Literature DB >> 3224256

A matched-control follow-up and family study of 'puerperal psychoses'.

C Platz1, R E Kendell.   

Abstract

A hundred and ten women admitted to a psychiatric hospital within 90 days of childbirth were individually matched for age, psychiatric syndrome, and year of admission with women admitted to the same hospital with illnesses unrelated to childbirth. Both groups were followed up after a mean interval of nine years, and 72 matched pairs of patients for whom adequate information was obtained were then compared. The previous and subsequent psychiatric morbidity of these two groups, their subsequent obstetric careers, and the psychiatric morbidity of their first-degree relatives were all very similar. However, the puerperal women had significantly fewer relapses in the follow-up period, fewer committed suicide, and the psychiatric morbidity of their relatives tended to be lower. This better outcome was most marked in puerperal subjects with major depressions; those with manic disorders fared no better than controls. These results suggest that puerperal psychoses are basically the same as affective illnesses occurring at other times but, because childbirth is a uniquely potent precipitant of affective illness, some of those who develop puerperal episodes have a lesser genetic predisposition to affective illness than the generality of women with affective disorders.

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Mesh:

Year:  1988        PMID: 3224256     DOI: 10.1192/bjp.153.1.90

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Psychiatry        ISSN: 0007-1250            Impact factor:   9.319


  8 in total

Review 1.  Postpartum psychoses: prognosis, risk factors, and treatment.

Authors:  Bruno Pfuhlmann; Gerald Stoeber; Helmut Beckmann
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 5.285

Review 2.  A review of postpartum psychosis.

Authors:  Dorothy Sit; Anthony J Rothschild; Katherine L Wisner
Journal:  J Womens Health (Larchmt)       Date:  2006-05       Impact factor: 2.681

Review 3.  Fifty years of electroconvulsive therapy.

Authors:  A Linington; B Harris
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1988-11-26

Review 4.  The comparison of postpartum with non-postpartum depression: a rose by any other name.

Authors:  V E Whiffen
Journal:  J Psychiatry Neurosci       Date:  1991-09       Impact factor: 6.186

5.  Follow-up and family study of postpartum psychoses. Part I: Overview.

Authors:  J Schöpf; B Rust
Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  1994       Impact factor: 5.270

Review 6.  Perinatal mental illness: definition, description and aetiology.

Authors:  Michael W O'Hara; Katherine L Wisner
Journal:  Best Pract Res Clin Obstet Gynaecol       Date:  2013-10-07       Impact factor: 5.237

Review 7.  Postpartum Relapse in Patients with Bipolar Disorder.

Authors:  Javier Conejo-Galindo; Alejandro Sanz-Giancola; Miguel Ángel Álvarez-Mon; Miguel Á Ortega; Luis Gutiérrez-Rojas; Guillermo Lahera
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-07-08       Impact factor: 4.964

Review 8.  Postpartum psychiatric disorders: Early diagnosis and management.

Authors:  Shashi Rai; Abhishek Pathak; Indira Sharma
Journal:  Indian J Psychiatry       Date:  2015-07       Impact factor: 1.759

  8 in total

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