Abstract

Background First episode psychosis (FEP) is the first episode of a psychiatric illness with psychotic symptoms. Delay in diagnosis increases the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) and leads to poorer outcome. Aims To explore the psychopathology of patients with FEP presenting to the National Hospital of Sri Lanka (NHSL). Methods This was an observational descriptive study. Patients admitted to ward-59, NHSL from March 2012 to November 2013 who met inclusion criteria were considered for the study. Data was collected retrospectively from bed head tickets using a structured questionnaire. Results The sample size was 101, of which 57 were male. A majority of the participants were in the 13-26 year age group. Delusions were the most common psychopathology noted in this sample, with persecutory themes being the most common content. Of the hallucinations, second person auditory hallucinations were the commonest type. Non-euthymic mood was seen in over two-thirds of participants, with depressed mood being the most common finding. Insight was poor in over half the participants. Schizophrenia was the most common diagnosis noted in this group of patients, followed by mania with psychotic features. Conclusions Persecutory delusions, second person auditory hallucinations, mood and speech abnormalities were prominent among participants of this study. A better understanding of psychopathology in FEP may help to reduce DUP.

Highlights

  • First episode psychosis (FEP) refers to the first episode of a psychiatric illness which presents with psychotic symptoms

  • All patients admitted to the University Psychiatry Unit, National Hospital of Sri Lanka for the first time from 01.03.2012 to 30.11.2013 were included provided they had delusions and hallucinations during the admission or carried a diagnosis of drug-induced psychosis (ICD category -F1x.5), schizophrenia (ICD cat: -F20), schizophreniform disorder (ICD cat: -F20.8), schizoaffective disorder (ICD cat: -F25), delusional disorder (ICD cat: -F22), acute and transient psychotic disorder (ICD cat: -F23), severe depressive episode with psychotic symptoms (ICD cat: -F32.3), bipolar affective disorder current episode severe depression with psychotic features (ICD cat: -F31.5), or bipolar affective disorder current episode mania with psychotic features (ICD cat: -F31.2)

  • This study describes psychopathology seen in a cohort of patients with first episode psychosis

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Summary

Methods

Data was collected retrospectively from bed head tickets using a structured questionnaire

Results
Introduction
Method
Discussion
Limitations
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