Puerperal psychoses: a clinical case study with follow-up

Journal of affective disorders, 26(1), 25-30

DOI 10.1016/0165-0327(92)90031-z PMID 1430665 Source

Abstract

Thirty cases of post-partum psychotic disorders occurred between 1973 and 1987 and hospitalized at the Psychiatric Ward of Florence University were studied and followed up. A structured diagnostic interview was used, which explored DSM Ill-R diagnosis both for mood disorders and for psychotic features. The psychotic symptoms had started within 8 weeks of parturition in all cases. Only 36.7% of the patients showed no subsequent pathology after the puerperal symptoms. The diagnoses, both at the index episode and at the follow-up, revealed a great predominance of mood disorders and the absence of schizophrenia. The follow-up survey showed a greater proportion of bipolar disorders than it appeared at the puerperal onset of the disease. A high frequency of puerperal psychotic relapses has also occurred after subsequent deliveries during the follow-up period.

Topics

postpartum psychosis clinical outcomes, puerperal psychotic disorders follow-up, postpartum bipolar disorder relapse, psychosis after childbirth recurrence, mood disorders after delivery, postpartum mental health long-term, postnatal psychosis diagnosis, puerperal psychiatric complications, postpartum psychotic episode prognosis, bipolar disorder pregnancy recurrence

Cite this article

Benvenuti, P., Cabras, P. L., Servi, P., Rosseti, S., Marchetti, G. M., & Pazzagli, A. (1992). Puerperal psychoses: a clinical case study with follow-up. *Journal of affective disorders*, *26*(1), 25-30. https://doi.org/10.1016/0165-0327(92)90031-z

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