Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0036341 (schizophrenia)
60,220 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical pictures of a left temporal lobe astrocytoma involving the hippocampal region showed a period of 27 years from ages 12 to 38 by epileptic seizures and a period of 9 years from 14 to 22 by schizophrenia-like symptoms and the following aggressive behavior during 16 years from ages 23 to 38. After a resection of the temporal lobe tumor sparing the hippocampus, transient delusions and aggressive behavior were observed. It might be considered that the hippocampus has the most suspectable relationship with the schizophrenia-like symptoms.
...
PMID:A case of temporal lobe astrocytoma associated with epileptic seizures and schizophrenia-like psychosis. 273 75

Persistent aggressive behavior may develop in patients with brain disorders of various types, including seizure disorders, mental retardation, metabolic disorders, head injury, and in some instances schizophrenia. Although a neurochemical basis for aggression in these cases is unclear, a hyperadrenergic state is considered to be one possibility. This has led to the hypothesis that beta blockers may be useful in the control of aggression. The original assumption was that the site of antiaggressive action of beta blockers is in the brain. However, the antiaggressive efficacy of nadolol, which does not cross the blood-brain barrier to any great extent, suggests a peripheral site or sites. A review of several studies in which both old and young aggressive patients with various organic brain disorders received propranolol showed that aggressive behavior was reduced in 75 (86%) of 87. These results are encouraging because none of the patients had responded to earlier drug treatment. However, with the exception of one study of nine patients, none of the studies were controlled for placebo effects and most were retrospective. Preliminary results suggest tentative guidelines for treatment of aggressive behavior with beta blockers. Further studies are needed, and these should use a prospective, longitudinal double-blind design; large enough patient samples to permit testing hypotheses about disease-specific or symptom-specific responses to beta blockers; and improved instruments for measuring and classifying aggression.
...
PMID:Can aggressive behavior in humans be modified by beta blockers? 289 57

The (F-18) fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) technique to measure local cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (LCMRglu) is well accepted and widely used by many institutions around the world. A large number of studies has been carried out in normal volunteers and patients with a variety of CNS disorders. Several investigators have noted that no significant age-related changes in cerebral glucose use occur with normal aging. Some important and interesting findings have been revealed following sensory, motor, visual, and auditory stimulations. Functional imaging with FDG in certain neurologic disorders has dramatically improved our understanding of their underlying pathophysiologic phenomena. Some abnormalities detected on the positron emission tomography (PET) images have no corresponding changes on either x-ray computed tomograms (XCT) or magnetic resonance images (MRI). In patients with Alzheimer's disease, primary sensorimotor, visual, and cerebellar metabolic activity appears relatively preserved. In contrast, parietal, temporal, and to some degree, frontal glucose metabolism is significantly diminished even in the early stages of the disease. Patients with Huntington's disease and those at risk of developing this disorder have a typical pattern of diminished CMRglu in the caudate nuclei and putamen. In patients with stroke, PET images with FDG have demonstrated abnormal findings earlier than either XCT or MRI and with a wider topographic distribution. FDG scans have revealed interictal zones of decreased LCMRglu in approximately 70% of patients with partial epilepsy. The location of the area of hypometabolism corresponds to the site of the epileptic focus as determined by electroencephalography and microscopic examination of the resected tissue. Ictal scans during partial seizures demonstrate areas of hypermetabolism corresponding to the sites of seizure onset and spread. Several investigators have reported relative hypofrontal CMRglu in patients with schizophrenia. In our center, FDG scans from patients with schizophrenia were successfully differentiated from those obtained in normal controls. Finally, our preliminary data (using PET, XCT, and MRI) in patients with CNS disorders indicate that MRI provides excellent delineation of the structural abnormalities. It may prove to be superior to XCT in the evaluation of certain diseases such as cerebral ischemia and infarcts, head injury, tumors, and white matter lesions. Metabolic imaging with FDG provides functional information not obtainable with either MRI or NMR spectroscopy. Therefore, PET studies will play a complementary role to the anatomic imaging in the management of patients with CNS disorders.
...
PMID:Positron emission tomography imaging of regional cerebral glucose metabolism. 293 38

The results of many studies using quantitative EEG techniques in clinical settings have been published. Those reports are reviewed here, with emphasis on those that used EEG frequency analysis and topographic mapping. In cerebrovascular disease, these methods can confirm the existence of lesions that are too mild to show up on routine EEG or too mild or too early to show up on computed tomography. The results correlate well with cerebral blood flow studies. These EEG tests can be done continuously in an intensive care unit or operating room. However, exact localization ability is inferior to that seen using traditional neuroimaging tests. In epilepsy, quantitative EEG techniques have found subtle degrees of background EEG changes near epileptic foci. Other methods can quantify epileptic spikes in useful ways and can indicate which region is driving other regions during seizures. Quantification is also useful for measuring drug effects when drugs (such as thiopental) are given deliberately to provoke acute EEG changes. Other measurements of drug effects may become useful in the future. In patients with mass lesions and metabolic encephalopathies, quantitative EEG changes do occur, and some of these correlate with the clinical state. However, in the latter settings, the clinical advantages for patient care are not yet clear, especially in comparison to available neuro-imaging studies and other routine medical tests. For dementia, quantitative EEG techniques are being developed. Some of these tests are accurate in moderately or severely demented patients, but there is still poor accuracy for early or borderline cases. For dyslexia, schizophrenia, and depression, there is a considerable volume of research reports but still no consensus about how to use quantitative EEG tests for care of individual patients. These tests require substantial user expertise in EEG. At present, these tests should be viewed as adjunctive to traditional EEG testing: such routine EEG testing should serve as the foundation for any clinical use of quantitative EEG tools.
...
PMID:Quantitative EEG: II. Frequency analysis and topographic mapping in clinical settings. 307 70

An antagonistic relationship between psychosis and seizures has been described in some patients and is sometimes termed "forced normalization." We saw seven epileptic patients without a previous psychiatric history, who developed acute psychotic states on establishment of seizure control and normalization of previously abnormal electroencephalograms with frank epileptiform activity. A possible hypothetical relationship between psychosis and epilepsy regarding the mesolimbic dopaminergic system and kindling of this system with epileptic discharge in temporal-limbic circuits could induce a florid psychotic state in some patients. This biochemical relationship to schizophrenia with heightened dopamine activity would also easily explain the amelioration of acute psychotic activity in our seven patients with neuroleptic agents and their antagonism of this increased dopaminergic outflow state.
...
PMID:Forced normalization. Acute psychosis after seizure control in seven patients. 310 87

This study examined the descriptive epidemiology of seizure disorder in 129 male residents of a Veterans Administration Nursing Home. Eighty-seven of the residents were institutionalized because of nonpsychiatric disorders (60 for chronic neurologic diseases, and 27 for other medical conditions). Forty-two were institutionalized because of a chronic psychosis (39 for schizophrenia, three for affective disorders). We determined for each resident an extensive clinical data base of 54 items including measures of hematologic, nutritional, metabolic and endocrine status, as well as continuing medications. In the nonpsychiatric group, 16 of the 87 men had a seizure disorder. In the psychiatric group, this proportion was only three of 42. The prevalence of epilepsy in the nonpsychiatric group was 20-40 times greater than in the aged-matched general population of men. In the nonpsychiatric group, the onset of seizures followed the onset of organic brain disease. Forty-five percent of seizure disorders occurred in men who had experienced a cerebrovascular accident, and 23% in men with other types of chronic brain disease. The seizures of the nonpsychiatric men had been observed to be generalized clonic-tonic in 45%, and partial complex in 22%. Ninety-four percent of the nonpsychiatric men with epilepsy received anticonvulsants, and none had experienced more than one seizure during the preceding year. Univariate statistical analysis of the 54 item data base showed that the occurrence of seizure disorder correlated inversely with age, blood urea nitrogen, serum creatinine and serum bilirubin, and directly with plasma testosterone, hemoglobin, use of anticonvulsants, and use of psychotherapeutic agents.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Seizure disorder in the men of a Veterans Administration nursing home. 328 Jul 35

In this paper, the second of a two-part series on current psychiatric aspects of epilepsy, the authors consider the classification and management of the various kinds of psychoses and other behavior disturbances associated with some cases of epilepsy. After discussing the common aspects of epilepsy and schizophrenia, they describe attempts to categorize epileptic psychoses, focusing on a classification of ten kinds of psychoses that they believe has broadest application. They present guidelines for psychopharmacological management of epilepsy accompanied by behavior disturbance, with emphasis on anticonvulsant monotherapy, and they discuss possibly related seizure disorders and possible etiologies of behavioral symptoms of epilepsy.
...
PMID:Modern perspectives on epilepsy in relation to psychiatry: behavioral disturbances of epilepsy. 328 72

A case of schizophrenia associated with complex partial seizure disorder and postictal violence, both refractory to conventional treatment, is presented. Adjunctive treatment with clonazepam resulted in the cessation of the seizures and of persistent, violent hallucinations. The theoretical implications for possible mechanisms underlying at least some types of aggressive behavior are discussed.
...
PMID:Antiaggressive effect of adjunctive clonazepam in schizophrenia associated with seizure disorder. 334 99

Nineteen patients were analyzed who exhibited cognitive-dysmnesic psychic partial seizures and structural damage shown by means of CT scans. It was observed that these seizures originated in the amygdala-hippocampal system, coinciding with the effects found when using electrical stimulation of the brain. An attempt is made to relate these findings to the present biochemical hypotheses of schizophrenia, the kindling effect and the genetico-maturational hypotheses. All these data seem to agree and point in the direction of the possible neurophysiological mechanisms of psychosis and of schizophrenia in particular.
...
PMID:Partial cognitive-dysmnesic seizures as a model for studying psychosis. 335 95

Three cases of complex partial status which were diagnosed as psychotic episodes are presented. The scans of two of these cases show structural abnormalities in the left temporal lobe. It is proposed that there are similar neurophysiological mechanisms in primary schizophrenia and in the perceptual, affective and cognitive phenomena apparent is some complex and psychic partial seizures. The hippocampal-amygdaline system plays a central role in both cases.
...
PMID:Complex partial status and schizophrenia. 341 Jun 42


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>