mental disorders

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Autism conference to look at link to mercury poisoning, mirror neurons, genetics

More than 900 scientists, parents and activists from around the world who are focused on understanding the causes of autism and finding treatments for the developmental disorder will gather in Seattle May 3-5 to share the latest research findings at the sixth International Meeting for Autism Research.

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Bipolar Disorder Controversy with Medications

Medications used to treat Bipolar disorder are worrying some patients that they will incur medical problems in the future. While patients voice their concerns, doctors try to present the benefits of the medications. For some people, the side effects are too much to handle, and they will refuse treatment. For others, taking medications has become routine as they vow to take their chances.

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Australasian mental health research needs a wider perspective

While ANZ mental health researchers have an outstanding record of collaboration and publishing internationally, most of this activity relates to rich countries in North America and Europe.

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Formation of social memories

Is there a specific memory for events involving people? Researchers in the Vulnerability, Adaptation and Psychopathology Laboratory (CNRS/University Paris VI France ) and a Canadian team at Douglas Hospital, McGill University (Montreal), have identified the internal part of the prefrontal cortex as being the key structure for memorising social information. Published in Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, February 2007

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Extreme irritability - is it childhood bipolar disorder?

Results of a new study may help improve the diagnosis and treatment of two debilitating childhood mental disorders - pediatric bipolar disorder (BD) and a syndrome called severe mood dysregulation (SMD).

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Mental health risks vary within the US Black population

The longer Black Caribbean immigrants stay in the U.S., the poorer their mental health becomes. That's one finding from a new study that examined the prevalence of psychiatric disorders among Black individuals in the U.S. The study appears in the January 2007 issue of the American Journal of Public Health.

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Chelation therapy reduces lead-exposure effects children treated for autism

Lead chelation therapy - a chemical treatment to remove lead from the body - can significantly reduce learning and behavioral problems that result from lead exposure, a Cornell study of young rats finds.

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Women With Mental Disorders Less Likely To Have Mammograms

Nature of mental illness does play a role

 

Women with mental disorders are less likely to have screening mammograms than women without mental illness, although the nature of the mental illness does play a role, according to a large study published by Indiana University School of Medicine and Richard Roudebush VA Health Services Center for Excellence researchers in the October issue of Journal of General Internal Medicine. Prior to this study, little was known about whether the type or severity of mental illness influences receipt of preventive services such as mammograms.