Articles Tagged ‘treatment’
Neuroscience & Neurology | By December 25, 2006 | By Eileen Jones, RN, MPH | 6 Comments
Cranial Electrotherapy Stimulation: A Non-Drug Neuromedical Treatment
Cranial electrotherapy stimulation (CES), (also known as “electrosleep”, “transcranial electrotherapy” and by many other names), involves a form of treatment that sends low intensity microcurrent (under 1 milliampere) to the brain. [1] CES devices function differently from other biomedical electronics, such as deep brain stimulating electrodes (which prevent seizures and hand tremors) [2] and heart pacemakers. While those instruments require surgical implantation, CES operates non-invasively. Designed for home use, the devices deliver current to the brain via a hand held machine to electrodes attached on or behind the ears. Read more →
- Antipsychotic Drug Development off Course?
- Sleep Disorders Demystified
- Advances of Alzheimer’s Research: Outlook on Prevention and Earlier Detection
- Comparing Mood Disorders
- Unnecessary Mental Health Stigmas
- Latest Lines of Biopsychosocial Research
- Biopsychosocial Model Transformations and Its Future
- Integrating Schizophrenia Management
- Vulnerability-Stress-Coping Model for Schizophrenia
- Integration of the Biopsychosocial Model in Contemporary Psychiatry
- Prince Hamlet’s Depression and its Neuroanatomical Correlate
Antipsychotic drug development may be off course. Since its accidental discovery during 1951 (Shen 1999), 15 to 40 drugs have been used to treat antipsychotic symptoms. Further developement in drug treatment was on hold until the introduction of Clozapine treatment in the United States in 1990. Discontinuation... Read more →
Sleep is one of our most enigmatic functions. The uncertainties of why we sleep and the utter necessity of sleep are being incessantly investigated. Based on what we do know, it is fairly safe to assume that sleep is certainly vital to our well-being. The necessity of sleep can be determined by each... Read more →
An estimated 4.5 million older people currently have Alzheimer’s disease, and researchers predict that by 2050 the number could nearly triple to 13.2 million. But several promising recent developments in the study of Alzheimer’s disease may one day lead to new methods of diagnosing, preventing... Read more →
Of all the mental health disorders, the two most common, and perhaps the most disruptive and distressing, are schizophrenia and bipolar. Even though the two share few similarities in symptoms and characteristics, they are both treated and medicated very differently. Schizophrenia is the most devastating... Read more →
Every year in the United States, approximately 44 million people are diagnosed with a mental disorder. Of those diagnosed, roughly 19 million suffer from depression and 4 million others suffer from some form of generalized anxiety disorder. Unfortunately, not everyone with a mental disorder seeks treatment.... Read more →
Generally, the latest hot topics in biopsychosocial fields include medical ethics, international medicine and health, reducing health care costs and expanding health services, and correlations between nutrition and illness. To view the latest research in health psychology, behavioral medicine, and the... Read more →
Engel’s portrayal of the biopsychosocial model has significantly redefined psychiatry, medicine, and psychology. With the emergence of health psychology and behavioral medicine in primary care settings and the training of general practitioners on different health paradigms, patients are increasingly... Read more →
Schizophrenia treatment has significantly evolved since Nobel Laureate John Nash was initially treated with electro-convulsive therapy (ECT) and insulin coma “therapies” in the 50-60’s — as portrayed in the movie, A Beautiful Mind. Now, the ultimate goals of schizophrenia clinical... Read more →
Schizophrenia is a multifaceted disorder that manifests by both genetic and environmental factors. A plethora of twin and adoption studies suggest major genetic influences on the pathogenesis of schizophrenia; however, a MZ concordance of 50% also suggests environmental factors (Cardno et al., 1999).... Read more →
Psychosis involves a disconnection with reality and perceptions outside the range of normality. Moreover, it is the common multifaceted symptom of psychotic disorders often accompanied by behavioral abnormalities and cognitive impairments. In fact, such characteristics are used to differentially classify... Read more →
“How weary, stale, flat and unprofitable seem to me all the uses of this world!” Shakespeare’s arguably depressed and suicidal Prince Hamlet uttered those words to himself almost five centuries ago. But what if he had confessed them in his doctor’s office today, how would his... Read more →
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
- The Anti-Psychiatry Movement
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Vaccines - A Two-Edged Sword
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- Woman Comparable to Men in Domestic Violence: Stereotypes and their Consequences
- God And Religion: Is It All In Our Heads?
- The Bipolar Trend
- Anti-Smoking Campaign Doesn't Mess Around
- The Implications of Implanted Chips
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- The Biopsychosocial Model of Health & Illness
- Is War A Psychosis?
- Unhinging from Theory: Autism and Opinions
- Mind-Body: We Want Evidence, Don't We?
- Encephalon, Thirty-Third Edition
- Meditation for Troubled Minds: Can the Mind Heal the Mind?
- Acknowledging Vaccination Concerns
- Usually It's Cheaper to Pay Than to Go To Court
- Integrating Schizophrenia Management
- Rabies Virus Helps Deliver Drugs into the Brain
- China’s Tainted Reputation
- The Silent Epidemic of Health Illiteracy
- Managed Care Kills a Provider’s Reputation
- Writing Away Your Worries
- Sleep Deprivation, Behavior, and the Young
- Preventative Care in Medicine
- Cheating Husbands - What His Genes Tell Us
- Reduced Empathy Following Traumatic Brain Injury
- Craniosacral Therapy – Healing Through Touch
- Brain Blogging, Thirty-Ninth Edition
- Are Doctors Super Human?
- Taking Care of Those Who Take Care of Us
- Water - How Much is Too Much?
- Involving Physicians in Military Interrogations
- What Does Your iPod Say About You?
- HIPAA Doesn’t Exist For Doctors
- Is the Primary Care Physician Becoming Extinct?
- George Huntington and the Disease Bearing His Name
- Physiological Effects of Alcohol Consumption
- Antipsychotics May Decrease the Risk of Suicide
- While I agree providers are going non par because of low reimbursements, I do no...
- Our perceptions, emotions, and reactions to the world around us begin at birth, ...
- Those measure that have been used have been formulated by insurance companies ai...
- Obviously, you've never had to work with lawyers who are dealing with/appealing ...
- For depression, I recommend that one sees a counsellor to ascertain the source o...
- simple...those things do really happen. End....
- doctors are still normal people you know......
- so...does it mean that people with Type 2 Diabetes Millitus are less anxious and...
- Sleep deprivation is a common lack of the required amount of sleep. This may ari...
- The medical tourist usually chooses to have the surgery or procedure done overse...
- Are any tests to be conducted in the Tyler, TX area?...
- Links (between insomnia and other 'problems') are NOT causal correlates, they ar...
- yah it's sum what true
when i was in kings wood my doctor never talked to me,...
- humans like to kill. at one point in every persons life we have the urge to kill...
- religion is a troubling parodox that waist time trying to figure out.
and the...
- To answer your questions: No, the authors did not really consider the "uniquenes...
- Doctors are working in a broken health care system. They're not exactly having a...
- Hello,This may be true for most with frontal lobe injury but for many with other...
- Doctors call for antibiotics to treat our disease. Antibiotics shoo the bacteria...
- It would be interesting to see whether learning and practicing Dr Herbert Benson...


