13 results match your criteria: "Okehazama Hospital Fujita Mental Care Center[Affiliation]"
Asian J Psychiatr
November 2024
Department of Psychiatry, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan.
Psychiatry Clin Neurosci
January 2024
Department of Psychiatry, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan.
Psychiatry Clin Neurosci
April 2023
Department of Psychiatry, Okehazama Hospital Fujita Mental Care Center, Toyoake, Japan.
Psychogeriatrics
January 2023
Department of Psychiatry, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan.
Psychiatry Clin Neurosci
March 2021
Department of Psychiatry, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan.
Acta Neuropsychiatr
April 2021
Moriyama General Mental Hospital, Aichi, Japan.
Heliyon
March 2020
Department of Neuropsychiatry, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.
Previous studies have reported clinical characteristics of hoarding disorder (HD), such as early onset, a chronic course, familiality, high unmarried rate, and high rates of comorbidities. However, clinical research targeting Japanese HD patients has been very limited. As a result, there is a low recognition of HD in Japan, leading to insufficient evaluation and treatment of Japanese HD patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychogeriatrics
July 2020
Department of Psychiatry, Okehazama Hospital Fujita Mental Care Center & The Neuroscience Research Center, Toyoake, Japan.
Neuropathology
October 2019
Department of Psychiatry, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan.
Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal-dominant neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the presence of chorea, psychiatric symptoms, and dementia. Although motor symptoms are thought to be correlated with the degeneration of the striatum, there is little information regarding the neuropathological basis of psychiatric symptoms. The ventral part of the striatum is known as the nucleus accumbens (Acb) and is a region of interest as a responsible focus of psychiatric symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychogeriatrics
September 2017
Department of Psychiatry, Okehazama Hospital Fujita Mental Care Center, Toyoake, Japan.
Background: Sleep problems in people with dementia are common and place a high burden on caregivers. Although hypnotic agents are often used to treat sleep disturbances, their use is associated with a considerable number of high-risk side-effects such as daytime sleepiness, amnesia, and an increased frequency of falling. The administration of bright light therapy (BLT) in the morning was a non-pharmacological remedy that was expected to treat sleep disorders in patients with dementia by entraining the circadian rhythm to ameliorate disturbances to the normal sleep-wake cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropathology
December 2016
Department of Psychiatry, Okehazama Hospital Fujita Mental Care Center & the Neuroscience Research Center, Toyoake, Japan.
In recent years, MRI has revealed cortical superficial siderosis (cSS), which exhibits hemosiderin deposition in only the cortical surface. However, the associations between the histological findings and clinical symptoms of cSS remain unclear. We herein report an autopsy case of a 75-year-old Japanese man with cSS with persistent abnormal behavior according to cognitive impairment, hallucination and delusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychogeriatrics
March 2016
Department of Psychiatry, Okehazama Hospital Fujita Mental Care Center, Toyoake, Japan.
Discrepancies between clinical and pathological diagnoses of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) may occur because the full disease progression remains unclear, especially during the early stage. Herein, we report the case of a 78-year-old Japanese man with hypochondriasis who had autopsy-confirmed limbic-type DLB pathology. He exhibited no core clinical features of DLB.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatry Clin Neurosci
June 2010
Department of Psychiatry, Okehazama Hospital Fujita Mental Care Center, Aichi, Japan.
Aims: The aim of this study was to analyze the relation between treatment response and the duration of untreated illness (DUI) in 133 outpatients with the first major depressive disorder (MDD) episode.
Methods: A logistic regression was performed with DUI, sex, age at onset, and score for 17 items on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale at the time of start of fluvoxamine treatment as the explanatory variables, and the response and the remission as the outcome variables.
Results: Regression analysis showed significant association between the response and DUI (P < 0.