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3.
J Am Psychoanal Assoc ; 41(1): 127-50, 1993.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8426050

ABSTRACT

In an institute research class, the validity of Lewin's methodology in his manifest dream exercise was tested by a different approach. Class members developed a questionnaire based on two actual manifest dreams. Responses from six analytic candidates and fifteen graduate analysts were analyzed by two classroom groups, working independently. The data were assessed by two methods and the conclusions were only partially synchronous with Lewin's method of collective free association in which members of the group influenced one another. Our subjects did not influence one another, and they and research class members were "blind" to the dreams' associations, context, and meanings derived years earlier, until after data were assessed and conclusions were reached. One conclusion suggests that intuition as to "correct" meanings may be independent of the number of years of analytic experience. This project is reported to stimulate similar research projects as a regular part of psychoanalytic education.


Subject(s)
Dreams , Psychoanalytic Interpretation , Psychoanalytic Therapy/education , Curriculum , Free Association , Humans , Psychoanalytic Theory
5.
J Am Psychoanal Assoc ; 35(4): 877-902, 1987.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3693789

ABSTRACT

This paper describes a predictable relation between our manic-depressive patients' blood lithium levels and particular changes in their conscious and unconscious mental processes (i.e., their thoughts, wishes, fantasies, inclinations, and feelings). These changes were, in turn, predictively related to specific changes in these patients' overt manic symptomatology. Because each of our patients' manic episodes was heralded by a marked increase in unconscious or conscious phallic sexual thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, and because this increase preceded any observed deterioration in ego or superego functioning, we hypothesize that a primary increase in our patients' phallic instinctual drives secondarily overwhelmed the capacity of their egos to defend against these drives, and that this, in turn, resulted in the development of our patients' overt manic symptoms. Psychoanalysis (or psychoanalytically oriented psychotherapy) made our patients consciously aware both of their previously unconscious phallic sexual thoughts and impulses, and of their defenses against them. This new awareness enabled our patients to recognize when their, now conscious, phallic sexual impulses and thoughts became inappropriately intensified; and this, in turn, permitted them to avoid overt manic episodes by counteracting these inappropriate inclinations with increased doses of lithium.


Subject(s)
Bipolar Disorder/therapy , Lithium/therapeutic use , Psychoanalytic Therapy , Sexual Behavior , Adult , Bipolar Disorder/psychology , Combined Modality Therapy , Defense Mechanisms , Fantasy , Female , Humans , Libido , Lithium/blood , Male
6.
J Pediatr ; 109(5): 753-8, 1986 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3772655

ABSTRACT

We report 25 children with oligoarticular arthritis associated with Lyme disease. There were 16 boys (male/female ratio 1.8:1); ages ranged from 2 to 15 years. Thirteen (52%) children had no history of erythema chronicum migrans or other rash. Thirteen had temperatures as high as 41 degrees C for up to 2 months before the onset of arthritis. Twelve recalled definite tick bites. Ten (40%) children, of whom seven had no history of rash, were hospitalized for presumed septic arthritis. Another four had diagnoses of pauciarticular juvenile rheumatoid arthritis for as long as 3 years. Seven patients had less acute, recurrent episodes of synovitis. Two children had seventh nerve palsies 2 months before onset of arthritis. All patients had antibodies to the Lyme spirochete. In 14 patients, synovial fluid white blood cell counts ranged from 180 to 97,700/mm3 (greater than or equal to 76% polymorphonuclear leukocytes). Antibiotic therapy was effective in all patients; in 13, orally administered therapy alone resulted in elimination of synovitis and recurrent attacks. Lyme arthritis may be confused with acute bacterial septic arthritis or recurrent "pauciarticular juvenile rheumatoid arthritis," particularly when there is no history of erythema chronicum migrans.


Subject(s)
Arthritis, Infectious/diagnosis , Lyme Disease/diagnosis , Adolescent , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Antibodies, Bacterial/analysis , Arthritis, Infectious/drug therapy , Arthritis, Infectious/etiology , Arthritis, Infectious/immunology , Blood Cell Count , Child , Child, Preschool , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Lyme Disease/drug therapy , Lyme Disease/immunology , Male , Penicillins/therapeutic use , Recurrence , Skin Diseases/etiology , Synovial Fluid/cytology , Synovitis/etiology
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