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Symptom Differences in Schizophrenia with Good and Poor Prognosis
MICHAEL S. McCABE; RICHARD C. FOWLER; REMI J. CADORET; GEORGE WINOKUR
Am J Psychiatry 1972;128:1239-1243.
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Special Research Fellow with the Institute of Psychiatric Demography, Aarhus State Hospital, Risskov 8240, Denmark
Supervising Psychiatrist, Malcolm Bliss Mental Health Center, St. Louis, Mo.
Professor and Chairman, Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa, 500 Newton Rd., Iowa City, Iowa 52240
1972, American Psychiatric Association
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Abstract
The authors studied 28 good prognosis and 25 poor prognosis schizophrenics, differentiated on the basis of duration of illness and premorbid level of functioning. When compared for differences in symptomatology, the good prognosis group was found to be more likely to have diagnosable mania or depression, visual hallucinations, perceptual disorders, and confusion, and was less likely to have affective blunting and a combination of special types of auditory hallucinations and haptic hallucinations. Like previous reports, which have established that good prognosis schizophrenia is closely related to the affective disorders by family history, this study demonstrated a close clinical relationship between good prognosis schizophrenia and the affective disorders.Abstract Teaser
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