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Patient's Mother (patient + mother)
Selected AbstractsContext-Oriented Model Development in Psychotherapy Planning (,COMEPP'): a useful adjunct to diagnosis and therapy of severe personality disordersACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 3 2004M. Fischer-Kern Objective:, Pathogenous interpersonal (e.g. interfamilial) relationships and reference styles can compromise treatment efforts in severely disturbed (i.e. psychotic or borderline) patients. The integration of family- and individual-centred starting points may be useful in establishing interdisciplinary treatment concepts in these patients. Context-Oriented Model Development in Psychotherapy Planning (COMEPP) represents a diagnostic and therapy planning process, integrating both systemic and psychoanalytic conceptualizations. Method:, COMEPP is exemplified by the case of a young man with psychotic personality disorder who had previously been unresponsive to pharmacological and psychological treatment. Results:, After psycho-dynamical conflicts (i.e. primitive projective processes from the patient's mother to her son) had been elucidated during the COMEPP process, a sufficient treatment setting could be established. Conclusion:, COMEPP provides a psychotherapeutical approach to treatment planning on case-specific premises and may serve as an adjunct to concomitant pharmacological and psychological treatment strategies in so-called ,therapy refractory' patients. [source] Two novel fibrinogen variants found in patients with pulmonary embolism and their familiesJOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS, Issue 6 2003M. M. L. Hanss Summary.,Background:,The occurrence of dysfibrinogen is quite rare in comparison with other hemostatic defects, specially in cases of venous thrombosis. Objectives:,Fibrinogen is known to have multiple functions, which are not evaluated by simple coagulation testing. We have used gel electrophoresis to search for new mutations. Patients and methods:,Specimens of purified fibrinogen from 217 consecutive patients with familial or recurrent or early thrombosis and from 490 control subjects were evaluated by electrophoresis. Plasma fibrinogen levels and coagulation-dependent tests (electromechanical and optical coagulometric determinations, immunological measurement, thrombin and ReptilaseŽ times) were normal. Results:,Two novel familial variants were detected. For a 42-year-old patient, an in-frame 117 base pair insertion in the A,-chain gene caused a 5-kDa mobility shift of the A, chain. This corresponds to a 39 amino acid duplication in the connector domain (fibrinogen Champagne au Mont d'Or). This pattern was also found in the patient's mother and child. A second 31-year-old patient presented an extra band under non-reducing conditions, 30 kDa larger than HMW fibrinogen and reacting with antifibrinogen antibodies (fibrinogen Lozanne). A heterozygous 5909A,G mutation was found on the B,-chain gene leading to heterozygous B, Tyr236, stop codon. The predicted truncated B, chain could participate in chain assembly. Two family members were also affected, one of whom had suffered early venous thrombosis. Conclusions:,Electrophoretic testing of apparently normal fibrinogens can reveal new variants which may be clinically relevant. [source] An anaphylactic reaction to blood supplied from patient's motherACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 10 2002Y. Nakaigawa We present the case of a 4-year-old girl who developed anaphylactic shock during general anesthesia. Symptoms appeared 80 min into the operation and may have been an immediate allergic reaction to the transfused blood supplied from the child's mother based on the clinical signs, the decrease of components of complements and the elevated concentrations of histamine and tryptase. The blood type was the same and antibody screening test and crossmatch was negative. The blood was irradiated and we used a white cell-reduction filter. This patient possibly has antibodies to her mother's plasma and this type of reaction cannot be prevented by these routine methods. It is reported that the risk of transfusion associated graft-vs.-host disease is high when a patient receives blood from a closely related donor. However, there are, no reports of anaphylactic reactions to blood supplied from mother to child. We suggest that there is a potential for anaphylactic reaction as well as transfusion associated graft-vs.-host disease when a child patient receives blood from the mother. [source] Cardiac arrest in a child with cerebral palsy undergoing sevoflurane induction of anesthesia after preoperative clonidinePEDIATRIC ANESTHESIA, Issue 3 2007MARK M. GOLDFINGER MD Summary Clonidine is a frequently administered ,2-adrenergic agonist which can decrease heart rate and blood pressure. We present a case of a 5-year-old child with cerebral palsy and seizure disorder, receiving clonidine for restlessness, who presented for placement of a baclofen pump. Without the knowledge of the medical personnel, the patient's mother administered three doses of clonidine during the evening before and morning of surgery to reduce anxiety. During induction of anesthesia, the patient developed bradycardia and hypotension requiring cardiac resuscitation. There are no previous reports of clonidine-associated cardiac arrest in a child undergoing induction of anesthesia. [source] Family history of suicidal behaviour: prevalence and significance in deliberate self-harm patientsACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 5 2002Keith Hawton Objective:, To investigate whether there are differences between the characteristics of deliberate self-harm (DSH) patients with and without a family history of suicidal behaviour. Method:, In 146 DSH patients, those with and without a positive family history were compared with regard to the nature and repetition of their DSH episodes, and psychological and psychiatric characteristics. Results:, Fifty-two (35.6%) patients had a family history of suicidal behaviour. DSH was more frequent in patients' mothers (17.1%) than fathers (2.7%). Patients with a family history of suicidal behaviour, especially females, had higher state anger scores. Conclusion:, Family history of suicidal behaviour appears to be associated with greater anger. Absence of other associations suggests that family history probably has less implication for individuals who have already engaged in DSH than in contributing to its initiation. Future studies should include patients with violent or life-threatening DSH acts. [source] |