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Dive into the research topics where Anthony J. Pelosi is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony J. Pelosi.


BMJ | 1990

Tired, weak, or in need of rest: fatigue among general practice attenders.

Anthony S. David; Anthony J. Pelosi; E McDonald; D Stephens; D Ledger; R Rathbone; Anthony Mann

OBJECTIVES--To determine the prevalence and associations of symptoms of fatigue. DESIGN--Questionnaire survey. SETTING--London general practice. PARTICIPANTS--611 General practice attenders. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Scores on a fatigue questionnaire and reasons given for fatigue. RESULTS--10.2% Of men (17/167) and 10.6% of women (47/444) had substantial fatigue for one month or more. Age, occupation, and marital status exerted minor effects. Subjects attributed fatigue equally to physical and non-physical causes. Physical ill health, including viral infection, was associated with more severe fatigue. Women rather than men blamed family responsibilities for their fatigue. The profile of persistent fatigue did not differ from that of short duration. Only one person met criteria for the chronic fatigue syndrome. CONCLUSIONS--Fatigue is a common complaint among general practice attenders and can be severe. Patients may attribute this to physical, psychological, and social stress.


Psychiatric Genetics | 2001

Identification of polymorphisms within Disrupted in Schizophrenia 1 and Disrupted in Schizophrenia 2, and an investigation of their association with schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder

Rebecca S. Devon; Susan Anderson; Peter Teague; Paul Burgess; Tiina Kipari; Colin A. Semple; J. K. Millar; Walter J. Muir; Valerie Murray; Anthony J. Pelosi; Douglas Blackwood; David J. Porteous

We have undertaken a search for polymorphic sequence variation within Disrupted in Schizophrenia 1 and Disrupted in Schizophrenia 2 (DISC1 and DISC2), which are both novel genes that span a translocation breakpoint strongly associated with schizophrenia and related psychoses in a large Scottish family. A scan of the coding sequence, intron/exon boundaries, and part of the 5′ and 3′ untranslated regions of DISC1, plus 2.7 kb at the 3′ end of DISC2, has revealed a novel microsatellite and 15 novel single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). We have tracked the inheritance of four of the SNPs through multiply affected families, and carried out case–control association studies using the microsatellite and four common SNPs on populations of patients with schizophrenia or bipolar affective disorder versus normal control subjects. Neither co‐segregation with disease status nor significant association was detected; however, we could not detect linkage disequilibrium between all these markers in the control population, arguing that an even greater density of informative markers is required to test rigorously for association in this genomic region.


Neurology | 2010

Early outcomes and predictors in 260 patients with psychogenic nonepileptic attacks

P. McKenzie; M. Oto; Aline Russell; Anthony J. Pelosi; Rod Duncan

Objective: To determine short-term outcome and its predictors in patients with psychogenic nonepileptic attacks (PNEA). Methods: Retrospective cohort study of outcomes relating to attendance at follow-up, spells, use of emergency services, employment, and social security payments recorded at 6 and 12 months post diagnosis in 260 consecutive patients. Results: A total of 187 patients (71.9%) attended at least 1 follow-up visit, and 105 patients (40.4%) attended 2. A total of 71/187 patients (38.0%) were spell-free at last follow-up. In contrast, 35/187 patients (18.7%) had marked increase in spell frequency postdiagnosis. Delay to diagnosis had no relationship to outcome. Patients with anxiety or depression were 2.32 times less likely to become spell-free (p = 0.012), and patients drawing social security payments at baseline were 2.34 times less likely to become spell-free (p = 0.014), than patients without those factors. Men were 2.46 times more likely to become spell-free than women (p = 0.016). While 93/187 patients (49.7%) were using emergency medical services at baseline, only 29/187 (15.5%) were using them at follow-up (p < 0.001). This was independent of whether or not the patient became spell-free. Conclusion: A substantial minority of our patients became spell-free with communication of the diagnosis the only intervention. Previous psychiatric diagnoses, social security payments, and gender were important predictors of outcome. Most patients stopped using emergency services, irrespective of whether or not spells continued. Outcomes other than spell frequency may be important in patients with psychogenic nonepileptic attacks.


European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry | 2006

Children in foster care : Mental health, service use and costs

Helen Minnis; Kimberley Everett; Anthony J. Pelosi; Judy Dunn; Martin Knapp

ObjectiveTo assess the prevalence of mental health problems in children in foster care, their families’ use of services and the associated costs.MethodsInformation on mental health problems, service use and costs was collected, by postal questionnaires and home interviews, on 182 children, their foster carers and teachers from 17 local authorities in Central Scotland.ResultsOver 90% of the children had previously been abused or neglected and 60 % had evidence of mental health problems including conduct problems, emotional problems, hyperactivity and problems with peer relations. When compared with 251 children from local schools, the children in foster care had significantly higher symptom scores for Reactive Attachment Disorder. Those children with highest scores for mental health problems were attracting a high level of service support from a wide range of agencies, except Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS). Costs were associated with learning disability, mental health problems, and a history of residential care.ConclusionsChildren in “mainstream” foster care are at greater risk of mental health problems, and are attracting greatest costs, but CAMHS are not successfully targeting these problems. CAMHS may need to develop new models of service delivery.


BMJ | 1988

POSTVIRAL FATIGUE SYNDROME - TIME FOR A NEW APPROACH

Anthony S. David; Simon Wessely; Anthony J. Pelosi

Controversial views on the postviral fatigue syndrome (“myalgic encephalomyelitis”) were critically appraised in their historical context and recent advances in research (virology, immunology, neurophysiology, histopathology, and epidemiology) reviewed. Flaws detected in certain aspects of recent research included in particular failure to define fatigue, inadequate assessment of psychological features, and absent or inappropriate control groups. The findings suggest that the fruitless dichotomy of “organic versus functional” should be replaced by a multifactorial approach. Most important, epidemiological studies with explicit operational case definition are essential before progress can be made in the management of this distressing disorder.


The Lancet | 1994

Predictors of chronic "postviral" fatigue

Helen Cope; Anthony Mann; Anthony S. David; Anthony J. Pelosi

We set out to determine the relation between a general practitioner (GP) diagnosis of viral illness and development of chronic fatigue 6 months later. 618 subjects who attended GPs clinics in London, south, and southwest England and who received a diagnosis of viral illness were followed prospectively and fatigue was assessed by questionnaire after 6 months. At presentation, GPs recorded fatigue in 62.6% of subjects, usually since the onset of symptoms. 502 (81.2%) subjects completed the 6-month questionnaire, of whom 88 (17.5%) met criteria for chronic fatigue and 65 (12.9%) had no reported fatigue before the viral illness. Compared with a similar group of non-postviral GP attenders, the risk ratio for chronic fatigue in the present cohort was 1.45 (95% CI 1.14-2.04). Infective symptoms did not predict fatigue 6 months later. Psychiatric morbidity, belief in vulnerability to viruses, and attributional style at initial presentation were all associated with self-designated postviral fatigue. Logistic regression showed that somatic attributional style, less definite diagnosis by the GP, and sick certification were the only significant predictors of chronic fatigue after viral infection when other factors were controlled for. Chronic severe fatigue 6 months after GP-diagnosed viral illness is related to symptom-attributional style and doctor behaviour, rather than to features of the viral illness. Some subjects with apparent postviral fatigue had complained of tiredness before their presentation with a viral illness.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2009

An exploratory study of the association between reactive attachment disorder and attachment narratives in early school-age children.

Helen Minnis; Jonathan Green; Thomas G. O'Connor; Ashley Liew; Danya Glaser; E. Taylor; Michael Follan; Darwin Young; James Barnes; Christopher Gillberg; Anthony J. Pelosi; J. Arthur; A. Burston; Brenda Connolly; F. A. Sadiq

OBJECTIVE To explore attachment narratives in children diagnosed with reactive attachment disorder (RAD). METHOD We compared attachment narratives, as measured by the Manchester Child Attachment Story Task, in a group of 33 children with a diagnosis of RAD and 37 comparison children. RESULTS The relative risk (RR) for children with RAD having an insecure attachment pattern was 2.4 (1.4-4.2) but 30% were rated as securely attached. Within the RAD group, children with a clear history of maltreatment were more likely to be Insecure-Disorganised than children without a clear history of maltreatment. CONCLUSIONS Reactive attachment disorder is not the same as attachment insecurity, and questions remain about how attachment research informs clinical research on attachment disorders.


Neurology | 2006

Late onset psychogenic nonepileptic attacks

Roderick Duncan; M. Oto; Emma Martin; Anthony J. Pelosi

Objective: To investigate differences between groups of patients with early vs late onset psychogenic nonepileptic attacks (PNEA). Methods: The authors compared patients with onset of PNEA after age 55 years (n = 26) to patients whose onset of PNEA was before age 55 years (n = 241). The authors examined sociodemographic variables, factors potentially predisposing to PNEA, clinical semiology, and medical and psychiatric background. Results: Patients with late onset PNEA were more likely to be male (p = 0.029) (p values are quoted uncorrected for multiple comparisons). They were less likely to report antecedent sexual abuse (p = 0.008), and more likely to have severe physical health problems (p < 0.001) and to report health-related traumatic experiences (p < 0.0001). There were no clear differences in PNEA clinical semiology. There was a trend to better baseline mental health in the late onset group. Conclusions: The data suggest a distinct subgroup of patients with late onset psychogenic nonepileptic attacks, in whom psychological trauma related to poor physical health plays a prominent role.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2001

The genomic organisation of the metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 5 gene, and its association with schizophrenia

Rebecca S. Devon; Susan Anderson; Peter Teague; Walter J. Muir; Valerie Murray; Anthony J. Pelosi; Douglas Blackwood; David J. Porteous

The G-protein coupled metabotropic glutamate receptors (GRMs/mGluRs) have been implicated in the aetiology of schizophrenia as they modulate the NMDA response and that of other neurotransmitters including dopamine and GABA.1–3 Electrophysiological studies in GRM subtype 5 knockout mice reveal, in one study, a sensorimotor gating deficit characteristic of schizophrenia4 and in another, a key rôle for this gene in the modulation of hippocampal NMDA-dependent synaptic plasticity.5 In humans, GRM5 levels are increased in certain pyramidal cell neurons in schizophrenics vscontrols.6 Finally, GRM5 has been mapped to 11q14, neighbouring a translocation that segregates with schizophrenia and related psychoses in a large Scottish family, F23 (MLOD score 6.0).7,8 We determined the intron/exon structure of GRM5 and identified a novel intragenic microsatellite. A case-control association study identified a significant difference in allele frequency distribution between schizophrenics and controls (P = 0.04). This is suggestive of involvement of the GRM5 gene in schizophrenia in this population.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2011

Disability, distress and unemployment in neurology outpatients with symptoms ‘unexplained by organic disease’

Alan Carson; Jon Stone; Carina Hibberd; Gordon Murray; Roderick Duncan; Richard J Coleman; Charles Warlow; Richard Roberts; Anthony J. Pelosi; Jonathan Cavanagh; Keith Matthews; R Goldbeck; Christian Holm Hansen; Michael Sharpe

Objectives To determine the disability, distress and employment status of new neurology outpatients with physical symptoms unexplained by organic disease and to compare them with patients with symptoms explained by organic disease. Methods As part of a cohort study (the Scottish Neurological Symptoms Study) neurologists rated the extent to which each new patients symptoms were explained by organic disease. Patients whose symptoms were rated as ‘not at all’ or only ‘somewhat’ explained by disease were considered cases, and those whose symptoms were ‘largely’ or ‘completely’ explained by disease were considered controls. All patients completed self-ratings of disability, health status (Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 12-Item Scale (SF-12)) and emotional distress (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) and also reported their employment and state financial benefit status. Results 3781 patients were recruited: 1144 (30%) cases and 2637 (70%) controls. Cases had worse physical health status (SF-12 score 42 vs 44; difference in means 1.7 (95% CI –2.5 to 0.9)) and worse mental health status (SF-12 score 43 vs 47; difference in means –3.5 (95% CI –4.3 to to 2.7)). Unemployment was similar in cases and controls (50% vs 50%) but cases were more likely not to be working for health reasons (54% vs 37% of the 50% not working; OR 2.0 (95% CI 1.6 to 2.4)) and also more likely to be receiving disability-related state financial benefits (27% vs 22%; (OR 1.3, 95% CI 1.1 to 1.6)). Conclusions New neurology patients with symptoms unexplained by organic disease have more disability-, distress- and disability-related state financial benefits than patients with symptoms explained by disease.

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Alan Carson

University of Edinburgh

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R Goldbeck

Aberdeen Royal Infirmary

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