Search results for "PSYCHOSIS"

showing 10 items of 324 documents

Psychosis, symbol, affectivity 1: etiopathogenesis and treatment through analytical psychology

2021

This is the first of two papers concerning our study into an integrated approach to psychotic disorders, conducted at the University of Palermo's Psychiatry Unit Polyclinic over approximately 15 years. Here we will explore and reflect upon the acute psychotic condition mainly from a theoretical and conceptual perspective, while in the second paper we will explore the clinical perspective. From the point of view of psychopathology, and in the light of C.G. Jung's conceptualization of analytical psychology, as well as calling on contributions from other authors from the systemic-relational and post-psychoanalytic field, we will clarify the ideas developed over these last few years by our team…

PsychoanalysisJungian Theorymedia_common.quotation_subjecttreatment of psychosesPsychoanalysisPsychicJ.W. PerrySettore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia Clinicapsychotic symbolismHumansSettore MED/25 - Psichiatriamedia_commonConceptualizationPerspective (graphical)Analytical psychologyPsychodynamicsPsychotherapyClinical PsychologySymbolPolyclinicaffectivity in psychosisPsychotic Disordersanalytical psychologyPsychologyaffective neurosciencePsychopathology
researchProduct

Psychosis and melancholy in the paintings of the 16th century

2009

Psychosis melancholySettore MED/39 - Neuropsichiatria Infantile
researchProduct

Central side-effects of therapies based on CB1 cannabinoid receptor agonists and antagonists: focus on anxiety and depression

2009

Both agonists (e.g. Delta(9)-tetrahydrocannabinol, nabilone) and antagonists (e.g. rimonabant, taranabant) of the cannabinoid type-1 (CB(1)) receptor have been explored as therapeutic agents in diverse fields of medicine such as pain management and obesity with associated metabolic dysregulation, respectively. CB(1) receptors are widely distributed in the central nervous system and are involved in the modulation of emotion, stress and habituation responses, behaviours that are thought to be dysregulated in human psychiatric disorders. Accordingly, CB(1) receptor activation may, in some cases, precipitate episodes of psychosis and panic, while its inhibition may lead to behaviours reminiscen…

PsychosisCannabinoid receptorEndocrinology Diabetes and Metabolismmedicine.medical_treatmentPharmacologyEndocrinologyTaranabantPiperidinesReceptor Cannabinoid CB1RimonabantCannabinoid Receptor ModulatorsmedicineAnimalsHumansDronabinolDepressive Disorderbusiness.industryCannabinoid Receptor Agonistsmedicine.diseaseAnxiety DisordersEndocannabinoid systemNabiloneAffectPyrazolesCannabinoidRimonabantbusinessNeurosciencemedicine.drugBest Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
researchProduct

Semantic context-processing deficit in thought-disordered schizophrenic patients: Evidence from new semantic priming paradigms

2006

Introduction. Disorders in the processing of the semantic context are now a well-established phenomenon in thought-disordered (TD) schizophrenic patients, and have been revealed especially well by studies that have made use of the experimental paradigm of lexical decision tasks coupled with semantic priming. The main question addressed by this study was the evaluation of the experimental conditions under which TD schizophrenic patients are able to deploy cognitive strategies for semantic context processing. Methods. We studied semantic priming in two double lexical decision tasks (i.e., involving the explicit processing of the prime word) using a sequential presentation of words (stimulus o…

PsychosisCognitive NeuroscienceThought disorderCognitive disorderStimulus onset asynchronyCognitionmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthmedicineLexical decision taskLanguage disordermedicine.symptomPsychologyPriming (psychology)Cognitive psychologyCognitive Neuropsychiatry
researchProduct

Auditory temporal processing in schizophrenia: high level rather than low level deficits?

2006

INTRODUCTION: Patients with schizophrenia demonstrate a wide range of information processing deficits. Most recent studies argue in favour of high level deficits, including attention and context processing, whereas fewer studies have demonstrated deficits at earlier stages of processing, such as perceptual discrimination and organisation. This is the first study to investigate both high and low level processing, within a single paradigm, in the case of auditory temporal processing in schizophrenia. METHODS: Patients with schizophrenia were compared to controls on a series of tasks involving three auditory temporal processes varying from low to higher level: (1) segregation of a complex sequ…

PsychosisContext processingCognitive NeuroscienceSchizophrenia (object-oriented programming)Cognitive disorderInformation processingTime perceptionmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthPerceptual discriminationmedicineLevels-of-processing effectPsychologyCognitive psychologyCognitive neuropsychiatry
researchProduct

Psychosis Is Not Illness but a Survival Strategy in Severe Stress: A Proposal for an Addition to a Phenomenological Point of View

2018

Phenomenology often looks at psychosis as a defined pathological state. In this paper, psychosis is not seen as a (pathological) state but as a way to respond in extreme stress. It is psychological functioning of the embodied and relational mind, and psychotic experience can be seen as one form of affective arousal among any other affects. Taken the point of views of Emmanuel Levinas and Mikhail Bakhtin about the primacy of living in responsive relationships, psychotic behavior is seen as emerging in relationships that do not guarantee adequate responses and thus the subject is imposed to isolate from social relationships and developing odd behavior. If dialogical responses are guaranteed, …

PsychosisDialogical selfmedicine.disease030227 psychiatryExtreme stressArousalPhenomenology (philosophy)03 medical and health sciencesPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical Psychology0302 clinical medicinePsychotic DisordersEmbodied cognitionSurvival strategySocial relationshipmedicineHumansPsychologyStress Psychological030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychologyPsychopathology
researchProduct

EPA-1417 – Migration history and first episode psychosis: Results from EUGEI project- Italy

2014

The excess of psychosis among migrants and ethnic minorities is a well defined phenomenon in North Europe, while it should be still demonstrated in south Europe. Because of the variation in prevalence and distribution of risk factors in different national contexts, similar studies in different countries are needed to test the hypotheses and to ensure the generalizability of the findings. Moreover, available studies have been mostly focused on risk factors of psychosis during the post migration phase (such as ethnic fragmentation, unemployment, etc) and among well established ethnic minorities (second and further generations of migrants). In Italy, first generation migrants are still the lar…

PsychosisEuropean communitycountrybusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectEthnic groupDistribution (economics)medicine.diseaseschizophreniaPsychiatry and Mental healthGeographySchizophreniaFirst episode psychosisUnemploymentmedicineDemographic economicsGeneralizability theorybusinessmedia_commonEuropean Psychiatry
researchProduct

Attentional biases to emotional scenes in schizophrenia: An eye-tracking study

2020

Attentional biases to emotional information may play a key role in the onset and course of schizophrenia. The aim of this experiment was to examine the attentional processing of four emotional scenes in competition (happy, neutral, sad, threatening) in 53 patients with schizophrenia and 51 controls. The eye movements were recorded in a 20-seconds free-viewing task. The results were: (i) patients showed increased attention on threatening scenes, compared to controls, in terms of attentional engagement and maintenance; (ii) patients payed less attention to happy scenes than controls, in terms of attentional maintenance; (iii) whereas positive symptoms were associated with a late avoidance of …

PsychosisEye MovementsEmotionsbehavioral disciplines and activities050105 experimental psychologyAttentional Bias03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemental disordersmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEye-Tracking TechnologyMechanism (biology)General Neuroscience05 social sciencesEye movementmedicine.diseaseFacial ExpressionNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologySchizophreniaSchizophreniaEye trackingPsychologypsychological phenomena and processes030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPsychopathologyCognitive psychologyBiological Psychology
researchProduct

The relationship of symptom dimensions with premorbid adjustment and cognitive characteristics at first episode psychosis: Findings from the EU-GEI s…

2021

Premorbid functioning and cognitive measures may reflect gradients of developmental impairment across diagnostic categories in psychosis. In this study, we sought to examine the associations of current cognition and premorbid adjustment with symptom dimensions in a large first episode psychosis (FEP) sample. We used data from the international EU-GEI study. Bifactor modelling of the Operational Criteria in Studies of Psychotic Illness (OPCRIT) ratings provided general and specific symptom dimension scores. Premorbid Adjustment Scale estimated premorbid social (PSF) and academic adjustment (PAF), and WAIS-brief version measured IQ. A MANCOVA model examined the relationship between symptom di…

PsychosisFirst episode psychosiscognitive domainsPremorbid Adjustment ScaleQUOCIENTE DE INTELIGÊNCIATransdiagnostic Premorbid adjustmentNEGATIVE SYMPTOMSArticlesymptom dimensionspremorbid adjustmentWORKING-MEMORYSecondary analysisFirst episode psychosisfirst episode psychosis1ST-EPISODE NONAFFECTIVE PSYCHOSISMedicineScopusCognitive domain[SDV.NEU] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]Settore MED/25 - PsichiatriaBiological PsychiatryTransdiagnosticbusiness.industryWorking memoryConfoundingCognitive domainsCognitionBIPOLAR DISORDERSymptom dimensionsmedicine.diseaseGENE-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONSFirst episode psychosiCANNABIS USEPsychiatry and Mental healthSymptom dimensionPerceptual reasoningJCRIQSOCIAL COGNITIONtransdiagnosticPROCESSING-SPEEDNEURODEVELOPMENTAL TRAJECTORIES[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]Premorbid adjustmentbusinessSCHIZOAFFECTIVE DISORDERClinical psychology
researchProduct

Antagonists and agonists at the glycine site of the NMDA receptor for therapeutic interventions.

2003

For decades neuroreceptor research has focused on the development of NMDA glycine-site antagonists, after Johnson and Ascher found out in 1987 about the co-agonistic character of this achiral amino acid at the NMDA receptor. Contrary to the inhibitory glycine receptor (glycine(A)) the glycine binding site on the NMDA receptor (glycine(B)) is strychnine-insensitive. A great diversity of diseases showing a disturbed glutamate neurotransmission have been linked to the NMDA receptor. Glycine site antagonists have been investigated for acute diseases like stroke and head trauma as well as chronic ones like dementia and chronic pain.

PsychosisGlycinePainPharmacologyNeurotransmissionInhibitory postsynaptic potentialReceptors N-Methyl-D-AspartateGlycine bindingMemantineDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansReceptorGlycine receptorPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationBinding SitesEpilepsyOrganic ChemistryGlutamate receptorGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseAmino acidStrokeNeuroprotective AgentsBiochemistrychemistryGlycineSchizophreniaNMDA receptorAnticonvulsantsDementiaExcitatory Amino Acid AntagonistsEuropean journal of medicinal chemistry
researchProduct