Welcome to PsychiatryAI.com: [PubMed] - Psychiatry AI Latest

Epidemiology and Psychiatry

Individual Prognostication of Disease Activity and Disability Worsening in Multiple Sclerosis With Retinal Layer Thickness Scores
Lin TY, Motamedi S, Asseyer S, Chien C, Saidha S, Calabresi PA, Fitzgerald KC, Samadzadeh S, Villoslada P, Llufriu S, Green AJ, Preiningerova JL, Petzold A, Leocani L, Garcia-Martin E, Oreja-Guevara C, Outteryck O, Vermersch P, Balcer LJ, Kenney R, Albrecht P, Aktas O, Costello F, Frederiksen J, Uccelli A, Cellerino M, Frohman EM, Frohman TC, Bellmann-Strobl J, Schmitz-Hübsch T, Ruprecht K, Brandt AU, Zimmermann HG and Paul F
Retinal optical coherence tomography (OCT) provides promising prognostic imaging biomarkers for future disease activity in multiple sclerosis (MS). However, raw OCT-derived measures have multiple dependencies, supporting the need for establishing reference values adjusted for possible confounders. The purpose of this study was to investigate the capacity for age-adjusted scores of OCT-derived measures to prognosticate future disease activity and disability worsening in people with MS (PwMS).
The Role of the Vascular Neurologist in Optimizing Stroke Care
Roeder HJ and Leira EC
The article summarizes the training pathways and vocational opportunities within the field of vascular neurology. It highlights the groundbreaking clinical trials that transformed acute stroke care and the resultant increased demand for readily available vascular neurology expertise. The article emphasizes the need to train a larger number of diverse physicians in the subspecialty and the role of vascular neurologists in improving outcomes across demographic and geographic lines.
Effect of alcohol health warning labels on knowledge related to the ill effects of alcohol on cancer risk and their public perceptions in 14 European countries: an online survey experiment
Correia D, Kokole D, Rehm J, Tran A, Ferreira-Borges C, Galea G, Likki T, Olsen A and Neufeld M
Alcohol health-warning labels are a policy option that can contribute to the reduction of alcohol-related harms, but their effects and public perception depend on their content and format. Our study aimed to investigate the effect of health warnings on knowledge that alcohol causes cancer, the perceptions of three different message topics (responsible drinking, general health harm of alcohol, and alcohol causing cancer), and the role of images included with the cancer message.
Association between previous SARs-CoV-2 infection and new prescription of antidepressant drugs: a case-control study in Friuli Venezia Giulia region, Italy
Rosolen V, Castriotta L, Driutti M, Albert U, Barbone F and Castelpietra G
A rise in affective and anxiety disorders and in antidepressant (AD) treatment during the COVID-19 pandemic has been extensively described, but few studies were provided at the individual level, further considering COVID-19 severity and vaccination status.
Effects of Two Early Parenting Programmes on Child Aggression and Risk for Violence in Brazil: a Randomised Controlled Trial
Murray J, Martins RC, Greenland M, Cruz S, Altafim E, Arteche AX, Cooper PJ, Domingues MR, Gonzalez A, Kramer Fiala Machado A, Murray L, Oliveira I, Santos I, Soares TB, Tovo-Rodrigues L and Voysey M
Violence is a major public health problem globally, with the highest rates in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in the Americas and southern Africa. Parenting programmes in high-income countries can diminish risk for violence, by reducing risk factors such as child aggression and harsh parenting, and increasing protective factors such as child cognitive development and school readiness. However, there is critical need to identify low-cost programmes with replicable benefits that work in real-world LMICs contexts. A three-arm, randomised, single-blind trial evaluated effects of two low-cost, group-based parenting programmes recommended for LMICs (ACT: Raising Safe Kids; DBS: dialogic book-sharing) on child aggression (primary outcome), child development, parenting, maltreatment, and stress. Participants were 369 children with medium-high levels of aggression (mean age 3.1 years at baseline) in poor households. Interventions were implemented in city health and education services in southern Brazil. Maternal reports, filmed observations, child tasks, and hair cortisol were assessed at baseline, 1-month post-intervention, and 8-month follow-up. Intention-to-treat analyses compared each of ACT and DBS with a control group. Three hundred sixty-eight (99.7%) participants completed follow-up assessments 8 months after the interventions. There was no effect of ACT (standardised mean difference, SMD 0.11, 95% CI - 0.05, 0.27) or DBS (SMD 0.05, 95% CI - 0.11, 0.21) on the primary outcome of child aggression. ACT reduced harsh parenting behaviour post-intervention (SMD - 0.23; 95% CI - 0.46, - 0.01), but not at follow-up. DBS improved book-sharing practices at both time points (e.g., maternal sensitivity at follow-up SMD 0.33; 95% CI 0.08, 0.57). There were no benefits of either programme for other parenting, child development, or stress outcomes. Two parenting programmes in Brazil had small effects on parenting practices but did not reduce child aggression or several other important risk/protective factors for violence. Effective early interventions that reduce violence in real-world LMIC settings are highly desirable but may be challenging to achieve.
Association between serum magnesium levels and cognitive function in patients undergoing hemodialysis
Kato K, Nakashima A, Shinagawa S, Kobayashi A, Ohkido I, Urashima M and Yokoo T
The relationship between chronic kidney disease-mineral and bone disorder (CKD-MBD) and cognitive function remains largely unknown. This cross-sectional study aimed to explore the association between CKD-MBD and cognitive function in patients on hemodialysis.
Detection of anxiety symptoms and disorders in older adults: a diagnostic accuracy systematic review
Atchison K, Wu P, Samii L, Walsh M, Ismail Z, Iaboni A and Goodarzi Z
Anxiety symptoms and disorders are common in older adults and often go undetected. A systematic review was completed to identify tools that can be used to detect anxiety symptoms and disorders in community-dwelling older adults.
A world-wide study on delirium assessments and presence of protocols
Nydahl P, Liu K, Bellelli G, Benbenishty J, van den Boogaard M, Caplan G, Chung CR, Elhadi M, Gurjar M, Heras-La Calle G, Hoffmann M, Jeitziner MM, Krewulak K, Mailhot T, Morandi A, Nawa RK, Oh ES, Collet MO, Paulino MC, Lindroth H, von Haken R and
Delirium is a common complication of older people in hospitals, rehabilitation and long-term facilities.
Neural Responses to Auditory Food Stimuli Following Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Binge-Eating Disorder
Chao AM, Agarwal K, Zhou Y, Grilo CM, Gur RC, Joseph P, Shinohara RT, Richmond TS and Wadden TA
Adults with binge-eating disorder (BED), compared with those without BED, demonstrate higher blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) response to food cues in reward-related regions of the brain. It is not known whether cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) can reverse this reward system hyperactivation. This randomized controlled trial (RCT) assessed changes in BOLD response to binge-eating cues following CBT versus wait-list control (WLC).
Changes in prevalence and incidence of dementia and risk factors for dementia: an analysis from cohort studies
Mukadam N, Wolters FJ, Walsh S, Wallace L, Brayne C, Matthews FE, Sacuiu S, Skoog I, Seshadri S, Beiser A, Ghosh S and Livingston G
Some cohort studies have reported a decline in dementia prevalence and incidence over time, although these findings have not been consistent across studies. We reviewed evidence on changes in dementia prevalence and incidence over time using published population-based cohort studies that had used consistent methods with each wave and aimed to quantify associated changes in risk factors over time using population attributable fractions (PAFs).
A Tailored Virtual Program for Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment Among Liver Transplant Candidates and Recipients Is Feasible and Associated With Lower Post-Transplant Relapse
Goswami A, Weinberg E, Coraluzzi L, Bittermann T, Nahas J, Addis S, Weinrieb R and Serper M
Alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) is a leading indication for liver transplant (LT) in the United States. Rates of early liver transplant (ELT) with less than 6 months of sobriety have increased substantially. Patients who receive ELT commonly have alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH) and are often too ill to complete an intensive outpatient program (IOP) for alcohol use disorder (AUD) prior to LT. ELT recipients feel alienated from traditional IOPs.
Association Between Telecommuting Preference-frequency mismatch and Insomnia among Japanese Workers in the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Prospective Cohort study
Hamada S, Okawara M, Tateishi S, Eguchi H, Tsuji M, Ogami A, Mori K, Matsuda S, Yoshimura R, Fujino Y and
We hypothesized that telecommuting's impact on sleep varied based on preference-frequency mismatch. Here, we evaluated this relationship in a large cohort of Japanese workers.
Integrating Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder into Rural, Primary Care Settings
Wyse JJ, Eckhardt A, Newell S, Gordon AJ, Morasco BJ, Carlson K, Korthuis PT, Ono SS and Lovejoy TI
Medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) including buprenorphine are effective, but underutilized. Rural patients experience pronounced disparities in access. To reach rural patients, the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has sought to expand buprenorphine prescribing beyond specialty settings and into primary care.
"How" web searches change under stress
Kelly CA, Blain B and Sharot T
To adjust to stressful environments, people seek information. Here, we show that in response to stressful public and private events the high-level features of information people seek online alter, reflecting their motives for seeking knowledge. We first show that when people want information to guide action they selectively ask "How" questions. Next, we reveal that "How" searches submitted to Google increased dramatically during the pandemic (controlling for search volume). Strikingly, the proportion of these searches predicted weekly self-reported stress of ~ 17K individuals. To rule out third factors we manipulate stress and find that "How" searches increase in response to stressful, personal, events. The findings suggest that under stress people ask questions to guide action, and mental state is reflected in features that tap into why people seek information rather than the topics they search for. Tracking such features may provide clues regrading population stress levels.
Examining the association between prenatal cannabis exposure and child autism traits: A multi-cohort investigation in the environmental influences on child health outcome program
Nutor C, Dickerson AS, Hsu T, Al-Jadiri A, Camargo CA, Schweitzer JB, Shuster CL, Karagas MR, Madan JC, Restrepo B, Schmidt RJ, Lugo-Candelas C, Neiderhiser J, Sathyanarayana S, Dunlop AL, Brennan PA and
This study examined the association between prenatal cannabis exposure and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) diagnoses and traits. A total sample of 11,570 children (ages 1-18; 53% male; 25% Hispanic; 60% White) from 34 cohorts of the National Institutes of Health-funded environmental influences on child health outcomes consortium were included in analyses. Results from generalized linear mixed models replicated previous studies showing that associations between prenatal cannabis exposure and ASD traits in children are not significant when controlling for relevant covariates, particularly tobacco exposure. Child biological sex did not moderate the association between prenatal cannabis exposure and ASD. In a large sample and measuring ASD traits continuously, there was no evidence that prenatal cannabis exposure increases the risk for ASD. This work helps to clarify previous mixed findings by addressing concerns about statistical power and ASD measurement.
Alcohol rehabilitation and cancer risk: a nationwide hospital cohort study in France
Schwarzinger M, Ferreira-Borges C, Neufeld M, Alla F and Rehm J
Even though alcohol consumption is an established risk factor for cancer, evidence regarding the effect of a reduction or cessation of alcohol consumption on cancer incidence is scarce. Our main study aim was to assess the effect of alcohol rehabilitation and abstinence on cancer incidence in people with alcohol dependence.
Improving access to buprenorphine for rural veterans in a learning health care system
Wyse JJ, Mackey K, Kauzlarich KA, Morasco BJ, Carlson KF, Gordon AJ, Korthuis PT, Eckhardt A, Newell S, Ono SS and Lovejoy TI
To describe a learning health care system research process designed to increase buprenorphine prescribing for the treatment of opioid use disorder (OUD) in rural primary care settings within U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) treatment facilities.
Health Care Team Interventions to Reduce Distress Behaviors in Older Adults: A Systematic Review
Ramos K, Shepherd-Banigan M, McDermott C, McConnell ES, Raman SR, Chen D, Der T, Tabriz AA, Boggan JC, Boucher NA, Carlson SM, Joseph L, Sims CA, Ma JE, Gordon AM, Dennis P, Snyder J, Jacobs M, Cantrell S, Gierisch JM and Goldstein KM
This review examines health care team-focused interventions on managing persistent or recurrent distress behaviors among older adults in long-term residential or inpatient health care settings.
Why Psychological Problems Presage Cardiometabolic Health Problems
Lahey BB
Temporal dynamics of depressive symptoms and cognitive decline in the oldest old: dynamic time warp analysis of the Leiden 85-plus study
van der Slot AJC, Bertens AS, Trompet S, Mooijaart SP, Gussekloo J, van den Bos F and Giltay EJ
The prevalence of depressive symptoms and cognitive decline increases with age. We investigated their temporal dynamics in individuals aged 85 and older across a 5-year follow-up period.
Using Medical Records to Investigate the Genetics of Treatment-Resistant Depression Across Health Care Systems
Polimanti R
The ReCoDe addiction research consortium: Losing and regaining control over drug intake-Findings and future perspectives
Spanagel R, Bach P, Banaschewski T, Beck A, Bermpohl F, Bernardi RE, Beste C, Deserno L, Durstewitz D, Ebner-Priemer U, Endrass T, Ersche KD, Feld G, Gerchen MF, Gerlach B, Goschke T, Hansson AC, Heim C, Kiebel S, Kiefer F, Kirsch P, Kirschbaum C, Koppe G, Lenz B, Liu S, Marxen M, Meinhardt MW, Meyer-Lindenberg A, Montag C, Müller CP, Nagel WE, Oliveria AMM, Owald D, Pilhatsch M, Priller J, Rapp MA, Reichert M, Ripke S, Ritter K, Romanczuk-Seiferth N, Schlagenhauf F, Schwarz E, Schwöbel S, Smolka MN, Soekadar SR, Sommer WH, Stock AK, Ströhle A, Tost H, Vollstädt-Klein S, Walter H, Waschke T, Witt SH, Heinz A and
Substance use disorders (SUDs) are seen as a continuum ranging from goal-directed and hedonic drug use to loss of control over drug intake with aversive consequences for mental and physical health and social functioning. The main goals of our interdisciplinary German collaborative research centre on Losing and Regaining Control over Drug Intake (ReCoDe) are (i) to study triggers (drug cues, stressors, drug priming) and modifying factors (age, gender, physical activity, cognitive functions, childhood adversity, social factors, such as loneliness and social contact/interaction) that longitudinally modulate the trajectories of losing and regaining control over drug consumption under real-life conditions. (ii) To study underlying behavioural, cognitive and neurobiological mechanisms of disease trajectories and drug-related behaviours and (iii) to provide non-invasive mechanism-based interventions. These goals are achieved by: (A) using innovative mHealth (mobile health) tools to longitudinally monitor the effects of triggers and modifying factors on drug consumption patterns in real life in a cohort of 900 patients with alcohol use disorder. This approach will be complemented by animal models of addiction with 24/7 automated behavioural monitoring across an entire disease trajectory; i.e. from a naïve state to a drug-taking state to an addiction or resilience-like state. (B) The identification and, if applicable, computational modelling of key molecular, neurobiological and psychological mechanisms (e.g., reduced cognitive flexibility) mediating the effects of such triggers and modifying factors on disease trajectories. (C) Developing and testing non-invasive interventions (e.g., Just-In-Time-Adaptive-Interventions (JITAIs), various non-invasive brain stimulations (NIBS), individualized physical activity) that specifically target the underlying mechanisms for regaining control over drug intake. Here, we will report on the most important results of the first funding period and outline our future research strategy.
Towards a Novel Frontier in the Use of Epigenetic Clocks in Epidemiology
Martínez-Magaña JJ, Hurtado-Soriano J, Rivero-Segura NA, Montalvo-Ortiz JL, Garcia-delaTorre P, Becerril-Rojas K and Gomez-Verjan JC
Health problems associated with aging are a major public health concern for the future. Aging is a complex process with wide intervariability among individuals. Therefore, there is a need for innovative public health strategies that target factors associated with aging and the development of tools to assess the effectiveness of these strategies accurately. Novel approaches to measure biological age, such as epigenetic clocks, have become relevant. These clocks use non-sequential variable information from the genome and employ mathematical algorithms to estimate biological age based on DNA methylation levels. Therefore, in the present study, we comprehensively review the current status of the epigenetic clocks and their associations across the human phenome. We emphasize the potential utility of these tools in an epidemiological context, particularly in evaluating the impact of public health interventions focused on promoting healthy aging. Our review describes associations between epigenetic clocks and multiple traits across the life and health span. Additionally, we highlighted the evolution of studies beyond mere associations to establish causal mechanisms between epigenetic age and disease. We explored the application of epigenetic clocks to measure the efficacy of interventions focusing on rejuvenation.
Prescription Medication Use in Pregnancy in People with Disabilities: A Population-Based Cohort Study
Camden A, Grandi SM, Lunsky Y, Ray JG, Sharpe I, Lu H, Guttmann A, Tailor L, Vigod S, De Vera MA and Brown HK
Individuals with disabilities may require specific medications in pregnancy. The prevalence and patterns of medication use, overall and for medications with known teratogenic risks, are largely unknown. This population-based cohort study in Ontario, Canada, 2004-2021, comprised all recognized pregnancies among individuals eligible for public drug plan coverage. Included were those with a physical ( = 44,136), sensory ( = 13,633), intellectual or developmental ( = 2,446) disability, or multiple disabilities ( = 5,064), compared with those without a disability ( = 299,944). Prescription medication use in pregnancy, overall and by type, was described. Modified Poisson regression generated relative risks (aRR) for the use of medications with known teratogenic risks and use of ≥2 and ≥5 medications concurrently in pregnancy, comparing those with versus without a disability, adjusting for sociodemographic and clinical factors. Medication use in pregnancy was more common in people with intellectual or developmental (82.1%), multiple (80.4%), physical (73.9%), and sensory (71.9%) disabilities, than in those with no known disability (67.4%). Compared with those without a disability (5.7%), teratogenic medication use in pregnancy was especially higher in people with multiple disabilities (14.2%; aRR 2.03, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.88-2.20). Furthermore, compared with people without a disability (3.2%), the use of ≥5 medications concurrently was more common in those with multiple disabilities (13.4%; aRR 2.21, 95% CI: 2.02-2.41) and an intellectual or developmental disability (9.3%; aRR 2.13, 95% CI: 1.86-2.45). Among people with disabilities, medication use in pregnancy is prevalent, especially for potentially teratogenic medications and polypharmacy, highlighting the need for preconception counseling/monitoring to reduce medication-related harm in pregnancy.
Antidepressants and Bipolar Disorder: The Plot Thickens
Gottlieb N and Young AH
Admixture mapping of cognitive function in diverse Hispanic and Latino adults: Results from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos
Xia R, Jian X, Rodrigue AL, Bressler J, Boerwinkle E, Cui B, Daviglus ML, DeCarli C, Gallo LC, Glahn DC, Knowles EEM, Moon JY, Mosley TH, Satizabal CL, Sofer T, Tarraf W, Testai F, Blangero J, Seshadri S, González HM and Fornage M
We conducted admixture mapping and fine-mapping analyses to identify ancestry-of-origin loci influencing cognitive abilities.
A Nationwide Target Trial Emulation Assessing the Risk of Antidepressant-Induced Mania Among Patients With Bipolar Depression
Rohde C, Østergaard SD and Jefsen OH
Antidepressants are commonly used to treat bipolar depression but may increase the risk of mania. The evidence from randomized controlled trials, however, is limited by short treatment durations, providing little evidence for the long-term risk of antidepressant-induced mania. The authors performed a target trial emulation to compare the risk of mania among individuals with bipolar depression treated or not treated with antidepressants over a 1-year period.
The Role of Atypicals With Regard to Weight Gain in Bipolar Disorder Treatment: Response to Mattes
Najar H, Pålsson E and Landén M
Reproductive hormones in relation to white matter hyperintensity volumes among midlife women
Thurston RC, Chang Y, Wu M, Harrison EM, Aizenstein HJ, Derby CA, Barinas-Mitchell E and Maki PM
Although reproductive hormones are implicated in cerebral small vessel disease in women, few studies consider measured hormones in relation to white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV), a key indicator of cerebral small vessel disease. Even fewer studies consider estrone (E1), the primary postmenopausal estrogen, or follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), an indicator of ovarian age. We tested associations of estradiol (E2), E1, and FSH to WMHV among women.
Genetic analyses point to alterations in immune-related pathways underpinning the association between psychiatric disorders and COVID-19
Monistrol-Mula A, Diaz-Torres S, Felez-Nobrega M, Haro JM, Medland SE and Mitchell BL
Current literature suggests that people with psychiatric disorders have a higher risk of COVID-19 infection and a worse prognosis of the disease. We aimed to study the genetic contribution to these associations across seven psychiatric disorders as well as a general psychopathology factor (P-factor) and determine whether these are unique or shared across psychiatric disorders using statistical genetic techniques. Using the largest available genome-wide association studies (GWAS), we found a significant genetic overlap between depression, ADHD, PTSD, and the P-factor with both COVID-19 infection and hospitalization, and between anxiety and COVID-19 hospitalization. We used pairwise GWAS to examine this overlap on a fine-grained scale and identified specific regions of the genome shared between several psychiatric disorders, the P-factor, and COVID-19. Gene-based analysis in these genomic regions suggested possible links with immune-related pathways such as thyroid homeostasis, inflammation, and stress response. Finally, we show preliminary evidence for causal associations between depression, ADHD, PTSD, and the P-factor, and higher COVID-19 infection and hospitalization using Mendelian Randomization and Latent Causal Variable methods. Our results support the hypothesis that the relationship between psychiatric disorders and COVID-19 risk is likely due to shared alterations in immune-related pathways and is not a result of environmental factors alone, shedding light on potentially viable therapeutic targets.
The COVID-19 Pandemic Led To A Large Decline In Physician Gross Revenue Across All Specialties In 2020
Parikh RB, Emanuel EJ, Zhao Y, Pagnotti DR, Pathak PS, Hagen S, Pizza DA and Navathe AS
US health care use declined during the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Although utilization is known to have recovered in 2021 and 2022, it is unknown how revenue in 2020-22 varied by physician specialty and practice setting. This study linked medical claims from a large national federation of commercial health plans to physician and practice data to estimate pandemic-associated impacts on physician revenue (defined as payments to eligible physicians) by specialty and practice characteristics. Surgical specialties, emergency medicine, and medical subspecialties each experienced a greater than 9 percent adjusted gross revenue decline in 2020 relative to prepandemic baselines. By 2022, pathology and psychiatry revenue experienced robust recovery, whereas surgical and oncology revenue remained at or below baseline. Revenue recovery in 2022 was greater for physicians practicing in hospital-owned practices and in practices participating in accountable care organizations. Pandemic-associated revenue recovery in 2021 and 2022 varied by specialty and practice type. Given that physician financial instability is associated with health care consolidation and leaving practice, policy makers should closely monitor revenue trends among physicians in specialties or practice settings with sustained gross revenue reductions during the pandemic.
Developing inclusive public involvement and engagement activities with secondary school students and educational professionals: a protocol
Cross L, Banham D, Melendez-Torres GJ, Ford T, van Sluijs E and Liabo K
Public involvement and engagement (PI&E) is increasingly recognised as an important component of research. It can offer valuable insights from those with experiential knowledge to improve research quality, relevance, and reach. Similarly, schools are ever more common sites for health research and, more recently, PI&E. However, 'gold-standard' practice is yet to be established, and activities/approaches remain underreported. As a result, knowledge can remain localised or lost. Diversity and inclusion also remains a challenge.
Graded Exposure Therapy for Fear Avoidance Behaviour After Concussion (GET FAB): protocol for a multisite Canadian randomised controlled trial
Mikolic A, Klotz T, Brasher P, Yeates K, Vranceanu AM, Kendall KD, Snell DL, Debert CT, Bayley M, Panenka W, Cairncross M, Hunt C, Burke M, Tartaglia MC, Silverberg N and
Persistent symptoms after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) negatively affect daily functioning and quality of life. Fear avoidance behaviour, a coping style in which people avoid or escape from activities or situations that they expect will exacerbate their symptoms, maybe a particularly potent and modifiable risk factor for chronic disability after mTBI. This study will evaluate the efficacy of graded exposure therapy (GET) for reducing persistent symptoms following mTBI, with two primary aims: (1) To determine whether GET is more effective than usual care; (2) to identify for whom GET is the most effective treatment option, by evaluating whether baseline fear avoidance moderates differences between GET and an active comparator (prescribed aerobic exercise). Our findings will guide evidence-based care after mTBI and enable better matching of mTBI patients to treatments.
Mid- and late-life lifestyle activities as main drivers of general and domain-specific cognitive reserve in individuals with Parkinson's disease: cross-sectional and longitudinal evidence from the LANDSCAPE study
Ophey A, Wirtz K, Wolfsgruber S, Balzer-Geldsetzer M, Berg D, Hilker-Roggendorf R, Kassubek J, Liepelt-Scarfone I, Becker S, Mollenhauer B, Reetz K, Riedel O, Schulz JB, Storch A, Trenkwalder C, Witt K, Wittchen HU, Dodel R, Roeske S and Kalbe E
Cognitive reserve (CR) is considered a protective factor for cognitive function and may explain interindividual differences of cognitive performance given similar levels of neurodegeneration, e.g., in Alzheimer´s disease. Recent evidence suggests that CR is also relevant in Parkinson's disease (PD).
Cannabis-related treatment demand at the eve of German cannabis legalization - a 20-years trend analysis
Stampf A, Schwarzkopf L, Batalla A, Feingold D, Fischer B, Hoch E and
Post-2000, the prevalence of cannabis consumption has been rising internationally. This paper investigates whether cannabis-related treatment demand in German outpatient addiction care facilities (OACFs) has been following this trend. Treatment demand related to cannabis use disorder (CUD) for the period 2001 to 2021 was investigated using data from the nation-wide standardized German Addiction Care Statistical Service. Analyses covered all and first-time treatment admissions, demographics, and treatment outcomes. We identified years with significant changes in slope or direction of trends through joinpoint regression. Trends within the CUD client population were contrasted with trends among the entire OACF client population. CUD is the second-most common cause for OACF admissions in Germany. Between 2001 and 2021, the share of CUD-related cases among total OACF caseload increased from 7.1 to 19.9%, whereby the share of first-time treatment admissions declined from 79.6 to 55.6%. The share of CUD client population > 35 years almost tripled from 6.0 to 17.4%, that of female client population rose from 15.6 to 18.1%. From 2001 to 2007, the share of CUD-related treatments completed with improved symptomatology increased from 54.7 to 65.6%, followed by a marginal decline. CUD-related treatment demand is growing in Germany's OACFs, involving a client population that is increasingly older and more experienced with the addiction care system. As current intervention programmes mainly target adolescents and young adults who have been consuming cannabis only for a short time, adapting service offers to the changing client profiles appears paramount to improve treatment effectiveness.
When, Why and How to Re-challenge Clozapine in Schizophrenia Following Myocarditis
Qubad M, Dupont G, Hahn M, Martin SS, Puntmann V, Nagel E, Reif A and Bittner RA
Clozapine-induced myocarditis (CIM) is among the most important adverse events limiting the use of clozapine as the most effective treatment for schizophrenia. CIM necessitates the immediate termination of clozapine, often resulting in its permanent discontinuation with considerable detrimental effects on patients' psychopathology and long-term outcome. Consequently, a clozapine re-challenge after CIM is increasingly regarded as a viable alternative, with published reports indicating a success rate of approximately 60%. However, published cases of re-challenges after CIM remain limited. Here, we provide a narrative review of the current state of research regarding the epidemiology, pathophysiology, risk factors, diagnosis and clinical management of CIM as well as a synthesis of current recommendations for re-challenging patients after CIM. This includes a step-by-step guide for this crucial procedure based on the current evidence regarding the pathophysiology and risk factors for CIM. Slow dose titration regimes and addressing risk factors including concomitant valproate and olanzapine are crucial both to prevent CIM and to ensure a safe and successful re-challenge. Furthermore, we discuss the utility of C-reactive protein, troponin, N-terminal-pro hormone and brain natriuretic peptide, therapeutic drug-monitoring and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging for CIM screening and diagnosis as well as for post-CIM re-challenges.
Subjective cognitive concerns, APOE ε4, PTSD symptoms, and risk for dementia among older veterans
Neale ZE, Fonda JR, Miller MW, Wolf EJ, Zhang R, Sherva R, Harrington KM, Merritt V, Panizzon MS, Hauger RL, Gaziano JM, and Logue MW
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI) are associated with self-reported problems with cognition as well as risk for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD). Overlapping symptom profiles observed in cognitive disorders, psychiatric disorders, and environmental exposures (e.g., head injury) can complicate the detection of early signs of ADRD. The interplay between PTSD, head injury, subjective (self-reported) cognitive concerns and genetic risk for ADRD is also not well understood, particularly in diverse ancestry groups.
Do engagement and behavioural mechanisms underpin the effectiveness of the Drink Less app?
Garnett C, Dinu LM, Oldham M, Perski O, Loebenberg G, Beard E, Angus C, Burton R, Field M, Greaves F, Hickman M, Kaner E, Michie S, Munafò M, Pizzo E and Brown J
This is a process evaluation of a large UK-based randomised controlled trial (RCT) (n = 5602) evaluating the effectiveness of recommending an alcohol reduction app, Drink Less, compared with usual digital care in reducing alcohol consumption in increasing and higher risk drinkers. The aim was to understand whether participants' engagement ('self-reported adherence') and behavioural characteristics were mechanisms of action underpinning the effectiveness of Drink Less. Self-reported adherence with both digital tools was over 70% (Drink Less: 78.0%, 95% CI = 77.6-78.4; usual digital care: 71.5%, 95% CI = 71.0-71.9). Self-reported adherence to the intervention (average causal mediation effect [ACME] = -0.250, 95% CI = -0.42, -0.11) and self-monitoring behaviour (ACME = -0.235, 95% CI = -0.44, -0.03) both partially mediated the effect of the intervention (versus comparator) on alcohol reduction. Following the recommendation (self-reported adherence) and the tracking (self-monitoring behaviour) feature of the Drink Less app appear to be important mechanisms of action for alcohol reduction among increasing and higher risk drinkers.
Experiences of telehealth during and after the COVID-19 pandemic and preferences for future care of people with systemic sclerosis: a cross-sectional study
Nassar EL, Virgili-Gervais G, Carrier ME, Kwakkenbos L, Henry RS, Hu S, Provencher S, Golberg M, Bartlett SJ, Mouthon L, Patten SB, Varga J, Benedetti A, Thombs BD and
Urinary metabolite concentrations of phthalate and plasticizers in infancy and childhood in the UNC Baby Connectome Project
Thistle JE, Liu CW, Rager JE, Singer AB, Chen D, Manley CK, Piven J, Gilmore J, Keil AP, Starling AP, Zhu H, Lin W, Lu K and Engel SM
Existing evidence suggests that exposure to phthalates is higher among younger age groups. However, limited knowledge exists on how phthalate exposure, as well as exposure to replacement plasticizers, di(isononyl) cyclohexane-1,2-dicarboxylate (DINCH) and di-2-ethylhexyl terephthalate (DEHTP), change from infancy through early childhood.
Individual Patient Data Meta-Analysis Estimates the Minimal Detectable Change of the Geriatric Depression Scale-15
González-Domínguez NP, Wu Y, Fan S, Levis B, Sun Y, Gilbody S, Ioannidis JPA, Harel D, Vigod SN, Markham S, Ziegelstein RC, Cuijpers P, Patten SB, Boruff JT, Thombs BD, Benedetti A and
To use individual participant data meta-analysis (IPDMA) to estimate the minimal detectable change (MDC) of the Geriatric Depression Scale-15 (GDS-15) and to examine whether MDC may differ based on participant characteristics and study-level variables.
DNA Methylation Mediates the Association between Cardiometabolic Risk Factors and Cognition: Findings from the Health and Retirement Study
Wan Z, Chibnik LB, Valeri L, Hughes TM, Blacker D and Ma Y
The association between cardiometabolic risk factors and cognitive function has been well documented, but the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. This longitudinal study aimed to investigate the potential mediating role of DNA methylation in this association. We conducted the analyses in 3708 participants (mean [SD] age: 67.3 [9.49], women: 57.9%) from the Health and Retirement Study who were assessed in the 2014 to 2020 waves, had Infinium Methylation EPIC BeadChip methylation assays from the 2016 Venous Blood Study, and had cognitive assessment between 2016-2020. Causal mediation analyses were used to test the mediation role of DNA methylation in the associations between cardiometabolic risk factors and cognition, adjusting for demographic, socioeconomic, and lifestyle factors. Hypertension (-0.061 in composite cognitive z-score; 95% CI: (-0.119, -0.004)) and diabetes (-0.134; 95% CI: (-0.198, -0.071)) were significantly associated with worse cognitive function while abnormal BMI and hypercholesterolemia were not. An increased number of cardiometabolic risk factors was associated with worse cognitive function (P=0.002). DNA methylation significantly mediated the association of hypertension (mediated effect on composite cognitive z-score: -0.023; 95% CI: (-0.033, -0.014)), diabetes (-0.022; 95% CI: (-0.032, -0.014)), and obesity (-0.021; 95% CI: (-0.033, -0.011)) with cognitive function, while the mediation effect was not observed for having hypercholesterolemia. The estimated proportions mediated were 37.4% for hypertension and 16.7% for diabetes. DNA methylation may be an important mediator linking cardiometabolic risk factors to worse cognition and might even provide a potential target for dementia prevention.
Cross-sectional association between posttraumatic stress and cognition is moderated by pulmonary functioning in world trade center responders
Choi J, Hall CB, Clouston SAP, Cleven KL, Mann FD, Luft BJ and Zammit AR
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptomatology and poorer pulmonary function are highly prevalent psychiatric and medical conditions. In the present study, we tested for the individual, additive, and modifying associations of PTSD symptomatology and pulmonary function with cognitive performance.
Snoring and risk of dementia: a prospective cohort and Mendelian randomization study
Gao Y, Andrews S, Daghlas I, Brenowitz WD, Raji CA, Yaffe K and Leng Y
The association between snoring, a very common condition that increases with age, and dementia risk is controversial. We aimed to investigate the observational and causal relationship between snoring and dementia, and to elucidate the role of body mass index (BMI).
Sex-specific impact of inflammation on traditional cardiovascular risk factors and atherosclerosis in axial spondyloarthritis. A multicentre study of 913 patients
Ferraz-Amaro I, Genre F, Blanco R, Calvo-Rio V, Corrales-Selaya C, Portilla V, Aurrecoechea E, Batanero R, Hernández-Hernández V, Quevedo-Abeledo JC, Rodríguez-Lozano C, López-Medina C, Ladehesa-Pineda L, Castañeda S, Vicente-Rabaneda EF, Fernández-Carballido C, Martínez Vidal MP, Castro Corredor D, Anino Fernández J, Peiteado D, Plasencia-Rodriguez C, Expósito R, Garcia Vivar ML, Galíndez-Agirregoikoa E, Vegas N, Urionagüena I, Montes-Perez E, Gonzalez-Gay MA and Rueda-Gotor J
The nature of the relationship between inflammation, cardiovascular (CV) risk factors and atherosclerosis in axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) remains largely unknown and sex differences in this regard are yet to be assessed.
Fluctuations in therapist responsiveness facing clients with borderline personality disorder: Starting therapy on the right foot
Culina I, Ranjbar S, Nadel I and Kramer U
The present paper focuses on therapist responsiveness during the initial therapy session with clients with borderline personality disorder (BPD), aiming to analyze therapist responsiveness at short intervals during the initial session and determine if it can predict therapeutic alliance from both therapist and client viewpoints.
Immersive virtual reality as a novel approach to investigate the association between adverse events and adolescent paranoid ideation
Gayer-Anderson C, Knowles G, Beards S, Turner A, Stanyon D, Davis S, Blakey R, Lowis K, Dorn L, Ofori A, Rus-Calafell M, Morgan C and Valmaggia L
Paranoid ideation is common among adolescents, yet little is known about the precursors. Using a novel immersive virtual reality (VR) paradigm, we tested whether experiences of bullying, and other interpersonal/threatening events, are associated with paranoid ideation to a greater degree than other types of (i) non-interpersonal events or (ii) adverse childhood experiences.
Follow-up of telemedicine mental health interventions amid COVID-19 pandemic
Roncero C, Díaz-Trejo S, Álvarez-Lamas E, García-Ullán L, Bersabé-Pérez M, Benito-Sánchez JA and González-Sánchez A
The initiation of the program Mental Health Support Program for Coronavirus Infection addressed the increased demand for mental health services in the province of Salamanca, resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. The psychiatry service provided care for COVID-19 patients, their families, and healthcare workers who treated them, as these groups were identified as being at risk. This study aims to describe the assistance provided, including personnel and resources utilized, types of interventions carried out, and to assess the demand for mental health care and predominant symptoms and emotions experienced by patients. Billboards and the complex's intranet publicized the program. Specific clinical approach using telemedicine were provide from March 2020 to December 2021 to COVID-19 patients, their relatives, and healthcare workers. 216 patients were included with a mean age of 53.2 years, with women comprising 77.3% of this group. All the groups received treatment in similar proportions. Over a period of 730 h, a total of 1376 interventions were performed, with an average duration of 31.8 min per intervention. The program could treat 79.6% of these patients without requiring referrals to other services. When the program concluded, only 21 participants (9.7%) were discharged to the local mental health network to continue their mental health treatment. The program effectively reduced the burden on regular mental health services due to its ability to treat most patients without requiring referrals. The program was able to attend to most mental health requests with minimal involvement of the regular mental health service.
Beyond the Norm: epidemiology of irritable bowel syndrome and mental health among sexual and gender-diverse young adults in a large representative cohort
Bootsma E, Jansen L, van Houte K, Kessler RC, Tack J, Bruffaerts R and
Antipsychotic Discontinuation and New Trazodone Use in Ontario Nursing Homes: Evidence of Medication Substitution
Harris DA, Maclagan LC, Pequeno P, Iaboni A, Austin PC, Rosella LC, Guan J, Maxwell CJ and Bronskill SE
An unintended consequence of efforts to reduce antipsychotic medications in nursing homes is the increase in use of other psychotropic medications; however, evidence of substitution remains limited. Our objective was to measure individual-level prescribing patterns consistent with substitution of trazodone for antipsychotics.
Ending Weight Stigma to Advance Health Equity
Pearl RL, Donze LF, Rosas LG, Agurs-Collins T, Baskin ML, Breland JY, Shanks CB, Stowers KC, Johnson S, Lee BY, Martin MY, Mujuru P, Odoms-Young A, Panza E, Pronk NP, Calicutt K, Nadglowski J, Nece PM, Tedder M, Chow LS, Krishnamurti H, Jay M, Xi D, Jastreboff AM and Stanford FC
Maternal vitamin D levels during pregnancy and offspring schizophrenia
Sourander A, Upadhyaya S, Surcel HM, Hinkka-Yli-Salomäki S, Cheslack-Postava K, Silwal S, McKeague IW and Brown AS
Findings from previous studies on maternal 25(OH)D levels during pregnancy and offspring schizophrenia are limited and inconsistent.
Longitudinal changes in functional neural activation and sensitization during face processing in fragile X syndrome
Gao Y, Li R, Ma Q, Bartholomay KL, Lightbody AA and Reiss AL
Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is a genetic condition associated with increased risk for social anxiety and avoidance. Using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), we previously demonstrated aberrant neural activity responding to faces in young girls with FXS cross-sectionally. Here, we tested the hypothesis that abnormalities in neural activation and sensitization would increase with age in 65 girls with FXS, ages 5-16 years, relative to an age-matched control group of 52 girls who had comparable cognitive function and clinical symptoms.
A comprehensive genetic variant reference for the Chinese population
Jiang T, Guo H, Liu Y, Li G, Cui Z, Cui X, Liu Y, Li Y, Zhang A, Cao S, Zhao T, Juan L, Kong W, Chen M, Liu D, Liu H, Zhang Y, Xu K, Wang Y, He M, Guo J, Lu M, Chen J, Zhao X, Zhao G, Dang S, Chen C, Wu X, Qin Q, Li Y, Shen H, Jin L, Liu B, Chen X, Zhao Y and Wang Y
Development and validation of machine-learning algorithms predicting retention, overdoses, and all-cause mortality among US military veterans treated with buprenorphine for opioid use disorder
J Hayes C, Bin Noor N, Raciborski RA, C Martin B, J Gordon A, J Hoggatt K, Hudson T and A Cucciare M
Buprenorphine for opioid use disorder (B-MOUD) is essential to improving patient outcomes; however, retention is essential.
The importance of mother-child interaction on smart device usage and behavior outcomes among toddlers: a longitudinal study
Chakranon P, Huang JP, Au HK, Lin CL, Chen YY, Mao SP, Lin WY, Zou ML, Estinfort W and Chen YH
In recent years, smart devices have become an integral part of daily life. However, longitudinal studies, particularly those regarding the relationship between toddlers' smart device usage and behavioral outcomes, are limited. Understanding the impact of parent-child interactions on this relationship is crucial for enhancing toddlers' developmental outcomes. Accordingly, this study examined the influence of early screen time and media content exposure on toddlers' behaviors, as well as the positive effects of mother-child interactions on this influence.
Estimating substance use disparities across intersectional social positions using machine learning: An application of group-lasso interaction network
McCabe CJ, Helm JL, Halvorson MA, Blaikie KJ, Lee CM and Rhew IC
An aim of quantitative intersectional research is to model the joint impact of multiple social positions on health risk behaviors. Although moderated multiple regression is frequently used to pursue intersectional research hypotheses, such parametric approaches may produce unreliable effect estimates due to data sparsity and high dimensionality. Machine learning provides viable alternatives, offering greater flexibility in evaluating many candidate interactions amid sparse data conditions, yet remains rarely employed. This study introduces group-lasso interaction network (glinternet), a novel machine learning approach involving hierarchical regularization, to assess intersectional differences in substance use prevalence.
The criteria used to rule out mild cognitive impairment impact dementia incidence rates in subjective cognitive decline
Whitfield T, Chouliaras L, Morrell R, Rubio D, Radford D, Marchant NL and Walker Z
The research criteria for subjective cognitive decline (SCD) exclude mild cognitive impairment (MCI), but do not stipulate the use of specific MCI criteria. This study compared different approaches to defining (i.e., excluding) MCI during the ascertainment of SCD, focusing on the impact on dementia incidence rates in SCD.
Cognitive performance in adults with post-COVID syndrome: Results from a German case-control study
Zülke AE, Luppa M, Wirkner K, Reusche M, Sander C, Büchner R, Schomerus G, Then Bergh F, Lehmann J, Witte AV, Villringer A, Zeynalova S, Löffler M, Engel C and Riedel-Heller SG
Numerous studies on post-COVID syndrome (PCS) describe persisting symptoms of cognitive impairment. Previous studies, however, often investigated small samples or did not assess covariates possibly linked to cognitive performance. We aimed to describe 1) global and domain-specific cognitive performance in adults with PCS, controls with previous SARS-CoV-2 infection and healthy controls, 2) associations of sociodemographics, depressive symptoms, anxiety, fatigue, somatic symptoms and stress with cognitive performance and subjective cognitive decline (SCD), using data of the LIFE-Long-COVID-Study from Leipzig, Germany. Group differences in cognitive performance and associations with sociodemographic and neuropsychiatric covariates were assessed using multivariable regression analyses. Our study included n = 561 adults (M: 48.8, SD: 12.7; % female: 70.6). Adults with PCS (n = 410) performed worse in tests on episodic memory (b = -1.07, 95 % CI: -1.66, -0.48) and visuospatial abilities (b = -3.92, 95 % CI: -6.01, -1.83) compared to healthy controls (n = 64). No impairments were detected for executive function, verbal fluency, and global cognitive performance. Odds of SCD were not higher in PCS. A previous SARS-CoV-2 infection without PCS (n = 87) was not linked to cognitive impairment. Higher age and higher levels of stress and fatigue were linked to worse performance in several cognitive domains. Routine administration of tests for episodic memory and visuospatial abilities might aid in the identification of individuals at risk for cognitive impairment when reporting symptoms of PCS. Low numbers of participants with severe COVID-19 infections possibly limit generalizability of our findings.
Clinical subtypes of older adults starting long-term care in Japan and their association with prognoses: a data-driven cluster analysis
Ito Y, Iwagami M, Komiyama J, Hamasaki Y, Kuroda N, Suzuki A, Ito T, Goto T, Wan EYF, Lai FTT and Tamiya N
We aimed to identify the clinical subtypes in individuals starting long-term care in Japan and examined their association with prognoses. Using linked medical insurance claims data and survey data for care-need certification in a large city, we identified participants who started long-term care. Grouping them based on 22 diseases recorded in the past 6 months using fuzzy c-means clustering, we examined the longitudinal association between clusters and death or care-need level deterioration within 2 years. We analyzed 4,648 participants (median age 83 [interquartile range 78-88] years, female 60.4%) between October 2014 and March 2019 and categorized them into (i) musculoskeletal and sensory, (ii) cardiac, (iii) neurological, (iv) respiratory and cancer, (v) insulin-dependent diabetes, and (vi) unspecified subtypes. The results of clustering were replicated in another city. Compared with the musculoskeletal and sensory subtype, the adjusted hazard ratio (95% confidence interval) for death was 1.22 (1.05-1.42), 1.81 (1.54-2.13), and 1.21 (1.00-1.46) for the cardiac, respiratory and cancer, and insulin-dependent diabetes subtypes, respectively. The care-need levels more likely worsened in the cardiac, respiratory and cancer, and unspecified subtypes than in the musculoskeletal and sensory subtype. In conclusion, distinct clinical subtypes exist among individuals initiating long-term care.
Longitudinal examination of ENDS characteristics, flavors, and nicotine content for cigarette cessation: Findings from PATH waves 5-6
Erinoso O, Osibogun O, Li W and Kalan ME
A subpopulation of adults who smoke cigarettes use electronic nicotine device systems (ENDS) for cigarette cessation. This study examined the relationship between ENDS flavors, device types, and nicotine concentration with past month cigarette abstinence among adults using ENDS for cigarette cessation.
The role of accelerometer-derived sleep traits on glycated haemoglobin and glucose levels: a Mendelian randomization study
Liu J, Richmond RC, Anderson EL, Bowden J, Barry CS, Dashti HS, Daghlas IS, Lane JM, Kyle SD, Vetter C, Morrison CL, Jones SE, Wood AR, Frayling TM, Wright AK, Carr MJ, Anderson SG, Emsley RA, Ray DW, Weedon MN, Saxena R, Rutter MK and Lawlor DA
Self-reported shorter/longer sleep duration, insomnia, and evening preference are associated with hyperglycaemia in observational analyses, with similar observations in small studies using accelerometer-derived sleep traits. Mendelian randomization (MR) studies support an effect of self-reported insomnia, but not others, on glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c). To explore potential effects, we used MR methods to assess effects of accelerometer-derived sleep traits (duration, mid-point least active 5-h, mid-point most active 10-h, sleep fragmentation, and efficiency) on HbA1c/glucose in European adults from the UK Biobank (UKB) (n = 73,797) and the MAGIC consortium (n = 146,806). Cross-trait linkage disequilibrium score regression was applied to determine genetic correlations across accelerometer-derived, self-reported sleep traits, and HbA1c/glucose. We found no causal effect of any accelerometer-derived sleep trait on HbA1c or glucose. Similar MR results for self-reported sleep traits in the UKB sub-sample with accelerometer-derived measures suggested our results were not explained by selection bias. Phenotypic and genetic correlation analyses suggested complex relationships between self-reported and accelerometer-derived traits indicating that they may reflect different types of exposure. These findings suggested accelerometer-derived sleep traits do not affect HbA1c. Accelerometer-derived measures of sleep duration and quality might not simply be 'objective' measures of self-reported sleep duration and insomnia, but rather captured different sleep characteristics.
Engagement Along the PrEP Care Continuum Among Men Who Have Sex with Men in China: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Wang L, Hong C, Chen L, John SA, Simoni JM, Wong FY, Velloza J and Holloway IW
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), including daily oral, on-demand, and long-acting injectable (LAI), is a promising HIV prevention intervention for men who have sex with men (MSM). We conducted a systematic review on engagement with the PrEP continuum among MSM in China. A total of 756 studies were initially identified and 36 studies were included (N = 26,021). In the 20 studies (N = 13,886) examining PrEP awareness, 32.4% (95% CI: 25.1-40.7) of MSM were aware of PrEP. In the 25 studies (N = 18,587) examining willingness, 54.5% (95% CI: 41.9-66.5) MSM indicated they were willing to use PrEP. The pooled prevalence of PrEP uptake from 9 studies (N = 6,575) was 4.9% (95% CI: 1.4-15.8%), while pooled estimates of adequate adherence from five studies (N = 2,344) among MSM on PrEP was 40.7% (95% CI: 20.0-65.2%). Subgroup analyses suggested studies conducted after 2015 (versus before) tended to report higher awareness and uptake. Awareness was highest for daily oral PrEP, followed by on-demand, and LAI PrEP; willingness to use was highest for LAI PrEP. The operationalization of willingness and adherence constructs varied across studies and complicated the interpretation of pooled estimates. This review revealed gaps in the PrEP care continuum among MSM in China, with relatively low awareness and uptake (in contrast to willingness and adherence) as the major potential barriers to widespread implementation and the need for a unified approach to defining and measuring PrEP outcomes.
Suicide Mortality During the Perinatal Period
Zivin K, Zhong C, Rodríguez-Putnam A, Spring E, Cai Q, Miller A, Johns L, Kalesnikava VA, Courant A and Mezuk B
The US has the highest maternal mortality rate among developed countries. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention deems nearly all of these deaths preventable, especially those attributable to mental health conditions. Coordination between US health care and social service systems could help further characterize circumstances and risks associated with perinatal suicide mortality.
[Autistic spectrum disorder in women : how does gender operate?]
Maillard AM, Dini S, Repond G, Haarman G, Clair C and Jequier Gygax M
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a common neurodevelopmental disorder, that affects both pediatric and adult populations and presents heterogeneously. The understanding of the clinical characteristics of ASD has expanded, in parallel with societal developments, including the integration of the notion of gender in medicine. It appears that individuals affected by this disorder, regardless of their age, are neither detected, diagnosed, nor followed or treated in the same manner depending on their gender. This article proposes to review current knowledge on ASD, its expression based on gender, factors influencing care, and the consequences for patients of exposure to gender bias.
From Patient Registry to Multi-Center Research Consortium: the Toxicology Investigators Consortium (ToxIC) Turns Fifteen
Brent J, Wax P, Culbreth R, Campleman S and Aldy K
The Toxicology Investigators Consortium (ToxIC) was launched as a prospective multi-center registry of cases who receive medical toxicology consultations. Now, with over 100,000 cases, the Core Registry continues to address many medical toxicology research questions and has served as the foundation for multiple sub-registries, including the North American Snakebite Registry and the Medications for Opioid Use Disorder sub-registry. ToxIC also has evolved a portfolio of non-registry-based projects utilizing medical toxicology physician site principal investigators who enroll patients through emergency departments, irrespective of whether they received a medical toxicology consultation. These studies include the FDA-ACMT COVID-19 ToxIC Pharmacovigilance Project, which identifies adverse drug reactions related to the treatment of COVID-19, the Fentalog Study a toxico-surveillance study of suspected opioid overdose cases, the Drug Overdose Toxico-Surveillance Reporting Program which enrolls either suspected stimulant or opioid overdose cases, and the just being launched Real-World Examination of Naloxone for Drug Overdose Reversal project. Given ToxIC's experience in multi-center studies and its well-developed infrastructure, it is well-positioned to provide a nimble response on the part of the medical toxicology community to addressing evolving toxicological threats, drug and chemical toxicosurveillance, and other important medical toxicology priorities.
Psychosocial Interventions for Individuals With Comorbid Psychosis and Substance Use Disorders: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Studies
Siddiqui S, Mehta D, Coles A, Selby P, Solmi M and Castle D
Substance use is highly prevalent among people with schizophrenia (SCZ) and related disorders, however, there is no broad-spectrum pharmacotherapy that concurrently addresses both addiction and psychotic symptoms. Psychosocial (PS) interventions, which have yielded promising results in treating psychosis and substance dependence separately, demonstrate potential but have not been systematically evaluated when combined.
Plasma amyloid beta X-42/X-40 ratio and cognitive decline in suspected early and preclinical Alzheimer's disease
Vogelgsang J, Hansen N, Stark M, Wagner M, Klafki H, Morgado BM, Jahn-Brodmann A, Schott B, Esselmann H, Bauer C, Schuchhardt J, Kleineidam L, Wolfsgruber S, Peters O, Schneider LS, Wang X, Menne F, Priller J, Spruth E, Altenstein S, Lohse A, Schneider A, Fliessbach K, Vogt I, Bartels C, Jessen F, Rostamzadeh A, Duezel E, Glanz W, Incesoy E, Butryn M, Buerger K, Janowitz D, Ewers M, Perneczky R, Rauchmann B, Guersel S, Teipel S, Kilimann I, Goerss D, Laske C, Munk M, Sanzenbacher C, Spottke A, Roy-Kluth N, Heneka M, Brosseron F, Ramierez A, Schmid M and Wiltfang J
Blood-based biomarkers are a cost-effective and minimally invasive method for diagnosing the early and preclinical stages of amyloid positivity (AP). Our study aims to investigate our novel immunoprecipitation-immunoassay (IP-IA) as a test for predicting cognitive decline.
Proteome-wide association study using cis and trans variants and applied to blood cell and lipid-related traits in the Women's Health Initiative study
Chen BD, Lee C, Tapia AL, Reiner AP, Tang H, Kooperberg C, Manson JE, Li Y and Raffield LM
In most Proteome-Wide Association Studies (PWAS), variants near the protein-coding gene (±1 Mb), also known as cis single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), are used to predict protein levels, which are then tested for association with phenotypes. However, proteins can be regulated through variants outside of the cis region. An intermediate GWAS step to identify protein quantitative trait loci (pQTL) allows for the inclusion of trans SNPs outside the cis region in protein-level prediction models. Here, we assess the prediction of 540 proteins in 1002 individuals from the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), split equally into a GWAS set, an elastic net training set, and a testing set. We compared the testing r between measured and predicted protein levels using this proposed approach, to the testing r using only cis SNPs. The two methods usually resulted in similar testing r, but some proteins showed a significant increase in testing r with our method. For example, for cartilage acidic protein 1, the testing r increased from 0.101 to 0.351. We also demonstrate reproducible findings for predicted protein association with lipid and blood cell traits in WHI participants without proteomics data and in UK Biobank utilizing our PWAS weights.
The prevalence and moderating factors of sleep disturbances in people living with HIV: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Lee S, Oh JW, Park KM, Ahn JY, Lee S and Lee E
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to investigate the prevalence of self-reported sleep disturbances in people living with HIV considering the effects of age, depression, anxiety, CD4 cell counts, time since HIV diagnosis, study region, and the instruments used to measure sleep disturbances. We searched PubMed, PsycINFO, and EMBASE to include eligible articles. In this meta-analysis of 43 studies, the pooled prevalence of self-reported sleep disturbances was 52.29% (95% confidence interval 47.69-56.87). The subgroup analyses revealed that variations in the sleep measurements and study region significantly contributed to the observed heterogeneity. In the meta-regression analyses, higher proportions of participants with depression or anxiety and longer times since HIV diagnosis were significantly associated with a higher prevalence of self-reported sleep disturbances after adjusting for mean age. Our findings emphasise the substantial burden of sleep disturbances in people living with HIV and identified comorbid depression and anxiety and the time since HIV diagnosis as significant moderators. These results underscore the importance of considering these factors when designing tailored screening programmes for high-risk patients and implementing early interventions to prevent and mitigate sleep disturbances in people living with HIV.
Haematopoietic stem cell-derived immune cells have reduced X chromosome inactivation skewing in systemic lupus erythematosus
Roberts AL, Morea A, Amar A, West M, Karrar S, Lehane R, Tombleson P, Cunningham Grahman D, Reynolds JA, Wong CCY, Morris DL, Small KS and Vyse TJ
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) shows a marked female bias in prevalence. X chromosome inactivation (XCI) is the mechanism which randomly silences one X chromosome to equalise gene expression between 46, XX females and 46, XY males. Though XCI is expected to result in a random pattern of mosaicism across tissues, some females display a significantly skewed ratio in immune cells, termed XCI-skew. We tested whether XCI was abnormal in females with SLE and hence contributes to sexual dimorphism.
Age of juice introduction and cardiometabolic outcomes in middle childhood
Clayton PK, Putnick DL, Trees IR, Robinson SL, O'Connor TG, Tyris JN and Yeung EH
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends juice introduction after 12 months of age. Juice consumption has been linked to childhood obesity and cardiometabolic risk. We examined the prospective relationship between the age of juice introduction and primary and secondary cardiometabolic outcomes in middle childhood.
Agreement of medical record abstraction and self-report of breast cancer treatment with an extended recall window
Reiner AS, Knight JA, John EM, Lynch CF, Malone KE, Liang X, Woods M, Root JC and Bernstein JL
Medical record abstraction (MRA) and self-report questionnaires are two methods frequently used to ascertain cancer treatment information. Prior studies have shown excellent agreement between MRA and self-report, but it is unknown how a recall window longer than 3 years may affect this agreement.
Sexual and Reproductive Justice and Health Equity for LGBTQ+ Women
Ertl MM, Maroney MR, Becker A, Paschen-Wolff MM, Blankenau A, Hoffman S and Tross S
LGBTQ+ women have long been overlooked in sexual and reproductive health research. However, recent research has established that LGBTQ+ women have unique and specific needs that need to be addressed in order to improve effectiveness of sexual health education and practice with this historically and presently underserved population. Informed by a reproductive justice framework coupled with liberation psychology theory, this review discusses the current state of sexual and reproductive health and technologies among LGBTQ+ women. In particular, we focus on a range of HIV prevention and reproductive technologies and their use and promotion, including the internal condom, abortion, oral contraceptives, dapivirine ring, HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis, intrauterine device, and other less studied options, such as the contraceptive sponge. Grounded in an intersectional framing, this review acknowledges the intersecting systems of oppression that affect multiply marginalized women inequitably and disproportionately. A sociohistorical, critical lens is applied to acknowledge the well-documented racist origins of reproductive health technologies and ongoing coercive practices that have led to medical mistrust among marginalized and stigmatized communities, particularly racialized LGBTQ+ women, women with disabilities, and women who are poor or incarcerated. Moreover, we discuss the urgent need to center LGBTQ+ women in research and clinical care, community-engaged health promotion efforts, affirming non-heteronormative sexual health education, and health policies that prioritize autonomy and dismantle structural barriers for this population. We conclude with recommendations and future directions in this area to remedy entrenched disparities in health.
Predicting the Population Risk of Suicide Using Routinely Collected Health Administrative Data in Quebec, Canada: Model-Based Synthetic Estimation Study
Wang J, Kharrat FGZ, Gariépy G, Gagné C, Pelletier JF, Massamba VK, Lévesque P, Mohammed M and Lesage A
Suicide is a significant public health issue. Many risk prediction tools have been developed to estimate an individual's risk of suicide. Risk prediction models can go beyond individual risk assessment; one important application of risk prediction models is population health planning. Suicide is a result of the interaction among the risk and protective factors at the individual, health care system, and community levels. Thus, policy and decision makers can play an important role in suicide prevention. However, few prediction models for the population risk of suicide have been developed.
Correlates of missed or late versus timely diagnosis of dementia in healthcare settings
Chen Y, Power MC, Grodstein F, Capuano AW, Lange-Maia BS, Moghtaderi A, Stapp EK, Bhattacharyya J, Shah RC, Barnes LL, Marquez DX, Bennett DA and James BD
There is limited evidence about factors related to the timeliness of dementia diagnosis in healthcare settings.
Association of COVID-19 vaccination and anxiety symptoms: A Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network (SPIN) Cohort longitudinal study
Virgili-Gervais G, Henry RS, Kwakkenbos L, Carrier ME, Patten S, Bartlett SJ, Mouthon L, Varga J, Benedetti A, Thombs BD, and
Symptoms of anxiety increased early in the COVID-19 pandemic among people with systemic sclerosis (SSc) then returned to pre-pandemic levels, but this was an aggregate finding and did not evaluate whether vaccination may have contributed to reduced anxiety symptom levels. We investigated whether being vaccinated for COVID-19 was associated with reduced anxiety symptoms among people with SSc.
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Diagnoses in Finland During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Auro K, Holopainen I, Perola M, Havulinna AS and Raevuori A
Several reports suggest an increase in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic. This nationwide study assessed new ADHD diagnoses and ADHD prevalence before and during the pandemic.
Comparing times of self-harm presentations to hospital emergency departments in children, adolescents, young adults and adults: a national registry study 2007-2019
McEvoy D, Joyce M, Mongan D, Clarke M and Codd M
The few studies that have explored self-harm presentation times at hospital emergency departments (EDs) - an important factor that can determine if a patient receives a mental health assessment - primarily focus on adult samples. This study examined the times of self-harm presentations to EDs, self-harm methods used, mental health assessments, and admission data across different age-groups.
Family-based genome-wide association analysis of novelty seeking in a Korean schizophrenic population: A pilot study
Kim JH, Lee BD, Park JM, Lee YM, Moon E, Suh H, Kim K, Kim YJ, Lee HJ and Oh HY
Schizophrenia (SPR) is the most devastating mental illness that causes severe deterioration in social and occupational functioning, but, the etiology remains unknown. The objective of this study is to explore the genetic underpinnings of novelty seeking behavior in schizophrenic family within the Korean population. By conducting a family-based genome-wide association study, we aim to identify potential genetic markers and variations associated with novelty seeking traits in the context of SPR. We have recruited 27 probands (with SPR) with their parents and siblings whenever possible. DNA was extracted from blood sampling of 58 individuals in 27 families and analyzed in an Illumina core exome single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array. A family-based association test (qFAM) was used to derive SNP association values across all chromosomes. Although none of the final 800,000 SNPs reached the genome-wide significant threshold of 8.45 × 10-7, the most significant 4 SNPs were within the 10-5 to 10-7. This study identifies genetic associations between novelty seeking behavior and SPR within families. RAPGEF5 emerges as a significant gene, along with other neuropsychiatric-related genes. Noteworthy genes like DRD4 and COMT did not show associations, possibly due to the focus on schizophrenic family. While shedding light on this complex relationship, larger studies are needed for robust conclusions and deeper mechanistic insights.
Occupational burnout and their determinants among schoolteachers in Nepal: a cross-sectional study
Paudel NR, Kc P, Ghimire R, Nygård CH and Neupane S
Burnout syndrome attributable to cumulative stressors is highly prevalent among teachers. Despite this, knowledge of burnout syndrome among schoolteachers in lower-middle-income countries are limited, therefore we aimed to investigate self-reported occupational burnout syndrome and associated factors among schoolteachers in Nepal.
Racial Differences in the Prevalence of Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Systematic Review
Gallin Z, Kolevzon AM, Reichenberg A, Hankerson SH and Kolevzon A
Racial differences in prevalence rates of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have shifted in the United States (US) since the 1990s. This review addresses the nature and context of this shift and discusses potential contributing factors and areas for future research.
Metal phosphide poisoning in a disaster-stricken area. Can early hemodialysis improve outcomes?
Abdo N, Mohamed S, Luyckx V, Mohammad A, Rahman SAE, Christine K, Alexander J, Khaled HN, Lina M, Oussama RA, Alasfar S and Ahmad A
Phosphide metal poisoning results in tens of thousands of fatalities per year worldwide. The mortality in critically ill patients often exceeds 50%. The available treatment is supportive and there is no antidote. Dialysis is recommended to treat advanced complications but has not been prescribed early in the process. In this study we report our experience in using dialysis in the early hours of presentation of the patients and suggest it can favorably improve the prognosis. We also draw attention to the risk of suicide under conditions of chronic conflict such as those in northwestern Syria, and to the lack of necessary mental health support for patients after suicide attempts.
Systemic Oxidative Stress Levels During the Course of Pregnancy: Associations with Exposure to Air Pollutants
Wang X, Lin Y, Ge Y, Craig E, Liu X, Miller RK, Thurston SW, Brunner J, Barrett ES, O'Connor TG, Rich DQ and Zhang JJ
Increased systemic oxidative stress, implicated in adverse pregnancy outcomes for both mothers and fetuses, has been associated with gestational exposure to air pollutants such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), fine particulate matter (PM), and nitrogen dioxide (NO). However, it is unclear whether exposure to pollutants at levels below the current air quality standards can increase oxidative stress in pregnant women. In a cohort of 305 pregnant persons residing in western New York, we examined the association between exposure to PM, NO, and PAHs (measured as urinary 1-hydroxypyrene) and urinary biomarkers of oxidative stress (malondialdehyde [MDA] and 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine [8-OHdG]) measured in each trimester. After controlling for gestational stage, maternal age, lifestyles, and socioeconomic factors, each interquartile range (IQR) increase in 1-hydroxypyrene concentration (65.8 pg/ml) was associated with a 7.73% (95%CI: 3.18%,12.3%) higher in MDA levels throughout the pregnancy and in the first and second trimester. An IQR increase in PM concentration (3.20 μg/m) was associated with increased MDA levels in the first trimester (8.19%, 95%CI: 0.28%,16.1%), but not the 2 (-7.99%, 95% CI: -13.8%, -2.23%) or 3 trimester (-2.81%, 95% CI: -10.0%, 4.38%). The average cumulative PM exposures in the 3-7 days before urine collection were associated with increased 8-OHdG levels during the second trimester, with the largest difference (22.6%; 95% CI: 3.46%, 41.7%) observed in relation to a one IQR increase in PM concentration in the previous 7 days. In contrast, neither oxidative stress biomarker was associated with NO exposure. Observed in pregnant women exposed to low-level air pollution, these findings expanded previously reported associations between systemic oxidative stress and high-level PM and PAH concentrations. Further, the first and second trimesters may be a susceptible window during pregnancy for oxidative stress responses to air pollution exposure.
Chronic Illnesses and Depression among Community-based Adolescents in Rural Haryana, India
Mohta A, Malhotra S, Kalaivani M, Patra BN and Nongkynrih B
Evidence on the association of chronic illnesses with depression among adolescents in the Indian community setting is limited. A simple random sample of 583 adolescents, comprising 56.6% of boys and 43.4% of girls, were interviewed on home visits. Self-reports on chronic illnesses were elicited, followed by administration of Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) questionnaire to screen for depression, and for confirmation of diagnosis by age-appropriate Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview for Children and Adolescents (MINI Kid), or MINI. The prevalence of chronic illnesses was 8.4% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 6.3-11.0). Of these participants, 42.8% screened positive for depression. The prevalence of depression was 10.2% (95% CI: 3.4-22.2) among adolescents with chronic illness. The prevalence of physical-mental multimorbidity was 0.8% (95% CI: 0.3-2.0). The presence of chronic illness was associated with depression identified using both PHQ-9 (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] =3.1 [95% CI: 1.7-5.8], P < 0.001) and MINI Kid/MINI (AOR = 3.2 [95% CI: 1.1-9.4], P = 0.037). Adolescents with chronic illnesses can be targeted for mental morbidity screening in a bid to improve functional outcomes.
Patients with schizophrenia in Morocco during the COVID-19 pandemic: a longitudinal observational study
Doufik J, Lahlou L, al'Absi M, Benhamida J, Laaraj H, Ouhamou M, El Oumary O, Salehddine Z, Mouhadi K and Rammouz I
During the COVID-19 pandemic, social-distancing and confinement measures were implemented. These may affect the mental health of patients with mental disorders such as schizophrenia. This study examined the clinical course of patients with schizophrenia at a public hospital in Morocco during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Prevalence of depressive and anxiety symptoms and perceived stress in hospitalised patients with COVID-19
Rajmohan V and Aparna NM
COVID-19 infection is associated with significant depressive and anxiety symptoms and stress. We examined the prevalences of depressive and anxiety symptoms and perceived stress among patients with COVID-19.
Associations Between Suicidal Behaviour, Attitudes Towards Suicide, and Psychological Distress Among Students in a University in East Malaysia
Kamaruddin MNSB, Hashim NAB, Mohamed SB and Azhari ZIB
Suicidal behaviour can be influenced by attitudes towards suicide and psychological distress. This study aimed to investigate the associations between psychological distress, attitudes towards suicide, and suicidal behaviour and to determine the prevalence of suicidal behaviour among students of a public university in East Malaysia.
Factors Associated With Physical Restraints in a Psychiatric Unit in Japan: a Retrospective Study
Kawai K, Yamada H, Tomioka H, Iwanami A and Inamoto A
To identify factors associated with the use and duration of physical restraint (PR) in a psychiatric unit in Japan.
Psychological Distress among Care Recipients Attending Youth Mental Health Promotion Centers across Karnataka, India
Raghuvir S, Arelingaiah M, Loganathan S, Ramamurthy SV, Naik V and Banandur PS
Yuva Spandana (YS) is a unique community-based youth mental health promotion program implemented across Karnataka.
Prevalence and Association of Digital Eye Strain with the Quality of Sleep and Feeling of Loneliness among Female College Students in Northern India
Rana M, Gupta PC, Grover S, Furr A and Bhargava N
Because of COVID's impact on social behavior, students have become more reliant on computer-facilitated communication to continue their studies and interact with friends. While it is known that the association between screen exposure and psychological well-being is both harmful and stronger among adolescents than younger children, what is less studied are the causal factors that may mediate the relationship.
Association of Common Mental Disorders with Diabetes Mellitus - Evidence from Community-based Matched Case-Control Study in North India
Salve HR, Kamble BD, Krishnan A, Sagar R, Ramakrishnan L, Kant S, Nongkynrih B and Sreenivas V
Diabetes mellitus (DM) and depression are major public health problems globally. Evidence of linkage of common mental disorders (CMDs) including depression and anxiety disorders with DM is sparsely reported from community-based settings.
Neuroanatomical dimensions in medication-free individuals with major depressive disorder and treatment response to SSRI antidepressant medications or placebo
Fu CHY, Antoniades M, Erus G, Garcia JA, Fan Y, Arnone D, Arnott SR, Chen T, Choi KS, Fatt CC, Frey BN, Frokjaer VG, Ganz M, Godlewska BR, Hassel S, Ho K, McIntosh AM, Qin K, Rotzinger S, Sacchet MD, Savitz J, Shou H, Singh A, Stolicyn A, Strigo I, Strother SC, Tosun D, Victor TA, Wei D, Wise T, Zahn R, Anderson IM, Craighead WE, Deakin JFW, Dunlop BW, Elliott R, Gong Q, Gotlib IH, Harmer CJ, Kennedy SH, Knudsen GM, Mayberg HS, Paulus MP, Qiu J, Trivedi MH, Whalley HC, Yan CG, Young AH and Davatzikos C
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a heterogeneous clinical syndrome with widespread subtle neuroanatomical correlates. Our objective was to identify the neuroanatomical dimensions that characterize MDD and predict treatment response to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants or placebo. In the COORDINATE-MDD consortium, raw MRI data were shared from international samples ( = 1,384) of medication-free individuals with first-episode and recurrent MDD ( = 685) in a current depressive episode of at least moderate severity, but not treatment-resistant depression, as well as healthy controls ( = 699). Prospective longitudinal data on treatment response were available for a subset of MDD individuals ( = 359). Treatments were either SSRI antidepressant medication (escitalopram, citalopram, sertraline) or placebo. Multi-center MRI data were harmonized, and HYDRA, a semi-supervised machine-learning clustering algorithm, was utilized to identify patterns in regional brain volumes that are associated with disease. MDD was optimally characterized by two neuroanatomical dimensions that exhibited distinct treatment responses to placebo and SSRI antidepressant medications. Dimension 1 was characterized by preserved gray and white matter ( = 290 MDD), whereas Dimension 2 was characterized by widespread subtle reductions in gray and white matter ( = 395 MDD) relative to healthy controls. Although there were no significant differences in age of onset, years of illness, number of episodes, or duration of current episode between dimensions, there was a significant interaction effect between dimensions and treatment response. Dimension 1 showed a significant improvement in depressive symptoms following treatment with SSRI medication (51.1%) but limited changes following placebo (28.6%). By contrast, Dimension 2 showed comparable improvements to either SSRI (46.9%) or placebo (42.2%) ( = -18.3, 95% CI (-34.3 to -2.3),  = 0.03). Findings from this case-control study indicate that neuroimaging-based markers can help identify the disease-based dimensions that constitute MDD and predict treatment response.
Relationship between social cognition and emotional markers and acoustic-verbal hallucination in youth with post-traumatic stress disorder: Protocol for a prospective, 2-year, longitudinal case-control study
Dumas LE, Fernandez A, Auby P and Askenazy F
Auditory-verbal hallucinatory experiences (AVH) have a 12% prevalence in the general pediatric population. Literature reports a higher risk of developing AVH in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The persistence of AVHs during adolescence represents a risk of evolution into psychotic disorders. Social cognition and emotional markers could be considered prodromes markers of this evolution. The objectives of this prospective observational study are to observe social cognition and emotional markers correlation with the presence and persistence of AVH over two years and with the evolution of PTSD and psychotic diagnosis.
[Hospital frequency of non-epileptic psychogenic seizures in Bamako]
Keita G, Traoré J, Coulibaly SP, Traoré K, Maiga BH, Dara EA, Koné M, Kamaté Z, Diarra OS, Diakité K, Coulibaly S, Diallo SH and Maiga YM
Diagnosing a non-epileptic seizure is difficult in the absence of a video electroencephalogram. The expert commission of the international league against epilepsy proposes a diagnostic approach allowing the diagnosis to be made according to a degree of certainty with or in the absence of a video electroencephalogram. Our objective was to determine the hospital frequency of psychogenic non-epileptic seizures in the absence of video-electroencephalogram. Using the outpatient registry, we identified patients followed for epilepsy with two normal interictal electroencephalographies, between January 2020 and October 2021. A review of the patients' medical records and an assessment of the validity of the diagnosis were carried out. Out of 64 patients evaluated with normal interictal electroencephalogram, 19 were included as suffering from psychogenic non-epileptic seizures, i.e. 26.68%. The average age was 23.94 +/- 9.4 years. Women represented 68.4%. Patients followed in neurology represented 84%. A history of childhood trauma was found in (47.4%). The first crisis was preceded by stressful events in 47.36%. Post-traumatic stress disorder was the most represented with 73.7% of cases. The average age was 20.95 +/- 9.8 years for the first crisis and the average duration of evolution of the crises was 3 years +/- 2 years. This study illustrates the possibility of making a presumptive diagnosis of psychogenic non-epileptic seizure in the absence of video-electroencephalogram.
Regional insights on tobacco-related tweets: unveiling user opinions and usage patterns
Castillo-Toledo C, Fernandez-Lazaro CI, Lara-Abelenda FJ, Molina-Ruiz RM, Ortega MA, Mora F, Alvarez-Mon M, Quintero J and Alvarez-Mon MA
Tobacco consumption and its impact on health remain high worldwide. Additionally, it is a contentious issue generating significant controversy. Twitter has proven to be a useful platform for evaluating public health topics related to population health behaviors, and tobacco consumption.
Comparative analysis of anticholinergic burden scales to explain iatrogenic cognitive impairment in schizophrenia: results from the multicenter FACE-SZ cohort
Vidal N, Roux P, Urbach M, Belmonte C, Boyer L, Capdevielle D, Clauss-Kobayashi J, D'Amato T, Dassing R, Dubertret C, Dubreucq J, Fond G, Honciuc RM, Leignier S, Llorca PM, Mallet J, Misdrahi D, Pignon B, Rey R, Schürhoff F, Tessier A, , Passerieux C and Brunet-Gouet E
The anticholinergic properties of medications are associated with poorer cognitive performance in schizophrenia. Numerous scales have been developed to assess anticholinergic burden and yet, there is no consensus indicating which anticholinergic burden scale is more relevant for patients with schizophrenia. We aimed to identify valid scales for estimating the risk of iatrogenic cognitive impairment in schizophrenia.
Defining a screening tool for post-traumatic stress disorder in East Africa: a penalized regression approach
Meffert SM, Mathai MA, Ongeri L, Neylan TC, Mwai D, Onyango D, Akena D, Rota G, Otieno A, Obura RR, Wangia J, Opiyo E, Muchembre P, Oluoch D, Wambura R, Mbwayo A, Kahn JG, Cohen CR, Bukusi DE, Aarons GA, Burger RL, Jin C, McCulloch CE and Njuguna Kahonge S
Scalable PTSD screening strategies must be brief, accurate and capable of administration by a non-specialized workforce.
Macroeconomic antecedents of racial disparities in psychiatric-related emergency department visits
Singh P
To test whether monthly declines in aggregate employment precede a rise in African American psychiatric-related ED visits (PREDVs) relative to white visits among low-income, working-age populations.
Bidirectional relationship between C-reactive protein and depressive symptoms considering cumulative effect among Chinese middle-aged and older adults
Zhao N, Jiang L, Hu M, Zhang B, Lin Y, Yao Q, Hao J and Zhu C
Research examining the bidirectional relationship between C-reactive protein (CRP) and depressive symptoms, while accounting for cumulative effect of repeated episodes of CRP or depressive symptoms, is currently deficient in non-Western populations.
close chatgpt icon
ChatGPT

Enter your request.

Psychiatry AI RAISR 4D System Psychiatry + Mental Health