Häfner H, an der Heiden W
Schizophrenia Research Unit, Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim, Germany.
Can J Psychiatry. 1997 Mar;42(2):139-51. doi: 10.1177/070674379704200204.
To characterize the epidemiology of schizophrenia.
Narrative literature review.
Each year 1 in 10,000 adults (12 to 60 years of age) develops schizophrenia. Based on a restrictive and precise definition of the diagnosis and using standardized assessment methods and large, representative populations, the incidence rates appear stable across countries and cultures and over time, at least for the last 50 years. Schizophrenic patients are not born into ecological and social disadvantage. The uneven distribution of prevalence rates is a result of social selection: an early onset leads to social stagnation, a late onset to descent from a higher social status. The main age range of risk for schizophrenia is 20 to 35 years. It is still unclear whether schizophrenia-like late-onset psychoses (for example, late paraphrenia) after age 60 should be classified as schizophrenia either psychopathologically or etiologically. In 75% of cases, first admission is preceded by a prodromal phase with a mean length of 5 years and a psychotic prephase of one year's duration. On average, women fall ill 3 to 4 years later than men and show a second peak of onset around menopause. Consequently, late-onset schizophrenias are more frequent and more severe in women than in men. The sex difference in age of onset is smaller in cases with a high genetic load and greater in cases with a low genetic load. Type of onset and core symptoms do not differ between the sexes. The most pronounced sex difference is the socially negative illness behaviour of young men.
Among the factors determining social course and outcome are level of social development at onset, the disorder itself (for example, genetic liability, severity of symptoms, and functional deficits), general biological factors (for example, estrogen), and sex- and age-specific illness behaviour.
描述精神分裂症的流行病学特征。
叙述性文献综述。
每年每10000名成年人(12至60岁)中有1人患精神分裂症。基于对诊断的严格精确定义,并采用标准化评估方法和具有代表性的大样本人群,发病率在各国、各文化以及不同时间内似乎保持稳定,至少在过去50年如此。精神分裂症患者并非出生于生态和社会劣势环境。患病率分布不均是社会选择的结果:发病早会导致社会停滞,发病晚会导致社会地位下降。精神分裂症的主要风险年龄范围是20至35岁。60岁以后出现的类似精神分裂症的迟发性精神病(如晚发性偏执狂)在精神病理学或病因学上是否应归类为精神分裂症仍不明确。在75%的病例中,首次入院前有一个平均时长为5年的前驱期和一个为期一年的精神病前期。平均而言,女性发病比男性晚3至4年,并在绝经前后出现第二个发病高峰。因此,迟发性精神分裂症在女性中比在男性中更常见且更严重。发病年龄的性别差异在遗传负荷高的病例中较小,在遗传负荷低的病例中较大。发病类型和核心症状在性别上无差异。最明显的性别差异是年轻男性在社交方面的消极患病行为。
决定社会病程和结局的因素包括发病时的社会发展水平、疾病本身(如遗传易感性、症状严重程度和功能缺陷)、一般生物学因素(如雌激素)以及性别和年龄特异性的患病行为。