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Amphetamine psychosis or paranoid schizophrenia?
H, Zeidman, M, Oscherwitz, D, Addario
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Illusory correlations in paranoid and non‐paranoid schizophrenia
British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1984Paranoid schizophrenics, non‐paranoid schizophrenics and normals were assessed on tasks designed to demonstrate their tendency to perceive illusory correlations. It was hypothesized that paranoids would show stronger illusory correlations than normals due to the predominance of their schemata when processing information, and that non‐paranoids would ...
J H, Brennan, D R, Hemsley
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Narcissistic Equilibrium in Paranoid Schizophrenia
Psychodynamic Psychiatry, 2019Several studies have stressed the relevance of family environment in the course of schizophrenia and the perception of the pathology by both the subjects and family members. The objective of the current qualitative study consisted in the development of a grounded theory (GT) regarding narcissism and the family dynamics of subjects diagnosed with ...
Guilherme Rui, Canta +3 more
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Cannabis Psychosis and Paranoid Schizophrenia
Archives of General Psychiatry, 1976The initial clinical symptoms of 25 consecutive cases of cannabis psychosis of the paranoid type and 25 consecutive cases of paranoid schizophrenia were studied and compared, in order to delineate features that would enable a differentiation of the two conditions. It was observed that the patients with cannabis psychosis substantially differed in terms
V R, Thacore, S R, Shukla
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Phenylethylamine in Paranoid Chronic Schizophrenia
Science, 1979Phenylethylamine (PEA) is an endogenous amine that is structurally and pharmacologically related to amphetamine. Urinary PEA excretion is significantly higher in paranoid chronic schizophrenics than in nonparanoid chronic schizophrenics and normal controls.
S G, Potkin +5 more
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Paranoid schizophrenia: An unorthodox view.
American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1984Most paranoid patients have traditionally been diagnosed as schizophrenic, although considerable evidence points to the dissimilarities between paranoid and nonparanoid schizophrenic patients and to commonalities between paranoid and affective disorder groups.
Edward, Zigler, Marion, Glick
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PARANOID SCHIZOPHRENIA: CASE REPORT
Health Sciences, 2023Schizophrenia is a complex chronic mental disorder, that manifests with positive and negative symptoms, as well as disorganized behavior and cognitive changes, and affects around 1% of the population. Paranoia remains the most common delusion among patients diagnosed with schizophrenia.
Raminta Šulskutė +2 more
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HLA—Cw4 in Paranoid Schizophrenia
Tissue Antigens, 1977On a group of 40 paranoid schizophrenic patients HLA serotypes for HLA--A, B, C antigens a significant increase of Cw4 was observed. It is argued that this finding represents the common denominator for previous data reporting increased A9 and A28 antigen in SCH because these antigens are frequently present on haplotypes bearing Cw4.
P, Iványi, D, Iványi, P, Zemek
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Organ Transplantation and Paranoid Schizophrenia
Psychosomatics, 1994We describe two actively psychotic patients with DSM-III-R diagnoses of chronic paranoid schizophrenia who were successfully transplanted (bone marrow and liver)
A, DiMartini, R, Twillman
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Depression in Chronic Paranoid Schizophrenia
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1980SummaryAmongst 100 chronic paranoid schizophrenics depression occurred in 30 per cent over a mean 6 years and was significantly associated with parental loss before 17 years.
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