6 results on '"Hoffmann, Robert F."'
Search Results
2. Neurophysiological correlates of suicidal ideation in major depressive disorder: Hyperarousal during sleep.
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Dolsen, Michael R., Cheng, Philip, Arnedt, J. Todd, Swanson, Leslie, Casement, Melynda D., Kim, Hyang Sook, Goldschmied, Jennifer R., Hoffmann, Robert F., Armitage, Roseanne, and Deldin, Patricia J.
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SLEEP , *NEUROPHYSIOLOGY , *SUICIDAL ideation , *MENTAL depression , *PUBLIC health , *CENTRAL nervous system physiology , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *RELATIVE medical risk , *CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: Suicide is a major public health concern, and a barrier to reducing the suicide rate is the lack of objective predictors of risk. The present study considers whether quantitative sleep electroencephalography (EEG) may be a neurobiological correlate of suicidal ideation.Methods: Participants included 84 (45 female, mean age=26.6) adults diagnosed with major depressive disorder (MDD). The item that measures thoughts of death or suicide on the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) was used to classify 47 participants as low suicidal ideation (24 females, mean age=26.1) and 37 as high suicidal ideation (21 females, mean age=27.3). Data were obtained from archival samples collected at the University of Michigan and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center between 2004 and 2012. Sleep EEG was quantified using power spectral analysis, and focused on alpha, beta, and delta frequencies.Results: Results indicated that participants with high compared to low suicidal ideation experienced 1) increased fast frequency activity, 2) decreased delta activity, and 3) increased alpha-delta sleep after adjusting for age, sex, depression, and insomnia symptoms.Limitations: Limitations include the exclusion of imminent suicidal intent, a single suicidal ideation item, and cross-sectional archival data.Conclusions: This is one of the first studies to provide preliminary support that electrophysiological brain activity during sleep is associated with increased suicidal ideation in MDD, and may point toward central nervous system (CNS) hyperarousal during sleep as a neurobiological correlate of suicidal ideation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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3. Sleep-disordered breathing in major depressive disorder.
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Cheng, Philip, D. Casement, Melynda, Chen, Chiau‐Fang, Hoffmann, Robert F., Armitage, Roseanne, and Deldin, Patricia J.
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MENTAL depression , *DEPRESSED persons , *SLEEP apnea syndromes , *SLEEP disorder diagnosis , *RESPIRATION - Abstract
Individuals with major depressive disorder often experience obstructive sleep apnea. However, the relationship between depression and less severe sleep-disordered breathing is unclear. This study examined the rate of sleep-disordered breathing in depression after excluding those who had clinically significant sleep apnea (>5 apneas∙h−1). Archival data collected between 1991 and 2005 were used to assess the prevalence of sleep-disordered breathing events in 60 (31 depressed; 29 healthy controls) unmedicated participants. Respiratory events were automatically detected using a program developed in-house measuring thermal nasal air-flow and chest pressure. Results show that even after excluding participants with clinically significant sleep-disordered breathing, individuals with depression continue to exhibit higher rates of sleep-disordered breathing compared with healthy controls (depressed group: apnea-hypopnea index mean = 0.524, SE = 0.105; healthy group: apnea-hypopnea index mean = 0.179, SE = 0.108). Exploratory analyses were also conducted to assess for rates of exclusion in depression studies due to sleep-disordered breathing. Study exclusion of sleep-disordered breathing was quantified based on self-report during telephone screening, and via first night polysomnography. Results from phone screening data reveal that individuals reporting depression were 5.86 times more likely to report a diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea than presumptive control participants. Furthermore, all of the participants excluded for severe sleep-disordered breathing detected on the first night were participants with depression. These findings illustrate the importance of understanding the relationship between sleep-disordered breathing and depression, and suggest that screening and quantification of sleep-disordered breathing should be considered in depression research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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4. Dim Light Melatonin Onset in Alcohol-Dependent Men and Women Compared with Healthy Controls.
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Conroy, Deirdre A., Hairston, Ilana S., Arnedt, J. Todd, Hoffmann, Robert F., Armitage, Roseanne, and Brower, Kirk J.
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MELATONIN , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of light , *ALCOHOLISM , *WOMEN , *ALCOHOL drinking , *CIRCADIAN rhythms , *COMPARATIVE studies ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
Sleep disturbances in alcohol-dependent (AD) individuals may persist despite abstinence from alcohol and can influence the course of the disorder. Although the mechanisms of sleep disturbances of AD are not well understood and some evidence suggests dysregulation of circadian rhythms, dim light melatonin onset (DLMO) has not previously been assessed in AD versus healthy control (HC) individuals in a sample that varied by sex and race. The authors assessed 52 AD participants (mean ± SD age: 36.0 ± 11.0 yrs of age, 10 women) who were 3-12 wks since their last drink (abstinence: 57.9 ± 19.3 d) and 19 age- and sex-matched HCs (34.4 ± 10.6 yrs, 5 women). Following a 23:00-06:00 h at-home sleep schedule for at least 5 d and screening//baseline nights in the sleep laboratory, participants underwent a 3-h extension of wakefulness (02:00 h bedtime) during which salivary melatonin samples were collected every 30 min beginning at 19:30 h. The time of DLMO was the primary measure of circadian physiology and was assessed with two commonly used methodologies. There was a slower rate of rise and lower maximal amplitude of the melatonin rhythm in the AD group. DLMO varied by the method used to derive it. Using 3 pg//mL as threshold, no significant differences were found between the AD and HC groups. Using 2 standard deviations above the mean of the first three samples, the DLMO in AD occurred significantly later, 21:02 ± 00:41 h, than in HC, 20:44 ± 00:21 h ( t == −2.4, p == .02). Although melatonin in the AD group appears to have a slower rate of rise, using well-established criteria to assess the salivary DLMO did not reveal differences between AD and HC participants. Only when capturing melatonin when it is already rising was DLMO found to be significantly delayed by a mean 18 min in AD participants. Future circadian analyses on alcoholics should account for these methodological caveats. (Author correspondence: ) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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5. Sleep and body mass index in depressed children and healthy controls
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Wojnar, Julita, Brower, Kirk J., Dopp, Richard, Wojnar, Marcin, Emslie, Graham, Rintelmann, Jeanne, Hoffmann, Robert F., and Armitage, Roseanne
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DEPRESSION in children , *BODY mass index , *EATING disorders in children , *SLEEP deprivation , *POLYSOMNOGRAPHY , *CHILD psychopathology , *RAPID eye movement sleep , *MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: Higher body mass index (BMI) has been associated with more sleep disturbance and depressive symptoms, but the combined effects of depression and BMI on sleep have not been studied in children. This study evaluated the relationship between BMI and polysomnography in children with major depressive disorder (MDD), compared to healthy controls (HCs). Method: The sample of 104 subjects included 72 children, 8–17years old, with MDD and 32 similarly aged HCs with no personal or family history of psychopathology. BMI was adjusted using the CDC formula for percentiles by age. Subjects were categorized as (1) normal weight (5–84th percentile) or (2) high weight, which included at risk of overweight and overweight (⩾85th percentile). All analyses were adjusted for sex and Tanner maturational stage scores. Results: In the MDD group only, higher BMI was significantly correlated with decreased sleep efficiency, decreased percentage of rapid eye movement sleep (REM%), and higher percentage of time spent awake and moving (TSPAM). In the HC group only, higher BMI correlated with higher total sleep time. Multivariate analyses revealed significant interactions between the BMI and diagnostic groups for several REM sleep parameters, such that high-weight children from the HC and MDD groups had increases and decreases in REM sleep, respectively. TSPAM increased in the high-weight MDD group, but decreased in the high-weight HC group. Conclusions: Although limited by small sample size, these findings suggest that children and adolescents with MDD and a high BMI have more fragmented sleep than other children. The increased REM sleep patterns observed with MDD in this and other studies normalized in high-weight children with MDD. Prevention and treatment strategies should target both sleep and weight as factors that can potentially influence the development and course of MDD. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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6. Blunted circadian variation in autonomic regulation of sinus node function in veterans with Gulf War syndrome
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Haley, Robert W., Vongpatanasin, Wanpen, Wolfe, Gil I., Bryan, Wilson W., Armitage, Roseanne, Hoffmann, Robert F., Petty, Frederick, Callahan, Timothy S., Charuvastra, Elizabeth, Shell, William E., Wesley Marshall, W., and Victor, Ronald G.
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AUTONOMIC nervous system , *HUMAN abnormalities , *POLYSOMNOGRAPHY , *HEART rate monitoring - Abstract
To test the hypothesis that subtle abnormalities of the autonomic nervous system underlie the chronic symptoms reported by many Gulf War veterans, such as chronic diarrhea, dizziness, fatigue, and sexual dysfunction.Twenty-two ill Gulf War veterans and 19 age-, sex-, and education-matched control veterans underwent measurement of circadian rhythm of heart rate variability by 24-hour electrocardiography, ambulatory blood pressure recording, Valsalva ratio testing, sympathetic skin response evaluation, sweat imprint testing, and polysomnography. Investigators were blinded to case- or control-group status.High-frequency spectral power of heart rate variability increased normally 2.2-fold during sleep in controls but only 1.2-fold in ill veterans (P <0.0001). In ill veterans as compared with controls, it was lower at night (P = 0.0006), higher during the morning (P = 0.007), but no different during the rest of the day (P = 0.8). The mean heart rate of ill veterans also declined less at night (P = 0.0002), and their corrected QT intervals tended to be longer over the full 24 hours (P = 0.07), particularly at night (P = 0.03). Blunting of the nocturnal heart rate dip in ill veterans was confirmed by 24-hour automatic ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (P = 0.05) and polysomnography (P = 0.03). These differences remained significant after adjusting for potential confounders. Cases and controls were similar on measures of sympathetic adrenergic and sudomotor function, sleep architecture, respiratory function, and circadian variation in blood pressure and body temperature.Some symptoms of Gulf War syndrome may be due to subtle autonomic nervous system dysfunction. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2004
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