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  Vol. 213 No. 7, August 17, 1970 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Manic-Depressive Illness

by George Winokur, Paula Clayton, and Theodore Reich, 186 pp, illus, paper $6.50, St. Louis: C. V. Mosby Co., 1969.

Ronald R. Fieve, MD, Reviewer
New York State Psychiatric Institute New York

JAMA. 1970;213(7):1196.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

If one can agree to these authors' broad definition of affective disorder, one cannot fail to be impressed with their finding that affective disorders occur three times as frequently as schizophrenia in the general population. The authors comprehensively review the diverse findings of epidemiological surveys and studies subclassifying the affective disorders. They question the biological validity of depressive symptom-clusters obtained by factor analytic techniques and conclude that, as yet, the clinical picture and predisposing psychological factors have not resulted in any clear-cut separation of depressive subtypes from the larger group of patients with affective symptoms.

An important point of the book— that use of genetic factors is the most promising approach in differentiating out affective subgroups—is supported by the authors' own family history and family study data. In their patient sample, the occurrence of mania and genetic history showing two generations of affective disorder differentiate out one group of patients, . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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