Results 181 to 190 of about 10,347,648 (265)

Neuro-Ophthalmologic Manifestations of Psychogenic Disease

Seminars in Neurology, 2006
From a neuro-ophthalmologic standpoint, five areas may be affected by psychogenic disease: (1) vision, including visual acuity and visual field; (2) ocular motility and alignment; (3) pupillary size and reactivity; (4) eyelid position and function; and (5) corneal and facial sensation.
Neil Miller1
openaire   +3 more sources

Functional (psychogenic) symptoms in Parkinson's disease

Movement Disorders, 2013
ABSTRACTIt has been reported that patients who have Parkinson's disease have a high prevalence of somatisation (functional neurological symptoms) compared with patients who have other neurodegenerative conditions. Numerous explanations have been advanced for this phenomenon.
Isabel, Pareés   +7 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Prostatitis, Prostatosis and Prostalgia, Psychogenic or Organic Disease?

Scandinavian Journal of Urology and Nephrology, 1991
The term 'chronic prostatitis syndrome' (C.P.S) encompasses chronic bacterial prostatitis, chlamydia or ureaplasma-associated disease, chronic 'abacterial' prostatitis, and patients with prostatosis or prostatosis or prostalgia. Interesting observations emerged from the evaluation of the clinical material indicating that the patients with abacterial ...
M. PAVONEMACALUSO   +11 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Functional (psychogenic) neurological diseases

2022
Many neurological symptoms may appear without organic lesions of the nervous system. Functional (psychogenic) neurological diseases, also called conversion disorders, are involuntary. There are two voluntary mimics of functional disorders: factitious disease, where patients have a psychiatric illness, and malingering, where persons have no illness and ...
Hiroshi Shibasaki, Mark Hallett
openaire   +1 more source

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