Cargando…

S117. MODELLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSIGHT, PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND GENDER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS

BACKGROUND: Studies about the problem of the lack of awareness of the illness in psychosis have a long trajectory of research (Amador and David, 2004). Previous reported articles exert their insidious negative effects in the evolution and managing of the illness both by the patients and professional...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cobo, Jesus, Labad, Javier, Pousa, Esther, Nieto, Lourdes, Ochoa, Susana, Usall, Judith, Baños, Iris, González, Beatriz, Massons, Carmina, Ruiz, Isabel, Ruiz, Ada
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5887552/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby018.904
_version_ 1783312329723609088
author Cobo, Jesus
Labad, Javier
Pousa, Esther
Nieto, Lourdes
Ochoa, Susana
Usall, Judith
Baños, Iris
González, Beatriz
Massons, Carmina
Ruiz, Isabel
Ruiz, Ada
author_facet Cobo, Jesus
Labad, Javier
Pousa, Esther
Nieto, Lourdes
Ochoa, Susana
Usall, Judith
Baños, Iris
González, Beatriz
Massons, Carmina
Ruiz, Isabel
Ruiz, Ada
author_sort Cobo, Jesus
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Studies about the problem of the lack of awareness of the illness in psychosis have a long trajectory of research (Amador and David, 2004). Previous reported articles exert their insidious negative effects in the evolution and managing of the illness both by the patients and professionals. Lack of insight have been related to a generally poor prognosis of schizophrenia, predisposing to non-adherence with antipsychotic and other negatives influences on outcomes. In the last years, previous analysis from the Insight Barcelona Research Group tried to develop a deeper view of insight dimensions in schizophrenia (Pousa et al., 2017). The impact of gender in schizophrenia and first-episode psychosis has been studied extensively in recent decades (Riecher-Rössler and Häfner, 2000; Ochoa et al., 2011). Previous studies about the role of gender in the deficit of insight in psychosis showed inconclusive results. These contradictory findings may be related to differences in the study populations as well as to the use of different instruments to assess insight and other related variables. In these sense, our group presented a previous analysis focused on insight and gender (Cobo et al., 2016) into specific psychotic symptoms. Using the Spanish complete version of the Scale of Unawareness of Mental Disorder - SUMD (Ruiz et al., 2008) and the Five-PANSS Lidenmayer’s Factors (1995) - Positive, Negative, Cognitive, Depressive and Excitement. No gender differences in the three main dimensions of insight in psychosis were found, neither in awareness and attribution of symptoms when assessed globally. However, gender differences appear in awareness and attribution of particular symptoms when assessed separately, with women showing higher levels of unawareness and misattribution than men. On the other hand, a different pattern of clinical, sociodemographic and functional variables seem to affect insight in men and women differently. AIM: The aim of this study was to modelling the influence of psychopathological factors in the deficit of insight in psychosis, taking in account the difference of gender as a relevant variable. METHODS: A multicenter sample of 305 patients with schizophrenia who agreed to participate was evaluated in four centers of the metropolitan area of Barcelona (Catalonia). Psychopathological assessment was performed using the Five-PANSS Wallwork’s Factors (2012). Insight and its dimensions were assessed by means of the SUMD. Structural Equation Models (SEM) was used to fix the model in the total sample and by gender. RESULTS: SEM models for the sample showed a moderate fix capacity. Insight SUMD Dimensions models in the schizophrenia sub-sample were related significantly to Positive, Excited and Depressed PANSS Wallwork’s Factors. Higher scores on Positive and Excited PANSS Wallwork’s Factors reduce de insight scores. Conversely, higher scores in Depressed PANSS Wallwork Factor were associated to greater awareness. In women affected of schizophrenia, SEM models fixed poorly and the lack of association for any isolated PANSS factor, probably due to the size of the subsample. DISCUSSION: There is a lack of studies in the area. In the previous SEM model of Xavier et al. (2017), disorganized symptoms had the strongest effect on insight. In addition, both in our study and in the study of Xavier et al. (2017), negative symptoms have no significative effect on either illness insight or treatment insight. In our opinion, the possible explanation of the principal differences between the studies is related to the instruments utilized and the sample characteristics. Our data also support gender differences in the influence of psychopatology factors on the insight dimensions.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5887552
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-58875522018-04-11 S117. MODELLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSIGHT, PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND GENDER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS Cobo, Jesus Labad, Javier Pousa, Esther Nieto, Lourdes Ochoa, Susana Usall, Judith Baños, Iris González, Beatriz Massons, Carmina Ruiz, Isabel Ruiz, Ada Schizophr Bull Abstracts BACKGROUND: Studies about the problem of the lack of awareness of the illness in psychosis have a long trajectory of research (Amador and David, 2004). Previous reported articles exert their insidious negative effects in the evolution and managing of the illness both by the patients and professionals. Lack of insight have been related to a generally poor prognosis of schizophrenia, predisposing to non-adherence with antipsychotic and other negatives influences on outcomes. In the last years, previous analysis from the Insight Barcelona Research Group tried to develop a deeper view of insight dimensions in schizophrenia (Pousa et al., 2017). The impact of gender in schizophrenia and first-episode psychosis has been studied extensively in recent decades (Riecher-Rössler and Häfner, 2000; Ochoa et al., 2011). Previous studies about the role of gender in the deficit of insight in psychosis showed inconclusive results. These contradictory findings may be related to differences in the study populations as well as to the use of different instruments to assess insight and other related variables. In these sense, our group presented a previous analysis focused on insight and gender (Cobo et al., 2016) into specific psychotic symptoms. Using the Spanish complete version of the Scale of Unawareness of Mental Disorder - SUMD (Ruiz et al., 2008) and the Five-PANSS Lidenmayer’s Factors (1995) - Positive, Negative, Cognitive, Depressive and Excitement. No gender differences in the three main dimensions of insight in psychosis were found, neither in awareness and attribution of symptoms when assessed globally. However, gender differences appear in awareness and attribution of particular symptoms when assessed separately, with women showing higher levels of unawareness and misattribution than men. On the other hand, a different pattern of clinical, sociodemographic and functional variables seem to affect insight in men and women differently. AIM: The aim of this study was to modelling the influence of psychopathological factors in the deficit of insight in psychosis, taking in account the difference of gender as a relevant variable. METHODS: A multicenter sample of 305 patients with schizophrenia who agreed to participate was evaluated in four centers of the metropolitan area of Barcelona (Catalonia). Psychopathological assessment was performed using the Five-PANSS Wallwork’s Factors (2012). Insight and its dimensions were assessed by means of the SUMD. Structural Equation Models (SEM) was used to fix the model in the total sample and by gender. RESULTS: SEM models for the sample showed a moderate fix capacity. Insight SUMD Dimensions models in the schizophrenia sub-sample were related significantly to Positive, Excited and Depressed PANSS Wallwork’s Factors. Higher scores on Positive and Excited PANSS Wallwork’s Factors reduce de insight scores. Conversely, higher scores in Depressed PANSS Wallwork Factor were associated to greater awareness. In women affected of schizophrenia, SEM models fixed poorly and the lack of association for any isolated PANSS factor, probably due to the size of the subsample. DISCUSSION: There is a lack of studies in the area. In the previous SEM model of Xavier et al. (2017), disorganized symptoms had the strongest effect on insight. In addition, both in our study and in the study of Xavier et al. (2017), negative symptoms have no significative effect on either illness insight or treatment insight. In our opinion, the possible explanation of the principal differences between the studies is related to the instruments utilized and the sample characteristics. Our data also support gender differences in the influence of psychopatology factors on the insight dimensions. Oxford University Press 2018-04 2018-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5887552/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby018.904 Text en © Maryland Psychiatric Research Center 2018. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Cobo, Jesus
Labad, Javier
Pousa, Esther
Nieto, Lourdes
Ochoa, Susana
Usall, Judith
Baños, Iris
González, Beatriz
Massons, Carmina
Ruiz, Isabel
Ruiz, Ada
S117. MODELLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSIGHT, PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND GENDER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS
title S117. MODELLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSIGHT, PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND GENDER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS
title_full S117. MODELLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSIGHT, PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND GENDER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS
title_fullStr S117. MODELLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSIGHT, PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND GENDER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS
title_full_unstemmed S117. MODELLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSIGHT, PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND GENDER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS
title_short S117. MODELLING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSIGHT, PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND GENDER IN SCHIZOPHRENIA USING STRUCTURAL EQUATIONS
title_sort s117. modelling the relationship between insight, psychopathology and gender in schizophrenia using structural equations
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5887552/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby018.904
work_keys_str_mv AT cobojesus s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT labadjavier s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT pousaesther s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT nietolourdes s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT ochoasusana s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT usalljudith s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT banosiris s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT gonzalezbeatriz s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT massonscarmina s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT ruizisabel s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations
AT ruizada s117modellingtherelationshipbetweeninsightpsychopathologyandgenderinschizophreniausingstructuralequations