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1 categorized as 'atypical', 'idiopathic' or 'psychogenic'.
2 epticus such as nonconvulsive, autonomic and psychogenic.
3 ement disorders may still be misdiagnosed as psychogenic.
5 ecords and neuropsychological findings in 53 psychogenic amnesia cases (ratio of 3:1, males:females),
8 ms of Markowitsch's and Kopelman's models of psychogenic amnesia, and with respect to Anderson's neur
12 eal-life ambulatory setting in patients with psychogenic and organic tremor by actigraphy, and compar
16 head injury was actually more common in our psychogenic cases (P = 0.012), perhaps reflecting a 'lea
18 it remained unknown how chronic exposure to psychogenic challenges affects excitatory and inhibitory
20 onclusive features of somatoform disorder or psychogenic disorder can be found and, in these patients
21 isorders and, if unrecognised as a sign of a psychogenic disorder, it may lead to unnecessary and occ
25 ss and may be misdiagnosed or malingering or psychogenic dizziness because they often present with co
26 zziness; a refinement of earlier concepts of psychogenic dizziness, phobic postural vertigo, and spac
29 h organic dystonia to that in a patient with psychogenic dystonia (Psyd) and in healthy waking monkey
30 in functional neuroimaging of patients with psychogenic dystonia and genetically determined dystonia
32 l cortex that was common to both organic and psychogenic dystonia groups (compared with control subje
33 cortical differentiation between organic and psychogenic dystonia in terms of regional blood flow, bo
35 od flow in the primary motor cortex, whereas psychogenic dystonia was associated with significantly g
36 efrontal cortex, but there are no studies on psychogenic dystonia, and comparisons with findings in o
37 tudied patients did not have any evidence of psychogenic dystonia, and detailed investigation failed
40 ria for documented or clinically established psychogenic dystonia; 29% fulfilled DSM-IV (Diagnostic a
41 ii) fugue-to-focal retrograde amnesia; (iii) psychogenic focal retrograde amnesia following a minor n
42 owever, some tests reported to differentiate psychogenic from neurological movement disorders may hav
44 iographical memory loss differed between the psychogenic groups: fugue cases showed a severe and unif
46 buted to toxic exposure had features of mass psychogenic illness - notably, widespread subjective sym
48 f the anxiety surrounding an episode of mass psychogenic illness requires prompt recognition and a de
51 very few case series of patients with acute psychogenic memory loss (also known as dissociative/func
56 nt disorders continues, but a diagnosis of a psychogenic movement disorder should be actively sought
57 reatment-induced dyskinesias, can be seen in psychogenic movement disorder, and abnormal movements th
62 nic movement disorders cases, 4/11 (36%) non-psychogenic movement disorders cases and 4/12 (33%) cont
63 Convergence spasm was present in 9/13 (69%) psychogenic movement disorders cases, 4/11 (36%) non-psy
68 ogic sign, 36 subjects were studied, 13 with psychogenic movement disorders, 11 with organic movement
69 d laboratory findings that may help diagnose psychogenic movement disorders, and the ongoing controve
70 s can demonstrate characteristic features of psychogenic movement disorders, such as entrainment or s
76 t work on the diagnosis and investigation of psychogenic non-epileptic attacks, drop attacks, falls,
79 ily doctors of 260 consecutive patients with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES), 5-10 years af
80 ave been few studies of long-term outcome in psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES), and none of l
81 s involved in the treatment of patients with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures and generates ideas f
83 nd economic burdens from diagnostic delay of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) requires prompt
87 s the recent studies assessing patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures and developments in tr
89 ncrease in the number of publications about (psychogenic) nonepileptic seizures (NES) over the past t
92 ements that would not normally be considered psychogenic or produced by psychological factors, such a
93 t that confirms the diagnosis and excludes a psychogenic or voluntary torticollis in individual patie
94 ymptoms that have been called 'hysterical', 'psychogenic' or 'medically unexplained', which we will c
96 ary skin conditions, as well as neuropathic, psychogenic, or systemic disorders like chronic liver di
98 dache or tension headache, fibromyalgia, and psychogenic pain) and subsequent suicide death (assessed
102 arkinson's disease', 'Paradoxical kinesia', 'Psychogenic parkinsonism', 'Functional somatic syndromes
104 ounter the duality of the somatogenic versus psychogenic perspective and suggest a more integrated as
106 pain (OR, 2.20; 95% CI, 1.54-3.15; 1 study), psychogenic seizures (OR, 2.96; 95% CI, 1.12-4.69, I(2)
112 of exposure to predator odor stress (POS), a psychogenic stressor, on the concurrent efflux of four m
113 the nervous system to decrease reactivity to psychogenic stressors and facilitate social behavior, wh
114 lesions enhance corticosterone responses to psychogenic stressors via trans-synaptic influences on p
117 We studied 9 patients (five females) with psychogenic tics representing 4.9% of all 184 patients f
122 These data demonstrate that patients with psychogenic tremor fail to accurately perceive that they
124 st that maintenance of phasic contraction in psychogenic tremor is not due to intrinsic instability o
125 ay have incomplete specificity; for example, psychogenic tremor may not always be associated with com
126 actigraphy recordings, whereas patients with psychogenic tremor reported 65% more tremor than actigra
129 rders, such as entrainment or suppression of psychogenic tremor with contralateral hand movements.
132 t report describes seven elite athletes with psychogenic vocal cord dysfunction who presented with ac
133 cases and 4/12 (33%) controls (p=0.049 when psychogenic vs non-psychogenic disorders or controls wer
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