The study of sexual dimorphism in brain morphology may help delineate subtypes of schizophrenia based, in part, on sex; yield insight into the relationship between brain structure and behavior; and provide a neurodevelopmental context for studying the ontogenesis of schizophrenia. Preliminary findings from an ongoing study of sex differences in brain morphology and neuropsychological performance in schizophrenia suggest that schizophrenic males are characterized by multiple morphological deviations; this may represent an extreme form of normal sexual dimorphism in brain morphology. The role of brain morphology deviation in the ontogenesis of schizophrenia is discussed.
Evaluating the clinical significance of cognitive dysfunction in patients who exhibit signs of both depression and dementia is one of the more formidable challenges in psychiatry. This article reviews cognitive dysfunction associated with depression, the concept of "pseudodementia," and the syndromal phenomenology of coexisting depression and Alzheimer's-type dementia. The state of the art in neuropsychologic, electroencephalographic, metabolic, and neuroradiographic techniques for evaluating dementia and depression syndromes will be discussed, as will implications for the treatment of such patients.
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