Shafiee-Kandjani, Ali Reza and Yahyavi -Mazraeh shadi, Mohammad and Arfaie, Asghar and Safikhanlou, Salman and Jafarzadeh-Gharaziaddin, Mohsen (2018) Personality profiles and clinical syndromes of patients withtonic-clonic seizures. Journal of Analytical Research in Clinical Medicine, 6 (1). pp. 13-21. ISSN 2345-4970
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Abstract
Introduction: Epilepsy is one of the chronic neurological disorders with an incidence rate of 3% in the normal population. Epilepsy may render behavioral changes so that affected people are prone to prolonged interpersonal difficulties. In order to evaluate co-morbidities and potential personality changes, the study was conducted among the patients with epilepsy in an Iranian population. Methods: The study was a cross-sectional one with a convenience sampling method. The data of 74 patients with epilepsy and 74 non-epileptic patients were collected by clinical interview and Millon clinical multiaxial inventory (MCMI-III) and were analyzed by SPSS software. Results: The average age was 31.70. The highest scores gained in epileptic patients were in narcissistic 14.04 (4.53%), obsessive 14.26 (4.30%), and negativistic domains 14.15 (5.24%), while histrionic 76.38 (28.54%) and obsessive 61.74 (24.03%) patterns were obtained in non-epilepticpeople. There were significant differences between the two groups in all areas except for the debasement index (Z score) and the negativistic personality disorder. There was a significant positive correlation between narcissistic and obsessive personality patterns and post-traumatic stress disorder with education, as well as between sex and drug dependency. Economic and marital status showed correlations with schizoid personality and sadistic personality, respectively. Conclusion: Patients with tonic-clonic seizures have although difficulties in personality (negativistic) and clinical syndrome areas but the results showed lower scores in subscales except for disclosure (X index) compared with non-epileptic individuals. They are more inclined to disclose the problems with worse mental health conditions than non-epileptic people.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | STM Academic > Medical Science |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email support@stmacademic.com |
Date Deposited: | 20 Jan 2023 05:08 |
Last Modified: | 02 Jan 2024 13:16 |
URI: | http://article.researchpromo.com/id/eprint/44 |