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Association between grandiose delusions in first-episode psychosis and diagnostic evolution to bipolar disorder: a two-year follow-up study

First-Episode Psychosis (FEP) is the onset of psychotic symptoms such as delusions, hallucinations, negative symptoms, or behavioural and cognitive disturbances. FEP has a significant personal, functional, and social impact and may progress to DSM-5 diagnoses including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or other psychotic and affective disorders. Predicting its evolution at onset is challenging due to clinical heterogeneity, requiring longitudinal follow-up to determine an accurate diagnostic trajectory. Early identification of FEP evolution enables timely diagnosis and early appropriate treatment, improving functional prognosis and reducing risks such as higher suicide or reduced quality of life. Grandiose delusions are particularly relevant initial symptoms, present in both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, but their prognostic value and content remain understudied. This study examines FEP patients with grandiose delusions, categorizes them into subtypes (inflated ego, fame, religiosity, attraction) using the B-MGI scale, and explores associations with diagnostic evolution toward bipolar disorder

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Director: Serrano Sarbosa, Domènec
Castells Cervelló, Xavier
Altres contribucions: Universitat de Girona. Facultat de Medicina
Autor: Sánchez Prieto, Ana
Data: novembre 2025
Resum: First-Episode Psychosis (FEP) is the onset of psychotic symptoms such as delusions, hallucinations, negative symptoms, or behavioural and cognitive disturbances. FEP has a significant personal, functional, and social impact and may progress to DSM-5 diagnoses including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or other psychotic and affective disorders. Predicting its evolution at onset is challenging due to clinical heterogeneity, requiring longitudinal follow-up to determine an accurate diagnostic trajectory. Early identification of FEP evolution enables timely diagnosis and early appropriate treatment, improving functional prognosis and reducing risks such as higher suicide or reduced quality of life. Grandiose delusions are particularly relevant initial symptoms, present in both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, but their prognostic value and content remain understudied. This study examines FEP patients with grandiose delusions, categorizes them into subtypes (inflated ego, fame, religiosity, attraction) using the B-MGI scale, and explores associations with diagnostic evolution toward bipolar disorder
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Format: application/pdf
Accés al document: http://hdl.handle.net/10256/28627
Llenguatge: eng
Drets: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
URI Drets: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Matèria: Psicosi
Psychoses
Deliri
Delirium
Esquizofrènia -- Diagnòstic
Schizophrenia -- Diagnosis
Trastorn bipolar
Bipolar disorder
Psicopatologia -- Diagnòstic
Psychology, Pathological -- Diagnosis
Delusions
Psicodiagnòstic
Psychodiagnostics
Títol: Association between grandiose delusions in first-episode psychosis and diagnostic evolution to bipolar disorder: a two-year follow-up study
Tipus: info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis
Repositori: DUGiDocs

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