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Acute and Transient Psychotic Disorder (ATPD) is a group of rare psychotic disorders characterized by acute onset, symptom fluctuation and short duration typically followed by complete recovery. Throughout the time, there have been different attempts to classify these disorders (Bouffée Délirante, Cycloid Psychosis, etc.); nevertheless, in the current date, ATPD encompasses a broad spectrum of heterogenous clinical presentations with low diagnostic stability over time.
Objectives
To describe a case of ATPD, highlighting the variability of its’ psychopathological phenomena and establishing a comparison with historical descriptions of this nosological entity.
Methods
Clinical case report and brief review of literature.
Results
V, 20-year old male without psychiatric history, presents in the emergency room exhibiting fluctuant psychopathology over the preceding two weeks – initially with depressive mood, anhedonia, apathy, bizarre behaviors and soliloquies; afterwards, showing paranoid delusional ideation; total insomnia in the previous 2-3 days; finally, showing grandiose delusional ideation; and throughout the episode, revealing pseudohallucinatory verbal activity assuming multiple identities. Several stress factors were identified in close time-relation with the onset of these symptoms. V. started risperidone 2mg 2id and quetiapine 100mg id and was discharged 2 weeks later, fully recovering from these psychopathological phenomena. V. remains asymptomatic at 6 months of follow-up.
Conclusions
Historically, some classifications of this disorder focus on etiological factors, others on clinical evolution and course, and yet another group on separation from the Kraepelinian duality (schizophrenia and bipolar disorder). ATPD is a diagnosis with high clinical heterogeneity and low stability over time, which can have implications in follow-up and long-term outcome.
Pervez Ghauri, University of Birmingham,Kjell Grønhaug, Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration, Bergen-Sandviken,Roger Strange, University of Sussex
In business studies most researchers need to collect some primary data to answer their research question. This entails deciding what kind of data collection method to use, which depends upon an overall judgement on which type of data is needed for a particular research problem. One important aspect is to identify the scope of the study and unit of analysis and what type of analysis is needed. After looking briefly at the chief differences between quantitative and qualitative approaches, the chapter looks at different qualitative methods and when to use them.
Pervez Ghauri, University of Birmingham,Kjell Grønhaug, Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration, Bergen-Sandviken,Roger Strange, University of Sussex
In business studies most researchers need to collect some primary data to answer their research question. This entails deciding what kind of data collection method to use, which depends upon an overall judgement on which type of data is needed for a particular research problem. One important aspect is to identify the scope of the study and unit of analysis and what type of analysis is needed. After looking briefly at the chief differences between quantitative and qualitative approaches, the chapter looks at different qualitative methods and when to use them.
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