Medical News |
- Postpartum psychiatric risk varies with birth order
- Menopause symptom discrepancy between Spanish natives, immigrants
- Postpartum psychiatric risk varies with birth order
- Older age key to suicide risk in Asian patients with early psychosis
- Older age key to suicide risk in Asian patients with early psychosis
- Gray matter changes reflect psychosis burden
- LLN spirometry inadequate to detect airflow obstruction
| Postpartum psychiatric risk varies with birth order Posted: 14 Nov 2013 04:00 PM PST The elevated postpartum risk for a first-time psychiatric episode, particularly of bipolar disorder, is most marked after a first delivery, shows a population-based study. |
| Menopause symptom discrepancy between Spanish natives, immigrants Posted: 14 Nov 2013 04:00 PM PST Latin–American immigrants to Spain are less likely to report experiencing hot flashes than their native Spanish counterparts, suggests research published in Menopause. |
| Postpartum psychiatric risk varies with birth order Posted: 14 Nov 2013 04:00 PM PST The elevated postpartum risk for a first-time psychiatric episode, particularly of bipolar disorder, is most marked after a first delivery, shows a population-based study. |
| Older age key to suicide risk in Asian patients with early psychosis Posted: 14 Nov 2013 04:00 PM PST Suicide risk among patients with first-episode psychosis appears to be greatest for older individuals with severe symptoms that have gone untreated for a long time, Asian study findings indicate. |
| Older age key to suicide risk in Asian patients with early psychosis Posted: 14 Nov 2013 04:00 PM PST Suicide risk among patients with first-episode psychosis appears to be greatest for older individuals with severe symptoms that have gone untreated for a long time, Asian study findings indicate. |
| Gray matter changes reflect psychosis burden Posted: 13 Nov 2013 04:00 PM PST Changes in gray matter volume may be associated with psychosis burden rather than clinical diagnosis, research suggests. |
| LLN spirometry inadequate to detect airflow obstruction Posted: 13 Nov 2013 04:00 PM PST Research published in Thorax indicates that use of a lower limit of normal spirometric threshold fails to identify a number of patients with airflow obstruction and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. |
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