MENTAL DISTRUBANCES FOLLOWED BY STUPOR IN A PATIENT WITH CARCINOIDOSIS: Recovery with Tryptophan treatment | Semantic Scholar
Tryptophan in the treatment of carcinoid crisis
- 2004
Medicine
Tryptophan may have a supportive role in the management of carcinoid crisis and its level of consciousness improved and blood tryptophan increased to 10 μg/ml after treatment with 3.4 g tryPTophan daily.
Catatonia: the Tension Insanity
- John Johnson
- 1993
Psychology, Medicine
Catatonia is now best considered as a neuropsychiatric syndrome due to a wide variety of organic disease processes, manifest in catelepsy in a setting of an abnormal mental state, most commonly an affective disorder.
INITIAL MENTAL DISORDERS IN CARCINOMA OF PANCREAS AND STOMACH
- L. JacobssonJ. Ottosson
- 1971
Medicine, Psychology
There are several casuistic reports of early mental disorders in carcinoma of the pancreas (c.p.) usually in the form of depression, anxiety and insomnia, and there is usually a fairly high percentage of cases with initial mental disturbance without or coiicurrent with somatic symptoms such as pain and loss of weight.
Delirium, clouding of consciousness and confusion.
- Z. J. Lipowski
- 1967
Psychology, Medicine
Current interest in cognition should extend to delirium in which disorganization of cognitive processes is the chief feature, and dissatisfaction with the current classification of the so-called organic brain syndromes is justified.
A PITFALL IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF MYASTHENIA GRAVIS
- Raymond Antebi
- 1963
Medicine
It is noteworthy that most of the classical textbooks of Medicine, Neurology or Psychiatry mention in the appropriate chapters, the common symptomatology of Myasthenia Gravis and Conversion Hysteria.
Hypnosis without hypnosis.
- A. Kuhner
- 1962
Psychology
Case illustrations support the viewpoint that the proper relationship is akin to the hypnotic one and enhances the therapeutic prognun without hypnosis failures and a comprehemive approach to counteract the BhortCOmings mentioned manipulates the inter-pemd relationship factor.
The significance of hypnotic depth in therapy.
- A. Weitzenhoffer
- 1962
Psychology
There is evidence, however, that dimensions other than suggestibility probably determine hypnotic behavior, hence the effectiveness of hypnotherapeutic intervention and the hypnotist's ability to recognize, accept, and utilize what the patient offers.