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The participation of Early Maladaptive Schemas (EMSs) in the perception of pain in patients with migraine: A psychological profile

A PARTICIPAÇÃO DOS ESQUEMAS INICIAIS DESADAPTATIVOS (EIDS) NA PERCEPÇÃO DA DOR EM PACIENTES COM MIGRÂNEA: UM PERFIL PSICOLÓGICO

ABSTRACT

Young's early maladaptive schemas questionnaire (YSQ-S3) is used to understand psychological aspects.

Objective:

EMSs were evaluated in patients with migraine.

Methods:

Sixty-five subjects were evaluated using the YSQ-S3 under standard conditions in a room with air conditioning at 22 ± 2°C. The subjects were stratified by morbidity (migraine), gender (male/female) and age (18-29 / 30-39 / 40-55). Controls (without migraine), n = 27 and patients (with migraine), n = 38, men (n = 19) and women (n = 46); participants aged 18-29 years, n = 34, aged 30-39 years, n = 14 and aged 40-55 years, n = 17. Data were analyzed using the Chi-square test, with p-values <0.05. Results were expressed as percentages in contingency tables.

Results:

There was a significant association between migraine and female gender (84.21%; p-value <0.05, Table 1), between hypervigilance and inhibition, and unrelenting standards (56.52%; p-value <0.0.014, Table 2) and female gender with migraine. Moreover, there was a significant association between hypervigilance and inhibition, and unrelenting standards (73.68%; p-value <0.0001) and self-punishment (84.21%; p-value <0.0001) in patients with migraine of both genders (Table 3).

Conclusion:

The individuals with migraine had a psychological profile of being overly demanding with themselves and others and self-punishing, where this was more frequent in women.

Key words:
early maladaptive schemas; migraine; psychological profile

RESUMO

O questionário de esquemas iniciais desadaptativos de Young (YSQ-S3) é usado para se entender aspectos psicológicos.

Objetivo:

Os EIDs foram avaliados em pacientes com migrânea.

Métodos:

Sessenta e cinco indivíduos foram avaliados utilizando YSQ-S3 sob condições padrão em uma sala com ar condicionado a 22 ± 2°C. Os sujeitos foram estratificados pela morbidade (migrânea), por gênero (masculino/feminino) e por idade (18-29 / 30-39 / 40-55). Controle (sem migrânea), n = 27 e com migrânea, n = 38, homens (n ​​= 19) e mulheres (n = 46); indivíduos com idade entre 18 a 29 anos, n = 34, entre 30-39 anos, n = 14 e entre 40-55 anos, n = 17. Os dados foram analisados ​​usando o teste do qui-quadrado, com valores p <0,05. Os resultados foram expressos em porcentagens em tabelas de contingência.

Resultados:

Houve associação significativa entre migrânea e gênero feminino (84,21%; p-valor <0,05, Tabela 1), entre hipervigilância e inibição, e padrões excessivamente rígidos ​​(56,52%; p-valor <0,0,014, Tabela 2) e gênero feminino com migrânea. Além disso, houve associação significativa entre hipervigilância e inibição, e padrões excessivamente rígidos ​​(73,68%; p-valor <0,0001) e autopunição (84,21%; p-valor <0,0001) em pacientes com migrânea de ambos os gêneros (Tabela 3).

Conclusão:

Os indivíduos com migrânea têm um perfil psicológico de serem excessivamente exigentes consigo e com os outros e de se autopunirem, sendo isso mais frequente em mulheres.

Palavras-chave:
Esquemas iniciais desadaptativos; migrânea; perfil psicológico

One of the main goals of the physiotherapist is to alleviate or eradicate acute and chronic pain in patients.11 Wohlin Wottrich A, Stenström CH, Engardt M, Tham K, Von Koch L. Characteristics of physiotherapy sessions from the patient's and therapist's perspective. Disabil Rehabil. 2004;26(20):1198-205. However, even with the proper use of several techniques, the different forms of expression of pain among individuals22 Price DD. Psychological and neural mechanisms of the affective dimension of pain. Science. 2000;288(5472):1769-72. still appear to pose a great challenge in the interpretation of the efficacy of the treatment process, hindering even the perception of its termination.33 Fleming-McDonnell D, Czuppon S, Deusinger SS, Deusinger RH. Physical therapy in the emergency department: development of a novel practice venue. Physical Ther. 2010;90(3):420-6. From the physiological point of view, knowledge about the difference between the peripheral and central circuits of pain seems only to provide support to understand the differences between the perceptions of acute and chronic pain, respectively.44 Leite EM (editores). Alodinia em pacientes com cefaleia em salvas e migrânea. 2012. Substances such as bradykinin, prostaglandins, leukotrienes, substance P, serotonin and acetylcholine are released with peripheral pain. These substances act on different populations of neurons, reducing the activation threshold of nociceptors.44 Leite EM (editores). Alodinia em pacientes com cefaleia em salvas e migrânea. 2012.,55 Morais TC (editores). Efeito analgésico, antiinflamatório e gastroprotetor dos ácidos anacárdicos, isolados de anacardium occidentale l., em modelos experimentais; 2010. In central sensitization, the responses of dorsal horn neurons are increased after repeated stimulation of C-fibers, which release glutamate and stimulate N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in these neurons until reaching the thalamus.55 Morais TC (editores). Efeito analgésico, antiinflamatório e gastroprotetor dos ácidos anacárdicos, isolados de anacardium occidentale l., em modelos experimentais; 2010.,66 Klaumann PR, Wouk A, Sillas T. Patofisiologia da dor. Arch Veter Science. 2008;13(1).

Understanding of the pathophysiologic mechanism of pain does not yet seem to explain the diverse responses of different patients to similar intensities of pain that follow the same circuit. One individual with acute pain shows little evidence of that pain77 Craig KD, Prkachin KM. Nonverbal measures of pain. Pain measurement and assessment. 1983;29:173-82. while another subject demonstrates the sensation of pain by much suffering88 Chapman WP, Finesinger JE, Jones CM, Cobb S. Measurements of pain sensitivity in patients with psychoneurosis. Arch NeurPsych. 1947; 57(3):321-31. expressed through resounding cries.99 Lynch-Jordan AM, Kashikar-Zuck S, Goldschneider KR. Parent perceptions of adolescent pain expression: The adolescent pain behavior questionnaire. Pain. 2010;151(3):834-42.

Thus, the major problem for the physiotherapist still seems to involve the different behaviors related to pain intensity.22 Price DD. Psychological and neural mechanisms of the affective dimension of pain. Science. 2000;288(5472):1769-72. There are descriptions in the literature1010 Vlaeyen JW, Linton SJ. Fear-avoidance and its consequences in chronic musculoskeletal pain: a state of the art. Pain. 2000;85(3):317-32.,1111 Woby SR, Urmston M, Watson PJ. Self-Efficacy mediates the relation between pain-related fear and outcome in chronic low back pain patients. Eur J Pain. 2007;11(7):711-8. concerned with the cognitive model of fear arising from the need to avoid pain.1212 Tazawa N. Modelagem da dor utilizando-se redes neurais artificiais: Universidade de São Paulo; 2006. However, the impression is that this perspective does not yet answer the question of how to help patients minimize their suffering. In this context, it seems relevant to understand the origin of the different expressions of sensations, which often leads to the physiotherapist feeling a sense of failure after several tiresome maneuvers during the recovery process.99 Lynch-Jordan AM, Kashikar-Zuck S, Goldschneider KR. Parent perceptions of adolescent pain expression: The adolescent pain behavior questionnaire. Pain. 2010;151(3):834-42.

Thus, for this study we chose an interdisciplinary approach to understand the psychological aspects of pain, not for treatment as such, but to see the patient as a whole and be able to refer them for treatment of the psyche, if their needs no longer relate to the neurophysiological circuits of pain perception. In this interdisciplinary literary search, Young (2003)1313 Sava FA. Maladaptive schemas, irrational beliefs, and their relationship with the five-factor personality model. J Cogn Behav Psychother. 2009;9(2):135-147. appears to give more support to this approach. He establishes that people internalize thoughts in childhood, which become part of their personality structure and that, in adulthood, these thoughts can promote social adaptation or maladjustment.1414 Teixeira DCA. Esquemas iniciais desadaptativos e ajustamento psicológico em crianças e adolescentes; 2010.

For thought to exist, it is necessary to have fully functioning neural networks,1515 Mason MF, Norton MI, Van Horn JD, Wegner DM, Grafton ST, Macrae CN. Wandering minds: the default network and stimulus-independent thought. Science. 2007;315(5810):393-5. with each neural network accommodating a type of thinking that is modulated by small chains of proteins called peptides.1616 Boyer P. Religious thought and behaviour as by-products of brain function. Trend Cogn Sci. 2003;7(3):119-24.,1717 Verkhratsky A, Parpura V, Rodríguez JJ. Where the thoughts dwell: the physiology of neuronal-glial "diffuse neural net". Brain Res Rev. 2011;66(1):133-51. Thus, the way of thinking and acting in the world mobilizes neurochemical signaling, because, for each type of thinking, the hypothalamus releases neuropeptides that enable short-term or long-term mobile synapses.1818 Ohno T, Hasegawa T, Tsuruoka T, Terabe K, Gimzewski JK, Aono M. Short-term plasticity and long-term potentiation mimicked in single inorganic synapses. Nat Mater. 2011;10(8):591-5.

The activation of these neural networks in schematic formats involves the ways of thinking and acting as human beings; Young (2003)1919 Young JE, Klosko JS, Weishaar ME. Schema therapy: A practitioner's guide: Guilford Press; 2003. called this complex set ´early schemas´ and according to him, they can be adaptive or maladaptive. After many years of studies, Young constructed a scale to identify the early maladaptive schemas (EMSs) in subjects1919 Young JE, Klosko JS, Weishaar ME. Schema therapy: A practitioner's guide: Guilford Press; 2003. that can be modified in psychotherapy sessions.2020 Freeman A, Freeman S. Understanding schemas. Encyclopedia of Cognitive Behavior Therapy. 2005:421-6.

Thus, the purpose of this study was to investigate the participation of EMSs in the perception of pain, especially migraine, because this is not merely a headache, but an active and incapacitating disease classified by the Brazilian Society of Headache and also because it is a risk factor for brain lesions.2121 Kraus JF, McArthur DL. Epidemiology of brain injury. Neurol Trauma. 1996;2:3-18.

METHODS

Subjects

Sixty-five patients, 38 with migraine (Migraine Group) and 27 without migraine (Control Group) from a population of 207 patients of the Brain and Neurofeedback Technology (Clinic/Cérebro e Tecnologia Neurofeedback Recife) - CTNR were evaluated. These patients were undergoing brain training at the CTNR and presented at the clinic with medical diagnoses indicative for this auxiliary neurofeedback treatment. The patients studied were university students, air force personnel and businesspersons. Only the university students were single, while all the other subjects were married. All subjects were submitted to evaluations using the EMS questionnaire (YSQ-S3) under standard conditions in an air-conditioned room at a temperature of 22 ± 2°C. Inclusion criteria were subjects of both sexes aged 18-60 years, who had chronic migraine without aura and used non-opioid analgesics, antiemetic agents or anti-inflammatory drugs only during crises. Chronic migraine without aura was defined according to the second and revised edition of the International Headache Society classification of 2004,redefined to include chronic headache occurring on eight (previously 15) or more days per month for more than three months in the absence of overuse of medications. Subjects under 18 or over 60 years of age were excluded according to the criterion of the YSQ-S3 validation process in Portuguese.2222 Pinto Gouveia J, Rijo D, Salvador M. A versão portuguesa do Questionário de Esquemas de Young. Não publicado. 2005.

Groups

The Chi-Square Distribution and Simple Random Method (90% confidence level with 10% probability of error) were used.2323 Kothari CR. Research methodology: Methods and techniques: New Age International; 2004.

n = χ 2 * N * P * Q e 2 * N 1 + χ 2 * P * Q
  • n = sample size to be calculated;

  • χ2 = Chi-Square (3.8416);

  • α = 10% = 0.1 =>Level of Significance with (1 - α) = 90% = 0.9 => Confidence level;

  • N = Total number of patients (207);

  • P = 0.5 = 50% success;

  • Q = 0.5 = 50% failure;

  • e2 = 0.1 = 10% (Sampling error).

Therefore:

n = 3 . 8 4 1 6 * 2 0 7 0 . 5 * 0 . 5 0 . 1 2 * 206 + 3 . 8 4 1 6 * 0 . 5 * 0 . 5 = 1 9 8 . 8 0 2 . 0 6 + 0 . 9 6 0 4 = 1 9 8 . 8 0 3 . 0 2 0 4 = 6 5 , 8 1 65 patients

The subjects of this cross-sectional study were stratified in two ways (gender and age group):

Stratification by Gender

Two subgroups were formed from the 65 patients: male (n = 19: Control = 6; Migraine = 13) and female (n = 46: Control = 14; Migraine = 32).

Stratification by age

Three subgroups were formed from the 65 patients: individuals aged 18-29 years (n = 34), 30-39 years (n = 14) and 40-60 years (n = 17).

Assessments

This work was approved by the local Research Ethics Committee (CAAE Number #1.383.600 on January 5, 2016). Before data collection, all the subjects signed informed consent forms and all the women ensured that they were not in the pre-menstrual period and in the prodromal period of the migraine on the day of the assessment.

Specifications of the Young Schema Questionnaire - Short Form 3 (YSQ-S3)

The EMS questionnaire used in this study was developed by Jeffrey Young in 20031919 Young JE, Klosko JS, Weishaar ME. Schema therapy: A practitioner's guide: Guilford Press; 2003. and adapted to Portuguese by Pinto Gouveia et al. in 2005.2222 Pinto Gouveia J, Rijo D, Salvador M. A versão portuguesa do Questionário de Esquemas de Young. Não publicado. 2005. The 90-question version is based on research on absent paternal and/or maternal figures or their failures during early life education, a phase that enables adaptation. Young found in his studies that if there is a lack of basic security in the family and in the group, including related to problems of attachment, autonomy, self-esteem, self-expression and real limits, the individual can acquire EMSs that may lead to a personality disorder.2424 Beck AT, Freeman A, Davis DD. Cognitive therapy of personality disorders: Guilford Publications; 2015.

The Portuguese version of the YSQ-S3 22 is composed of 90 questions using a Likert scale ranging from 1 to 6:2525 Medeiros LMV, Ribas VR. Early maladaptive schemas of women who are victims of domestic violence in pernambuco/brazil. Neurobiologia. 2014;77:1-2.

  • 1 = completely false, that is, has definitely nothing to do with what happens to me;

  • 2 = false most of the time, that is, it has almost nothing to do with what happens to me;

  • 3 = a little truer than false, that is, it has a little to do with what happens to me;

  • 4 = moderately true, that is, in some way it has something to do with what happens to me;

  • 5 = true most of the time, that is, it has a lot to do with what happens to me;

  • 6 = describes me perfectly, that is, it has everything to do with what happens to me.

Young identified 18 EMSs organized in five domains (disconnection/rejection, impaired autonomy, impaired limits, orientation to the other, and hypervigilance and inhibition),1919 Young JE, Klosko JS, Weishaar ME. Schema therapy: A practitioner's guide: Guilford Press; 2003. which, when impaired, lead to dysfunctional schemas, as described in the following table:

Domain Early maladaptive schemas Origin / Etiology 1st Domain:Disconnection and rejection • Fear of abandonment• Mistrust• Emotional deprivation• Defectiveness/shame• Social isolation/alienation Linked to failures of secure attachment to others, of affection and stability, of mothering in general. Serious difficulties in establishing healthy affective relationships. 2nd Domain:Impaired autonomy and performance • Dependency/incompetency• Vulnerability to harm or illness• Enmeshment• Failure Individuals cannot develop a sense of confidence, of establishing themselves in the world by themselves, generally possessing overprotective families that, in an attempt to protect the child, end up not reinforcing their autonomy. 3rd Domain:Impaired limits • Entitlement/grandiosity• Insufficient self-discipline Linked to failures to apply realistic limits, the ability to follow rules and norms, respect the rights of others and fulfill personal goals. Selfishness is the main characteristic of these individuals, and the family is generally permissive. 4th Domain:Orientation to the other • Subjugation• Self-sacrifice• Recognition-seeking In order to gain approval and avoid retaliation, patients in this domain have an overemphasis on meeting the other's wants and needs at the expense of their own needs. The family of origin usually establishes a conditional love relationship, that is, the child only receives attention and approval, if it suppresses its free expression and behaves in the desired way. 5th Domain:Hypervigilance and inhibition • Negativism/pessimism• Emotional inhibition• Unrelenting standards• Punitiveness Because of a rigid, repressive education in which there was no possibility to express their emotions in a free way, individuals with schemas linked to this domain are generally sad and introverted, with overly rigid internalized rules, exaggerated self-control and pessimism, and hypervigilance for possible negative events.

Data analysis

Data analysis was carried out using the SIGMA STAT computer program for Windows - Version 2.0 (Jandel Corporation). The results were analyzed using the Chi-square test, with a p-value <0.05 considered statistically significant. Results are expressed as percentages and represented in contingency tables.

RESULTS

Association between migraine, gender and age group

There was a statistically significant association between migraine and female gender (84.21%; p-value <0.05 - Table 1).

Table 1
Association between morbidity, gender and age group.

Association of hypervigilance and inhibition and the EMSs negativism/pessimism, emotional inhibition, unrelenting standards and self-punishment with patient gender

There was a significant association between hypervigilance and inhibition and unrelenting standards (56.52%; p-value <0.0.014) and female gender in patients with migraine (Table 2).

Table 2
Evaluation of early maladaptive schemas related to hypervigilance and inhibition according to gender.

Association of hypervigilance and inhibition and the EMSs negativism/pessimism, emotional inhibition, unrelenting standards and self-punishment with patient gender and migraine

There was a significant association between hypervigilance and inhibition and unrelenting standards (73.68%; p-value <0.0001) and self-punishment (84.21%; p-value <0.0001) in female patients with migraine (Table 3).

Table 3
Evaluation of early maladaptive schemas related to hypervigilance and inhibition according to group.

DISCUSSION

This study found a significant association between migraine, female gender, hypervigilance and inhibition, unrelenting standards and self-punishment.

Although the designations of unrelenting standards and self-punishment, which are EMSs linked to the hypervigilance and inhibition domain, were used in this study, it is important to clarify that these findings were not specifically of the EMSs, because they did not meet the requirements established by Young et al . 1919 Young JE, Klosko JS, Weishaar ME. Schema therapy: A practitioner's guide: Guilford Press; 2003. on the response screen, as the expected means for this classification should be above an average of 5.0.

During the statistical analysis, it was found that the tendency for a significant result in the 65 subjects evaluated in this study would not indicate a personality disorder related to the EMSs as there were few results with average scores above 5.0. Thus, an average score above 3.8 was chosen for each item on the YSQ-S3 response screen that could characterize at least one psychological profile.2626 Larsen RJ, Buss DM. Personality psychology. Jastrebarsko: Naklada Slap. 2008:269-71.

The choice of this mean score was based on reports by other authors2525 Medeiros LMV, Ribas VR. Early maladaptive schemas of women who are victims of domestic violence in pernambuco/brazil. Neurobiologia. 2014;77:1-2.,2727 Silva SdS, Pereira RC, Aquino TAAd. A Terapia cognitivo-comportamental no ambulatório público: possibilidades e desafios. Rev Bras Terap Cogn. 2011;7(1):44-9. that used the YSQ-S3 in their clinics during workups preceding psychotherapy and suggested that a mean score of 3.0 would be a very basic starting point to understand each patient's way of thinking and the origin of their crib education using the domains.2525 Medeiros LMV, Ribas VR. Early maladaptive schemas of women who are victims of domestic violence in pernambuco/brazil. Neurobiologia. 2014;77:1-2.

The unrelenting standards and self-punishment found in this study, for example, demonstrate that these individuals experienced a rigid, repressive education in which there was no possibility of expressing their emotions freely. Thus, individuals who have scores between 3.0 and 5.0 may not have EMSs, but appear to be have a strong tendency to be overly -demanding of himself or herself, thus suggesting a psychological profile or way of being yet without solid evidence of a personality disorder.2828 Lavergne F, Marie N, Mehran F. The 5 mental dimensions identified in early maladaptive schemas statistical analysis of Young's schema questionnaire (YSQ-s3). Encephale. 2015;41(4):314-22.

Nevertheless, some hold that 'way of being' is related to personality disorders.2626 Larsen RJ, Buss DM. Personality psychology. Jastrebarsko: Naklada Slap. 2008:269-71. Henri Ey regards some people (explosive, theatrical, systematic, meticulous, obsessive, obscene, very emotional and with other difficult traits) as having a pathological ego, characterizing not only a way of being in the world, but above all, a way of existing in the world.2929 Ey H, Bernard P, Brisset C. Tratado de Psiquiatria: 2* edição. Barcelona, Toray-Masson. 1969:388.

Karl Jaspers affirms that personalities that make people and those around them suffer are not normal. According to Jaspers, abnormal personalities represent non-normal variations of human nature, which can be perfectly understood as personality disorders.3030 Havens LL. Karl Jaspers and American psychiatry. Am J Psychiatry. 1967;124(1):66-70. However, 'way of being' for this study was not in this context, because the subjects appeared to affect only themselves with the discomfort of migraine.

  • This study was conducted both at the Departamento de Neuropsiquiatria da Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, PE, Brazil.

REFERENCES

  • 1
    Wohlin Wottrich A, Stenström CH, Engardt M, Tham K, Von Koch L. Characteristics of physiotherapy sessions from the patient's and therapist's perspective. Disabil Rehabil. 2004;26(20):1198-205.
  • 2
    Price DD. Psychological and neural mechanisms of the affective dimension of pain. Science. 2000;288(5472):1769-72.
  • 3
    Fleming-McDonnell D, Czuppon S, Deusinger SS, Deusinger RH. Physical therapy in the emergency department: development of a novel practice venue. Physical Ther. 2010;90(3):420-6.
  • 4
    Leite EM (editores). Alodinia em pacientes com cefaleia em salvas e migrânea. 2012.
  • 5
    Morais TC (editores). Efeito analgésico, antiinflamatório e gastroprotetor dos ácidos anacárdicos, isolados de anacardium occidentale l., em modelos experimentais; 2010.
  • 6
    Klaumann PR, Wouk A, Sillas T. Patofisiologia da dor. Arch Veter Science. 2008;13(1).
  • 7
    Craig KD, Prkachin KM. Nonverbal measures of pain. Pain measurement and assessment. 1983;29:173-82.
  • 8
    Chapman WP, Finesinger JE, Jones CM, Cobb S. Measurements of pain sensitivity in patients with psychoneurosis. Arch NeurPsych. 1947; 57(3):321-31.
  • 9
    Lynch-Jordan AM, Kashikar-Zuck S, Goldschneider KR. Parent perceptions of adolescent pain expression: The adolescent pain behavior questionnaire. Pain. 2010;151(3):834-42.
  • 10
    Vlaeyen JW, Linton SJ. Fear-avoidance and its consequences in chronic musculoskeletal pain: a state of the art. Pain. 2000;85(3):317-32.
  • 11
    Woby SR, Urmston M, Watson PJ. Self-Efficacy mediates the relation between pain-related fear and outcome in chronic low back pain patients. Eur J Pain. 2007;11(7):711-8.
  • 12
    Tazawa N. Modelagem da dor utilizando-se redes neurais artificiais: Universidade de São Paulo; 2006.
  • 13
    Sava FA. Maladaptive schemas, irrational beliefs, and their relationship with the five-factor personality model. J Cogn Behav Psychother. 2009;9(2):135-147.
  • 14
    Teixeira DCA. Esquemas iniciais desadaptativos e ajustamento psicológico em crianças e adolescentes; 2010.
  • 15
    Mason MF, Norton MI, Van Horn JD, Wegner DM, Grafton ST, Macrae CN. Wandering minds: the default network and stimulus-independent thought. Science. 2007;315(5810):393-5.
  • 16
    Boyer P. Religious thought and behaviour as by-products of brain function. Trend Cogn Sci. 2003;7(3):119-24.
  • 17
    Verkhratsky A, Parpura V, Rodríguez JJ. Where the thoughts dwell: the physiology of neuronal-glial "diffuse neural net". Brain Res Rev. 2011;66(1):133-51.
  • 18
    Ohno T, Hasegawa T, Tsuruoka T, Terabe K, Gimzewski JK, Aono M. Short-term plasticity and long-term potentiation mimicked in single inorganic synapses. Nat Mater. 2011;10(8):591-5.
  • 19
    Young JE, Klosko JS, Weishaar ME. Schema therapy: A practitioner's guide: Guilford Press; 2003.
  • 20
    Freeman A, Freeman S. Understanding schemas. Encyclopedia of Cognitive Behavior Therapy. 2005:421-6.
  • 21
    Kraus JF, McArthur DL. Epidemiology of brain injury. Neurol Trauma. 1996;2:3-18.
  • 22
    Pinto Gouveia J, Rijo D, Salvador M. A versão portuguesa do Questionário de Esquemas de Young. Não publicado. 2005.
  • 23
    Kothari CR. Research methodology: Methods and techniques: New Age International; 2004.
  • 24
    Beck AT, Freeman A, Davis DD. Cognitive therapy of personality disorders: Guilford Publications; 2015.
  • 25
    Medeiros LMV, Ribas VR. Early maladaptive schemas of women who are victims of domestic violence in pernambuco/brazil. Neurobiologia. 2014;77:1-2.
  • 26
    Larsen RJ, Buss DM. Personality psychology. Jastrebarsko: Naklada Slap. 2008:269-71.
  • 27
    Silva SdS, Pereira RC, Aquino TAAd. A Terapia cognitivo-comportamental no ambulatório público: possibilidades e desafios. Rev Bras Terap Cogn. 2011;7(1):44-9.
  • 28
    Lavergne F, Marie N, Mehran F. The 5 mental dimensions identified in early maladaptive schemas statistical analysis of Young's schema questionnaire (YSQ-s3). Encephale. 2015;41(4):314-22.
  • 29
    Ey H, Bernard P, Brisset C. Tratado de Psiquiatria: 2* edição. Barcelona, Toray-Masson. 1969:388.
  • 30
    Havens LL. Karl Jaspers and American psychiatry. Am J Psychiatry. 1967;124(1):66-70.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Jan-Mar 2018

History

  • Received
    24 July 2017
  • Accepted
    03 Dec 2017
Academia Brasileira de Neurologia, Departamento de Neurologia Cognitiva e Envelhecimento R. Vergueiro, 1353 sl.1404 - Ed. Top Towers Offices, Torre Norte, São Paulo, SP, Brazil, CEP 04101-000, Tel.: +55 11 5084-9463 | +55 11 5083-3876 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
E-mail: revistadementia@abneuro.org.br | demneuropsy@uol.com.br