188 results
A retrospective analysis of iv ketamine outcome on hospitalizations in an unselected psychiatric sample
- Karl Sandström, Olli Kampman, Peter Asellus
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- Acta Neuropsychiatrica / Accepted manuscript
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 25 April 2024, pp. 1-21
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Objective:
This study aims to explore the outcome with iv ketamine treatment in a real-world clinical setting, primarily measured as posttreatment days hospitalized.
Methods:The psychiatric medical records of 46 patients having received iv ketamine on a psychiatric treatment indication between 2015-2018 were retrospectively examined. Analysis comparing the number and duration of hospital admissions before and after ketamine treatment as well as logistic regression analysis to investigate clinical predictors of effectiveness, were performed. To assess patients’ severity of depressed symptoms records were screened for MADRS-S scores.
Results:No significant difference between pre- and posttreatment hospital days (p=0.170), or number of hospitalizations (p=0.740) were found. The response rate was 31% and remission rate 21%. None of the predictors showed statistical significance in the logistic model.
Conclusion:Iv ketamine treatment showed effectiveness in reducing depressive symptoms even with complex patients in a real-world clinical setting. However, this did not translate to a reduction in hospitalization. Highlighting the multifaceted challenges posed when implementing iv ketamine treatment in clinical practice.
Missed conceptions about paediatric bipolar disorder: a reply and discussion of DMDD
- Gin S. Malhi, Erica Bell
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- Acta Neuropsychiatrica , First View
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 25 March 2024, pp. 1-2
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Neurocognitive correlates of metabolic dysregulation in individuals with mood disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- Kateryna Maksyutynska, Nicolette Stogios, Femin Prasad, Jashan Gill, Zaineb Hamza, Riddhita De, Emily Smith, Angelina Horta, Benjamin I. Goldstein, Daphne Korczak, Ariel Graff-Guerrero, Margaret K. Hahn, Sri Mahavir Agarwal
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- Journal:
- Psychological Medicine / Volume 54 / Issue 7 / May 2024
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 07 March 2024, pp. 1245-1271
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Individuals with mood disorders are predisposed to metabolic dysfunction, while those with metabolic dysregulation such as diabetes and obesity experience more severe depressive symptoms. Both metabolic dysfunction and mood disorders are independently associated with cognitive deficits. Therefore, given their close association, this study aimed to explore the association between metabolic dysfunction in individuals with mood disorders in relation to cognitive outcomes. A comprehensive search comprised of these three domains was carried out; a random-effects meta-analysis pooling mean cognitive outcomes was conducted (PROSPERO ID: CRD42022295765). Sixty-three studies were included in this review; 26 were synthesized in a quantitative meta-analysis. Comorbid metabolic dysregulation was associated with significantly lower global cognition among individuals with mood disorders. These trends were significant within each mood disorder subgroup, including major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, and self-report depression/depressive symptoms. Type 2 diabetes was associated with the lowest cognitive performance in individuals with mood disorders, followed by peripheral insulin resistance, body mass index ⩾25 kg/m2, and metabolic syndrome. Significant reduction in scores was also observed among individual cognitive domains (in descending order) of working memory, attention, executive function, processing speed, verbal memory, and visual memory. These findings demonstrate the detrimental effects of comorbid metabolic dysfunction in individuals with mood disorders. Further research is required to understand the underlying mechanisms connecting mood disorders, metabolism, and cognition.
Depression, anxiety and brain volume after hearing loss and tinnitus: cohort study in the UK Biobank
- Xiaowan Chen, Kejia Hu, Huan Song, Li Yin, Magnus Kaijser, Tiril P. Gurholt, Ole A. Andreassen, Unnur Valdimarsdóttir, Fang Fang, Maoli Duan
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- Journal:
- BJPsych Open / Volume 10 / Issue 2 / March 2024
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 01 February 2024, e37
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Background
Hearing loss and tinnitus have been proposed as potential indicators of impaired mental health and brain morphological changes.
AimsTo assess the associations of hearing loss and tinnitus with the risk of depression and anxiety and with brain volume.
MethodWe conducted a community-based cohort study including 129 610 participants aged 40−69 years at recruitment to the UK Biobank with a follow-up period during 2006–2021 to estimate the risk of depression and anxiety after detection of hearing loss and reported tinnitus. We also assessed the associations of hearing loss and tinnitus with brain volume in a subsample with available brain magnetic resonance imaging data (N = 5222).
ResultsWe observed an increased risk of depression among individuals with hearing loss (hazard ratio [HR] 1.14, 95% CI 1.03–1.26), tinnitus (HR 1.30, 95% CI 1.21–1.41) or both (HR 1.32, 95% CI 1.15–1.52), compared with individuals with neither hearing loss nor tinnitus. Similar results were noted for anxiety (HR 1.18, 95% CI 1.07–1.30 for hearing loss; HR 1.32, 95% CI 1.22–1.43 for tinnitus; and HR 1.48, 95% CI 1.30–1.68 for both). Hearing loss was associated with decreased overall brain volume as well as decreased volume of different brain regions. The latter associations disappeared after adjustment for whole intracranial volume. Tinnitus was associated with greater left accumbens and right occipital pole volume after adjustment for the whole intracranial volume.
ConclusionsIndividuals with tinnitus are at increased risk of depression and anxiety. Hearing loss, on the other hand, is associated with both mood disorders and altered brain morphology.
Chapter 3 - Epidemiological Language in Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy
- from Part I - Origins: Histories
- Edited by Anna M. Elsner, Universität St Gallen, Switzerland, Monika Pietrzak-Franger, Universität Wien, Austria
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- Literature and Medicine
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- 17 January 2024
- Print publication:
- 18 January 2024, pp 53-68
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Summary
Melancholy is an ‘epidemicall’ disease, Burton says, noting the multitude of causes which, along with human wickedness and inherent humoral imbalances, explain the extensive and increasing suffering he observes around him. His observations tell us little about seventeenth-century epidemiology, I argue. Moreover, the meanings accorded to seemingly familiar terms such as ‘disease’, ‘symptom’, and ‘epidemic’ rest on assumptions that leave them orthogonal to today’s standard etiological medical assumptions. Yet they find resonance within recent broad theorizing about the concept of disease, in public health emphases and alternative medicine, as well as in the larger health culture of our times.
56 Dunning-Kruger Effect and Anxiety in a Mexican population
- Natalia L. Acosta, Krissy E. Smith, Tara L. Victor, David H. Hardy, Alberto L. Fernandez, Raymundo Cervantes, Ana Paula P. Quiñones, Carolina G. Castañeda, Jill Razani, Isabel D.C. Muñoz, Daniel W. Lopez-Hernandez
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 841-842
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Objective:
The Dunning-Krueger effect is a cognitive bias where individuals tend to overestimate their abilities in areas where they are less competent. The Cordoba Naming Test (CNT) is a 30-item confrontation naming task. Hardy and Wright (2018) conditionally validated a measure of perceived mental workload called the NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX). Researchers reported that workload ratings on the NASA-TLX increased with increased task demands on a cognitive task. Anxiety is known as an emotion that can make an individual more susceptible to develop a mental health condition. We examine if the Dunning-Krueger effect occurs in a Mexican population with and without current symptoms of anxiety and possible factors driving individuals to overestimate their abilities on the CNT. We predicted the abnormal symptoms of anxiety (ASA) group would report better CNT performance, report higher perceived workloads on the CNT, and underperform on the CNT compared to the normal symptoms of anxiety (NSA) group. We also predicted the low-performance group would report better CNT performance, report higher perceived workloads on the CNT, and underperform on the CNT compared to the high-performance group.
Participants and Methods:The sample consisted of 192 Mexican participants with NSA (79 low-performance & 113 high-performance) and 74 Mexican participants with ASA (44 low-performance & 30 high-performance). Participants completed the CNT, NASA-TLX, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) in Spanish. The NASA-TLX was used to evaluate perceived workloads after the completion of the CNT. Meanwhile, the HADS was used to create our anxiety groups. Finally, CNT raw scores were converted into T-scores, which then were averaged to create the following two groups: low-performance (CNT T-Score <50) and high-performance (CNT T-Score 50+). A series of 2x2 ANCOVAs, controlling for gender were used to evaluate CNT performance and perceived workloads.
Results:We found a significant interaction where the low-performance ASA and the high-performance NSA groups demonstrated better CNT performance and reported higher perceived workloads (i.e., performance, temporal demand) on the CNT compared to their respective counterparts (i.e., low-performance NSA & high-performance ASA groups), p's<.05, ηp's2=.02. We found a main effect where the high-performance group outperformed the low-performance group on the CNT and reported lower perceived workloads on the CNT, p's<.05, ηp's2 =.04-.46.
Conclusions:The Dunning-Krueger effect did not occur in our sample. Participants that demonstrated better CNT performance also reported higher perceived workloads regardless of their current symptoms of anxiety. A possible explanation can be our sample's cultural norms of what would be considered as abnormal symptoms of anxiety, is a normal part of life, decreasing the possibilities to experience self-efficacy distoritions. Future studies should investigate whether the Dunning-Kruger effect may be influencing other aspects of cognitive functioning subjectively in Mexicans residing in Mexico and the United States with and without current symptoms of anxiety.
52 Internalizing Psychopathology is Highly Related to Subjective Cognitive Impairment and the Discrepancy Between Objective and Subjective Cognitive Impairment: A Preliminary Cross-Sectional Study.
- John-Christopher Finley, Andrea Cladek, Michael Brook
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 838-839
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Objective:
Eliciting perceived cognitive complaints is a routine part of a clinical neuropsychological evaluation, presumably because complaints are informative of underlying pathology. However, there is no strong empirical support that subjective cognitive impairment (SCI) is actually related to objective cognitive impairment as measured by neurocognitive tests. Instead, internalizing psychopathology is thought to predominately influence the endorsement of SCI. Specifically, individuals with greater symptoms of depression and anxiety, when accounting for comorbidities, have a higher disposition to overestimate their degree of cognitive impairment as compared to objective testing. Yet, there are few existing studies that have determined which factors influence both SCI and the discrepancy between subjective and objective cognitive impairment in general outpatient populations. The current study examined the relationship between subjective and objective cognitive impairment in a clinically diverse sample of outpatients. We additionally explored the associations between SCI and relevant intrapersonal factors including internalizing psychopathology, number of medical comorbidities, and demographics. Finally, we quantified the degree of discrepancy between subjective and objective impairment and examined this discrepancy in relation to the intrapersonal factors.
Participants and Methods:The sample comprised 142 adult women and men (age range 18–79 years) seen in an outpatient neuropsychology clinic for a diverse range of referral questions. Scores on the cognition portion of the WHO Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS 2.0) were used to index SCI. A composite score from 14 measures across various domains of cognitive functioning served as an objective measure of cognitive functioning. Internalizing psychopathology was measured via a standardized composite of scores from screening measures of anxiety and depression. Medical comorbidities were indexed by the number of different ICD diagnostic categories documented in patients' medical records. Demographics included age, sex, race, and years of formal education. Objective-subjective discrepancy scores were computed by saving standardized residuals from a linear regression of neurocognitive test performance on the WHODAS 2.0 scores.
Results:A hierarchical linear regression revealed that objective cognitive impairment was not significantly related to SCI (p > .05), explaining less than 2% of the variance in SCI ratings. Likewise, participants' demographics (age, sex, education, race) and number of comorbidities were not significantly related to their SCI ratings, explaining about 6% of the variance. However, participants' level of internalizing psychopathology was significantly associated with SCI (F[10, 131] = 4.99, p < .001), and explained approximately 20% of the variance in SCI ratings. Similarly, the degree of discrepancy between subjective and objective cognitive impairment was primarily influenced by internalizing psychopathology (F[9, 132] = 5.20, p < .001, R2 = 21%) and largely unrelated to demographics and number of comorbidities, which explained about 6% of the variance.
Conclusions:These findings are consistent with prior research suggesting that SCI may be more indicative of the extent of internalizing psychopathology rather than actual cognitive impairment. Taken together, these results illuminate potential treatment and diagnostic implications associated with assessing perceived cognitive complaints during a neuropsychological evaluation.
73 Do depression, anxiety, or stress moderate the relationship between simple attention, working memory and verbal learning?
- Aamir Laique, Jessica Springer, Jenna Axelrod, Leslie Guidotti Breting, Elizabeth Geary, Jerry J Sweet
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 276
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Objective:
Working memory is a vital construct in efficient verbal memory encoding (Cotton & Ricker, 2021). Working memory is impacted by attentional capacities (Riccio, Cohen, Garrison, & Smith, 2005). Mood symptoms impact efficient information processing and consolidation of memory (Hubbard, 2016; Lukasik, 2019). This study examines self-reported symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress as possible moderators of the relationship between working memory and a verbal list-learning task.
Participants and Methods:Archival data from 415 adults (Mage= 56.10, SD=18.05; Medu= 15.5 SD=2.2; 53% female; 73% white) were collected at an outpatient clinic. Sex and race were not available in a small percentage of cases included in analyses. The Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale 4th Edition Digit Span subtest was given to assess attention and working memory. Although Digit Span Forward is a measure of simple attention, not working memory, it was included in initial analyses because the subtest was given as a whole. The three components of Digit Span total, Forward, Backward, and Sequencing were also investigated separately, with the two latter scores being better representations of working memory. Learning was assessed via the California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT-II) total T-Score (Trials 1-5). Mood was assessed via the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales (DASS-42).
Results:Results of a hierarchical linear regression showed a significant effect between total Digit Span performance and total learning on the CVLT-II in the Block 1 (F(3, 411)=14.383, p =<.001 , AR2=.095). Standardized beta weights and p-values for Digit Span Forward, Backward, and Sequencing were (ß=-.50, p=.374), (ß= .159, p=.009), and (ß=.210, p<.001) respectively. In Block 2, when the DASS variables were introduced, the model remained significant F(3,408)=2.602, p=.05 , AR2=.017). The DASS anxiety and stress subscales had significant beta weights in the model (ß=-.172, p=.015) and (ß=.144, p=.039) respectively, with depression being insignificant (ß=--.023, p=.724).
Conclusions:Mood symptoms have been shown to be an important consideration when assessing working memory and verbal learning performance (Massey, Meares, Batchelor, & Bryant, 2015). Present results demonstrate that when accounting for working memory, anxiety and stress were significant predictors of performance on a measure of verbal learning. Additionally, as the components best representing working memory, Digit Span Sequencing and Backward were significantly correlated with verbal learning, whereas a measure best representing simple attention, Digit Span Forward, was not significantly correlated with verbal learning.
57 Association Between Adverse Childhood Experiences on Depression and Anxiety in Adulthood: Examining the Role of Cognitive Flexibility
- Rosario Pintos Lobo, Alexandria G. Nuccio, Zachary T. Goodman, Stacy S. Merritt, Xiaoyan Sun, Katalina F. McInerney, Bonnie E. Levin
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 842-843
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Objective:
The association between adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and adult depression and anxiety has been well described (Aafjes-van Doorn et al., 2020; Dolbier et al., 2021; Herzog & Schmahl, 2018). However, cognitive flexibility, as a potential moderating factor of this relationship, has been underreported (Kalia et al., 2021). We hypothesize that increased ACEs will be associated with increased symptoms of depression and anxiety, and cognitive flexibility will exhert a moderating role in this relationship.
Participants and Methods:Participants from the Evelyn F. McKnight University of Miami Frailty Registry were included in the study. 224 adults (Mage= 66.30, SD = 11.63; 59.4% female; 62.1% Hispanic/Latinx) without primary neurological disorders were recruited from University of Miami clinics and community centers. Participants completed a demographic questionnaire and neuropsychological evaluation including the Adverse Childhood Experiences inventory, Beck Depression Inventory, Beck Anxiety Inventory, and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST). Current data were initially analyzed using descriptive statistics and correlations among variables. A series of hierarchical multiple linear regressions (HLR) were conducted to examine the effect that age has on cognitive flexibility (measured by number of perseverative errors on the WCST), as well as the association between number of ACEs endorsed on symptoms of depression and anxiety in late life.
Results:Correlation analyses revealed a negative correlation between total ACE score and cognitive flexibility (r=-.16, p=0.03); a positive correlation between age and cognitive flexibility (r=0.19, p=0.01); and positive relationships between ACE score and both BDI (r=0.35, p<0.001) and BAI (r=0.28, p<0.001) scores. Correlations further revealed a negative correlation between cognitive flexibility and both BDI (r=-0.18, p=0.014) and BAI (r=-0.14, p=0.048) scores. A series of hierarchical multiple linear regressions revealed that total number of ACEs had a statistically significant effect on both depression (f=7.24, p<.001, ΔR2=0.072) and anxiety (f=4.57, p<.001, ΔR2=0.044) symptoms, in models adjusted for demographic correlates (i.e., age, sex, race, ethnicity). While the overall moderation model examining the effect of cognitive flexibility on the relationship between ACEs and psychopathology was significant (f=6.04, p<.001, ΔR2=0.191), the interaction was not significant (p=.4199). However, HLRs further revealed a statistically significant effect of age on cognitive flexibility (f=6.77, p=0.01, ΔR2=0.034).
Conclusions:Current findings support past research showing higher number of ACEs are associated with more symptoms of depression and anxiety in later life. However, cognitive flexibility did not moderate the relationship between ACEs and symptoms of depression and anxiery. This suggests cognitive flexibility might not play a significant role in the association between childhood trauma and symptoms of depression and anxiety in later life. Alternatively present results could be attributed to a small sample size, or the specific measure of cognitive flexibility used. This study expands on prior research highlighting the role of cognitive flexibility on age, with age serving as a prominent feature in the association between ACEs and adult depression and anxiety. Further research examining the role of cognitive flexibility in younger and middle years and its association with ACEs and psychopathology may provide unique insights on how to intervene earlier in the life course before cognitive flexibility begins to decline.
66 An Exploratory Analysis of the Moderating Effect of Internalizing Symptoms on Memory Performance Following COVID-19 Infection.
- Samantha J Feldman, Katie C Benitah, Theone SE Paterson, Kristina M Gicas
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 61-62
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Objective:
Cognitive difficulties are amongst the most frequently reported sequelae following COVID-19 infection, even in those experiencing mild to moderate illness (Matos et al., 2021). Recent research has identified patterns of diminished cognitive performance on tests of memory and executive functioning in COVID-19 cases; however, the etiology of neurocognitive difficulties remains unclear (Delgado-Alonso et al., 2022). Emerging evidence has identified moderate associations between decreased performance on neuropsychological tests of memory and elevated anxiety and depression symptom reporting in COVID-19 patients. Similar associations are well-established in the literature in persons with anxiety and depression disorders, warranting further investigation as to whether mental health variables such as internalizing symptom severity may moderate the association between COVID-19 illness and cognitive difficulties. This study examined how internalizing symptoms as indexed by depression and anxiety symptom scales may differentially influence performance on neuropsychological tests of memory between persons who have and have not had COVID-19.
Participants and Methods:In this cross-sectional study, 104 adults aged 19-80, were recruited in Ontario and British Columbia, Canada; 84 adults met inclusion criteria and participated in neuropsychological testing. There were 40 participants who tested positive for COVID-19 infection (N=44 with no suspected exposures or confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19). Participants had no history of dementia, mild cognitive impairment, or other known neurological disorder. Anxiety and depression symptoms were measured using the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7) and Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) via self-report on Qualtrics. Memory encoding and delayed recognition performance were assessed using the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test Revised (HVLT-R) and the Neuropsychological Assessment Battery Shape Learning subtest (NAB-SL). To test for potential moderating effects of anxiety and depression symptoms on the association between COVID-19 infection status and memory performance, a series of multiple linear regressions were conducted. Age and sex were included as covariates in all analyses.
Results:Moderation analyses revealed that the interaction between COVID-19 infection and anxiety symptoms accounted for a significant portion of variance in both HVLT-R recognition (B= -0.78, SE= 0.34, p<0.05) and NAB-SL delayed recognition scores (B= -0.83, SE= 0.35, p<0.05). Simple slopes analyses revealed that among participants who tested positive for COVID-19 infection, higher GAD-7 scores were associated with lower verbal and visual recognition scores. A similar interaction was observed between COVID-19 and depressive symptoms in accounting for variance in NAB-SL delayed recognition scores, however, for that model the threshold of p=0.05 was not met in our small sample (p=0.07).
Conclusions:Findings demonstrate that anxiety symptom severity had a moderating effect on the impact of COVID-19 on delayed retrieval of verbal and visual information from memory. Future work in a larger sample is needed to further elucidate the potential moderating role of depression on memory in COVID-19 positive persons, as the current work suggests that depression symptoms could have a similar impact as anxiety. Further identifying the relationships between key modifiable psychological factors such as anxiety and memory following COVID-19 infection will provide insight into potential interventions to minimize the negative effects of internalizing symptoms on long-term cognitive outcomes.
36 White Matter Correlates of Coping with Social Stress in Adolescence, and Their Links to Mental Health
- Erin Gilliland, Peyton Thomas, Scout Crowell, Whitney I. Mattson, Eric E. Nelson, Kristen R. Hoskinson
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 824-825
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Objective:
The increasing complexity of social stress may be especially threatening to mental health during childhood and adolescence. One's skills in effectively coping with this stress may contribute to symptoms of pediatric anxiety and depression, a growing, significant, and pervasive public health concern. In addition to strategic skills, individual differences in coping may reflect differences in brain structure, including the white matter pathways that integrate frontal lobe networks with those involved in social functioning. Identifying the neurological substrates underlying anxiety and depression is an important way to delineate mechanisms underlying development of these disorders. Deterministic automated-fiber quantification (AFQ) is a technique that removes potential error from manual tracking of white matter, segregating tracts into distinct nodes—diminishing the effect of crossing fibers—and quantifying the number of fibers in a tract, allowing for assessment of connectivity across regions. Collectively, this investigation aims to quantify the interplay between anxiety, depression, coping with social stress, and white matter microstructure in children and adolescents.
Participants and Methods:Ninety-two healthy children and adolescents (8-17 years old; n=53 female, Mage=12.96; n=39 male, Mage=12.31) and a parent rated symptoms of anxiety and depression using the Behavior Assessment System for Children (BASC-III). Coping and stress reactivity were assessed using the Responses to Stress Questionnaire, Social Stress version. Children and adolescents also completed 64-direction DTI in a Siemens 3T Prisma scanner. White matter microstructure was quantified using AFQ; Fractional anisotropy (FA) values were extracted for 18 tracts, comprised of 100 nodes each.
Results:Mean levels of parent- and self-reported anxiety and depression fell within the normative range, and children reported mild- to moderate social stress. Higher levels of social stress were associated with increased parent reported anxiety (r=.294, p=.002) and parent- and self-reported depression (r=.481, p<.001; r=.211, p=.034, respectively). Anxiety and depression were not significantly related to white matter microstructure; however, several specific links with coping were noted. Use of secondary control coping (e.g., cognitive restructuring) was associated with higher FA of the bilateral inferior fronto-occipital fasciculi (left IFOF r=.228, p=.027; right IFOF r=.299, p=.003) and left inferior longitudinal fasciculus (r=.269, p=.009); use of primary control coping (e.g., problem solving) was associated with higher FA of the bilateral uncinate fasciculi (left UF r=.216, p=.036; right UF r=.207, p=.045). Furthermore, use of primary and secondary control coping were associated with fewer symptoms of anxiety and depression, whereas greater use of disengagement coping (e.g., wishful thinking) was associated with more depressive symptoms.
Conclusions:These findings highlight links among white matter microstructure in tracts integrating frontal with temporal and occipital regions, and adoption of adaptive (i.e., primary and secondary control) coping responses. This may suggest that strong connections between brain regions supports more of a modulatory than a neglecting coping strategy. Finding also replicate extant literature on the ties between coping style and psychosocial distress. Given that coping responses are amenable to intervention, capitalizing on these brain-behavior links during ongoing neuromaturation is worthy of future research, with a goal of reducing symptoms of anxiety and depression via the brain's support of adaptive coping.
53 Hoarding Behaviors are Associated with Greater Perceived Cognitive Dysfunction and Disability in Individuals with Late Life Depression
- Katie Firestone, John Bello, Divya Shridar, Michelle Kassel, Maria Kryza-Lacombe, Philip Insel, Kai Woodworth, Derek Satre, Craig Nelson, Carol Mathews, Duygu Tosun, Scott Mackin
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 839
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Objective:
Perceived cognitive dysfunction is a common feature of late-life depression (LLD) that is associated with diminished quality of life and greater disability. Similar associations have been demonstrated in individuals with Hoarding Disorder. The degree to which hoarding behaviors (HB) are associated with greater perceived cognitive dysfunction and disability in individuals with concurrent LLD is not known.
Participants and Methods:Participants with LLD (N=83) completed measures of hoarding symptom severity (Savings Inventory-Revised; SI-R) and were classified into two groups based on HB severity: LLD+HB who exhibited significant HB (SI-R . 41, n = 25) and LLD with low HB (SI-R < 41, n = 58). Additional measures assessed depression severity (Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; HDRS), perceived cognitive difficulties (Everyday Cognition Scale; ECOG), and disability (World Health Organization Disability Assessment Scale [WHODAS]-II-Short). Given a non-normal distribution of ECOG and WHODAS-II scores, non-parametric Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney tests were used to assess group differences in perceived cognitive dysfunction and disability. A regression model assessed the extent to which perceived cognitive dysfunction was associated with hoarding symptom severity measured continuously, covarying for age, education, gender, and depression severity. A separate regression model assessed the extent to which disability scores were associated with perceived cognitive dysfunction and HB severity covarying for demographics and depression severity.
Results:LLD+HB endorsed significantly greater perceived cognitive dysfunction (W = 1023, p = 0.003) and greater disability (W = 1006, p = < 0.001) compared to LLD. Regression models accounting for demographic characteristics and depression severity revealed that greater HB severity was associated with greater perceived cognitive dysfunction (β = 0.009, t = 2.765, p = 0.007). Increased disability was associated with greater perceived cognitive dysfunction (β = 4.792, t(71) = 3.551, p = 0.0007) and HB severity (β = 0.080, t(71) = 1.944, p = 0.056) approached significance after accounting for variance explained by depression severity and demographic covariates.
Conclusions:Our results suggest that hoarding behaviors are associated with increased perceived cognitive dysfunction and greater disability in individuals with LLD. Screening for HB in individuals with LLD may help identify those at greater risk for poor cognitive and functional outcomes. Interventions that target HB and perceived cognitive difficulties may decrease risk for disability in LLD. However, longitudinal studies would be required to further evaluate these relationships.
59 Neuropsychiatric Clustering of Veterans with TBI: The Link Between Neuropsychological Test Validity and Somatic Post-Concussive Symptoms
- Nathalie Dugas, Morgan Caudle, Amber Keller, Jessica Bomyea, Amy Jak
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 164-165
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Objective:
There is a wide variability in the neuropsychiatric presentation of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), and accurate diagnosis and treatment is complicated by within-condition heterogeneity and overlapping symptoms of common comorbidities (e.g., PTSD). Such diagnostic complexities can obfuscate clinical decision-making and lead to suboptimal treatment response. In contrast to traditional diagnostic categories, person-centered analysis methods create data-derived groupings wherein individuals within a cluster are similar and individuals across clusters are different. The current study sought to apply clustering to dimensional emotional and neuropsychological features in treatment-seeking Veterans with mTBI, with the goal of identifying more precise, homogeneous clinical profiles.
Participants and Methods:Study participants were 190 Veterans with mTBI history participating in a clinical neuropsychological assessment of cognitive complaints (Mean age: 34.38, 89.6% male, average years of education: 13.14). Participants completed a diagnostic interview, neuropsychological tests, and symptom questionnaires (NBSI, PCL, BDI, BAI, AUDIT, PSQI). To identify clusters of similar neuropsychiatric presentations, we first conducted dimension reduction on data from the cognitive tests and self-report measures using principal components analysis. Second, cluster analysis and cluster validation was performed on the resultant principal components (R: kmeans, clusterboot, clusterValid) to find homogeneous subgroups of participants.
Results:The clinical data was best represented by principal components reflecting anxious arousal, depressive cognitions, somatic post-concussive symptoms, reexperiencing and avoidance symptoms, and objective cognitive deficits. Cluster analysis using bootstrapping and cluster validity indices (e.g., Silhouette width, Dunn index) indicated that a 6-subgroup solution was optimal (subgroups were labeled Group A-Group F). Group A was characterized by moderate levels across all dimension scores. Group B was characterized by elevated somatic post-concussive symptoms and cognitive deficits. Group C was characterized by intact cognitive performance and low somatic post concussive symptoms. Group D was characterized by elevated depressive cognitions. Group E was characterized by high anxious arousal but low depressive cognitions and reexperiencing and avoidance. Group F was characterized by elevated reexperiencing and avoidance. The subgroups did not differ statistically on any demographic items, such as years of education, age, or gender. However, there were statistically significant differences across groups in performance validity failure (x2(10) = 27.17, p=.002); Group B showed the highest rate of failure.
Conclusions:Results demonstrate that phenotypically similar subgroups of individuals can be identified within treatment-seeking Veterans with mTBI. Data suggest that somatic post-concussive symptoms may be linked to cognitive deficits, however the rate of validity failure indicates that neuropsychological test scores may not reflect true cognitive ability. In contrast to prior studies that treat mTBI as a unitary construct that accounts for symptoms, our data suggest that a nuanced evaluation yields vastly diverse clinical presentations. Cluster analytic frameworks hold promise for better assessment and treatment planning for Veterans, as both patients and their treating clinicians would be greatly served by the ability to use common clinical assessment tools to better identify a given individual’s clinical needs. A critical next step is to validate subgroups using novel samples and data sources (e.g., neurobiology, genetics) and to determine if these subgroupings can be effectively utilized to personalize treatment assignment.
43 Mood and Everyday Function in Older Adults: Analyses of Self-report and Performance-based Measures of Everyday Function
- Marina Kaplan, Moira McKniff, Emma Pinksy, Molly Tassoni, Stephanie M Simone, Katherine Hackett, Rachel Mis, Giuliana Vallecorsa, Sophia Holmqvist, Tania Giovannetti
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 352
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Objective:
The relation between depressed mood and functional difficulties in older adults has been demonstrated in studies using self-report measures and has been interpreted as evidence for low mood negatively impacting everyday functional abilities. However, few studies have directly examined the relation between mood and everyday function using performance-based tests. This study included a standardized, performance-based measure of everyday action (Naturalistic Action Task, NAT) to test the prediction that report of depression symptoms are associated with self-report and performance-based tests of everyday function. Associations with anxiety symptoms and motivation/grit and everyday function also were explored.
Participants and Methods:68 older adults without dementia were screened and recruited (n = 55, M age = 74.21, SD= 6.80, age range = 65 to 98) from the community and completed self-report measures of depression symptoms (GDS), anxiety (GAI), motivation (Short Grit-S), and everyday functioning (FAQ). Participants also performed the NAT, which requires completion of a breakfast and lunch task and is scored for task accomplishment, errors (micro-errors, overt, motor), and total time. Additionally, an informant also reported on the participant’s everyday function. Spearman correlations were performed and results showing a medium effect size or greater are reported.
Results:Participant mood (GDS) was associated with self-reported function (FAQ; r =.45) but not performance-based measures of everyday function (NAT). Self-reported anxiety and motivation were not meaningfully associated with either self-reported or performance-based everyday function. Participant self-report (FAQ) and informant report of participant’s function (IFAQ) supported the validity of performance-based assessment as both were meaningfully associated with NAT performance (FAQ x NAT overt errors r = .34; I-FAQ x NAT micro-errors r = .34; I-FAQ x NAT motor errors r = .49).
Conclusions:Mood, but not anxiety or motivation, was associated with self-reported everyday function but not performance-based function. When considered alongside the meaningful relations between self/informant-report of function and everyday task performance, results suggest mood does not impact everyday function abilities in community-dwelling older adults without dementia. We suggest that frameworks to be reconceptualized to consider the potential for mild functional difficulties to negatively impact mood in older adults without dementia. Additionally, interventions and compensatory strategies designed to improve everyday function should examine the impact on mood outcomes.
75 Mood and Quality of Life after Responsive Neurostimulation (RNS) in Epilepsy Patients
- Stephanie Santiago Mejias, Zulfi Haneef, Adriana M. Strutt, Michele K. York, Stephen R. McCauley, Samantha K. Henry, Jennifer M. Stinson
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 480-481
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Objective:
Poor mood and quality of life is common among patients with medically intractable seizures. Many of these patients are not candidates for seizure focus resection and continue to receive standard medical care. Responsive neurostimulation (RNS) has been an effective approach to reduce seizure frequency for nonsurgical candidates. Previous research using RNS clinical trial participants has demonstrated improved mood and quality of life when patients received RNS-implantation earlier in their medically resistant epilepsy work-up (Loring et al., 2021). We aimed to describe the level of depression and quality of life in adults with medical resistant epilepsy, treated with RNS, presenting to an outpatient clinic.
Participants and Methods:This pilot study was conducted among 11 adult epilepsy patients treated with RNS at the epilepsy specialty clinic at Baylor College of Medicine. Ages of participants ranged from 18-56 (M=32.01, SD=12.37) with a mean education of 12.43 (SD=0.85). The majority of the participants identified as White (White=72.2%; Hispanic/Latino/a=14.3%, Other=7.1%). We also present pre- and post-RNS preliminary results of a subset of 4 patients for whom pre and post implantation data was available. Depression symptoms were assessed through the Beck Depression Inventory, 2nd Edition (BDI-II) and quality of life was determined using the Quality of Life in Epilepsy (QoLiE-31).
Results:Patients reported minimal symptoms of depression (M=5.45, SD=4.03) and good overall quality of life (M=71.18, SD=14.83) after RNS. Participants’ scores on their overall quality of life ranged from 50 to 95 (100=better quality of life). The QoLiE-31 showed high scores on emotional wellbeing (M=69.45, SD=14.56) and cognitive functioning (M=65.36, SD=16.66) domains. Post-hoc analysis revealed a significant difference in the cognitive functioning domain of QoLiE-31 before (M=44.75, SD=12.58) and after (M=51.0, SD=11.58) RNS implantation(t(3)=-3.78, p=0.016. Additionally, overall QoLiE score approached statistical significance when comparing pre-RNS (M=44.75 SD=9.29) to post-RNS (M=49.75 SD=11.62; t(3)=-2.01, p = 0.069). No significant differences were evident on seizure worry, energy/fatigue, medication effects, and social functioning domains of QoLiE-31 before and after RNS treatment.
Conclusions:These pilot study results suggest low levels of depression with this population post-RNS implantation. Additionally, there is preliminary evidence to suggest improved patient-rated cognitive functioning and overall quality of life. While this is a small study population, the results have important implications for patients with intractable epilepsy, even with those form who surgical resection may not be possible. Future studies with large enough samples to examine moderating and mediating factors to mood and quality of life changes post-RNS will be important.
26 Do depression, anxiety, or stress moderate the relationship between auditory learning and verbal learning?
- Aamir Laique, Jessica Springer, Leslie Guidotti Breting, Jenna Axelrod, Elizabeth Geary, Jerry J Sweet
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 634-635
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Objective:
Attention plays a key role in auditory processing of information by shifting cognitive resources to focus on incoming stimuli (Riccio, Cohen, Garrison, & Smith, 2005). Mood symptoms are known to affect the efficiency with which this processing occurs, especially when consolidation of memory is required (Massey, Meares, Batchelor, & Bryant, 2015). Without proper focus on relevant task information, improper encoding occurs, resulting in negatively affected performances. This study examines how depression, anxiety, and stress moderate the relationship between auditory attention and verbal list-learning.
Participants and Methods:Archival data from 373 adults (Mage= 56.46, SD=17.75; Medu = 15.45, SD=2.2; 54% female; 74% white*) were collected at an outpatient clinic. Race was not available in a small percentage of cases included in analyses. Auditory attention was assessed via the Brief Test of Attention (BTA). Learning was assessed via the California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT-II) total T-Score (Trials 15). Mood was assessed via the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales (DASS-42). A moderation analysis was conducted utilizing the DASS-42 as the moderator between the relationship of BTA and CVLT-II.
Results:Block 1 of the hierarchical regression was significant in that BTA contributed significantly toward verbal learning on the CVLT-II (F(1, 378)=30.141, p =<.001 , AR2=.074). The standardized beta weight and p-value for BTA were (ß=.272, p<.001). When DASS variables were introduced into Block 2, the model remained significant F(3, 375)=4.227, p =.006 , AR2=.030). The DASS Anxiety subscale had significant beta weights in the model (ß=-.210 p=.004), whereas Depression and Stress were not significant (ß=.039, p=.563) and (ß=.021, p=.765), respectively.
Conclusions:The current study examined whether mood symptoms affect the relationship between auditory attention and verbal learning. Present results confirm previous research that auditory attention has a significant impact on verbal learning (Massey, Meares, Batchelor, & Bryant, 2015; Weiser, 2004). Building upon prior research, these results indicate that when accounting for auditory attention, clinicians should be aware of possible confounds of anxiety, which may artificially suppress auditory attention. In some circumstances, a differential diagnosis may require consideration that absent anxiety auditory attention may be within normal range. Continued assessment and evaluation regarding the impact of anxiety is crucial for neuropsychologists when examining performances on verbal learning.
Subjects suffering from bipolar disorder taking lithium are less likely to report physical pain: a FACE-BD study
- Nathan Risch, Jonathan Dubois, Bruno Etain, Bruno Aouizerate, Frank Bellivier, Raoul Belzeaux, Caroline Dubertret, Emmanuel Haffen, Dominique Januel, Marion Leboyer, Antoine Lefrere, Ludovic Samalin, Mircea Polosan, Romain Rey, Paul Roux, Raymund Schwan, Michel Walter, FondaMental Advanced Centres of Expertise in Bipolar Disorders (FACE-BD) Collaborators, Philippe Courtet, Emilie Olié
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- Journal:
- European Psychiatry / Volume 67 / Issue 1 / 2024
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 13 December 2023, e8
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Background
Physical pain is a common issue in people with bipolar disorder (BD). It worsens mental health and quality of life, negatively impacts treatment response, and increases the risk of suicide. Lithium, which is prescribed in BD as a mood stabilizer, has shown promising effects on pain.
MethodsThis naturalistic study included 760 subjects with BD ( FACE-BD cohort) divided in two groups: with and without self-reported pain (evaluated with the EQ-5D-5L questionnaire). In this sample, 176 subjects were treated with lithium salts. The objectives of the study were to determine whether patients receiving lithium reported less pain, and whether this effect was associated with the recommended mood-stabilizing blood concentration of lithium.
ResultsSubjects with lithium intake were less likely to report pain (odds ratio [OR] = 0.59, 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.35–0.95; p = 0.036) after controlling for sociodemographic variables, BD type, lifetime history of psychiatric disorders, suicide attempt, personality traits, current depression and anxiety levels, sleep quality, and psychomotor activity. Subjects taking lithium were even less likely to report pain when lithium concentration in blood was ≥0.5 mmol/l (OR = 0.45, 95% CI, 0.24–0.79; p = 0.008).
ConclusionsThis is the first naturalistic study to show lithium’s promising effect on pain in subjects suffering from BD after controlling for many confounding variables. This analgesic effect seems independent of BD severity and comorbid conditions. Randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm the analgesic effect of lithium salts and to determine whether lithium decreases pain in other vulnerable populations.
Blood–brain barrier permeability and electroconvulsive therapy: a systematic review
- Christoffer C. Lundsgaard, Krzysztof Gbyl, Poul Videbech
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- Journal:
- Acta Neuropsychiatrica , First View
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 16 October 2023, pp. 1-8
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Objective:
The cause of cognitive side effects after electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is largely unknown. Alterations in the blood–brain barrier (BBB) have been considered in several recent ECT studies. We therefore found it worthwhile to perform a systematic review of the literature to examine if electrically induced seizures affect the permeability of the BBB.
Methods:PubMed/MEDLINE and Embase were searched 16 November 2022. Studies with a direct measurement of BBB permeability in animals treated with modified electroconvulsive stimulation (ECS) and in humans treated with ECT were included. Synthesis of results was narrative due to the low number of studies and differences in study designs.
Results:Four animal and two human (31 participants) studies were included. In animals, two studies found increased BBB permeability to some smaller molecules after modified ECS, while the two other studies found marginally increased or unchanged permeability to albumin after treatment. In contrast, the human studies did not find increased BBB permeability to smaller molecules or albumin after ECT.
Conclusion:Animal but not human studies support increased BBB permeability to some smaller molecules after electrically induced seizures. However, this conclusion is confined by the low number of studies and the lack of studies applying state-of-the-art methods. More studies using modern approaches to measuring of BBB permeability are warranted.
Funding and Registration:The study was founded by Mental Health Services in the Capital Region of Denmark (grant number 61151-05) and was registered on PROSPERO before data extraction was initiated (CRD42022331385).
Role of T and B lymphocyte cannabinoid type 1 and 2 receptors in major depression and suicidal behaviours
- Michael Maes, Muanpetch Rachayon, Ketsupar Jirakran, Atapol Sughondhabirom, Abbas F. Almulla, Pimpayao Sodsai
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- Acta Neuropsychiatrica , First View
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 September 2023, pp. 1-12
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Early flow cytometry studies revealed T cell activation in major depressive disorder (MDD). MDD is characterised by activation of the immune-inflammatory response system (IRS) and the compensatory immunoregulatory system (CIRS), including deficits in T regulatory (Treg) cells. This study examines the number of cannabinoid type 1 (CB1) and type 2 (CB2) receptor-bearing T/B lymphocytes in MDD, and the effects of in vitro cannabidiol (CBD) administration on CB1/CB2-bearing immunocytes. Using flow cytometry, we determined the percentage of CD20+CB2+, CD3+CB2+, CD4+CB2+, CD8+CB2+ and FoxP3+CB1+ cells in 19 healthy controls and 29 MDD patients in 5 conditions: baseline, stimulation with anti-CD3/CD28 with or without 0.1 µg/mL, 1.0 µg/mL, or 10.0 µg/mL CBD. CB2+ was significantly higher in CD20+ than CD3+ and CD4+ and CD 8+ cells. Stimulation with anti-CD3/CD8 increases the number of CB2-bearing CD3+, CD4+ and CD8+ cells, as well as CB1-bearing FoxP3+ cells. There was an inverse association between the number of reduced CD4+ CB2+ and IRS profiles, including M1 macrophage, T helper-(Th)-1 and Th-17 phenotypes. MDD is characterised by lowered basal FoxP3+ CB1+% and higher CD20+ CB2+%. 33.2% of the variance in the depression phenome (including severity of depression, anxiety and current suicidal behaviours) is explained by CD20+ CB2+ % (positively) and CD3+ CB2+% (inversely). All five immune cell populations were significantly increased by 10 µg/mL of CBD administration. Reductions in FoxP3+ CB1+% and CD3+ /CD4+ CB2+% contribute to deficits in immune homoeostasis in MDD, while increased CD20+CB2+% may contribute to the pathophysiology of MDD by activating T-independent humoral immunity.
The temporal dependencies between social, emotional and physical health factors in young people receiving mental healthcare: a dynamic Bayesian network analysis
- Frank Iorfino, Mathew Varidel, Roman Marchant, Sally Cripps, Jacob Crouse, Ante Prodan, Rafael Oliveria, Joanne S. Carpenter, Daniel F. Hermens, Adam Guastella, Elizabeth Scott, Jai Shah, Kathleen Merikangas, Jan Scott, Ian B. Hickie
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- Journal:
- Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences / Volume 32 / 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 08 September 2023, e56
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Aims
The needs of young people attending mental healthcare can be complex and often span multiple domains (e.g., social, emotional and physical health factors). These factors often complicate treatment approaches and contribute to poorer outcomes in youth mental health. We aimed to identify how these factors interact over time by modelling the temporal dependencies between these transdiagnostic social, emotional and physical health factors among young people presenting for youth mental healthcare.
MethodsDynamic Bayesian networks were used to examine the relationship between mental health factors across multiple domains (social and occupational function, self-harm and suicidality, alcohol and substance use, physical health and psychiatric syndromes) in a longitudinal cohort of 2663 young people accessing youth mental health services. Two networks were developed: (1) ‘initial network’, that shows the conditional dependencies between factors at first presentation, and a (2) ‘transition network’, how factors are dependent longitudinally.
ResultsThe ‘initial network’ identified that childhood disorders tend to precede adolescent depression which itself was associated with three distinct pathways or illness trajectories; (1) anxiety disorder; (2) bipolar disorder, manic-like experiences, circadian disturbances and psychosis-like experiences; (3) self-harm and suicidality to alcohol and substance use or functioning. The ‘transition network’ identified that over time social and occupational function had the largest effect on self-harm and suicidality, with direct effects on ideation (relative risk [RR], 1.79; CI, 1.59–1.99) and self-harm (RR, 1.32; CI, 1.22–1.41), and an indirect effect on attempts (RR, 2.10; CI, 1.69–2.50). Suicide ideation had a direct effect on future suicide attempts (RR, 4.37; CI, 3.28–5.43) and self-harm (RR, 2.78; CI, 2.55–3.01). Alcohol and substance use, physical health and psychiatric syndromes (e.g., depression and anxiety, at-risk mental states) were independent domains whereby all direct effects remained within each domain over time.
ConclusionsThis study identified probable temporal dependencies between domains, which has causal interpretations, and therefore can provide insight into their differential role over the course of illness. This work identified social, emotional and physical health factors that may be important early intervention and prevention targets. Improving social and occupational function may be a critical target due to its impacts longitudinally on self-harm and suicidality. The conditional independence of alcohol and substance use supports the need for specific interventions to target these comorbidities.