Searched for: person:barrw01 or charvl01 or Cherva01 or locasg01 or morric03 or Raoju01 or rosenj41 or salinl01
Comparing the convergent validity and clinical utility of the Behavior Assessment System for Children-Parent Rating Scales and Child Behavior Checklist in children with epilepsy
Allison Bender, H; Auciello, Dominick; Morrison, Chris E; MacAllister, William S; Zaroff, Charles M
The convergent validity and clinical utility of two parent-report child behavior rating scales, the Behavior Assessment System for Children-Parent Rating Scales (BASC-PRS) and Child Behavior Checklist/Ages 6-18 (CBCL), in children with epilepsy were examined. Analogous broadband and narrowband behavior rating scales were evaluated in 60 subjects aged 6-17 years (mean=11.0, SD=3.4) with Full Scale IQ >70. Correlations for each similarly labeled scale were statistically significant (P<0.002) and greater with broadband (r=0.71-0.79) than with narrowband (r=0.41-0.78) scales. The BASC captured significantly less composite internalizing symptoms (P<0.002), but more unusual thought processes (P<0.0002) and attention problems versus a CBCL DSM-oriented attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder scale (P<0.002). Variation in the correlations between measures may stem from underlying differences between rationally-and empirically-derived approaches to test construction. Both the CBCL and BASC have diagnostic and clinical utility in assessing behavior problems in pediatric epilepsy
PMID: 18448391
ISSN: 1525-5069
CID: 79398
Gender and major depression in a sample of epilepsy patients [Meeting Abstract]
Wolkin, JR; Barr, WB; Alper, KR; Zemon, V; Devinsky, O
ISI:000257336700045
ISSN: 1385-4046
CID: 104237
Robust and conventional neuropsychological norms: diagnosis and prediction of age-related cognitive decline
De Santi, Susan; Pirraglia, Elizabeth; Barr, William; Babb, James; Williams, Schantel; Rogers, Kimberley; Glodzik, Lidia; Brys, Miroslaw; Mosconi, Lisa; Reisberg, Barry; Ferris, Steven; de Leon, Mony J
The aim of the study was to compare the performance of Robust and Conventional neuropsychological norms in predicting clinical decline among healthy adults and in mild cognitive impairment (MCI). The authors developed Robust baseline cross sectional and longitudinal change norms from 113 healthy participants retaining a normal diagnosis for at least 4 years. Baseline Conventional norms were separately created for 256 similar healthy participants without follow-up. Conventional and Robust norms were tested in an independent cohort of longitudinally studied healthy (n=223), MCI (n=136), and Alzheimer's disease (AD, n=162) participants; 84 healthy participants declined to MCI or AD (NL-->DEC), and 44 MCI declined to AD (MCI-->AD). Compared to Conventional norms, baseline Robust norms correctly identified a higher proportion of NL-->DEC with impairment in delayed memory and attention-language domains. Both norms predicted decline from MCI-->AD. Change norms for delayed memory and attention-language significantly incremented baseline classification accuracies. These findings indicate that Robust norms improve identification of healthy individuals who will decline and may be useful for selecting at-risk participants for research studies and early interventions
PMCID:2661242
PMID: 18590359
ISSN: 0894-4105
CID: 86549
Postictal psychosis in partial epilepsy: a case-control study
Alper, Kenneth; Kuzniecky, Ruben; Carlson, Chad; Barr, William B; Vorkas, Charles K; Patel, Jignasa G; Carrelli, Angela L; Starner, Karen; Flom, Peter L; Devinsky, Orrin
OBJECTIVE: Divergent findings among prior studies on correlates of risk for postictal psychosis (PIP) suggest the value of a controlled study involving a relatively large number of patients. METHODS: The study population consisted of a consecutive series of 59 patients with partial epilepsy and a history of PIP, and 94 control patients with partial epilepsy and no history of PIP evaluated as inpatients with video-electroencephalography. The groups did not differ significantly regarding demographic features. Exact tests yielded a subset of variables and a tentative interpretation that were evaluated further utilizing principal components analysis and logistic regression. RESULTS: PIP was associated with extratemporal versus temporal (p = 0.036) or undetermined (p = 0.001) localization of seizure onset, bilateral interictal epileptiform activity (p = 0.017), secondary generalization (p = 0.049), and history of encephalitis (p = 0.018). Interictal slow activity was more frequently absent in control patients (p = 0.045). PIP was associated with family histories of psychiatric disorders (p = 0.007) and epilepsy (p = 0.042), which themselves were significantly intercorrelated (r = 0.225; p = 0.006). Age of onset or duration of epilepsy and lateralized electroencephalographic or magnetic resonance imaging asymmetries did not differ significantly between control and PIP groups. The analysis indicated four underlying domains of risk for PIP: ambiguous/extratemporal localization, family neuropsychiatric history, abnormal interictal electroencephalographic activity, and encephalitis. Each unit increase on a simple additive scale composed of 9 dichotomous independent variables multiplied the odds ratio for PIP by 1.71 (95% confidence interval, 1.36-2.15; p < 0.0001). INTERPRETATION: PIP in partial epilepsy is associated with relatively broadly and bilaterally distributed epileptogenic networks, genetic determinants of psychiatric disorders and seizures, and encephalitis
PMID: 18481288
ISSN: 1531-8249
CID: 79550
Historical development of the neuropsychological test battery
Chapter by: Barr, William B
in: Textbook of clinical neuropsychology by Morgan, Joel E [Eds]
New York, NY, US: Psychology Press, 2008
pp. 3-17
ISBN: 1-84169-477-0
CID: 4811
Neuropsychology of sports-related injuries
Chapter by: Barr, William B; McCrea, Michael; Randolph, Christopher
in: Textbook of clinical neuropsychology by Morgan, Joel E [Eds]
New York, NY, US: Psychology Press, 2008
pp. 660-678
ISBN: 1-84169-477-0
CID: 4810
Neuropsychological approaches to criminality and violence
Chapter by: Barr, William B
in: Clinical neuropsychology in the criminal forensic setting by Denney, Robert L [Eds]
New York, NY, US: Guilford Press, 2008
pp. 238-272
ISBN: 1-59385-721-7
CID: 4800
Chapter 21 Visual agnosia
Devinsky, Orrin; Farah, Martha J; Barr, William B
PMID: 18631704
ISSN: 0072-9752
CID: 95084
Use of the WAIS-III/WMS-III six factor structure in left and right temporal lobe epilepsy [Meeting Abstract]
Karantzoulis, S; Morrison, CE; Barr, WB; Devinsky, O
ISI:000255690000084
ISSN: 1385-4046
CID: 104240
Personality disorders
Chapter by: Devinsky, Orrin; Vorkas, Charles; Barr, William B; Hermann, Bruce P
in: Epilepsy : a comprehensive textbook by Engel J; Pedley TA [Eds]
Philadelphia PA : Wolters Kluwer/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2008
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 9780781757775
CID: 5444