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Antiaggressive effect of quetiapine in a patient with schizoaffective disorder [Letter]

Citrome L; Krakowski M; Greenberg WM; Andrade E; Volavka J
PMID: 11775051
ISSN: 0160-6689
CID: 60360

Impulse control: Integrative aspects

Chapter by: Krakowski, Menahem
in: Understanding and treating violent psychiatric patients by Crowner, Martha L [Eds]
Washington, DC, US: American Psychiatric Association, 2000
pp. 147-165
ISBN: 0-88048-752-6
CID: 4779

Course of violence in patients with schizophrenia: relationship to clinical symptoms

Krakowski M; Czobor P; Chou JC
To understand the heterogeneity of violent behaviors in patients with schizophrenia, one must consider underlying clinical symptoms of the illness and their change over time. The purpose of this study was to examine persistence and resolution of violence in relation to psychotic symptoms, ward behaviors, and neurological impairment. Psychiatric symptoms and ward behaviors were assessed in violent inpatients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder and in nonviolent controls on entry into the study. Patients were followed for 4 weeks; those who showed resolution of assaults over this time were classified as transiently violent, and those who remained assaultive were categorized as persistently violent. At the end of the 4 weeks, psychiatric symptoms, ward behaviors, and neurological impairment were assessed. Overall, the two violent groups presented with more severe psychiatric symptoms and were judged to be more irritable than the nonviolent control subjects, but the transiently violent patients showed improvement in symptoms over time. At the end of 4 weeks, the persistently violent patients had evidence of more severe neurological impairment, hostility, suspiciousness, and irritability than the other two groups. Canonical discriminant analyses identified two significant dimensions differentiated the groups. The first, characterized by positive psychotic symptoms, differentiated the violent patients from the control subjects; the second, characterized by neurological impairment and high endpoint score for negative symptoms, differentiated the transiently from the persistently violent patients. Identification of certain symptoms associated with different forms of violence has important implications for the prediction and differential treatment of violent behavior in patients with schizophrenia
PMID: 10478785
ISSN: 0586-7614
CID: 60285

Effect of neuroleptic treatment on depressive symptoms in acute schizophrenic episodes

Krakowski M; Czobor P; Volavka J
This study examined depressive symptoms in acute schizophrenic episodes and their relationship to neuroleptic treatment. Sixty-three depressed and 62 non-depressed acutely exacerbated schizophrenic patients were evaluated with the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, the Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms, the Simpson-Angus Extrapyramidal Scale, and the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. Subjects were then randomly assigned to different haloperidol plasma levels and followed for 3 weeks. Overall, depression improved with treatment of the acute psychosis, but a positive association between extrapyramidal side effects and depressive symptoms emerged over time. Depressive symptoms tended to be positively related to haloperidol plasma levels. The results suggest that depressive symptoms in schizophrenia are heterogeneous in origin; while neuroleptics can ameliorate depressive symptoms inherent in the acute schizophrenic episode, they can also contribute to depression
PMID: 9247978
ISSN: 0165-1781
CID: 60294

Violence in psychiatric patients: the role of psychosis, frontal lobe impairment, and ward turmoil

Krakowski M; Czobor P
The purpose of the study was to identify psychiatric symptoms, neurological impairments, and situational factors associated with the emergence of violence and with its persistence. Psychiatric symptoms were assessed in newly admitted physically assaultive psychiatric patients and nonviolent controls. Patients were than evaluated for 4 weeks to determine the persistence or resolution of these physical assaults. Patients who showed marked resolution of assaults were classified as transiently violent (n = 41), and those who remained assaultive throughout were categorized as persistently violent (n = 34). At the end of 4 weeks, all patients received a comprehensive psychiatric and neurological assessment. Physical assaults were associated initially with prominent positive psychotic symptoms. Both transiently and persistently violent patients were more psychotic than the nonviolent controls; however transiently violent patients showed better resolution of these symptoms over the 4 weeks. They also evidenced less frontal lobe impairment on the neurological examination than the persistently violent patients. The two violent groups differed in their susceptibility to environmental influences: the surrounding ward agitation fostered physical assaults in transiently but not in persistently violent patients. This differentiation between transiently and persistently violent patients has major implications for the comprehensive treatment of violent behavior
PMID: 9202880
ISSN: 0010-440x
CID: 60293

Community violence and inpatient assaults: neurobiological deficits

Krakowski M; Czobor P; Carpenter MD; Libiger J; Kunz M; Papezova H; Parker BB; Schmader L; Abad T
The goals of this study were to examine the relationship between community violence and inpatient assaults and to identify neurological and neuropsychological deficits underlying violent behavior. Thirty-three inpatients with a history of community violence were compared with 69 patients who did not have such a history. Inpatient assaults were recorded for 4 weeks; a neurological/neuropsychological battery was then administered. Patients without community violence were more likely to show transient or no violence while in the hospital. Patients with community violence performed more poorly on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test and on psychomotor tasks, impairments that are consistent with frontal lobe dysfunction. Inpatient assaults were not associated with these neuropsychological impairments. They were related, however, to impairment on frontal motor programming tasks and a history of community violence
PMID: 9447495
ISSN: 0895-0172
CID: 60291

Violent crime in psychiatric patients: relationship to frontal lobe impairment

Krakowski M; Czobor P; Carpenter MD; Nolan K; Libiger J; Kunz M; Papezova H; Parker BB; Schmader L
ORIGINAL:0004126
ISSN: 0163-1942
CID: 18207

Serotonin in violent patients with schizophrenia

Kunz M; Sikora J; Krakowski M; Convit A; Cooper TB; Volavka J
CSF levels of 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid (5-HIAA), the serotonin metabolite, were assayed in 10 violent and 10 matched nonviolent patients with schizophrenia. Mean group levels of 5-HIAA in cerebrospinal fluid were found to be nearly identical. Possible explanations, including effects of medications, are discussed
PMID: 8771232
ISSN: 0165-1781
CID: 60301

Clinical symptoms, neurological impairment, and prediction of violence in psychiatric inpatients

Krakowski MI; Czobor P
OBJECTIVE: The study sought to identify basic clinical symptoms of violent inpatients and to determine the relationship between these symptoms and two outcome measures: whether violence was persistent or transient, and length of stay on a secure care unit designed to control violent behavior. METHODS: Thirty-eight patients consecutively admitted to the secure care unit were assessed using a quantified neurological scale, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, and a modified version of the Social Participation Rating Scale, which measured participation in unit activities. Because there was considerable overlap among these clinical measures, factor analysis was applied to isolate underlying clinical factors. RESULTS: Factor analysis consistently identified two independent factors at different time points. The first factor, which consisted of various psychiatric symptoms and behavioral abnormalities, was indicative of general impairment. The second factor was bipolar, reflecting a positive association with neurological impairment and a negative association with paranoid symptoms. A differential association between these two factors and the outcome variables was found. Length of stay, a measure of perceived dangerousness, was best predicted by the general impairment factor, whereas persistent violence was predicted primarily by the bipolar factor. CONCLUSIONS: The data confirmed an association between persistent violence and neurological impairment. The study underscores the need for differential treatment of violent behavior in psychiatric inpatients, as different psychopathological processes might be involved
PMID: 7927295
ISSN: 0022-1597
CID: 63404

Long-term high-dose neuroleptic treatment: who gets it and why?

Krakowski MI; Kunz M; Czobor P; Volavka J
OBJECTIVE: High doses of neuroleptic medication are still administered to many patients, although many studies have shown the effectiveness of low-dose strategies. The purposes of the study were to determine whether and in what ways high-dose patients differed from patients on regular dosages and whether the higher dosages were more effective. METHODS: In a case-control study at two large state hospitals, 38 high-dose patients were compared with 29 regular-dose patients. RESULTS: The high-dose patients had a persistent course of illness, with severe chronic symptoms resulting in hospitalizations of much longer duration than those of the regular-dose patients. The high-dose patients evidenced more regressed functioning and were more violent. To control these behaviors, clinicians increased neuroleptic dosages. CONCLUSIONS: The high-dose patients represented a subgroup of chronic regressed and violent patients. Clinicians prescribed high dosages and continued to use them despite a lack of clear evidence that such treatment is effective
PMID: 8102617
ISSN: 0022-1597
CID: 61038