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   English Wikipedia
 
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 Alternating and postictal psychoses: review and a unifying hypothesis Sachdev PSSchizophr Bull  2007[Jul]; 33 (4): 1029-37A comparison of the clinical and pathophysiological features of postictal  psychosis and brief interictal or alternating psychosis was undertaken to examine  if the underlying mechanisms are distinct in these 2 conditions. A selective  review of the published literature in English on epilepsy and brief psychosis was  carried out. The literature indicates that even though brief postictal and  alternating psychoses are considered to be separate syndromes, they have a number  of similarities. It can be argued that the underlying pathomechanisms are common,  with the brain's inhibitory processes in response to seizures playing a key role  in the development of the psychosis. These homeostatic mechanisms manifest as  electrophysiological, cerebral blood flow, and neurotransmitter and receptor  changes. Both syndromes are likely to be associated with prolonged inhibition in  limbic circuits, with further seizures modifying the psychosis depending upon  whether it is associated with disinhibition or hypersynchrony involving enhanced  inhibition. The neurotransmitter with a key role is GABA, although ionic  currents, catecholamines, opiates, adenosine, glutamate, and nitric oxide play a  role. Brief postictal and alternating psychoses provide an opportunity to  understand the complex relationships between epilepsy and schizophrenia-like  brief psychotic episodes, and this understanding can assist in their management.|Brain/physiopathology[MESH]|Electroencephalography[MESH]|Epilepsy/*complications/diagnosis/physiopathology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|N-Methylaspartate/physiology[MESH]|Psychotic Disorders/*diagnosis/*etiology/physiopathology[MESH]|Schizophrenia/complications[MESH]|gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/physiology[MESH]
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