Author: Glossary

  • Pia mater

    The innermost of the meninges; a delicate fibrous membrane closely enveloping the brain and spinal cord. The innermost and most delicate of the three membranes covering the brain and spinal cord. Innermost of the three meninges covering the brain and spinal cord (the other two being the dura mater and arachnoid); it is highly vascular…

  • Phrenology

    A discredited theory positing a relationship between the structure of the skull and mental traits. A pseudoscience based on the belief that the contours or bumps of the skull are indicative of a person’s personality, character, and mental facilities. The study of the bumps on the outside of the skull in order to determine a…

  • Photophobia

    Photophobia

    Abnormal intolerance to light, often associated with albinism, drug-induced pupil dilation, migraine, encephalitis, measles, and other diseases. Abnormal sensitivity to, and intolerance of, light. Photophobia can be a symptom of a variety of diseases and conditions, such as excessive wear of contact lenses, eye injury or infection, inflammation, migraine headache, meningitis (inflammation of the brain…

  • Phonophobia

    Phonophobia

    The fear of or increased sensitivity to loud noises. A fear of loud noises. A morbid fear of sound or noise. A fear of talking or an intense aversion to sound.  

  • Phobia

    Phobia

    Fear cued by the presence or anticipation of a specific object or situation, exposure to which almost invariably provokes an immediate anxiety response or panic attack even though the subject recognizes that the fear is excessive or unreasonable. The phobic stimulus is avoided or endured with marked distress. Two types of phobia have been differentiated:…

  • Phenylketonuria (PKU)

    A genetic metabolic disturbance characterized by an inability to convert phenylalanine to tyrosine. It is treatable by diet when detected in early infancy; if untreated, intellectual disability results. Also known as phenylpyruvic oligophrenia. A genetic disease caused by a recessive gene that results in an infant being unable to metabolize phenylalanine, an essential amino acid…

  • Phenothiazines

    Subgroup of conventional antipsychotic drugs that, chemically, have in common a phenothiazine configuration (i.e., phenyl rings and heterocyclic ring containing nitrogen and sulfur) but differ from one another through variations in side chains. Based on the side chain attached to the nitrogen atom in the middle ring, the phenothiazines are subdivided into three subgroups: aliphatic…

  • Phenomenology

    The study of occurrences or happenings in their own right rather than from the point of view of inferred causes; specifically, the theory that behavior is determined not by external reality as it can be described objectively in physical terms but rather by the way in which the subject perceives that reality at any moment.…

  • Phenobarbital

    A barbiturate (a class of central nervous system [CNS] depressants with potent sedative and hypnotic properties) that is potentially addictive and lethal in overdose. For this reason, phenobarbital is seldom prescribed for treatment of anxiety or insomnia; however, it is still used as an anticonvulsant to control seizures. Barbiturate used as a sedative to treat…

  • Phenelzine

    An antidepressant that is a potent inhibitor of monoamine oxidase; used in the treatment of depression, especially in patients with atypical symptoms, such as rejection sensitivity, anxiety, and hypersomnia. Also used to treat certain anxiety disorders. Marketed under the brand name nardil. An MAO inhibitor, used as an antidepressant. Monoamine oxidase inhibitor used to treat…