Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Effects of iron supplementation on attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children
Konofal, Eric; Lecendreux, Michel; Deron, Juliette; Marchand, Martine; Cortese, Samuele; Zaim, Mohammed; Mouren, Marie Christine; Arnulf, Isabelle
Iron deficiency has been suggested as a possible contributing cause of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children. This present study examined the effects of iron supplementation on ADHD in children. Twenty-three nonanemic children (aged 5-8 years) with serum ferritin levels <30 ng/mL who met DSM-IV criteria for ADHD were randomized (3:1 ratio) to either oral iron (ferrous sulfate, 80 mg/day, n = 18) or placebo (n = 5) for 12 weeks. There was a progressive significant decrease in the ADHD Rating Scale after 12 weeks on iron (-11.0 +/- 13.9; P < 0.008), but not on placebo (3.0 +/- 5.7; P = 0.308). Improvement on Conners' Parent Rating Scale (P = 0.055) and Conners' Teacher Rating Scale (P = 0.076) with iron supplementation therapy failed to reach significance. The mean Clinical Global Impression-Severity significantly decreased at 12 weeks (P < 0.01) with iron, without change in the placebo group. Iron supplementation (80 mg/day) appeared to improve ADHD symptoms in children with low serum ferritin levels suggesting a need for future investigations with larger controlled trials. Iron therapy was well tolerated and effectiveness is comparable to stimulants.
PMID: 18054688
ISSN: 0887-8994
CID: 1154872
The Late Teen Years: Meeting the Challenges of College
Gallagher, Richard
ORIGINAL:0009430
ISSN: n/a
CID: 1450152
Offering to share: how to put heads together in autism neuroimaging
Belmonte, Matthew K; Mazziotta, John C; Minshew, Nancy J; Evans, Alan C; Courchesne, Eric; Dager, Stephen R; Bookheimer, Susan Y; Aylward, Elizabeth H; Amaral, David G; Cantor, Rita M; Chugani, Diane C; Dale, Anders M; Davatzikos, Christos; Gerig, Guido; Herbert, Martha R; Lainhart, Janet E; Murphy, Declan G; Piven, Joseph; Reiss, Allan L; Schultz, Robert T; Zeffiro, Thomas A; Levi-Pearl, Susan; Lajonchere, Clara; Colamarino, Sophia A
Data sharing in autism neuroimaging presents scientific, technical, and social obstacles. We outline the desiderata for a data-sharing scheme that combines imaging with other measures of phenotype and with genetics, defines requirements for comparability of derived data and recommendations for raw data, outlines a core protocol including multispectral structural and diffusion-tensor imaging and optional extensions, provides for the collection of prospective, confound-free normative data, and extends sharing and collaborative development not only to data but to the analytical tools and methods applied to these data. A theme in these requirements is the need to preserve creative approaches and risk-taking within individual laboratories at the same time as common standards are provided for these laboratories to build on.
PMCID:3076291
PMID: 17347882
ISSN: 0162-3257
CID: 1780642
Mission statement: advancing the science of pediatric mental health and promoting the care of youth and their families [Editorial]
Martin, Andres; Faraone, Stephen V; Henderson, Schuyler W; Hudziak, James J; Leibenluft, Ellen; Piacentini, John; Stein, Bradley; Todd, Richard; Walkup, John
PMID: 18174818
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 178342
Elevated fear conditioning to socially relevant unconditioned stimuli in social anxiety disorder
Lissek, Shmuel; Levenson, Jessica; Biggs, Arter L; Johnson, Linda L; Ameli, Rezvan; Pine, Daniel S; Grillon, Christian
OBJECTIVE: Though conditioned fear has long been acknowledged as an important etiologic mechanism in social anxiety disorder, past psychophysiological experiments have found no differences in general conditionability among social anxiety patients using generally aversive but socially nonspecific unconditioned stimuli (e.g., unpleasant odors and painful pressure). The authors applied a novel fear conditioning paradigm consisting of socially relevant unconditioned stimuli of critical facial expressions and verbal feedback. This study represents the first effort to assess the conditioning correlates of social anxiety disorder within an ecologically enhanced paradigm. METHOD: Subjects with social anxiety disorder and age- and gender-matched healthy comparison subjects underwent differential classical conditioning. Conditioned stimuli included images of three neutral facial expressions, each of which was paired with one of three audiovisual unconditioned stimuli: negative insults with critical faces (US(neg)), positive compliments with happy faces (US(pos)), or neutral comments with neutral faces (US(neu)). The conditioned response was measured as the fear-potentiation of the startle-blink reflex elicited during presentation of the conditioned stimuli. RESULTS: Only social anxiety subjects demonstrated fear conditioning in response to facial expressions, as the startle-blink reflex was potentiated by the CS(neg) versus both CS(neu) and CS(pos) among those with the disorder, while healthy comparison subjects displayed no evidence of conditioned startle-potentiation. Such group differences in conditioning were independent of levels of anxiety to the unconditioned stimulus, implicating associative processes rather than increased unconditioned stimulus reactivity as the active mechanism underlying enhanced conditioned startle-potentiation among social anxiety subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Results support a conditioning contribution to social anxiety disorder and underscore the importance of disorder-relevant unconditioned stimuli when studying the conditioning correlates of pathologic anxiety.
PMCID:2538574
PMID: 18006874
ISSN: 0002-953x
CID: 161924
Cumulative trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder among children exposed to the 9/11 World Trade Center attack
Mullett-Hume, Elizabeth; Anshel, Daphne; Guevara, Vivianne; Cloitre, Marylene
Two and one-half years after the September 11, 2001 World Trade Center attack, 204 middle school students in an immigrant community located near Ground Zero were assessed for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms as influenced by 'dose' of exposure to the attack and accumulated lifetime traumas. Ninety percent of students reported at least one traumatic event other than 9/11 (e.g., community violence) with an average of 4 lifetime events reported. An interaction was obtained such that the dose-response effect depended on presence of other traumas. Among students with the lowest number of additional traumas, the usual dose-response pattern of increasing PTSD symptoms with increasing 9/11 exposure was observed; among those with medium to high cumulative life trauma, PTSD symptoms were substantially higher and uniformly so regardless of 9/11 exposure dose. Results suggest that traumas that precede or follow mass violence often have as much as if not greater impact on long-term symptom severity than high-dose exposure to the event. Implications regarding the presence of continuing or previous trauma exposure for postdisaster and early intervention policies are discussed
PMID: 18444732
ISSN: 0002-9432
CID: 81057
Assessment of anxiety and depression in IBD adolescents [Meeting Abstract]
Reigada, L; Waxman, A; Heyden, R; Masia, C; Levy, J
ISI:000252145700072
ISSN: 1078-0998
CID: 75957
Neural connectivity in children with bipolar disorder: impairment in the face emotion processing circuit
Rich, Brendan A; Fromm, Stephen J; Berghorst, Lisa H; Dickstein, Daniel P; Brotman, Melissa A; Pine, Daniel S; Leibenluft, Ellen
BACKGROUND: Pediatric bipolar disorder (BD), a highly debilitating illness, is characterized by amygdala abnormalities, i.e., volume reduction and hyperactivation during face processing. Evidence of perturbed amygdala functional connectivity with other brain regions would implicate a distributed neural circuit in the pathophysiology of BD, and would further elucidate the neural mechanisms associated with BD face emotion misinterpretation. METHODS: Thirty-three BD and 24 healthy age, gender, and IQ-matched subjects completed a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) task of face emotion identification in which attention was directed to emotional (hostility, fearfulness) and nonemotional (nose width) aspects of faces. Voxel-wise analyses examined whole brain functional connectivity with the left amygdala. RESULTS: Compared to healthy subjects, BD subjects had significantly reduced connectivity between the left amygdala and two regions: right posterior cingulate/precuneus and right fusiform gyrus/parahippocampal gyrus. Deficits were evident regardless of mood state and comorbid diagnoses. CONCLUSIONS: BD youth exhibit deficient connectivity between the amygdala and temporal association cortical regions previously implicated in processing facial expressions and social stimuli. In conjunction with previously documented volumetric and functional perturbations in these brain regions, dysfunction in this distributed neural circuit may begin to clarify the pathophysiology of the face emotion misperceptions and social deficits seen in BD youth.
PMCID:2721276
PMID: 18181882
ISSN: 0021-9630
CID: 161919
Fear conditioning in adolescents with anxiety disorders: results from a novel experimental paradigm
Lau, Jennifer Y F; Lissek, Shmuel; Nelson, Eric E; Lee, Yoon; Roberson-Nay, Roxann; Poeth, Kaitlin; Jenness, Jessica; Ernst, Monique; Grillon, Christian; Pine, Daniel S
OBJECTIVE: Considerable research examines fear conditioning in adult anxiety disorders but few studies examine youths. Adult data suggest that anxiety disorders involve elevated fear but intact differential conditioning. We used a novel paradigm to assess fear conditioning in pediatric anxiety patients. METHOD: Sixteen individuals with anxiety disorders and 38 healthy comparisons viewed two photographs of actresses displaying neutral expressions. One picture served as the conditioned stimulus (CS), paired with a fearful expression and a shrieking scream (CS+), whereas the other picture served as a CS unpaired with the aversive outcome (CS-). Conditioning was indexed by self-reported fear. Subjects participated in two visits involving conditioning and extinction trials. RESULTS: Both groups developed greater fear of the CS+ relative to CS-. Higher fear levels collapsed across each CS characterized anxious relative to healthy subjects, but no significant interaction between group and stimulus type emerged. Fear levels at visit 1 predicted avoidance of visit 2. Fear levels to both CS types showed stability even after extinction. CONCLUSIONS: Consistent with adult data, pediatric anxiety involves higher fear levels following conditioning but not greater differential conditioning. Extending these methods to neuroimaging studies may elucidate neural correlates of fear conditioning. Implications for exposure therapies are discussed.
PMCID:2788509
PMID: 18174830
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 161920
Effects of early focal brain injury on memory for visuospatial patterns: selective deficits of global-local processing
Stiles, Joan; Stern, Catherine; Appelbaum, Mark; Nass, Ruth; Trauner, Doris; Hesselink, John
Selective deficits in visuospatial processing are present early in development among children with perinatal focal brain lesions (PL). Children with right hemisphere PL (RPL) are impaired in configural processing, while children with left hemisphere PL (LPL) are impaired in featural processing. Deficits associated with LPL are less pervasive than those observed with RPL, but this difference may reflect the structure of the tasks used for assessment. Many of the tasks used to date may place greater demands on configural processing, thus highlighting this deficit in the RPL group. This study employed a task designed to place comparable demands on configural and featural processing, providing the opportunity to obtain within-task evidence of differential deficit. Sixty-two 5- to 14-year-old children (19 RPL, 19 LPL, and 24 matched controls) reproduced from memory a series of hierarchical forms (large forms composed of small forms). Global- and local-level reproduction accuracy was scored. Controls were equally accurate on global- and local-level reproduction. Children with RPL were selectively impaired on global accuracy, and children with LPL on local accuracy, thus documenting a double dissociation in global-local processing
PMID: 18211156
ISSN: 0894-4105
CID: 116237