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タグ「neuropsychic health」

The role of radiation factor in the formation of neuropsychiatric disorders in children born to families of Chernobyl accident liquidators and the rationale for the tactics of diagnostic and therapeutic-preventive measures

Title: The role of radiation factor in the formation of neuropsychiatric disorders in children born to families of Chernobyl accident liquidators and the rationale for the tactics of diagnostic and therapeutic-preventive measures

Author: Zotova, Svetlana Arkadyevna

Reference: Moscow, 2007

Keywords: pediatrics, neuropsychic health, children, therapeutic- rehabilitative services,  nervous system

Abstract: Research aim: to determine the role of radiation effects on parents – the Chernobyl accident liquidators, in the formation of neuropsychiatric disorders in their children; to develop the principles of therapeutic- rehabilitative activities based on a comprehensive analysis of clinical-functional and cytogenetic examination results and family psychological testing.

URL:http://www.dissercat.com/content/rol-radiatsionnogo-faktora-v-formirovanii-nervno-psikhicheskikh-narushenii-u-detei-rodivshik

Neuropsychiatric effects. In: Twenty-five Years after Chornobyl Accident: Safety for the Future. National Report of Ukraine Radiological and Health Consequences of Chernobyl Disaster. Effect of the Complex Factors of the Chernobyl Disaster on Public Health.

Author: Loganovsky K.N.

Reference: Kiev, KIM, 2011, pp. 158–164

Cognitive, psychological and psychiatric effects of ionizing radiation exposure

Author: D. Marazziti, S. Baroni, M. Catena-Dell’Osso, et al.

Reference: Curr Med Chem. —2012. — Vol. 19, №12. — P. 1864–1869.

Keywords: cancer, non-cancer diseases, pathophysiology

Abstract: Radiation exposure leads to an increased risk for cancer and, possibly, additional ill-defined non-cancer risk, including atherosclerotic, cardiovascular, cerebro-vascular and neurodegenerative effects. Studies of brain irradiation in animals and humans provide evidence of apoptosis, neuro-inflammation, loss of oligo-dendrocytes precursors and myelin sheaths, and irreversible damage to the neural stem compartment with long-term impairment of adult neurogenesis. With the present paper we aim to present a comprehensive review on brain effects of radiation exposure, with a special focus on its impact on cognitive processes and psychological functions, as well as on their possible role in the pathophysiology of different psychiatric disorders.

URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22376039

Children’s well-being 11 years after the Chornobyl catastrophe

Author: E.J. Bromet, D. Goldgaber, G. Carlson et al.

Reference: Arch. Gen. Psychiatry. — 2000. — № 57. — P. 563–571.

Keywords: in utero infants, Kyiv, behavioral mental disorders

Abstract: Background  The psychological effects of technological disasters have rarely been studied in children. This study assessed the aftermath of the 1986 Chornobyl disaster in children evacuated to Kyiv from the contaminated zone surrounding the nuclear power facility.

Methods  In 1997, we evaluated three hundred 10- to 12-year-old children in Kyiv who were in utero or infants at the time of the disaster and who had resided near Chornobyl (evacuees) and 300 sex-matched homeroom classmates who had never lived in a radiation-contaminated area. Response rates were 92% (evacuees) and 85% (classmates). Data were obtained from children, mothers, and teachers using standard measures of well-being and risk factors for childhood psychopathology. The children also received physical examinations and basic blood tests.

Results  The evacuees and classmates perceived their mental health similarly except for Chornobyl-related anxiety symptoms and perceived scholastic competence. No differences were found on the Iowa Conners’ Teacher Rating Scale. Although the physical examination and blood test results were normal, the evacuee mothers rated their children’s well-being as significantly worse, especially with respect to somatic symptoms on the Children’s Somatization Inventory and Child Behavior Checklist. The most important risk factors for these ratings were maternal somatization and Chornobyl-related stress.

Conclusions  Given the multiple stressful experiences to which evacuee families were exposed, the small differences in the children’s self-reports suggest that there are protective factors in the lives of these children. The trauma experienced by the mothers was reflected in their perceptions of their children’s well-being, particularly somatic symptoms, but was not transmitted to the children themselves.

URL: http://archpsyc.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=481617

From atomic neuropsychiatry to brain-computer interface, or how to preserve and enhance the domestic scientific and technological potential

Author: K.N. Loganovsky

Reference: Новая медицина тысячелетия (New Medicine of the Millennium), 2010

Abstract: the article introduces the history of atomic neuropsychiatry. Full text in Russian on the web magazine, on pages 16-27.

URL: http://nmt-journal.com/arch/files/full/2010_3.pdf

Neuroimmune mechanisms of early and remote effects of radiation / / Health Effects of the Chernobyl accident

Author: D.A. Bazyka, N.A. Golyarnik, N.V. Belyaeva

Reference: Kiev, 2007

Abstract: There is no data on web. For detailed information on the article contact the National Scientific Center for Radiation Medicine of Ukraine. The center’s home page is: http://www.national.rcrm.net.ua/index.php/en/

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