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1 hypothesis of glutamatergic hypofunction in catatonia.
2 that microglial-mediated inflammation causes catatonia.
3 ents and determine diagnostic thresholds for catatonia.
4 , are needed to advance our understanding of catatonia.
5 gnostic Statistical Manual 5 criterion A for catatonia.
6 .6-92.9) for Diagnostic Statistical Manual 5 catatonia.
7 arning of new motor routines and spontaneous catatonia.
8 ny other motor abnormalities associated with catatonia.
9 well-recognised motor abnormalities seen in catatonia.
10 viewed for five critically ill patients with catatonia.
11 h altered mental status in order to diagnose catatonia.
12 females with acute disorganized behavior or catatonia.
13 to identify an organic cause for the likely catatonia.
14 and the conditions that are associated with catatonia.
15 premotor areas in patients with hypokinetic catatonia.
16 parietal cortices could be state-specific to catatonia.
17 h constitute the neurovegetative features of catatonia.
18 lowing, agitation, disorganized behavior, or catatonia.
19 nes the evidence for immune dysregulation in catatonia.
20 yields insights into the time to relapse in catatonia.
21 the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying catatonia.
22 ]), psychosis (310 [67%]), mood (219 [47%]), catatonia (137 [30%]), and sleep disturbance (97 [21%]).
23 (43%) had only delirium, four (3%) had only catatonia, 42 (31%) had both, and 32 (24%) had neither.
26 ief review of the diagnosis and treatment of catatonia and address issues surrounding ECT, cardiac ef
27 en that about one in three patients had both catatonia and delirium, these data prompt reconsideratio
28 eficit/hyperactive disorder, mood disorders, catatonia and repetitive behaviours compared with childr
29 , which resulted in a complete resolution of catatonia and some resolution of her symptoms of depress
30 show that reduced CNP levels correlate with catatonia and white matter inflammation in human subject
32 the prevalence and response to treatment of catatonia, and the conditions that are associated with c
33 nd conflicting for acute-phase activation in catatonia, and whether this feature is secondary to immo
36 stems and consider the merits of designating catatonia as a separate diagnostic category with defined
37 ces of volition led to the classification of catatonia as a subtype of schizophrenia, but changes in
38 he literature on the features that delineate catatonia as a syndrome, the prevalence and response to
39 agnostic groupings, support consideration of catatonia as an individual category in psychiatric diagn
40 se of a year and subsequently presented with catatonia, auditory and visual hallucinations, paranoia,
41 esearch over the past two decades has led to catatonia being recognized as an independent diagnosis i
42 rasitic infections have been associated with catatonia, but it is primarily linked to CNS infections.
47 neuropsychiatric condition causing insomnia, catatonia, encephalopathy, and obsessive-compulsive beha
48 f the surviving rats showing muscle rigidity/catatonia for several days after dosing, along with decr
49 ific gene (CNP rs2070106-AA) associated with catatonia in 2 independent schizophrenia cohorts and als
52 The authors assess the present position of catatonia in diagnostic classification systems and consi
53 verlap and relationship between delirium and catatonia in ICU patients and determine diagnostic thres
54 high morbidity and mortality associated with catatonia in psychiatric and non-psychiatric settings.
56 x neurobehavioral phenotype, which resembles catatonia in schizophrenic humans and tonic immobility i
76 th novel behavioral paradigms, we determined catatonia-like symptoms and isolated executive dysfuncti
79 ment Method for the ICU and the Bush Francis Catatonia Rating Scale mapped to Diagnostic Statistical
80 g long-term management strategies to prevent catatonia relapse and call for further research into the
83 However, in an unknown number of patients, catatonia remains unrecognized and these patients are at
85 s had lower PANSS positive, PANSS total, and catatonia scores than did antibody-negative patients.
86 f of greater than or equal to 4 Bush Francis Catatonia Screening Instrument items was both sensitive
87 progressing to a decrease of verbal output, catatonia, seizures, dyskinesias, and frequent autonomic
94 Currently available diagnostic criteria for catatonia were found to be nonspecific in the ICU settin