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Book Chapter
Pathological Yawning, Laughing and Crying
Available to PurchaseSeries: Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Volume: 41
Published: 06 December 2017
10.1159/000475691
EISBN: 978-3-318-05859-8
... Abstract Yawning, laughing, and crying are normal physiological behaviors of humans in good health. As with all physiological behaviors, their deregulation can reveal disorders. Pathological yawning occurs in salvos of 10-20 successive yawns, and the number of yawns per day can exceed one...
Book Chapter
Pathological Crying: Modern Treatment Options
Available to PurchaseSeries: Advances in Biological Psychiatry
Volume: 21
Published: 13 September 2002
10.1159/000066869
EISBN: 978-3-318-00864-7
Book Chapter
Catastrophe Reaction and Emotionalism
Available to PurchaseSeries: Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Volume: 41
Published: 06 December 2017
10.1159/000475695
EISBN: 978-3-318-05859-8
... Abstract The catastrophic reaction (CR; a disruptive and uncontrolled behavior triggered by anger, irritability, and hostility) and emotionalism (a condition of uncontrolled crying or laughing) are disorders of the emotional regulation and expression, the prevalence of which is underestimated...
Book Chapter
Microanalysis of the First Interview with Psychosomatic Patients
Available to PurchaseVolume: 31
Published: 31 December 1979
10.1159/000287336
EISBN: 978-3-318-06164-2
... the complaint start, and in the here and now dimension, e.g., in how far does the information imply a cry for help and understanding. Psychosomatic patients, who are usually well adapted, suppress or repress their problems and emotions so much that they are hardly able to express these quite openly...
Book Chapter
Facial Nerve Function Insufficiency after Radiosurgery versus Microsurgery
Available to PurchaseSeries: Progress in Neurological Surgery
Volume: 21
Published: 15 September 2008
10.1159/000156718
EISBN: 978-3-8055-8371-8
...) was, of course, associated with a highrate of complaint, with burning eye in 27 and crying eyein 39. In patients from the two arms with no FP, a dry eyewas reported in 8/64 after GKS and 7/42 after MS (not significant)and a burning eye in 9/64 after GKS and 9/42 afterMS (not significant). Thus, 14% of patients...
Book Chapter
References
Available to PurchaseSeries: Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Volume: 41
Published: 06 December 2017
EISBN: 978-3-318-05859-8
...: Textbook of Nervous Diseases for Physicians and Students by Professor H. Oppenheim of Berlin. (Bruce A., 1911). 6. Wilson SAK: Some problems in neurology. II. Pathological laughing and crying. J Neurol Psychopathol 1924;IV:229-233. 7. Papez JW: A proposed mechanism of emotion. 1937. J...
Book Chapter
References
Available to PurchaseSeries: Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Volume: 41
Published: 06 December 2017
EISBN: 978-3-318-05859-8
... patients. Brain Struct Funct 2015;220:803-812. 9. Walusinski O: Yawning in diseases. Eur Neurol 2009;62:180-187. 10. Poeck K: Pathological laughter and crying; in Frederik S (ed): Handbook of Clinical Neurology. Amsterdam, Elsevier, 1985, vol. 45, pp. 219-225. 11. Askenasy JJ: The functions...
Book Chapter
Reading Appetite Cues in Infancy: A Role for Nutrition Education
Available to PurchaseSeries: Nestlé Nutrition Institute Workshop Series
Volume: 92
Published: 14 January 2020
10.1159/000499548
EISBN: 978-3-318-06528-2
... to eat by sucking their hands and eliciting the hunger cry, and indicate satiation through a wide repertoire of behaviors ranging from subtle facial expressions, shifts in gaze through to changes in gesture and bodily movements including turning their head away. Filming mealtime interactions reveals...
Book Chapter
Starting Early: Obesity Prevention during Infancy
Available to PurchaseSeries: Nestlé Nutrition Institute Workshop Series
Volume: 73
Published: 26 October 2012
10.1159/000341300
EISBN: 978-3-318-02116-5
... sleeping, crying, and feeding. First-time mothers were randomly assigned to receive either a Soothe/Sleep intervention, an Introduction of Solids intervention, both interventions, or no interventions. The interventions were delivered via home visits and showed positive effects on infant behaviors...
Book Chapter
Series: Nestlé Nutrition Institute Workshop Series
Volume: 86
Published: 28 June 2016
10.1159/000442723
EISBN: 978-3-318-05483-5
... , 7 ]. Proton pump inhibitors do not decrease infant regurgitation, crying, distress and irritability [ 8 ]. There is no indication for drug treatment in ‘happy spitters' or even in troublesome regurgitation [ 2 ]. Commercially available antiregurgitation formulas contain different thickening agents...
Book Chapter
Evidence-Based Medicine for Neurosurgeons: Introduction and Methodology
Available to PurchaseSeries: Progress in Neurological Surgery
Volume: 19
Published: 09 August 2006
10.1159/000095175
EISBN: 978-3-318-01358-0
... techniques, and the best available evidence can be a far cry from scientific truth.With the support and backing of governmental agencies, professional medical societies, theAAMC, the ACGME, and the ABMS, EBM is likely here to stay. The fact that: (1) EBM philosophyand critical appraisal techniques have...
Book Chapter
Measurements of Respiratory Muscle Function in Children
Available to PurchaseSeries: Progress in Respiratory Research
Volume: 33
Published: 04 February 2005
10.1159/000083531
EISBN: 978-3-318-01087-9
..., and
invasive tests such as measurement of transdiaphragmatic
pressures during crying, sniff transdiaphragmatic pressures,
and magnetic stimulation of the phrenic nerves. The measurement
of sniff nasal pressures and magnetic stimulation of
the phrenic nerves may be increasingly used in children in the
coming...
Book Chapter
Ego, My Double: (The Golyadkin Phenomenon)
Available to PurchaseSeries: Key Issues in Mental Health
Volume: 164
Published: 22 April 1986
10.1159/000412326
EISBN: 978-3-318-03912-2
... Abstract ‘Mr Golyadkin wanted to cry out but could not, to make some sort of protest but his strength failed him. His hair stood on end and he collapsed into a chair, insensible with horror. Mr Golyadkin had recognized his nocturnal acquaintance. Mr Golyad-kin’s nocturnal acquaintance was none...
Book
Neurologic-Psychiatric Syndromes in Focus - Part I: From Neurology to Psychiatry
Available to PurchaseSeries: Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Volume: 41
Published online: 16 November 2017
Published in print: 06 December 2017
10.1159/isbn.978-3-318-05859-8
EISBN: 978-3-318-05859-8
Book Chapter
Series: Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Volume: 28
Published: 25 March 2010
10.1159/000307086
EISBN: 978-3-8055-9405-9
... cases, the attribution produces a contagion. This typically occurs in the context of a personal emotional experience such as someone crying. If your sister, mother, child or even close friend came to your house and started to cry and express extreme sadness you might be compelled, somewhat...
Book Chapter
Series: Nestlé Nutrition Institute Workshop Series
Volume: 88
Published: 30 May 2017
10.1159/000455219
EISBN: 978-3-318-06031-7
...) across the life span, colic is defined by the manifestations of recurrent (>3 times/week) and protracted (>3 h/day) periods of irritability, crying, and fussiness that begins in otherwise healthy babies during the first few months of life [ 1 ]. These infants are developmentally normal and have...
Book Chapter
References
Available to PurchaseSeries: Nestlé Nutrition Institute Workshop Series
Volume: 86
Published: 28 June 2016
EISBN: 978-3-318-05483-5
... for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition (NASPGHAN) and the European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition (ESPGHAN). J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2009;49:498-547. 8. Gieruszczak-Białek D, Konarska Z, Skórka A, et al: No effect of proton pump inhibitors on crying...
Book Chapter
Series: Nestlé Nutrition Institute Workshop Series
Volume: 95
Published: 12 January 2021
10.1159/000511515
EISBN: 978-3-318-06866-5
... ]. In a longitudinal study, Spinrad et al. [ 27 ] reported that mothers more often responded to 18-month-old children’s negative affect (compared to positive affect); some using distraction, some giving in to the child’s wishes, and others questioning the validity of the child’s emotions (e.g., “why are you crying...
Book Chapter
The Neurology of Literature
Available to PurchaseSeries: Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience
Volume: 27
Published: 01 April 2010
10.1159/000311204
EISBN: 978-3-8055-9331-1
.... Romberg and Gowers stressed the epileptic temperament and the inevitable intellectual decline of those with the condition. Physical appearance was thought to declare the condition, an opinion shared by Dostoyevsky. Both neurologists and novelists of the 19th century emphasized the epileptic cry...
Book Chapter
Gastrointestinal Food Allergies
Available to PurchaseSeries: Chemical Immunology and Allergy
Volume: 101
Published: 21 May 2015
10.1159/000371700
EISBN: 978-3-318-02341-1
... of persistent and inconsolable crying during the first weeks of life. In the vast majority of infants with colic, no organic cause is found [ 36 , 37 ]. However, colic symptoms may cause maternal exhaustion and significant family stress [ 38 ]. Only few randomised, placebo-controlled studies on the treatment...
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