104 results on '"Bonar, L"'
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2. Love and Despair: How Catholic Activism Shaped Politics and the Counterculture in Modern Mexico.
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Hernández Sandoval, Bonar L.
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CATHOLICS , *ACTIVISTS , *ACTIVISM , *COUNTERCULTURE , *DESPAIR , *POLITICAL persecution , *PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
"Love and Despair: How Catholic Activism Shaped Politics and the Counterculture in Modern Mexico" by Jaime M. Pensado explores the impact of Mexican Catholics on local, regional, and global changes during the Cold War era. The book highlights the activism of conservative and progressive Catholics, including students, intellectuals, filmmakers, journalists, and priests, who embraced a language of "love" to promote social justice and inclusivity. The author argues that Mexican Catholics adopted both conservative and liberal discourses, becoming radicalized by the progressive turn within global Catholicism and the revolutionary upheaval of the 1960s. The book also examines the rise of progressive Catholicism, the changing political context of Mexico in the 1960s, and the interaction of Mexican Catholics with the counterculture movement known as "La Onda." Overall, "Love and Despair" provides a nuanced understanding of how Mexican society engaged with modernity during the Cold War, emphasizing the diverse and multifaceted nature of Catholicism in Mexico. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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3. Reforming Catholicism: Papal Power in Guatemala during the 1920s and 1930s
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Hernández, Bonar L.
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- 2014
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4. Predicting clinical outcome from reward circuitry function and white matter structure in behaviorally and emotionally dysregulated youth
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Bertocci, M A, Bebko, G, Versace, A, Fournier, J C, Iyengar, S, Olino, T, Bonar, L, Almeida, J R C, Perlman, S B, Schirda, C, Travis, M J, Gill, M K, Diwadkar, V A, Forbes, E E, Sunshine, J L, Holland, S K, Kowatch, R A, Birmaher, B, Axelson, D, Horwitz, S M, Frazier, T W, Arnold, L E, Fristad, M A, Youngstrom, E A, Findling, R L, and Phillips, M L
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- 2016
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5. Altered functioning of reward circuitry in youth offspring of parents with bipolar disorder
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Manelis, A., Ladouceur, C. D., Graur, S., Monk, K., Bonar, L. K., Hickey, M. B., Dwojak, A. C., Axelson, D., Goldstein, B. I., Goldstein, T. R., Bebko, G., Bertocci, M. A., Gill, M. K., Birmaher, B., and Phillips, M. L.
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- 2016
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6. Behavioral and emotional dysregulation trajectories marked by prefrontal–amygdala function in symptomatic youth
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Bertocci, M. A., Bebko, G., Olino, T., Fournier, J., Hinze, A. K., Bonar, L., Almeida, J. R. C., Perlman, S. B., Versace, A., Travis, M., Gill, M. K., Demeter, C., Diwadkar, V. A., White, R., Schirda, C., Sunshine, J. L., Arnold, L. E., Holland, S. K., Kowatch, R. A., Birmaher, B., Axelson, D., Youngstrom, E. A., Findling, R. L., Horwitz, S. M., Fristad, M. A., and Phillips, M. L.
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- 2014
7. Characterization of very young mineral phases of bone by solid state 31Phosphorus magic angle sample spinning nuclear magnetic resonance and X-ray diffraction
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Roberts, J. E., Bonar, L. C., Griffin, R. G., and Glimcher, M. J.
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- 1992
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8. The Catholic Church and Power Politics in Latin America: The Dominican Case in Comparative Perspective
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Sandoval, Bonar L. Hernandez
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The Catholic Church and Power Politics in Latin America: The Dominican Case in Comparative Perspective (Nonfiction work) -- Book reviews ,Books -- Book reviews ,History ,Regional focus/area studies - Published
- 2009
9. X-ray diffraction radial distribution function studies on bone mineral and synthetic calcium phosphates
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Grynpas, M. D., Bonar, L. C., and Glimcher, Melvin J.
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- 1984
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10. X-ray diffraction studies of the crystallinity of bone mineral in newly synthesized and density fractionated bone
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Bonar, L. C., Roufosse, A. H., Sabine, W. K., Grynpas, M. D., and Glimcher, M. J.
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- 1983
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11. X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis in a Steel Foundry
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Bonar, L. G. and Strong, R. W.
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- 1966
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12. Reward-related neural activity and structure predict future substance use in dysregulated youth.
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Bertocci, M. A., Bebko, G., Versace, A., Iyengar, S., Bonar, L., Forbes, E. E., Almeida, J. R. C., Perlman, S. B., Schirda, C., Travis, M. J., Gill, M. K., Diwadkar, V. A., Sunshine, J. L., Holland, S. K., Kowatch, R. A., Birmaher, B., Axelson, D. A., Frazier, T. W., Arnold, L. E., and Fristad, M. A.
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BRAIN physiology ,CEREBRAL cortex ,SUBSTANCE abuse & psychology ,ANALYSIS of variance ,BIOMARKERS ,EMOTIONS ,LIMBIC system ,MENTAL health ,NEURORADIOLOGY ,REGRESSION analysis ,REWARD (Psychology) - Abstract
Background. Identifying youth who may engage in future substance use could facilitate early identification of substance use disorder vulnerability. We aimed to identify biomarkers that predicted future substance use in psychiatrically unwell youth. Method. LASSO regression for variable selection was used to predict substance use 24.3 months after neuroimaging assessment in 73 behaviorally and emotionally dysregulated youth aged 13.9 (S.D. = 2.0) years, 30 female, from three clinical sites in the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms (LAMS) study. Predictor variables included neural activity during a reward task, cortical thickness, and clinical and demographic variables. Results. Future substance use was associated with higher left middle prefrontal cortex activity, lower left ventral anterior insula activity, thicker caudal anterior cingulate cortex, higher depression and lower mania scores, not using antipsychotic medication, more parental stress, older age. This combination of variables explained 60.4% of the variance in future substance use, and accurately classified 83.6%. Conclusions. These variables explained a large proportion of the variance, were useful classifiers of future substance use, and showed the value of combining multiple domains to provide a comprehensive understanding of substance use development. This may be a step toward identifying neural measures that can identify future substance use disorder risk, and act as targets for therapeutic interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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13. La historia de Guatemala en sus libros.
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Hernández S., Bonar L.
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- 2006
14. Fibrous Proteins of Snake Scale.
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BADEN, H. P., ROTH, S. I., and BONAR, L. C.
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- 1966
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15. The Mayan in the Mall: Globalization, Development, and the Making of Modern Guatemala by J. T. Way (review)
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Hernández, Bonar L.
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- 2014
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16. Examining relationships among NODDI indices of white matter structure in prefrontal cortical-thalamic-striatal circuitry and OCD symptomatology.
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Lima Santos JP, Versace A, Arora M, Bertocci MA, Chase HW, Skeba A, Graur S, Bonar L, Maffei C, Yendiki A, Rasmussen SA, Haber SN, and Phillips ML
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Corpus Striatum diagnostic imaging, Corpus Striatum pathology, Neural Pathways pathology, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Neural Pathways physiopathology, Young Adult, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Case-Control Studies, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder diagnostic imaging, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder pathology, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder physiopathology, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology, Prefrontal Cortex pathology, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Thalamus diagnostic imaging, Thalamus pathology
- Abstract
Obsessive-compulsive disorder is a psychiatric disorder characterized by intrusive thoughts and repetitive behaviors. There are two prominent features: Harm Avoidance (HA) and Incompleteness (INC). Previous resting-state studies reported abnormally elevated connectivity between prefrontal cortical (PFC) and subcortical regions (thalamus, striatum) in OCD participants. Yet, little is known about the white matter (WM) structural abnormalities in these connections. Using brain parcellation and segmentation, whole brain tractography, and Neurite Orientation Dispersion and Density Imaging (NODDI), we aimed to characterize WM structural abnormalities in OCD vs. healthy controls and determine the extent to which NODDI indices of these connections were associated with subthreshold-threshold HA, INC and overall OCD symptom severity across all participants. Four PFC regions were segmented: ventral medial (vmPFC), ventrolateral (vlPFC), dorsomedial (dmPFC), and dorsolateral (dlPFC). NODDI Neurite Density (NDI) and Orientation Dispersion (ODI) indices of WM structure were extracted from connections between these PFC regions and the thalamus (42 OCD, 44 healthy controls, mean age[SD] = 23.65[4.25]y, 63.9% female) and striatum (38 OCD, 41 healthy controls, mean age[SD] = 23.59[4.27]y, 64.5% female). Multivariate analyses of covariance revealed no between-group differences in these indices. Multivariate regression models revealed that greater NDI in vmPFC-thalamus, greater NDI and ODI in vmPFC-striatum, and greater NDI in dmPFC-thalamus connections were associated with greater INC severity (Q ≤ 0.032). These findings highlight the utility of NODDI in the examination of WM structure in OCD, provide valuable insights into specific WM alterations underlying dimensional INC, and can facilitate the development of customized treatments for OCD individuals with treatment-resistant symptoms., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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17. Specific Patterns of Endogenous Functional Connectivity Are Associated With Harm Avoidance in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.
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Ghane M, Trambaiolli L, Bertocci MA, Martinez-Rivera FJ, Chase HW, Brady T, Skeba A, Graur S, Bonar L, Iyengar S, Quirk GJ, Rasmussen SA, Haber SN, and Phillips ML
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Neural Pathways physiopathology, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain physiopathology, Young Adult, Avoidance Learning physiology, Harm Reduction, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder physiopathology, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
Background: Individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) show persistent avoidance behaviors, often in the absence of actual threat. Quality-of-life costs and heterogeneity support the need for novel brain-behavior intervention targets. Informed by mechanistic and anatomical studies of persistent avoidance in rodents and nonhuman primates, our goal was to test whether connections within a hypothesized persistent avoidance-related network predicted OCD-related harm avoidance (HA), a trait measure of persistent avoidance. We hypothesized that 1) HA, not an OCD diagnosis, would be associated with altered endogenous connectivity in at least one connection in the network; 2) HA-specific findings would be robust to comorbid symptoms; and 3) reliable findings would replicate in a holdout testing subsample., Methods: Using resting-state functional connectivity magnetic resonance imaging, cross-validated elastic net for feature selection, and Poisson generalized linear models, we tested which connections significantly predicted HA in our training subsample (n = 73; 71.8% female; healthy control group n = 36, OCD group n = 37); robustness to comorbidities; and replicability in a testing subsample (n = 30; 56.7% female; healthy control group n = 15, OCD group n = 15)., Results: Stronger inverse connectivity between the right dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and right basolateral amygdala and stronger positive connectivity between the right ventral anterior insula and left ventral striatum were associated with greater HA across groups. Network connections did not discriminate OCD diagnostic status or predict HA-correlated traits, suggesting sensitivity to trait HA. The dorsal anterior cingulate cortex-basolateral amygdala relationship was robust to controlling for comorbidities and medication in individuals with OCD and was also predictive of HA in our testing subsample., Conclusions: Stronger inverse dorsal anterior cingulate cortex-basolateral amygdala connectivity was robustly and reliably associated with HA across groups and in OCD. Results support the relevance of a cross-species persistent avoidance-related network to OCD, with implications for precision-based approaches and treatment., (Copyright © 2024 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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18. Working memory updating in individuals with bipolar and unipolar depression: fMRI study.
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Manelis A, Halchenko YO, Bonar L, Stiffler RS, Satz S, Miceli R, Ladouceur CD, Bebko G, Iyengar S, Swartz HA, and Phillips ML
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- Brain diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Memory, Short-Term, Bipolar Disorder, Depressive Disorder psychology
- Abstract
Understanding neurobiological characteristics of cognitive dysfunction in distinct psychiatric disorders remains challenging. In this secondary data analysis, we examined neurobiological differences in brain response during working memory updating among individuals with bipolar disorder (BD), those with unipolar depression (UD), and healthy controls (HC). Individuals between 18-45 years of age with BD (n = 100), UD (n = 109), and HC (n = 172) were scanned using fMRI while performing 0-back (easy) and 2-back (difficult) tasks with letters as the stimuli and happy, fearful, or neutral faces as distractors. The 2(n-back) × 3(groups) × 3(distractors) ANCOVA examined reaction time (RT), accuracy, and brain activation during the task. HC showed more accurate and faster responses than individuals with BD and UD. Difficulty-related activation in the prefrontal, posterior parietal, paracingulate cortices, striatal, lateral occipital, precuneus, and thalamic regions differed among groups. Individuals with BD showed significantly lower difficulty-related activation differences in the left lateral occipital and the right paracingulate cortices than those with UD. In individuals with BD, greater difficulty-related worsening in accuracy was associated with smaller activity changes in the right precuneus, while greater difficulty-related slowing in RT was associated with smaller activity changes in the prefrontal, frontal opercular, paracingulate, posterior parietal, and lateral occipital cortices. Measures of current depression and mania did not correlate with the difficulty-related brain activation differences in either group. Our findings suggest that the alterations in the working memory circuitry may be a trait characteristic of reduced working memory capacity in mood disorders. Aberrant patterns of activation in the left lateral occipital and paracingulate cortices may be specific to BD., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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19. White Matter Correlates of Early-Onset Bipolar Illness and Predictors of One-Year Recurrence of Depression in Adults with Bipolar Disorder.
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Lima Santos JP, Bertocci M, Bebko G, Goldstein T, Kim T, Iyengar S, Bonar L, Gill M, Merranko J, Yendiki A, Birmaher B, Phillips ML, and Versace A
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Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging (dMRI) studies have reported abnormalities in emotion regulation circuits in BD; however, no study has examined the contribution of previous illness on these mechanisms. Using global probabilistic tractography, we aimed to identify neural correlates of previous BD illness and the extent to which these can help predict one-year recurrence of depressive episodes. dMRI data were collected in 70 adults with early-onset BD who were clinically followed for up to 18 years and 39 healthy controls. Higher number of depressive episodes during childhood/adolescence and higher percentage of time with syndromic depression during longitudinal follow-up was associated with lower fractional anisotropy (FA) in focal regions of the forceps minor (left, F = 4.4, p = 0.003; right, F = 3.1, p = 0.021) and anterior cingulum bundle (left, F = 4.7, p = 0.002; right, F = 7.0, p < 0.001). Lower FA in these regions was also associated with higher depressive and anxiety symptoms at scan. Remarkably, those having higher FA in the right cluster of the forceps minor (AOR = 0.43, p = 0.017) and in a cluster of the posterior cingulum bundle (right, AOR = 0.50, p = 0.032) were protected against the recurrence of depressive episodes. Previous depressive symptomatology may cause neurodegenerative effects in the forceps minor that are associated with worsening of BD symptomatology in subsequent years. Abnormalities in the posterior cingulum may also play a role.
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- 2022
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20. White matter predictors of worsening of subthreshold hypomania severity in non-bipolar young adults parallel abnormalities in individuals with bipolar disorder.
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Santos JPL, Versace A, Stiffler RS, Aslam HA, Lockovich JC, Bonar L, Bertocci M, Iyengar S, Bebko G, Skeba A, Gill MK, Monk K, Hickey MB, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
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- Anisotropy, Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods, Humans, Mania, Young Adult, Bipolar Disorder psychology, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Background: Identifying neural predictors of worsening subthreshold hypomania severity can help identify risk of progression to BD. While diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging (dMRI) studies reported white matter microstructural abnormalities in tracts supporting emotional regulation in individuals with BD, it remains unknown whether similar patterns of white matter microstructure predict worsening of subthreshold hypomania severity in non-BD individuals., Methods: dMRI data were collected in: 81 non-BD individuals recruited across a range of subthreshold depression and hypomania, and followed for six months; and independent samples of 75 BD and 58 healthy individuals. All individuals were assessed using standardized diagnostic assessments, mood and anxiety symptom rating scales. Global probabilistic tractography and a tract-profile approach examined fractional anisotropy (FA), a measure of fiber collinearity, in tracts supporting emotional regulation shown to have abnormalities in BD: forceps minor (FMIN), anterior thalamic radiation (ATR), cingulum bundle (CB), and uncinate fasciculus (UF)., Results: Lower FA in left CB (middle, β = -0.22, P = 0.022; posterior, β = -0.32, P < 0.001), right CB (anterior, β = -0.30, P = 0.003; posterior, β = -0.27, P = 0.005), and right UF (frontal, β = -0.29, P = 0.002; temporal, β = -0.40, P < 0.001) predicted worsening of subthreshold hypomania severity in non-BD individuals. BD versus healthy individuals showed lower FA in several of these segments: middle left CB (F = 8.7, P = 0.004), anterior right CB (F = 9.8, P = 0.002), and frontal right UF (F = 7.0, P = 0.009). Non-BD individuals with worsening 6-month hypomania had lower FA in these three segments versus HC and non-BD individuals without worsening hypomania, but similar FA to BD individuals., Limitations: Relatively short follow-up., Conclusions: White matter predictors of worsening subthreshold hypomania in non-BD individuals parallel abnormalities in BD individuals, and can guide early risk identification and interventions., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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21. Patterns of Infant Amygdala Connectivity Mediate the Impact of High Caregiver Affect on Reducing Infant Smiling: Discovery and Replication.
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Phillips ML, Schmithorst VJ, Banihashemi L, Taylor M, Samolyk A, Northrup JB, English GE, Versace A, Stiffler RS, Aslam HA, Bonar L, Panigrahy A, and Hipwell AE
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- Amygdala, Female, Humans, Infant, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Caregivers, Smiling
- Abstract
Background: Behavioral research indicates that caregiver mood disorders and emotional instability in the early months following childbirth are associated with lower positive emotionality and higher negative emotionality in infants, but the neural mechanisms remain understudied., Methods: Using resting-state functional connectivity as a measure of the functional architecture of the early infant brain, we aimed to determine the extent to which connectivity between the amygdala, a key region supporting emotional learning and perception, and large-scale neural networks mediated the association between caregiver affect and anxiety and early infant negative emotionality and positive emotionality. Two samples of infants (first sample: n = 58; second sample: n = 31) 3 months of age underwent magnetic resonance imaging during natural sleep., Results: During infancy, greater resting-state functional connectivity between the amygdala and the salience network and, to a lesser extent, lower amygdala and executive control network resting-state functional connectivity mediated the effect of greater caregiver postpartum depression and trait anxiety on reducing infant smiling (familywise error-corrected p < .05). Furthermore, results from the first sample were replicated in the second, independent sample, to a greater extent for caregiver depression than for caregiver anxiety., Conclusions: We provide evidence of early objective neural markers that can help identify infants who are more likely to be at risk from, versus those who might be protected against, the deleterious effects of caregiver depression and anxiety and reduced positive emotionality., (Copyright © 2021 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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22. Neural function during emotion regulation and future depressive symptoms in youth at risk for affective disorders.
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Fournier JC, Bertocci M, Ladouceur CD, Bonar L, Monk K, Abdul-Waalee H, Versace A, Santos JPL, Iyengar S, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
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- Adolescent, Depression, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Mood Disorders, Depressive Disorder, Major, Emotional Regulation
- Abstract
Affective disorders (AD, including bipolar disorder, BD, and major depressive disorder) are severe recurrent illnesses. Identifying neural markers of processes underlying AD development in at-risk youth can provide objective, "early-warning" signs that may predate onset or worsening of symptoms. Using data (n = 34) from the Bipolar Offspring Study, we examined relationships between neural response in regions supporting executive function, and those supporting self-monitoring, during an emotional n-back task (focusing on the 2-back face distractor versus the 0-back no-face control conditions) and future depressive and hypo/manic symptoms across two groups of youth at familial risk for AD: Offspring of parents with BD (n = 15, age = 14.15) and offspring of parents with non-BD psychopathology (n = 19, age = 13.62). Participants were scanned and assessed twice, approximately 4 years apart. Across groups, less deactivation in the mid-cingulate cortex during emotional regulation (Rate Ratio = 3.07(95% CI:1.09-8.66), χ
2 (1) = 4.48, p = 0.03) at Time-1, and increases in functional connectivity from Time-1 to 2 (Rate Ratio = 1.45(95% CI:1.15-1.84), χ2 (1) = 8.69, p = 0.003) between regions that showed deactivation during emotional regulation and the right caudate, predicted higher depression severity at Time-2. Both effects were robust to sensitivity analyses controlling for clinical characteristics. Decreases in deactivation between Times 1 and 2 in the right putamen tail were associated with increases in hypo/mania at Time-2, but this effect was not robust to sensitivity analyses. Our findings reflect neural mechanisms of risk for worsening affective symptoms, particularly depression, in youth across a range of familial risk for affective disorders. They may serve as potential objective, early-warning signs of AD in youth.- Published
- 2021
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23. Factors influencing estimates of HIV-1 infection timing using BEAST.
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Dearlove B, Tovanabutra S, Owen CL, Lewitus E, Li Y, Sanders-Buell E, Bose M, O'Sullivan AM, Kijak G, Miller S, Poltavee K, Lee J, Bonar L, Harbolick E, Ahani B, Pham P, Kibuuka H, Maganga L, Nitayaphan S, Sawe FK, Kim JH, Eller LA, Vasan S, Gramzinski R, Michael NL, Robb ML, and Rolland M
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- Bayes Theorem, Cohort Studies, Computational Biology, Female, Genes, Viral, Genetic Variation, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections virology, Humans, Likelihood Functions, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Models, Genetic, Phylogeny, Time Factors, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Models, Biological, Software
- Abstract
While large datasets of HIV-1 sequences are increasingly being generated, many studies rely on a single gene or fragment of the genome and few comparative studies across genes have been done. We performed genome-based and gene-specific Bayesian phylogenetic analyses to investigate how certain factors impact estimates of the infection dates in an acute HIV-1 infection cohort, RV217. In this cohort, HIV-1 diagnosis corresponded to the first RNA positive test and occurred a median of four days after the last negative test, allowing us to compare timing estimates using BEAST to a narrow window of infection. We analyzed HIV-1 sequences sampled one week, one month and six months after HIV-1 diagnosis in 39 individuals. We found that shared diversity and temporal signal was limited in acute infection, and insufficient to allow timing inferences in the shortest HIV-1 genes, thus dated phylogenies were primarily analyzed for env, gag, pol and near full-length genomes. There was no one best-fitting model across participants and genes, though relaxed molecular clocks (73% of best-fitting models) and the Bayesian skyline (49%) tended to be favored. For infections with single founders, the infection date was estimated to be around one week pre-diagnosis for env (IQR: 3-9 days) and gag (IQR: 5-9 days), whilst the genome placed it at a median of 10 days (IQR: 4-19). Multiply-founded infections proved problematic to date. Our ability to compare timing inferences to precise estimates of HIV-1 infection (within a week) highlights that molecular dating methods can be applied to within-host datasets from early infection. Nonetheless, our results also suggest caution when using uniform clock and population models or short genes with limited information content., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2021
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24. White Matter Correlates of Suicidality in Adults With Bipolar Disorder Who Have Been Prospectively Characterized Since Childhood.
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Lima Santos JP, Brent D, Bertocci M, Mailliard S, Bebko G, Goldstein T, Kim T, Iyengar S, Hafeman D, Fenster-Ehrlich VC, Skeba A, Bonar L, Abdul-Waalee H, Gill M, Merranko J, Birmaher B, Phillips ML, and Versace A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Humans, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide, Attempted, Bipolar Disorder, Suicide, White Matter diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: Prevention of suicide in individuals with early-onset bipolar disorder (BD) remains a challenge. Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging studies in BD have identified neural correlates of emotional dysregulation implicated in BD and suicide. Using diffusion magnetic resonance imaging, we sought to identify neural signatures of suicide attempts in adults with childhood-onset BD who have been clinically followed for up to 19 years as part of the COBY (Course and Outcome of Bipolar Youth) study., Methods: Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging data were collected in 68 adults with BD: 20 in the suicide attempter (SA
+ ) group and 48 in the non-suicide attempter (SA- ) group. Multivariate analysis of covariance was used to identify the effect of group (SA+ , SA- ) on mean fractional anisotropy (indirect index of fiber collinearity) in key white matter tracts of emotional regulation. The effect of suicidal ideation and other clinical factors was further explored. False discovery rate was used to account for multiple comparison. Forty healthy control subjects were included., Results: Analyses revealed a main effect of group on fractional anisotropy (F5,59 = 3.0, p = .017). Specifically, the SA+ group showed lower fractional anisotropy than the SA- and healthy control groups in the middle portion of the forceps minor (FMIN) (F1,63 = 8.5, p = .010) and in the anterior (F1,63 = 7.8, p = .010) and posterior (F1,63 = 8.7, p = .006) portion of the right cingulum bundle (CB). Abnormalities in the FMIN, but not CB, were also associated with suicidal ideation (F1,64 = 10.6, p = .002) and levels of emotional distress at scan., Conclusions: FMIN and CB abnormalities have been associated with emotional dysregulation in BD. Our findings suggest that the FMIN may represent a generic marker of suicidal ideation and, more broadly, emotional distress, while CB may represent a specific marker of attempted suicide., (Copyright © 2020 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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25. Emotional regulation neural circuitry abnormalities in adult bipolar disorder: dissociating effects of long-term depression history from relationships with present symptoms.
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Bertocci MA, Bergman J, Santos JPL, Iyengar S, Bonar L, Gill MK, Abdul-Waalee H, Bebko G, Stiffler R, Lockovich J, Aslam H, Ladouceur C, Merranko J, Diler R, Birmaher B, Versace A, and Phillips ML
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Emotions, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prefrontal Cortex, Prospective Studies, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Depression, Emotional Regulation
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is common and debilitating and confounding effects of depression history on neural activity in BD are unknown. We aimed to dissociate neural activity reflecting past depression-load vs. present symptom severity using the Course and Outcome of Bipolar Youth (COBY), a prospective longitudinal cohort study of pediatric-onset BD. In n = 54 COBY (18-32 years), we modeled depression scores over time (up to 17.5 years) using a standardized autoregressive moving average (ARMA) model, followed by k-means cluster analysis. N = 36 healthy participants (HC, 20-36 years) were included. Using two factorial analyses, we parsed the impact of ARMA-defined past depression-load on neural activity from the impact of current symptoms on neural activity (p < 0.001, k > 30) and examined relationships with past and present symptoms (ps FDR-corrected). ARMA identified three COBY groups based on past depression-load. ARMA-defined COBY participants with the greatest past depression-load vs. other groups showed greater activity in right temporoparietal junction, thalamus, insula, premotor cortex, left fusiform gyrus, bilateral precuneus and cerebellum. In contrast, BD-COBY participants vs. HC showed greater activity in left hippocampus, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and right somatosensory cortex, plus the above thalamus, premotor cortex and cerebellum; activity positively correlated with present symptom severity in most regions. Past depression-load was related to social cognition and salience perception network activity, potentially reflecting heightened attention to socially relevant distracters, while present symptoms were associated with emotion processing and reappraisal network activity, potentially reflecting abnormal emotional experience and regulation. Differentiating aberrant neural activity related to long-term depression vs. present affective symptoms can help target interventions to networks associated with pathophysiological processes, rather than long-term illness effects.
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- 2020
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26. Views from the Front: Inner-City and Rural Pandemic Perspectives.
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Egan T and Bonar L
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- Adult, Arizona, Attitude of Health Personnel, Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, Chicago, Cities statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Indians, North American, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics prevention & control, Pandemics statistics & numerical data, Rural Population, SARS-CoV-2, Urban Population, Adaptation, Psychological, Coronavirus Infections diagnosis, Coronavirus Infections psychology, Coronavirus Infections therapy, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Delivery of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Health Personnel psychology, Pneumonia, Viral diagnosis, Pneumonia, Viral psychology, Pneumonia, Viral therapy
- Abstract
For populations experiencing the preexisting conditions of poverty and all its related social inequalities, the COVID-19 pandemic further complicates the delivery of healthcare. Two members of the American College of Healthcare Executives-Tim Egan, president and CEO of Roseland Community Hospital on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois, and Lynette Bonar, RN, FACHE, CEO of Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation on the Navajo and Hopi reservations in Arizona-deal with those complications daily. Presented here together, their perspectives show resilience, cultural sensitivity, and commitment to protect the well-being of their diverse communities.
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- 2020
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27. Limbic white matter structural integrity at 3 months prospectively predicts negative emotionality in 9-month-old infants: a preliminary study.
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Banihashemi L, Bertocci MA, Alkhars HM, Versace A, Northrup JB, Lee VK, Schmithorst VJ, Samolyk A, Taylor M, English GE, Stiffler RS, Aslam HA, Bonar L, Panigrahy A, Hipwell AE, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Brain, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Frontal Lobe, Humans, Infant, Prospective Studies, White Matter diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: Little is known about how early alterations in white matter relate to clinically relevant behaviors such as emotional dysregulation. Thus, our goal was to examine how the white matter structural integrity of key limbic (i.e., uncinate fasciculus and cingulum) and commissural (i.e., forceps minor) bundles in 3-month-old infants prospectively predicts emotional regulation behaviors at 9 months., Methods: Three-month-old infants underwent multishell diffusion-weighted imaging. Following image processing, tractography was performed for each tract within each infant's native space (n=20). Measures of white matter integrity, including microstructure and morphology, were extracted from each tract. At 9 months, negative emotionality (NE) and positive emotionality (PE) were elicited using Laboratory Assessment of Temperament tasks. Elastic net regressions were performed for variable selection, which included white matter integrity variables from each of the 3 tracts, along with several covariates, including age, sex, use of public assistance, and the mother's depressive symptoms. Outcome variables were NE and PE composite scores evaluated in two separate models., Results: Notably, following hierarchical regression using elastic net-selected variables, uncinate structural integrity was the most robust predictor of NE (ß=-0.631, p=0.005)., Limitations: The sample size of our study is a limitation, however, as a preliminary study, our goal was to describe our findings to inform future, larger studies., Conclusions: Greater uncinate structural integrity predicted lower NE, suggesting that greater uncinate structural integrity at 3 months allows greater emotional regulation capacity at 9 months. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate prospective brain-to-emotional behavior relationships in infants., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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28. Functional disruption in prefrontal-striatal network in obsessive-compulsive disorder.
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Sha Z, Versace A, Edmiston EK, Fournier J, Graur S, Greenberg T, Santos JPL, Chase HW, Stiffler RS, Bonar L, Hudak R, Yendiki A, Greenberg BD, Rasmussen S, Liu H, Quirk G, Haber S, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adult, Amygdala physiopathology, Case-Control Studies, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Corpus Striatum diagnostic imaging, Corpus Striatum physiopathology, Female, Gyrus Cinguli physiopathology, Humans, Male, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder diagnostic imaging, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, Thalamus physiopathology, Young Adult, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Nerve Net physiopathology, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder physiopathology, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is characterized by intrusive thoughts and repetitive, compulsive behaviors. While a cortico-striatal-limbic network has been implicated in the pathophysiology of OCD, the neural correlates of this network in OCD are not well understood. In this study, we examined resting state functional connectivity among regions within the cortico-striatal-limbic OCD neural network, including the rostral anterior cingulate cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, amygdala, thalamus and caudate, in 44 OCD and 43 healthy participants. We then examined relationships between OCD neural network connectivity and OCD symptom severity in OCD participants. OCD relative to healthy participants showed significantly greater connectivity between the left caudate and bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. We also found a positive correlation between left caudate-bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex connectivity and depression scores in OCD participants, such that greater positive connectivity was associated with more severe symptoms. This study makes a significant contribution to our understanding of functional networks and their relationship with depression in OCD., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors report no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2020
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29. Functional Disruption of Cerebello-thalamo-cortical Networks in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.
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Sha Z, Edmiston EK, Versace A, Fournier JC, Graur S, Greenberg T, Lima Santos JP, Chase HW, Stiffler RS, Bonar L, Hudak R, Yendiki A, Greenberg BD, Rasmussen S, Liu H, Quirk G, Haber S, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain, Cerebellum, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
- Abstract
Background: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is characterized by intrusive thoughts and repetitive, compulsive behaviors. Neuroimaging studies have implicated altered connectivity among the functional networks of the cerebral cortex in the pathophysiology of OCD. However, there has been no comprehensive investigation of the cross-talk between the cerebellum and functional networks in the cerebral cortex., Methods: This functional neuroimaging study was completed by 44 adult participants with OCD and 43 healthy control participants. We performed large-scale data-driven brain network analysis to identify functional connectivity patterns using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data., Results: Participants with OCD showed lower functional connectivity within the somatomotor network and greater functional connectivity among the somatomotor network, cerebellum, and subcortical network (e.g., thalamus and pallidum; all p < .005). Network-based statistics analyses demonstrated one component comprising connectivity within the somatomotor network that showed lower connectivity and a second component comprising connectivity among the somatomotor network, and motor regions in particular, and the cerebellum that showed greater connectivity in participants with OCD relative to healthy control participants. In participants with OCD, abnormal connectivity across both network-based statistics-derived components positively correlated with OCD symptom severity (p = .006)., Conclusions: To our knowledge, this study is the first comprehensive investigation of large-scale network alteration across the cerebral cortex, subcortical regions, and cerebellum in OCD. Our findings highlight a critical role of the cerebellum in the pathophysiology of OCD., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2020
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30. Molecular dating and viral load growth rates suggested that the eclipse phase lasted about a week in HIV-1 infected adults in East Africa and Thailand.
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Rolland M, Tovanabutra S, Dearlove B, Li Y, Owen CL, Lewitus E, Sanders-Buell E, Bose M, O'Sullivan A, Rossenkhan R, Labuschagne JPL, Edlefsen PT, Reeves DB, Kijak G, Miller S, Poltavee K, Lee J, Bonar L, Harbolick E, Ahani B, Pham P, Kibuuka H, Maganga L, Nitayaphan S, Sawe FK, Eller LA, Gramzinski R, Kim JH, Michael NL, and Robb ML
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- Adult, Africa, Eastern, Female, HIV Infections genetics, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Thailand, Time Factors, Viremia genetics, Genome, Viral, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV-1 metabolism, Molecular Diagnostic Techniques, Viral Load, Viremia diagnosis
- Abstract
Most HIV-1 infected individuals do not know their infection dates. Precise infection timing is crucial information for studies that document transmission networks or drug levels at infection. To improve infection timing, we used the prospective RV217 cohort where the window when plasma viremia becomes detectable is narrow: the last negative visit occurred a median of four days before the first detectable HIV-1 viremia with an RNA test, referred below as diagnosis. We sequenced 1,280 HIV-1 genomes from 39 participants at a median of 4, 32 and 170 days post-diagnosis. HIV-1 infections were dated by using sequence-based methods and a viral load regression method. Bayesian coalescent and viral load regression estimated that infections occurred a median of 6 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 9-3 and 11-4 days prior, respectively). Poisson-Fitter, which analyzes the distribution of hamming distances among sequences, estimated a median of 7 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 15-4 days) based on sequences sampled 4 days post-diagnosis, but it did not yield plausible results using sequences sampled at 32 days. Fourteen participants reported a high-risk exposure event at a median of 8 days prior to diagnosis (IQR: 12 to 6 days prior). These different methods concurred that HIV-1 infection occurred about a week before detectable viremia, corresponding to 20 days (IQR: 34-15 days) before peak viral load. Together, our methods comparison helps define a framework for future dating studies in early HIV-1 infection., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2020
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31. Neural mechanisms of persistent avoidance in OCD: A novel avoidance devaluation study.
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Chase HW, Graur S, Versace A, Greenberg T, Bonar L, Hudak R, Quirk GJ, Greenberg BD, Rasmussen SA, Haber SN, and Phillips ML
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- Cognition, Habits, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Reward, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is characterized by repetitive avoidance behavior which is distressing and associated with marked impairment of everyday life. Recently, paradigms have been designed to explore the hypothesis that avoidance behavior in OCD is consistent with a formal conception of habit. Such studies have involved a devaluation paradigm, in which the value of a previously rewarded cue is altered so that avoidance is no longer necessary. We employed a rule-based avoidance task which included a devaluation, examining behavioral performance on the task and their neural correlates using functional MRI in groups of participants with OCD (n = 44) and healthy control participants (n = 46). Neuroimaging data were analyzed using a general linear model (GLM), modelling valued, devalued and control cues, as well as feedback events. First, while no overall effect of OCD was seen on devaluation performance, patients with longer illness duration showed poorer devaluation performance (χ
2 = 13.84, p < 0.001). Reduced devaluation was related to impaired learning on the overtraining phase of the task, and to enhanced feedback activation in the caudate and parietal lobe during within-scanner retraining (T = 5.52, p_FWE = 0.003), across all participants. Second, a significant interaction effect was observed in the premotor cortex (F = 29.03, p_FWE = 0.007) coupled to the devalued cue. Activations were divergent in participants with OCD (lower activation) and healthy controls (higher activation) who did not change responding to the devalued cue following devaluation, and intermediate in participants who did change responding (T = 5.39, p_FWE = 0.003). Finally, consistent with previous work, medial orbitofrontal cortex activation coupled to valued cues was reduced in OCD compared to controls (T = 3.49, p_FWE = 0.009). The findings are discussed in terms of a prediction error-based model of goal-directed and habitual control: specifically, how goal-directed control might be diminished in OCD in favor of habits. They suggest that illness duration might be significant determinant of variation in impaired goal-directed learning in OCD, and be a factor relevant for understanding discrepancies across studies. Overall, the study shows the potential of conceptual replication attempts to provide complementary insights into compulsive behavior and its associated neural circuitry in OCD., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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32. Clinical, cortical thickness and neural activity predictors of future affective lability in youth at risk for bipolar disorder: initial discovery and independent sample replication.
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Bertocci MA, Hanford L, Manelis A, Iyengar S, Youngstrom EA, Gill MK, Monk K, Versace A, Bonar L, Bebko G, Ladouceur CD, Perlman SB, Diler R, Horwitz SM, Arnold LE, Hafeman D, Travis MJ, Kowatch R, Holland SK, Fristad MA, Findling RL, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Anxiety physiopathology, Anxiety Disorders physiopathology, Biomarkers, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Depression physiopathology, Depressive Disorder, Major physiopathology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Parietal Lobe physiopathology, Prognosis, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Risk Factors, Temporal Lobe physiopathology, Young Adult, Bipolar Disorder diagnosis, Bipolar Disorder metabolism, Neural Pathways physiopathology
- Abstract
We aimed to identify markers of future affective lability in youth at bipolar disorder risk from the Pittsburgh Bipolar Offspring Study (BIOS) (n = 41, age = 14, SD = 2.30), and validate these predictors in an independent sample from the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms study (LAMS) (n = 55, age = 13.7, SD = 1.9). We included factors of mixed/mania, irritability, and anxiety/depression (29 months post MRI scan) in regularized regression models. Clinical and demographic variables, along with neural activity during reward and emotion processing and gray matter structure in all cortical regions at baseline, were used to predict future affective lability factor scores, using regularized regression. Future affective lability factor scores were predicted in both samples by unique combinations of baseline neural structure, function, and clinical characteristics. Lower bilateral parietal cortical thickness, greater left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex thickness, lower right transverse temporal cortex thickness, greater self-reported depression, mania severity, and age at scan predicted greater future mixed/mania factor score. Lower bilateral parietal cortical thickness, greater right entorhinal cortical thickness, greater right fusiform gyral activity during emotional face processing, diagnosis of major depressive disorder, and greater self-reported depression severity predicted greater irritability factor score. Greater self-reported depression severity predicted greater anxiety/depression factor score. Elucidating unique clinical and neural predictors of future-specific affective lability factors is a step toward identifying objective markers of bipolar disorder risk, to provide neural targets to better guide and monitor early interventions in bipolar disorder at-risk youth.
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- 2019
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33. Advocating for Equity in Cancer Care.
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McCanney J, Johnson T, Bandini LAM, Chambers S, Bonar L, and Carlson RW
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- Ethnicity, Healthcare Disparities, Humans, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms therapy, United States epidemiology, Health Equity, Neoplasms epidemiology, Patient Advocacy, Patient Care standards
- Abstract
Demographic factors such as race, socioeconomic status, gender identity, area of residence, native language, and cultural barriers have an effect on outcomes in cancer care. To identify unmet needs, challenges, and opportunities in achieving high-quality, patient-centered cancer care for all, NCCN conducted a yearlong environmental scan, which involved stakeholder meetings with patients and patient advocacy groups to discuss these topics. The findings from this scan informed the corresponding NCCN Patient Advocacy Summit: Advocating for Equity in Cancer Care, held in Washington, DC, on December 10, 2018. In addition to the many patient advocacy groups, the summit featured a number of other stakeholders that advocate for equity in cancer care. This article encapsulates the findings of the environmental scan and the discussion from the NCCN Patient Advocacy Summit.
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- 2019
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34. Deep Sequencing Reveals Central Nervous System Compartmentalization in Multiple Transmitted/Founder Virus Acute HIV-1 Infection.
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Tovanabutra S, Sirijatuphat R, Pham PT, Bonar L, Harbolick EA, Bose M, Song H, Chang D, Oropeza C, O'Sullivan AM, Balinang J, Kroon E, Colby DJ, Sacdalan C, Hellmuth J, Chan P, Prueksakaew P, Pinyakorn S, Jagodzinski LL, Sutthichom D, Pattamaswin S, de Souza M, Gramzinski RA, Kim JH, Michael NL, Robb ML, Phanuphak N, Ananworanich J, Valcour V, Kijak GH, Sanders-Buell E, and Spudich S
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Male, Sequence Analysis, RNA, Virus Replication, Young Adult, Genes, env genetics, Genes, pol genetics, HIV Infections blood, HIV Infections cerebrospinal fluid, HIV-1 genetics, HIV-1 physiology, RNA, Viral blood
- Abstract
HIV-1 disseminates to a broad range of tissue compartments during acute HIV-1 infection (AHI). The central nervous system (CNS) can serve as an early and persistent site of viral replication, which poses a potential challenge for HIV-1 remission strategies that target the HIV reservoir. CNS compartmentalization is a key feature of HIV-1 neuropathogenesis. Thus far, the timing of how early CNS compartmentalization develops after infection is unknown. We examined whether HIV-1 transmitted/founder (T/F) viruses differ between CNS and blood during AHI using single-genome sequencing of envelope gene and further examined subregions in pol and env using next-generation sequencing in paired plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from 18 individuals. Different proportions of mostly minor variants were found in six of the eight multiple T/F-infected individuals, indicating enrichment of some variants in CSF that may lead to significant compartmentalization in the later stages of infection. This study provides evidence for the first time that HIV-1 compartmentalization in the CNS can occur within days of HIV-1 exposure in multiple T/F infections. Further understanding of factors that determine enrichment of T/F variants in the CNS, as well as potential long-term implications of these findings for persistence of HIV-1 reservoirs and neurological impairment in HIV, is needed.
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- 2019
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35. Baseline and follow-up activity and functional connectivity in reward neural circuitries in offspring at risk for bipolar disorder.
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Acuff HE, Versace A, Bertocci MA, Ladouceur CD, Hanford LC, Manelis A, Monk K, Bonar L, McCaffrey A, Goldstein BI, Goldstein TR, Sakolsky D, Axelson D, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Functional Neuroimaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neural Pathways, Risk, Bipolar Disorder, Brain diagnostic imaging, Child of Impaired Parents, Reward
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is a serious psychiatric illness with demonstrated abnormalities in reward processing circuitry. Examining this circuitry in youth at familial risk for BD may provide further insight into the underlying mechanisms of BD development. In this study, we compared offspring of bipolar parents (OBP, n = 32), offspring of comparison parents with non-BD psychopathology (OCP, n = 36), and offspring of healthy parents (OHP, n = 39) during a functional magnetic resonance imaging reward processing task. Elastic net regression analyses identified 26 activity, functional connectivity (FC), and demographic variables that explained 34.24% of the variance in group (λ = 0.224). ANOVA and post-hoc analyses revealed that OBP had significantly lower right ventral striatum-left caudal anterior cingulate FC to loss (OBP versus OCP: p = 0.028, OBP versus OHP: p = 0.015) and greater right pars orbitalis-left (OBP versus OCP: p = 0.003, OBP versus OHP: p = 0.036) and -right (OBP versus OCP: p = 0.001, OBP versus OHP: p = 0.038) orbitofrontal cortex FC to reward versus OCP and OHP, respectively. These findings were not affected by non-BD psychopathology, psychotropic medication use, or symptomatology. There were no changes in, or relationships between, neuroimaging or symptom measures at follow-up (mean(SD) = 2.70(1.22) year inter-scan interval) in a subset of youth with follow-up data (OBP, n = 14; OCP, n = 8; OHP, n = 19). These findings suggest that lower right ventral striatum-left caudal anterior cingulate FC to loss and greater right pars orbitalis-orbitofrontal cortex FC to reward may be trait-level neural markers that may reflect risk for BD in at-risk youth. These findings comprise important steps toward identifying neural markers of BD risk, which may enhance early identification and guide interventions for youth at familial risk for BD.
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- 2019
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36. A Healthy Respect for Culture Can Improve the Delivery of Care.
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Bonar L
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, United States, Attitude of Health Personnel, Culturally Competent Care organization & administration, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Health Personnel psychology, Health Services, Indigenous organization & administration, Quality of Health Care organization & administration, Respect
- Published
- 2019
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37. Intrinsic functional connectivity correlates of person-level risk for bipolar disorder in offspring of affected parents.
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Hafeman DM, Chase HW, Monk K, Bonar L, Hickey MB, McCaffrey A, Graur S, Manelis A, Ladouceur CD, Merranko J, Axelson DA, Goldstein BI, Goldstein TR, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Bipolar Disorder diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Child, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, Risk, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Child of Impaired Parents, Connectome, Nerve Net physiopathology
- Abstract
Offspring of parents with bipolar disorder (OBP) are at increased risk to develop bipolar disorder (BD). Alterations in resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) have been identified in OBP; however, replication has been limited and correlation with person-level risk is unknown. A recent study found reduced rsFC between left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and clusters in the left insula (LINS), lentiform nucleus (LENT), and midcingulate cortex (MCING) in OBP (Roberts et al. 2017); here, we aim to extend these findings to at-risk youth. We scanned a subset of the Pittsburgh Bipolar Offspring Study, a longitudinal study of OBP and community controls. Twenty-four OBP, 20 offspring of control parents with non-bipolar psychopathology (OCP), and 27 healthy controls (HC) had acceptable rsFC data. After preprocessing steps, we assessed group differences in seed-based rsFC between the IFG and target clusters (LINS, LENT, MCING) using multivariate regression. Next, we tested whether rsFC correlated with person-level risk score and with other dimensional measures. We did not find group differences in rsFC between IFG and target regions. Within OBP, risk score negatively correlated with IFG-LINS rsFC (p = 0.002). Across groups, mood lability correlated negatively with rsFC between IFG and target regions (p = 0.0002), due to negative correlation with IFG-LINS (p = 0.0003) and IFG-MCING (p = 0.001) rsFC. While group-level differences were not replicated, IFG-LINS rsFC was negatively correlated with a person-level risk score in OBP and with mood lability (a predictor of BD) across the sample. Thus, IFG-LINS rsFC might constitute a risk marker, within OBP, for the development of BD.
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- 2019
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38. White matter - emotion processing activity relationships in youth offspring of bipolar parents.
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Acuff HE, Versace A, Bertocci MA, Hanford LC, Ladouceur CD, Manelis A, Monk K, Bonar L, McCaffrey A, Goldstein BI, Goldstein TR, Sakolsky D, Axelson D, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Amygdala pathology, Amygdala physiopathology, Anisotropy, Case-Control Studies, Child, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Facial Expression, Female, Frontal Lobe pathology, Frontal Lobe physiopathology, Gyrus Cinguli pathology, Gyrus Cinguli physiopathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Prefrontal Cortex pathology, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, White Matter pathology, Bipolar Disorder, Child of Impaired Parents psychology, Emotions physiology, Parents psychology, White Matter physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Early detection of Bipolar Disorder (BD) is critical for targeting interventions to delay or prevent illness onset. Yet, the absence of objective BD biomarkers makes accurately identifying at-risk youth difficult. In this study, we examined how relationships between white matter tract (WMT) structure and activity in emotion processing neural circuitry differentiate youth at risk for BD from youth at risk for other psychiatric disorders., Methods: Offspring (ages 8-17) of parents with BD (OBP, n = 32), offspring of comparison parents with non-BD psychopathology (OCP, n = 30), and offspring of healthy parents (OHP, n = 24) underwent diffusion tensor and functional magnetic resonance imaging while performing an emotional face processing task. Penalized and multiple regression analyses included GROUP(OBP,OCP)xWMT interactions as main independent variables, and emotion processing activity as dependent variables, to determine significant group differences in WMT-activity relationships., Results: 8 GROUPxWMT interaction variables contributed to 16.5% of the variance in amygdala and prefrontal cortical activity to happy faces. Of these, significant group differences in slopes (inverse for OBP, positive for OCP) existed for the relationship between forceps minor radial diffusivity and rostral anterior cingulate activity (p = 0.014). Slopes remained significantly different in unmedicated youth without psychiatric disorders (p = 0.017) and were moderated by affective lability symptoms (F(1,29) = 5.566, p = 0.036)., Limitations: Relatively small sample sizes were included., Conclusions: Forceps minor radial diffusivity-rostral anterior cingulate activity relationships may reflect underlying neuropathological processes that contribute to affectively labile youth at risk for BD and may help differentiate them from youth at risk for other psychiatric disorders., (Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2019
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39. Association of Neuroimaging Measures of Emotion Processing and Regulation Neural Circuitries With Symptoms of Bipolar Disorder in Offspring at Risk for Bipolar Disorder.
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Acuff HE, Versace A, Bertocci MA, Ladouceur CD, Hanford LC, Manelis A, Monk K, Bonar L, McCaffrey A, Goldstein BI, Goldstein TR, Sakolsky D, Axelson D, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Amygdala diagnostic imaging, Amygdala physiopathology, Analysis of Variance, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Facial Expression, Female, Gyrus Cinguli diagnostic imaging, Gyrus Cinguli physiopathology, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Neural Pathways physiopathology, Neuroimaging, Risk Factors, Bipolar Disorder diagnosis, Child of Impaired Parents, Emotions physiology
- Abstract
Importance: Bipolar disorder (BD) is difficult to distinguish from other psychiatric disorders. Neuroimaging studies can identify objective markers of BD risk., Objective: To identify neuroimaging measures in emotion processing and regulation neural circuitries and their associations with symptoms specific to youth at risk for BD., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional (August 1, 2011, to July 31, 2017) and longitudinal (February 1, 2013, to November 30, 2017) neuroimaging study performed at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center compared a sample of 31 offspring of parents with BD (OBP) with 28 offspring of comparison parents with non-BD psychopathologies (OCP) and 21 offspring of healthy parents (OHP); OBP, OCP, and OHP were recruited from the Bipolar Offspring Study and the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms Study., Main Outcomes and Measures: Group differences in activity and functional connectivity during emotional face processing and n-back task performance in amygdala, dorsolateral and ventrolateral prefrontal cortices (PFC), caudal anterior cingulate cortices (cACC), and rostral anterior cingulate cortices (rACC) neuroimaging measures showing between-group differences and symptom severity (anxiety, affective lability, depression, mania). We hypothesized that elevated amygdala activity and/or lower PFC activity and abnormal amygdala to PFC functional connectivity would distinguish OBP from OCP and OHP, and magnitudes of these abnormalities would positively correlate with elevated symptom severity. We explored associations between changes in neuroimaging and symptom measures over follow-up (mean [SD], 2.9 [1.4] years) in a subset of participants (n = 30)., Results: Eighty participants were included (mean [SD] age, 14.2 (2.1) years; 35 female). Twelve neuroimaging measures explained 51% of the variance in the results of neuroimaging measures overall. Of the 12, 9 showed significant main associations of the group; however, after post hoc analyses and Bonferroni corrections, only 7 showed statistically significant associations between groups (corrected P < .05 for all). Of the 7, 2 showed significant relationships with symptoms. Offspring of parents with BD had greater right rACC activity when regulating attention to happy faces vs OCP (mean [SD] difference, 0.744 [0.249]; 95% CI, 0.134-1.354; P = .01), which positively correlated with affective lability severity (ρ = 0.304; uncorrected P = .006). Offspring of parents with BD had greater amygdala to left cACC functional connectivity when regulating attention to fearful faces vs OCP (mean [SD] difference, 0.493 [0.169]; 95% CI, 0.079-0.908; P = .01). Increases in this measure positively correlated with increases in affective lability over follow-up (r = 0.541; P = .003)., Conclusions and Relevance: Greater anterior cingulate cortex activity and functional connectivity during emotion regulation tasks may be specific markers of BD risk. These findings highlight potential neural targets to aid earlier identification of and guide new treatment developments for BD.
- Published
- 2018
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40. The Impact of Caregiving on the Association Between Infant Emotional Behavior and Resting State Neural Network Functional Topology.
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Hanford LC, Schmithorst VJ, Panigrahy A, Lee V, Ridley J, Bonar L, Versace A, Hipwell AE, and Phillips ML
- Abstract
The extent to which neural networks underlying emotional behavior in infancy serve as precursors of later behavioral and emotional problems is unclear. Even less is known about caregiving influences on these early brain-behavior relationships. To study brain-emotional behavior relationships in infants, we examined resting-state functional network metrics and infant emotional behavior in the context of early maternal caregiving. We assessed 46 3-month-old infants and their mothers from a community sample. Infants underwent functional MRI during sleep. Resting-state data were processed using graph theory techniques to examine specific nodal metrics as indicators of network functionality. Infant positive and negative emotional behaviors, and positive, negative and mental-state talk (MST) indices of maternal caregiving were coded independently from filmed interactions. Regression analyses tested associations among nodal metrics and infant emotionality, and the moderating effects of maternal behavior on these relationships. All results were FDR corrected at alpha = 0.05. While relationships between infant emotional behavior or maternal caregiving, and nodal metrics were weak, higher levels of maternal MST strengthened associations between infant positive emotionality and nodal metrics within prefrontal ( p < 0.0001), and occipital ( p < 0.0001) cortices more generally. Positive and negative aspects of maternal caregiving had little effect. Our findings suggest that maternal MST may play an important role in strengthening links between emotion regulation neural circuitry and early infant positive behavior. They also provide objective neural markers that could inform and monitor caregiving-based interventions designed to improve the health and well-being of vulnerable infants at-risk for behavioral and emotional problems.
- Published
- 2018
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41. Diffusion imaging markers of bipolar versus general psychopathology risk in youth at-risk.
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Versace A, Ladouceur CD, Graur S, Acuff HE, Bonar LK, Monk K, McCaffrey A, Yendiki A, Leemans A, Travis MJ, Diwadkar VA, Holland SK, Sunshine JL, Kowatch RA, Horwitz SM, Frazier TW, Arnold LE, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, Goldstein BI, Goldstein T, Axelson D, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Bipolar Disorder genetics, Child, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Female, Humans, Male, Psychopathology, Risk Factors, Bipolar Disorder diagnostic imaging, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Child of Impaired Parents psychology, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging trends
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is highly heritable. Thus, studies in first-degree relatives of individuals with BD could lead to the discovery of objective risk markers of BD. Abnormalities in white matter structure reported in at-risk individuals could play an important role in the pathophysiology of BD. Due to the lack of studies with other at-risk offspring, however, it remains unclear whether such abnormalities reflect BD-specific or generic risk markers for future psychopathology. Using a tract-profile approach, we examined 18 major white matter tracts in 38 offspring of BD parents, 36 offspring of comparison parents with non-BD psychopathology (depression, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder), and 41 offspring of healthy parents. Both at-risk groups showed significantly lower fractional anisotropy (FA) in left-sided tracts (cingulum, inferior longitudinal fasciculus, forceps minor), and significantly greater FA in right-sided tracts (uncinate fasciculus and inferior longitudinal fasciculus), relative to offspring of healthy parents (P < 0.05). These abnormalities were present in both healthy and affected youth in at-risk groups. Only offspring (particularly healthy offspring) of BD parents showed lower FA in the right superior longitudinal fasciculus relative to healthy offspring of healthy parents (P < 0.05). We show, for the first time, important similarities, and some differences, in white matter structure between offspring of BD and offspring of non-BD parents. Findings suggest that lower left-sided and higher right-sided FA in tracts important for emotional regulation may represent markers of risk for general, rather than BD-specific, psychopathology. Lower FA in the right superior longitudinal fasciculus may protect against development of BD in offspring of BD parents.
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- 2018
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42. Decreased functional connectivity in the fronto-parietal network in children with mood disorders compared to children with dyslexia during rest: An fMRI study.
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Horowitz-Kraus T, Woodburn M, Rajagopal A, Versace AL, Kowatch RA, Bertocci MA, Bebko G, Almeida JRC, Perlman SB, Travis MJ, Gill MK, Bonar L, Schirda C, Diwadkar VA, Sunshine JL, Birmaher B, Axelson D, Gerry Taylor H, Horwitz SM, Frazier T, Eugene Arnold L, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, Phillips ML, and Holland SK
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Brain Mapping, Child, Dyslexia physiopathology, Executive Function physiology, Female, Frontal Lobe physiopathology, Functional Neuroimaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Mood Disorders physiopathology, Nerve Net physiopathology, Neuropsychological Tests, Parietal Lobe physiopathology, Reading, Dyslexia diagnostic imaging, Frontal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Mood Disorders diagnostic imaging, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Parietal Lobe diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background: The DSM-5 separates the diagnostic criteria for mood and behavioral disorders. Both types of disorders share neurocognitive deficits of executive function and reading difficulties in childhood. Children with dyslexia also have executive function deficits, revealing a role of executive function circuitry in reading. The aim of the current study is to determine whether there is a significant relationship of functional connectivity within the fronto-parietal and cingulo-opercular cognitive control networks to reading measures for children with mood disorders, behavioral disorders, dyslexia, and healthy controls (HC)., Method: Behavioral reading measures of phonological awareness, decoding, and orthography were collected. Resting state fMRI data were collected, preprocessed, and then analyzed for functional connectivity. Differences in the reading measures were tested for significance among the groups. Global efficiency (GE) measures were also tested for correlation with reading measures in 40 children with various disorders and 17 HCs., Results: Significant differences were found between the four groups on all reading measures. Relative to HCs and children with mood disorders or behavior disorders, children with dyslexia as a primary diagnosis scored significantly lower on all three reading measures. Children with mood disorders scored significantly lower than controls on a test of phonological awareness. Phonological awareness deficits correlated with reduced resting state functional connectivity MRI (rsfcMRI) in the cingulo-opercular network for children with dyslexia. A significant difference was also found in fronto-parietal global efficiency in children with mood disorders relative to the other three groups. We also found a significant difference in cingulo-opercular global efficiency in children with mood disorders relative to the Dyslexia and Control groups. However, none of these differences correlate significantly with reading measures., Conclusions/significance: Reading difficulties involve abnormalities in different cognitive control networks in children with dyslexia compared to children with mood disorders. Findings of the current study suggest increased functional connectivity of one cognitive control network may compensate for reduced functional connectivity in the other network in children with mood disorders. These findings provide guidance to clinical professionals for design of interventions tailored for children suffering from reading difficulties originating from different pathologies.
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- 2018
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43. Using machine learning and surface reconstruction to accurately differentiate different trajectories of mood and energy dysregulation in youth.
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Versace A, Sharma V, Bertocci MA, Bebko G, Iyengar S, Dwojak A, Bonar L, Perlman SB, Schirda C, Travis M, Gill MK, Diwadkar VA, Sunshine JL, Holland SK, Kowatch RA, Birmaher B, Axelson D, Frazier TW, Arnold LE, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Horwitz SM, Findling RL, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Affect, Bipolar Disorder pathology, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Case-Control Studies, Cerebral Cortex pathology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Child, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging statistics & numerical data, Male, Neuroimaging statistics & numerical data, Parahippocampal Gyrus diagnostic imaging, Parahippocampal Gyrus pathology, Parahippocampal Gyrus physiopathology, Parietal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Parietal Lobe pathology, Parietal Lobe physiopathology, Prefrontal Cortex pathology, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, Temporal Lobe pathology, Temporal Lobe physiopathology, Bipolar Disorder diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted, Machine Learning, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Difficulty regulating positive mood and energy is a feature that cuts across different pediatric psychiatric disorders. Yet, little is known regarding the neural mechanisms underlying different developmental trajectories of positive mood and energy regulation in youth. Recent studies indicate that machine learning techniques can help elucidate the role of neuroimaging measures in classifying individual subjects by specific symptom trajectory. Cortical thickness measures were extracted in sixty-eight anatomical regions covering the entire brain in 115 participants from the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms (LAMS) study and 31 healthy comparison youth (12.5 y/o;-Male/Female = 15/16;-IQ = 104;-Right/Left handedness = 24/5). Using a combination of trajectories analyses, surface reconstruction, and machine learning techniques, the present study aims to identify the extent to which measures of cortical thickness can accurately distinguish youth with higher (n = 18) from those with lower (n = 34) trajectories of manic-like behaviors in a large sample of LAMS youth (n = 115; 13.6 y/o; M/F = 68/47, IQ = 100.1, R/L = 108/7). Machine learning analyses revealed that widespread cortical thickening in portions of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, right inferior and middle temporal gyrus, bilateral precuneus, and bilateral paracentral gyri and cortical thinning in portions of the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, and right parahippocampal gyrus accurately differentiate (Area Under Curve = 0.89;p = 0.03) youth with different (higher vs lower) trajectories of positive mood and energy dysregulation over a period up to 5years, as measured by the Parent General Behavior Inventory-10 Item Mania Scale. Our findings suggest that specific patterns of cortical thickness may reflect transdiagnostic neural mechanisms associated with different temporal trajectories of positive mood and energy dysregulation in youth. This approach has potential to identify patterns of neural markers of future clinical course.
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- 2017
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44. Reading related white matter structures in adolescents are influenced more by dysregulation of emotion than behavior.
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Horowitz-Kraus T, Holland SK, Versace AL, Bertocci MA, Bebko G, Almeida JRC, Perlman SB, Travis MJ, Gill MK, Bonar L, Schirda C, Sunshine JL, Birmaher B, Taylor G, Diwadkar VA, Horwitz SM, Axelson D, Frazier T, Arnold EL, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, and Phillips ML
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- Adolescent, Child, Child Behavior Disorders complications, Comprehension physiology, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Dyslexia etiology, Dyslexia pathology, Female, Humans, Male, Mood Disorders complications, Neural Pathways pathology, Neuroimaging methods, Child Behavior Disorders pathology, Mood Disorders pathology, Reading, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Mood disorders and behavioral are broad psychiatric diagnostic categories that have different symptoms and neurobiological mechanisms, but share some neurocognitive similarities, one of which is an elevated risk for reading deficit. Our aim was to determine the influence of mood versus behavioral dysregulation on reading ability and neural correlates supporting these skills in youth, using diffusion tensor imaging in 11- to 17-year-old children and youths with mood disorders or behavioral disorders and age-matched healthy controls. The three groups differed only in phonological processing and passage comprehension. Youth with mood disorders scored higher on the phonological test but had lower comprehension scores than children with behavioral disorders and controls; control participants scored the highest. Correlations between fractional anisotropy and phonological processing in the left Arcuate Fasciculus showed a significant difference between groups and were strongest in behavioral disorders, intermediate in mood disorders, and lowest in controls. Correlations between these measures in the left Inferior Longitudinal Fasciculus were significantly greater than in controls for mood but not for behavioral disorders. Youth with mood disorders share a deficit in the executive-limbic pathway (Arcuate Fasciculus) with behavioral-disordered youth, suggesting reduced capacity for engaging frontal regions for phonological processing or passage comprehension tasks and increased reliance on the ventral tract (e.g., the Inferior Longitudinal Fasciculus). The low passage comprehension scores in mood disorder may result from engaging the left hemisphere. Neural pathways for reading differ mainly in executive-limbic circuitry. This new insight may aid clinicians in providing appropriate intervention for each disorder.
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- 2017
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45. Longitudinal relationships among activity in attention redirection neural circuitry and symptom severity in youth.
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Bertocci MA, Bebko G, Dwojak A, Iyengar S, Ladouceur CD, Fournier JC, Versace A, Perlman SB, Almeida JRC, Travis MJ, Gill MK, Bonar L, Schirda C, Diwadkar VA, Sunshine JL, Holland SK, Kowatch RA, Birmaher B, Axelson D, Horwitz SM, Frazier T, Arnold LE, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, and Phillips ML
- Abstract
Background: Changes in neural circuitry function may be associated with longitudinal changes in psychiatric symptom severity. Identification of these relationships may aid in elucidating the neural basis of psychiatric symptom evolution over time. We aimed to distinguish these relationships using data from the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms (LAMS) cohort., Methods: Forty-one youth completed two study visits (mean=21.3 months). Elastic-net regression (Multiple response Gaussian family) identified emotional regulation neural circuitry that changed in association with changes in depression, mania, anxiety, affect lability, and positive mood and energy dysregulation, accounting for clinical and demographic variables., Results: Non-zero coefficients between change in the above symptom measures and change in activity over the inter-scan interval were identified in right amygdala and left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex. Differing patterns of neural activity change were associated with changes in each of the above symptoms over time. Specifically, from Scan1 to Scan2, worsening affective lability and depression severity were associated with increased right amygdala and left ventrolateral prefrontal cortical activity. Worsening anxiety and positive mood and energy dysregulation were associated with decreased right amygdala and increased left ventrolateral prefrontal cortical activity. Worsening mania was associated with increased right amygdala and decreased left ventrolateral prefrontal cortical activity. These changes in neural activity between scans accounted for 13.6% of the variance; that is 25% of the total explained variance (39.6%) in these measures., Conclusions: Distinct neural mechanisms underlie changes in different mood and anxiety symptoms overtime.
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- 2017
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46. Amygdala-prefrontal cortical functional connectivity during implicit emotion processing differentiates youth with bipolar spectrum from youth with externalizing disorders.
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Hafeman D, Bebko G, Bertocci MA, Fournier JC, Chase HW, Bonar L, Perlman SB, Travis M, Gill MK, Diwadkar VA, Sunshine JL, Holland SK, Kowatch RA, Birmaher B, Axelson D, Horwitz SM, Arnold LE, Fristad MA, Frazier TW, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Amygdala diagnostic imaging, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity physiopathology, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Diagnosis, Differential, Facial Expression, Female, Gyrus Cinguli diagnostic imaging, Gyrus Cinguli physiopathology, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prefrontal Cortex diagnostic imaging, Psychophysiology, Amygdala physiopathology, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity diagnosis, Bipolar Disorder diagnosis, Emotions physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: Both bipolar spectrum disorders (BPSD) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) present with emotion-regulation deficits, but require different clinical management. We examined how the neurobiological underpinnings of emotion regulation might differentiate youth with BPSD versus ADHD (and healthy controls, HCs), specifically assessing functional connectivity (FxC) of amygdala-prefrontal circuitry during an implicit emotion processing task., Methods: We scanned a subset of the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms (LAMS) sample, a clinically recruited cohort with elevated behavioral and emotional dysregulation, and age/sex-ratio matched HCs. Our sample consisted of 22 youth with BPSD, 30 youth with ADHD/no BPSD, and 26 HCs. We used generalized psychophysiological interaction (gPPI) to calculate group differences to emerging emotional faces vs. morphing shapes in FxC between bilateral amygdala and ventral prefrontal cortex/anterior cingulate cortex., Results: FxC between amygdala and left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC) in response to emotions vs. shapes differed by group (p=.05): while BPSD showed positive FxC (emotions>shapes), HC and ADHD showed inverse FxC (emotions
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- 2017
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47. Standardization of a cytometric p24-capture bead-assay for the detection of main HIV-1 subtypes.
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Merbah M, Onkar S, Grivel JC, Vanpouille C, Biancotto A, Bonar L, Sanders-Buell E, Kijak G, Michael N, Robb M, Kim JH, Tovanabutra S, and Chenine AL
- Subjects
- Biological Assay methods, HIV Infections virology, Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sensitivity and Specificity, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay standards, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect standards, HIV Core Protein p24 immunology, HIV-1 classification, HIV-1 immunology
- Abstract
The prevailing method to assess HIV-1 replication and infectivity is to measure the production of p24 Gag protein by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Since fluorescent bead-based technologies offer a broader dynamic range and higher sensitivity, this study describes a p24 capture Luminex assay capable of detecting HIV-1 subtypes A-D, circulating recombinant forms (CRF) CRF01_AE and CRF02_AG, which together are responsible for over 90% of HIV-1 infections worldwide. The success of the assay lies in the identification and selection of a cross-reactive capture antibody (clone 183-H12-5C). Fifty-six isolates that belonged to six HIV-1 subtypes and CRFs were successfully detected with p-values below 0.021; limits of detection ranging from 3.7 to 3 × 104 pg/ml. The intra- and inter-assay variation gave coefficient of variations below 6 and 14%, respectively. The 183-bead Luminex assay also displayed higher sensitivity of 91% and 98% compared to commercial p24 ELISA and a previously described Luminex assay. The p24 concentrations measured by the 183-bead Luminex assay showed a significant correlation (R=0.92, p<0.0001) with the data obtained from quantitative real time PCR. This newly developed p24 assay leverages the advantages of the Luminex platform, which include smaller sample volume and simultaneous detection of up to 500 analytes in a single sample, and delivers a valuable tool for the field., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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48. Can Emotional and Behavioral Dysregulation in Youth Be Decoded from Functional Neuroimaging?
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Portugal LC, Rosa MJ, Rao A, Bebko G, Bertocci MA, Hinze AK, Bonar L, Almeida JR, Perlman SB, Versace A, Schirda C, Travis M, Gill MK, Demeter C, Diwadkar VA, Ciuffetelli G, Rodriguez E, Forbes EE, Sunshine JL, Holland SK, Kowatch RA, Birmaher B, Axelson D, Horwitz SM, Arnold EL, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, Pereira M, Oliveira L, Phillips ML, and Mourao-Miranda J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Affective Symptoms drug therapy, Affective Symptoms pathology, Affective Symptoms physiopathology, Behavior Rating Scale, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Cerebellum pathology, Cerebellum physiopathology, Cerebral Cortex pathology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Cohort Studies, Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Games, Experimental, Humans, Limbic System pathology, Limbic System physiopathology, Male, Mental Disorders drug therapy, Mental Disorders pathology, Mental Disorders physiopathology, Psychotropic Drugs pharmacology, Psychotropic Drugs therapeutic use, Symptom Assessment, Adolescent Behavior, Affective Symptoms diagnosis, Brain Mapping, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Pattern Recognition, Automated, Psychology, Adolescent, Reward
- Abstract
Introduction: High comorbidity among pediatric disorders characterized by behavioral and emotional dysregulation poses problems for diagnosis and treatment, and suggests that these disorders may be better conceptualized as dimensions of abnormal behaviors. Furthermore, identifying neuroimaging biomarkers related to dimensional measures of behavior may provide targets to guide individualized treatment. We aimed to use functional neuroimaging and pattern regression techniques to determine whether patterns of brain activity could accurately decode individual-level severity on a dimensional scale measuring behavioural and emotional dysregulation at two different time points., Methods: A sample of fifty-seven youth (mean age: 14.5 years; 32 males) was selected from a multi-site study of youth with parent-reported behavioral and emotional dysregulation. Participants performed a block-design reward paradigm during functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). Pattern regression analyses consisted of Relevance Vector Regression (RVR) and two cross-validation strategies implemented in the Pattern Recognition for Neuroimaging toolbox (PRoNTo). Medication was treated as a binary confounding variable. Decoded and actual clinical scores were compared using Pearson's correlation coefficient (r) and mean squared error (MSE) to evaluate the models. Permutation test was applied to estimate significance levels., Results: Relevance Vector Regression identified patterns of neural activity associated with symptoms of behavioral and emotional dysregulation at the initial study screen and close to the fMRI scanning session. The correlation and the mean squared error between actual and decoded symptoms were significant at the initial study screen and close to the fMRI scanning session. However, after controlling for potential medication effects, results remained significant only for decoding symptoms at the initial study screen. Neural regions with the highest contribution to the pattern regression model included cerebellum, sensory-motor and fronto-limbic areas., Conclusions: The combination of pattern regression models and neuroimaging can help to determine the severity of behavioral and emotional dysregulation in youth at different time points.
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- 2016
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49. White matter structure in youth with behavioral and emotional dysregulation disorders: a probabilistic tractographic study.
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Versace A, Acuff H, Bertocci MA, Bebko G, Almeida JR, Perlman SB, Leemans A, Schirda C, Aslam H, Dwojak A, Bonar L, Travis M, Gill MK, Demeter C, Diwadkar VA, Sunshine JL, Holland SK, Kowatch RA, Birmaher B, Axelson D, Horwitz SM, Frazier TW, Arnold LE, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Affective Symptoms complications, Anisotropy, Behavioral Symptoms complications, Case-Control Studies, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Female, Humans, Male, Affective Symptoms pathology, Behavioral Symptoms pathology, Brain pathology, Gyrus Cinguli pathology, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Importance: Psychiatric disorders in youth characterized by behavioral and emotional dysregulation are often comorbid and difficult to distinguish. An alternative approach to conceptualizing these disorders is to move toward a diagnostic system based on underlying pathophysiologic processes that may cut across conventionally defined diagnoses. Neuroimaging techniques have potentials for the identification of these processes., Objective: To determine whether diffusion imaging, a neuroimaging technique examining white matter (WM) structure, can identify neural correlates of emotional dysregulation in a sample of youth with different psychiatric disorders characterized by behavioral and emotional dysregulation., Design, Setting, and Participants: Using global probabilistic tractography, we examined relationships between WM structure in key tracts in emotional regulation circuitry (ie, cingulum, uncinate fasciculus, and forceps minor) and (1) broader diagnostic categories of behavioral and emotional dysregulation disorders (DDs) and (2) symptom dimensions cutting across conventional diagnoses in 120 youth with behavioral and/or emotional DDs, a referred sample of the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms (LAM) study. Thirty age- and sex-matched typically developing youth (control participants) were included. Multivariate multiple regression models were used. The study was conducted from July 1, 2010, to February 28, 2014., Main Outcomes and Measures: Fractional anisotropy as well as axial and radial diffusivity were estimated and imported into a well-established statistical package. We hypothesized that (1) youth with emotional DDs and those with both behavioral and emotional DDs would show significantly lower fractional anisotropy compared with youth with behavioral DDs in these WM tracts and (2) that there would be significant inverse relationships between dimensional measures of affective symptom severity and fractional anisotropy in these tracts across all participants., Results: Multivariate multiple regression analyses revealed decreased fractional anisotropy and decreased axial diffusivity within the uncinate fasciculus in youth with emotional DDs vs those with behavioral DDs, those with both DDs, and the controls (F6,160 = 2.4; P = .032; all pairwise comparisons, P < .002). In the same model, greater severity of manic symptoms was positively associated with higher fractional anisotropy across all affected youth (F3,85 = 2.8; P = .044)., Conclusions and Relevance: These findings suggest that abnormal uncinate fasciculus and cingulum WM structure may underlie emotional, but not behavioral, dysregulation in pediatric psychiatric disorders and that a different neural mechanism may exist for comorbid emotional and behavioral DDs.
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- 2015
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50. Decreased amygdala-insula resting state connectivity in behaviorally and emotionally dysregulated youth.
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Bebko G, Bertocci M, Chase H, Dwojak A, Bonar L, Almeida J, Perlman SB, Versace A, Schirda C, Travis M, Gill MK, Demeter C, Diwadkar V, Sunshine J, Holland S, Kowatch R, Birmaher B, Axelson D, Horwitz S, Frazier T, Arnold LE, Fristad M, Youngstrom E, Findling R, and Phillips ML
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- Adolescent, Anxiety physiopathology, Anxiety Disorders physiopathology, Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders physiopathology, Case-Control Studies, Depression physiopathology, Depressive Disorder physiopathology, Female, Functional Neuroimaging methods, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Personality Inventory, Young Adult, Amygdala physiopathology, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Emotions physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
The Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) adopts a dimensional approach for examining pathophysiological processes underlying categorically defined psychiatric diagnoses. We used this framework to examine relationships among symptom dimensions, diagnostic categories, and resting state connectivity in behaviorally and emotionally dysregulated youth selected from the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms study (n=42) and healthy control youth (n=18). Region of interest analyses examined relationships among resting state connectivity, symptom dimensions (behavioral and emotional dysregulation measured with the Parent General Behavior Inventory-10 Item Mania Scale [PGBI-10M]; dimensional severity measures of mania, depression, anxiety), and diagnostic categories (Bipolar Spectrum Disorders, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Anxiety Disorders, and Disruptive Behavior Disorders). After adjusting for demographic variables, two dimensional measures showed significant inverse relationships with resting state connectivity, regardless of diagnosis: 1) PGBI-10M with amygdala-left posterior insula/bilateral putamen; and 2) depressive symptoms with amygdala-right posterior insula connectivity. Diagnostic categories showed no significant relationships with resting state connectivity. Resting state connectivity between amygdala and posterior insula decreased with increasing severity of behavioral and emotional dysregulation and depression; this suggests an intrinsic functional uncoupling of key neural regions supporting emotion processing and regulation. These findings support the RDoC dimensional approach for characterizing pathophysiologic processes that cut across different psychiatric disorders., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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