Publications by authors named "Savvateeva N"

Aim: To determine neuroanatomical peculiarities of grey matter in some regions of the prefrontal cortex and several subcortical structures in patients with juvenile shift like schizophrenia (F20 ICD-10).

Material And Methods: Forty-three young male patients and 54 mentally healthy men without family history of mental diseases underwent structural MRI with T1 high resolution images.

Results: As compared to mentally healthy subjects, there was a decrease of grey matter thickness in all tested regions of the prefrontal cortex in patients.

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The study aimed at elucidation of potential correlations between EEG features, neuromorphologic and psychological characteristics in patients with schizophrenia and in subjects with familial predisposition to the disease. EEG has been conducted in 71 patients, 162 first-degree relatives of schizophrenia subjects and 67 healthy controls. In the patients and relatives, correlations of power indices for 7 frequency ranges of resting EEG with computed tomography and cognitive parameters were analyzed.

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To evaluate the rigidity of psychic processes (RPP) as a factor predisposing (vulnerability) to schizophrenia and to study interactions between RPP and other susceptibility factors, psychological characteristics and magnetic resonance tomography data have been studied in 26 families with schizophrenia. Correlation, cluster and regression analyses and trait phenotypic variance decomposing into genetic and environmental components for heritability estimation were used. RPP indices in patients with schizophrenia and their relatives differed significantly from those in the control group of healthy subjects without positive family history of schizophrenia.

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160 patients over 60 years of age appealed to gerontologic unit of out-patient psychiatric clinic for the first time. The patients were divided into two main groups: with organic mental disorders (OMD) and with functional mental disorders (FMD) (79 and 81 patients, respectively). In the group of OMD the main form of disturbances were cases with dementia (74.

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Genetic analysis of clinical data and data obtained by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) on 26 families of schizophrenic patients (26 probands who were patients with schizophrenia, 47 parents, and 15 siblings) revealed an enlargement of the ventricular brain system both in probands and their affected and healthy relatives. Most MRI parameters had high coefficients of inheritance and tended to be linked with positive and negative psychopathological symptoms. Our results confirm the hypothesis of genetic predisposition to the structural changes in the brains of schizophrenic patients and suggest that such MRI characteristics as the width of the anterior horn of the left lateral ventricle in the region of the caudate nucleus, the width of the central region of the left lateral ventricle, the width of the anterior horn of the right lateral ventricle in the region of the caudate nucleus, and the width of the central region of the right lateral ventricle may serve as a marker of predisposition to schizophrenia.

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Computed tomography (CT) was performed in 189 individuals: in 44 children of schizophrenic parents (high risk group, HRG), in 39 parents with schizophrenia or with schizophrenic disturbance, in 56 children with schizophrenia, in 50 children with consequences of early organic damages of central nervous system (mental retardation syndrome and generalized tic syndrome). The frequency of CT changes was equal in the mentioned groups but their character was quite different. The widening of brain's liquor system (89.

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The authors retrospectively analyse CT data obtained in examinations of 1745 patients divided into three groups. Of these, 832 were male and 913 female patients. Group 1 consisted of 721 patients with schizophrenia, group 2 (reference) consisted of 855 mentally normal subjects directed to computer tomographic examination with suspected organic involvement of the brain, and group 3 (control) consisted of 169 mentally and neurologically normal subjects.

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