Literature DB >> 31215968

From Many to One to Many-the Search for Causes of Psychiatric Illness.

Kenneth S Kendler1,2.   

Abstract

The search for the causes of medical and psychiatric disorders has gone through 3 historical phases. First, up until the mid-19th century, causes of illness were anecdotally recorded from individual cases, resulting in long and diverse lists for all disorders. Second, in the latter half of the 19th century, with the use of microbiological methods, single causes were found for many infectious diseases that led to specific diagnostic tests, effective preventions, and, in some cases, treatments. Causal thinking in medicine shifted from the earlier multicausal approaches to monocausal theories of etiology. Indeed, proving monocausal etiology became a way to establish the legitimacy of a disorder. Through the writings of Kahlbaum and Hecker, psychiatry was deeply influenced by this monocausal perspective, the importance of which was substantially amplified by a twist of fate: the increasing clinical importance of general paresis of the insane throughout the 19th century and the eventual proof that it too was a monocausal condition. However, in the mid-20th century, the third phase began. With decreasing deaths from infectious diseases, epidemiology and clinical medicine shifted to a chronic disease model in which paradigmatic disorders, such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, were shown to be highly multicausal. Biostatistics evolved from deterministic to probabilistic models of disease risk factors. Paradoxically, at this time, biological psychiatry, then rising to dominance in American psychiatry, vigorously pursued monocausal theories, first of neurochemical origin and then of genetic origin. We were trying to establish the legitimacy of our field by pursuing an outmoded model-that "real" diseases are monocausal. Despite ample evidence to the contrary, monocausal thinking continues to influence our field, for example, in the popular but improbable view that we can, with a few key advances, move easily from descriptive to etiologically based diagnoses.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31215968     DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2019.1200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Psychiatry        ISSN: 2168-622X            Impact factor:   21.596


  16 in total

1.  Migration, ethnicity and psychoses: evidence, models and future directions.

Authors:  Craig Morgan; Gemma Knowles; Gerard Hutchinson
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2019-10       Impact factor: 49.548

2.  Transdiagnostic clinical staging in youth mental health: a first international consensus statement.

Authors:  Jai L Shah; Jan Scott; Patrick D McGorry; Shane P M Cross; Matcheri S Keshavan; Barnaby Nelson; Stephen J Wood; Steven Marwaha; Alison R Yung; Elizabeth M Scott; Dost Öngür; Philippe Conus; Chantal Henry; Ian B Hickie
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2020-06       Impact factor: 49.548

3.  Association of Recent Stressful Life Events With Mental and Physical Health in the Context of Genomic and Exposomic Liability for Schizophrenia.

Authors:  Lotta-Katrin Pries; Jim van Os; Margreet Ten Have; Ron de Graaf; Saskia van Dorsselaer; Maarten Bak; Bochao D Lin; Kristel R van Eijk; Gunter Kenis; Alexander Richards; Michael C O'Donovan; Jurjen J Luykx; Bart P F Rutten; Sinan Guloksuz
Journal:  JAMA Psychiatry       Date:  2020-12-01       Impact factor: 21.596

Review 4.  Meaningful associations in the adolescent brain cognitive development study.

Authors:  Anthony Steven Dick; Daniel A Lopez; Ashley L Watts; Steven Heeringa; Chase Reuter; Hauke Bartsch; Chun Chieh Fan; David N Kennedy; Clare Palmer; Andrew Marshall; Frank Haist; Samuel Hawes; Thomas E Nichols; Deanna M Barch; Terry L Jernigan; Hugh Garavan; Steven Grant; Vani Pariyadath; Elizabeth Hoffman; Michael Neale; Elizabeth A Stuart; Martin P Paulus; Kenneth J Sher; Wesley K Thompson
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2021-06-18       Impact factor: 6.556

5.  Multifactorial prediction of depression diagnosis and symptom dimensions.

Authors:  Mary E McNamara; Jason Shumake; Rochelle A Stewart; Jocelyn Labrada; Alexandra Alario; John J B Allen; Rohan Palmer; David M Schnyer; John E McGeary; Christopher G Beevers
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2021-02-13       Impact factor: 3.222

Review 6.  Linking RDoC and HiTOP: A new interface for advancing psychiatric nosology and neuroscience.

Authors:  Giorgia Michelini; Isabella M Palumbo; Colin G DeYoung; Robert D Latzman; Roman Kotov
Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2021-03-24

Review 7.  Do DSM classifications help or hinder
drug development?
.

Authors:  Michael Davidson; Cristian Gabos-Grecu
Journal:  Dialogues Clin Neurosci       Date:  2020-03       Impact factor: 5.986

8.  Towards a precision psychiatry approach to anxiety disorders with ecological momentary assessment: the example of panic disorder.

Authors:  Donald J Robinaugh; Mackenzie L Brown; Olivia M Losiewicz; Payton J Jones; Luana Marques; Amanda W Baker
Journal:  Gen Psychiatr       Date:  2020-02-09

Review 9.  Current challenges and possible future developments in personalized psychiatry with an emphasis on psychotic disorders.

Authors:  Anastasia Levchenko; Timur Nurgaliev; Alexander Kanapin; Anastasia Samsonova; Raul R Gainetdinov
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2020-05-20

10.  The Identifying Depression Early in Adolescence Risk Stratified Cohort (IDEA-RiSCo): Rationale, Methods, and Baseline Characteristics.

Authors:  Christian Kieling; Claudia Buchweitz; Arthur Caye; Pedro Manfro; Rivka Pereira; Anna Viduani; Maurício Anés; Lucas Battel; Silvia Benetti; Helen L Fisher; Rakesh Karmacharya; Brandon A Kohrt; Thais Martini; Sandra Petresco; Jader Piccin; Thiago Rocha; Luis Augusto Rohde; Fernanda Rohrsetzer; Laila Souza; Bruna Velazquez; Annabel Walsh; Leehyun Yoon; Zuzanna Zajkowska; Valentina Zonca; Johnna R Swartz; Valeria Mondelli
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2021-06-21       Impact factor: 4.157

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