Freeman Daniel, Morrison Anthony, Bird Jessica C, Chadwick Eleanor, Bold Emily, Taylor Kathryn M, Diamond Rowan, Collett Nicola, Černis Emma, Isham Louise, Lister Rachel, Kirkham Miriam, Teale Ashley-Louise, Twivy Eve, Waite Felicity
Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford; and Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, UK.
Professor of Clinical Psychology, Greater Manchester Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust; and Division of Psychology and Mental Health, University of Manchester, UK.
BJPsych Open. 2019 Sep 17;5(5):e83. doi: 10.1192/bjo.2019.67.
The period before the formation of a persecutory delusion may provide causal insights. Patient accounts are invaluable in informing this understanding.
To inform the understanding of delusion formation, we asked patients about the occurrence of potential causal factors - identified from a cognitive model - before delusion onset.
A total of 100 patients with persecutory delusions completed a checklist about their subjective experiences in the weeks before belief onset. The checklist included items concerning worry, images, low self-esteem, poor sleep, mood dysregulation, dissociation, manic-type symptoms, aberrant salience, hallucinations, substance use and stressors. Time to reach certainty in the delusion was also assessed.
Most commonly it took patients several months to reach delusion certainty (n = 30), although other patients took a few weeks (n = 24), years (n = 21), knew instantly (n = 17) or took a few days (n = 6). The most frequent experiences occurring before delusion onset were: low self-confidence (n = 84); excessive worry (n = 80); not feeling like normal self (n = 77); difficulties concentrating (n = 77); going over problems again and again (n = 75); being very negative about the self (n = 75); images of bad things happening (n = 75); and sleep problems (n = 75). The average number of experiences occurring was high (mean 23.5, s.d. = 8.7). The experiences clustered into six main types, with patients reporting an average of 5.4 (s.d. = 1.0) different types.
Patients report numerous different experiences in the period before full persecutory delusion onset that could be contributory causal factors, consistent with a complex multifactorial view of delusion occurrence. This study, however, relied on retrospective self-report and could not determine causality.
None.
迫害妄想形成之前的阶段可能提供因果关系的见解。患者的叙述对于增进这种理解非常宝贵。
为了增进对妄想形成的理解,我们询问患者在妄想发作之前是否出现了从认知模型中识别出的潜在因果因素。
共有100名患有迫害妄想的患者完成了一份关于他们在信念形成前几周主观经历的清单。该清单包括有关担忧、意象、自卑、睡眠不佳、情绪失调、解离、躁狂样症状、异常显著性、幻觉、物质使用和应激源的项目。还评估了达到妄想确定状态所需的时间。
大多数患者需要几个月才能达到妄想确定状态(n = 30),不过其他患者需要几周(n = 24)、几年(n = 21)、瞬间知晓(n = 17)或几天(n = 6)。妄想发作前最常出现的经历是:自信心不足(n = 84);过度担忧(n = 80);感觉不像正常的自己(n = 77);注意力难以集中(n = 77);反复思考问题(n = 75);对自己非常消极(n = 75);不好的事情发生的意象(n = 75);以及睡眠问题(n = 75)。出现的经历平均数量很高(均值23.5,标准差 = 8.7)。这些经历聚为六种主要类型,患者报告的不同类型平均为5.4种(标准差 = 1.0)。
患者报告在完全形成迫害妄想之前的阶段有许多不同的经历,这些经历可能是促成妄想的因果因素,这与妄想发生的复杂多因素观点一致。然而,这项研究依赖于回顾性自我报告,无法确定因果关系。
无。