PURPOSE To date, laboratory-based experimental behavioral methods have not been used to identify ... more PURPOSE To date, laboratory-based experimental behavioral methods have not been used to identify factors associated with pediatric functional seizures (FS), leaving a critical gap for effective treatment development. METHODS Children ages 13-18 with video-EEG-confirmed FS were matched to controls (MCs) based on income, sex, race, and age. A modified Stroop task which included a condition requiring participants to report the ink colors in which seizure symptom words were written (e.g., "shaking" in blue) measured selective attention and cognitive inhibition through response time. The magic and turbulence task assessed sense of control in three conditions (magic, lag, turbulence). Children with FS were asked to report premonitory symptoms predicting FS. RESULTS Participants included 26 children with FS and 26 MCs (Meanage=15.2, 74% female, 59% white). On Stroop, children with FS had a slower reaction time (Mean=1193.83) than MCs (Mean=949.26, p = 0.022) for seizure symptom words. Children with FS had significantly poorer sense of control in the turbulence condition of the magic and turbulence task (Mean=-3.99, SD=8.83) than MCs (Mean=-11.51, SD=7.87; t(20)=-2.61, p =0.017). Children with FS (Mean=-1.80, SD=6.54) also had significantly poorer sense of control in the magic condition than MCs (Mean=-5.57, SD=6.01; p =0.028). Ninety-eight percent of patients endorsed premonitory symptoms. CONCLUSION Compared with MCs, children with FS have (1) poorer selective attention and cognitive inhibition when presented with seizure-related information and (2) lower sense of control (i.e. poorer awareness that their control was manipulated). Premonitory symptoms were common. Sense of control, selective attention, and inhibition may be novel treatment targets for FS intervention.
Background: Prior studies have independently reported associations between major depressive disor... more Background: Prior studies have independently reported associations between major depressive disorder (MDD), elevated cortisol concentrations, early adverse events and region-specific decreases in grey matter volume, but the relationships among these variables are unclear. In the present study, we sought to evaluate the relationships between grey matter volume, early adverse events and cortisol levels in MDD. Methods/Results: Grey matter volume was compared between 19 controls and 19 individuals with MDD using voxel-based morphometry. A history of early adverse events was assessed using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Subjects also provided salivary cortisol samples. Depressed patients showed decreased grey matter volume in the rostral ACC as compared to controls. Rostral ACC volume was inversely correlated with both cortisol and early adverse events. Conclusions: These findings suggest a key relationship between ACC morphology, a history of early adverse events and circulating c...
Inference A Framework for Causal Connectivity Analysis of fMRI in Patient Populations: An applica... more Inference A Framework for Causal Connectivity Analysis of fMRI in Patient Populations: An application to Major Depression and Early Life stress Karthik Ramakrishnan Sreenivasan, Merida M Grant, and Gopikrishna Deshpande AU MRI Research Center, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, United States, Department of Psychiatry, University of Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL, United States, Department of Psychology, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, United States
Screening instruments are urgently needed to rapidly and efficiently identify those in need of me... more Screening instruments are urgently needed to rapidly and efficiently identify those in need of mental health treatment, particularly among underserved populations. Although designed initially for use in research, the CES-D has become a widely used clinical screening tool for the presence of major depression. Despite four decades and three major revisions to the DSM since the CES-D was first introduced, the cutoff score of 16 remains the marker by which individuals are assessed. The present study aims to examine an optimal cutoff score in a low-income, high-risk sample of ethnically diverse adults involved in some phase of the criminal justice system. The utility of the CES-D to detect depression in this population is unknown as these individuals are unlikely to be included in community studies of mental health. A diverse sample of participants under criminal justice supervision (n = 500, ages 19-72) completed the CES-D at up to six time points and the MINI-D at two time-points over a year. Using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, a cut point of 21 on the CES-D was determined to produce the best overall screening characteristics (sens = 0.82, spec = 0.76) using an efficiency calculation when compared with the gold standard MINI-D, though these results varied by race and gender. The optimal cutoff for women in this sample was determined to be 23 as opposed to 15 for men, and 20 for nonwhites versus 23 for whites. This study is limited in its generalizability to low-income individuals without criminal justice involvement or those without substance use. Results suggest that the CES-D is a useful screening measure for depressive symptoms among high-risk individuals under criminal justice supervision. However, the current cutoff score of 16 is inadequate for optimizing true positives and false negatives. Possible gender and racial/ethnic bias may limit the utility of this instrument in this population. The current study contributes to the understanding of mental health needs in underserved populations.
The present study examined whether training in cognitive coping skills would enhance pain coping ... more The present study examined whether training in cognitive coping skills would enhance pain coping strategies and alter pain perception in adults with sickle cell disease (SCD). Sixty-four African Americans with SCD were randomly assigned to either a cognitive coping skills condition (three 45-min sessions in which patients were trained to use 6 cognitive coping strategies) or a disease-education control condition (three 45-min didactic-discussion sessions about SCD). Pain sensitivity to calibrated noxious stimulation was measured at pre- and posttesting, as were cognitive coping strategies, clinical pain, and health behaviors. Results indicated that, compared with the randomly assigned control condition, brief training in cognitive coping skills resulted in increased coping attempts, decreased negative thinking, and lower tendency to report pain during laboratory-induced noxious stimulation.
Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, Jan 11, 2002
Marital functioning is an important consideration in the treatment of depression. Although there ... more Marital functioning is an important consideration in the treatment of depression. Although there are several studies of the marriages of depressed individuals, there is little data on the marital lives of those with chronic depression. In this article, we compare the marital ...
ObjectiveHeightened amygdala reactivity to aversive stimuli in major depression is regarded as a ... more ObjectiveHeightened amygdala reactivity to aversive stimuli in major depression is regarded as a core feature of the underlying physiology but individual differences in amygdala response may also arise secondary to persistent changes in limbic function during early neurodevelopment relative to stressors such as childhood trauma. We sought to determine whether heightened amygdala response is a core feature of depression or
PURPOSE To date, laboratory-based experimental behavioral methods have not been used to identify ... more PURPOSE To date, laboratory-based experimental behavioral methods have not been used to identify factors associated with pediatric functional seizures (FS), leaving a critical gap for effective treatment development. METHODS Children ages 13-18 with video-EEG-confirmed FS were matched to controls (MCs) based on income, sex, race, and age. A modified Stroop task which included a condition requiring participants to report the ink colors in which seizure symptom words were written (e.g., "shaking" in blue) measured selective attention and cognitive inhibition through response time. The magic and turbulence task assessed sense of control in three conditions (magic, lag, turbulence). Children with FS were asked to report premonitory symptoms predicting FS. RESULTS Participants included 26 children with FS and 26 MCs (Meanage=15.2, 74% female, 59% white). On Stroop, children with FS had a slower reaction time (Mean=1193.83) than MCs (Mean=949.26, p = 0.022) for seizure symptom words. Children with FS had significantly poorer sense of control in the turbulence condition of the magic and turbulence task (Mean=-3.99, SD=8.83) than MCs (Mean=-11.51, SD=7.87; t(20)=-2.61, p =0.017). Children with FS (Mean=-1.80, SD=6.54) also had significantly poorer sense of control in the magic condition than MCs (Mean=-5.57, SD=6.01; p =0.028). Ninety-eight percent of patients endorsed premonitory symptoms. CONCLUSION Compared with MCs, children with FS have (1) poorer selective attention and cognitive inhibition when presented with seizure-related information and (2) lower sense of control (i.e. poorer awareness that their control was manipulated). Premonitory symptoms were common. Sense of control, selective attention, and inhibition may be novel treatment targets for FS intervention.
Background: Prior studies have independently reported associations between major depressive disor... more Background: Prior studies have independently reported associations between major depressive disorder (MDD), elevated cortisol concentrations, early adverse events and region-specific decreases in grey matter volume, but the relationships among these variables are unclear. In the present study, we sought to evaluate the relationships between grey matter volume, early adverse events and cortisol levels in MDD. Methods/Results: Grey matter volume was compared between 19 controls and 19 individuals with MDD using voxel-based morphometry. A history of early adverse events was assessed using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Subjects also provided salivary cortisol samples. Depressed patients showed decreased grey matter volume in the rostral ACC as compared to controls. Rostral ACC volume was inversely correlated with both cortisol and early adverse events. Conclusions: These findings suggest a key relationship between ACC morphology, a history of early adverse events and circulating c...
Inference A Framework for Causal Connectivity Analysis of fMRI in Patient Populations: An applica... more Inference A Framework for Causal Connectivity Analysis of fMRI in Patient Populations: An application to Major Depression and Early Life stress Karthik Ramakrishnan Sreenivasan, Merida M Grant, and Gopikrishna Deshpande AU MRI Research Center, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, United States, Department of Psychiatry, University of Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL, United States, Department of Psychology, Auburn University, Auburn, AL, United States
Screening instruments are urgently needed to rapidly and efficiently identify those in need of me... more Screening instruments are urgently needed to rapidly and efficiently identify those in need of mental health treatment, particularly among underserved populations. Although designed initially for use in research, the CES-D has become a widely used clinical screening tool for the presence of major depression. Despite four decades and three major revisions to the DSM since the CES-D was first introduced, the cutoff score of 16 remains the marker by which individuals are assessed. The present study aims to examine an optimal cutoff score in a low-income, high-risk sample of ethnically diverse adults involved in some phase of the criminal justice system. The utility of the CES-D to detect depression in this population is unknown as these individuals are unlikely to be included in community studies of mental health. A diverse sample of participants under criminal justice supervision (n = 500, ages 19-72) completed the CES-D at up to six time points and the MINI-D at two time-points over a year. Using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, a cut point of 21 on the CES-D was determined to produce the best overall screening characteristics (sens = 0.82, spec = 0.76) using an efficiency calculation when compared with the gold standard MINI-D, though these results varied by race and gender. The optimal cutoff for women in this sample was determined to be 23 as opposed to 15 for men, and 20 for nonwhites versus 23 for whites. This study is limited in its generalizability to low-income individuals without criminal justice involvement or those without substance use. Results suggest that the CES-D is a useful screening measure for depressive symptoms among high-risk individuals under criminal justice supervision. However, the current cutoff score of 16 is inadequate for optimizing true positives and false negatives. Possible gender and racial/ethnic bias may limit the utility of this instrument in this population. The current study contributes to the understanding of mental health needs in underserved populations.
The present study examined whether training in cognitive coping skills would enhance pain coping ... more The present study examined whether training in cognitive coping skills would enhance pain coping strategies and alter pain perception in adults with sickle cell disease (SCD). Sixty-four African Americans with SCD were randomly assigned to either a cognitive coping skills condition (three 45-min sessions in which patients were trained to use 6 cognitive coping strategies) or a disease-education control condition (three 45-min didactic-discussion sessions about SCD). Pain sensitivity to calibrated noxious stimulation was measured at pre- and posttesting, as were cognitive coping strategies, clinical pain, and health behaviors. Results indicated that, compared with the randomly assigned control condition, brief training in cognitive coping skills resulted in increased coping attempts, decreased negative thinking, and lower tendency to report pain during laboratory-induced noxious stimulation.
Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, Jan 11, 2002
Marital functioning is an important consideration in the treatment of depression. Although there ... more Marital functioning is an important consideration in the treatment of depression. Although there are several studies of the marriages of depressed individuals, there is little data on the marital lives of those with chronic depression. In this article, we compare the marital ...
ObjectiveHeightened amygdala reactivity to aversive stimuli in major depression is regarded as a ... more ObjectiveHeightened amygdala reactivity to aversive stimuli in major depression is regarded as a core feature of the underlying physiology but individual differences in amygdala response may also arise secondary to persistent changes in limbic function during early neurodevelopment relative to stressors such as childhood trauma. We sought to determine whether heightened amygdala response is a core feature of depression or
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