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Cognitive processes in delusional disorders

C Fear1, H Sharp, D Healy

  • 1Kidderminster General Hospital, Worcestershire.

The British Journal of Psychiatry : the Journal of Mental Science
|January 1, 1996
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Delusional disorder (DD) patients are not covertly depressed, challenging previous assumptions. Instead, they exhibit heightened sensitivity to threat, dysfunctional attitudes, and distinct attention and attribution biases, suggesting DD is a unique condition.

Area of Science:

  • Psychiatry
  • Cognitive Psychology

Background:

  • Previous research linked persecutory delusions in schizophrenia to cognitive biases and suggested delusions may defend against depression.
  • This study investigates whether patients with delusional disorder (DD) are covertly depressed, challenging existing assumptions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine cognitive and emotional characteristics of delusional disorder (DD) patients.
  • To differentiate DD from schizophrenia and assess the role of depression and cognitive biases.

Main Methods:

  • Collected clinical, demographic, schizotypy, depression, dysfunctional attitudes, and attributional/attention bias data from 29 DD patients.
  • Compared DD patient data with 20 matched normal controls and published schizophrenic data.

Main Results:

Related Experiment Videos

  • Delusional disorder (DD) patients did not exhibit abnormal levels of overt or covert depression or schizotypy.
  • DD subjects showed significantly higher levels of dysfunctional attitudes (P < 0.0001).
  • Distinctive attributional styles (P = 0.01) and increased attention to threat-related stimuli (P = 0.01) were observed in DD patients.

Conclusions:

  • Delusional disorder (DD) is a distinct psychiatric condition characterized by threat sensitivity and specific attention and attribution biases.
  • Findings suggest potential implications for cognitive therapy approaches in treating delusional disorder.