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1.
Handb Clin Neurol ; 139: 509-520, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27719868

ABSTRACT

Interest in malingering has grown in recent years, and is reflected in the exponential increase in academic publications since 1990. Although malingering is more commonly detected in medicolegal practice, it is not an all-or-nothing presentation and moreover can vary in the extent of presentation. As a nonmedical disorder, the challenge for clinical practice remains that malingering by definition is intentional and deliberate. As such, clinical skills alone are often insufficient to detect it and we describe psychometric tests such as symptom validity tests and relevant nonmedical investigations. Finally, we describe those areas of neurologic practice where symptom exaggeration and deception are more likely to occur, e.g., postconcussional syndrome, psychogenic nonepileptic seizures, motor weakness and movement disorders, and chronic pain. Factitious disorders are rare in clinical practice and their detection depends largely on the level of clinical suspicion supported by the systematic collection of relevant information from a variety of sources. In this chapter we challenge the accepted DSM-5 definition of factitious disorder and suggest that the traditional glossaries have neglected the extent to which a person's reported symptoms can be considered a product of intentional choice or selective psychopathology largely beyond the subject's voluntary control, or more likely, both. We present evidence to suggest that neurologists preferentially diagnose factitious presentations in healthcare workers as "hysterical," possibly to avoid the stigma of simulated illness.


Subject(s)
Conversion Disorder/diagnosis , Factitious Disorders/diagnosis , Malingering/diagnosis , Nervous System Diseases/diagnosis , Nervous System Diseases/psychology , Humans
2.
Perception ; 44(6): 709-23, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26489211

ABSTRACT

Hypnotic suggestibility (HS) is the ability to respond automatically to suggestions and to experience alterations in perception and behavior. Hypnotically suggestible participants are also better able to focus and sustain their attention on an experimental stimulus. The present study explores the relation between HS and susceptibility to the rubber hand illusion (RHI). Based on previous research with visual illusions, it was predicted that higher HS would lead to a stronger RHI. Two behavioral output measures of the RHI, an implicit (proprioceptive drift) and an explicit (RHI questionnaire) measure, were correlated against HS scores. Hypnotic suggestibility correlated positively with the implicit RHI measure contributing to 30% of the variation. However, there was no relation between HS and the explicit RHI questionnaire measure, or with compliance control items. High hypnotic suggestibility may facilitate, via attentional mechanisms, the multisensory integration of visuoproprioceptive inputs that leads to greater perceptual mislocalization of a participant's hand. These results may provide insight into the multisensory brain mechanisms involved in our sense of embodiment.


Subject(s)
Body Image/psychology , Illusions/psychology , Suggestion , Touch Perception/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adult , Humans , Individuality , Proprioception/physiology
3.
Ann Phys Rehabil Med ; 58(2): 40-53, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25543183

ABSTRACT

Spatial neglect (SN) is commonly associated with poor functional outcome. Adaptation to a rightward optical deviation of vision has been shown to benefit to SN rehabilitation. The neurophysiological foundations and the optimal modalities of prism adaptation (PA) therapy however remain to be validated. This study is aimed at exploring the long-term sensory-motor, cognitive and functional effects produced by weekly PA sessions over a period of four weeks. A double-blind, monocentric randomized and controlled trial (RCT) was carried out. Twenty patients with left SN secondary to stroke were included, 10 in the "prism" group and 10 in the "control" group. The sensory-motor effects of PA were evaluated by measurement of manual and visual straight-ahead, and also by precision of pointing without visual feedback before and after each PA session. The functional independence measure (FIM) was evaluated before and at 1, 3 and 6 months after PA, while SN severity was assessed using the Behavioural Inattention Test (BIT) before and 6 months after PA. Before the intervention, only manual straight-ahead pointing constituted a reproducible sensory-motor measurement. During prism exposure, a questionnaire showed that not a single patient were aware of the direct effects of optical deviation on pointing movement performance. The sensory-motor after-effects produced by the PA produced a more rapid reduction of the rightward manual straight-ahead, which was secondarily followed by visual straight-ahead. These sensory-motor effects helped to clarify the action mechanisms of PA on SN. At the conclusion of the 6-month follow-up, the two groups showed similar improvement, indicating that a weekly PA session over 4 weeks was not sufficient to produce long-term functional benefit. This improvement was correlated with the evolution of visual straight-ahead, which can be proposed as a marker for patients outcome.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Perceptual Disorders/rehabilitation , Psychomotor Performance , Space Perception , Visual Perception , Adult , Aged , Attention/physiology , Double-Blind Method , Feedback, Sensory , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Perceptual Disorders/etiology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Stroke/complications , Treatment Outcome
4.
Conscious Cogn ; 26: 24-36, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24657632

ABSTRACT

Our sense of self includes awareness of our thoughts and movements, and our control over them. This feeling can be altered or lost in neuropsychiatric disorders as well as in phenomena such as "automatic writing" whereby writing is attributed to an external source. Here, we employed suggestion in highly hypnotically suggestible participants to model various experiences of automatic writing during a sentence completion task. Results showed that the induction of hypnosis, without additional suggestion, was associated with a small but significant reduction of control, ownership, and awareness for writing. Targeted suggestions produced a double dissociation between thought and movement components of writing, for both feelings of control and ownership, and additionally, reduced awareness of writing. Overall, suggestion produced selective alterations in the control, ownership, and awareness of thought and motor components of writing, thus enabling key aspects of automatic writing, observed across different clinical and cultural settings, to be modelled.


Subject(s)
Awareness/physiology , Executive Function/physiology , Motor Activity/physiology , Suggestion , Thinking/physiology , Writing , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Young Adult
5.
Cogn Neuropsychiatry ; 17(5): 367-70, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22963610

ABSTRACT

Cognitive Neuropsychiatry has secured recognition in Thomson's Science and Social Science Citation Indices which will lead to the calculation of the journal impact factor.


Subject(s)
Journal Impact Factor , Neuropsychiatry , Periodicals as Topic/trends , Humans
6.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ; 79(3): 266-70, 2008 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17596280

ABSTRACT

In 1987, Weiskrantz and Zhang described a stroke patient with severe somatosensory loss who, nevertheless, demonstrated impressive residual sensory performance when required to touch the affected limb with her ipsilesional hand (self touch; ST). The current study set out to ascertain the prevalence and characteristics of self-touch enhancement (STE) in patients with unilateral stroke and hemihypaesthesia. Thirty-nine stroke patients who were referred with hemihypaesthesia fulfilled the criteria. STE was defined where a patient showed a statistically significant increase (p<0.05) in performance for (i) detection, (ii) localisation and/or (iii) perceived intensity during touch with their ipsilesional hand, compared with standard experimenter elicited sensory performance. Group comparisons between the conventional touch versus ST conditions revealed significant differences for detection (p<0.01), intensity estimation (p<0.01) and localisation (p<0.001) using ST. Twenty-two of the 39 patients (56.4%) showed STE on at least one assessment mode. In detection, 16 (41%) patients showed STE; for localisation, 12 patients (31%) showed STE and for intensity, 17 patients (44%) showed STE. Out of the 22 patients with STE, 17 had right hemisphere lesions. In summary, more than half of the stroke patients showed reliable and significant improvements in somatosensory performance when using their unaffected hand as the source of tactile stimulation. This striking phenomenon suggests that the threshold for the impaired hand is affected by active involvement of the contralateral (ipsilesional) limb when delivering the stimulus contact. Possible mechanisms to explain these findings are discussed.


Subject(s)
Hypesthesia/diagnosis , Hypesthesia/epidemiology , Stroke/epidemiology , Aged , Agnosia/epidemiology , Case-Control Studies , Cerebral Hemorrhage/epidemiology , Cerebrum , Comorbidity , False Positive Reactions , Female , Functional Laterality , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prevalence , Reproducibility of Results , Self Stimulation , Vision Disorders/etiology
7.
Neurology ; 66(12): 1859-67, 2006 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16801651

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the anatomic substrates underlying the beneficial effect of prism adaptation in five patients with persistent left neglect following right stroke. METHODS: In a functional imaging PET study, we used a covariation analysis to examine linear changes of regional cerebral blood flow over sessions as a function of left neglect improvement. RESULTS: The network of significant brain regions associated with improvement of left neglect performance produced by prism adaptation involved the right cerebellum, the left thalamus, the left temporo-occipital cortex, the left medial temporal cortex, and the right posterior parietal cortex. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that the realignment of visuomotor coordinates is processed by the cerebellum and that low level sensorimotor adaptation actively modulates cerebral areas, albeit now relying on intact cerebellocerebral connections. Hence, our data support the hypothesis that the beneficial effect of prism adaptation on the clinical presentation of left neglect derives from modulation of cortical regions implicated in spatial cognition.


Subject(s)
Brain/blood supply , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Lenses , Perceptual Disorders/diagnostic imaging , Perceptual Disorders/rehabilitation , Recovery of Function/physiology , Adaptation, Physiological , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Brain/physiopathology , Brain Mapping , Female , Humans , Male , Perceptual Disorders/etiology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Positron-Emission Tomography , Stroke/complications , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Stroke/physiopathology , Stroke Rehabilitation , Treatment Outcome
9.
Rheumatology (Oxford) ; 44(4): 509-16, 2005 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15644392

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Conflict between motor-sensory central nervous processing has been suggested as one cause of pain in those conditions where a demonstrable or local nociceptive aetiology cannot be convincingly established (e.g. complex regional pain syndrome type 1, repetitive strain injury, phantom limb pain and focal hand dystonia). The purpose of this study was to discover whether pain could be induced in pain-free healthy volunteers when this conflict was generated transiently in a laboratory setting. METHODS: Forty-one consecutively recruited healthy adult volunteers without a history of motor or proprioceptive disorders performed a series of bilateral upper and lower limb movements whilst viewing a mirror/whiteboard, which created varied degrees of sensory-motor conflict during congruent/incongruent limb movements. A qualitative method recorded any changes in sensory experience. RESULTS: Twenty-seven subjects (66%) reported at least one anomalous sensory symptom at some stage in the protocol despite no peripheral nociceptive input. The most frequent symptoms occurred when incongruent movement was performed whilst viewing the reflected limb in the mirror condition, the time of maximum sensory-motor conflict. Symptoms of pain were described as numbness, pins and needles, moderate aching and/or a definite pain. Other sensations included perceived changes in temperature, limb weight, altered body image and disorientation. There were indications that some individuals were more susceptible to symptom generation than others. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support the hypothesis that motor-sensory conflict can induce pain and sensory disturbances in some normal individuals. We propose that prolonged sensory-motor conflict may induce long-term symptoms in some vulnerable subjects.


Subject(s)
Models, Neurological , Pain/etiology , Somatosensory Cortex/physiopathology , Adult , Aged , Feedback, Psychological , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Psychological , Motor Activity , Pain/physiopathology , Pain/psychology , Proprioception , Sensation Disorders/etiology
10.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg ; 126(4): 1061-4, 2003 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14566247

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Cognitive dysfunction and postoperative hypoxia are common sequelae of coronary artery bypass grafting, but there has been no study to determine whether there is any relationship between them. METHODS: Arterial blood gas measurements were performed before surgical intervention and on the second and fifth postoperative day, and neuropsychological assessments were performed before surgical intervention and 5 days and 3 months postoperatively by using a battery of 10 psychometric tests in 175 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting. An estimate of overall performance on the battery at each assessment point was provided by a simple aggregate cognitive index score calculated from the mean z scores of 4 normally distributed test variables. Multiple regression analysis was performed by using the cognitive index score at day 5 as the dependent variable, with age, sex, duration of the operation, presence or absence of cardiopulmonary bypass, preoperative cognitive index score, and arterial oxygenation and percentage of saturation at day 5 as independent variables. RESULTS: The mean cognitive index score decreased significantly in 115 (66%) patients who agreed to neuropsychological test battery assessment on the fifth postoperative day but improved significantly beyond baseline at 3 months. Mean arterial oxygen tension and percentage of saturation decreased significantly 2 days after the operation and, although improving over the following 3 days, remained decreased at day 5. Decreased cognitive index scores at day 5 strongly predicted cognitive impairment at 3 months (r = 0.36). The only significant independent predictors of the day 5 cognitive index score in the multiple regression analysis were preoperative cognitive index score and arterial oxygenation tension at day 5 (r = 0.24, P <.03). CONCLUSIONS: We report a significant correlation between postoperative cognitive dysfunction and hypoxia 5 days after coronary artery bypass grafting. This finding might have therapeutic implications because early postoperative cognitive dysfunction influences long-term impairment.


Subject(s)
Cognition Disorders/etiology , Coronary Artery Bypass , Hypoxia/complications , Humans , Neuropsychological Tests , Oxygen/blood , Postoperative Complications , Psychometrics , Regression Analysis
11.
Heart ; 89(8): 897-900, 2003 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12860868

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess platelet activating factor (PAF) antagonists, potent neuroprotective agents in experimental cerebral dysfunction, in clinical practice. DESIGN: Double blind, minimised, placebo controlled trial of low and high dose PAF antagonist (lexipafant). SETTING: Cardiac surgery unit. PATIENTS: 150 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery using cardiopulmonary bypass. INTERVENTIONS: Randomisation to placebo, low dose (10 mg) or high dose (100 mg) lexipafant. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Incidence of impairment on four established cognitive tests, undertaken before, five days, and three months after CABG, examined by three methods for defining impairment. RESULTS: The three groups were similar with respect to preoperative and intraoperative factors. Observed levels of cognitive impairment were less than had been predicted from previous studies. There was no difference in the groups in cognitive change scores at five days or three months. Group mean analysis showed significant time factors for all four tests but not for interactions or for the lexipafant group. A composite cognitive index, based on the aggregate of four normally distributed tests, showed a significant effect for timing of the test but not for the lexipafant group or interaction. Age, but not duration of bypass, was the most important determinant of postoperative cognitive impairment. CONCLUSIONS: The neuroprotective PAF antagonist lexipafant did not differentially reduce the level of cognitive impairment after CABG as determined by power estimates derived from published studies. The strongest predictors of cognitive impairment were age and timing of the test after operation.


Subject(s)
Cognition Disorders/prevention & control , Coronary Artery Bypass/adverse effects , Imidazoles/therapeutic use , Leucine/analogs & derivatives , Leucine/therapeutic use , Neuroprotective Agents/therapeutic use , Platelet Activating Factor/antagonists & inhibitors , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests
12.
Rheumatology (Oxford) ; 42(9): 1067-73, 2003 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12730522

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: This study sought to explore and characterize referred sensations (RS) in patients with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) type 1 and test the hypothesis that pain in CRPS is associated with central sensory changes. METHODS: Subjects underwent standardized neurological examination involving light touch, pinprick and vibration sense with eyes closed and then with eyes open. The subjects described the location and sensation emanating from the stimulated site and whether they experienced any sensations (similar or different) elsewhere. RESULTS: Five of 16 subjects recruited demonstrated RS. These were experienced in real time, were modality specific (touch and pinprick) and were located on the body part immediately adjacent, on Penfield's cortical homunculus, to the stimulated site. The RS were diminished or absent when the subject visualized the stimulated area. They disappeared when stimulation ceased and on clinical improvement. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first report of RS in CRPS and provides further evidence of central reorganization in what was previously thought to be a peripheral disorder.


Subject(s)
Complex Regional Pain Syndromes/complications , Somatosensory Disorders/etiology , Adult , Complex Regional Pain Syndromes/physiopathology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Neurologic Examination/methods , Neuronal Plasticity , Pain Measurement , Physical Stimulation/methods , Somatosensory Disorders/physiopathology , Touch , Vibration
13.
Rheumatology (Oxford) ; 42(7): 888-92, 2003 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12730550

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The nature and cause of perceived joint stiffness (PJS), a well-established and defining symptom of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), remains unclear. We hypothesized that changes in the central nervous system (CNS) may determine and maintain this subjective experience of stiffness in a limb even after it is amputated. To test this hypothesis, patients with a phantom limb (PL) who had experienced characteristic RA stiffness prior to amputation were systematically investigated. METHODS: Three patients with a current diagnosis of RA and lower limb amputation were investigated to determine the nature and pattern of pain and stiffness in their PL and intact limb. In addition to standard physical examination, pain and stiffness severity was measured using visual analogue scales for both limbs. The duration and timing of stiffness were also recorded for each limb. RESULTS: In all three cases, the pattern of perceived RA stiffness was similar for the intact limb and the PL. All three patients described stiffness in their PL which mirrored that of physical RA joint symptoms in terms of quality, frequency, diurnal variation, location, distribution and response to medication [non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), corticosteroid, opiate and disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD)]. Unilateral exercise (or attempted exercise) relieved stiffness only in the limb being exercised. CONCLUSION: The extent to which the subjective experience of perceived stiffness could be dissociated from the assumed original peripheral source was strikingly illustrated in RA patients with phantom limbs. We suggest that the PJS characteristic of RA is generated and maintained by secondary plastic changes in the CNS, although causally related to the initial peripheral rheumatoid disease process.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Rheumatoid/physiopathology , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/psychology , Joints/physiopathology , Phantom Limb/physiopathology , Aged , Exercise Test , Humans , Middle Aged , Movement , Pain Threshold
14.
Rheumatology (Oxford) ; 42(1): 97-101, 2003 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12509620

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: We assessed mirror visual feedback (MVF) to test the hypothesis that incongruence between motor output and sensory input produces complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) (type 1) pain. METHODS: Eight subjects (disease duration > or =3 weeks to < or =3 yr) were studied over 6 weeks with assessments including two controls (no device and viewing a non-reflective surface) and the intervention (MVF). Pain severity and vasomotor changes were recorded. RESULTS: The control stages had no analgesic effect. MVF in early CRPS (< or =8 weeks) had an immediate analgesic effect and in intermediate disease (< or =1 yr) led to a reduction in stiffness. At 6 weeks, normalization of function and thermal differences had occurred (early and intermediate disease). No change was found in chronic CRPS. CONCLUSIONS: In early CRPS (type 1), visual input from a moving, unaffected limb re-establishes the pain-free relationship between sensory feedback and motor execution. Trophic changes and a less plastic neural pathway preclude this in chronic disease.


Subject(s)
Feedback, Psychological , Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy/therapy , Visual Perception , Adult , Body Temperature , Female , Humans , Leg , Male , Movement , Pain Threshold , Pilot Projects , Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy/psychology , Self Psychology
15.
Cogn Neuropsychiatry ; 8(4): 295-312, 2003 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16571568

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Distinguishing conversion disorder from malingering presents a significant challenge as the diagnosis ultimately depends on the patient's subjective report and the clinician's suspicion of an intention to deceive. Using hypnosis to manipulate the intentionality of movement inhibition in the same subjects, we used positron emission tomography (PET) to determine whether failure to move during intentionally simulated and subjectively experienced paralysis is mediated by different neural structures. METHODS: Using a within-subject design, 12 normal, hypnotised subjects were tested under two paralysis conditions during the same scanning session. Half of the scans were performed with the suggestion that the left leg was paralysed (subjectively experienced paralysis condition) and half with the leg normal but with the instruction that paralysis should be feigned (intentionally simulated paralysis condition). RESULTS: Relative increases in brain activation were seen in the right orbitofrontal cortex, right cerebellum, left thalamus, and left putamen during subjectively experienced paralysis compared to intentionally simulated paralysis, although a previously reported activation of the right anterior cingulate cortex was not seen. During intentionally simulated paralysis compared to subjectively experienced paralysis relative increases in brain activation were seen in the left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, and a number of right posterior cortical structures. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that subjectively experienced paralysis has a different neural basis to intentionally simulated paralysis. These findings have theoretical and clinical implications for malingering and related attempts to unravel the neuropsychological basis for conversion hysteria.

17.
Br J Gen Pract ; 51(465): 295-6, 2001 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11458483

ABSTRACT

This survey of 152 rural general practitioners (GPs) studied the impact of patient suicide on their professional and personal lives. The response rate was 79%, with the average GP encountering a patient suicide every three years. The reactions of GPs to patient suicide were similar to those expressed by other health care workers. Factors that lessened the effects of patient suicide were identified and most GPs indicated their preference for a support system to be established to facilitate GPs in dealing with the aftermath of practice suicide.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Attitude to Death , Physicians, Family/psychology , Rural Population , Suicide/psychology , Adult , Data Collection , Emotions , Female , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Ireland , Male , Middle Aged , Referral and Consultation , Social Support
18.
Neuroimage ; 14(1 Pt 2): S91-7, 2001 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11373138

ABSTRACT

Patients who seem to "ignore" objects or people on one side of space have been described in the medical literature for well over a century. The term "visuospatial neglect" is now used to describe the cluster of behaviors whereby patients after unilateral cerebral lesions (most frequently of right parietal cortex) fail to attend or explore (predominantly) the side of space contralateral to the lesion. Although the condition comprises a complex disruption of space-related behaviors, the prevailing view was that the different symptoms could be accommodated in terms of damage to one of three different cognitive mechanisms mediating attention (e.g., K. M. Heilman and E. Valenstein, Ann. Neurol. 5: 166-170, 1979), intention (R. T. Watson, E. Valenstein, and K. Heilman, Ann. Neurol. 3: 505-508, 1978), and/or representation (E. Bisiach, Q. J. Exp. Psychol. 46: 435-461, 1993). The general consensus favors an attentional deficit but the notion of attention has always proved conceptually slippery and difficult to operationalize (P. W. Halligan and J. C. Marshall, Cogn. Neuropsychol. 11: 167-206, 1994a). In this paper, we consider how drawing performance after right brain damage in patients with "visual neglect" reveals the involvement and interplay of several cognitive deficits, including aspects of mental representation and spatial awareness.


Subject(s)
Agraphia/physiopathology , Attention/physiology , Perceptual Disorders/physiopathology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Space Perception/physiology , Agraphia/diagnosis , Art , Awareness/physiology , Brain Mapping , Humans , Neuropsychological Tests , Parietal Lobe/physiopathology , Perceptual Disorders/diagnosis
19.
Nat Rev Neurosci ; 2(3): 209-15, 2001 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11256082

ABSTRACT

Cognitive neuropsychiatry represents a systematic and theoretically driven approach to explain clinical psychopathologies in terms of deficits to normal cognitive mechanisms. A concern with the neural substrates of impaired cognitive mechanisms links cognitive neuropsychiatry to the basic neurosciences. The emergence of cognitive neuropsychiatry in the 1990s illustrates the growing rapprochement between cognitive neuropsychology, clinical medicine and the neurosciences in addressing common questions about disorders of the mind/brain. In reviewing recent applications, we highlight how this hybrid discipline will make a distinctive contribution to the science of psychopathology.


Subject(s)
Cognition Disorders , Cognitive Science , Mental Disorders , Psychiatry , Psychopathology , Brain/pathology , Brain/physiopathology , Brain Chemistry , Hallucinations , Humans , Mental Disorders/classification , Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Mental Disorders/etiology , Mental Disorders/psychology , Psychiatry/methods
20.
Ann Thorac Surg ; 71(2): 667-72, 2001 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11235725

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The systemic inflammatory reaction (SIR) is assumed to be one of the factors that causes cerebral dysfunction after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The aim of the present study was to evaluate the relationship between the SIR and postoperative cognitive performance at 5 days and 3 months. METHODS: One hundred patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting were studied. Inflammatory markers and markers of coagulation and fibrinolysis were determined at several time points during and after the operation. Correlation analysis between maximum levels of the different markers and early and late performance was performed. RESULTS: No overall association was found between the maximum levels of the inflammatory markers and early and late function. CONCLUSIONS: Notwithstanding limitations of statistical power established markers of systemic inflammatory reaction showed no relationship with outcome at 5-day or 3-month follow-up in this subset of patients.


Subject(s)
Cardiopulmonary Bypass , Cognition Disorders/immunology , Coronary Artery Bypass , Inflammation Mediators/blood , Neuropsychological Tests , Postoperative Complications/immunology , Aged , Cognition Disorders/diagnosis , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Postoperative Complications/diagnosis , Risk Factors , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/diagnosis , Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome/immunology
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