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Welcome...
... Schizophrenos... literally: "division of the brain"!!! I am pleased to introduce you my blog devoted to students of medicine and impassioned of the subject but also to fused and impassioned friends of everything classical altro!Paradigma of the possibility to mix the to know with the folly pura!Provare to believe...
The sentence of the month...
The confinements don't hold out never the others, they serve only to suffocate you. Be able specare your life to trace confinements or to decide to live for overcoming them... there are some confinements that is too much expensive to cross, but if dare do him/it, the life on the other side is stupendous!
The eutanasia,literally good death, is the practice that consists of getting the death, using the way most painless, rapid and bloodless possible, to a human being affection from an incurable illness, to the purpose to put an end to its suffering.
Which among these symptoms you find in your daily life?
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Epilepsy, psychosis, and schizophrenia
This study examines the relationship between epilepsy and psychosis. It compares clinical, EEG, and neuropathologic data from a group of subjects who had both epilepsy and psychosis with similar information from another group of patients who had epilepsy but no evidence of psychotic illness. We examined, blind to clinical diagnosis, gross and microscopic material from whole-brain specimens from 10 patients diagnosed with epilepsy plus schizophrenia-like psychosis, nine subjects diagnosed with epilepsy plus "epileptic psychosis," and 36 individuals with epilepsy (21 from an epileptic colony and 15 from the community at large) who had no history of psychosis (n = 10 + 9 + 21 + 15 = 55). We abstracted case histories without knowledge of pathologic findings. Epileptic colony patients had an earlier age at onset of seizures, while epileptic colony and epileptic psychosis patients had more frequent seizures. Epileptic individuals in the community died at a younger age than did epileptic patients in long-stay hospital care. Psychotic epileptic patients had larger cerebral ventricles, excess periventricular gliosis, and more focal cerebral damage compared with epileptic patients who had no psychotic illness. Epileptic patients with schizophrenia-like psychosis were distinguished from all other groups by a significant excess of pinpoint perivascular white-matter softenings. We found that mesial temporal sclerosis and temporal lobe epilepsy occurred with equal frequency in the psychotic and nonpsychotic groups; generalized seizures occurred more frequently in the psychotic epileptics and the epileptic colony epileptics than in the community epileptic controls.C. J. Bruton, MD, Janice R. Stevens, MD and C. D. Frith, PhD
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