1.The Changing Patterns of Psychiatric Consultations at a General Hospital.
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 1997;36(4):671-682
We have studied the changing patterns of psychiatric consultation in a general hospital for 10 years . Results were as follows 1) The annual psychiatric consultation rate was 1.64%. 2) In age group, elderly patients above 60's had increasing tendency of consultation. 3) The referred patients from department of Internal medicine was the highest and ones from neurology department were increasing recently. 4) Most of the patients were consulted during the month of lune, f311owe4 by April, March and May. 5) The most frequent reason far their psychiatric consultation was psychiatric complaint without specific evidence of lab. data but physical problems. 6) In the psychiatric diagnoses of the consulted patients, organic mental disorders were the first, and depression was the second in order.
Aged
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Neurocognitive Disorders
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Depression
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Diagnosis
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Hospitals, General*
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Humans
;
Internal Medicine
;
Neurology
;
Referral and Consultation*
2.A systematic review on blood biomarkers of neurocognitive disorders in HIV infected individuals.
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(9):1274-1280
Biomarkers are very useful in the diagnosis and identification of neurocognitive impairments (NCIs) or disorders (NCDs) in HIV-infected individuals, and in particular, blood biomarkers have become more promising because they are cheap and easy to obtain or accept. A systematically literature retrieval was conducted by using PubMed, CNKI, Wanfang and VIP databases for studies about blood biomarkers of neurocognitive impairment of HIV-infected individuals in 2008-2017, according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Finally, a total of 43 related articles were included for this systematic review for the purpose of providing scientific evidence for further research and clinical practices.
Adult
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Anti-Retroviral Agents/therapeutic use*
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Biomarkers/blood*
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Cognition Disorders/diagnosis*
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Female
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HIV Infections/drug therapy*
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Humans
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Neurocognitive Disorders/diagnosis*
3.Psychiatric Consultations at an Emergency Department in a Metropolitan University Hospital in Northern Japan.
Masaki SHIRAISHI ; Takao ISHII ; Yoshiyasu KIGAWA ; Masaya TAYAMA ; Keisuke INOUE ; Kenji NARITA ; Masaru TATENO ; Chiaki KAWANISHI
Psychiatry Investigation 2018;15(7):739-742
Many patients with mental disorders visit emergency departments (EDs). However, the majority of these patients do not receive psychiatric assessment. In the present study, we investigated the detailed proportion of patients with mental disorders visiting an urban ED in the largest northern city in Japan. A retrospective chart review study was performed at a University Hospital from January 2012 to December 2015. The reasons for psychiatric consultations made by ED staff, and the primary psychiatric diagnoses were investigated. Among all living patients, 20% of them received consultations. The most common reason for consultation was suicide attempt followed by agitation or insomnia. Of all diagnoses, organic mental disorder was the most frequent and the mean age was significantly higher than the other diagnostic groups. Our study indicated that the frequency of psychiatric consultation was high. This indicates the high demand for mental health services at the ED. A thorough psychiatric assessment can provide adequate psychiatric services to acute patients; thereby possibly preventing suicide attempters from later actually dying by suicide.
Diagnosis
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Dihydroergotamine
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Emergencies*
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Emergency Service, Hospital*
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Humans
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Japan*
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Mental Disorders
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Mental Health Services
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Neurocognitive Disorders
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Referral and Consultation*
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Retrospective Studies
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Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
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Suicide
4.Elderly Patient Trends in a Chronic Mental Hospital and Accompanying Medical Diseases.
Sae Han JU ; Shin Kyum KIM ; Won Tan BYUN ; Bong Joo JUNG ; Young Min PARK ; Jae Won SEO ; Se Hoon KIM
Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2018;22(1):25-32
OBJECTIVE: It investigated the tendency of the increase of elderly patients in a psychiatric hospital. In this regard, it examined whether the number of patients with outpatient consultant, discharge, medical diseases, and neurocognitive disorder increased or not. METHODS: It retrospectively reviewed inpatient medical records for the years 2008, 2011, 2014, 2017. To investigate the changes of elderly patients admitted to psychiatry, it examined the changes of patients who are older than 50 or 60 years in addition to the people who are older than 65 years. It analyzed diagnosis, discharge, medical diseases, and outpatient consultant of the three groups respectively. RESULTS: It confirmed that the number of elderly patients who are older than 50, 60, and 65 years has increased in mental hospital for 10 years. There was a significant increase in the number of neurocognitive disorder patients, the ratio of consultant outpatient, and the mean number of outpatient consultant. Diabetes increased in all three groups. Especially it has significantly increased for patients who are older than 50 and 60 years. In the case of patients discharged due to transfer, the number of patients increased in all three groups but it was statistically significant for the patients who are older than 50 years. CONCLUSION: The study shows that the number of elderly patients increased with the trend of aging society. In relation to this, the rate of outpatient consultant and discharge, including diabetic and dementia patients, also increased. Therefore, if the mental health department provides a system to manage the elderly ward or nursing ward to respond to the increase of elderly patients, or to manage the accompanying chronic diseases such as diabetes and its complications, it could solve the inconvenience of patients due to the consultation outside a hospital or discharge.
Aged*
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Aging
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Chronic Disease
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Consultants
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Dementia
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Diagnosis
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Hospitals, Psychiatric*
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Humans
;
Inpatients
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Medical Records
;
Mental Health
;
Neurocognitive Disorders
;
Nursing
;
Outpatients
;
Retrospective Studies
5.The Role of Nuclear Medicine in the Staging and Management of Human Immune Deficiency Virus Infection and Associated Diseases
Alfred O ANKRAH ; Andor W J M GLAUDEMANS ; Hans C KLEIN ; Rudi A J O DIERCKX ; Mike SATHEKGE
Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2017;51(2):127-139
Human immune deficiency virus (HIV) is a leading cause of death. It attacks the immune system, thereby rendering the infected host susceptible to many HIV-associated infections, malignancies and neurocognitive disorders. The altered immune system affects the way the human host responds to disease, resulting in atypical presentation of these disorders. This presents a diagnostic challenge and the clinician must use all diagnostic avenues available to diagnose and manage these conditions. The advent of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) has markedly reduced the mortality associated with HIVinfection but has also brought in its wake problems associated with adverse effects or drug interaction and may even modulate some of the HIV-associated disorders to the detriment of the infected human host. Nuclear medicine techniques allow non-invasive visualisation of tissues in the body. By using this principle, pathophysiology in the body can be targeted and the treatment of diseases can be monitored. Being a functional imaging modality, it is able to detect diseases at the molecular level, and thus it has increased our understanding of the immunological changes in the infected host at different stages of the HIV infection. It also detects pathological changes much earlier than conventional imaging based on anatomical changes. This is important in the immunocompromised host as in some of the associated disorders a delay in diagnosis may have dire consequences. Nuclear medicine has played a huge role in the management of many HIV-associated disorders in the past and continues to help in the diagnosis, prognosis, staging, monitoring and assessing the response to treatment of many HIV-associated disorders. As our understanding of the molecular basis of disease increases nuclear medicine is poised to play an even greater role. In this review we highlight the functional basis of the clinicopathological correlation of HIV from a metabolic view and discuss how the use of nuclear medicine techniques, with particular emphasis of F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose, may have impact in the setting of HIV. We also provide an overview of the role of nuclear medicine techniques in the management of HIV-associated disorders.
Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active
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Cause of Death
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Diagnosis
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Drug Interactions
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HIV
;
HIV Infections
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Humans
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Immune System
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Immunocompromised Host
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Mortality
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Neurocognitive Disorders
;
Nuclear Medicine
;
Prognosis
6.A Study of Physical Disorder in a Geriatric Psychiatric Inpatients.
Kyung Duk LEE ; Ki Hyun HWANG ; Ye Kyung LEE ; Youn Sin KIM
Journal of the Korean Geriatrics Society 2000;4(4):270-277
BACKGROUND: This study was designed to investigate the relationship between psychiatric disease and systemic disease in geriatric psychiatric inpatients who were consulted to department of internal medicine and were above 6th decade, and was directed to assess the physical problems and possible ways to resolve them in a closed psychiatric unit. METHOD: Through evaluation of medical records of 225 inpatients who had consulted in department of internal medicine in Seoul National Mental Hospital from January 1, 1998 to December 31, 1999. We classified the physical illness according to ICD-9-CM and psychiatric disease according to NTA. RESULTS: The result were as follows: 1) In age sex distribution, male was 62.7%, and 81.8% of the subjects was 6th decade. 2) The most common systemic diagnosis were disease of circulatory system, disease of digestive system, and disease of respiratory system. 3) The most systemic disease was disease of circulatory system in 6th and 8th decade. 4) Disease of circulatory system in all psychiatric disease was the most frequent. 5) Rate of circulatory disorder was the highest in organic mental disorder. Disease of digestive system and disease of endocrine system were the most frequent in alcoholics. Disease of respiratory system showed the highest rate in schizophrenea. CONCLUSION: The clinical characteristics of psychiatric diseases influenced to get systemic disease in geriatric patients.
Alcoholics
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Neurocognitive Disorders
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Diagnosis
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Digestive System
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Endocrine System
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Hospitals, Psychiatric
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Humans
;
Inpatients*
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Internal Medicine
;
International Classification of Diseases
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Male
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Medical Records
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Respiratory System
;
Seoul
;
Sex Distribution