Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Earlier parental set bedtimes as a protective factor against depression and suicidal ideation
Gangwisch, James E; Babiss, Lindsay A; Malaspina, Dolores; Turner, J Blake; Zammit, Gary K; Posner, Kelly
STUDY OBJECTIVES: To examine the relationships between parental set bedtimes, sleep duration, and depression as a quasi-experiment to explore the potentially bidirectional relationship between short sleep duration and depression. Short sleep duration has been shown to precede depression, but this could be explained as a prodromal symptom of depression. Depression in an adolescent can affect his/her chosen bedtime, but it is less likely to affect a parent's chosen set bedtime which can establish a relatively stable upper limit that can directly affect sleep duration. DESIGN: Multivariate cross-sectional analyses of the ADD Health using logistic regression. SETTING: United States nationally representative, school-based, probability-based sample in 1994-96. PARTICIPANTS: Adolescents (n = 15,659) in grades 7 to 12. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Adolescents with parental set bedtimes of midnight or later were 24% more likely to suffer from depression (OR = 1.24, 95% CI 1.04-1.49) and 20% more likely to have suicidal ideation (1.20, 1.01-1.41) than adolescents with parental set bedtimes of 10:00 PM or earlier, after controlling for covariates. Consistent with sleep duration and perception of getting enough sleep acting as mediators, the inclusion of these variables in the multivariate models appreciably attenuated the associations for depression (1.07, 0.88-1.30) and suicidal ideation (1.09, 0.92-1.29). CONCLUSIONS: The results from this study provide new evidence to strengthen the argument that short sleep duration could play a role in the etiology of depression. Earlier parental set bedtimes could therefore be protective against adolescent depression and suicidal ideation by lengthening sleep duration
PMCID:2802254
PMID: 20120626
ISSN: 0161-8105
CID: 134968
Intellectual Quotient of Juveniles Evaluated in a Forensic Psychiatry Clinic After Committing a Violent Crime
Lopez-Leon, Manuel; Rosner, Richard
The purpose of this preliminary study is to evaluate if there is a difference between the intelligence quotient (IQ) of 27 adolescent defendants referred to the Bellevue Hospital Center Forensic Psychiatry Clinic after committing violent crimes, and those adolescents in the same age group in the general population of the United States, as defined by the norms of the psychometric testing instrument Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, 4th edition (WISC-IV). The IQ scores and sub-scores were compared to IQ scores of the general population (mean = 100, SD = 15) using a Z-test. The mean for the Full Scale IQ was 82.93. The means for the subtests which include Processing Speed Index, Perceptual Reasoning Index, Verbal Comprehension Index, and Working Memory Index, were: 78.48, 87.78, 86.70 (p < 0.05), and 90.78 (p = 0.09) respectively. There is a statistically significant difference in the IQ scores of the violent juveniles studied when compared to the general population
PMID: 20015167
ISSN: 1556-4029
CID: 106033
Overgeneralization of conditioned fear as a pathogenic marker of panic disorder
Lissek, Shmuel; Rabin, Stephanie; Heller, Randi E; Lukenbaugh, David; Geraci, Marilla; Pine, Daniel S; Grillon, Christian
OBJECTIVE: Classical conditioning features prominently in many etiological accounts of panic disorder. According to such accounts, neutral conditioned stimuli present during panic attacks acquire panicogenic properties. Conditioned stimuli triggering panic symptoms are not limited to the original conditioned stimuli but are thought to generalize to stimuli resembling those co-occurring with panic, resulting in the proliferation of panic cues. The authors conducted a laboratory-based assessment of this potential correlate of panic disorder by testing the degree to which panic patients and healthy subjects manifest generalization of conditioned fear. METHOD: Nineteen patients with a DSM-IV-TR diagnosis of panic disorder and 19 healthy comparison subjects were recruited for the study. The fear-generalization paradigm consisted of 10 rings of graded size presented on a computer monitor; one extreme size was a conditioned danger cue, the other extreme a conditioned safety cue, and the eight rings of intermediary size created a continuum of similarity from one extreme to the other. Generalization was assessed by conditioned fear potentiating of the startle blink reflex as measured with electromyography (EMG). RESULTS: Panic patients displayed stronger conditioned generalization than comparison subjects, as reflected by startle EMG. Conditioned fear in panic patients generalized to rings with up to three units of dissimilarity to the conditioned danger cue, whereas generalization in comparison subjects was restricted to rings with only one unit of dissimilarity. CONCLUSIONS: The findings demonstrate a marked proclivity toward fear overgeneralization in panic disorder and provide a methodology for laboratory-based investigations of this central, yet understudied, conditioning correlate of panic. Given the putative molecular basis of fear conditioning, these results may have implications for novel treatments and prevention in panic disorder.
PMCID:2806514
PMID: 19917595
ISSN: 0002-953x
CID: 161861
Normal development of brain circuits
Tau, Gregory Z; Peterson, Bradley S
Spanning functions from the simplest reflex arc to complex cognitive processes, neural circuits have diverse functional roles. In the cerebral cortex, functional domains such as visual processing, attention, memory, and cognitive control rely on the development of distinct yet interconnected sets of anatomically distributed cortical and subcortical regions. The developmental organization of these circuits is a remarkably complex process that is influenced by genetic predispositions, environmental events, and neuroplastic responses to experiential demand that modulates connectivity and communication among neurons, within individual brain regions and circuits, and across neural pathways. Recent advances in neuroimaging and computational neurobiology, together with traditional investigational approaches such as histological studies and cellular and molecular biology, have been invaluable in improving our understanding of these developmental processes in humans in both health and illness. To contextualize the developmental origins of a wide array of neuropsychiatric illnesses, this review describes the development and maturation of neural circuits from the first synapse through critical periods of vulnerability and opportunity to the emergent capacity for cognitive and behavioral regulation, and finally the dynamic interplay across levels of circuit organization and developmental epochs.
PMCID:3055433
PMID: 19794405
ISSN: 0893-133x
CID: 934312
Parent-reported homework problems in the MTA study: evidence for sustained improvement with behavioral treatment
Langberg, Joshua M; Arnold, L Eugene; Flowers, Amanda M; Epstein, Jeffery N; Altaye, Mekibib; Hinshaw, Stephen P; Swanson, James M; Kotkin, Ronald; Simpson, Stephen; Molina, Brooke S G; Jensen, Peter S; Abikoff, Howard; Pelham, William E Jr; Vitiello, Benedetto; Wells, Karen C; Hechtman, Lily
Parent-report of child homework problems was examined as a treatment outcome variable in the MTA-Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Five hundred seventy-nine children ages 7.0 to 9.9 were randomly assigned to either medication management, behavioral treatment, combination treatment, or routine community care. Results showed that only participants who received behavioral treatment (behavioral and combined treatment) demonstrated sustained improvements in homework problems in comparison to routine community care. The magnitude of the sustained effect at the 10-month follow-up assessment was small to moderate for combined and behavioral treatment over routine community care (d = .37, .40, respectively). Parent ratings of initial ADHD symptom severity was the only variable found to moderate these effects
PMCID:3086047
PMID: 20390813
ISSN: 1537-4424
CID: 139437
Stigma of HIV and AIDS : psychiatric aspects
Chapter by: Khalife, Sami; Soffer, Jocelyn; Cohen, Mary Ann
in: Handbook of AIDS psychiatry by Cohen, Mary Ann; et al [Eds]
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2010
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0195372573
CID: 155612
Treating depression symptoms in grieving children
Chapter by: Pearlman, Michelle Y; Schwalbe, Karen D'Angelo; Cloltre, Marylene
in: Grief in childhood: Fundamentals of treatment in clinical practice by Pearlman, Michelle Y; Schwalbe, Karen D'Angelo; Cloitre, Marylene [Eds]
Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, 2010
pp. 279-282
ISBN: 1-4338-0752-1
CID: 5296
Spatio-Temporal Analysis of Early Brain Development
Sadeghi, Neda; Prastawa, Marcel; Gilmore, John H; Lin, Weili; Gerig, Guido
Analysis of human brain development is a crucial step for improved understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders. We focus on normal brain development as is observed in the multimodal longitudinal MRI/DTI data of neonates to two years of age. We present a spatio-temporal analysis framework using Gompertz function as a population growth model with three different spatial localization strategies: voxel-based, data driven clustering and atlas driven regional analysis. Growth models from multimodal imaging channels collected at each voxel form feature vectors which are clustered using the Dirichlet Process Mixture Models (DPMM). Clustering thus combines growth information from different modalities to subdivide the image into voxel groups with similar properties. The processing generates spatial maps that highlight the dynamic progression of white matter development. These maps show progression of white matter maturation where primarily, central regions mature earlier compared to the periphery, but where more subtle regional differences in growth can be observed. Atlas based analysis allows a quantitative analysis of a specific anatomical region, whereas data driven clustering identifies regions of similar growth patterns. The combination of these two allows us to investigate growth patterns within an anatomical region. Specifically, analysis of anterior and posterior limb of internal capsule show that there are different growth trajectories within these anatomies, and that it may be useful to divide certain anatomies into subregions with distinctive growth patterns.
PMCID:4199456
PMID: 25328368
ISSN: 1058-6393
CID: 1780482
Working with dually diagnosed patients
Chapter by: Ross, Stephen
in: Handbook of motivation and change: A practical guide for clinicians by Levounis, Petros; Arnaout, Bachaar [Eds]
Arlington, VA, US: American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.; US, 2010
pp. 7105-7110
ISBN: 978-1-58562-370-9
CID: 5341
The Building Bridges Initiative: residential and community-based providers, families, and youth coming together to improve outcomes
Blau, Gary M; Caldwell, Beth; Fisher, Sylvia K; Kuppinger, Anne; Levison-Johnson, Jody; Lieberman, Robert
The Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) provides a framework for achieving positive outcomes for youth and families served in residential and community programs. Founded on core principles, an emerging evidence base, and acknowledged best practices, the BBI emphasizes collaboration and coordination between providers, families, youth, advocates, and policymakers to achieve its aims. Examples are presented of successful state, community, and provider practice changes, and available tools and resources to support all constituencies in achieving positive outcomes.
PMID: 20857878
ISSN: 0009-4021
CID: 2606972