keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22374708/examining-the-prevalence-role-and-impact-of-evidence-regarding-antisocial-personality-sociopathy-and-psychopathy-in-capital-cases-a-survey-of-defense-team-members
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John F Edens, Jennifer Cox
Although anecdotal case accounts suggest that evidence concerning Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD), sociopathy and psychopathy is frequently introduced by the prosecution in capital murder trials, to date there has been no systematic research to determine the actual prevalence, role, or perceived impact of such evidence in these cases. Survey data collected from attendees at a national capital mitigation conference (n=41) indicated that prosecution evidence concerning APD was quite prevalent, with "sociopath" and "psychopath" labels being introduced less frequently...
May 2012: Behavioral Sciences & the Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22360520/lifetime-history-of-traumatic-brain-injury-among-persons-with-substance-use-disorders
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John D Corrigan, Jennifer Bogner, Christopher Holloman
OBJECTIVE: Determine (a) if there are sub-groups of individuals with substance use disorders distinguished by their pattern of sustaining traumatic brain injury (TBI) over the lifetime and (b) whether sub-group membership affects current functioning. DESIGN: Secondary analysis. SETTINGS: Outpatient substance abuse treatment programme and state prison. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred and fifty-seven participants with lifetime histories of both TBI and substance used disorder drawn from two previous studies of (a) persons in substance abuse treatment and (b) prison inmates...
2012: Brain Injury
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21677240/the-spectrum-of-sociopathy-in-dementia
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mario F Mendez, Jill S Shapira, Ronald E Saul
Although well-known from head trauma and acute strokes, sociopathic behavior from dementia is less known and understood. This study reviewed 33 dementia patients who had been in trouble with the law. They were divided into two groups: 22 who committed impulsive sociopathic acts and 11 who committed non-impulsive acts. The impulsive patients demonstrated nonviolent acts, such as disinhibited sexual behavior or pathological stealing, and had disproportionate frontal-caudate atrophy on neuroimaging. The majority of non-impulsive patients demonstrated agitation-paranoia, sometimes with reactive aggression, delusional beliefs, or aphasic paranoia, and had advanced memory and other cognitive impairment...
2011: Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20979622/what-should-be-done-with-antisocial-personality-disorder-in-the-new-edition-of-the-diagnostic-and-statistical-manual-of-mental-disorders-dsm-v
#24
EDITORIAL
Morten Hesse
Antisocial personality disorder, psychopathy, dissocial personality disorder and sociopathy are constructs that have generally been used to predict recidivism and dangerousness, alongside being used to exclude patients from treatment services. However, 'antisocial personality disorder' has recently begun to emerge as a treatment diagnosis, a development reflected within cognitive behaviour therapy and mentalisation-based psychotherapy. Many of the behaviour characteristics of antisocial personality disorder are, at the same time, being targeted by interventions at criminal justice settings...
October 27, 2010: BMC Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20562756/relationship-between-comorbidity-and-violence-risk-assessment-in-forensic-psychiatry-the-implication-of-neuroimaging-studies
#25
REVIEW
Tija Zarković Palijan, Sanja Radeljak, Marina Kovac, Drazen Kovacević
Violence is an important social problem. Violence in the community has important social relevance for the political, criminal justice, and health care systems. Studies of homicide offenders have suggested a high prevalence of neurologic dysfunction due to organic brain damage such as traumatic brain injury, epilepsy and dementia have been observed to exhibit excessive violence. Moreover, violence in the mentally ill can be viewed as an important medical and mental health problem with significant implications for forensic psychiatry and the community...
June 2010: Psychiatria Danubina
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20192950/variation-in-the-gene-encoding-the-serotonin-transporter-is-associated-with-a-measure-of-sociopathy-in-alcoholics
#26
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Aryeh I Herman, Tamlin S Conner, Raymond F Anton, Joel Gelernter, Henry R Kranzler, Jonathan Covault
The present study examined the association between a measure of sociopathy and 5-HTTLPR genotype in a sample of individuals from Project MATCH, a multi-center alcohol treatment trial. 5-HTTLPR, an insertion-deletion polymorphism in SLC6A4, the gene encoding the serotonin transporter protein, results in functionally distinct long (L) and short (S) alleles. The S allele has been associated with a variety of psychiatric disorders and symptoms including alcohol dependence, but it is unknown whether 5-HTTLPR increases the risk for co-morbid sociopathy among those with alcohol dependence...
January 2011: Addiction Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20183548/of-brain-and-bone-the-unusual-case-of-dr-a
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J Narvid, M L Gorno-Tempini, A Slavotinek, S J Dearmond, Y H Cha, B L Miller, K Rankin
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a clinical syndrome characterized by progressive decline in social conduct and a focal pattern of frontal and temporal lobe damage. Its biological basis is still poorly understood but the focality of the brain degeneration provides a powerful model to study the cognitive and anatomical basis of social cognition. Here, we present Dr. A, a patient with a rare hereditary bone disease (hereditary multiple exostoses) and FTD (pathologically characterized as Pick's disease), who presented with a profound behavioral disturbance characterized by acquired sociopathy...
June 2009: Neurocase
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20173686/the-neurobiology-of-moral-behavior-review-and-neuropsychiatric-implications
#28
REVIEW
Mario F Mendez
Morality may be innate to the human brain. This review examines the neurobiological evidence from research involving functional magnetic resonance imaging of normal subjects, developmental sociopathy, acquired sociopathy from brain lesions, and frontotemporal dementia. These studies indicate a "neuromoral" network for responding to moral dilemmas centered in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and its connections, particularly on the right. The neurobiological evidence indicates the existence of automatic "prosocial" mechanisms for identification with others that are part of the moral brain...
November 2009: CNS Spectrums
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19742238/rapid-urbanization-its-impact-on-mental-health-a-south-asian-perspective
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jitendra K Trivedi, Himanshu Sareen, Mohan Dhyani
Rapid increase in urban population as a proportion of total population is resulting in rapid urbanization of the world. By the end of 2008, a majority of the world's population will be living in the cities. This paradigm shift in the dynamics of human population is attracting attention of demographers, sociologists, scientists, and politicians alike. Urbanization brings with it a unique set of advantages and disadvantages. Though it is driving the economies of most of the nations of the world, a serious concern regarding the impact of urbanization on mental health is warranted...
July 2008: Indian Journal of Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19528542/why-we-recommend-analytic-treatment-for-some-patients-and-not-for-others
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eve Caligor, Barry L Stern, Margaret Hamilton, Verna Maccornack, Lionel Wininger, Joel Sneed, Steven P Roose
One hundred consecutive patients applying for analysis completed a comprehensive battery of structured interviews and self-report questionnaires assessing dimensions of psychopathology and psychological functions that analysts consider important when evaluating patients for analysis. Patients were evaluated for analysis by a candidate supervised by a training analyst. Fifty patients were accepted for analysis and fifty rejected. In both groups, psychiatric morbidity and psychosocial impairment were high, with a 50% current and 74% lifetime diagnosis of mood disorder, 56% current and 61% lifetime history of anxiety disorder...
June 2009: Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19499384/altered-emotional-morality-in-frontotemporal-dementia
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mario F Mendez, Jill S Shapira
INTRODUCTION: Frontotemporal dementia (FTD), a disorder characterised by abnormal social behaviour and potential sociopathy, provides a window to the neurobiology of moral behaviour. This study investigated the basis of altered moral judgements in patients with FTD. METHODS: We administered an inventory of moral knowledge, five "reasoned" moral dilemmas, and five "emotional" moral dilemmas where subjects may cause direct harm to another through their own actions, to 21 patients with FTD compared to 21 comparably mildly impaired patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and 21 normal controls...
May 2009: Cognitive Neuropsychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19441975/sociopathy-and-groups-insights-from-the-film-the-night-porter
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas A Wood
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2009: International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19121516/delay-discounting-correlates-with-proportional-lateral-frontal-cortex-volumes
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
James M Bjork, Reza Momenan, Daniel W Hommer
BACKGROUND: Functional neuroimaging experiments in healthy control subjects have shown that choosing between small and immediate rewards versus larger but deferred rewards in delay discounting (DD) tasks recruits mesofrontal and lateral frontal cortex. Might individual differences in frontocortical gray matter morphology be related to preference for immediate reward? METHODS: We related DD in a laboratory decision-making task to proportional frontocortical gray matter (GM) volumes calculated from segmented magnetic resonance images in 29 healthy adults...
April 15, 2009: Biological Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18499372/the-limited-role-of-neuroimaging-in-determining-criminal-liability-an-overview-and-case-report
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David S Husted, Wade C Myers, Yuijin Lui
OBJECTIVE: Studies indicate there is a substantial biological substrate for psychopathic behavior. Neuroimaging techniques have afforded biomedical sciences a means to investigate further how aberrant brain activity or structure may be correlated with psychopathy and violence. This paper will provide an overview of the literature, and then will explore the role of structural and functional MRI brain imaging in the defense of a young adult male charged with kidnapping and rape. METHOD: Using Pubmed and the keywords "functional neuroimaging," "structural neuroimaging," "psychopathy," "antisocial personality," "sociopathy," "aggression," "impulsivity," and "violence," the authors conduct a review of structural and functional neuroimaging studies involving aggressive, violent, psychopathic or antisocial offenders...
July 18, 2008: Forensic Science International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18255237/does-hiv-1-aids-associated-frontotemporal-neuropathology-following-perinatal-infection-influence-the-development-of-moral-behaviour
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
G S Gericke
While HIV encephalopathy and the AIDS dementia complex are considered hallmark neurologic manifestations of HIV-1 infection, increasing evidence of a continuum of nervous system involvement indicates the existence of an unrecognized number of individuals with milder, mostly cognitive and/or behavioural effects. Questions are raised whether HIV-related frontotemporal neuropathology during critical developmental stages could affect development of the brain networks documented to be involved in moral decisions, and whether this could contribute to the phenomenon of delinquency in an unknown percentage of the current generation of approximately 18-25 year old survivors of early childhood or vertically acquired HIV infection...
2008: Medical Hypotheses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18208680/prevention-of-suicide-and-attempted-suicide-in-denmark-epidemiological-studies-of-suicide-and-intervention-studies-in-selected-risk-groups
#36
REVIEW
Merete Nordentoft
The suicide rates in Denmark have been declining during the last two decades. The decline was relatively larger among women than among men. All age groups experienced a decline except the very young with stable rates and the very old with increasing rates. The Universal, Selective, Indicated (USI) model recommended by Institute of Medicine was used as a framework for the thesis. Universal preventive interventions are directed toward the entire population; selective interventions are directed toward individuals who are at greater risk for suicidal behaviour; and indicated preventions are targeted at individuals who have already begun self-destructive behaviour...
November 2007: Danish Medical Bulletin
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17894301/affective-disorders-chemical-dependence-lithium-for-alcohol-and-drug-addiction-a-clinical-note
#37
REVIEW
A Flemenbaum
The author presents a working hypothesis for the treatment of some types of "chemical dependence," based on the following data: alcoholism and/or chemical dependence (and for that matter, other disorders like sociopathy) are heterogeneous syndromes. The literature is suggestive that some types of alcoholism may be genetically related to affective disorders, and that alcoholism and other related disorders could be "parapsychiatric" manifestation of subpsychotic mood swings. There has been increased evidence that selected cases of depressive disorders respond to prophylactic administration of Lithium Carbonate; further, that Lithium seems to be beneficial in disorders other than affective ones...
June 1974: Diseases of the Nervous System
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17143085/personality-change-in-old-age
#38
REVIEW
Nicola T Lautenschlager, Hans Förstl
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The present short review summarizes some of the most important personality changes in older adults. RECENT FINDINGS: Personality changes in old age are usually minimal. Cluster B personality disorders appear to become less prevalent. Significant changes in personality are typically associated with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (e.g., slowly progressive sociopathy), Alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment due to incipient dementia or underlying medical illness...
January 2007: Current Opinion in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16946075/a-role-for-the-macaque-anterior-cingulate-gyrus-in-social-valuation
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
P H Rudebeck, M J Buckley, M E Walton, M F S Rushworth
Complex human social interaction is disrupted when the frontal lobe is damaged in disease, and in extreme cases patients are described as having acquired sociopathy. We compared, in macaques, the effects of lesions in subdivisions of the anterior cingulate and the orbitofrontal cortices believed to be anatomically homologous to those damaged in such patients. We show that the anterior cingulate gyrus in male macaques is critical for normal patterns of social interest in other individual male or female macaques...
September 1, 2006: Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16540253/what-frontotemporal-dementia-reveals-about-the-neurobiological-basis-of-morality
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mario F Mendez
There is evidence that moral behavior is a product of evolution and an innate aspect of the human brain. Functional magnetic resonance studies in normals, investigations of psychopaths, and acquired sociopathy from brain lesions suggest a neurobiology of moral behavior. Reports of sociopathy among patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) have provided a further opportunity to clarify the neurobiology of morality. They confirm a morality network that includes the ventromedial frontal cortex, the orbitofrontal cortex, and the amygdalae...
2006: Medical Hypotheses
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