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Home » neuroscience_in_psychiatry

Articles Tagged with ''neuroscience_in_psychiatry''

Structural Brain Changes After ECT for Depression

April 5, 2022
Chris Aiken, MD and Batya Swift Yasgur, MA, LSW
From The Carlat Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Chris Aiken, MD Batya Swift Yasgur, MA, LSW The authors have disclosed no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.
How does ECT change the brain? A systemic review offers up some answers.
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How COVID-19 Affects the Brain

September 3, 2020
Paul Riordan, MD.
From The Carlat Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Paul Riordan, MD. Assistant Consulting Professor of Psychiatry, Duke University. Dr. Riordan has disclosed that he has no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.
Pandemics create a long list of psychosocial stressors, but COVID-19 also has direct effects on the CNS. Neuropsychiatric syndromes can develop after the respiratory illness resolves. Paul Riordan reviews the cardinal symptoms to look for after a COVID infection.
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A Look at the Latest Antidepressant Meta-Analysis

June 1, 2018
Adam Strassberg, MD
From The Carlat Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Adam Strassberg, MD Psychiatrist in private practice in Palo Alto, CA. Contributing writer to the Carlat newsletters. Dr. Strassberg has disclosed that he has no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.
You may have read about the meta-analysis published in Lancet earlier this year on the efficacy evidence for all antidepressants (Cipriani A et al, Lancet 2018;391(10128):1357–1366). It’s a complicated paper, and in this article, we’ll take a closer look at it and give you our take on the bottom line.
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EXPERT Q&A

Neurobiology Concepts for Psychiatrists

June 1, 2018
David M. Kaufman, MD
From The Carlat Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
David M. Kaufman, MD Department of Neurology, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, NY. Co-author of Kaufman’s Clinical Neurology for Psychiatrists, 8th ed. (Elsevier). Dr. Kaufman has disclosed that he has no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.
The most common cause of parkinsonism is Parkinson disease, but parkinsonism also can occur from the use of any medication that blocks the D2 (dopamine type 2) receptor. Those include antipsychotics but can also include non-psychiatric medicines, particularly metoclopramide (Reglan), an anti-nausea medicine.
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The Neuroscience Behind Addictions and SSRIs

June 1, 2018
Edmund S. Higgins, MD.
From The Carlat Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Edmund M. Higgins, MD Clinical associate professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina. Co-author of The Neuroscience of Clinical Psychiatry: The Pathophysiology of Behavior and Mental Illness, 3rd ed. (Wolters Kluwer). Dr. Higgins has disclosed that he has no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.
If we think of the molecules (the endorphins or the opioids) as “keys” and the receptors on the neurons as “locks,” then one needs the right key in the lock to get the reward—to turn on the good feelings.
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Assessing and Treating Psychogenic Pain

May 1, 2018
Howard Schubiner, MD
From The Carlat Addiction Treatment Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Howard Schubiner, MD Director of the Mind Body Medicine Program at Providence Hospital, Southfield, MI. Coauthor of the book Unlearn Your Pain: A 28-Day Process to Reprogram Your Brain. Dr. Schubiner has disclosed that he has no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.
All pain is real. It’s just a question of whether that pain is being triggered by a physical injury or by something else. Studies show that emotional injury activates the same areas of the brain as does physical injury.
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Is EEG Useful in Psychiatry?

April 1, 2018
From The Carlat Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Is it useful for psychiatrists to order EEGs on their patients? That’s a perennially controversial question, and one that’s worth revisiting from time to time.
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Neurofeedback in Psychiatry: What’s the Evidence?

April 1, 2018
Remko van Lutterveld, PhD
From The Carlat Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Remko van Lutterveld, PhDRemko van Lutterveld, PhD Senior Research Scientist, Center for Mindfulness, University of Massachusetts Dr. van Lutterveld has disclosed that he has no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.


Neurofeedback is a type of biofeedback that uses an EEG to provide feedback to patients. While hooked up to an EEG, patients are shown different images through various forms of media, including video and other tools.
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The Neuroscience of Marijuana

May 1, 2017
From The Carlat Child Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Daniel Carlat, MD Publisher, The Carlat Child Psychiatry Report Dr. Carlat has disclosed that he has no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.
While the age-old tradition of smoking cannabis remains very common, several other options for preparing the drug are becoming widely available and frequently used. In this article, we’ll update you on the modern preparations and routes of administration.
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Research Domain Criteria (RDoC)

July 1, 2014
Bruce Cuthbert, PhD
From The Carlat Psychiatry Report
Issue Links: Learning Objectives | Editorial Information | PDF of Issue
Bruce Cuthbert, PhD Director, Division of Adult Translational Research and Treatment Development, NIMH Dr. Cuthbert has disclosed that he has no relevant financial or other interests in any commercial companies pertaining to this educational activity.
Bruce Cuthbert, PhD, the head of the NIMH’s new Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) program, explains how this new way of funding and conducting research in psychiatry is revolutionizing the field.
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