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Being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: Psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach

INTRODUCTION: The notion of subclinical psychosis is as old as Eugen Bleuler’s work on schizophrenia. It is also consistent with psychodynamic theories (see PDM-2) on the organization of personality on different levels including, among others, a psychotic level of personality organization. Research...

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Autor principal: Mitropoulos, G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9480282/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.2127
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author Mitropoulos, G.
author_facet Mitropoulos, G.
author_sort Mitropoulos, G.
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description INTRODUCTION: The notion of subclinical psychosis is as old as Eugen Bleuler’s work on schizophrenia. It is also consistent with psychodynamic theories (see PDM-2) on the organization of personality on different levels including, among others, a psychotic level of personality organization. Research on the continuum of psychosis has offered substantial support to the view that psychotic phenotypes are significantly more prevalent than clinical psychosis. OBJECTIVES: This may imply that being “psychotic” is not necessarily being ill. This assumption raises important theoretical and clinical questions: what causes psychosis to manifest itself clinically and, conversely, what possibly prevents it from doing so? METHODS: At the same time, it potentially frees psychiatry from certain diagnostic and therapeutic impasses. It allows for a shift of emphasis from misguiding classifications and often frustrating “evidence-based” therapeutic attempts to a more personalized approach. RESULTS: Diagnosis may thus rely on psychoanalytical “markers” or “indicators” regarding the subject (e.g. deficits in the symbolic register, dysregulated rapport with one’s body, problematic inscription in social relations etc.) at least as much as on symptomic phenomenology. Therapy may also take advantage of and deploy the unique coping strategies employed by the psychotic individual. CONCLUSIONS: The diagnostic and therapeutic insights offered by Lacanian psychoanalysis create the possibility of a fruitful theoretical, diagnostic and therapeutic approach for clinical and subclinical psychotic conditions; indicate that psychoanalysis is indispensable for clinical psychiatry; and signal the possibility of a time-honored alternative to the in-vogue neurocognitive paradigm of “personalized” psychiatry. DISCLOSURE: No significant relationships.
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spelling pubmed-94802822022-09-29 Being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: Psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach Mitropoulos, G. Eur Psychiatry Abstract INTRODUCTION: The notion of subclinical psychosis is as old as Eugen Bleuler’s work on schizophrenia. It is also consistent with psychodynamic theories (see PDM-2) on the organization of personality on different levels including, among others, a psychotic level of personality organization. Research on the continuum of psychosis has offered substantial support to the view that psychotic phenotypes are significantly more prevalent than clinical psychosis. OBJECTIVES: This may imply that being “psychotic” is not necessarily being ill. This assumption raises important theoretical and clinical questions: what causes psychosis to manifest itself clinically and, conversely, what possibly prevents it from doing so? METHODS: At the same time, it potentially frees psychiatry from certain diagnostic and therapeutic impasses. It allows for a shift of emphasis from misguiding classifications and often frustrating “evidence-based” therapeutic attempts to a more personalized approach. RESULTS: Diagnosis may thus rely on psychoanalytical “markers” or “indicators” regarding the subject (e.g. deficits in the symbolic register, dysregulated rapport with one’s body, problematic inscription in social relations etc.) at least as much as on symptomic phenomenology. Therapy may also take advantage of and deploy the unique coping strategies employed by the psychotic individual. CONCLUSIONS: The diagnostic and therapeutic insights offered by Lacanian psychoanalysis create the possibility of a fruitful theoretical, diagnostic and therapeutic approach for clinical and subclinical psychotic conditions; indicate that psychoanalysis is indispensable for clinical psychiatry; and signal the possibility of a time-honored alternative to the in-vogue neurocognitive paradigm of “personalized” psychiatry. DISCLOSURE: No significant relationships. Cambridge University Press 2021-08-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9480282/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.2127 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Mitropoulos, G.
Being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: Psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach
title Being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: Psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach
title_full Being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: Psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach
title_fullStr Being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: Psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach
title_full_unstemmed Being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: Psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach
title_short Being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: Psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach
title_sort being psychotic is not necessarily being ill: psychotic continuum and the relevance of lacanian psychoanalytic approach
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9480282/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.2127
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