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Sleep-related symptoms are common in the majority of psychiatric diagnostic categories. The overlap of sleep and psychiatric disorders have been demonstrated in numerous studies. The understanding of sleep and child psychiatry has progressively evolved in the last decade and newer insights have developed regarding the complex interaction between sleep and psychopathology. This collection of articles represents updates on sleep and psychiatric disorders with medical and neurological co-morbidities in children and adolescents.
screening --- attention deficit hyperactivity disorder --- medical education --- sleep disturbance --- narcolepsy --- mental health --- circadian disturbance --- schizophrenia --- teenagers --- psychosis --- sleep disorders in ASD --- pediatric sleep --- executive functions --- children --- autism spectrum disorder --- multidisciplinary --- adolescents --- traumatic brain injury --- sleep problems --- comorbidities in ASD --- anxiety --- adolescence --- pediatric intensive care unit --- adolescent --- attention deficit disorder --- Theory of Mind --- arousal --- social functioning --- sleep–wake disorders --- mechanical ventilation --- child psychiatry --- learning --- Acute illness --- non-pharmacologic management --- sedation --- sleep --- electroencephalography (EEG) --- delayed sleep phase --- anticipatory guidance --- behavior --- obstructive sleep apnea --- medications for sleep disorders in ASD --- Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) --- cannabis --- autism --- insomnia --- interventions --- sleep disordered breathing --- emotional information processing cognition --- attention --- cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) --- depression --- post-traumatic stress --- melatonin --- psychiatric disorders
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Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is an age-related neurological disease that affects tens of millions of people, in addition to their carers. Hallmark features of AD include plaques composed of amyloid beta, as well as neurofibrillary tangles of tau protein. However, despite more than a century of study, the cause of Alzheimer’s disease remains unresolved. The roles of amyloid beta and tau are being questioned and other causes of AD are now under consideration. The contributions of researchers, model organisms, and various hypotheses will be examined in this Special Issue.
HOTAIR --- neurosciences --- sleep disturbance --- positron emission tomography (PET) --- vitamin B complex --- neurodegeneration --- Tau --- miR-15/107 --- default-mode network --- complement receptor 1 --- neuronal differentiation --- epigenetics --- brain glucose metabolism --- oligomerization --- genetic risk --- A?O receptors --- prion --- ryanodine receptor --- type 3 diabetes --- complement --- cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia --- cognitive function --- epigenome-wide association study --- Alzheimer’s disease --- calcium signaling --- ?-secretase --- tau --- Prolyl isomerases --- NEAT1 --- complement C3b/C4b receptor --- proteostasis --- amyloid beta --- yeast --- slow-wave sleep --- amyloid ? --- nutrition --- 4 --- protein aggregation --- apolipoprotein E --- dementia --- MALAT1 --- inositol 1 --- lncRNAs --- molecular biology --- methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase MTHFR gene --- 5-trisphosphate receptor --- CR1 density --- miR-34c --- aggregation --- heat shock protein --- dendritic spine --- S-adenosylmethionine --- beta amyloid --- ion channel --- inflammation --- sleep fragmentation --- cystathionine-?-lyase CTH gene --- DNA methylation --- heat shock response --- microglia --- drug target discovery --- amyloid-? oligomer --- therapy --- CR1 length polymorphism --- methylome --- APOE gene --- ubiquitin --- magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) --- neuronal degeneration --- type 2 diabetes --- Pin1 --- mild cognitive impairment --- dairy products --- endoplasmic reticulum --- oxidative stress --- Hispanics --- CDK5R1
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