Synopsis
Contributors. Acknowledgements. Introduction; E.F. Torrey, M.B. Knable. Methodology and General Findings. 1. Psychiatric Brain Banks: Situation in Europe and Asia; I. Matsumoto, S.I. Niwa, R. Ravid. 2. Methodological and Stereological Considerations in Postmortem Psychiatric Brain Research; I.P. Everall, P.J. Harrison. 3. Imaging vs. Postmortem Receptor Studies: What You See is What You Get? L. Pilowsky. 4. Glial Pathology and Major Psychiatric Disorders; D.R. Cotter, C.M. Pariante, G. Rajkowska. 5. Indications of Abnormal Connectivity in Neuropsychiatric Disorders and Postmortem Studies; W.G. Honer. 6. Studies in the Human Frontal Cortex: Evidence for Changes in Neurochemical Markers in Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder; B. Dean. 7. Summary of Prefrontal Molecular Abnormalities in the Stanley Foundation Neuropathology Consortium; M.B. Knable, B.M. Barci, M.J. Webster, E.F. Torrey. Schizophrenia. 8. Macroanatomical Findings in Postmortem Brain Tissue from Schizophrenic Patients; P. Falkai. 9. Microanatomical Findings in Postmortem Brain Tissue from Subjects with Schizophrenia: Disturbances in Thalamorcortical and Corticocortical in Schizophrenia; T. Hashimoto, D.A. Lewis. 10. In Situ/Histological Approaches to Neurotransmitter- Specific Postmortem Brain Studies of Schizophrenia; S.E. Bachus, J.E. Kleinman. 11. Defining the Role of Specific Limbic Circuitry in the Pathophysiology of Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder; F.M. Benes, S. Berretta. 12. Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortical Parallel Circuit in Schizophrenia: Postmortem Abnormalities; B.G. Bunney, W.E. Bunney, R. Stein, S.G. Potkin. 13. Postmortem Studies of the Hippocampal Formation in Schizophrenia; A.J. Dwork. 14. GSK-3 and WNT Markers of Neurodevelopmental Abnormalities in Schizophrenia; N. Kozlovsky, R.H. Belmaker, G. Agam. Affective Disorders. 15. Macroanatomical Findings in Postmortem Brain Tissue; G.D. Pearlson. 16. Quantitative Cytoarchitectonic Findings in Postmortem Brain Tissue from Mood Disorder Patients; G. Rajkowska. 17. Phosphoinositide Signal Transduction System in Postmortem Human Brain; R.S. Jope. 18. cAMP Signal Transduction Abnormalities in the Pathophysiology of Mood Disorders: Contributions from Postmortem Brain Studies; A. Chang, P.P. Li, J.J. Warsh. 19. Monoamine Receptors in Postmortem Brain: Do Postmortem Brain Studies Cloud or Clarify our Understanding of the Affective Disorders? C.A. Stockmeier, G. Jurjus. 20. Non-Monaminergig Transmitters, Glia Cell Markers, Cell Adhesion Molecules and Synaptic Proteins in Postmortem Brain Tissue; D. Rujescu, P. Riederer. Concluding Remarks; D.R. Weinberger. Index.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.