As I did on
my posts of November 30,
2011, October 2,
2012,September 17,
2013, June 3, 2014, February 24,
2015, December 15,
2015, and September 13, 2016, it’s
time once again to look over the highlights of the latest issue of
one of my two favorite psychiatry journals, Duh! and No
Sh*t, Sherlock. We'll take a look at the unsurprising findings
published in the latest issue of the former. My comments are in
bronze.
As I pointed
out in those earlier posts, research dollars are very limited and
therefore precious. Why waste good money trying to study new, cutting
edge or controversial ideas that might turn out to be wrong, when we can
study things that that are already known to be true but have yet to be
"proven"? Such an approach increases the success rate of studies
almost astronomically. And studies with positive results are far more likely to
be published than those that come up negative.
Clinical Psychiatric News article, June, 2016. Data from a longitudinal study
reported at the World Congress on Osteoarthritis show that weight gain in young
women is an independent predictor of future low back pain. Well, maybe
their backs would do better if they carried around a sack of bricks slung over
their shoulders 24 hours a day.
7/21/16. Apparently these researchers don't watch
the evening news.
Addiction To Prescription Opioids May Be Tied To Creation Of
Market For Cheaper, Potent Heroin, Analysis Suggests. The Washington Post (7/20, Humphreys) “Wonkblog”
reports that the relationship between restricting access to prescription
opioids and increasing heroin use is more complicated than some critics of the
Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act believe, according to a systemic analysis of the matter that was published
in the New England Journal of Medicine. The analysis was led by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse’s Wilson Compton who says that restricting access to
prescription opioids does not automatically increase heroin use, but that
having many people addicted to prescription opioids may be tied to the creation
of a market for cheap, potent heroin that appeals to people addicted to
prescription opioids, which may explain the increase in heroin use in recent
years.
7/21/16. And
these researchers apparently don't get out much. Alcohol
Intoxication Increases Aggression While Cannabis Use Reduces Such Feelings,
Study Finds. The Washington Post (7/20) reports research
published in the journal Psychopharmacology suggest “alcohol intoxication
increased subjective aggression” while those who smoke marijuana “became less
aggressive when they were high.” Researchers concluded that the “results in the
present study support the hypothesis that acute alcohol intoxication increases
feelings of aggression and that acute cannabis intoxication reduces feelings of
aggression.” The findings are in line with other research.
7/25/16. People exposed to addictive
substances found to have higher chance of getting addicted to them. Greater
Pain Found to Increase Risk of Opioid Use Disorder.
Researchers
have long suspected that the level of pain experienced by a patient may
increase his or her risk of developing an opioid use disorder. A study in AJP
in Advance has for the first time taken a prospective look at this link,
revealing a significant association between pain and prescription opioid use
disorder at baseline and three years later. The researchers found that people
with moderate or severe pain had a 41 percent higher risk of developing
prescription opioid use disorders than those without, independent of
demographics or other potential contributing factors. Males, younger adults (of
either gender), and those with a family history of antisocial personality
disorder were also found to be more likely to develop opioid use disorder.
8/2/16. Being sedentary bad for the heart? Who knew? Watching TV
longer increases risk of fatal blood clot, study finds. The New York Times (8/1, Bakalar) reports a new study published in the journal Circulation by Japanese researchers
analyzing “86,024 generally healthy people who filled out questionnaires with
items about health and lifestyle, including time spent watching television,”
found that more time watching television increases the risk for a fatal blood
clot. Researchers estimated that, after adjusting for other factors, “watching
for two and a half to five hours increased the risk for a fatal clot by 70
percent, and watching more than five hours increased the risk by 250 percent,”
compared to watching for less than two and half hours each day.
8/2/16. Less serious disorders found
to have better prognosis. Predictors of outcomes in
outpatients with anorexia nervosa: Results from the ANTOP study. Psychiatry
Research, 08/01/2016 Clinical
Article. Wild B, et al. –
Researchers explored the factors that may predict outcomes in outpatients with
anorexia nervosa (AN). They concluded that better outcome was achieved in those
who had a higher baseline BMI [Body Mass Index] and shorter illness duration.
8/24/16. Traumatic brain injuries seen in many domestic
assault survivors. The AP (8/23, Tanner) reports that, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, “about one-quarter of U.S. women and 14 percent of men
have experienced severe physical assaults by a partner in their lifetime,
including hitting, punching, being slammed against something hard or pushed
down stairs.” Meanwhile, according to a research review published this year in the journal Family & Community Health,
“head and neck injuries are among the most common, and data suggest that
domestic assaults may cause traumatic brain injuries in at least 60 percent of
survivors.” Being assaulted can lead to head trauma! OH NO!
9/6/16. Taking care of
someone who can't tell you what's wrong should be a breeze! Relatives
Who Care For Patients With Dementia Often Experience Frustration Due To Poor
Communication, Study Suggests. The Washington Post (9/4, Bluth) reported relatives
who care for patients with advanced dementia often experience difficulty
because they can no longer communicate with their loved ones, according to a study published in the American
Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease & Other Dementias. Researchers found that
many family caretakers were often frustrated with their relatives with dementia
because they could no longer communicate what they needed or when they were in
pain.
9/16/16. But what
about all those codgers I see running out on the streets? Many older US adults are physically inactive, CDC study finds. The CBS News (9/15, Welch) website reports, “More than a quarter of Americans
age 50 and older do not move beyond basic everyday activities,” research
indicates. TIME (9/15, Oaklander) reports that according to an “analysis of 2014
surveillance data, 28% of Americans ages 50 and over are inactive – meaning
that 31 million adults are moving no more than necessary to perform the most
basic functions of daily life.” HealthDay (9/15, Dotinga) reports that such inactivity increases the risk
for “heart disease, diabetes, and cancer,” researchers from the CDC’s Physical
Activity and Health Branch found. What’s more, “the older Americans get, the
less exercise they get,” investigators found. “Thirty-five percent of people
aged 75 and older were inactive, as were 27 percent of those between 65 and 74,
and 25 percent of those aged 50 to 64,” the study revealed.
12/13/16. Risk
For Opioid Relapse May Be Lower After Voluntary Treatment Than After Compulsory
Treatment, Small Study Indicates. Healio (12/12, Oldt) reports patients “with opioid
dependence who were treated in compulsory drug detention centers were
significantly more likely to relapse after release than those treated with
methadone in voluntary drug treatment centers,” researchers found after
conducting “a parallel, two-arm, prospective observational study of individuals
with opioid dependence treated in Malaysia.” The findings of the study, which included 184
participants, were published online Dec. 7 in The Lancet Global Health. The
author of an accompanying editorial observed that the study findings “provide
solid evidence in support of an urgent need to expand availability of, and
access to, evidence-based voluntary drug-dependence treatment approaches to all
individuals affected by drug dependence.” Because motivation for treatment is irrelevant to its
success.
12/12/16. Pain
is associated with poorer grades, reduced emotional well-being, and attention
problems in adolescents The Clinical Journal of Pain, 12/12/2016 Clinical
Article - Voerman
JS, et al. – Findings imply that
the association between pain and Dutch adolescents grades is intervened by
reduced emotional well–being and attention problems. The association between
pain and math grades is mediated by emotional problems. The outcomes recommend
that an intervention targeted at the pain in adolescents could have a positive
effect on their emotional well–being, attention, and school performance. What a shock!
Being in pain has
effects on your emotional and cognitive functioning.
2/21/16. Impact of somatic severity on long-term mortality in anorexia
nervosa
Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity, 12/21/2016 Clinical Article, Stheneur C, et al. – The present study sought to survey whether time in somatic intensive care unit, justified by a patient’s somatic condition in the course of hospital care, has any association with patient outcome in terms of mortality in the long term. The findings suggest that the clinical seriousness of the somatic condition during hospitalisation for AN is a risk factor for excess mortality in the medium term. In the present study, 195 patients were hospitalised for AN between April 1996 and May 2002, 97 were re-assessed 9 years later on average. Researchers observed that out of 195 patients hospitalised for AN between April 1996 and May 2002, 29 had required transfer to intensive care. Findings revealed that mortality at 9 years was 20 times higher in the group having been transferred to intensive care, irrespective of the duration of follow-up. You mean, the sickest patients had the worst prognosis? How can that be?
Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity, 12/21/2016 Clinical Article, Stheneur C, et al. – The present study sought to survey whether time in somatic intensive care unit, justified by a patient’s somatic condition in the course of hospital care, has any association with patient outcome in terms of mortality in the long term. The findings suggest that the clinical seriousness of the somatic condition during hospitalisation for AN is a risk factor for excess mortality in the medium term. In the present study, 195 patients were hospitalised for AN between April 1996 and May 2002, 97 were re-assessed 9 years later on average. Researchers observed that out of 195 patients hospitalised for AN between April 1996 and May 2002, 29 had required transfer to intensive care. Findings revealed that mortality at 9 years was 20 times higher in the group having been transferred to intensive care, irrespective of the duration of follow-up. You mean, the sickest patients had the worst prognosis? How can that be?
Impaired Social Functioning Appears To Be Most Common In
Schizophrenia, Study Indicates.
Healio (1/4,
Oldt) reports that among people “with schizophrenia spectrum disorders, major
depressive disorder with psychosis and bipolar disorder with psychosis,
impaired social functioning was most common in schizophrenia,” researchers
found in a study including “individuals with schizophrenia spectrum disorders
(n = 269), major depressive disorder with psychosis (n = 77), bipolar disorder
with psychosis (n = 139), and a comparison group without psychotic disorders.”
Participants were followed for 20 years. The findings were
published online Dec. 16 in the American Journal of Psychiatry, a publication
of the American Psychiatric Association. Have these
people ever even been to a psychiatric ward?
1/11/17. And here we thought booze was a cure all: Using Alcohol To Deal With
Unpleasant Memories May Worsen Certain Mental Health Conditions, Mouse Study
Indicates. The
New York Daily News (1/10, Jagannathan)
reports that instead of easing the pain of “distressing memories,” alcohol may
“actually make it more difficult to cope with distressing memories,”
researchers found. Medical Daily (1/10, Dovey) reports that using
alcohol as a coping mechanism “to deal with unpleasant memories...doesn’t work,
and may actually worsen certain mental health conditions, such as”
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), researchers found. Working with mice,
investigators found that “alcohol consumption did not help to ease fearful
emotional memories, and may have strengthened them.”
1/23/17. Because no
one ever drinks to forget. Spousal
Loss Found to Increase Risk of Alcohol Use Disorder. Spousal loss due to divorce or death appears to be
associated with an enduring risk of alcohol use disorder (AUD), but remarriage
may help to reduce this risk, according to a study published today in AJP in
Advance. “The pronounced elevation in AUD risk following divorce or
widowhood, and the protective effect of both first marriage and remarriage
against subsequent AUD, speaks to the profound impact of marriage on
problematic alcohol use and the importance of clinical surveillance for AUD
among divorced or widowed individuals,” lead author Kenneth Kendler, M.D., of
Virginia Commonwealth University and colleagues wrote.
And on a related note: Getting A Divorce May Increase The Risk Of Developing An Alcohol
Use Disorder For Both Genders, Study Indicates. Medscape (1/26, Anderson) reports, “Getting a divorce
increases the risk of developing an alcohol use disorder (AUD) by more than
sevenfold for women and almost sixfold for men,” researchers found after
identifying and then following “942,366 individuals born in Sweden between 1960
and 1990 who were married and residing with their spouse in or after 1990 and
who had no AUD prior to marriage.” The findings were published online Jan. 20 in the
American Journal of Psychiatry, a publication of the American Psychiatric
Association.
1/24/17. Stress and
anxiety were always thought to be totally unrelated. Stress Of Managing Breast Cancer Care May Provoke Symptoms Of
Anxiety In Partners, Caregivers, Study Suggests. HealthDay (1/23, Thompson) reports that research
suggests “the stress of managing breast cancer care provokes symptoms of
anxiety in more than 42 percent of partners and caregivers.” Investigators
found that “this stress-induced anxiety can last years after their loved one’s
illness.” Investigators came to these conclusions after surveying “289 partners
of patients diagnosed with breast cancer at age 40 or younger.” The findings
are scheduled to be presented at a meeting of the American Society for Clinical
Oncology.
This will
certainly come as a surprise to no psychotherapist ever. February 24,
2017. Using
findings from a study that assessed children adopted from Romanian institutions
into families in the United Kingdom, The Lancet reports
that deprivation and neglect in early childhood can have a lasting
psychological effect into adulthood.