Introduction to the Iowa 500. Historical perspective. Background findings in course and follow-up of the affective disorders and schizophrenia. The family background in the major functional psychoses. The Iowa 500 genesis. Real people: histories and verbatim interviews. The follow-up of untreated patients: the course of the illness unaffected by effective therapy. Families: familial psychiatric illnesses obtained by systematically obtained family histories. Special aspects: life events, early parental loss, premorbid asociality, clinical characteristics, outcome after short follow-up, heterogeneity in bipolar illness, subtyping schizophrenia, delusional disorder, affective symptoms in schizophrenia, sporadic depressive disease. The gospel according to field work: methodology of follow-up and epidemiological findings. What the future held: 30-40 year course and outcome in patients according to final diagnosis. Familial psychiatric illness in schizophrenia and the affective disorders: psychiatric illness in relatives obtained by personal examination. Early clinical and family history findings in light of the final Feighner diagnosis: admission clinical picture and family history relevant to follow-up diagnosis. Zero-symptom schizophrenia: symptoms present in schizophrenic patients after a 30-40 year follow-up. Diagnosis and classification of the affective disorders and chronic nonaffective psychoses: the contribution of the Iowa 500 to diagnosis and classification. References. Appendix I: The Iowa 500-bibliography. Appendix II: Code book-index admission and chart follow-up for the Iowa 500 Study. Index.
George Winokur, M.D., is the Paul W. Penningroth Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Iowa College of Medicine in Iowa City, Iowa.
Ming T. Tsuang, M.D., Ph.D., is The Stanley Cobb Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
"This is a landmark book. It summarizes a tremendous amount of data
from the systematic, long-term follow-up of the Iowa 500 samples.
George Winokur and Ming Tsuang began working on this study
approximately 25 years ago, and it is a monument to their
unflagging commitment, excellent judgment, and high standards
concerning psychiatric investigation. The data are invaluable, but
their discussion and critique are equally important. I can't
imagine any psychiatrist who would not want to read this book or
who would not gain greatly from doing so. I fully expect the book
to win wide respect and even a prize or two."-- "Samuel B. Guze,
M.D., Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of
Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri"
"This volume describes a landmark study conducted on the life
course of severe mental disorders. Aspects of the Iowa 500 study
have been described in dozens of peer-reviewed papers, however, the
essence of this very important and pioneering study are now
included in one integrated and comprehensive volume. As such, it is
a remarkable book, providing many unique and valuable insights into
the life course and outcome of severe mental diseases. Equally
important, Drs. Winokur and Tsuang should be warmly congratulated,
since the book is clearly and concisely written and very readable.
I recommend "The Natural History of Mania, Depression and
Schizophrenia" highly to all students, clinicians, and researchers
who are interested in severe psychiatric disorders."-- "Lewis Judd,
M.D., Mary Gilman Marston Professor, Chair, Department of
Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, Former Director,
National Institute of Mental Health"
"Using the power of the classical clinical approach and based on
the landmark Iowa 500 study, Drs. Winokur and Tsuang--two of our
leading naturalists--paint the definitive longitudinal portraits of
the major psychiatric disorders. It is an historic achievement."--
"Hagop S. Akiskal, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry and Director of
the International Mood Clinic, University of California at San
Diego"
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