Literature DB >> 27265696

Psychosis as a transdiagnostic and extended phenotype in the general population.

Jim van Os1,2, Uli Reininghaus1,3.   

Abstract

A large body of research indicates that weak expressions of positive psychotic symptoms ("psychotic experiences") can be measured in the general population, and likely represent the behavioural manifestation of distributed multifactorial (genetic and non-genetic) risk for psychosis. Psychotic experiences are a transdiagnostic phenomenon: the majority of individuals with these experiences have a diagnosis of non-psychotic disorder, particularly common mental disorder, in which psychotic experiences predict greater illness severity and poorer treatment response. Some of the people with common mental disorder and psychotic experiences will present to mental health services meeting criteria for "clinical high risk". Treatment of the transdiagnostic dimension of psychosis in individuals with common mental disorder who meet "clinical high risk" criteria thus may improve outcome (which cannot be interpreted as prevention of "schizophrenia"). Subthreshold psychotic experiences are transitory in about 80% of individuals, while around 20% go on to develop persistent psychotic experiences and 7% a psychotic disorder, with an annual transition rate of 0.5-1%. Persistence is associated, on the one hand, with environmental exposures, particularly childhood trauma, and, on the other, with network-type dynamic interactions between psychotic experiences themselves (e.g., interactions between hallucinatory experiences and delusional ideation) and between symptom dimensions (e.g., interactions between affective symptoms and psychotic experiences, or interactions between subthreshold negative symptoms and psychotic experiences). The study of psychotic experiences is helping to elucidate the mechanisms by which environmental and genetic influences shape the transdiagnostic expression of psychosis proneness, that is mostly transitory but may first become persistent over time and eventually give rise to transition to a psychotic disorder.
© 2016 World Psychiatric Association.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Psychotic experiences; aberrant salience; extended psychosis phenotype; genetic risk; network models of severity; neurocognition; socio-environmental factors; ultra-high-risk states

Year:  2016        PMID: 27265696      PMCID: PMC4911787          DOI: 10.1002/wps.20310

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World Psychiatry        ISSN: 1723-8617            Impact factor:   49.548


  94 in total

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4.  The dynamics of subthreshold psychopathology: implications for diagnosis and treatment.

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Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 18.112

5.  Psychopathological mechanisms linking childhood traumatic experiences to risk of psychotic symptoms: analysis of a large, representative population-based sample.

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Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 9.306

Review 6.  Cannabis use and risk of psychotic or affective mental health outcomes: a systematic review.

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7.  Virtual reality and paranoid ideations in people with an 'at-risk mental state' for psychosis.

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Authors:  M R Broome; L C Johns; I Valli; J B Woolley; P Tabraham; C Brett; L Valmaggia; E Peters; P A Garety; P K McGuire
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Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 49.548

10.  Psychotic experiences and psychotic disorders at age 18 in relation to psychotic experiences at age 12 in a longitudinal population-based cohort study.

Authors:  Stanley Zammit; Daphne Kounali; Mary Cannon; Anthony S David; David Gunnell; Jon Heron; Peter B Jones; Shôn Lewis; Sarah Sullivan; Dieter Wolke; Glyn Lewis
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 18.112

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  116 in total

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Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2021-03-16       Impact factor: 9.306

2.  Dimensional assessment of schizotypal, psychotic, and other psychiatric traits in children and their parents: development and validation of the Childhood Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences on a representative US sample.

Authors:  David W Evans; Laina G Lusk; Mylissa M Slane; Andrew M Michael; Scott M Myers; Mirko Uljarević; Oliver Mason; Gordon Claridge; Thomas Frazier
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2017-10-30       Impact factor: 8.982

3.  Evidence That Environmental and Familial Risks for Psychosis Additively Impact a Multidimensional Subthreshold Psychosis Syndrome.

Authors:  Lotta-Katrin Pries; Sinan Guloksuz; Margreet Ten Have; Ron de Graaf; Saskia van Dorsselaer; Nicole Gunther; Christian Rauschenberg; Ulrich Reininghaus; Rajiv Radhakrishnan; Maarten Bak; Bart P F Rutten; Jim van Os
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2018-06-06       Impact factor: 9.306

4.  'False-positive' self-reported psychotic experiences in the general population: an investigation of outcome, predictive factors and clinical relevance.

Authors:  Y van der Steen; I Myin-Germeys; M van Nierop; M Ten Have; R de Graaf; S van Dorsselaer; J van Os; R van Winkel
Journal:  Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci       Date:  2018-04-16       Impact factor: 6.892

5.  The Search for Environmental Mechanisms Underlying the Expression of Psychosis: Introduction.

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6.  The contribution of the WPA to the production of the ICD-11 chapter on mental, behavioural or neurodevelopmental disorders.

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8.  Conceptualizing psychotic disorders: don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

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9.  Psychosis as a continuous phenotype in the general population: the thin line between normality and pathology.

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10.  Physical Activity Levels and Psychosis: A Mediation Analysis of Factors Influencing Physical Activity Target Achievement Among 204 186 People Across 46 Low- and Middle-Income Countries.

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Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2017-05-01       Impact factor: 9.306

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