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Dive into the research topics where Jean Adès is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean Adès.


European Psychiatry | 2000

Epidemiology of behavioral dependence: literature review and results of original studies

Michel Lejoyeux; M. Mc Loughlin; Jean Adès

The extension of the definition of dependence leads to the consideration of some impulsive disorders as a form of dependence disorder. This pathological condition is characterized by the repetitive occurrence of impulsive and uncontrolled behaviors. Other clinical characteristics are failure to resist an impulse, drive or temptation to perform some act harmful to oneself and/or others, an increasing sense of tension or excitement before acting out, and a sense of pleasure, gratification or release at the time of the behavior or shortly thereafter. Behavioral dependences most often described are pathological gambling, kleptomania, trichotillomania and compulsive buying. Studies using a specific assessment scale, the South Oaks Gambling Screen, distinguished problem gambling from pathological gambling. Social gamblers spend 5% of their money and pathological gamblers 14 to 45%. Prevalence of problem gambling is 4% and pathological gambling 2%. Several studies have suggested that the incidence of pathological gambling is eight to ten times greater in alcohol-dependent patients than in the general population. No systematic study has assessed the prevalence of kleptomania. Data come from case reports. Among subjects arrested after a theft, prevalence of kleptomania varied between 0 and 24%. Trichotillomania prevalence rate is 0.6% among students. Studies using less restrictive diagnostic criteria found a prevalence rate of 3.4% in women and 1.5% in men. The disorder is often unrecognized; 40% of the cases are not diagnosed and 58% of the patients have never been treated. Prevalence studies of compulsive buying found a rate between 1 and 6% in the general population. Compulsive buying is significantly more frequent among women (90% of the cases). Study of family history of compulsive buyers showed a high frequency of alcohol-dependence disorder (20%) and depression (18%). In all cases of behavioral dependence disorders, a high level of impulsivity and sensation-seeking could determine an increased risk.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1998

Impulse-control disorders in alcoholics are related to sensation seeking and not to impulsivity

Michel Lejoyeux; Nathalie Feuché; Sabrina Loi; Jacquelyn Solomon; Jean Adès

Impulse-control disorders (ICD) include intermittent explosive disorder, kleptomania, trichotillomania, pyromania and pathological gambling. Several studies have suggested that the incidence of pathological gambling and impulsive violent behavior is substantially higher in alcohol-dependent patients than in the general population. The association between ICD and alcoholism, as well as personality characteristics such as sensation seeking and impulsivity, has never been systematically studied. The present study compared the levels of impulsivity and sensation seeking in age- and sex-matched groups of alcohol-dependent patients with concomitant ICD (ICD+, n = 30), alcohol-dependent patients without ICD (ICD-; n = 30) and control subjects (n = 30). All the alcohol-dependent patients (ICD+ and ICD-) were hospitalized for alcohol detoxification. Diagnoses of ICD were based on DSM-IV criteria and the Minnesota Impulsive Disorders Interview. All patients completed the Zuckerman Sensation-Seeking Scale (SSS) and the Barratt Impulsiveness Rating Scale (BIS). Mean scores on the SSS general factor, the SSS disinhibition subscale, and the SSS experience-seeking scale were significantly higher in ICD+ patients than in either ICD- patients or control subjects. By contrast, total scores and subscale scores on the BIS showed no significant differences among the three groups. Thus, it appears that measures of sensation seeking, rather than impulsivity, are relevant in distinguishing between alcohol-dependent patients with and without concomitant impulse control disorders.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 1999

Comparison of buying behavior in depressed patients presenting with or without compulsive buying

Michel Lejoyeux; Nathalie Haberman; Jacquelyn Solomon; Jean Adès

Compulsive buying is defined as repetitive impulsive and excessive buying leading to personal and familial distress. This study compares the buying behavior of depressed patients presenting with or without compulsive buying. The weight of promotional factors such as sales and advertising campaigns was systematically assessed. The impulsive nature of compulsive buying and the choice of items purchased were also investigated. For this purpose, we studied buying behavior among 52 inpatients diagnosed for major depressive episode with DSM-IV criteria. None of the patients presented mania or hypomania, obsessive-compulsive disorder, or alcohol or drug abuse or dependence disorder. We assessed the prevalence of compulsive buying and compared the buying style among patients with (CB+) and without (CB-) compulsive buying. The diagnosis of depression was assessed with the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI). The diagnosis of compulsive buying was made using standardized criteria and a specific rating scale. All patients answered a specific questionnaire assessing the phenomenology of the buying behavior. Twenty-one of 52 depressives presented with compulsive buying. The CB+ group was not more sensitive to promotional factors. They did not seek sales or use loans significantly more than others. Upon entering a shop, the CB+ subjects did not change their choice more often than others. CB+ subjects were significantly more often alone while shopping (85% of cases v61% of CB- group, p = .05). Most purchases from the CB+ group were self-gifts or gifts to others (50.4% v 23.5%, p = .003); 14.4% of purchases in the CB+ group (v 2.2% in CB- group, P = .045) were made because the patients believed their social status requires acquisition. Items to be bought were more often considered by CB+ subjects as occasions not to be missed (31.4% v15.1%, P = .03). Purchases were significantly (57% v 16%) less often used than expected by the CB+ group (P = .002). Most purchases, in addition, represented gifts for oneself or others and were used significantly less often than expected.


CNS Drugs | 1996

Antidepressant Withdrawal Syndrome

Michel Lejoyeux; Jean Adès; Sabelle Mourad; Jacquelyn Solomon; Steven C. Dilsaver

SummaryWithdrawal from tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) and selective serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) can produce somatic and psychological distress. Influenza-like syndromes, gastrointestinal adverse effects, arrhythmias, anxiety, sleep disturbances, movement disorders, mania or hypomania, panic attacks and delirium may follow antidepressant withdrawal. At present, the aetiology of withdrawal symptoms is not fully known.Withdrawal phenomena are usually prevented by gradually reducing the total daily dosage of the drug in question rather than abruptly discontinuing it. Antimuscarinic agents can be prescribed in order to alleviate the symptoms produced by the withdrawal of TCAs and MAOIs. To date, no drugs have been shown to be useful in the treatment of SSRI-associated withdrawal symptoms. The withdrawal syndrome associated with MAOIs may constitute a medical emergency.


CNS Drugs | 1994

Serotonin Syndrome: Incidence, Symptoms and Treatment

Michel Lejoyeux; Jean Adès; Frédéric Rouillon

SummaryIn animals, the occurrence of a behavioural syndrome consisting of hyperactivity, stereotyped movements and increased body temperature can be induced by monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), the serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) precursor, tryptophan, and serotonin reuptake inhibitors, alone or in combination. Most of these manifestations can be specifically blocked by pretreatment with an inhibitor of serotonin synthesis.The associated symptoms of myoclonus, diarrhoea, confusion, hypomania, agitation, hyperreflexia, shivering, incoordination, fever and diaphoresis can occur in patients treated with serotonergic agents. This constitutes the ‘serotonin syndrome’. Cases of the serotonin syndrome were reported after treatments with tryptophan, MAOIs, serotonin reuptake inhibitors and tricyclic antidepressants, alone or in combination. In some cases, the serotonin syndrome corresponds to a toxic reaction induced by a combination of serotonergic agents at high dosages. In other cases, a toxic and potentially fatal interaction can occur between MAOIs, tricyclic agents and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) given at therapeutic dosages.The serotonin syndrome also provides a heuristic model of the putative mode of action of antidepressants. Serotonin-related symptoms are the physical and objective expression of an antidepressant-induced increase in serotonin neurotransmission.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 2000

Alcohol Dependence Among Patients Admitted to Psychiatric Emergency Services

Michel Lejoyeux; Sophie Boulenguiez; Anika Fichelle; Mary McLoughlin; Micheline Claudon; Jean Adès

We assessed the prevalence of alcohol dependence among patients examined in the psychiatric emergency service of a general hospital. We compared socio-demographic data and psychiatric status of patients with and without alcohol dependence. One-hundred and four consecutive patients received by the psychiatric emergency service of Bichat-Claude Bernard Hospital (Paris, France) were assessed. Diagnosis of alcohol dependence, acute alcohol intoxication, and antisocial personality was determined according to DSM-IV criteria. Other psychiatric disorders were identified using a structured psychiatric interview, the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI). Prevalency rate of alcohol dependence was 37.5% among patients examined by the psychiatric emergency service. Alcohol-dependent patients were more often men than women and more often unemployed than non-alcohol-dependent psychiatric emergencies. They presented more dysthymia, acute alcohol intoxication, and antisocial personality than non-alcoholic patients followed by the psychiatric emergency service. Attempted suicide was as frequent in alcohol-dependent patients (23%) as in other patients (29%). Alcohol-dependent patients consumed alcohol more often when alone, and their alcohol consumption began more frequently in the morning. Patients seen in a psychiatric emergency service must be identified as a population at risk for alcohol dependence (37.5%). Alcohol-dependent patients are more often men and have a higher rate of unemployment. They present significantly more often dysthymia and acute alcohol intoxication associated to alcohol dependence.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1996

Modifications of erythrocyte membrane fluidity from patients with anorexia nervosa before and after refeeding

Michel Lejoyeux; Manuel Bouvard; Jacques Viret; Denis Daveloose; Jean Adès; Michel Dugas

Erythrocyte membrane characteristics were compared in 15 normal women and 15 women with anorexia nervosa; the patients were studied at hospital admission and again after 1 month of refeeding. At admission, physical properties of erythrocyte membranes, studied with electron spin resonance spectrometry, significantly differed between the anorexic patients and the normal volunteers. Fluidity from the hydrophobic part of the erythrocyte membrane, estimated by the correlation frequency, was decreased in the patients. After 1 month of refeeding, fluidity increased. One of the possible mechanisms of the variation of membrane fluidity could be the effect of cholesterol on membrane structure. Increased cholesterol levels in anorexic subjects could reduce fluidity. These alterations in membrane fluidity could explain some of the neurobiological abnormalities observed in anorexia nervosa.


European Psychiatry | 2002

Screening for domestic violence among patients admitted to a French emergency service.

Michel Lejoyeux; Patrick Zillhardt; François Chièze; Anika Fichelle; Mary Mc Loughlin; Astrid Poujade; Jean Adès

OBJECTIVEnThe authors assessed the prevalence of domestic violence among patients examined in the emergency service of a general hospital. They compared the socio-demographic status and psychiatric comorbidity of victims of domestic violence and other patients.nnnMETHODnAn assessment was made on 126 consecutive patients received by the emergency service of Bichat-Claude Bernard hospital (Paris, France). Assessment of domestic violence was made through the use of a specific questionnaire.nnnRESULTSnThe prevalence rate of domestic violence was 18% among patients examined by the emergency service. Thirty-five percent of the cases were physical violence, 22% sexual violence, 17% psychological violence and 26% multiple forms of domestic violence. Domestic violence had been going on for less than 1 month in only one case. In 74% of the cases, violence lasted for more than 1 year. No differences were found in terms of socio-demographic characteristics (age, marital status, rate of unemployment, sex ratio) and psychiatric comorbidity between victims of domestic violence and others.nnnCONCLUSIONnPatients seen in an emergency service must be identified as a population at risk for domestic violence (18%). These situations can be identified only by a systematic assessment using a standardized questionnaire.


European Addiction Research | 2001

Comparison of Alcohol-Dependent Patients with and without Physiological Dependence

Michel Lejoyeux; Micheline Claudon; Mary McLoughlin; Jean Adès

Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of alcohol-dependent patients with or without physiological dependence (e.g. tolerance to alcohol or withdrawal) were compared. 186 consecutive alcohol-dependent patients hospitalized for alcohol detoxification were assessed. Diagnosis of alcohol dependence, tolerance and withdrawal was determined according to DSM-IV criteria. Assessment also included modalities of alcohol consumption and the Michigan Alcohol Screening Test (MAST). All patients presented alcohol dependence, 124 presented tolerance, 116 alcohol withdrawal and 146 (78.5%) tolerance and/or withdrawal. Patients with physiological dependence were older (51.4 vs. 46.9 years), drank more alcohol each day (20.3 vs. 11.3 drinks/day) and began alcohol consumption more often in the morning (67 vs. 37.5%). MAST scores were significantly higher in patients with physiological dependence (28.8 vs. 24.5), as was the mean corpuscular volume of erythrocytes (108 vs. 83 fl). No difference was found in terms of age, marital status, rate of unemployment, level of education and psychiatric comorbidity between the patients with and without physiological dependence.


The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 1997

Study of Compulsive Buying in Depressed Patients

Michel Lejoyeux; Tassain; Jacquelyn Solomon; Jean Adès

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Nel Draijer

VU University Medical Center

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