Baethge Christopher, Baldessarini Ross J, Freudenthal Klaus, Streeruwitz Anna, Bauer Michael, Bschor Tom
Department of Psychiatry, International Consortium for Bipolar Disorder Research, Harvard Medical School, McLean Division of Massachusetts General Hospital, Belmont, MA 02478-9106, USA.
Bipolar Disord. 2005 Apr;7(2):136-45. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-5618.2004.00175.x.
As there is very little research on the topic, we compared the frequency and the type hallucinations among hospitalized patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder (BPD) versus other major psychiatric illnesses.
At admission, all patients hospitalized at the Department of Psychiatry at the Freie Universität Berlin (1981-2001) underwent comprehensive assessments using the standardized Association for Methodology and Documentation in Psychiatry (AMDP) system. We used these data to compare risks and types of hallucinations and associated factors by bivariate and multivariate testing in patients diagnosed with BPD, major depression, or schizophrenia.
At admission, the cross-sectional prevalence of current hallucinations among 4972 hospitalized subjects ranked: schizophrenia (61.1%), bipolar mixed (22.9%), bipolar manic (11.2%), bipolar depressed (10.5%), unipolar depressed (5.9%). The most frequent hallucinations across all patients were auditory, followed by somatic and visual hallucinations. There were only minor age or sex differences in risk of hallucinations. Compared with patients diagnosed with schizophrenia, hallucinations among patients with BPD were less severe, more visual and less often auditory. Characteristics of hallucinations were similar among manic and both bipolar- and unipolar-depressed subjects. Among patients with major affective disorders, those with hallucinations were less well-educated, had higher anxiety scores, less insight into the illness, and their hospitalizations averaged 17% longer. Across all diagnoses, hallucinations, particularly olfactory, were significantly associated with delusions. Hallucinations in BPD were most often accompanied by persecutory delusions; delusions of grandeur were least associated with hallucinations.
This study provides detailed descriptive data regarding the frequency (cross-sectional) and characteristics of hallucinations in a large sample of patients with BPD, major depression or schizophrenia. Our results suggest a link of lower education and the presence of hallucinations in major affective disorders. The significance of this finding, as well as the role of anxiety in hallucinating patients, requires further study.
鉴于关于该主题的研究极少,我们比较了被诊断为双相情感障碍(BPD)的住院患者与其他主要精神疾病患者出现幻觉的频率和类型。
在入院时,柏林自由大学精神病学系(1981 - 2001年)收治的所有患者均使用标准化的精神病学方法与文献记录协会(AMDP)系统进行了全面评估。我们利用这些数据,通过双变量和多变量测试,比较了被诊断为BPD、重度抑郁症或精神分裂症的患者出现幻觉的风险、类型及相关因素。
入院时,4972名住院患者中当前幻觉的横断面患病率排名如下:精神分裂症(61.1%)、双相混合发作(22.9%)、双相躁狂发作(11.2%)、双相抑郁发作(10.5%)、单相抑郁发作(5.9%)。所有患者中最常见的幻觉是听觉幻觉,其次是躯体幻觉和视觉幻觉。幻觉风险在年龄或性别上仅有微小差异。与被诊断为精神分裂症的患者相比,BPD患者的幻觉症状较轻,视觉幻觉更多,听觉幻觉较少。躁狂发作患者以及双相和单相抑郁发作患者的幻觉特征相似。在患有重度情感障碍的患者中,出现幻觉的患者受教育程度较低,焦虑评分较高,对疾病的洞察力较差,且住院时间平均长17%。在所有诊断类型中,幻觉,尤其是嗅觉幻觉,与妄想显著相关。BPD患者的幻觉最常伴有被害妄想;夸大妄想与幻觉的关联最小。
本研究提供了关于大量BPD、重度抑郁症或精神分裂症患者幻觉频率(横断面)和特征的详细描述性数据。我们的研究结果表明,在重度情感障碍中,受教育程度较低与出现幻觉之间存在关联。这一发现的意义以及焦虑在幻觉患者中的作用,需要进一步研究。