3 results match your criteria: "Department of Psychiatry Jichi Medical University Tochigi Japan.[Affiliation]"

Background: Along with the improved prognosis of patients with congenital heart disease, the associated diverse complications are under scrutiny. Due to various medical restrictions on their upbringing, patients with congenital heart disease often have coexisting mental disorders. However, reports on patients with congenital heart disease and coexisting eating disorders are rare.

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In the 1960s and 1970s, there was widespread discussion in Japan about the pathological experience of "unpleasant odors emanating from one's body." This symptom is called "Jikoshu," and this term was used in combination with various words, such as "Genkaku" (hallucination) and "Moso" (delusion), reflecting its symptomatological ambiguity. The best-known term in the English-language literature is ( phobia).

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This article introduces the concept proposed by the eminent second-generation Japanese psychopathologist Tadao Miyamoto in 1992 that the manic-depressive mixed state is the basic psychopathology of manic-depressive illness. When Kraepelin first established the dichotomy between schizophrenia and manic-depressive illness, mania and depression were placed in a symmetrical relationship. Now, in Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition (DSM-5), manic-depressive illness is divided into two distinct categories: bipolar and related disorders, and depressive disorders.

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