Read Secondary Schizophrenia Online
Authors: Perminder S. Sachdev
psychotic symptoms/lesion location,
Cohen, B. D.,
144
neuroimaging studies,
92
Collaborative Perinatal Project (CPP),
neuropathological studies,
92–
3
pathophysiological mechanisms for
Collerton, D.,
25
cellular/molecular consequences
Columbia University Scale for
Charles Bonnet Syndrome (CBS)
Psychopathology in
composite model,
95, 95f
Alzheimer’s Disease
complex hallucination sites,
373t
,
cortical dysgenesis hypothesis,
94
(CUSPAD),
209
cortical excitation/inhibition
common association, in schizophrenia,
fusiform face area,
373
superior temporal sulcus face
diffuses brain damage hypothesis,
area,
373
visual word form area,
373
complex auditory hallucinois,
29–
30
course and outcome,
374
underlying neuropathological/
Composite International Diagnostic
physiological dysfunction,
Interview (CIDI),
122
duration/cessation of hallucinations,
Computerized International
future research,
375
Diagnostic Interview,
171
computerized tomography (CT)
Davison, K.,
189,
265,
274,
275,
276,
and Huntington’s Disease,
349
brain tumor,
266
and traumatic brain injury,
187
deafferentation syndrome,
372–
3,
and Wilson’s Disease,
341
Huntington’s Disease,
350
depression, major,
293
laterality of epileptic focus,
91
and multiple sclerosis,
274
postictal psychosis,
84
default mode network of brain activity,
and velocardiofacial syndrome,
309,
stimulants and psychosis,
133
ventricular enlargement,
258
Degenhardt, L.,
175
Wilson’s Disease,
339
Deiters cells,
29
Descheemaeker, M. J.,
329
delirium. See
toxic psychosis
Devinsky, O.,
84
delusional disorder,
201
diabetes, and leukodystrophies,
250
conserved noncoding elements
delusional misidentifications,
205,
Diagnostic Interview for Genetic
(CNEs),
297
Studies,
289
copper excretion. See
Wilson’s Disease
delusional parasitosis,
34
Diagnostic Interview Schedule,
122
copy number variations (CNVs),
290,
delusions, and Alzheimer’s Disease,
DIDMOAD (Diabetes Insipidus,
Diabetes Mellitus, Optic
dementia
Atrophy, Deafness). See
antipsychotic medications for,
396–
7
core network,
64
diffuses brain damage hypothesis,
94–
5
Cornelius, J.,
22
associated with Fahr’s Disease,
360
diffusion tensor imaging (DTI),
7,
243
corpus callosum (CC)
characteristics of, 181t.
181t
See also
in child with VCFS,
314f
digoxin,
370
increase in child with VCFS,
314
disconnectivity syndrome,
267
cortical blindness,
232
de Morsier, G.,
370
dissociative anesthetic,
142
cortical dysgenesis hypothesis,
94
demyelinating disease and psychosis
DNA microarray studies,
297
cortical excitation/inhibition
Davison and Bagley’s review,
274,
dopamine D2 receptor,
66–
7,
143,
182,
corticosteroids, as cause of toxic
psychosis,
182
dorsal stream,
25
creatine, and Huntington’s Disease,
genetic links,
276
dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
outcomes,
277
(DLPFC),
5
treatment,
277
droperidol,
145
Curran, C.,
131
antipsychotic medication,
277
DSM diagnostic criteria, for psychosis,
viral hypothesis,
276
cycloid psychosis,
329
multiple sclerosis, and psychosis,
DSM-III diagnostic criteria
cystamine, and Huntington’s Disease,
brief reactive psychosis,
381
age of presentation,
275
six-month criterion for
clinical features,
275
schizophrenia,
80
distinguishing characteristics,
DSM-III-R diagnostic criteria
organic hallucinosis,
198
D1-like dopamine receptors,
118
on substance-induced psychosis,
D2-like dopamine receptors,
119,
organic psychosis,
275
summary,
277
DSM-IV diagnostic criteria
D3-like dopamine receptors,
118
temporal association,
275
on brief psychotic disorder,
381,
382
taxonomy of demyelinating disease,
Das, S. K.,
384
on personality disorder,
349
Dening, T. R.,
340
datura,
27
on post-stroke psychosis,
198
depression,
258
on psychosis,
113
David, A.,
21
and brain tumors,
266
on schizophrenia,
289
and Fahr’s Disease,
360
on SLP associated with epilepsy,
81
DSM-IV diagnostic criteria (cont.)
environmental factors,
8f
definition issues,
80
on substance-induced psychosis,
Epidemiological Catchment Area
epilepsy/SLP affinity,
81
epilepsy type determination,
81
on traumatic brain injury,
187,
191
forced normalization and,
88
epilepsy,
30
D’Souza, D. C.,
174
infantile myoclonic,
230
heterogeneity problem,
80
Durr, A.,
332
relationship with traumatic brain
dynamometer testing,
48
injury,
192–
3
See also
partial complex status,
81–
2
petit mal status,
82
dysarthria,
333
disconnection syndrome,
simple partial status,
82
epilepsy, and schizophrenia-like
brief interictal psychosis as
dysgraphesthesia, lateralizing,
53
psychosis (SLP)
anticonvulsant drugs,
87
distinct from,
88
dysphagia,
349
antipsychotic drugs,
87, 87t
,
changes in cerebral blood flow,
early development model, in
brief interictal psychosis,
86–
7
postictal psychosis as distinct
from,
88
pathogenetic mechanisms,
84
eating disorders,
32
categorization of,
81, 81t
predisposing factors,
84
ecologic studies, on infections and
chronic interictal psychoses,
88–
95
chronic SLP with epilepsy risk
superficial similarity,
80
Ecstasy (MDMA)
temporal lobe epilepsy,
80
evidence for schizophrenia/