Journal Article10.1176/AJP.140.6.814B
Two violent adolescents.
1
About: This article is published in American Journal of Psychiatry. The article was published on 01 Jun 1983. The article focuses on the topics: Poison control & Injury prevention.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
The Assessment of Psychopathology in Juvenile Delinquency
Peter D. Guggenheim,Richard Garmise +1 more
- 01 Jan 1985
TL;DR: The clinic assesses the respondent’s mental functioning and recommends to the court appropriate avenues of remediation and rehabilitation, balancing the needs of the juvenile with those of society, all within the context of the “least restrictive” guidelines.
References
Hyponatremia in Psychogenic Polydipsia
Mavidi K. Hariprasad,Robert P. Eisinger,Irving M. Nadler,Capecomorin S. Padmanabhan,Bernard D. Nidus +4 more
TL;DR: Twenty psychotic patients with psychogenic polydipsia had hyponatremia lasting up to 28 months, with headache, hypertension, dementia, seizures, lethargy, and coma, thus suggesting a "reset osmostat" or antidiuretic hormone response to nonosmotic stimuli.
158
Prophylactic treatment of alcoholism by lithium carbonate. A controlled study.
TL;DR: Lithium therapy has been shown to have a therapeutic influence in reducing the drinking and incapacity by alcohol in depressive alcoholics in a prospective double blind placebo-controlled trial conducted over one year, but it had no significant effect on non-depressed patients.
137
Psychogenic Polydipsia and Inappropriate Antidiuresis
TL;DR: Investigators showed convincingly that the polyuria was not due to neurogenic or nephrogenic diabetes insipidus and labeled the condition "compulsive water drinking," noting that these patients usually gave reasons other than thirst to explain their polydipsia.
24
Psychopathic State Inventory (PSI): development of a short test for measuring psychopathic states.
TL;DR: Six rational psychopathic state scales for Impulsivity, Egocentricity, Needs, Hypophoria (negative feeling states), Sociopathy, and High were revised by selecting items within a rational category which most highly differentiated psychopaths as exemplified by opiate addicts and alcoholics from normals.
Self-induced water intoxication in schizophrenic patients.
TL;DR: Self-induced water intoxication appears to be more common in schizophrenic patients than is generally realized and should be suspected in any schizophrenic patient who develops convulsions or coma, and hyperdopaminergic CNS activity may be involved.