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Corpus Callosum Area (CCA) in Schizophrenic Patients

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

G. Bersani
Affiliation:
III Psychiatric Clinic
A. Iannutelli
Affiliation:
III Psychiatric Clinic
C. Silvestrini
Affiliation:
III Psychiatric Clinic
P. Cipriano
Affiliation:
III Psychiatric Clinic
C. Zucca
Affiliation:
III Psychiatric Clinic
F. Pontieri
Affiliation:
I Neurological Clinic
G.F. Gualdi
Affiliation:
I Medical Clinic, MRI-TC Unit, “La Sapienza” University, Rome
C. DiBiasi
Affiliation:
I Medical Clinic, MRI-TC Unit, “La Sapienza” University, Rome
G. Trasimeni
Affiliation:
I Medical Clinic, MRI-TC Unit, “La Sapienza” University, Rome
P. Pancheri
Affiliation:
III Psychiatric Clinic

Abstract

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Type
Free communications
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 1997

References

(1)Nasrallah, H.A, Andreasen, N.C, Coffman, JA, Olsen, SC, Dunn, V D, Ehrhardt, J, Chapman, SA controlled Magnetic Resonance Imaging study of corpus callosum thickness in schizophrenia Biological Psychiatry 1986,21 274282CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(2)Doty, R., Schizophrenia a disease of interhemispheric proceses at forebrain and brainstem levels? Behavioural Brain Research 1919,34 133CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(3)Cowell, P E., Kostianovsky, D J, Gur, RC, Turetsky, B I, Gur, R ESex differences in Neuroanatomical and Clinical Correlations in Schizophrenia American Journal of Psychiatry 1996, 153 799805Google Scholar
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