All Relations between Mania and emotion

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Brian S Appleby, Patrick S Duggan, Alan Regenberg, Peter V Rabin. Psychiatric and neuropsychiatric adverse events associated with deep brain stimulation: A meta-analysis of ten years' experience. Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society. vol 22. issue 12. 2008-01-09. PMID:17721929. the prevalence of depression was 2-4%, mania 0.9-1.7%, emotional changes 0.1-0.2%, and the prevalence of suicidal ideation/suicide attempt was 0.3-0.7%. 2008-01-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
Josef Parvizi, David B Arciniegas, Gary L Bernardini, Michael W Hoffmann, Jay P Mohr, Mark J Rapoport, Jeremy D Schmahmann, Jonathan M Silver, Stanley Tuhri. Diagnosis and management of pathological laughter and crying. Mayo Clinic proceedings. vol 81. issue 11. 2006-12-05. PMID:17120404. in contrast, patients with mood disorders have a pervasive and sustained change in their emotional experience and thus exhibit spells of laughter or crying because of an underlying mania or depression. 2006-12-05 2023-08-12 Not clear
Melissa M Amick, Janet Grac. Deep brain stimulation surgery for Parkinson's disease: the role of neuropsychological assessment. Medicine and health, Rhode Island. vol 89. issue 4. 2006-06-20. PMID:16676908. while worsening of depression and the development of symptoms of mania are potential side effects from dbs, more studies find that dbs is associated with improvements in emotional functioning. 2006-06-20 2023-08-12 Not clear
Antonio Carota, Sebastian Dieguez, Julien Bogousslavsk. [Psychopathology of stroke]. Psychologie & neuropsychiatrie du vieillissement. vol 3. issue 4. 2006-01-25. PMID:16316815. thus the neuropsychiatry of stroke comprises disorders of the perception/identification of the self and the environment (anosognosia of hemiplegia, misidentification syndromes, confabulations, visual hallucinations, delirium and acute confusional state), amotivational syndromes (apathy and athymhormia), disorders of emotional reactivity (blunted affect, emotional incontinence, irritability, catastrophic reactions), poor impulse or ideation control (mania) and personality changes. 2006-01-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
Rebecca Elliott, Alan Ogilvie, Judy S Rubinsztein, Gloria Calderon, Raymond J Dolan, Barbara J Sahakia. Abnormal ventral frontal response during performance of an affective go/no go task in patients with mania. Biological psychiatry. vol 55. issue 12. 2004-07-13. PMID:15184035. patients with mania show a behavioral bias toward positive information in an emotional go/no go task. 2004-07-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
Gin S Malhi, Jim Lagopoulos, Philip B Ward, Veena Kumari, Philip B Mitchell, Gordon B Parker, Belinda Ivanovski, Perminder Sachde. Cognitive generation of affect in bipolar depression: an fMRI study. The European journal of neuroscience. vol 19. issue 3. 2004-03-29. PMID:14984424. individuals with bipolar disorder manifest the full spectrum of emotions ranging from depression to mania. 2004-03-29 2023-08-12 human
Michel Habib, Barbara Joly-Pottu. [Semiology of behavioral disorders caused by cerebral injury]. La Revue du praticien. vol 53. issue 4. 2003-12-02. PMID:12708273. the study of different types of frontal syndromes provide the largest part of this chapter, including depression and pseudo-depression, mania, emotional indifference, anosognosia, desinhibition. 2003-12-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
Mary L Phillips, Wayne C Drevets, Scott L Rauch, Richard Lan. Neurobiology of emotion perception II: Implications for major psychiatric disorders. Biological psychiatry. vol 54. issue 5. 2003-11-07. PMID:12946880. in each psychiatric disorder, the pattern of abnormalities may be associated with specific symptoms, including emotional flattening, anhedonia, and persecutory delusions in schizophrenia, prominent mood swings, emotional lability, and distractibility in bipolar disorder during depression and mania, and with depressed mood and anhedonia in major depressive disorder. 2003-11-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Katarzyna Kucharska-Pietura, Anthony S Davi. The perception of emotional chimeric faces in patients with depression, mania and unilateral brain damage. Psychological medicine. vol 33. issue 4. 2003-09-15. PMID:12785476. the perception of emotional chimeric faces in patients with depression, mania and unilateral brain damage. 2003-09-15 2023-08-12 Not clear
S E Hyma. Goals for research on bipolar disorder: the view from NIMH. Biological psychiatry. vol 48. issue 6. 2001-02-02. PMID:11018216. we must identify the circuits that regulate mood, emotion, energy, and other relevant functions that are affected in bipolar disorder, and we must determine what goes wrong in those circuits during mania, depression, and other aspects of this illness. 2001-02-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
G A Carlson, J Loney, H Salisbury, R J Volp. Young referred boys with DICA-P manic symptoms vs. two comparison groups. Journal of affective disorders. vol 51. issue 2. 2000-05-25. PMID:10743844. the findings of this and other studies suggest that there is a mania dimension or syndrome, which may be an indicator of true bipolar disorder--or simply a marker for disruptive comorbidity, behavioral and emotional multimorbidity, or general severity of psychopathology. 2000-05-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
L Ciomp. The concept of affect logic: an integrative psycho-socio-biological approach to understanding and treatment of schizophrenia. Psychiatry. vol 60. issue 2. 1997-11-28. PMID:9257355. this hypothesis leads to: 1) an integrative psycho-socio-biological model of long-term evolution of the illness; 2) a new understanding of psychopathological core phenomena such as ambivalence, incoherence, and emotional flattening; 3) an innovative therapeutic approach based on an emotion-relaxing milieu and style of care; and 4) the hypothesis that schizophrenia could basically be an affective (and not a cognitive) disease, of another kind than mania or melancholia, however. 1997-11-28 2023-08-12 Not clear
B Hodges, J Turnbull, R Cohen, A Bienenstock, G Norma. Evaluating communication skills in the OSCE format: reliability and generalizability. Medical education. vol 30. issue 1. 1996-10-23. PMID:8736187. ninety-five final-year medical students participated in an osce in which six 10-min encounters examined the students' ability to manage difficult emotional situations such as fear, anxiety, mania, sadness, confusion and anger. 1996-10-23 2023-08-12 Not clear
L D Nelson, D Cicchetti, P Satz, M Sowa, M Mitrushin. Emotional sequelae of stroke: a longitudinal perspective. Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology. vol 16. issue 5. 1995-02-28. PMID:7836503. five dimensions of emotional functioning were examined in a sample of 19 stroke subjects: indifference, inappropriateness, depression, mania, and pragnosia (a defect in the pragmatics of social communicative style). 1995-02-28 2023-08-12 human
Y Kaminer, R Seifer, A Mastria. Observational measurement of symptoms responsive to treatment of major depressive disorder in children and adolescents. The Journal of nervous and mental disease. vol 180. issue 10. 1992-10-30. PMID:1402842. four consecutive weekly observation sessions were done using the emotional disorders rating scale, which collects information about symptoms of depression, mania, anxiety, hostility, and irritability. 1992-10-30 2023-08-11 Not clear
S E Starkstein, M L Berthier, P L Lylyk, A Casasco, R G Robinson, R Leiguard. Emotional behavior after a Wada test in a patient with secondary mania. The Journal of neuropsychiatry and clinical neurosciences. vol 1. issue 4. 1992-08-18. PMID:2521093. emotional behavior after a wada test in a patient with secondary mania. 1992-08-18 2023-08-11 Not clear
P Gillig, J C Sackellares, H S Greenber. Right hemisphere partial complex seizures: mania, hallucinations, and speech disturbances during ictal events. Epilepsia. vol 29. issue 1. 1988-03-10. PMID:3338419. a patient with right hemisphere complex partial seizures exhibited extreme emotional lability resembling mania, neologisms resembling those found in fluent aphasia, and hallucinations during ictal periods. 1988-03-10 2023-08-11 Not clear
G P Slover, R W Morris, C F Stroebel, M K Pate. Case study of psychophysiological diary: infradian rhythms. Progress in clinical and biological research. vol 227B. 1987-09-25. PMID:3628353. the following correlations have a p value less than or equal to 0.01: mania was directly correlated with number of sleeping pills, time to really wake up, need for rest, moodiness, and helplessness, and indirectly with expectations, pressure at work, sense of time, and emotional state. 1987-09-25 2023-08-11 Not clear
J G Modell, R H Lenox, S Weine. Inpatient clinical trial of lorazepam for the management of manic agitation. Journal of clinical psychopharmacology. vol 5. issue 2. 1985-06-05. PMID:3988969. antipsychotic medications have traditionally been used for their sedative effects in the management of the behavioral and emotional agitation of mania while awaiting the therapeutic effect of lithium. 1985-06-05 2023-08-11 Not clear
V C Jampala, R Abrams, M A Taylo. Mania with emotional blunting: affective disorder or schizophrenia? The American journal of psychiatry. vol 142. issue 5. 1985-05-20. PMID:2858982. mania with emotional blunting: affective disorder or schizophrenia? 1985-05-20 2023-08-11 Not clear