Is the thought disorder with oculogyric crisis a feature of tardive akathisia or tardive dysphrenia?
✍ Scribed by Stanley Fahn
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 192 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0364-5134
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The report by de Lacoste-Utamsing and Holloway that the splenium of the human corpus callosum is larger in females than in males has prompted a number of laboratories to investigate that claim [l]. In a recent study published in the Annah, Oppenheim and colleagues failed to detect significant sex-related differences in the splenium using magnetic resonance imagery (21. While they reference a single corroborating report, at least five recently published studies, including our own, have also failed to detect sexual dimorphism in the splenium f3,4). In addition, even the studies of de Lacoste-Utamsing and Holloway fail to demonstrate a sex difference in splenial size. In their original study of 9 male and 5 female callosa (I], the statistical significance of the sex losum do not predict gender: a study using magnetic resonance likely the tardive dysphrenia/akathisia syndrome. imagery. Behave Neurosci (in press) Holloway RL, de Iacoste MC. Sexual dimorphism in the human Department of Neurology corpus callosum: an extension and replication study. Hum Neurobiol 1986; 5:87-9 1