The Fate of Obsessions in Depressive Psychosis
- 1 July 1966
- journal article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 112 (488) , 705-708
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.112.488.705
Abstract
Obsessions may appear for the first time during the course of a depression without having been present before the onset of the depression. Such cases (hereinafter called “Gainers”) have been noted by Esquirol (1827), Prichard (1835), Marc (1840), Schüle (1886), Gordon (1925), Saunders (1932), Lewis (1934), Woolley (1937), Muncie and White (1937), Lion (1942), Stengel (1948), Terhune (1949), Sargant and Slater (1950), Pollitt (1956), Reda and Paretti (1958), and Skoog (1959). The frequency of this phenomenon, however, remains uncertain. Heilbronner (1912) described 22 cases of melancholia with obsessions of whom 18 were “Gainers”. Vurpas and Corman (1933) described 27 cases of depression with obsessions (two organically based) of whom 24 were “Gainers”.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effect of Obsessions on Depressive PsychosisThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1966
- THE PHOBIC SYNDROMEArchives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1949
- Some Clinical Observations On the Psychodynamic Relationship Between Depression and Obsessive-Compulsive SymptomsJournal of Mental Science, 1948
- A Study on Some Clinical Aspects of the Relationship between Obsessional Neurosis and Psychotic Reaction TypesJournal of Mental Science, 1945
- ANANCASTIC DEPRESSIONSJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1942
- Studies in obsessive ruminative tension statesPsychiatric Quarterly, 1937
- THE MOOD—CONTENT PROBLEM AND THYMONOIC REACTIONSArchives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1937
- Melancholia: Prognostic Study and Case-MaterialJournal of Mental Science, 1936
- Melancholia: a Clinical Survey of Depressive StatesJournal of Mental Science, 1934
- Zwangsvorstellung und PsychoseZeitschrift für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie, 1912