A. Riecherrossler et W. Rossler, THE COURSE OF SCHIZOPHRENIC PSYCHOSES - WHAT DO WE REALLY KNOW - A SELECTIVE REVIEW FROM AN EPIDEMIOLOGIC PERSPECTIVE, European archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience, 248(4), 1998, pp. 189-202
There is only a limited amount of definite knowledge on the course of
schizophrenic psychoses, although 100 years have passed since they wer
e first described by Kraepelin as ''Dementia praecox''. The main reaso
n for this is that most studies done thus far suffer from more or less
serious methodological shortcomings: samples were often highly select
ive; investigations were often not direct, not prospective and almost
never continuous, which would be of utmost importance in an episodic d
isease such as schizophrenia; assessments in older studies were neithe
r standardized nor tested for validity or reliability; in more recent
studies they were often not conducted by experienced psychiatrists; pa
tients who refused to participate or who died during the study period
were widely neglected. Nevertheless, we have learned that schizophreni
c psychoses do not have a steadily deteriorating course ending in ''de
mentia''. On the contrary, the course of these psychoses seems very he
terogeneous. Due to their methodological shortcomings, studies done th
us far even seem to have underestimated heterogeneity by partly neglec
ting patients with very good outcome, on the one hand, and very poor o
utcome, on the other hand.