Topics in Neuropsychiatry (September)

Date of Issue: 09/01/2009 | Volume: 7 | Number: 9

Issue Links:Learning Objectives | Editorial Information

Teaser to be posted soon.

In This Issue

Article

Treating Headaches in Psychiatry

Topics: Free Articles | Natural Medications | Neuroscience in Psychiatry

We know that headaches are common in the general population, but they are particularly common among patients with psychiatric problems. According to one review, (Pompili M et al., J Headache Pain 2009; 10(4):283-290) patients with depression have a 46% lifetime prevalence of migraine, while bipolar patients have a 51% prevalence. Patients with migraines have triple the risk of developing depression than patients without migraines.

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Article

Evaluating and Treating Tremor

Topics: Anxiety Disorder | Depressive Disorder

While tremor is traditionally thought of as a neurological issue, the symptom pops up often in psychiatric practice, and some basic knowledge of its diagnosis and treatment comes in handy.

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Research Update

Role of Depression “Risk Gene” Questioned

Topics: Depressive Disorder

It has long been thought that one’s genetic makeup combines with stressors to cause depression, but for many years there was little data to support this hypothesis.

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Research Update

Restricting Drug Samples May Reduce Costs

Topics: Practice Tools and Tips

Drug samples are a staple of pharmaceutical marketing. The drug industry argues, quite logically, that samples are useful to treat patients who lack the funds to purchase medications. Yet some reformers have called for drug samples to be banned, an idea that has received a decidedly mixed reception.

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Research Update

N-Acetylcysteine Effective For Trichotillomania

Topics: OCD

Trichotillomania (TTM) is an impulse control disorder in which patients feel that they can relieve tension by pulling out hair from different parts of their bodies. While sharing some features with obsessive compulsive disorder, DSM-IV-TR does not officially classify it as a type of OCD.

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Expert QA

Thinking like a Neurologist

Dr. Price, for most of your career, you’ve worked closely with psychiatrists in treating patients with neuropsychiatric disease. I thought we might start by discussing how psychiatrists might bring more neurological thinking into their evaluations. When should psychiatrists start thinking neurologically?

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