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1 by diseases exhibiting comorbid visceral and psychiatric symptoms.
2 d had significantly improved functioning and psychiatric symptoms.
3 ng with the treatment regimen as a result of psychiatric symptoms.
4  how mind and brain work together to produce psychiatric symptoms.
5 f a deleterious association between lead and psychiatric symptoms.
6 s, lead was nonsignificantly associated with psychiatric symptoms.
7 nigmatic relationships between dizziness and psychiatric symptoms.
8 iginous dizziness, subjective imbalance, and psychiatric symptoms.
9  abuse, by themselves and in combination, on psychiatric symptoms.
10  can induce distinct behavioral outcomes and psychiatric symptoms.
11 th hepatic disease, neurological disease, or psychiatric symptoms.
12 imprinted gene that is often associated with psychiatric symptoms.
13 with PTSD, substance use disorder, and other psychiatric symptoms.
14  system to fully address either individual's psychiatric symptoms.
15 ot specific to working memory abnormality or psychiatric symptoms.
16 l, or dysmorphic conditions co-occurred with psychiatric symptoms.
17 rlie the frequent comorbidity of colonic and psychiatric symptoms.
18  Negative Syndrome Scale was used to measure psychiatric symptoms.
19 nd structured interview measures of PTSD and psychiatric symptoms.
20 reater impairment) than did patients with no psychiatric symptoms.
21 tes were randomly selected for screening for psychiatric symptoms.
22 ss and trauma, leading to increased risk for psychiatric symptoms.
23 presents one of the earliest and most common psychiatric symptoms.
24 significant after controlling for concurrent psychiatric symptoms.
25 s were associated with both self and partner psychiatric symptoms.
26 donepezil and rivastigmine for cognitive and psychiatric symptoms.
27 w they may be influencing the development of psychiatric symptoms.
28 tanding fluctuations in emotional memory and psychiatric symptoms.
29  no between-group differences in severity of psychiatric symptoms.
30 behaviors and their impairments give rise to psychiatric symptoms.
31 ly developing group and the group with other psychiatric symptoms.
32 tem, which could affect the brain and induce psychiatric symptoms.
33 ic effect in causing both motor and specific psychiatric symptoms.
34 xes, occasionally spasticity, and frequently psychiatric symptoms.
35 s no longer significant after adjustment for psychiatric symptoms.
36 on positive group to 27 of whom 21 (77%) had psychiatric symptoms.
37 ay underlie other aspects of functioning and psychiatric symptoms.
38                      While 55.2% reported no psychiatric symptoms, 39.2% and 26.3% reported symptoms
39 sistently poor and ex-poor children had more psychiatric symptoms (4.38 and 4.28, respectively) than
40 als, but was more frequently associated with psychiatric symptoms (58 [25%] vs 34 [15%]) and weight g
41 ome carriers of the translocation who had no psychiatric symptoms-a pattern found in other families w
42 view for DSM-III-R; level of functioning and psychiatric symptoms according to the Global Assessment
43        In nearly all cases, there were early psychiatric symptoms after a median period of 6 months a
44 elve women (14-44 years) developed prominent psychiatric symptoms, amnesia, seizures, frequent dyskin
45        This study examined the prevalence of psychiatric symptoms among residents/workers in Manhatta
46 c steroid (AAS) use has been associated with psychiatric symptoms and cognitive deficits, yet we have
47              The degree to which people with psychiatric symptoms and cognitive dysfunction can provi
48 were used to assess the relationship between psychiatric symptoms and cognitive function.
49 ons require adaptation in this group because psychiatric symptoms and cognitive impairment are highly
50                             The influence of psychiatric symptoms and cognitive impairment on daily l
51                                              Psychiatric symptoms and cognitive performance were not
52                     The relationship between psychiatric symptoms and disability in refugee survivors
53 eable risk factors in influencing adolescent psychiatric symptoms and disorders.
54 giosity are not strongly related to risk for psychiatric symptoms and disorders.
55  with having been tested before, more severe psychiatric symptoms and drug problems, level of worry a
56 s well its relationship to substance-induced psychiatric symptoms and drug use patterns.
57 cipants every 4 months for 2 years to assess psychiatric symptoms and functional status, and we colle
58          The authors examined the changes in psychiatric symptoms and global functioning in children
59 njection drug, and alcohol use.Reductions in psychiatric symptoms and hospitalizations are important
60 mechanisms through which genes contribute to psychiatric symptoms and how pharmacological and psychol
61 on is achieved are associated with decreased psychiatric symptoms and improved functioning in the off
62 en steroid abuse is associated with multiple psychiatric symptoms and is a significant public health
63 ated the association between lead burden and psychiatric symptoms and its potential modification by a
64 eductions in associated eating disorders and psychiatric symptoms and maintenance of gains through fo
65 alopathy, although the latter can also cause psychiatric symptoms and movement disorders.
66       Using large-scale online assessment of psychiatric symptoms and neurocognitive performance in t
67 eimer's disease but who manifest significant psychiatric symptoms and neuroleptic-induced extrapy-ram
68 ine the relationship of estrogen levels with psychiatric symptoms and neuropsychological function in
69                                 Furthermore, psychiatric symptoms and psychosocial risk factors have
70   Dissociation may be a critical mediator of psychiatric symptoms and risk-taking behavior among sexu
71      Cognitive therapy significantly reduced psychiatric symptoms and seems to be a safe and acceptab
72 antibodies includes dominant behavioural and psychiatric symptoms and seizures that often interfere w
73 history of stressful life events, 4) current psychiatric symptoms and substance use, and 5) lifetime
74                                              Psychiatric symptoms and ward behaviors were assessed up
75 vels of alcohol use, injection drug use, and psychiatric symptoms and were one-fifth as likely as tho
76 981 participants endorsing significant other psychiatric symptoms and with 1963 typically developing
77  need for obstetricians to assess history of psychiatric symptoms and, with pediatric and psychiatric
78 ency between model animal behavior and human psychiatric symptoms, and 3) the possibility that model
79  in terms of neuropsychological functioning, psychiatric symptoms, and ability to provide informed co
80 ifests with progressive motor abnormalities, psychiatric symptoms, and cognitive decline.
81 is prevalent, especially among children with psychiatric symptoms, and constitutes a major concern wo
82 e relationships among cognitive dysfunction, psychiatric symptoms, and decisional capacity.
83 ent attendance, drug use, cigarette smoking, psychiatric symptoms, and HIV-risk behavior.
84              Poor visual acuity, presence of psychiatric symptoms, and less satisfaction with vision
85 involuntary movements, extrapyramidal signs, psychiatric symptoms, and medical and drug treatment his
86  programs, experienced greater reductions in psychiatric symptoms, and were more satisfied with their
87                                              Psychiatric symptoms are a consistent early clinical fea
88                                              Psychiatric symptoms are a significant aspect of Hunting
89 sentations, and the frequent assumption that psychiatric symptoms are an inherent part of the underly
90  system leading to cognitive, autonomic, and psychiatric symptoms are not sufficiently treated by cur
91  the neurobiological factors contributing to psychiatric symptoms are poorly understood.
92             These results indicate that once psychiatric symptoms are present in patients with Alzhei
93                                              Psychiatric symptoms are prominent in the initial presen
94 ng the 3 medication groups in improvement of psychiatric symptoms as measured by the PANSS total scor
95           Comprehensive measures of PTSD and psychiatric symptoms, as well as social functioning, wer
96  mechanistic insights into the cognitive and psychiatric symptoms associated with a schizophrenia-pre
97 een assumed to underlie the neurological and psychiatric symptoms associated with neurodevelopmental
98 e adjusted by sex, family factors, and child psychiatric symptoms at 8 years of age, we found indepen
99 ed-effects regression models, differences in psychiatric symptoms at baseline and over time between t
100 dwelling elderly adults who had nonpsychotic psychiatric symptoms at baseline.
101                              The presence of psychiatric symptoms at presentation was a better discri
102  to 7 had a rate of psychotic, but not other psychiatric, symptoms at age 23 that was nearly seven ti
103 tends these findings by examining changes in psychiatric symptoms, behavioral problems, and functioni
104  differences in emotional responses and many psychiatric symptoms between males and females.
105 fferences were not explained by nonpsychotic psychiatric symptom burden, multimorbidity, or substance
106 ication compliance was associated with fewer psychiatric symptoms but not with better housing placeme
107 icant reductions in substance use, PTSD, and psychiatric symptoms, but community care participants wo
108 est whether systematic patterns of change in psychiatric symptoms can be recovered across weekly asse
109 in other diseases where motor, cognitive and psychiatric symptoms co-exist.
110                          Relationships among psychiatric symptoms, cognitive function, and daily livi
111  maternal depression severity and children's psychiatric symptoms continued to decrease over time.
112                                              Psychiatric symptoms correlated positively with each oth
113      Clinicians should be aware that serious psychiatric symptoms could be associated with ephedra us
114 relationship between religiosity and current psychiatric symptoms, current substance use, lifetime ps
115 ssed mother's symptoms remit, her children's psychiatric symptoms decrease.
116                                              Psychiatric symptoms decreased significantly only in chi
117 patients with 22q11.2DS to manage associated psychiatric symptoms delayed diagnosis of PD by up to 10
118 eview introduces a classification scheme for psychiatric symptoms, describing them in terms of the st
119 id arthritis in whom subacute neurologic and psychiatric symptoms developed after 3 years of treatmen
120                              Analysis of the psychiatric symptoms does not suggest specific features
121 cal basis for and complex interactions among psychiatric symptoms, drug exposure history, and addicti
122 eptococcal infections present with motor and psychiatric symptoms, due to basal ganglia involvement.
123 olescence or early adulthood after age, sex, psychiatric symptoms during childhood and early adolesce
124 identifying the patients at highest risk for psychiatric symptoms during recovery.
125 ophrenia, neuropsychological functioning and psychiatric symptoms (e.g., apathy and avolition), but n
126                Less well appreciated are the psychiatric symptoms experienced by many PD patients, in
127 and, unlike girls, had no reduction in total psychiatric symptoms following foster placement.
128 omes with prominent, and sometimes isolated, psychiatric symptoms for which patients are fi rst seen
129  Longitudinal measures for up to 10 years of psychiatric symptoms from the Symptom Checklist-90-Revis
130               Additional measures were other psychiatric symptoms, functional status, quality of life
131 nversely related to the magnitude of initial psychiatric symptoms (Hamilton Depression Scale: r = -0.
132 s and atypical presentations, including pure psychiatric symptoms, has shifted scientific interest ba
133                     Prominent behavioral and psychiatric symptoms have been recognized since these di
134 struments designed to collect information on psychiatric symptoms, health, and possible postdeploymen
135                           In addition, their psychiatric symptoms, history of suicide attempts, and o
136  with reductions in use of other substances, psychiatric symptoms, HIV risk behavior, and inpatient s
137  and lives of people suffering from specific psychiatric symptoms, illnesses, and/or disabilities.
138 ata extraction were different neurologic and psychiatric symptoms, imaging results, and age at onset
139 autonomic reactivity to trauma reminders and psychiatric symptoms in adults who had some degree of di
140 rify the neuropathological substrates of key psychiatric symptoms in dementia with Lewy bodies.
141 ly provide insight into the origins of these psychiatric symptoms in dementia.
142 explanation for many of the neurological and psychiatric symptoms in FXS.
143  may be effective at treating effort-related psychiatric symptoms in humans.
144 in DISC1 and the delayed onset of a range of psychiatric symptoms in late adolescence.
145 ad to cognitive decline, motor deficits, and psychiatric symptoms in patients with Huntington disease
146  cognitive therapy was effective in reducing psychiatric symptoms in people with schizophrenia spectr
147 Little is known about the impact of comorbid psychiatric symptoms in persons with HIV.
148 n the two diagnoses, but the contribution of psychiatric symptoms in primary insomnia appears to be a
149 ess because they often present with comorbid psychiatric symptoms in the absence of identifiable vest
150  Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, psychiatric symptoms in the never-poor, persistently poo
151                                   Children's psychiatric symptoms in the STAR*D-Child study were asse
152           The acute onset of severe atypical psychiatric symptoms in young female patients should rai
153 m deficits in association with dimensions of psychiatric symptoms in youth using a working memory par
154 ington disease (HD) is associated with early psychiatric symptoms including anxiety and depression.
155                          Female carriers had psychiatric symptoms, including generalized anxiety, dep
156               Rather, it was the presence of psychiatric symptoms, including psychosis and agitation,
157  also carried this mutation but did not have psychiatric symptoms, indicating that this mutation has
158 l participants and used to obtain convergent psychiatric symptom information for additional first-deg
159             The authors group behavioral and psychiatric symptoms into psychotic features, agitated f
160 monitoring task and were assessed on current psychiatric symptoms, IQ, and frontal lobe functioning.
161 nce suggests that fetal exposure to maternal psychiatric symptoms is associated with future risk for
162 sure to bullying in the absence of childhood psychiatric symptoms is associated with psychiatric outc
163 o bullying, even in the absence of childhood psychiatric symptoms, is associated with severe adulthoo
164 lateral sclerosis (ALS) patient kindreds and psychiatric symptoms may precede the onset of motor symp
165 g brain, leading to complex neurological and psychiatric symptoms observed in fetal alcohol spectrum
166                                              Psychiatric symptoms occurred in two thirds of acute res
167 nd link a potential function of DISC1 to the psychiatric symptoms of AD.
168   There was a significant improvement in the psychiatric symptoms of individuals who were seropositiv
169 gulation, altered stress hormone levels, and psychiatric symptoms of stress-related mental illnesses.
170 he two groups did not differ with respect to psychiatric symptoms or hospitalizations.
171                  All patients presented with psychiatric symptoms or memory problems; 76 had seizures
172    There was very little change in patients' psychiatric symptoms or social behavior problems.
173 aze palsy, rhythmic myoclonus, dementia with psychiatric symptoms, or hypothalamic manifestations).
174                                              Psychiatric symptoms play a crucial role in psychology a
175 itish birth cohort) underwent assessments of psychiatric symptoms, primarily anxiety and depression,
176 t from other types of depression in terms of psychiatric symptom profile and treatment response.
177 ly, there was no evidence of exacerbation of psychiatric symptoms, psychosis, depression, or suicidal
178                  Ratings of cannabis use and psychiatric symptoms (psychotic, negative, disorganized,
179                                              Psychiatric symptoms, quality of life, scores on the Per
180 e used to determine the associations between psychiatric symptom ratings and quantitative anatomic an
181 ere were no significant treatment effects on psychiatric symptom ratings or psychiatric adverse event
182                       High rates of debt and psychiatric symptoms related to gambling, including anxi
183        In addition to relapse prevention and psychiatric symptom relief, the benefits of antipsychoti
184 gs indicate that in a young woman with acute psychiatric symptoms, seizures, and central hypoventilat
185  report four young women who developed acute psychiatric symptoms, seizures, memory deficits, decreas
186 a 26% (95% CI=7%-44%) greater improvement in psychiatric symptom severity compared with standard case
187  cortisol secretion and multiple measures of psychiatric symptom severity were also collected on all.
188 with life, neurobehavioral symptom severity, psychiatric symptom severity, and sleep impairment were
189 mary care clinicians who detect subthreshold psychiatric symptoms should consider a broad psychiatric
190 hosocial and functioning measures, including psychiatric symptoms, social interactions, quality of li
191 ed aspects of motivation are associated with psychiatric symptoms such as anergia, fatigue, lassitude
192 ications, and more alcohol-related emotional/psychiatric symptoms such as depression and anxiety.
193                       Prior studies indicate psychiatric symptoms such as depression, apathy and anxi
194  characterized by comorbidity of colonic and psychiatric symptoms, such as irritable bowel syndrome.
195  likely to have prominent speech-related and psychiatric symptoms than patients with classic disease
196  the complexities of evaluating and treating psychiatric symptoms that are concurrent with a seizure
197 mmon and results in several neurological and psychiatric symptoms that are poorly linked to standard
198     In addition, 50 (43%) of the mothers had psychiatric symptoms that did not meet the diagnostic th
199  The authors define 6 groups of subthreshold psychiatric symptoms that do not meet the full criteria
200 ut extrapyramidal symptoms or signs also had psychiatric symptoms that might be related to their carr
201 ase of a woman in her late 30s who developed psychiatric symptoms that progressed to encephalopathy,
202 tempts before treatment may reflect emerging psychiatric symptoms that trigger medical consultations
203                   However, as for many other psychiatric symptoms the biological mechanisms underlyin
204  environmental perturbations that exacerbate psychiatric symptoms themselves.
205                             Because of their psychiatric symptoms, they often are unlikely to receive
206 h histories of mood disorders reported their psychiatric symptoms to a medical provider, a substantia
207 ulation study with data on social habits and psychiatric symptoms to compare prevalences of depressio
208 any relationship between brain pathology and psychiatric symptoms, true natural disease entities may
209  manner, with onset of motor, cognitive, and psychiatric symptoms typically occurring in midlife, fol
210        We linked computational parameters to psychiatric symptoms using canonical correlation analysi
211  up these children at age 12 years to assess psychiatric symptoms using the Diagnostic Interview Sche
212 nterview for Substance and Mental Disorders; psychiatric symptoms using the Positive and Negative Syn
213              The relationships of persistent psychiatric symptoms (visual hallucinations, delusions,
214                            The occurrence of psychiatric symptoms was reported over 1 month.
215                                 Age, but not psychiatric symptoms, was predictive of objective insomn
216 nts and abnormalities of voluntary movement, psychiatric symptoms, weight loss, dementia, and a relen
217 nts and abnormalities of voluntary movement, psychiatric symptoms, weight loss, dementia, and a relen
218                                              Psychiatric symptoms were assessed and average estrogen
219                                              Psychiatric symptoms were assessed through the Positive
220                                              Psychiatric symptoms were assessed using the Brief Sympt
221                       MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Psychiatric symptoms were assessed using the Preschool A
222                                              Psychiatric symptoms were assessed with the Beck Depress
223 re years of education, white race, and fewer psychiatric symptoms were associated with being in the g
224 owing data: 1) whether changes in children's psychiatric symptoms were associated with changes in the
225 hildhood and early adolescence, and parental psychiatric symptoms were controlled statistically.
226                                              Psychiatric symptoms were evaluated by using the Hospita
227                               Differences in psychiatric symptoms were evaluated using longitudinal r
228              Rates of clinically significant psychiatric symptoms were high, equally prevalent in pat
229                                              Psychiatric symptoms were measured with the parent-rated
230                                   Changes in psychiatric symptoms were measured with the Positive and
231          Correlations of hormone levels with psychiatric symptoms were nonsignificant.
232 on about bullying, exposure to bullying, and psychiatric symptoms were obtained from parents, teacher
233                               These baseline psychiatric symptoms were of similar or greater magnitud
234 y enrolled, participants with high levels of psychiatric symptoms were oversampled for follow-up.
235    Healthy women with no gastrointestinal or psychiatric symptoms were randomly assigned to groups gi
236        Decreases in the number of children's psychiatric symptoms were significantly associated with
237     Own psychological resilience factors and psychiatric symptoms were strongly correlated for both p
238  measured by the LPP, predispose children to psychiatric symptoms when exposed to higher levels of st
239 n the ICU were significantly associated with psychiatric symptoms, whereas greater severity of illnes
240 ntions are beneficial in reducing iatrogenic psychiatric symptoms while allowing patients to maintain
241 he co-occurrence of various neurological and psychiatric symptoms with DD, including mood disorders,
242 ers, disabling relationship difficulties, or psychiatric symptoms without associated impairment.
243  type of isolated psychiatric episodes (pure psychiatric symptoms without neurological involvement) e

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