9 results on '"Therman S"'
Search Results
2. Psychotic-like experiences in a nationally representative study of general population adolescents.
- Author
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Lindgren M and Therman S
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Male, Female, Young Adult, Sex Factors, Age Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adult, Health Surveys, Psychotic Disorders epidemiology, Hallucinations epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Subclinical psychotic-like experiences (PLEs) are common among general population adolescents but have been found to correlate with various problems in well-being. Due to limited sample sizes these effects have not been well differentiated by sex and age., Methods: Using a nationally representative survey of almost 160,000 adolescents, we studied endorsement and correlates of PLEs by sex among middle adolescence pupils (ages 14-16) and late adolescence students (ages 16-20). PLEs were investigated with three questionnaire items: auditory and visual hallucinatory experiences and suspicious thought content, using a frequency response scale., Results: Weekly PLEs were reported by 14 % of the adolescents, more often in females (17 %) than males (11 %) and in the younger age group (17 %) compared to the older adolescents (10 %). A latent PLE factor represented the three assessed PLEs with good fit. Factor scores were highest for the younger females and lowest for the older males. The PLE factor correlated with two latent factors of other well-being, namely living environment ("adversity", loading most heavily on parental mental abuse; r = 0.63), and concurrent mental health ("distress", loading most heavily on depressive symptoms; r = 0.50). Adversity was associated especially strongly with PLEs in 14-16-year-old males., Conclusions: This cross-sectional study reaching the whole 14-20 age group in schools in Finland offers data on the meaning and relevance of PLEs as general markers of vulnerability. Many adolescents experience PLEs recurrently and these experiences are associated with a wide variety of burden in the adolescent's everyday life., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Molecular signaling pathways underlying schizophrenia.
- Author
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Tiihonen J, Koskuvi M, Lähteenvuo M, Trontti K, Ojansuu I, Vaurio O, Cannon TD, Lönnqvist J, Therman S, Suvisaari J, Cheng L, Tanskanen A, Taipale H, Lehtonen Š, and Koistinaho J
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Finland, Humans, Mice, Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase-Activating Polypeptide, Signal Transduction, Schizophrenia drug therapy, Schizophrenia genetics
- Abstract
The molecular pathophysiological mechanisms underlying schizophrenia have remained unknown, and no treatment exists for primary prevention. We used Ingenuity Pathway Analysis to analyze canonical and causal pathways in two different datasets, including patients from Finland and USA. The most significant findings in canonical pathway analysis were observed for glutamate receptor signaling, hepatic fibrosis, and glycoprotein 6 (GP6) pathways in the Finnish dataset, and GP6 and hepatic fibrosis pathways in the US dataset. In data-driven causal pathways, ADCYAP1, ADAMTS, and CACNA genes were involved in the majority of the top 10 pathways differentiating patients and controls in both Finnish and US datasets. Results from a Finnish nation-wide database showed that the risk of schizophrenia relapse was 41% lower among first-episode patients during the use of losartan, the master regulator of an ADCYAP1, ADAMTS, and CACNA-related pathway, compared to those time periods when the same individual did not use the drug. The results from the two independent datasets suggest that the GP6 signaling pathway, and the ADCYAP1, ADAMTS, and CACNA-related purine, oxidative stress, and glutamatergic signaling pathways are among primary pathophysiological alterations in schizophrenia among patients with European ancestry. While no reproducible dopaminergic alterations were observed, the results imply that agents such as losartan, and ADCYAP1/PACAP -deficit alleviators, such as metabotropic glutamate 2/3 agonist MGS0028 and 5-HT7 antagonists - which have shown beneficial effects in an experimental Adcyap1
-/- mouse model for schizophrenia - could be potential treatments even before the full manifestation of illness involving dopaminergic abnormalities., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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4. Childhood adversities and cognitive deficits in first-episode psychosis.
- Author
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Morales-Muñoz I, Suvisaari J, Therman S, Torniainen-Holm M, Mäntylä T, Rikandi E, Mantere O, Kieseppä T, and Lindgren M
- Subjects
- Adult, Adverse Childhood Experiences, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Humans, Psychotic Disorders complications, Attention physiology, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Psychotic Disorders physiopathology
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Predicting psychosis in a general adolescent psychiatric sample.
- Author
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Lindgren M, Manninen M, Kalska H, Mustonen U, Laajasalo T, Moilanen K, Huttunen M, Cannon TD, Suvisaari J, and Therman S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Cohort Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Male, Patient Admission, Prodromal Symptoms, Prognosis, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychotic Disorders epidemiology, Psychotic Disorders therapy, Regression Analysis, Risk, Survival Analysis, Interview, Psychological methods, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Current psychosis risk criteria have often been studied on a pre-selected population at specialized clinics. We investigated whether the Structured Interview for Prodromal Syndromes (SIPS) is a useful tool for psychosis risk screening among adolescents in general psychiatric care., Methods: 161 adolescents aged 15-18 with first admission to adolescent psychiatric services in Helsinki were interviewed with the SIPS to ascertain Clinical High-Risk (CHR) state. The participants were followed via the national hospital discharge register, patient files, and follow-up interviews. DSM-IV Axis I diagnoses were made at baseline and 12 months. Register follow-up spanned 2.8-8.9 years, and hospital care for a primary psychotic disorder and any psychiatric disorder were used as outcomes., Results: CHR criteria were met by 54 (33.5%) of the adolescents. Three conversions of psychosis as defined by SIPS emerged during follow-up, two of whom belonged to the CHR group. The positive predictive value of the CHR status was weak (1.9%) but its negative predictive value was 98.0%. Using the DSM-IV definition of psychosis, there were five conversions, three of which were in the CHR group. In regression analyses, hospital admissions for primary psychotic disorder were predicted by positive symptom intensity in the baseline SIPS. In addition, CHR status and SIPS positive and general symptoms predicted hospitalization for psychiatric disorder., Discussion: Psychosis incidence was low in our unselected sample of adolescent psychiatric patients. CHR status failed to predict SIPS or DSM-IV psychoses significantly at 12 months. However, in a longer follow-up, CHR did predict psychiatric hospitalization., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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6. Predicting psychosis and psychiatric hospital care among adolescent psychiatric patients with the Prodromal Questionnaire.
- Author
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Therman S, Lindgren M, Manninen M, Loewy RL, Huttunen MO, Cannon TD, and Suvisaari J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Depersonalization, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Finland, Follow-Up Studies, Hospitalization, Humans, Interview, Psychological methods, Male, Prodromal Symptoms, Prognosis, Proportional Hazards Models, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Psychotic Disorders therapy, Registries, Risk, Self Report, Sensitivity and Specificity, Survival Analysis, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
The Prodromal Questionnaire (PQ) identifies psychiatric help-seekers in need of clinical interviews to diagnose psychosis risk. However, some providers use the PQ alone to identify risk. Therefore, we tested its predictive utility among 731 adolescent psychiatric help-seekers, with a 3-9-year register-based follow-up. Nine latent factors corresponded well with postulated subscales. Depersonalization predicted later hospitalization with a psychosis diagnosis (HR 1.6 per SD increase), and Role Functioning predicted any psychiatric hospitalization (HR 1.3). Published cut-off scores were poor predictors of psychosis; endorsement rates were very high for most symptoms. Therefore, we do not recommend using the PQ without second-stage clinical interviews., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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7. The relationship between psychotic-like symptoms and neurocognitive performance in a general adolescent psychiatric sample.
- Author
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Lindgren M, Manninen M, Laajasalo T, Mustonen U, Kalska H, Suvisaari J, Moilanen K, Cannon TD, Huttunen M, and Therman S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Interview, Psychological methods, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Visual Perception physiology, Adolescent Psychiatry, Cognition Disorders complications, Mental Disorders complications
- Abstract
Introduction: The current criteria for detecting a Clinical High-Risk (CHR) state for psychosis do not address cognitive impairment. A first step for identifying cognitive markers of psychosis risk would be to determine which aspects of neurocognitive performance are related with more severe psychotic-like symptoms. This study assessed cognitive impairment associated with prodromal symptoms in adolescents receiving public psychiatric treatment., Methods: 189 adolescents were recruited from consecutive new patients aged 15-18 attending mainly outpatient adolescent psychiatric units in Helsinki. They had been screened for prodromal symptoms using the Prodromal Questionnaire, and all screen-positives as well as a random sample of screen-negatives were interviewed using the Structured Interview for Prodromal Symptoms (SIPS) and underwent testing using a large, standardized neurocognitive test battery. The sample included 62 adolescents who met the CHR criteria (CHR) and 112 who did not (non-CHR). A healthy control sample (n=72) was also included to provide age- and gender-matched norms., Results: The CHR group performed worse on visuospatial tasks than the non-CHR group. Among CHR adolescents, negative symptoms were associated with slower processing speed and poorer performance on verbal tasks. Among non-CHR adolescents, positive symptoms were associated with poorer performance on visuospatial tasks, and negative symptoms with poorer performance on verbal tasks., Conclusion: Clinical high-risk status is associated with impaired visuospatial task performance. However, both positive, psychotic-like symptoms and negative symptoms are associated with lower levels of neurocognitive functioning among adolescents in psychiatric treatment regardless of whether CHR criteria are met. Thus, even mild positive and negative symptoms may have clinical relevance in adolescents in psychiatric care. Adolescents with both psychotic-like symptoms and neurocognitive deficits constitute a group requiring special attention., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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8. Abnormally high EEG alpha synchrony during working memory maintenance in twins discordant for schizophrenia.
- Author
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Bachman P, Kim J, Yee CM, Therman S, Manninen M, Lönnqvist J, Kaprio J, Huttunen MO, Näätänen R, and Cannon TD
- Subjects
- Adult, Attention physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Cohort Studies, Diseases in Twins diagnosis, Diseases in Twins physiopathology, Dominance, Cerebral physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Twins, Dizygotic genetics, Twins, Monozygotic genetics, Alpha Rhythm, Cortical Synchronization psychology, Discrimination Learning physiology, Diseases in Twins genetics, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Orientation physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Schizophrenia genetics
- Abstract
Background: The present analyses aimed to test the prediction that schizophrenia patients and their non-schizophrenic co-twins would display reduced efficiency of the neurocognitive mechanisms subserving active maintenance of spatial information in working memory., Methods: Upper alpha frequency band EEG event-related desynchronization and synchronization (ERD/ERS) were calculated as percent changes in power relative to an inter-trial baseline across 4 memory loads in a spatial delayed-response task., Results: During the delay, the diagnostic groups showed equivalent ERD/ERS activity over posterior scalp regions at the lowest memory load; however, as memory load increased, patients, and to an intermediate degree, their non-schizophrenic co-twins (monozygotic and dizygotic pairs collapsed together), showed significantly greater increases in ERD/ERS amplitude as compared with controls., Conclusions: These findings demonstrate abnormally increased ERD/ERS amplitudes with increasing memory load in patients with schizophrenia and their co-twins, consistent with inefficiency of the neurocognitive mechanisms supporting active maintenance of information across a delay.
- Published
- 2008
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9. The relationship between performance and fMRI signal during working memory in patients with schizophrenia, unaffected co-twins, and control subjects.
- Author
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Karlsgodt KH, Glahn DC, van Erp TG, Therman S, Huttunen M, Manninen M, Kaprio J, Cohen MS, Lönnqvist J, and Cannon TD
- Subjects
- Aged, Attention physiology, Brain Mapping, Discrimination Learning physiology, Dominance, Cerebral physiology, Female, Finland, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Oxygen blood, Color Perception physiology, Diseases in Twins genetics, Diseases in Twins physiopathology, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Occipital Lobe physiopathology, Parietal Lobe physiopathology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, Schizophrenia genetics, Schizophrenia physiopathology
- Abstract
While behavioral research shows working memory impairments in schizophrenics and their relatives, functional neuroimaging studies of patients and healthy controls show conflicting findings of hypo- and hyperactivation, possibly indicating different relationships between physiological activity and performance. In a between-subjects regression analysis of fMRI activation and performance, low performance was associated with relatively lower activation in patients than controls, while higher performance was associated with higher activation in patients than controls in DLPFC and parietal cortex, but not occipital cortex, with unaffected twins of schizophrenics being intermediate between the groups. Accordingly, this supports the idea that both hyper and hypoactivation may be possible along a continuum of behavioral performance in a way consistent with a neural inefficiency model. Further, this study offers preliminary evidence that the relationship between behavior and physiology in schizophrenia may be heritable.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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