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1.
Tunisie Medicale [La]. 2014; 92 (3): 214-218
in French | IMEMR | ID: emr-156253

ABSTRACT

Clinical aspects in schizophrenia suggest a unique relationship with the proper name. Discuss the validity of the hypothesis that the non-transmission of the surname may be a vulnerability factor in schizophrenia. Descriptive cross-sectional study conducted among 60 patients with schizophrenia and their families. Data were collected using a semi-structured interview. Seven patients carried a different surname from their father [11.6% of participants]. The disparity has only concerned the child with schizophrenia. Family characteristics [birth rank, desired character of pregnancy, family history of schizophrenia] and evolutif profile of the disease were comparable between patients with a family name according to the father and those with a different surname. It appears that patients with schizophrenia maintain a special relationship with the proper name, which could be involved in the genesis of schizophrenia. Our early hypothesis, supported by the psychoanalytic, transgenerational and behavioral theories, would be a plausible starting point for studies with a broader spectrum including witnesses of the general and psychiatric populations

2.
Tunisie Medicale [La]. 2013; 91 (12): 693-699
in French | IMEMR | ID: emr-141199

ABSTRACT

Unlike schizophrenia, the impact of gender on the criminality of patients with bipolar disorder has received little attention. To estimate the sex ratio in relation to acts committed by forensic bipolar patients and evaluate the impact of gender on the characteristics of this crime. A comparative study by gender, conducted at the psychiatric hospital Razi has included all patients with bipolar disorder hospitalized between 1990 and 2010 after being relaxed for mental illness, owing to the Tunisian penal code. The total number of patients was 36 and the sex ratio of 3.5. A suicide history was four times more common in women. Alcohol abuse was found only in men. Relapses were more frequent in women [3.06 / year against 1.14 / year, p= 0.02]. Rapid cycling and comorbid anxiety were noted only in female patients. Filicide and prostitution were committed exclusively by women, economic crimes and sexual assaults were the preserve of men. The male offenses were more impulsive and unpremeditated [p=0.04]. Although sex ratio is in favor of men, women's representation in the violence induced by bipolar disorder is significant, resulting, particularly during depressive phases, by serious and deadly acts. Preventive measures of acting out in bipolar patients must be supported and especially adapted to the genre

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