(i) Psychological distress was relatively frequent in our patients with psoriasis; (ii) female gender was the most important predictive factor for psychological distress; (iii) there was no association between psoriasis severity and psychological distress; (iv) planning and active coping were the coping strategies most frequently employed by patients; and (v) most dermatologists employed a problem-orientated attitude in caring for patients.
Psychological distress (PD) is common in patients with psoriasis but little is known about its evolution. The aim of this study is to assess the evolution of PD in psoriasis. For this purpose, 1,505 psoriatic patients, who had been previously enrolled in the PSYCHAE study, an observational multicenter Italian study, were re-evaluated after 6 and 12 months. Minor and major PD were assessed using the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) and Brief Symptoms Inventory (BSI) questionnaires and coping using Brief COPE questionnaire. Minor PD was present in 46% of patients but halved during the study. Female gender, surface area, topical steroids, methotrexate, self-distraction, venting and behavioral disengagement were risk factors for minor PD; cyclosporine and humor were protective. Major PD was present in 11% of patients and remained stable. Female gender, venting, religion, behavioral disengagement and emotional support were risk factors for major PD; instrumental support was protective. In conclusion, the results obtained suggest that major PD remained stable after 12 months and that coping was a predictor of its evolution.
We evaluated the prevalence and the size of epithalamus calcifications (EC) and choroid plexus calcifications (CPC) on computed tomography (CT) scans in a group of 64 schizophrenic patients and in a group of 31 healthy controls. The associations between cerebral calcifications, demographic variables, and other brain morphological characteristics (particularly cerebral ventricular size and cortical atrophy) in both, patients and controls, were also considered. A significant increase in size of the epithalamic-region calcifications in schizophrenic patients was found, whereas there was no evidence of increase in both, dimension and prevalence, of choroid plexus calcification. Such dimensional increase was unrelated to the duration of illness and therefore did not seem to be iatrogenic or secondary to the disease. A correlation was found between epithalamus calcifications and cortical atrophy and third-ventricle enlargement, suggesting that calcifications of this cerebral region may be associated with lesions of third-periventricular areas and of circuitries hypothesized to be involved in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia.
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