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1.
Tehran University Medical Journal [TUMJ]. 2006; 64 (8): 31-42
in Persian | IMEMR | ID: emr-81387

ABSTRACT

The Composite International Diagnostic Interview [CIDI] is a comprehensive, standardized diagnostic interview for the assessment of psychiatric disorders. There have been few studies on the validity of the CIDI. The objective of present study was to assess the validity of a Farsi translation of the complete CIDI and its psychosis/mania module in five referral clinical psychiatric settings. Two hundred and three as well as 104 consecutive admissions were interviewed using the complete and the psychosis/mania module, respectively. Within two days of the CIDI interview, two last year residents of psychiatry or psychiatrist who were blind to the CIDI diagnosis completed the Clinical diagnostic checklists [based on DSM-IV and ICD-10 criteria] simultaneously and reached the consensus diagnosis. Data analysis was performed using SPSS 11 to determine the validity of CIDI. The sensitivity and specificity for the diagnosis of schizophrenia was 0.12 and 0.96 using DSM-IV criteria. According to ICD-10 criteria, the results were the same with 0.19% sensitivity and 0.96% specificity. The sensitivity for the diagnosis of bipolar I disorder was low [0.21 using DSM-IV criteria and 0.17% using ICD-10] and specificity, high [0.90 compared to DSM-IV and 0.89 compared to ICD-10 criteria]. The results were rather similar for the psychosis/mania module of CIDI. This study suggests that the Farsi translation of both the complete CIDI and the psychosis/mania module of CIDI have good specificity, but poor sensitivity for the diagnosis of schizophrenia and of bipolar I disorder


Subject(s)
Humans , Interviews as Topic , Schizophrenia/diagnosis , Bipolar Disorder/diagnosis , Psychotic Disorders/diagnosis
2.
IJMS-Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences. 2003; 28 (3): 106-110
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-62297

ABSTRACT

Patients with Graves' disease exhibit a considerable rate of relapse after treatment with antithyroid drugs and require ablative therapy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate variables which can be used as prognostic factors in predicting the outcome of Graves' disease after treatment with antithyroid drugs. Age, sex, duration of antithyroid drug therapy, pretreatment T3 and T4 values, T3 to T4 ratio, size of thyroid gland before and after treatment, and the effect of salt iodination were determined in 439 patients at an endocrine clinic in southern Iran during a 15- year period. The patients included 338 [77%] females and 101[23%] males with a mean age of 34.1 11.2 years. Overall, the relapse rate was 62%. The relapse rates were 58% and 76% in females and males, respectively [P=0.001]. The mean age was 35.0 11.6 years in the relapse group [n=275] and 32.6 +/- 11.3 in the remission group [n=164] [P=0.03]. T4 was 20.4 6.3 and 18.1 5.4 g/dl in the relapse and remission groups, respectively [P=0.000]. In the relapse group, T3 was 443.0 189.5 ng/dl and in the remission group, it was 373.4 182 ng/dl [P=0.009]. T3 to T4 ratio was higher in the relapse group [21.8 8.3 vs 18.6 7.0 ng/ g, P<0.005]. Larger pre- and post-treatment thyroid size were associated with higher relapse rate [P<0.05 and P=0.001, respectively]. Logistic regression analysis showed that male sex, old age, higher pretreatment T4, T3, and T3 to T4 ratio, and larger pre- and post-treatment thyroid size were associated with higher relapse rates. Iodinated salt consumption and duration of treatment beyond 12 months had no effect on the relapse rate. Patients with male gender, older age, higher pretreatment T3, T4 higher T3/T4 ratio, and larger thyroid size before and after treatment have higher risk of relapse


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Antithyroid Agents , Recurrence , Prognosis , Treatment Outcome
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