
ISSN: 1573-4 005

Current Psychiatry Reviews
Volume 4, Number 1, February 2008
Contents

Evidence Based Psychosocial Practices and Recovery
from Schizophrenia Pp. 1-9
Glenn D. Shean
[Abstract]
Recent Advances in Research on Personality Disorders
Pp. 10-13
Joel Paris
[Abstract]
Efficacy of Pharmacotherapy for Comorbid Major
Depression and Substance Use Disorders: A Review
Pp. 14-27
Ihsan M. Salloum and Yemisi Olagunju Jones
[Abstract]
Measures of Functional Status and Quality-of-Life
in Schizophrenia Pp. 28-38
Mark A. Price, Cheryl D. Hill, Valerie S.L. Williams,
Robert J. Morlock, Oscar Leeuwenkamp and Thomas L. Patterson
[Abstract]
Personality Disorders in a Cross-Cultural Perspective:
Impact of Culture and Migration on Diagnosis and Etiological
Aspects Pp. 39-47
Iris T. Calliess, Marcel Sieberer, Wielant Machleidt andMarc
Ziegenbein
[Abstract]
Borderline Personality Disorder in Young People
and the Prospects for Prevention and Early Intervention
Pp. 48-57
Andrew M. Chanen, Martina Jovev, Louise K. McCutcheon
Henry J. Jackson and Patrick D. McGorry
[Abstract]
Alzheimer’s Disease Burdens African-Americans:
A Review of Epidemiological Risk Factors and Implications
for Prevention and Treatment Pp. 58-62
Stephanie E. Kirbach and Jacobo Mintzer
[Abstract]
Abstracts

[Back to top]
Evidence Based Psychosocial Practices and Recovery
from Schizophrenia
Glenn D. Shean
Pessimistic views about the course and outcome of schizophrenia
have been replaced by a more optimistic approach that places
emphasis on providing services in the community that foster
functional recovery. The concept of recovery implies emphasis
on the importance of providing access to treatments and community
services that assist individuals to lead maximally productive
and personally meaningful lives. Research conducted by the
World Health Organization on the course and outcome of schizophrenia
contributed to growing recognition of the importance of community
based psychosocial therapy and rehabilitation programs in
improving prospects for recovery. The Schizophrenia Patient
Outcomes Research Team (PORT) recently published an updated
consensus list of twenty evidence-based practices (EBPs) that
includes six psychosocial treatments. The PORT psychosocial
EBPs are summarized in this paper, and factors that impact
program effectiveness are discussed. These factors include
stigma, and variations in the quality and integrity of implementation
of programs. The PORT recommendations are an excellent foundation
on which to build future innovation and research on psychosocial
approaches to improve opportunities for recovery of individuals
diagnosed with schizophrenia.
[Back to top]
Recent Advances in Research on Personality Disorders
Joel Paris
Research on personality disorders (PD) has made progress
in several areas.
1) Classification: Most PDs are exaggerations of normal traits
and can be described dimensionally, but highly symptomatic
PDs may not be well described in this way. Attempts to redefine
PDs as variants of Axis I categories, such as depression and
bipolar disorder, have been unconvincing.
2) Epidemiology: Recent community surveys suggest that PDs
as currently defined have an overall prevalence of around
10%.
3) Etiology: Studies of relationships between PDs and neuroimaging,
neuropsychological testing, neurotransmitters, and candidate
genes are not related specifically to disorders, although
certain markers are linked to traits. The complex pathways
to PDs depend on gene-environment interactions.
4) Outcome: PD categories tend to be unstable over time, largely
because of symptom reduction. However the traits underlying
disorders do not change, and many continue to have poor psychosocial
functioning.
5)Treatment: Clinical trials show that a number of psychotherapeutic
methods are effective, with improvement often occurring within
a few months. In contrast, the results of pharmacological
trials have been unimpressive and inconclusive.
[Back to top]
Efficacy of Pharmacotherapy for Comorbid Major Depression
and Substance Use Disorders: A Review
Ihsan M. Salloum and Yemisi Olagunju Jones
Objective: There is little guidance for optimal pharmacotherapy
for comorbid major depression and substance use disorder,
the most frequently encountered comorbidity in clinical settings.
We reviewed current evidence for effective treatments as reported
by pharmacological trials specifically conducted to address
this comorbidity.
Data Sources: Studies were identified through computerized
literature searches and from refereed articles from January
1966 through January of 2007. Randomized, placebo-controlled
trials and open-label studies with large samples or those
reporting novel approaches were selected for this review.
Data Synthesis: The search identified twenty-seven studies,
23 of which were randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
trials. Overall, treatment response was inconsistent among
the different trials. More trials reported improvement for
depression than improvement for substance use and rarely reported
improvement in both outcomes. Trials with non-serotonergic
reuptake inhibitor antidepressants reported more positive
findings than those with SSRI’s. Response varied by
type of medication and study design.
Conclusions: Antidepressants may provide
improvement for depression when comorbid with substance use.
There is less evidence of improvement for the substance use
outcome, and there was rarely improvement on both outcomes.
Addressing methodological challenges in future clinical trials
is crucial for providing more consistent results that allow
the construction of evidence-based algorithm for optimized
interventions in this population.
[Back to top]
Measures of Functional Status and Quality-of-Life 28 in Schizophrenia
Mark A. Price, Cheryl D. Hill, Valerie S.L. Williams,
Robert J. Morlock, Oscar Leeuwenkamp and Thomas L. Patterson
Pharmacotherapy has been reasonably effective in treating
positive symptoms associated with schizophrenia and less effective
in treating negative symptoms. Humanistic outcomes –
quality of life and functionality – are more difficult
to assess than changes in symptom severity and are equally
important in assessing the overall effectiveness of treatment.
The correlation between negative symptoms and poorer outcomes
in patients with schizophrenia underscores the need for more
effective treatment, and a large number of instruments have
been devised to provide quantitative assessment of the humanistic
outcomes associated with the treatment of schizophrenia. Some
were developed specifically for schizophrenia, and others
were originally developed for other clinical conditions but
later adapted for schizophrenia. The value of such instruments
depends on their intrinsic validity, selection criteria, and
how the selected instrument is used by physicians and other
clinical professionals. This review is aimed at increasing
clinicians’ awareness of these instruments and improving
their ability to use them appropriately as an adjunct to sound
clinical judgment. We provide an overview of the issues pertinent
to the use of rating instruments for quality of life and functionality,
and based on a literature search, we provide a brief description
of the 20 instruments most commonly used to assess these humanistic
outcomes in patients with schizophrenia. Each instrument is
discussed in terms of content and organization, formal validation,
and use in patients with schizophrenia. An accompanying table
reveals the domains relating to quality of life and functionality
addressed by each instrument.
[Back to top]
Personality Disorders in a Cross-Cultural Perspective: Impact
of Culture and Migration on Diagnosis and Etiological Aspects
Iris T. Calliess, Marcel Sieberer, Wielant Machleidt and
Marc Ziegenbein
The diagnosis of personality disorders is highly dependent
on how a society views certain behavior. Self concept, adaptation
and social context are important aspects of the cultural dimensions
of personality disorders. However, the relevance and implications
of the influence of sociocultural factors are seen differently.
Accordingly, there are very distinct conceptional, nosological
and diagnostic approaches for classifying personality dispositions
and personality disorders in a cross-cultural perspective.
The present paper describes the social and cultural context
of migration from an European perspective. A review of the
literature on mental health risk in immigrants is given, and
special focus is placed on the impact of culture on the development
of personality in general and on the emergence and manifestation
versus prevention of personality disorders in specific.
Due to globalization and migration processes clinicians and
therapists are increasingly called upon to assess the level
of personality functioning, not only in patients from different
ethnic backgrounds, but also in traumatized refugees and migrants.
Multiple social and cultural factors have an influence on
each level of the diagnostic and therapeutic process. In addition
to thorough background knowledge concerning trauma, migration
and culture specific issues, cultural sensitivity and cultural
competence are requisite for clinicians and therapists.
[Back to top]
Borderline Personality Disorder in Young People and the Prospects
for Prevention and Early Intervention
Andrew M. Chanen, Martina Jovev, Louise K. McCutcheon,
Henry J. Jackson and Patrick D. McGorry
Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is associated with
substantial psychosocial impairment, morbidity, mortality
and high health resource utilization. These data make a compelling
case for developing prevention and early intervention strategies
for BPD. This review examines the BPD diagnosis in young people,
along with prospective risk factors for and precursors to
the development of BPD. It then considers the prospects for
and potential risks and benefits associated with prevention
and early intervention for BPD. It concludes that the BPD
diagnosis in young people has similar reliability, validity
and prevalence to BPD in adults and that BPD in young people
almost certainly has serious and pervasive negative repercussions
over subsequent decades. Current data are inadequate to inform
specific universal or selective prevention programs
for BPD. However, they do support including BPD prevention
as an outcome when evaluating universal and/or selective interventions
for a variety of mental health problems and adverse psychosocial
outcomes. The data are stronger for developing indicated
preventive interventions but the strongest data support early
intervention for the emerging BPD phenotype. Early intervention
programs will need to be realistic in their aims, require
change in clinician attitudes and service systems and must
be mindful of the risk of iatrogenic harm.
[Back to top]
Alzheimer’s Disease Burdens African-Americans: A Review
of Epidemiological Risk Factors and Implications for Prevention
and Treatment
Stephanie E. Kirbach and Jacobo Mintzer
The number of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease
is expected to increase steadily over the next 50 years, and
this is especially concerning to African-Americans as they
currently carry a disproportionate burden of the disease as
compared to Caucasians. In conjunction with the APOE allele,
there exists a group of potentially treatable cardiovascular
risk factors that appear to be implicated in this disparity.
In this paper, we review the contribution of these risk factors
to Alzheimer’s disease as well as racial discrepancies
in their prevalence. Along with diet, cholesterol, hypertension
and type II diabetes mellitus, differences in APOE ε4
burden and effect among African-Americans and Caucasians are
also considered. We conclude that the topics under review
warrant further investigation, especially given their modifiable
nature and undeniable link to Alzheimer’s disease.
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