Schizophrenia often develops during adolescence or early adulthood. Neurocognitive deficits frequently occur before or during the first psychotic episode and are closely associated with poorer functional outcomes. However, the effects of antipsychotic treatment on neurocognitive function in treatment-naive patients with first-episode schizophrenia have not yet been fully elucidated.
Autoren
- Aneta Dehn
Publikation
- InFo NEUROLOGIE & PSYCHIATRIE
Related Topics
You May Also Like
- Cardiology
Minimally invasive – the quiet triumph of modern heart surgery
- Schizophrenia in the early-onset stage
Which antipsychotic should be used for treatment-naive patients?
- Diarrhea in children
The problem of parental expectations
- From symptom to diagnosis
Multilocular cystic renal cell carcinoma (MCRCC)
- Shaping the Future with LLM & Co.
AI in Everyday Clinical Practice: Friend or Foe?
- Ulcerative colitis: current evidence on anti-inflammatory therapies
Remission induction and maintenance with biologics and JAK-i
- Bronchiectasis
New strategies against neutrophilic inflammation
- IBD in childhood