Publications by authors named "S Guruprasad"

Article Synopsis
  • Child development assessment tests are crucial for educational placement and identifying cognitive weaknesses, but most research has been limited to high-income countries, making adaptation to other contexts challenging.
  • As part of a study on the impact of childhood vaccines in rural Haryana, India, researchers aimed to assess the feasibility of enrolling local children and conducting development assessments for kids aged 18 months to 8 years.
  • A rigorous seven-step adaptation process was developed to culturally and contextually tailor three assessment tests, which included translation, back-translation, iterative adaptation, and field-testing to ensure validity and relevance in the rural setting.
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Background: The positive association between adverse life events and somatoform disorders is a consistent observation. But no systematic studies have evaluated the relationship between health-related life events (HLEs) in patients with somatic symptom disorder (SSD)/somatoform disorders.

Aim: To examine the nature and relationship of HLE in patients with SSD and to assess the correlates of HLE.

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There is some evidence consistently linking the occurrence of de novo obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) with clozapine. This skin-picking disorder is also known as impulsive-compulsive disorder-unspecified which with an increasing convergence with OCD has been placed in the current Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders-fifth edition by American Psychiatric Association (DSM-5), in the category of the obsessive-compulsive and related disorders. To the best of our knowledge, there is no literature relating antipsychotics like clozapine with the occurrence of skin-picking behaviour.

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Psychogenic seizures are often underdiagnosed and epilepsy is very often over-treated which leads to multiple financial, social and stigma related difficulties. The myoclonic seizure itself is a rare phenomenon and when functional movement disorder presents like myoclonus then it's extremely difficult to pinpoint the exact cause. Here, we are presenting a case who was misdiagnosed as having a myoclonic seizure disorder and treated in multiple places without any improvement which ultimately turned out to be functional movement disorder of a rare variety.

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