Serum Creatine Kinase Levels in Untreated Hospitalized Adolescents During Acute Psychosis
Psychosis-associated creatine kinase (CK)-emia (PACK) is a common and pronounced laboratory abnormality that accompanies adult psychotic conditions. Adult PACK is a relatively consistent individual trait. The authors investigated whether psychotic adolescents also present with such PACK characterist...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 2002-09, Vol.41 (9), p.1045-1053 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Psychosis-associated creatine kinase (CK)-emia (PACK) is a common and pronounced laboratory abnormality that accompanies adult psychotic conditions. Adult PACK is a relatively consistent individual trait. The authors investigated whether psychotic adolescents also present with such PACK characteristics.
Participants were 127 newly admitted, drug-free, psychotic Israeli adolescents. Measures were baseline psychotic severity, serum creatine kinase (CK0), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH0), glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase (SGOT0), white blood cell count (WBC0), urine myoglobulin, and the repeated CK (RepCK) measurements taken during recurrent psychotic episodes.
Schizophrenia was the prevalent diagnosis (53%). CK0 levels did not correlate with the severity of the psychotic symptoms. Twenty-one percent of patients had a CK0 level >1,000 IU/L. CK0 and RepCK levels were higher in males than in females (p ≤ .001) and in Jewish Sephardi patients than in Ashkenazi patients (p < .007). There was no difference by diagnosis. Logarithmic (Ln) CK0 correlated with RepCK, SGOT0, LDH0, and WBC0 (r =+ 0.32−0.74, p < .001) but correlated inversely with serum cholesterol0 (r = −0.36, p = .002) in males. Even prominent PACK was not associated with myoglobinuria. These findings remained significant among the younger patients (aged |
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ISSN: | 0890-8567 1527-5418 |
DOI: | 10.1097/00004583-200209000-00004 |