Intellectual decline in patients with schizophrenia with comorbid type ii diabetes mellitus and alcoholism

Author:

Kostyuk G. Р.1ORCID,Cherepakhin D. I.1ORCID,Aronov P. V.2ORCID,Belskaya G. N.3ORCID,Nikiforov I. A.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Alekseev Psychiatric Clinical Hospital No. 1

2. Federal Scientific and Clinical Center for Specialized Types of Medical Care and Medical Technologies

3. Research Center of Neurology

Abstract

Comorbid conditions in general psychopathological practice need equally research in the field of psychiatry and narcology, as well as the development of issues of social practice in relation to mental patients. There is an opinion that comorbid mental pathologies are even more common than “pure” forms of diseases. In most cases of comorbid conditions, the medical community increasingly encounters clinical situations where “classic” symptoms and syndromes are deformed, mutually intertwined and, superimposed on the actual social situation of the patient, acquire an “unreal fancy character”.Schizophrenia remains one of the most urgent problems at the stage of modern psychiatry formation. Up to date there are 1.1% of men and 1.9% of women in the general population of patients. Schizophrenic spectrum disorders are often combined with a number of chronic pathologies that increase the negative impact on the neuro-cognitive sphere of a person. One of the main problems of modern urbanized society is type II diabetes and alcoholism. By increasing the negative impact on a person’s cognitive abilities, they accelerate the process of disintegration of personality and its social functioning. The intellectual level of patients with those chronic diseases that require patients to actively and consciously participate in the treatment process and social functioning can significantly affect the patient’s ability to learn, independently manage the disease, establish a high level of compliance and, as a result, the effectiveness of therapy. An attentive study of the issue of the state of intelligence of patients with comorbid pathology will lead to an improvement in the patient’s social adaptation, a more careful attitude to their somatic health and reduce the risk of disability of the able-bodied population.

Publisher

Remedium, Ltd.

Subject

General Medicine

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