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1 groups; CA1 only showed changes in the SO of schizophrenics.
2 on 1 meta-analysis and 2 studies of chronic schizophrenics.
3 gh-frequency synchronization in the brain of schizophrenics.
4 iction and the high prevalence of smoking in schizophrenics.
5 levels are elevated in postmortem brains of schizophrenics.
6 echanisms producing olfactory dysfunction in schizophrenics.
8 needed to attain smoking abstinence among 26 schizophrenic, 26 depressed, and 26 nonpsychiatric heavy
9 Some unaffected first-degree relatives of schizophrenics also manifest cortical gray-matter defici
11 ole, formalin-fixed left hemispheres from 14 schizophrenic and 19 normal comparison subjects were ana
18 reactive varicosities did not differ between schizophrenic and comparison subjects in the superficial
19 ontal cortex area 9 from 10 matched pairs of schizophrenic and comparison subjects were processed for
20 in gray matter volume were seen between the schizophrenic and comparison subjects, with selective re
22 nt protein kinase II, did not differ between schizophrenic and control subjects, nor between subjects
29 misphere thalami obtained at autopsy from 14 schizophrenic and eight comparison subjects were examine
30 s had Alzheimer's type pathology, leaving 10 schizophrenic and five comparison subjects without other
32 ibutions to the variance in liability to the schizophrenic and manic syndromes, but the genetic liabi
35 al cortex in tissue from an additional three schizophrenic and three matched comparison subjects and
36 loci in a large sample of unrelated Scottish schizophrenics and controls, but failed to replicate the
38 een recorded in language-impaired, autistic, schizophrenic, and other disabled human populations.
42 ls of the 3 proteins of interest in control, schizophrenic, bipolar, and major depression groups (n =
43 smission, the dysfunctional circuitry of the schizophrenic brain (both local circuits and long-loop p
45 picture of functional specialization in the schizophrenic brain and its connectional substrates is y
51 ities in the oligodendroglia demonstrated in schizophrenic brains are all examined in light of the hy
53 aller frontal gray matter volume observed in schizophrenic brains suggests that pathology of the fron
56 ty in area 9 exhibited a 12% increase in the schizophrenic cohort, replicating previous findings.
57 hippocampus in the control (unaffected) and schizophrenic conditions, implemented on a 72-processor
60 ic mutations in mGlu1 have been described in schizophrenics creating interest in this receptor as a t
63 was significantly down-regulated in both the schizophrenic discovery cohort and a second, independent
64 ndardized prevalence than men without CP for schizophrenic disorders (2.8% [95% CI, 2.2% to 3.4%] vs.
65 an entorhinal cortex volume of patients with schizophrenic disorders did not differ from that of pati
66 s were diagnosed as having a disorder in the schizophrenic disorders spectrum more frequently than di
68 Snap)-25 exocytotic disruption that displays schizophrenic endophenotypes modulated by prenatal facto
69 es were divided into 2 groups: 32 studies of schizophrenics enrolled at various illness points (25 57
77 eft hemisphere, with MDN reduced only in the schizophrenic group, and pulvinar in both patient groups
80 DNF Val(66)Met SNP interface with aspects of schizophrenic hippocampal and frontotemporal dysfunction
81 oral phenotype, which resembles catatonia in schizophrenic humans and tonic immobility in other mamma
82 s points (25 578 subjects) and 29 studies of schizophrenics identified at either illness onset or fir
84 vidence indicates that patients with typical schizophrenic illnesses perform poorly on tests of these
86 sib-pairs (pairs of unaffected siblings and schizophrenic index patients) and the relative risk rati
88 al dopamine activity in rodents, and induces schizophrenic-like behavior and cognitive deficits in hu
89 s a wide spectrum of antipsychotic-sensitive schizophrenic-like behavioral and psychopharmacological
91 ive series of behavioral test screenings for schizophrenic-like symptoms and investigated relevant do
92 gotic pairs and across the three pairings of schizophrenic-manic, schizophrenic-schizoaffective, and
95 ging scans of the brain were obtained for 64 schizophrenic or schizoaffective patients (representativ
96 listic to expect the development of, say, a 'schizophrenic' or 'autistic' mouse, mice are unlikely to
100 ssion of miR-19 in human NPCs generated from schizophrenic patient-derived induced pluripotent stem c
103 the patients with SPD and subsamples of the schizophrenic patients (n = 27) and control subjects (n
105 al glucose tolerance tests were performed in schizophrenic patients (n = 48) receiving clozapine, ola
107 difference in RGS4 expression levels between schizophrenic patients (or bipolar disorder patients in
109 onal images of the brain were acquired in 11 schizophrenic patients and 12 healthy control subjects (
110 64-channel event-related potentials from 14 schizophrenic patients and 14 control subjects in a visu
113 sorimotor control task in 22 medication-free schizophrenic patients and 22 performance-, age-, and se
114 resonance images obtained on 73 recent-onset schizophrenic patients and 23 controls were analyzed usi
116 otal of 54 healthy first-degree relatives of schizophrenic patients and 80 controls matched for demog
117 delineated nuclei) was not different between schizophrenic patients and controls, indicating that the
118 the significance of the differences between schizophrenic patients and healthy comparison subjects a
120 ting alterations of cortical interneurons in schizophrenic patients and the current notion of schizop
121 , hippocampal volumes did not differ between schizophrenic patients and their nonpsychotic relatives.
122 greater structural brain abnormalities among schizophrenic patients and their nonschizophrenic siblin
125 nterpretation of the high smoking rate among schizophrenic patients as self-medication has been chall
126 nals) may be particularly affected; although schizophrenic patients can extinguish conditioned fear,
127 t the SNAP25b/SNAP25a ratio was increased in schizophrenic patients carrying the rs6039769 at-risk al
130 frequency range (30-80 Hz) are disturbed in schizophrenic patients during cognitive processes and ma
131 nt of the increased gamma power described in schizophrenic patients during sleep and events of psycho
132 There are ongoing changes in the brains of schizophrenic patients during the initial years after di
134 nal and structural alterations differentiate schizophrenic patients from healthy controls with 80% se
136 ctive, might be related to difficulties that schizophrenic patients have in recognizing their own mov
137 -analysis confirmed that treatment-resistant schizophrenic patients have more favorable outcomes when
138 hat transplantation of fecal microbiota from schizophrenic patients into antibiotic-treated mice caus
140 The prominence of nicotine addiction in schizophrenic patients is reflected in the normalization
141 ect of alcohol dependence on the thalamus in schizophrenic patients may be mitigated by the type of n
142 evation of kynurenic acid (KYNA) observed in schizophrenic patients may contribute to core symptoms a
143 otion that P300 abnormalities in siblings of schizophrenic patients may involve a widespread network
144 ous expression of claudin-5 in the brains of schizophrenic patients post mortem was observed compared
145 We present a population-based study of 8967 schizophrenic patients receiving major surgery from the
150 st detection thresholds, and the unmedicated schizophrenic patients showed visual contrast detection
151 ct, and is contrary to the data from chronic schizophrenic patients suggesting that ketamine effect d
152 eterogeneity of pharmacological responses in schizophrenic patients suggests that additional drug tar
153 tivity disorder and has been associated with schizophrenic patients that do not respond to treatment
154 ltered neurodevelopmental time course in the schizophrenic patients that is particularly salient in a
155 They compared 23 unaffected siblings of schizophrenic patients to 18 matched comparison subjects
156 logy of schizophrenia and the sensitivity of schizophrenic patients to glutamate and glutamatergic dr
158 e matter tracts in the prefrontal area of 10 schizophrenic patients was determined by diffusion tenso
159 The cognitive and functional status of these schizophrenic patients was fairly stable until late life
161 l66Met polymorphism were assessed in Chinese schizophrenic patients with (n = 368) and without (n = 5
162 xamined whether cognitive changes in elderly schizophrenic patients with a history of long-term insti
166 ments in the functional impairments of older schizophrenic patients with increased medical burden.
167 rug of LY404039 (LY2140023) was evaluated in schizophrenic patients with olanzapine as an active cont
168 Studies comparing gray matter (GM) volume of schizophrenic patients with or without auditory verbal h
169 le frontal and inferior parietal cortices of schizophrenic patients with primary negative symptoms.
170 d duration strategies to target subgroups of schizophrenic patients with specific biological deficits
171 task, in ultra-high-risk, early, and chronic schizophrenic patients with the use of functional magnet
173 eased expression of CPLXII is seen in HD and schizophrenic patients, a role for CPLXII depletion shou
174 izophrenic patients, 115 healthy siblings of schizophrenic patients, and 89 unrelated controls were s
175 executive functioning in healthy adults and schizophrenic patients, and associates with EEG differen
176 els of NRG1 observed in forebrain regions of schizophrenic patients, exhibit behavioral deficits and
177 icture strongly resembles the one present in schizophrenic patients, highlighting the translational v
178 nsitization support neuroimaging findings in schizophrenic patients, implying that amphetamine sensit
180 n shown to occur in the prefrontal cortex of schizophrenic patients, suggesting that NRG1-erbB signal
181 nd gamma rhythm abnormalities are evident in schizophrenic patients, the approach followed here may f
182 assessed in a large and unselected sample of schizophrenic patients, their healthy siblings, and cont
183 s with SPD and significantly smaller than in schizophrenic patients, while the relative size of the c
204 sorder and 17.7% higher than predicted among schizophrenic patients; overall use in no-cap states was
206 homozygosis and behavioral and morphological schizophrenic phenotypes associated with forebrain defec
208 ip between positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenic probands and dimensions of schizotypy in t
209 n does not arise from smoking onset during a schizophrenic prodrome and demonstrates a clear dose-res
210 subjects, these diagnostic criteria for the schizophrenic prodrome and the Structured Interview for
211 ially the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT), and with schizophrenic psychopathology including thought disorder
212 ging and human post-mortem tissue studies in schizophrenic psychosis (SzP), have demonstrated functio
214 The prodromal features had converted to schizophrenic psychosis for 46% of the prodromal patient
215 ria for the prodrome of the first episode of schizophrenic psychosis when based on the Structured Int
216 a priori model of hippocampal dysfunction in schizophrenic psychosis, the authors postulated molecula
219 to investigate whether operationally defined schizophrenic, schizoaffective, and manic syndromes shar
220 of overlap in the genes contributing to RDC schizophrenic, schizoaffective, and manic syndromes.
221 Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) for lifetime-ever schizophrenic, schizoaffective, or manic syndrome were a
222 s the three pairings of schizophrenic-manic, schizophrenic-schizoaffective, and schizoaffective-manic
227 tained attention and sequencing abilities to schizophrenic speech disorder, measured in terms of comm
229 ortex expression of PSD-95 was higher in the schizophrenic subjects and correlated strongly with the
231 we identified six 3q29 deletions among 7545 schizophrenic subjects and one among 39,748 controls, re
232 immunoblotting in postmortem samples from 14 schizophrenic subjects and their age-, gender-, and auto
234 expression patterns in prefrontal cortex of schizophrenic subjects at different stages of illness, a
235 Oct-6 in the frontal and temporal cortex in schizophrenic subjects but not in comparison subjects.
236 The presence of Oct-6 expression in the schizophrenic subjects but not in the comparison subject
237 basis for increased plasma proline levels in schizophrenic subjects carrying the missense mutation L4
238 HRNA7 is reduced in several brain regions in schizophrenic subjects compared with control subjects.
239 In comparison to the normal adolescents, the schizophrenic subjects demonstrated low prefrontal corte
241 nd magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of schizophrenic subjects have not consistently revealed fr
242 magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies of schizophrenic subjects may identify brain activity chang
243 hors scanned seven normal subjects and seven schizophrenic subjects on two occasions during performan
244 nd variably improve cognitive functioning in schizophrenic subjects receiving typical antipsychotics.
245 n the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in more schizophrenic subjects relative to matched controls.
246 tter volume was significantly smaller in the schizophrenic subjects than in the comparison subjects (
247 al white matter volume (6%-8% smaller in the schizophrenic subjects than in the comparison subjects)
249 ng pictorial information at encoding allowed schizophrenic subjects to suppress false recognition to
250 nt study, the differential expression in the schizophrenic subjects was confirmed by quantitative RT-
252 ed to compare cerebral metabolic patterns in schizophrenic subjects with predominantly negative sympt
254 with NMDA-mediated hypofunction observed in schizophrenic subjects, administration of an NMDA antago
257 been found in previous postmortem studies of schizophrenic subjects, and magnetic resonance imaging (
259 onstrated in postmortem caudate nucleus from schizophrenic subjects, even though both D(2)R and A(2A)
263 In post-mortem human brain from untreated schizophrenic subjects, the 2AR is upregulated and the m
265 y was present in the temporal lobe in all 10 schizophrenic subjects, while very little or no expressi
266 n the magnitude of cognitive decline for the schizophrenic subjects, with older subjects experiencing
277 re broadly consistent with the proposal that schizophrenics suffer from enhanced signaling of salienc
278 sphodiesterase (CNP) are associated with the schizophrenic symptom catatonia in both humans and mouse
280 not been established that the dimensions of schizophrenic symptomatology and personality traits in n
283 renia because of the similarity between some schizophrenic symptoms and symptoms caused by NMDA antag
285 ognitive demands may confer vulnerability to schizophrenic symptoms when adult neuroplastic demands a
289 more common in 512 controls compared to 506 schizophrenic (SZ) cases (10.6% vs 7.2%, p=0.007) but th
293 thus provides novel insights into potential schizophrenic therapeutics that target the endocannabino
294 tributes to clozapine's clinical activity in schizophrenics through modulation of both muscarinic and
295 United Kingdom and Scotland, and a sample of schizophrenic trios from the United States containing pa
297 Twelve normal volunteers and 18 drug-free schizophrenic volunteers (deficit, N=8; nondeficit, N=10