The increased likelihood of homicide in subjects with MMDs cannot be fully explained by comorbid alcoholism. The results point to the special importance of sufficient treatment for a subgroup of mentally ill individuals being at higher risk of violence.
The finding of three factors of behavioral pathology in demented patients reflects the possibility that different etiological mechanisms could explain the expression of the symptoms and signs of psychosis in demented patients.
A retrospective analysis of the effects of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) was performed for two groups of 11 patients matched according to age (mean age, 52 years), sex, and diagnosis. Group 1 received ECT according to the age-dose protocol; group 2 was treated according to the titration method. A higher dose relative to the seizure threshold appeared to shorten the seizure duration. At the first treatment, the correlation between stimulus intensity and seizure duration was negative. In the titration group, the initial mean charge of 91 mC resulted in a seizure duration of 51 s, whereas in the age-dose group the seizure duration of 31 s was significantly shorter despite a higher mean charge of 312 mC. Seizure duration decreased during the ECT course in the group treated first at low dose (titrated) and then at 2.5 times the initial threshold. High stimulus intensity represented adequate treatment, although it produced short seizures. Thus, seizure duration proved to be an unreliable guideline for effective treatment. Furthermore, focus on seizure duration led to frequent high-dose restimulation in the elderly. The titration method obviates inadequate or excessive charges because the seizure threshold must first be determined.
Topiramate is a novel anticonvulsant agent with a broad spectrum mechanism of action, and recent clinical reports indicate that it may have mood stabilizing properties in bipolar disorder. Therefore, we treated a 41-year-old woman who had 12 previous hospitalizations for acute mania during a 10-year history of bipolar I disorder with this compound. Since 1991, the patient had been treated with carbamazepine, valproate and lamotrigine with limited success. At the beginning of a new manic episode, topiramate was started in the outpatient clinic. Eight weeks after initiation of treatment, the patient was hospitalized. This inpatient treatment lasted less than 3 weeks. Subsequently, the patient has not been hospitalized again. Topiramate was well tolerated. Even though, during subsequent topiramate treatment, a serious life event (suicide attempt of brother) induced re-occurence of the patient's psychopathology, which did not require hospitalization. Fortunately, inpatient treatment was not necessary due to an increase of topiramate dosage and addition of risperidone and clonazepam. The patient, now on 200 mg/day, is mostly asymptomatic and has functioned well for over 17 months, in contrast to 13 hospitalizations during the previous 10 years.
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