Home (Dissociation)
Home  
 
 
Home » Disease » Dissociation


 

Dissociation

Disease Disseminated tuberculosisDissociative amnesia

Dissociation: In psychology and psychiatry, a perceived detachment of the mind from the emotional state or even from the body.

 


Atrioventricular Dissociation

more about Atrioventricular Dissociation
Third-degree heart block or complete heart block ...

Dissociation (Collection: Mental Health )
Dissociation is probably best defined as a psychological process involving alterations of attention and memory so as to create alterations in identity or sense of self.

Dissociation of AGAT, GAMT and SLC6A8…
By Braissant O, Béard E, Torrent C, Henry H
Related Articles Dissociation of AGAT, GAMT and SLC6A8 in CNS: Relevance to creatine… more… ...

Dissociation-A reaction to trauma in which the mind splits off certain aspects of the trauma from conscious awareness. Dissociation can affect the patient's memory, sense of reality, and sense of identity.

dissociation A disruption in the usually integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, or perception of the environment. The disturbance may be sudden or gradual, transient or chronic.

Dissociation between electromechanical systole (Q-SII interval) and electrical systole (Q-T interval) so that the second heart tone (SII) is recorded before the end of the T wave; ...

Acid Dissociation And Ultrafiltration
ADA
Americans With Disabilities Act; Anterior Descending Artery; Antideoxyribonucleic Acid Antibody; Approved Dietary Allowance ...

Oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve.
Arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation is related to partial pressure of O2 (Po2). Po2 at 50% saturation (P50) is normally 27 mm Hg.

Anxiety, numbness, dissociation and/or inappropriate calmness
Anger and frustration
Acute stress disorder (ie, distress, memories, avoidance, and numbing in the months after trauma)
Depression
Post-traumatic symptoms and/or disorder ...

Total terms starting with selected letter: 1330 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Current page: 10Displacement paraphilia Disruption sequence Dissect Dissection Dissection, axillary Dissection, neck Dissociate Dissociation Distal Distance healing ...

ABI, Diabetic Acidosis, Dissociation, Disulfide, TMT, Epilepsies, Anterior Fronto-Polar, Gene, Bacterial, Generalized Headaches, Germ Cell Cancers, Heparin-Binding Protein, 39-kDa, Hepatitis B, Heterocyclic Cpds, 1-Ring, II, Neurofibromatosis, ...

Atrioventricular dissociation
Atrioventricular nodal reentry tachycardia (AVNRT))
Cardiomyopathy
Colonic obstruction
Coronary artery anomalies, atherosclerosis, or vasospasm
Encephalopathy
Esophageal cancer
Esophageal motility disorders ...

Because of its potent binding to ACE and slow dissociation from the enzyme, ramiprilat shows two elimination phases. The apparent elimination phase corresponds to the clearance of free ramiprilat and has a half-life of 9-18 hours.

In such a case you have to call this a dissociation. Those molecules are in a highly reactive state. This is the basis of heterogeneous catalysis. The substrate is then called catalytic converter.

If undiagnosed and untreated BPD can cause the individuals who are afflicted to have periods of complete dissociation with reality.

After a traumatic event, dissociation enables a person to numb his or her current feelings. It causes a temporary but drastic experience of feeling separate from one's self, not exisiting, or being in an unreal world. It can cause a dreamlike state.

Some of that difference is thought to be due to higher rates of dissociation soon before and after the traumatic event (peritraumatic), a tendency for individuals from minority ethnic groups to blame themselves, have less social support, ...

Peripheral pulse, heart one dissociation (i.e., more heartbeats heard than felt at the radial pulse)
Signs of CHF, if decompensated
Slow irregular heartbeat can occur if AV node disease
No signs (between episodes)
Signs of the underlying cause ...

Dissociation between thought and action
Impulsivity
Irritability and temper outbursts
Physical aggression
Communication problems
Socially inappropriate behaviour and dis-inhibition
Self-centred behaviour and egocentricity ...

The moderate to severe dissociation that occurs in patients with dissociative disorders is understood to result from a set of causes: ...

the cortical neural systems are in a state of partial dissociation, which renders possible an unduly intense and prolonged excitement of some one system at the expense of all other systems (cf. Hypnotism).
[edit]
Coincidental Hallucinations ...

disorders that affect consciousness defined as causing significant interference with the patient's general functioning, including social relationships and employment. Description In order to have a clear picture of these disorders, dissociation ...

Acids and bases: Acid-base extraction. Acid-base reaction. Acid dissociation constant ... 4.1 Polyprotic acids. 4.2 Neutralization. 4.3 Weak acid/weak base equilibria ...
Full article ...

Bipolar disorder
Body dysmorphic disorder
Cannabis and psychosis
Dissociation and dissociative disorders
Munchausen syndrome ...

Ernest Hilgard's neodissociation theory (1977) has been influential in the explanation of hypnosis.

Methemoglobin has a higher affinity for cyanide than does cytochrome oxidase and thus promotes its dissociation from this enzyme.

Each of the four major dissociative disorders is characterized by a distinct mode of dissociation. Dissociative disorder symptoms may include: ...

measurement of how tightly haemoglobin 'holds on to oxygen' (oxygen dissociation curve) ...

They may try to avoid people, places or things that are reminders, as well as numbing out emotions to avoid painful, overwhelming feelings. Numbing of thoughts and feelings in response to trauma is known as "dissociation" and is a hallmark of PTSD.

Problems with anger management, manifested as periods of intense, uncontrollable and often unreasonable anger
Episodes (usually precipitated by stress) of intense paranoia, dissociation, ...

^ Moattari AR, Cho K, Vinik AI (1990). "Somatostatin analogue in treatment of coexisting glucagonoma and pancreatic pseudocyst: dissociation of responses". Surgery 108 (3): 581-7. PMID 2168587.

See also: Symptom, Cancer, Injuries, Stress, Death

Disease Disseminated tuberculosisDissociative amnesia

 
 rssRSS