Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
A patient's guide to panic disorder, panic attacks, and other stress-related maladies. Download Plain Text version. Twenty years ago panic disorder was often misunderstood and misdiagnosed. Its symptoms frequently mimicked non-psychiatric diseases, making it a mystery to both doctors and patients. Sufferers filled emergency rooms and doctors' offices and endured countless general examinations that revealed nothing. In Understanding Panic and Other Anxiety Disorders , Benjamin Root, a practicing psychiatrist since 1986, gathers the very latest research and news on the newest pharmacological and
Choose an application
1. 1. The classic animal models for human psychiatric conditions involves rodents As prey species, their normal behaviors of avoidance would be considered pathological in humans and dogs. Hence, such models may not be homologous for similar behaviors found in psychiatric pathology in humans. 2. 2. Dogs exhibit pathological behavioral conditions that may be equivalent to certain human psychiatric conditions. These canine conditions appear spontaneously or endogenously in the absence of genetic or neurochemcial manipulation, and as such, may be homologous to the human condition. 3. 3. If canine conditions approach homology with human conditions they should have excellent face, predictive, and construct validity. 4. 4. The canine conditions of separation anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, cognitive dysfunction, dominance aggression, and panic disorder have good to excellent validity at all explored levels for human generalized anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, Alzheimer's disease, impulse control disorders, and panic disorder. 5. 5. Natural canine models can aid our understanding of human psychiatric conditions.
Absence. --- Aggression. --- Animal model. --- Animal-model. --- Animal-models. --- Animal. --- Anxiety. --- Assessment. --- Avoidance. --- Behavior. --- Canine model. --- Cognition. --- Cognitive disfunction dog model. --- Cognitive dysfunction. --- Control. --- Disease. --- Disorder. --- Dog. --- Dogs. --- Dominance aggression. --- Dominance. --- Generalized anxiety disorder. --- Genetic. --- Human. --- Humans. --- Impulse control disorder. --- Level. --- Model. --- Models. --- Natural. --- Obsessive-compulsive disorder. --- Obsessive-compulsive. --- Panic disorders. --- Panic. --- Post-traumatic stress syndrome. --- Prey. --- Rodent. --- Rodents. --- Schizophrenia. --- Separation anxiety. --- Separation.
Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|