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Yayın A Case of Chronic Functional Parkinsonism Treated Over 10 Years for the Diagnosis of Juvenile Parkinsonism(Turkiye Sinir Ve Ruh Sagligi Dernegi, 2021) Bulut, Necati Serkut; Yorguner, Nese; Carkaxhiu-Bulut, Gresa; Tunçer, Emine NeseFunctional (psychogenic) movement disorders (FMD) constitute a cluster of heterogeneous diagnoses involving motor symptoms that cannot be explained by organic pathology and are often associated with underlying psychological problems. In psychiatry, patients with FMD are often placed within the scope of somatoform disorders and conversion disorders. Functional Parkinsonism (FP) is a rare form of FMD seen in 1.5% of all patients presenting with symptoms of parkinsonism. Although almost all symptoms of parkinsonism can be present in FP, clinical features such as sudden onset and a non-progressive course, inconsistent response to pharmacotherapy, and atypical findings in neurological examination are considered as important clues of psychogenic aetiology. Limited data in the literature on FP indicate that the average age of onset is between 37-53 years of age, whereas the average onset age of Idiopathic Parkinson's Disease (IPD) is around 60; and Juvenile Parkinsonism, a rare condition presenting before the age of 21, is often familial and more closely related to genetic mutations. Here, we present the case of a female patient, who, after the diagnosis of Juvenile Parkinsonism at the age of 17, had been treated with antiparkinsonian medications for about 14 years in the neurology clinic. Even though the age of onset of this case was far earlier than expected for both IPD and FP and the symptoms became chronic despite close monitoring, it is believed that this case is a striking example for the importance of the recognition of FP and early intervention.Yayın The seductive allure effect extends from neuroscientific to psychoanalytic explanations among Turkish medical students: preliminary implications of biased scientific reasoning within the context of medical and psychiatric training(Thinking & Reasoning, 2022) Bulut, Necati Serkut; Gürsoy, Süha Can; Yorguner, Neşe; Bulut, Gresa Çarkaxhiu; Sayar, KemalResearch suggests that people tend to overweight arguments accompanied by neuroscientific terminology, which is dubbed as the seductive allure of neuroscience explanations (SANE) in the literature. Such an effect might be of particular significance when it comes to physicians and mental health professionals (MHP), given that it has the potential to cause significant bias in their understanding as well as their treatment approaches toward psychiatric symptoms. In this study, we aimed to test the SANE effect among Turkish medical students, and assess its uniqueness by comparing it with a discipline that still maintains an important role in contemporary psychiatric training in Turkey: psychoanalysis. 109 medical students with a basic level of knowledge of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience were asked to rate the credibility of explanations of differing quality (good vs. circular) for psychological phenomena, followed by three types of information: none, neuroscientific (SNI) or psychoanalytical (SPI). Our findings showed that SNI significantly increased the judged quality of explanations for both conditions with the effect being more prominent for circular explanations. On the other hand, SPI had no effect on good explanations but enhanced the judged quality of circular explanations in a level comparable to that of SNI. For the first time, the SANE effect was replicated among medical students and provided preliminary data in favor of a similar effect for psychoanalytically oriented information.Yayın The severity of inflammation in major neuropsychiatric disorders: comparison of neutrophil–lymphocyte and platelet–lymphocyte ratios between schizophrenia, bipolar mania, bipolar depression, major depressive disorder, and obsessive compulsive disorder(Nordic Journal of Psychiatry, 2021) Bulut, Necati Serkut; Yorguner, Neşe; Bulut, Gresa ÇarkaxhiuBackground: As non-specific markers of immune dysregulation, neutrophil–lymphocyte and platelet– lymphocyte ratios (NLR and PLR) have been consistently shown to be increased in major neuropsychiatric disorders. Although this increase seems to be trans-diagnostic, the extent to which its magnitude differs between disorders remains largely unclear. Aim: The aim of this study was to directly compare the severity of inflammation (as reflected by NLR and PLR) between schizophrenia (Sch), bipolar mania (BD-M), bipolar depression (BD-D), major depressive disorder (MDD) and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). Methods: NLR and PLR were obtained for a total of 417 subjects (91 Sch, 70 BD-D, 37 BD-M, 93 MDD, 37 OCD, and 95 controls) and analyzed for group differences. Results: Sch, BD-M, BD-D and MDD presented with significantly higher NLR compared with both OCD and HC. NLR in BD-M was significantly higher than all the remaining groups, whereas Sch, BD-D and MDD presented with comparably elevated NLR. Moreover, BD-M, Sch and MDD had significantly higher PLR compared with HC. Conclusion: These results suggest that the underlying inflammation may be most severe in BD-M, followed by Sch, BD-D and MDD. On the other hand, inflammation may be of negligible intensity in OCD, or at least undetectable by means of NLR or PLR.