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Pseudotherapies in Clinical Psychology: What Legal Recourse Do We Have?

Napolitano, Lisa A
ORIGINAL:0014541
ISSN: 0278-8403
CID: 4353882

Emotion regulation in the obsessive compulsive spectrum disorders

Chapter by: Napolitano, Lisa
in: The Wiley handbook of obsessive compulsive disorders by Abramowitz, Jonathan S; McKay, Dean; Storch, Eric A (Eds)
Hoboken, NJ, USA ; Chichester, West Sussex, UK : Wiley Blackwell, 2017
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 9781118890264
CID: 4353932

Childhood experiences of parental rearing patterns reported by Chinese patients with borderline personality disorder

Huang, Jianjun; Napolitano, Lisa A; Wu, Jiang; Yang, Yunping; Xi, Yingjun; Li, Yawen; Li, Kai
The primary purposes of this study were to (1) compare the characteristics of childhood experiences of parental rearing patterns in China reported by patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD), patients with other personality disorders and patients without personality disorders; (2) identify the reported parental rearing patterns associated with BPD in China; and (3) determine whether these patterns differ for males and females. One hundred and fifty-two patients with BPD, 79 patients with other personality disorders and 55 patients without Axis II diagnoses were administered the Chinese version of the McLean Screening Instrument for BPD and completed the Egna Minnen av Barndoms Uppfostran (EMBU), a self-report measure of childhood parental rearing patterns. Parental rearing patterns reported by the BPD group were characterized by less emotional warmth, and greater punishment, rejection and control than patterns reported by the other two groups. Within the BPD group, males were more likely than females to report parental punishment, rejection and control. Paternal punishment, low maternal emotional warmth and female gender predicted BPD diagnosis. Negative parental rearing patterns appear to contribute to the development of BPD in China and vary with the gender of the child. Maternal emotional warmth may be a protective factor against BPD.
PMID: 24811721
ISSN: 1464-066x
CID: 4353892

Childhood abuse in Chinese patients with borderline personality disorder

Huang, Jianjun; Yang, Yunping; Wu, Jiang; Napolitano, Lisa A; Xi, Yingjun; Cui, Yonghua
This study examined (1) the relative prevalence of childhood abuse and other pathological childhood experiences in China reported by outpatients with borderline personality disorder (BPD), with other personality disorders, and without personality disorders; and, (2) whether the primary predictors of BPD in North America are associated with the development of BPD in China. The childhood experiences of 203 outpatients with BPD, 109 outpatients with other personality disorders, and 70 outpatients without Axis II diagnoses were assessed with the Chinese version of the Childhood Experience of Care and Abuse Questionnaire (CECA.Q). Patients with BPD reported significantly more physical, emotional, and sexual abuse than either comparison group. Four types of childhood experiences were significant predictors of BPD: maternal neglect, paternal antipathy, sexual abuse, and maternal physical abuse. The findings suggest that maternal physical abuse is as strong a predictor of BPD in China as sexual abuse, a finding not replicated in North America.
PMID: 22486453
ISSN: 1943-2763
CID: 4353902

Emotion regulation in psychotherapy: A practitioner's guide

Leahy, Robert L; Tirch, Dennis; Napolitano, Lisa A
New York : Guilford Press, 2011
Extent: xvi, 304 p
ISBN: 978-1-60918-483-4
CID: 162218

Dichotomous thinking in borderline personality disorder

Napolitano, Lisa A.; Mckay, Dean
ISI:000250833500001
ISSN: 0147-5916
CID: 4353912

Never good enough: How to use perfectionism to your advantage without letting it ruin your life [Book Review]

Napolitano, Lisa A
ORIGINAL:0014542
ISSN: 1559-8527
CID: 4353922

Barriers to the construction of a valued social identity: a case study of Alzheimer's disease

Sabat, Steven R; Napolitano, Lisa; Fath, Heather
This case study describes a person with mild-to-moderate stage Alzheimer's disease (AD) and examines the relationship between malignant positioning and the ability of a person with AD to gain the cooperation of healthy persons to construct a valued social identity. Findings reveal that malignant positioning limited the person with AD to the embarrassing social identity of dysfunctional patient; whereas, the absence of such positioning allowed the subject to gain the cooperation from others necessary to construct a valued social identity, as well as reduce embarrassment and experience greater sense of self-worth. Preliminary recommendations on reducing malignant positioning are provided. Further research is required to elucidate the degree to which the present findings may be generalized.
PMID: 15214205
ISSN: 1533-3175
CID: 161624

Poor CD4 T cell restoration after suppression of HIV-1 replication may reflect lower thymic function

Teixeira L; Valdez H; McCune JM; Koup RA; Badley AD; Hellerstein MK; Napolitano LA; Douek DC; Mbisa G; Deeks S; Harris JM; Barbour JD; Gross BH; Francis IR; Halvorsen R; Asaad R; Lederman MM
OBJECTIVE: To characterize immune phenotype and thymic function in HIV-1-infected adults with excellent virologic and poor immunologic responses to highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). METHODS: Cross-sectional study of patients with CD4 T cell rises of > or = 200 x 10(6) cells/l (CD4 responders; n = 10) or < 100 x 10(6) cells/l (poor responders; n = 12) in the first year of therapy. RESULTS: Poor responders were older than CD4 responders (46 versus 38 years; P < 0.01) and, before HAART, had higher CD4 cell counts (170 versus 35 x 106 cells/l; P = 0.11) and CD8 cell counts (780 versus 536 x 10(6) cells/l; P = 0.02). After a median of 160 weeks of therapy, CD4 responders had more circulating naive phenotype (CD45+CD62L+) CD4 cells (227 versus 44 x 10(6) cells/l; P = 0.001) and naive phenotype CD8 cells (487 versus 174 x 10(6) cells/l; P = 0.004) than did poor responders (after 130 weeks). Computed tomographic scans showed minimal thymic tissue in 11/12 poor responders and abundant tissue in 7/10 responders (P = 0.006). Poor responders had fewer CD4 cells containing T cell receptor excision circles (TREC) compared with CD4 responders (2.12 versus 27.5 x 10(6) cells/l; P = 0.004) and had shorter telomeres in CD4 cells (3.8 versus 5.3 kb; P = 0.05). Metabolic labeling studies with deuterated glucose indicated that the lower frequency of TREC-containing lymphocytes in poor responders was not caused by accelerated proliferation kinetics. CONCLUSION: Poor CD4 T cell increases observed in some patients with good virologic response to HAART may be caused by failure of thymic T cell production
PMID: 11579235
ISSN: 0269-9370
CID: 65523