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Department/Unit:Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

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Comments on psychiatric education

Klein, Donald F
PMID: 15937258
ISSN: 1042-9670
CID: 998362

The Absence of Information about Hormones and Absence [Comment]

Scharfman, Helen E
PMCID:1198630
PMID: 16145615
ISSN: 1535-7597
CID: 73459

Comprehensive care for traumatized children

Saxe, GN; Ells, H; Fogler, J; Hansen, S; Sorkin, B
ISI:000229100900014
ISSN: 0048-5713
CID: 864382

Psychopathology among New York city public school children 6 months after September 11

Hoven, Christina W; Duarte, Cristiane S; Lucas, Christopher P; Wu, Ping; Mandell, Donald J; Goodwin, Renee D; Cohen, Michael; Balaban, Victor; Woodruff, Bradley A; Bin, Fan; Musa, George J; Mei, Lori; Cantor, Pamela A; Aber, J Lawrence; Cohen, Patricia; Susser, Ezra
CONTEXT: Children exposed to a traumatic event may be at higher risk for developing mental disorders. The prevalence of child psychopathology, however, has not been assessed in a population-based sample exposed to different levels of mass trauma or across a range of disorders. OBJECTIVE: To determine prevalence and correlates of probable mental disorders among New York City, NY, public school students 6 months following the September 11, 2001, World Trade Center attack. DESIGN: Survey. SETTING: New York City public schools. PARTICIPANTS: A citywide, random, representative sample of 8236 students in grades 4 through 12, including oversampling in closest proximity to the World Trade Center site (ground zero) and other high-risk areas. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Children were screened for probable mental disorders with the Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children Predictive Scales. RESULTS: One or more of 6 probable anxiety/depressive disorders were identified in 28.6% of all children. The most prevalent were probable agoraphobia (14.8%), probable separation anxiety (12.3%), and probable posttraumatic stress disorder (10.6%). Higher levels of exposure correspond to higher prevalence for all probable anxiety/depressive disorders. Girls and children in grades 4 and 5 were the most affected. In logistic regression analyses, child's exposure (adjusted odds ratio, 1.62), exposure of a child's family member (adjusted odds ratio, 1.80), and the child's prior trauma (adjusted odds ratio, 2.01) were related to increased likelihood of probable anxiety/depressive disorders. Results were adjusted for different types of exposure, sociodemographic characteristics, and child mental health service use. CONCLUSIONS: A high proportion of New York City public school children had a probable mental disorder 6 months after September 11, 2001. The data suggest that there is a relationship between level of exposure to trauma and likelihood of child anxiety/depressive disorders in the community. The results support the need to apply wide-area epidemiological approaches to mental health assessment after any large-scale disaster
PMID: 15867108
ISSN: 0003-990x
CID: 68173

Brain-derived Neurotrophic Factor and Epilepsy-A Missing Link?

Scharfman, Helen E
It has been known for some time that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is critical to normal development of the CNS, and more recently, studies also have documented the ability of BDNF to modify adult CNS structure and function. Therefore, it is no surprise that BDNF has been linked to diseases, such as epilepsy, which may involve abnormal cortical development or altered brain structure and function after maturity. This review evaluates the evidence, particularly from recent studies, that BDNF contributes to the development of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE)
PMCID:1198633
PMID: 16145610
ISSN: 1535-7597
CID: 73458

Parents' causal attributions about attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder: the effect of child and parent sex

Maniadaki, Katerina; Sonuga-Barke, Edmund; Kakouros, Efthymios
BACKGROUND: Boys with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD) demonstrate disruptive behaviour at significantly higher rates compared to girls. Disruptive behaviour often develops as a result of negative interaction patterns within the caregiving relationship. Given the importance of parental cognitions as mediators of parental behaviour, the consideration of parent and child sex in the investigation of causal attributions regarding AD/HD may, at least partially, explain sex differences in the prevalence of disruptive behaviour among children with AD/HD. AIM: To examine the effect of parent and child sex on parental causal attributions and reactions about AD/HD and to investigate the interrelationships between these variables. SAMPLE: Three hundred and seventeen mothers and 317 fathers of boys and girls aged 4-6 years and enrolled in kindergartens in Athens. METHOD: A Greek version of the Parental Account of the Causes of Childhood Problems Questionnaire was used, which followed a vignette about a hypothetical child displaying symptoms of AD/HD. Half of the participants received a male and another half received a female version of the vignette. RESULTS: The child's sex greatly influenced parents' causal attributions about AD/HD. Higher ratings of intentionality were conferred to boys with AD/HD than girls and these attributions were related to stricter responses towards boys. In contrast, parents who considered biological dysfunction as underlying AD/HD, they mostly did so in the case of girls. Minimal effect of parent sex on causal attributions was found. CONCLUSIONS: Because causal attributions of intentionality relate to the response of more strictness and such attributions are more prevalent for boys than girls, then these perceptions about the aetiology of AD/HD in boys may be at the basis of negative interaction patterns. The increase of such interaction patterns may place boys at a more vulnerable position towards the development of secondary behaviour problems
PMID: 15840153
ISSN: 0305-1862
CID: 145936

Decreased oral self-administration of alcohol in kappa-opioid receptor knock-out mice

Kovacs, Krisztina M; Szakall, Istvan; O'Brien, Danielle; Wang, Ray; Vinod, K Yaragudri; Saito, Mariko; Simonin, Frederic; Kieffer, Brigitte L; Vadasz, Csaba
BACKGROUND: Although a large body of evidence suggests a role for the opioid system in alcoholism, the precise role of mu-, delta-, kappa-, and ORL1-opioid receptors and the physiological significance of their natural genetic variation have not been identified. The method of targeted gene disruption by homologous recombination has been used to knock out (KO) genes coding for opioid receptors, and study their effects on alcohol self-administration. Here we examined the effects of targeted disruption of kappa-opioid receptor (KOR) on oral alcohol self-administration and other behaviors. METHODS: Oral alcohol, saccharin and quinine self-administration was assessed in a two-bottle choice paradigm using escalating concentrations of alcohol, or tastant solutions. In preference tests 12% alcohol, 0.033% and 0.066% saccharin, and 0.03 mM and 0.1 mM quinine solutions were used. Open-field activity was determined in an arena equipped with a computer-controlled activity-detection system. Subjects were tested for three consecutive days. Locomotor activity was assessed on days 1 and 2 (after saline injection, i.p.) and on day 3 (after alcohol injection, i.p.). Alcohol-induced locomotor activity was determined as the difference in activity between day 3 and day 2. RESULTS: Male KOR KO mice in preference tests with 12% alcohol consumed about half as much alcohol as wild-type (WT) or heterozygous (HET) mice, showed lower preference for saccharin (0.033% and 0.066%) and higher preference to quinine (0.1 mM) than WT mice. Female KOR KO mice showed similar reduction in alcohol consumption in comparison to WT and HET mice. Partial deletion of KOR in HET mice did not change alcohol consumption in comparison to WT mice. In all genotype-groups females drank significantly more alcohol than males. MANOVA of locomotor activity among KO, WT, and HET mice indicated that strain and sex effects were not significant for alcohol-induced activation (p > 0.05), while strain x sex interaction effects on alcohol-induced activation could be detected (F(1,55) = 6.07, p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Our results indicating decreased alcohol consumption, lower saccharin preference, and higher quinine preference in KOR KO mice are in line with previous observations of opioid involvement in maintenance of food intake and raise the possibility that the deficient dynorphin/KOR system affects orosensory reward through central mechanisms which reduce alcohol intake and disrupt tastant responses, either as direct effects of absence of kappa-opioid receptors, or as effects of indirect developmental compensatory changes
PMID: 15897716
ISSN: 0145-6008
CID: 93999

Differential prefrontal cortex activation during inhibitory control in adolescents with and without childhood attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Schulz, Kurt P; Tang, Cheuk Y; Fan, Jin; Marks, David J; Newcorn, Jeffrey H; Cheung, Angeles M; Halperin, Jeffrey M
The authors examined inhibitory control processes in 8 adolescents diagnosed with attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) during childhood and in 8 adolescent control participants using functional MRI with the Stimulus and Response Conflict Tasks (K. W. Nassauer & J. M. Halperin, 2003). No group differences in performance were evident on measures of interference control and/or response competition created by location and direction stimuli. However, the ADHD group demonstrated significantly greater activation of the left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex during interference control as well as greater activation of the left anterior cingulate cortex, right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, and left basal ganglia during the dual task of interference control and response competition. The magnitude of the prefrontal and basal ganglia activation was positively correlated with severity of ADHD. Response competition alone did not yield group differences in activation.
PMID: 15910125
ISSN: 0894-4105
CID: 164613

Neuropeptide Y stimulates neuronal precursor proliferation in the post-natal and adult dentate gyrus

Howell, Owain W; Doyle, Kharen; Goodman, Jeffrey H; Scharfman, Helen E; Herzog, Herbert; Pringle, Ashley; Beck-Sickinger, Annette G; Gray, William P
Adult dentate neurogenesis is important for certain types of hippocampal-dependent learning and also appears to be important for the maintenance of normal mood and the behavioural effects of antidepressants. Neuropeptide Y (NPY), a peptide neurotransmitter released by interneurons in the dentate gyrus, has important effects on mood, anxiety-related behaviour and learning and memory. We report that adult NPY receptor knock-out mice have significantly reduced cell proliferation and significantly fewer immature doublecortin-positive neurons in the dentate gyrus. We also show that the neuroproliferative effect of NPY is dentate specific, is Y1-receptor mediated and involves extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 activation. NPY did not exhibit any effect on cell survival in vitro but constitutive loss of the Y1 receptor in vivo resulted in greater survival of newly generated neurons and an unchanged total number of dentate granule cells. These results show that NPY stimulates neuronal precursor proliferation in the dentate gyrus and suggest that NPY-releasing interneurons may modulate dentate neurogenesis
PMID: 15836615
ISSN: 0022-3042
CID: 73454

Containment and contagion: How to strengthen families to support youth HIV prevention in South Africa

Paruk, Zubeda; Petersen, Inge; Bhana, Arvin; Bell, Carl; McKay, Mary
There has been little research done in South Africa that investigates how families nested within communities can be strengthened to support the prevention of HIV infection in youth. A focused ethnographic case-study approach was employed to better understand how families in a semi-rural area outside Durban, South Africa, could support youth to make healthy life choices, particularly with respect to HIV risk behaviour. This involved a volunteer convenience sample of parents or caregivers and key community members. A psychodynamic extension of social representational theory was applied to an interpretation of the data. The findings suggest that caregivers of youth feel disempowered and unsupported in a context of fractured and un-containing leadership structures, which works against social cohesion. In the context of social change and relatively new and threatening phenomena such as HIV/AIDS, we argue that strong unified leadership structures are necessary to assist with anchoring the unfamiliar and rendering it manageable, as well as to form the building blocks of social cohesion, a protective social environmental factor for youth. In addition, we suggest that programmes aimed at empowering parents or caregivers with knowledge about HIV/AIDS as well as renegotiating parental practices to promote greater parental authority, would be important interventions at a family level.
PMID: 25865642
ISSN: 1608-5906
CID: 1910882