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Nasal Decongestants and Paranoid Psychosis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

B. K. Wharton*
Affiliation:
Princess Alexandra's Royal Air Force Hospital, Wroughton, Swindon, Wilts

Extract

Introduction Much has been written in the last ten years on the deleterious effects of high doses of amphetamine drugs on brain function. The majority of published cases of amphetamine psychosis have been cases of addiction or illicit drug taking, thereby making a good premorbid personality questionable and unlikely. Amphetamine psychoses and their association with delinquency was the subject of a paper by Scott and Willcox (1965).

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1970 

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References

Slater, E., and Roth, M. (1969). Clinical Psychiatry (3rd ed), p. 421.Google Scholar
Bell, D. S. (1965). British Journal of Psychiatry, 111, 701–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, P. D., and Willcox, D. R. C. (1965). British Journal of Psychiatry, 111, 865–75.Google Scholar
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