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Affective symptoms in schizophrenia

Drug Discovery Today: Therapeutic Strategies, 2011
In addition to positive, negative, aggressive and cognitive symptoms, patients with schizophrenia often exhibit affective disorders, including depression and anxiety. Affective symptoms in schizophrenia can be particularly disturbing for patients with schizophrenia, increasing the risk of suicide and diminishing quality of life.
Debbi A. Morrissette, Stephen M. Stahl
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Affective Disorders and Affective Symptoms in Alcoholism

Journal of Chemical Dependency Treatment, 1990
(1990). Affective Disorders and Affective Symptoms in Alcoholism. Journal of Chemical Dependency Treatment: Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 139-162.
Richard L. Weddige, Mary Beth Ostrom
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Affective Symptoms in Early-Onset Dementia

Neurologic Clinics, 2011
The phenotypic expression of neuropsychological deficits can have very different genotypic etiologies. Understanding the causes of various neuropsychological deficits is tantamount in developing the appropriate treatments. The literature on mood disorders as a risk factor for dementia is reviewed as well as common neuropsychological patterns in ...
Kenneth, Podell, Karen, Torres
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Quality of life and subthreshold affective symptoms

Quality of Life Research, 2005
Although Quality of Life in patients with Mood Disorders has been widely investigated, there are very few studies that examine the relationship between quality of life and subthreshold affective symptoms. The aim of this study was to analyze the relationship between mood spectrum and subjective quality of life in the general population. A sample of 200
GORACCI, A.   +4 more
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Affective priming in schizophrenia with and without affective negative symptoms

European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 2003
In the present study automatic perceptual sensitivity to facial affect information was examined in chronic schizophrenic patients. An affective priming task including subliminal and supraliminal presentations of sad and happy facial affect was administered to schizophrenia patients with a flat affect expression (n = 30), schizophrenia patients ...
Thomas, Suslow   +2 more
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Mechanisms, Symptoms, and Affects

2015
This chapter discusses the mechanisms, symptoms, and affects, including physiological, biological, psychological states, traits and events; emotions, moods and affects (anxiety, depression, frustration-anger, pleasure-satisfaction-joy, pain, power-control-elation).
Michael McGuire, Alfonso Troisi
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Depression, Affect and Negative Symptoms in Schizophrenia

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1989
The relationship of depression with affect deficit in schizophrenic patients continues to challenge both the clinician and the researcher. Often there is considerable difficulty in differentiating these two affect states in a reliable and valid fashion. On the observational level, depressed affect often appears somewhat restricted, having lost the full
J P, Lindenmayer, S R, Kay
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Life Events and Senile Dementia Affective Symptoms

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1995
BackgroundPrevious research in the elderly has linked threatening life events with depression. Dementia sufferers are known to be sensitive to stressful changes in their daily life such as relocation. This study investigates whether threatening life events are associated with depressive symptoms in dementia sufferers.MethodUsing the Life Events and ...
M, Orrell, P, Bebbington
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Basic Symptoms in Schizophrenic and Affective Psychoses

Psychopathology, 1989
The study compares schizophrenic and affective psychoses with regard to basic symptoms. 30 patients in schizophrenic pre-, intra-, and postpsychotic basic stages and 30 patients in endogenous-depressive phases were examined according to the Bonn Scale for the Assessment of Basic Symptoms.
H, Ebel   +3 more
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Recalling symptom episodes affects reports of immediately-experienced symptoms: Inducing symptom suggestibility

Psychology & Health, 1996
Abstract We report two experiments in which subjects were induced to over-report symptoms that they had been instructed to recall. In Experiment 1, subjects who recalled a past upset stomach episode rated themselves as presently experiencing higher levels of nausea and other gastric symptoms than did control subjects.
J. A. Skelton   +2 more
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