Read Secondary Schizophrenia Online
Authors: Perminder S. Sachdev
aberrant regional recruitment under
Pelizaeus-Merzbacher Disease,
248
prepulse inhibition (PPI),
145,
150,
epilepsy,
96
Huntington’s Disease,
350
presynaptic DA turnover,
7
penicillin,
394
increased regional brain activation
perception and attentional deficit
in acute PCP-related models,
(PAD),
25
primary phospholipid syndrome
ketamine-induced by regional
(PAPS),
383
Perception and Attention Deficit
Model,
372
primary schizophrenia
Niemann-Pick Disease type C,
difference from secondary SZ,
9–
11,
Perlman, S.,
335
psychotic patient with epilepsy,
92
as idiopathic,
18
receptor occupancy evaluation with
personality disorders,
397
primary/secondary vs. organic/
functional categorization,
3
personality changes, and brain tumors,
sensitization,
134
proline dehydrogenase (PRODH) gene,
tinnitus,
29
Wilson’s Disease,
339
petit mal,
82
protein expression studies,
296
PfC relay,
119
postictal hemiparesis,
85
proteolipid (PLP) gene,
248
pharmaceutical kindling,
93,
105–
6
postictal psychosis (PIP),
83–
5, 85t
brief interictal psychosis as distinct
pseudodeficiency (PD),
242
phenacetylurea,
87
from,
88
psilocybin,
148
changes in cerebral blood flow,
85
experimental studies on,
142–
4,
145
Psychiatric Research Interview for
and forced normalization,
87
Substance and Mental
illicit use,
142
ketamine and,
147
Disorder (PRISM),
122
pathogenetic mechanisms,
84
psychosis, characteristics of,
181t
431
psychotic mood disorder,
117
visual hallucinations and,
27,
121,
Runeberg, J.,
48
psychotomimetic effects of PCP, LSD,
Runge, W.,
204
and ecstasy
N-methyl-D-aspartate glutamate
animal studies, of PCP-related
saccadic eye movements, impaired
amphetamine-induced
pulsatile tinnitus,
29
inhibition of,
66
hyperlocomotion model,
pulvino-cortical dissociations,
66
Saijo, T.,
234
PCP-related,
151
pyramidal tract integrity,
48
validity of,
150
Salbenblatt, M. J.,
334
behavior/clinical biomarker
Santhouse, A.,
24
change,
152
ketamine,
152
quetiapine fumarate (Seroquel),
277
sarcosine,
155
Quitkin, F.,
48
Satel, S. L.,
132
PCP,
152
Rabins, P. V.,
199
clozapine and acute ketamine-
Scarmeas, N.,
209
lamotrigine and ketamine-
induced model,
155
Schedule for Affective Disorders and
LY354740,
155
reality distortion,
66
Schizophrenia (SADS),
122
N-acetylaspartylglutamate
receptive prosodic disturbances,
66
Schedules for Clinical Assessment in
peptidase inhibitors,
155
regional interconnectivity studies,
63
Neuropsychiatry (SCAN),
sarcosine,
155
GABAergic interneuron deficits,
region of interest (ROI) studies,
6
schizoaffective disorder,
293
Reith, J.,
92
and acute psychotic disorder,
381–
2
increased prefrontal glutamate,
and antipsychotic medications,
394
restriction fragment length
and genetics of schizophrenia,
293
increased prefrontal neuronal
polymorphisms (RFLPs),
firing,
153
and Prader Willi Syndrome,
329,
increased regional brain
retrospective diagnosis,
17
activation,
152
and prenatal infection,
281
ketamine,
152
Rippon, G. A.,
208
MK-801,
152
risperidone,
396
schizophrenia
paradoxical hyperactivation/
corticosteroids,
399
age of onset,
3
hypoactivation,
152
dementia,
397
brain function alterations in,
5–
6
PCP model of schizophrenia,
Friedrich’s Ataxia,
335
Huntington’s Disease,
353
cognitive domains affected,
4t
pharmacology of PCP and PCP
multiple sclerosis,
277
course and severity,
4
parkinsonian symptoms,
398
diagnosis,
393
secondary monoaminergic
seizure disorder,
398
system disturbances,
154
electrophysiological abnormalities,
Roberts, A. H.,
189
conclusions,
157
Ecstasy
environment risk factors,
8
Robins, E.,
116
genetic risk factors,
8
studies,
149
late development model,
9
mood symptoms,
393
neural developmental theory of,
309
Ron, M. A.,
192
lysergic acid diethylamide,
Ropacki, S. A.,
206
Rosenbaum, G.,
144
prevalence of,
3
as primary psychotic disorder,
3–
9
illicit use of,
145
Rottig, S.,
382
secondary olfactory and gustatory
Rounsaville, B. J.,
132
hallucinations in,
32
secondary tactile hallucinations in,
rubella,
282
lysergic acid
Rubella Birth Defects Evaluation
secondary visual hallucinations in,
illicit use of,
147
Project (RBDEP),
282
schizophreniform disorder,
117,
258
delusional parasitosis,
34
single photon emission computed
schizophrenia,
34
tomography (SPECT),
7
in substance abuse/withdrawal,
35
aberrant regional recruitment under
Schneider, K.,
289
secondary visual hallucinations (VH),
Schor, J. D.,
180
epilepsy,
96
functional disconnectivity,
64
hallucinations,
375
Schultz, S. K.,
131
in neurological disorders,
26–
7
Huntington’s Disease,
350
Niemann-Pick Disease type C,
Schulz, B. W.,
288
localized pathology,
26
neurodegenerative disorders,
Schwartz, M.,
383
psychotic patient with epilepsy,
92
scopolamine,
27
Wilson’s Disease,
339
secondary auditory hallucinations
Slade, P.,
21