Department of Psychology, University of Montreal, Montreal, Canada.
Centre de recherche, Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Montréal, Montreal, Canada.
J Dual Diagn. 2020 Apr-Jun;16(2):260-270. doi: 10.1080/15504263.2020.1713425. Epub 2020 Jan 26.
Individuals with psychotic symptoms presenting to emergency psychiatry often have comorbid symptoms, such as substance misuse, depression, and anxiety. Many will also have symptoms linked to previous traumatic experiences such as impulsivity, often found in comorbid personality disorders. Although various studies have looked at specific comorbid symptoms, little is known regarding how these symptoms co-exist in individuals with psychotic symptoms and their link with social functioning. The primary objective of the present study was to identify comorbidity profiles among individuals seeking emergency room services for psychotic symptoms. The secondary objective was to investigate the relationship between comorbid symptoms and social functioning deficits in this same population. Data from 546 individuals seeking psychiatric help for psychotic symptoms was collected within the Signature Project (large data bank) in a psychiatric emergency. Participants answered brief measures of symptoms of alcohol/substance misuse (AUDIT, DAST), depression (PHQ-9), anxiety (STAI-6), childhood trauma (CEVQ), impulsivity (UPPS) and social functioning deficits (WHODAS). For this study, symptom measures and social functioning at baseline were used. Cluster analyses conducted using three different methods revealed a consensus of five classes of comorbid presentations. Class 1 ( = 90) grouped people who had a high score for childhood trauma, with fairly high scores for anxiety and depression. Class 2 ( = 176) included people with mostly psychotic symptoms with little comorbid presentation across other measures. Class 3 ( = 81) grouped people with the highest anxiety and depression scores as well as high drug use and impulsivity. Individuals in Class 4 ( = 87) had the highest scores on alcohol and substance abuse, as well as high impulsivity. Class 5 ( = 112) grouped people with very low anxiety and depression scores but average trauma, alcohol, and substance misuse scores. Linear regressions revealed an association between social functioning, and depression, anxiety, and childhood trauma. Comorbid presentations of individuals with psychosis are frequent and diverse. Depression and anxiety, in particular, worsen social functioning deficits in people with psychotic symptoms. Given their impact on functioning, psychiatric treatments should address these comorbidities during hospitalization, as well as when followed in the community.
个体出现精神病性症状并到急诊精神科就诊时,往往伴有共病症状,如物质使用障碍、抑郁和焦虑。许多人还会出现与先前创伤经历相关的症状,如冲动,这些症状通常与共病人格障碍有关。尽管有许多研究关注特定的共病症状,但对于精神病性症状患者的这些症状如何共存及其与社会功能的关系知之甚少。本研究的主要目的是确定因精神病性症状到急诊就诊的个体的共病特征。次要目的是调查该人群中同时存在的共病症状与社会功能缺陷之间的关系。在 Signature 项目(大型数据库)中,对 546 名因精神病性症状寻求精神科帮助的个体的数据进行了收集,该项目在精神科急诊中进行。参与者回答了简短的酒精/物质使用障碍症状量表(AUDIT、DAST)、抑郁量表(PHQ-9)、焦虑量表(STAI-6)、童年创伤量表(CEVQ)、冲动量表(UPPS)和社会功能缺陷量表(WHODAS)。本研究使用基线时的症状量表和社会功能来进行分析。使用三种不同方法进行的聚类分析显示出 5 种共病表现的共识。第 1 类( = 90)将童年创伤评分高、焦虑和抑郁评分相当高的人群分组。第 2 类( = 176)包括以精神病性症状为主、其他测量指标共病表现较少的人群。第 3 类( = 81)将焦虑和抑郁评分最高、药物使用和冲动程度最高的人群分组。第 4 类( = 87)酒精和物质滥用评分最高、冲动程度也高的人群分组。第 5 类( = 112)将焦虑和抑郁评分非常低、但童年创伤、酒精和物质滥用评分中等的人群分组。线性回归显示,社会功能与抑郁、焦虑和童年创伤有关。精神病患者的共病表现频繁且多样。抑郁和焦虑尤其会加重精神病性症状患者的社会功能缺陷。鉴于其对功能的影响,在住院期间以及在社区随访时,精神科治疗都应解决这些共病问题。