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1  effective even among those patients who are delusional.
2 s (29%) were rated as definitely or possibly delusional.
3                            Because this is a delusional affliction, successful treatment typically re
4 e is safe and more effective than placebo in delusional and nondelusional patients with BDD.
5          This scale may help clarify whether delusional and nondelusional variants of disorders const
6 chotic or schizophren* or schizoaffective or delusional and terms for mental disorders.
7 r low-level perceptual mechanisms underlying delusional belief or schizotypy more broadly and may ult
8 similarly explain how we fail to detect that delusional beliefs conflict with rationality, and/or mar
9                   A small number of uncommon delusional beliefs demonstrated direct pathways leading
10                             Highly prevalent delusional beliefs implying threat were associated with
11 ns both the formation and the persistence of delusional beliefs in terms of altered perceptual infere
12                                  A subset of delusional beliefs may be causally linked to violence, a
13 , individuals with schizophrenia who endorse delusional beliefs may be over-responsive to neutral sti
14 stability are implicated in the emergence of delusional beliefs.
15 t contribute to the tenacious persistence of delusional beliefs.
16  the characteristic rigidity associated with delusional beliefs.
17 y subjects and 12 individuals (7 males) with delusional beliefs.
18 and associative learning in the formation of delusional beliefs.
19 to serious violence mediated by anger due to delusional beliefs: persecution (z = 3.09, P = .002), be
20                          Ekbom Syndrome is a delusional condition; it is intractable and cannot be co
21 ifferent types of psychosis, such as between delusional disorder (DD) and schizophrenia (SZ).
22  no psychosis (N=742), schizophrenia (N=94), delusional disorder (N=29), and drug-induced psychosis (
23 of 4 rare/controversial psychotic disorders (delusional disorder [DD], acute psychoses [AP], psychosi
24 and 65 years) with schizophrenia spectrum or delusional disorder and an active, persistent (>=3 month
25 65-year-old man and a 54-year-old woman with delusional disorder and cognitive dysfunction, respectiv
26 s of ICD-10 schizophrenia-spectrum disorder, delusional disorder, or affective-spectrum psychotic dis
27  schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or delusional disorder; and a clinically significant level
28  1.05-1.09); schizophrenia, schizotypal, and delusional disorders (IRR, 1.05; 95% CI, 1.03-1.07); sel
29    17% of mothers had schizophrenia or other delusional disorders.
30 tween frequency of cannabis use and specific delusional experiences (persecutory delusions and though
31 cond, that the ubiquity of hallucinatory and delusional experiences across clinical and non-clinical
32 cture of the wide range of hallucinatory and delusional experiences across diverse populations, as we
33 cal disturbances related to real or imagined delusional experiences underlying the importance of memo
34                                          The delusional features of anosognosia for hemiplegia can be
35 aries 24, SD 11.6; no diary 24, SD 11.6) and delusional ICU memory recall (RR 1.04, 95% CI 0.84-1.28)
36 combined score of unusual thought content or delusional ideas and suspiciousness or persecutory ideas
37 ia group was correlated with the severity of delusional ideation (p = 0.006).
38                           Varying degrees of delusional ideation are also found in the healthy popula
39            In both CHR-P samples, ratings of delusional ideation decreased with the onset of attenuat
40 he entire group, dysphoria was found in 33%, delusional ideation in 39%, and hallucinations in 16%.
41 ss, may be a core computational mechanism of delusional ideation in psychosis.
42 se relationships are specific to paranoia or delusional ideation more broadly.
43                                              Delusional ideation was associated with less perceptual
44   Only self-reported JTC was associated with delusional ideation, controlling for paranoia.
45  was more strongly associated with increased delusional ideation, whereas decreased CON connectivity
46 s, and verbal aggression was associated with delusional ideation.
47 specifically associated with other themes of delusional ideation.
48                                              Delusional infestation can be debilitating for patients,
49                                              Delusional infestation is a condition encountered freque
50 t guidance for the appropriate management of delusional infestation.
51  or held their dysmorphic misperception with delusional intensity.
52                                              Delusional memories 28 days after discharge were common
53 nts who had no factual recall of ICU but had delusional memories at 2 wks scored highly for PTSD-rela
54             A total of 33 of 45 patients had delusional memories from ICU at 2 wks; nine of the patie
55         However, in those patients recalling delusional memories from the ICU, further psychological
56 from ICU at 2 wks; nine of the patients with delusional memories had no factual memories, and these p
57                              The presence of delusional memories was correlated significantly with bo
58                       Lack of ICU recall and delusional memories were common after ICU discharge desp
59                                              Delusional memories were less likely with longer duratio
60                                         Only delusional memories were retained over time, whereas the
61 ent were trait anxiety (p = .006) and having delusional memories without recall of factual events in
62 th intensive care unit sedation, delirium or delusional memories, and long-term impairments in qualit
63 ecovery, gaining coherence of nightmares and delusional memories, realizing the importance of the pre
64                                              Delusional misidentification and hallucinations in the e
65                        Capgras syndrome is a delusional misidentification syndrome characterized by t
66 re we instead propose that Capgras and other delusional misidentification syndromes arise from single
67   Hallucinations, depression, delusions, and delusional misidentification were all significantly high
68 connectivity pattern was highly specific for delusional misidentifications compared to four other les
69  studied the largest sample of patients with delusional misidentifications of space (ie, reduplicativ
70            First, 17 cases of lesion-induced delusional misidentifications were identified and lesion
71 ion, two processes thought to be abnormal in delusional misidentifications, were identified using met
72 ption and belief evaluation in patients with delusional misidentifications.
73 dentified subjects as definitely or possibly delusional on the basis of screening questions derived f
74 rocesses have long been proposed to underlie delusional pathology, but previous attempts to show this
75 obability estimates further showed that more delusional patients exhibited abnormal belief updating c
76 al patients to respond to fluoxetine, and no delusional patients responded to the placebo.
77                          The BDD symptoms of delusional patients were as likely as those of nondelusi
78 refrontal information processing deficits in delusional psychopathology and in genetic risk for schiz
79 ric symptoms, ranging from severe anxiety to delusional psychosis, may have anti-SARS-CoV-2 and antin
80 ificantly smaller than that of patients with delusional psychotic disorders and healthy subjects.
81 ctive valuation, were uncorrelated with both delusional severity and information seeking among the pa
82 onship between inferential abnormalities and delusional severity in schizophrenia.
83 chological theories of delusion approach the delusional subject as a sense-maker labouring under vari
84 logy and, in particular, to the reasoning of delusional subjects.
85 bling disorder associated with high rates of delusional symptoms and suicide attempts.
86 est that reliance on subject self-reports of delusional symptoms may result in mislabeling as delusio
87  to better understand the pathophysiology of delusional syndromes after stroke.
88 l nosologic categories for the non-affective delusional syndromes, in the 1913 8th edition of his tex
89 ation at large.Predominant symptoms included delusional thinking (74%), mood disturbances (70%,usuall
90 that, together, have the potential to worsen delusional thinking across the psychosis spectrum.
91 nships between feedforward connectivity, and delusional thinking and polygenic risk for schizophrenia
92 andom exploration) have been associated with delusional thinking in independent studies.
93 riables explain shared or unique variance in delusional thinking, and whether these relationships are
94 significant relationship between severity of delusional thought and the metabolic rates in three fron
95 ght prefrontal cortex may be associated with delusional thought in Alzheimer's disease.
96 he authors examined the relationship between delusional thoughts and regional cortical metabolism in
97                                              Delusional thoughts are common in patients with Alzheime
98 euronal networks and the specific content of delusional thoughts may modulate these relationships.
99 mation, including the presence and nature of delusional thoughts.
100 ory, this abnormal brain reactivity may fuel delusional thoughts.
101 Seventy-four patients with DSM-IV BDD or its delusional variant were enrolled and 67 were randomized

 
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