5 research outputs found

    Cardiovascular Risk Factor and Coronary Artery Disease Prevalencein Patients of Rheumatic and Nonrheumatic Valvular Heart Disease-A Study from Major Centre in North Eastern India

    Get PDF
    Abstract Introduction:Indian data about the prevalence ofCoronary artery disease(CAD) in patients with valvular heart disease are limited. Prevalence of CAD in valvular heart disease is unknown in North Easter

    Neuroanatomical Abnormalities in Violent Individuals with and without a Diagnosis of Schizophrenia

    Get PDF
    Several structural brain abnormalities have been associated with aggression in patients with schizophrenia. However, little is known about shared and distinct abnormalities underlying aggression in these subjects and non-psychotic violent individuals. We applied a region-of interest volumetric analysis of the amygdala, hippocampus, and thalamus bilaterally, as well as whole brain and ventricular volumes to investigate violent (n = 37) and non-violent chronic patients (n = 26) with schizophrenia, non-psychotic violent (n = 24) as well as healthy control subjects (n = 24). Shared and distinct volumetric abnormalities were probed by analysis of variance with the factors violence (non-violent versus violent) and diagnosis (non-psychotic versus psychotic), adjusted for substance abuse, age, academic achievement and negative psychotic symptoms. Patients showed elevated vCSF volume, smaller left hippocampus and smaller left thalamus volumes. This was particularly the case for non-violent individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia. Furthermore, patients had reduction in right thalamus size. With regard to left amygdala, we found an interaction between violence and diagnosis. More specifically, we report a double dissociation with smaller amygdala size linked to violence in non-psychotic individuals, while for psychotic patients smaller size was linked to non-violence. Importantly, the double dissociation appeared to be mostly driven by substance abuse. Overall, we found widespread morphometric abnormalities in subcortical regions in schizophrenia. No evidence for shared volumetric abnormalities in individuals with a history of violence was found. Finally, left amygdala abnormalities in non-psychotic violent individuals were largely accounted for by substance abuse. This might be an indication that the association between amygdala reduction and violence is mediated by substance abuse. Our results indicate the importance of structural abnormalities in aggressive individuals

    Violence Among People with Schizophrenia: Phenotypes and Neurobiology

    No full text

    Focal Points of Aggression Control

    No full text
    corecore