Medicine

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This repository contains the published and unpublished research of the Faculty of Medicine by the staff members of the faculty

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    Diagnostic overlap between adolescent affective instability in borderline personality and juvenile bipolar disorder in Sri Lanka
    (Sri Lanka College of Psychiatrists, 2019) Chandradasa, M.; Fernando, W.K.T.R.; Kuruppuarachchi, K.A.L.A.
    Borderline personality disorder (BPD) and bipolar disorder (BD) could present a diagnostic challenge in the adolescent due to the presence of overlapping symptoms such as impulsivity, affective instability, and sexual arousal. Of these symptoms, affective instability is a central feature of BPD, and there is a rapid shift from the neutral affect to an intense affect, and this is associated with a dysfunctional modulation of emotions. We describe three Sri Lankan adolescents presenting with affective instability, treated with psychopharmacological agents as for BD. While BPD is characterized by transient mood shifts induced by interpersonal stressors, in BD, there are sustained mood changes. A longitudinal assessment of the symptomatic profile and collateral information clarified the diagnosis as being BPD. An examination of the nature of affective instability is vital for a proper diagnosis and provision of evidence-based treatment.
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    Why are we still living in the past? Sri Lanka needs urgent and timely reforms of its archaic mental health laws
    (Cambridge University Press, 2023) Hapangama, A.; Mendis, J.; Kuruppuarachchi, K.A.L.A.
    Mental health legislation protects the rights of people with mental illnesses. However, despite major social, political and cultural changes, Sri Lankan mental health services still operate on laws enacted mostly during the British rule more than a century ago, in the pre-psychotropics era, and focusing more on the detention of people with mental illnesses than on their treatment. It is high time all stakeholders made efforts for the much-awaited new Mental Health Act to pass through parliament urgently to meet the needs and protect the rights of patients, their caregivers and service providers.
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    Betel-quid use and its effects on symptoms of schizophrenia and extrapyramidal symptoms among a group of patients in a tertiary care hospital in Sri Lanka.
    (Sri Lanka College of Psychiatrists, 2020) Isuru, A.; Ediriweera, D.; Pathmeswaran, A.; Embuldeniya, A.; Narammalage, H.; Warnakulasuriya, S.; Kuruppuarachchi, K.A.L.A.; Hapangama, A.
    BACKGROUND: There is limited research regarding the prevalence of betel quid use and its effects on symptoms of patients with schizophrenia. Available studies suggest an association between betel chewing and positive symptoms among males with schizophrenia. AIMS: This study aimed to compare the prevalence of betel quid chewing between patients with and without mental illness, and to explore the association between betel quid use, symptoms of schizophrenia and side effects of psychotropic medication. METHODS: A cross sectional descriptive study was carried atoutpatient clinics at a tertiary care hospital in Sri Lanka. A structured interview schedule was administered to all participants. RESULTS: Out of 1000 participants, 20.9% chewed betel quid (95%CI: 18.4% - 23.4%). The rate of betel chewing among patients with and without a mental illness was 20.7% (95% CI: 17.0% - 24.4%) and 21.0% (95% CI: 17.6% - 24.5%) respectively and there was no significant difference between the two groups. There was no statistically significant difference between the occurrence of positive or negative symptoms and extra pyramidal side effects in patients with schizophrenia who did and did not chew betel. Female gender (p=0.004) and betel quid chewing (0.002) were associated with more anticholinergic side effects. CONCLUSIONS: There was no association between betel quid usage and the occurrence of positive or negative symptoms of schizophrenia or extra pyramidal side effects. KEYWORDS: Schizophrenia, Betel quid, Positive symptoms, Negative symptoms, Extra pyramidal side effects
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    Child and youth mental health in post-war Sri Lanka
    (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2017) Chandradasa, M.; Kuruppuarachchi, K.A.L.A.
    Sri Lanka's civil war and the tsunami in 2004 had enormous psychological impacts on the country's children. Tackling these issues has been difficult due to the lack of specialists in child and adolescent psychiatry. The end of the war in 2009 opened new avenues for the development of mental health services for children and youth in Sri Lanka. The year 2016 was historic in that the first board-certified child and adolescent psychiatrists assumed services in the country, after training in Australia.
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    Volatile substance misuse is often missed
    (Sri Lanka Medical Association, 2007) Hapangama, A.; Kuruppuarachchi, K.A.L.A.
    No Abstract Available
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