104 results on '"Rössler, Wulf"'
Search Results
2. Pure animal phobia is more specific than other specific phobias: epidemiological evidence from the Zurich Study, the ZInEP and the PsyCoLaus
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Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rodgers, Stephanie, Müller, Mario, Hengartner, Michael P., Aleksandrowicz, Aleksandra, Kawohl, Wolfram, Heekeren, Karsten, Rössler, Wulf, Angst, Jules, Castelao, Enrique, Vandeleur, Caroline, and Preisig, Martin
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- 2016
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3. Longitudinal reciprocal associations between depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders over three decades of life
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Amendola, Simone, Hengartner, Michael Pascal, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Angst, Jules, Rössler, Wulf, University of Zurich, and Amendola, Simone
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Adult ,Male ,Epidemiology ,Depression ,Substance-Related Disorders ,3203 Clinical Psychology ,Psychiatric disorder ,616.8: Neurologie und Krankheiten des Nervensystems ,Bayes Theorem ,610 Medicine & health ,Comorbidity ,Anxiety ,Anxiety Disorders ,Prospective ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Young Adult ,2738 Psychiatry and Mental Health ,10054 Clinic for Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, and Psychosomatics ,Humans ,Community sample ,Course ,Psychiatric disorders ,Female ,Longitudinal Studies - Abstract
Background and objective: Studies exploring longitudinal reciprocal associations between depressive, anxiety, and substance use disorders (DD, AD and SUD, respectively) over long periods of time are mainly lacking. Therefore, the aim of the present study is to test longitudinal associations (i.e. temporal dynamics) between DD, AD and SUD from young adulthood to middle adulthood. Methods: A stratified community sample of 591 participants from the canton of Zurich, Switzerland, was inter-viewed with the Structured Psychopathological Interview and Rating of the Social Consequences of Psychological Disturbances for Epidemiology over seven interview waves from ages 20/21 to 49/50. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders criteria were used to evaluate the presence of DD, AD and SUD. We fitted an auto-regressive cross-lagged path analysis within a Bayesian structural equation model to test longitudinal associations. Results: Regarding autoregressive effects, AD (except during young adulthood) and SUD predicted themselves over the entire time period, while DD recurrently predicted itself not consistently over time. Regarding cross-lagged effects, DD predicted SUD at different time points, and vice versa. DD predicted subsequent AD in adulthood, whereas the reverse did not happen. Female gender was associated with DD and AD at all ages while male gender was associated with SUD only in young adulthood. Conclusions: Reciprocal longitudinal associations were found between DD and SUD and DD usually preceded AD. Our results further confirm an increased risk of DD and AD in women and a higher risk of SUD in young men. Early treatment and broad psychosocial interventions should be provided in order to prevent chronicity and further maladjustment as well as interrupting the cycle of mutual reinforcement between DD and SUD.
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- 2022
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4. Comparing two basic subtypes in OCD across three large community samples: a pure compulsive versus a mixed obsessive–compulsive subtype
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Rodgers, Stephanie, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Kawohl, Wolfram, Müller, Mario, Rössler, Wulf, Hengartner, Michael P., Castelao, Enrique, Vandeleur, Caroline, Angst, Jules, and Preisig, Martin
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- 2015
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5. Predictors of burnout: results from a prospective community study
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Rössler, Wulf, Hengartner, Michael P., Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, and Angst, Jules
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- 2015
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6. Externalizing disorders and substance use: empirically derived subtypes in a population-based sample of adults
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Rodgers, Stephanie, Müller, Mario, Rössler, Wulf, Castelao, Enrique, Preisig, Martin, and Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta
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- 2015
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7. Cannabis use during adolescence and the occurrence of depression, suicidality and anxiety disorder across adulthood: Findings from a longitudinal cohort study over 30 years
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Hengartner, Michael P, Angst, Jules, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rössler, Wulf, University of Zurich, and Hengartner, Michael P
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Population ,Poison control ,610 Medicine & health ,616.8: Neurologie und Krankheiten des Nervensystems ,Anxiety ,Suicidality ,Cohort Studies ,2738 Psychiatry and Mental Health ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Young adult ,education ,Psychiatry ,Cohort Study ,Cannabis ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Depression ,business.industry ,3203 Clinical Psychology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Anxiety Disorders ,030227 psychiatry ,Substance abuse ,Suicide ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,10054 Clinic for Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, and Psychosomatics ,Cohort ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Switzerland ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Anxiety disorder - Abstract
Objective To examine the association between cannabis use in adolescence and the occurrence of depression, suicidality and anxiety disorders during adulthood. Methods A stratified population-based cohort of young adults (n = 591) from Zurich, Switzerland, was retrospectively assessed at age 19/20 for cannabis use in adolescence. The occurrence of depression, suicidality and anxiety disorders was repeatedly assessed via semi-structured clinical interviews at the ages of 20/21, 22/23, 27/28, 29/30, 34/35, 40/41, and 49/50. Associations were controlled for various covariates, including socio-economic deprivation in adolescence as well as repeated time-varying measures of substance abuse during adulthood. Results About a quarter (24%) reported cannabis use during adolescence; 11% started at age 15/16 or younger and 13% between the ages of 16/17 and 19/20. In the adjusted multivariable model, cannabis use during adolescence was associated with adult depression (aOR = 1.70, 95%-CI = 1.24–2.32) and suicidality (aOR = 1.65, 95%-CI = 1.11–2.47), but not anxiety disorders (aOR = 1.10, 95%-CI = 0.82–1.48). First use at age 15/16 and younger (as against first use between age 16/17 and 19/20 and no use) and frequent use in adolescence (as against less frequent use and no use) were associated with a higher risk of depression in adult life. Conclusions In this longitudinal cohort study over 30-years, cannabis use during adolescence was associated with depression and suicidality in adult life. Young age at first use and high frequency of use in adolescence may particularly increase the risk of depression in adulthood. All associations were independent of cannabis abuse and other substance abuse during adulthood.
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- 2020
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8. Suicidality in the prospective Zurich study: prevalence, risk factors and gender
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Angst, Jules, Hengartner, Michael P., Rogers, Jonathan, Schnyder, Ulrich, Steinhausen, Hans-Christoph, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, and Rössler, Wulf
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- 2014
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9. The role of sex on stability and change of depression symptom subtypes over 20 years: a latent transition analysis
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Rodgers, Stephanie, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Müller, Mario, Hengartner, Michael P., Grosse Holtforth, Martin, Angst, Jules, and Rössler, Wulf
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- 2014
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10. Interpersonal functioning deficits in association with DSM-IV personality disorder dimensions
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Hengartner, Michael P., Müller, Mario, Rodgers, Stephanie, Rössler, Wulf, and Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta
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- 2014
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11. Occupational functioning and work impairment in association with personality disorder trait-scores
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Hengartner, Michael P., Müller, Mario, Rodgers, Stephanie, Rössler, Wulf, and Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta
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- 2014
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12. Risk factors for stuttering: a secondary analysis of a large data base
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Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Vetter, Stefan, Müller, Mario, Kawohl, Wolfram, Frey, Franz, Lupi, Gianpiero, Blechschmidt, Anja, Born, Claudia, Latal, Beatrix, and Rössler, Wulf
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- 2010
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13. Is depression a risk factor for heart complaints?: Longitudinal aspects in the Zurich study
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Eich, Dominique, Neuhaus, Christoph, Gamma, Alex, Angst, Jules, Rössler, Wulf, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, and Opravil, Milos
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- 2007
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14. Mental hospital admission rates of immigrants in Switzerland
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Lay, Barbara, Nordt, Carlos, and Rössler, Wulf
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- 2007
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15. Differences between unipolar mania and bipolar‐I disorder: Evidence from nine epidemiological studies.
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Angst, Jules, Rössler, Wulf, Ajdacic‐Gross, Vladeta, Angst, Felix, Wittchen, Hans Ulrich, Lieb, Rosalind, Beesdo‐Baum, Katja, Asselmann, Eva, Merikangas, Kathleen R, Cui, Lihong, Andrade, Laura H, Viana, Maria C, Lamers, Femke, Penninx, Brenda WJH, Azevedo Cardoso, Taiane, Jansen, Karen, Dias de Mattos Souza, Luciano, Azevedo da Silva, Ricardo, Kapczinski, Flavio, and Grobler, Christoffel
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SUBSTANCE-induced disorders , *MANIA , *MENTAL illness , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *PANIC disorders - Abstract
Objectives: Although clinical evidence suggests important differences between unipolar mania and bipolar‐I disorder (BP‐I), epidemiological data are limited. Combining data from nine population‐based studies, we compared subjects with mania (M) or mania with mild depression (Md) to those with BP‐I with both manic and depressive episodes with respect to demographic and clinical characteristics in order to highlight differences. Methods: Participants were compared for gender, age, age at onset of mania, psychiatric comorbidity, temperament, and family history of mental disorders. Generalized linear mixed models with adjustment for sex and age as well as for each study source were applied. Analyses were performed for the pooled adult and adolescent samples, separately. Results: Within the included cohorts, 109 adults and 195 adolescents were diagnosed with M/Md and 323 adults and 182 adolescents with BP‐I. In both adult and adolescent samples, there was a male preponderance in M/Md, whereas lifetime generalized anxiety and/panic disorders and suicide attempts were less common in M/Md than in BP‐I. Furthermore, adults with mania revealed bulimia/binge eating and drug use disorders less frequently than those with BP‐I. Conclusions: The significant differences found in gender and comorbidity between mania and BP‐I suggest that unipolar mania, despite its low prevalence, should be established as a separate diagnosis both for clinical and research purposes. In clinical settings, the rarer occurrence of suicide attempts, anxiety, and drug use disorders among individuals with unipolar mania may facilitate successful treatment of the disorder and lead to a more favorable course than that of BP‐I disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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16. Subtypes of stuttering determined by latent class analysis in two Swiss epidemiological surveys.
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Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Bechtiger, Laura, Rodgers, Stephanie, Müller, Mario, Kawohl, Wolfram, von Känel, Roland, Mutsch, Margot, Rössler, Wulf, Seifritz, Erich, Castelao, Enrique, Strippoli, Marie-Pierre F., Vandeleur, Caroline, Preisig, Martin, and Howell, Peter
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STUTTERING ,LATENT class analysis (Statistics) ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,ANXIETY disorders ,PSORIASIS - Abstract
Aims: Associations between stuttering in childhood and a broad spectrum of risk factors, associated factors and comorbidities were examined in two large epidemiological studies. Subtypes of stuttering were then identified based on latent class analysis (LCA). Methods: Data were from two representative Swiss population samples: PsyCoLaus (N = 4,874, age 35–82 years) and the ZInEP Epidemiology Survey (N = 1,500, age 20–41 years). Associations between stuttering and sociodemographic characteristics, familial aggregation, comorbidity and psychosocial risk / associated factors were investigated in both samples. LCAs were conducted on selected items from people in both samples who reported having stuttered in childhood. Results: Initial analyses linked early anxiety disorders, such as separation anxiety disorder and overanxious disorder, to stuttering (PsyCoLaus). ADHD was associated with stuttering in both datasets. In the analyses of risk / associated factors, dysfunctional parental relationships, inter-parental violence and further childhood adversities were mutual predictors of stuttering. Moreover, comorbidities were seen with hay fever, asthma, eczema and psoriasis (PsyCoLaus). Subsequent LCA identified an unspecific group of persons who self-reported that they stuttered and a group defined by associations with psychosocial adversities (ZINEP, PsyCoLaus) and atopic diseases (PsyCoLaus). Conclusions: The two subtypes of developmental stuttering have different risk / associated factors and comorbidity patterns. Most of the factors are associated with vulnerability mechanisms that occur early in life and that have also been linked with other neurodevelopmental disorders. Both psychosocial and biological factors appear to be involved in the etiopathogenesis of stuttering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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17. Sleep Disturbances and Suicidality–A Longitudinal Analysis From a Representative Community Study Over 30 Years.
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Rössler, Wulf, Angst, Jules, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Haker, Helene, Berrouiguet, Sofian, Ujeyl, Mariam, Glozier, Nicholas, and Hengartner, Michael P.
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COHORT analysis ,SLEEP disorders ,SLEEP-wake cycle - Abstract
Study objectives: Associations between sleep problems and suicidality are increasingly acknowledged, but prospective data from well-controlled long-term community studies are lacking.Methods: We analyzed data from a longitudinal cohort study withn = 591 young adults from Zurich, Switzerland, prospectively followed from 1979 (age 20/21 years) to 2008 (age 49/50 years). Twelve-month prevalence of various mental disorders, socio-environmental confounders and sleep problems were carefully assessed with semi-structured interviews at 7 assessment waves spanning overall a 30-year observation period. Interviews were conducted with the “Structured Psychopathological Interview and Rating of the Social Consequences of Psychological Disturbances for Epidemiology” (SPIKE). The 12-month prevalence of sleep problems was graded according to frequency and associated distress of reported symptoms. 12-month prevalence of suicidality was classified as either mild (transient suicidal ideation) or severe (self-harm, suicide attempts).Results: Concurrently, and fully adjusted for several covariates, including mental disorders, relative to no sleep problems there was an odds ratio (OR) ofOR = 1.9 (95% confidence interval 1.4–2.5),OR = 3.3 (2.5–4.4), andOR = 1.9 (1.3–2.8) for mild, moderate and severe sleep problems in association with suicidality. There was no evidence for a prospective effect of broad sleep problems on subsequent suicidality. Mild suicidality, but not severe suicidality, prospectively predicted subsequent broad sleep problems in the fully adjusted multivariate model (adjustedOR = 1.5; 1.1–1.9). Disturbed sleep initiation, a proxy for insomnia, significantly predicted subsequent suicidality (OR = 1.5; 1.1–1.9), whereas mild suicidality, but not severe suicidality, significantly predicted subsequent insomnia (OR = 1.5; 1.1–2.0).Conclusions: Sleep problems and suicidality are longitudinally inter-related, which has important implications for clinical practice. Most importantly, the causal pathways appear to be bi-directional and independent of socio-demographics and concomitant mental disorders. More research is needed to examine the possible biopsychosocial etiological mechanisms linking suicidality to sleep problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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18. Epidemiology of gastrointestinal symptoms in young and middle-aged Swiss adults: prevalences and comorbidities in a longitudinal population cohort over 28 years.
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Avramidou, Maria, Angst, Felix, Angst, Jules, Aeschlimann, André, Rössler, Wulf, and Schnyder, Ulrich
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GASTROINTESTINAL diseases ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,BIPOLAR disorder ,PRIMARY care - Abstract
Background: Although subacute and chronic gastrointestinal symptoms are very common in primary care, epidemiological date are sparse. The aim of the study was to examine and quantify the prevalence of subacute and chronic gastrointestinal symptoms and their associations with somatic and mental disorders in the general population.Methods: Data were collected prospectively between 1981 (age m = 22, f = 23) and 2008 (age 49/50) from the Zurich Cohort Study (n = 292 men, 299 women), a representative general population survey. The participants were assessed using a semi-structured interview, the "Structured Psychopathological Interview and Rating of the Social Consequences of Psychological Disturbances for Epidemiology" (SPIKE). Prevalence rates were computed to be representative of the general population aged 22-50. Associations were quantified by odds ratios (ORs) and their 99% confidence intervals (CI).Results: The prevalences of intestinal and of gastric symptoms were significantly higher among women in all categories examined. For example, any gastric symptoms: f. 26.4% vs m.15.2%; any intestinal symptoms: 27.6% vs 14.6%; nausea/vomitus: 19.1% vs 4.5%; constipation: 15.8% vs 6.5% (all p < 0.001). Strong associations (all p < 0.0001) were found between fatigue (1 month) and chronic stomach (OR = 9.96, 99%-CI: 5.53-17.94) and chronic intestinal symptoms (OR = 9.02, 99%-CI: 4.92-16.54). Panic attacks were associated with subacute intestinal symptoms (OR = 4.00, 99%-CI: 2.43-6.59). Anxiety was more strongly associated with subacute intestinal symptoms (OR = 3.37, 99%-CI: 2.23-5.08) than with subacute stomach symptoms (OR = 1.85, 1.20-2.86). Bipolar disorders were associated with subacute stomach symptoms (OR = 1.83, 1.18-2.17) and unipolar depression with subacute intestinal symptoms (OR = 2.05, 1.34-3.15).Conclusions: Remarkably high prevalence rates of gastric and intestinal complaints were observed in women (over 1/4; men 1/7). Fatigue/neurasthenia was the strongest co-factor in both conditions. Various syndromes related to anxiety, phobia, and panic disorders showed further significant associations. The integration of psychiatric and/or psychological treatment could help address the functional part of gastric and intestinal syndromes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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19. Duration of Absence from Work Is Related to Psychopathology, Personality, and Sociodemographic Variables in a Longitudinal Cohort.
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Gamma, Alex, Schleifer, Roman, Warnke, Ingeborg, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rössler, Wulf, Angst, Jules, and Liebrenz, Michael
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PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors - Abstract
Objective: To examine, in a non-clinical sample, the association of psychopathology, personality, sociodemographic information, and psychosocial indicators of non-occupational functioning with the duration of absence from work in the past 12 months. Method: A longitudinal community cohort of 591 adults from Switzerland was analyzed using multilevel ordered logistic regression, with several alternative models as robustness checks. Psychopathology was assessed using the total score (Global Severity Index) of the Symptom Check List-90 Revised. results: The highest psychopathology levels were associated with absences of 3 or more week duration, largely independently of age. Extraversion and being divorced, widowed or separated also corresponded with longer absences from work in some analyses. No effect of sex was found. Most effects tested were not statistically significant and estimates showed large uncertainty. conclusion: Although tentative, our results suggest a possible influence of psychopathology on work participation. It may thus be desirable in insurance-medical appraisals of work ability to include instruments for measuring psychopathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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20. Social Phobia Is Associated with Delayed Onset of Chickenpox, Measles, and Mumps Infections.
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Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Aleksandrowicz, Aleksandra, Rodgers, Stephanie, Müller, Mario, Kawohl, Wolfram, Rössler, Wulf, Castelao, Enrique, Vandeleur, Caroline, von Känel, Roland, Mutsch, Margot, Lieb, Roselind, Preisig, Martin, Lai, Carlo, and Fornaro, Michele
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SOCIAL phobia ,CHICKENPOX ,JUVENILE diseases ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Objective: Evidence showing that infectious diseases in childhood play an important role in the etiopathogenesis of neurodevelopmental and other mental disorders is growing. The aim of this study was to explore the timing of common childhood diseases in early-onset anxiety disorders. Materials and methods: We analyzed data from PsyCoLaus, a large Swiss Population Cohort Study (N = 3720). In this study, we regressed overanxious disorder, separation anxiety disorder, social phobia, and specific phobias on the age of onset of several childhood diseases, always adjusting for the other anxiety disorders listed above and for sex. Results: The timing of viral childhood diseases (chickenpox, measles, and mumps) was consistently delayed in social phobia, notably both in men and women. We found no evidence for a reversed sequence of onset of phobia symptoms before that of the infections included. Conclusion: Social phobia was the only early anxiety disorder to show an association with a delayed onset of common viral childhood diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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21. Two-week neurasthenic major depression.
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Angst, Jules, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, and Rössler, Wulf
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NEURASTHENIA ,MENTAL depression ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,MENTAL illness treatment - Abstract
The relationship between the two syndromes neurasthenia and depression is of interest in the context of burnout, which, although not a diagnosis, is often treated in psychiatry. This study defines major depressive episodes according to DSM-5 and neurasthenia by ICD-10 symptom criteria, and both syndromes on the basis of a 2-week minimum duration. The study includes all subjects of the Zurich epidemiological study who had taken part in the last five interviews (1986-2008) and compares three groups, pure depression, pure neurasthenia and their combination (neurasthenic depression), applying nonparametric statistics. The three groups did not differ in common validators: age of onset, course, a family history for depression and anxiety/panic. Psychiatric comorbidity was also very similar, with the exception of suicide attempts and substance abuse, which were less frequent in the pure neurasthenic group. Somatic comorbidity was also highly comparable, except for stomach problems, which were more common in subjects with neurasthenic syndromes. Surprisingly, the well-known preponderance of depression in women was explained by the association with neurasthenic syndromes. The proposed new diagnosis of neurasthenic depression could help diagnose subjects treated for burnout but needs replication by other representative studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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22. Latent Trajectories of Common Mental Health Disorder Risk Across 3 Decades of Adulthood in a Population-Based Cohort.
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Paksarian, Diana, Lihong Cui, Angst, Jules, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rössler, Wulf, Merikangas, Kathleen R., and Cui, Lihong
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PATHOLOGICAL psychology -- Risk factors ,ADULTS ,ANXIETY disorders ,SUBSTANCE-induced disorders ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,DIAGNOSIS ,MENTAL health ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology ,MENTAL illness ,CHRONIC diseases ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MENTAL status examination ,PUBLIC health surveillance ,RELATIVE medical risk ,CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Importance: Epidemiologic evidence indicates that most of the general population will experience a mental health disorder at some point in their lives. However, few prospective population-based studies have estimated trajectories of risk for mental disorders from young through middle adulthood to estimate the proportion of individuals who experience persistent mental disorder across this age period.Objectives: To describe the proportion of the population who experience persistent mental disorder across adulthood and to estimate latent trajectories of disorder risk across this age period.Design, Setting, and Participants: A population-based, prospective cohort study was conducted between 1979 and 2008 in the canton of Zurich, Switzerland. A stratified random sample of 591 Swiss citizens was enrolled in 1978 at ages 19 years (men) and 20 years (women); 7 interviews were performed during a 29-year period. Men were sampled from military enrollment records and women from electoral records. From those initially enrolled, participants with high levels of psychiatric symptoms were oversampled for follow-up. Data analysis was performed from July 28, 2015, to June 8, 2016.Main Outcomes and Measures: Latent trajectories, estimated using growth mixture modeling, of past-year mood/anxiety disorder (ie, major depressive episode, phobias, panic, generalized anxiety disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder), substance use disorder (ie, drug abuse or dependence and alcohol abuse or dependence), and any mental disorder (ie, any of the above) assessed during in-person semistructured interviews at each wave. Diagnoses were based on DSM-III, DSM-III-R, and DSM-IV criteria.Results: Of the 591 participants at baseline, 299 (50.6%) were female. Persistent mental health disorder across multiple study waves was rare. Among 252 individuals (42.6%) who participated in all 7 study waves, only 1.2% met criteria for disorder every time. Growth mixture modeling identified 3 classes of risk for any disorder across adulthood: low (estimated prevalence, 40.0%; 95% CI, -8.7% to 88.9%), increasing-decreasing (estimated prevalence, 15.3%; 95% CI, 1.0% to 29.6%), and increasing (estimated prevalence, 44.7%; 95% CI, -0.9% to 90.1%). Although no classes were characterized by persistently high disorder risk, for those in the increasing-decreasing class, risk was high from the late 20s to early 40s. Sex-specific models indicated 4 trajectory classes for women but only 3 for men.Conclusions and Relevance: Persistently high mental health disorder risk across 3 decades of adulthood was rare in this population-based sample. Identifying early determinants of sex-specific risk trajectories would benefit prevention efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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23. Distribution of Response Time, Cortical, and Cardiac Correlates during Emotional Interference in Persons with Subclinical Psychotic Symptoms.
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Holper, Lisa K. B., Aleksandrowicz, Alekandra, Müller, Mario, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Haker, Helene, Fallgatter, Andreas J., Hagenmuller, Florence, Kawohl, Wolfram, and Rössler, Wulf
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PSYCHOTIC depression ,PSYCHOSES risk factors ,HEART diseases ,BLOOD pressure ,REACTION time ,SPREADING cortical depression ,CYTODIAGNOSIS - Abstract
A psychosis phenotype can be observed below the threshold of clinical detection. The study aimed to investigate whether subclinical psychotic symptoms are associated with deficits in controlling emotional interference, and whether cortical brain and cardiac correlates of these deficits can be detected using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). A data set derived from a community sample was obtained from the Zurich Program for Sustainable Development of Mental Health Services. 174 subjects (mean age 29.67 ± 6.41, 91 females) were assigned to four groups ranging from low to high levels of subclinical psychotic symptoms (derived from the Symptom Checklist-90-R). Emotional interference was assessed using the emotional Stroop task comprising neutral, positive, and negative conditions. Statistical distributional methods based on delta plots [behavioral response time (RT) data] and quantile analysis (fNIRS data) were applied to evaluate the emotional interference effects. Results showed that both interference effects and disorder-specific (i.e., group-specific) effects could be detected, based on behavioral RTs, cortical hemodynamic signals (brain correlates), and heart rate variability (cardiac correlates). Subjects with high compared to low subclinical psychotic symptoms revealed significantly reduced amplitudes in dorsolateral prefrontal cortices (interference effect, p < 0.001) and middle temporal gyrus (disorder-specific group effect, p < 0.001), supported by behavioral and heart rate results. The present findings indicate that distributional analyses methods can support the detection of emotional interference effects in the emotional Stroop. The results suggested that subjects with high subclinical psychosis exhibit enhanced emotional interference effects. Based on these observations, subclinical psychosis may therefore prove to represent a valid extension of the clinical psychosis phenotype. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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24. Childhood trauma as a risk factor for the onset of subclinical psychotic experiences: Exploring the mediating effect of stress sensitivity in a cross-sectional epidemiological community study.
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Rössler, Wulf, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rodgers, Stephanie, Haker, Helene, and Müller, Mario
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CHILDREN'S injuries , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *PHENOTYPES , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY of adult child abuse victims , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MATHEMATICAL models of psychology , *PSYCHOSES , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *CROSS-sectional method ,PSYCHOSES risk factors - Abstract
Childhood trauma is a risk factor for the onset of schizophrenic psychosis. Because the psychosis phenotype can be described as a continuum with varying levels of severity and persistence, childhood trauma might likewise increase the risk for psychotic experiences below the diagnostic threshold. But the impact of stressful experiences depends upon its subjective appraisal. Therefore, varying degrees of stress sensitivity possibly mediate how childhood trauma impacts in the end upon the occurrence of subclinical psychotic experiences. We investigated this research question in a representative community cohort of 1500 participants. A questionnaire, comprising five domains of physical and emotional neglect, as well as physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, was used to assess childhood trauma. Based on different symptoms of subclinical psychotic experiences, we conducted a latent profile analysis (LPA) to derive distinct profiles for such experiences. Path modeling was performed to identify the direct and indirect (via stress sensitivity) pathways from childhood trauma to subclinical psychotic experiences. The LPA revealed four classes - unaffected, anomalous perceptions, odd beliefs and behavior, and combined anomalous perceptions/odd beliefs and behavior, that - except for sexual abuse - were all linked to childhood trauma. Moreover, except for physical abuse, childhood trauma was significantly associated with stress sensitivity. Thus, our results revealed that the pathways from emotional neglect/abuse and physical neglect to subclinical psychotic experiences were mediated by stress sensitivity. In conclusion, we can state that subclinical psychotic experiences are affected by childhood traumatic experiences in particular through the pathway of a heightened subjective stress appraisal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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25. Mental health and Functioning of Female sex Workers in chittagong, Bangladesh.
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Hengartner, Michael P., Islam, Md Nazrul, Haker, Helene, and Rössler, Wulf
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SEX workers ,MENTAL illness ,WOMEN ,HEALTH - Abstract
Aim: To examine the mental health and functioning of female sex workers (FSW) in Chittagong, Bangladesh, a population that has commonly been neglected in mental health policy and research. Methods: We included 259 women in the study (M age: 23.2 years; range: 11–48). The comprehensive Composite International Diagnostic Interview was used to assess their 12-month prevalence rates of DSM-IV mental disorders, and a comprehensive questionnaire was adapted to explore various factors, such as socio-demographics, working and living conditions, or experiences of abuse. Results: On average, participants began their commercial sex work at 18.5 years old (range: 10–45). Their main motives for sex work were coercion (49.4%) and the necessity to financially support families (54.8%). In total, 224 FSW (86.5%) wanted to quit commercial sex work. A mental disorder within the past 12 months was reported by 100 FSW (38.6%), with drug abuse clearly being the most prevalent diagnosis (15.4%). Sexual, physical, and emotional abuse were very common among the FSW, and substance use disorders (SUD) were significantly more prevalent in persons who experienced emotional abuse (OR = 2.2). Prevalence rates of any mental disorder and SUD were higher in women who did sex work to support their family, whereas mood disorders were more frequent in those who needed the money to pay debts. Participants with any disorder were significantly older than those without (M age: 24.4 vs. 22.5 years) and had started significantly later in the sex business (M age: 19.7 vs. 17.7 years). Conclusion: Our study revealed that FSW in Chittagong are very vulnerable and highly impaired, as expressed by high rates of abuse and mental disorders. Coercion is very common and many FSW are required to work in the sex business because they need the money to support their families. FSW are a very marginalized population, especially in the developing countries where awareness for mental health is low and the availability of mental health services is insufficient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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26. Zwangsstörungen vom 20.-50. Altersjahr: Prävalenz, Komorbidität und Remission.
- Author
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Angst, Jules, Rufer, Michael, Fineberg, Naomi, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, and Rössler, Wulf
- Abstract
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- Published
- 2015
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27. Serum testosterone levels and symptom-based depression subtypes in men.
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Rodgers, Stephanie, grosse Holtforth, Martin, Hengartner, Michael P., Müller, Mario, Aleksandrowicz, Aleksandra A., Rössler, Wulf, and Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta
- Subjects
TESTOSTERONE ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,CROSS-sectional method ,PSYCHOLOGY of men - Abstract
The main objective of this preliminary study was to further clarify the association between testosterone (T) levels and depression by investigating symptom-based depression subtypes in a sample of 64 men. The data were taken from the ZInEP epidemiology survey. Gonadal hormones of a melancholic (n=25) and an atypical (n=14) depression subtype, derived from latent class analysis, were compared with those of healthy controls (n=18). Serum T was assayed using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay procedure. Analysis of variance, analysis of covariance, non-parametrical tests, and generalized linear regression models were performed to examine group differences. The atypical depressive subtype showed significantly lower T levels compared with the melancholic depressives. While accumulative evidence indicates that, beyond psychosocial characteristics, the melancholic and atypical depressive subtypes are also distinguishable by biological correlates, the current study expanded this knowledge to include gonadal hormones. Further longitudinal research is warranted to disclose causality by linking the multiple processes in pathogenesis of depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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28. Assessing sub-clinical psychosis phenotypes in the general population — A multidimensional approach.
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Rössler, Wulf, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Müller, Mario, Rodgers, Stephanie, Haker, Helene, and Hengartner, Michael P.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOSES , *PHENOTYPES , *SYMPTOMS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *HALLUCINATIONS , *SOCIAL disabilities , *EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
Several studies have demonstrated that expression of a psychosis phenotype can be observed below the threshold of its clinical detection. To date, however, no conceptual certainty has been reported for the validity and reliability of sub-clinical psychosis. Our main objectives were to assess the prevalence rates and severity of various psychosis symptoms in a representative community sample. Furthermore, we wanted to analyze which latent factors are depicted by several currently used psychosis questionnaires. We also examined how those latent factors for sub-clinical psychosis are linked to psychosocial factors, normal personality traits, and coping abilities related to chronic stress. Most of the eight subscales from the Paranoia Checklist and the Structured Interview for Assessing Perceptual Anomalies had a very similar type of distribution, i.e., an inverse Gaussian (Wald) distribution. This supported the notion of a continuity of psychotic symptoms, which we would expect to find for continuously distributed symptoms within the general population. Sub-clinical psychosis can be reduced to two different factors — one representing odd beliefs about the world and odd behavior, and the other one representing anomalous perceptions (such as hallucinations). Persons with odd beliefs and behavior are under greater burden and more susceptible to psychosocial risks than are persons with anomalous perceptions. These sub-clinical psychosis syndromes are also related to stable personality traits. In conclusion, we obtained strong support for the notion that there is no natural cut-off separating psychotic illness from good health. Sub-clinical psychosis of any kind is not trivial because it is associated with various types of social disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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29. The ZInEP Epidemiology Survey: background, design and methods.
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Ajdacic‐Gross, Vladeta, Müller, Mario, Rodgers, Stephanie, Warnke, Inge, Hengartner, Michael P., Landolt, Karin, Hagenmuller, Florence, Meier, Magali, Tse, Lee‐Ting, Aleksandrowicz, Aleksandra, Passardi, Marco, Knöpfli, Daniel, Schönfelder, Herdis, Eisele, Jochen, Rüsch, Nicolas, Haker, Helene, Kawohl, Wolfram, and Rössler, Wulf
- Subjects
EPIDEMIOLOGY ,MENTAL illness ,DISEASE prevalence ,PSYCHIATRIC research ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,NEAR infrared spectroscopy ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
This article introduces the design, sampling, field procedures and instruments used in the ZInEP Epidemiology Survey. This survey is one of six ZInEP projects (Zürcher Impulsprogramm zur nachhaltigen Entwicklung der Psychiatrie, i.e. the 'Zurich Program for Sustainable Development of Mental Health Services'). It parallels the longitudinal Zurich Study with a sample comparable in age and gender, and with similar methodology, including identical instruments. Thus, it is aimed at assessing the change of prevalence rates of common mental disorders and the use of professional help and psychiatric sevices. Moreover, the current survey widens the spectrum of topics by including sociopsychiatric questionnaires on stigma, stress related biological measures such as load and cortisol levels, electroencephalographic (EEG) and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) examinations with various paradigms, and sociophysiological tests. The structure of the ZInEP Epidemiology Survey entails four subprojects: a short telephone screening using the SCL-27 ( n of nearly 10,000), a comprehensive face-to-face interview based on the SPIKE (Structured Psychopathological Interview and Rating of the Social Consequences for Epidemiology: the main instrument of the Zurich Study) with a stratified sample ( n = 1500), tests in the Center for Neurophysiology and Sociophysiology ( n = 227), and a prospective study with up to three follow-up interviews and further measures ( n = 157). In sum, the four subprojects of the ZInEP Epidemiology Survey deliver a large interdisciplinary database. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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30. Fluid intelligence and empathy in association with personality disorder trait-scores: exploring the link.
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Hengartner, Michael, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rodgers, Stephanie, Müller, Mario, Haker, Helene, and Rössler, Wulf
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FLUID intelligence ,EMPATHY ,PERSONALITY disorders ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,HEALTH surveys ,SUSTAINABLE development ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
There is some evidence that fluid intelligence as well as empathy may be significantly related to personality disorders (PDs). To our knowledge, no study has addressed those issues simultaneously in all 10 DSM PDs in a sample of the general population. We analysed data from 196 participants aged 20-41 from the Epidemiology Survey of the Zurich Programme for Sustainable Development of Mental Health Services (ZInEP), a comprehensive psychiatric survey in the general population of Zurich, Switzerland. We assessed the digit symbol-coding test (DSCT), the 'reading the mind in the eyes' test (RMET) and the interpersonal reactivity index (IRI). Both measures of cognitive empathy (i.e. RMET and IRI perspective taking) were not related to any PD trait-score. The total PD trait-score was significantly associated with low scores on DSCT and IRI empathic concern and high scores on IRI personal distress, which indicates a dose-response relationship in those measures. DSCT was particularly related to borderline PD, IRI empathic concern to schizoid and narcissistic PDs, and IRI personal distress to avoidant PD. The proportion of variance explained in the total PD trait-score accounted for by DSCT, IRI empathic concern and IRI personal distress was 2.6, 2.3 and 13.3 %, respectively. Symptomatology and severity of PDs are related to low fluid intelligence and reduced emotional empathy as characterized by low empathic concern and high personal distress towards emotional expressions of others. Further research is needed that examines the association between cognitive empathy and personality pathology as well as potential clinical applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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31. Hell Is Other People? Gender and Interactions with Strangers in the Workplace Influence a Person’s Risk of Depression.
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Fischer, Sebastian, Wiemer, Anita, Diedrich, Laura, Moock, Jörn, and Rössler, Wulf
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MENTAL depression risk factors ,WORK environment & psychology ,GENDER ,DIATHESIS-stress model (Psychology) ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
We suggest that interactions with strangers at work influence the likelihood of depressive disorders, as they serve as an environmental stressor, which are a necessary condition for the onset of depression according to diathesis-stress models of depression. We examined a large dataset (N = 76,563 in K = 196 occupations) from the German pension insurance program and the Occupational Information Network dataset on occupational characteristics. We used a multilevel framework with individuals and occupations as levels of analysis. We found that occupational environments influence employees’ risks of depression. In line with the quotation that ‘hell is other people’ frequent conflictual contacts were related to greater likelihoods of depression in both males and females (OR = 1.14, p<.05). However, interactions with the public were related to greater likelihoods of depression for males but lower likelihoods of depression for females (OR
intercation = 1.21, p<.01). We theorize that some occupations may involve interpersonal experiences with negative emotional tones that make functional coping difficult and increase the risk of depression. In other occupations, these experiences have neutral tones and allow for functional coping strategies. Functional strategies are more often found in women than in men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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32. Impact of childhood adversity on the onset and course of subclinical psychosis symptoms — Results from a 30-year prospective community study.
- Author
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Rössler, Wulf, Hengartner, Michael P., Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Haker, Helene, and Angst, Jules
- Subjects
- *
PEDIATRIC physiology , *COHORT analysis , *PSYCHOSES in children , *LONGITUDINAL method , *AGE factors in disease , *DOSE-response relationship in biochemistry - Abstract
Abstract: The study objective was to examine childhood adversity in association with intra-individual changes and inter-individual differences in subclinical psychosis in a representative community cohort over a 30-year period of observation. We analyzed two psychosis syndromes derived from the SCL-90-R – schizotypal signs and schizophrenia nuclear symptoms – in 335 participants. Participants were repeatedly assessed between 1978 (around age 20) and 2008 (around age 50). We focused specifically on inter-individual differences and intra-individual changes over time by applying structural equation modeling, generalized linear models, and generalized estimating equations. Several weak inter-individual differences revealed that increased schizotypal signs are related to various childhood adversities, such as being repeatedly involved in fights and parents having severe conflicts among themselves. We also found a significant positive association between schizotypal signs and the total number of adversities a subject experienced. This pointed toward a modest dose–response relationship. The intra-individual change in schizotypal signs over time was rather weak, although some adjustment did occur. In contrast, inter-individual schizophrenia nuclear symptoms were mainly unrelated to childhood adversity. However, some striking intra-individual changes in distress were noted over time, especially those linked with severe punishment and the total adversity score. In conclusion, we have confirmed previous positive findings about the association between childhood adversity and subsequent subclinical psychosis symptoms: An increase in adversity is weakly related to an increase of the psychosis symptom load. However, depending on the kind of adversity experienced the psychosis symptom load decreases gradually in adult life. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
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33. Deconstructing sub-clinical psychosis into latent-state and trait variables over a 30-year time span.
- Author
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Rössler, Wulf, Hengartner, Michael P., Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Haker, Helene, and Angst, Jules
- Subjects
- *
CLINICAL psychology , *PSYCHOSES , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *SYMPTOMS , *DATA analysis , *SCHIZOPHRENIA - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Our aim was to deconstruct the variance underlying the expression of sub-clinical psychosis symptoms into portions associated with latent time-dependent states and time-invariant traits. Methods: We analyzed data of 335 subjects from the general population of Zurich, Switzerland, who had been repeatedly measured between 1979 (age 20/21) and 2008 (age 49/50). We applied two measures of sub-clinical psychosis derived from the SCL-90-R, namely schizotypal signs (STS) and schizophrenia nuclear symptoms (SNS). Variance was decomposed with latent state–trait analysis and associations with covariates were examined with generalized linear models. Results: At ages 19/20 and 49/50, the latent states underlying STS accounted for 48% and 51% of variance, whereas for SNS those estimates were 62% and 50%. Between those age classes, however, expression of sub-clinical psychosis was strongly associated with stable traits (75% and 89% of total variance in STS and SNS, respectively, at age 27/28). Latent states underlying variance in STS and SNS were particularly related to partnership problems over almost the entire observation period. STS was additionally related to employment problems, whereas drug-use was a strong predictor of states underlying both syndromes at age 19/20. The latent trait underlying expression of STS and SNS was particularly related to low sense of mastery and self-esteem and to high depressiveness. Conclusions: Although most psychosis symptoms are transient and episodic in nature, the variability in their expression is predominantly caused by stable traits. Those time-invariant and rather consistent effects are particularly influential around age 30, whereas the occasion-specific states appear to be particularly influential at ages 20 and 50. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
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34. Lifetime comorbidity of obsessive-compulsive disorder and sub-threshold obsessive-compulsive symptomatology in the community: impact, prevalence, socio-demographic and clinical characteristics.
- Author
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Fineberg, Naomi A., Hengartner, Michael P., Bergbaum, Carmel, Gale, Tim, Rössler, Wulf, and Angst, Jules
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of obsessive-compulsive disorder ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,RESEARCH funding ,COMORBIDITY ,DATA analysis ,SYMPTOMS ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective. This study aims to expand the available knowledge on Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD)-comorbidity by investigating the prevalence and clinical impact on a group of individuals with OCD or subthreshold OC syndrome (OCS), prospectively followed-up over an extended period. Methods. A stratified sample of the general population of the canton of Zurich, Switzerland (n = 591), participated in a series of seven interviews over a 30-year period. Clinically significant comorbid subgroups of OCD/OCS were compared to cases of OCD/OCS without respective comorbidity, in order to determine differences in socio-demographic and other clinical characteristics. Results. Lifetime rates of psychiatric comorbidity were high and increased in prevalence across the OC severity spectrum. Bipolar affective disorder was significantly associated with OCD whereas unipolar major depression and both alcohol and drug misuse disorders were not. Most forms of comorbidity increased distress and impacted negatively on family and work relationships, though disorder-specific effects were observed. Thus, agoraphobia and GAD were associated with increased OCD-severity; bipolar disorder was associated with suicidal acts and panic disorder increased treatment-seeking behaviour. Conclusions. Despite the statistical limitations imposed by the small sample-size, our findings highlight the negative impact of psychiatric comorbidity on health and psychosocial function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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35. A prospective population-based cohort study of the prevalence, incidence and impact of obsessive-compulsive symptomatology.
- Author
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Fineberg, Naomi A., Hengartner, Michael P., Bergbaum, Carmel E., Gale, Tim M., Gamma, Alex, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rössler, Wulf, and Angst, Jules
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of obsessive-compulsive disorder ,AGE factors in disease ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research ,LONGITUDINAL method ,OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX distribution ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,SYMPTOMS ,VISUAL analog scale ,REPEATED measures design ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective. Prospective longitudinal studies of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and sub-diagnostic obsessive-compulsive symptomatology in the non-clinical population, using age-defined cohorts, are rare. This study aimed to investigate the effect of OC symptoms on distress and psychosocial function and the effect of early-onset OC symptoms. Methods. 591 subjects drawn from the general population of Zurich, Switzerland were interviewed seven times between 1979 (at age 20/21) and 2008 (age 49/50). Data for socio-demographic variables and psychosocial impairment was also collected and compared with a control-group without OC symptoms drawn from the same population. Results. The unweighted cumulative one-year rate of OCD in this sample was 5.1% and 21.7% reported some degree of clinically-relevant OC symptomatology (OCD or OCS). OCD appeared more prevalent in females whereas OCS and OC symptoms were more prevalent in males. The weighted cumulative prevalence rates, representative of the general population, for OCD, OCS and OC symptoms were 3.5%, 9.7%, and 11.2%, respectively. We could not identify OCD occurring before the age of 10 years, though sub-threshold cases were reported as early as age 2 years, whereas by the age of 22 years, around two thirds of OCD cases had emerged and no new cases developed OCD after around 37 years. Males were statistically significantly younger than females at onset of any OC symptomatology. Conclusions. Clinically-relevant OC syndromes start early and are associated with substantial distress, treatment-seeking activity and in the case of OCD, functional disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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36. Remission of obsessive-compulsive disorders and syndromes; evidence from a prospective community cohort study over 30 years.
- Author
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Fineberg, Naomi A., Hengartner, Michael P., Bergbaum, Carmel, Gale, Tim, Rössler, Wulf, and Angst, Jules
- Subjects
CONFIDENCE intervals ,LONGITUDINAL method ,OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,RESEARCH funding ,SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) ,SYMPTOMS ,DISEASE remission ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,KAPLAN-Meier estimator ,GLASGOW Coma Scale - Abstract
Objective. Studies suggest that obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is an unremitting disorder. We report a prospective, longitudinal investigation into OCD and sub-diagnostic OC syndrome (OCS) over a 30-year period to determine the extent to which individuals with clinically relevant OC symptomatology cumulatively remit, as well as the remission latency. Methods. Five hundred and ninety-one participants drawn from the general population of Zurich, Switzerland, participated in a series of seven interviews over a period of 30 years. Results. Median duration for OCD, OCS and unimpairing OC symptoms was 16, 14 and 6 years, respectively, suggesting a better prognosis for remission for less severe illness. Individuals with a longer duration of illness, greater number of OC-burdened years and those seeking professional help experienced significantly delayed remission. In addition, these factors together with the presence of comorbid anxiety disorders were associated with significantly reduced remission rates. We found a trend towards statistical significance for comorbid affective disorders and reduced remission rates. Conclusions. Our findings suggest a lack of diagnostic stability over the long-term and a high chance of eventual remission, albeit often after several years of illness, for obsessive-compulsive syndromes including OCD. However, roughly one-third of OCD cases do not remit by 50 years of age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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37. A new rating scale for adult ADHD based on the Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL-90-R).
- Author
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Eich, Dominique, Angst, Jules, Frei, Anja, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rössler, Wulf, and Gamma, Alex
- Subjects
ATTENTION-deficit hyperactivity disorder ,SYMPTOMS ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,NARCOTICS ,COHORT analysis ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) - Abstract
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults is increasingly recognized as a clinically important syndrome. The aim of this study was to evaluate the psychometric performance of a new scale for adult ADHD based on the widely used Symptom Checklist 90 Revised (SCL-90-R). Scale performance was assessed in a clinical study including 100 ADHD patients and 65 opiate-dependent patient controls, and in the Zurich study, an epidemiological age cohort followed over 30 years of adult life. Assessments included a ROC analysis of sensitivity and specificity, internal consistency, test-retest reliability, external validity and measurement invariance over nine testing occasions. The new scale showed a sensitivity and specificity of 75 and 54%, respectively, internal consistency over 0.8 (McDonald's omega, Cronbach's alpha), one-year test-retest reliabilities over 0.7, statistically significant and substantial correlations with two other validated self-rating scales of adult ADHD ( R = 0.5 and 0.66, respectively), and an acceptable degree of longitudinal stability (i.e., measurement invariance). The proposed scale must be further evaluated, but these preliminary results indicate it could be a useful rating instrument for adult ADHD in situations where SCL-90-R data, but no specific ADHD assessment, are available, such as in retrospective data analysis or in prospective studies with limited methodical resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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38. Sex differences in sub-clinical psychosis—Results from a community study over 30 years.
- Author
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Rössler, Wulf, Hengartner, Michael P., Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Haker, Helene, and Angst, Jules
- Subjects
- *
GENDER differences (Psychology) , *PSYCHOSES , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *SYMPTOMS , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Sex differences in schizophrenia have long been reported. They are found within almost all aspects of the disease, from incidence and prevalence, age of onset, symptomatology, and course to its psycho-social outcome. Many sex-related hypotheses have been developed about the biology, psychology, or sociology of that disease. A further approach to study sex differences would be to examine such differences in sub-clinical psychotic states as well. If factors related to full-blown psychosis were equally meaningful over the entire psychosis continuum, we should expect that “true” sex differences could also be identified in sub-clinical psychosis. Here, we studied sex differences in sub-clinical psychosis within a community cohort in Zurich, Switzerland. This population was followed for over 30 years and included males and females between the ages of 20/21 and 49/50. We applied two different measures of sub-clinical psychosis representing schizotypal signs and schizophrenia nuclear symptoms. Using cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses, we found no significant sex differences in sub-clinical psychosis over time with respect to age of onset, symptomatology, course, or psycho-social outcome. Thus it appears that sex differences in psychosis manifest themselves at the high end of the continuum (full-blown schizophrenia) rather than within the sub-threshold range. Possibly males and females have separate thresholds for certain symptoms because they are differently vulnerable or exposed to various risk factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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39. Linking substance use with symptoms of subclinical psychosis in a community cohort over 30 years.
- Author
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Rössler, Wulf, Hengartner, Michael P., Angst, Jules, and Ajdacic‐Gross, Vladeta
- Subjects
- *
CANNABIS (Genus) , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *DOPAMINE , *ALCOHOL drinking , *DRUG receptors , *DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology , *DRUGS of abuse , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *FACTOR analysis , *INTERVIEWING , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *PSYCHOSES , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *SCALES (Weighing instruments) , *SCHIZOAFFECTIVE disorders , *SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *STATISTICS , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DATA analysis , *SECONDARY analysis , *SYMPTOMS , *REPEATED measures design , *DISEASE prevalence , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
ABSTRACT Aims The aim of the study was to examine the temporal associations between substance use and subclinical psychosis symptoms. Design Data from a prospective community study sampled within a single cohort over 30 years (1978-2008) were analysed with discrete-time hazard models. Setting General population-based sample. Participants At initial sampling in 1978 males ( n = 292) were 19 and females ( n = 299) were 20 years old. Measurements Two psychosis syndromes representing 'schizotypal signs' and 'schizophrenia nuclear symptoms' and various substance use variables including cannabis, alcohol, tobacco and multiple-drug use (i.e. cannabis combined with other drugs). Findings In bivariate analyses, schizotypal signs were predominantly associated with regular cannabis use in adolescence (OR = 2.29, 95% CI 1.32-3.97). Schizophrenia nuclear symptoms were mainly related to alcohol (OR = 1.84, 95% CI 1.00-3.38) and multiple-drug use (OR = 2.35, 95% CI 1.38-4.02) during adolescence. Multivariate analyses showed that, in particular, regular cannabis use during adolescence was associated with the occurrence of subsequent schizotypal symptoms over a 30-year period (OR = 2.60, 95% CI; 1.59-4.23), whereas multiple-drug use in adolescence was associated predominantly with schizophrenia nuclear symptoms (OR = 1.75, 95% CI 1.01-3.03). Alcohol misuse was only slightly associated with the onset of such symptoms. Conclusions A significant portion of the occurrence of subclinical psychosis symptoms in adulthood can be attributed to excessive cannabis and multiple-drug use during adolescence. This is in line with the hypothesis that long-term sensitization of dopaminergic brain receptors plays a role in developing psychotic symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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40. The psychosis continuum in the general population: findings from the São Paulo Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study.
- Author
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Loch, Alexandre, Wang, Yuan-Pang, Rössler, Wulf, Tófoli, Luis, Silveira, Camila, and Andrade, Laura
- Subjects
PSYCHOSES ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,CROSS-sectional method ,HELP-seeking behavior ,LATIN Americans ,DISEASES - Abstract
The aim of the study was to examine the psychosis continuum in a Latin-American community setting. Data were from the Brazilian São Paulo Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study, a cross-sectional survey conducted in two boroughs of the city of São Paulo. The Composite International Diagnosis Interview (version 1.1) was applied to a probabilistic sample of 1,464 adults, who were interviewed in their household, in order to identify the presence of psychotic symptoms. A subsample was assessed with Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry interview. We described the occurrence of psychotic symptoms, categorized into subgroups according to their clinical impact, disability, and help-seeking behavior. The correlation of socio-demographic variables, depressive symptoms, and alcohol and substance use disorders with those psychotic subgroups was analyzed. Polychotomic logistic regression tested the associations between subgroups of psychosis (clinical and subclinical) and the correlates. Of the total sample, 38.0% presented at least one lifetime psychotic symptom, 1.9% met the criteria for an ICD-10 diagnosis of non-affective psychosis, 5.4% presented clinically relevant psychotic symptoms, and 30.7% endorsed clinically non-relevant symptoms. The most common psychotic symptom was delusion with a plausible explanation (in 18.6%). The presence of any psychiatric diagnosis was associated with the presence of psychotic symptoms (OR range, 1.9-8.9). Subclinical psychosis subgroups were found to be associated with the 18-24 year age bracket, chronic depressive mood, and alcohol use disorder. Our results support the concept of a psychosis continuum in Latin-American populations, suggesting that different risk factors influence their manifestation across the continuum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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41. Sub-clinical psychosis symptoms in young adults are risk factors for subsequent common mental disorders
- Author
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Rössler, Wulf, Hengartner, Michael P., Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Haker, Helene, Gamma, Alex, and Angst, Jules
- Subjects
- *
SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *DATA analysis , *SOCIAL phobia ,PSYCHOSES risk factors - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Not all persons identified in the early stages to be at risk for psychosis eventually cross the threshold for a psychotic illness. However, sub-clinical symptoms may not only indicate a specific risk but also suggest a more general, underlying psychopathology that predisposes one to various common mental disorders. Methods: Analyzing data from the prospective Zurich Cohort Study, we used two psychosis subscales – “schizotypal signs” and “schizophrenia nuclear symptoms” – derived from the SCL-90-R checklist that measured sub-clinical psychosis symptoms in 1979. We also assessed 10 different diagnoses of common mental disorders through seven interview waves between 1979 and 2008. This 30-year span, covering participant ages of 19/20 to 49/50, encompasses the period of highest risk for the occurrence of such disorders. Results: Both psychosis scales from 1979, but especially “schizotypal signs”, were significantly correlated with most mental disorders over the subsequent test period. Higher values on both subscales were associated with an increasing number of co-occurring disorders. Conclusions: Our data demonstrate that sub-clinical psychosis generally represents a risk factor for the development of common mental disorders and a liability for co-occurring disorders. This refers in particular to dysthymia, bipolar disorder, social phobia, and obsessive–compulsive disorder. Proneness to psychosis could signal a fundamental tendency toward common mental disorders. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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42. Adult versus adolescent onset of smoking: how are mood disorders and other risk factors involved?
- Author
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Ajdacic‐Gross, Vladeta, Landolt, Karin, Angst, Jules, Gamma, Alex, Merikangas, Kathleen R., Gutzwiller, Felix, and Rössler, Wulf
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AFFECTIVE disorders ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of tobacco ,PERSONALITY disorders in adolescence ,MENTAL depression ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,MENTAL illness risk factors - Abstract
Aims To examine the strength of association between smoking and mood disorders and the association between smoking and its traditional risk factors, comparing those who started smoking in adolescence with those who started smoking in early adulthood. Design and participants The analyses relied on prospective data from the Zurich Study. This longitudinal community study started in 1979 with a stratified sample of 591 participants aged 20/21 years, weighted towards those with mental disorders. Follow-up interviews were conducted at ages 23, 28, 30, 35 and 41. Measurements In this analysis the adult versus adolescent onset of smoking was regressed on the cumulative prevalence of mood disorders, personality characteristics measured by the Freiburg Personality Inventory, common risk factors such as parental smoking, conduct and school problems, troubles with the family and basic socio-demographic variables (sex, education). Findings In the Zurich Study cohort we found that 61.6% were former or current smokers, of whom 87% started smoking before the age of 20 and 13% after the age of 20. Adolescent onset of smoking was associated strongly with later major depression, dysthymia or bipolar disorders and, furthermore, with parental smoking, extroverted personality and discipline problems and rebelliousness in youth. However, only depression and dysthymia were associated with adult onset smoking and other risk factors associated with smoking were not so associated in this group. Conclusions Correlates of smoking onset in adolescence are mainly not applicable to the onset of smoking in young adulthood. Smoking onset beyond adolescence is an open research issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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43. Prevalence of exposure to potentially traumatic events and PTSD.
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Hepp, Urs, Gamma, Alex, Milos, Gabriella, Eich, Dominique, Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Rössler, Wulf, Angst, Jules, and Schnyder, Ulrich
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POST-traumatic stress disorder ,ANXIETY ,NEUROSES ,TRAUMATIC neuroses ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Presents the results of a study on the prevalence of exposure to potentially traumatic events and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Explanation on PTSD; Aims of the study; Methods of the study.
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- 2006
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44. Size of burden of schizophrenia and psychotic disorders
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Rössler, Wulf, Joachim Salize, Hans, van Os, Jim, and Riecher-Rössler, Anita
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SCHIZOPHRENIA , *MENTAL illness , *PSYCHOSES , *PEOPLE with schizophrenia - Abstract
Abstract: Schizophrenia is a severe mental disorder characterised by fundamental disturbances in thinking, perception and emotions. More than 100 years of research have not been able to fully resolve the puzzle that schizophrenia represents. Even if schizophrenia is not a very frequent disease, it is among the most burdensome and costly illnesses worldwide. It usually starts in young adulthood. Life expectancy is reduced by approximately 10 years, mostly as a consequence of suicide. Even if the course of the illness today is considered more favourable than it was originally described, it is still only a minority of those affected, who fully recover. The cumulative lifetime risk for men and women is similar, although it is higher for men in the age group younger than 40 years. According to the Global Burden of Disease Study, schizophrenia causes a high degree of disability, which accounts for 1.1% of the total DALYs (disability-adjusted life years) and 2.8% of YLDs (years lived with disability). In the World Health Report [The WHO World Health Report: new understanding, new hope, 2001. Geneva], schizophrenia is listed as the 8th leading cause of DALYs worldwide in the age group 15–44 years. In addition to the direct burden, there is considerable burden on the relatives who care for the sufferers. The treatment goals for the moment are to identify the illness as early as possible, treat the symptoms, provide skills to patients and their families, maintain the improvement over a period of time, prevent relapses and reintegrate the ill persons into the community so that they can lead as normal a life as possible. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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45. Social Phobia Is Associated with Delayed Onset of Chickenpox, Measles, and Mumps Infections
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Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Aleksandrowicz, Aleksandra, Rodgers, Stephanie, Müller, Mario, Kawohl, Wolfram, Rössler, Wulf, Castelao, Enrique, Vandeleur, Caroline, von Känel, Roland, Mutsch, Margot, Lieb, Roselind, and Preisig, Martin
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Childhood diseases ,Epidemiology ,mental disorders ,Infectious diseases ,Social phobia ,3. Good health ,Anxiety disorders - Abstract
Objective: Evidence showing that infectious diseases in childhood play an important role in the etiopathogenesis of neurodevelopmental and other mental disorders is growing. The aim of this study was to explore the timing of common childhood diseases in early-onset anxiety disorders. Materials and methods: We analyzed data from PsyCoLaus, a large Swiss Population Cohort Study (N = 3720). In this study, we regressed overanxious disorder, separation anxiety disorder, social phobia, and specific phobias on the age of onset of several childhood diseases, always adjusting for the other anxiety disorders listed above and for sex. Results: The timing of viral childhood diseases (chickenpox, measles, and mumps) was consistently delayed in social phobia, notably both in men and women. We found no evidence for a reversed sequence of onset of phobia symptoms before that of the infections included. Conclusion: Social phobia was the only early anxiety disorder to show an association with a delayed onset of common viral childhood diseases., Frontiers in Psychiatry, 7, ISSN:1664-0640
46. Trends in psychiatric hospitalisation of people with schizophrenia: A register-based investigation over the last three decades
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Lay, Barbara, Nordt, Carlos, Rössler, Wulf, and Rössler, Wulf
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PSYCHIATRIC hospital patients , *DIAGNOSIS of schizophrenia , *PSYCHIATRY education , *MEDICAL care , *SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment , *FORECASTING , *HOSPITAL care , *HOSPITAL utilization , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals , *PSYCHOSES , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *ACQUISITION of data , *CROSS-sectional method , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Abstract: The number of psychiatric beds has declined considerably in many countries over the past decades. Long-term studies on the impact of these health care changes for the severely mentally ill, however, are still scarce. This epidemiological study investigates the use of inpatient psychiatric services by people with schizophrenia, compared to that by people with other mental disorders. We used psychiatric register data of the Swiss canton Zurich to establish the annual treatment prevalence in the period 1977–2004. For patients with psychoses, the length of inpatient episodes decreased by half. The annual number of inpatient admissions doubled. The proportion of schizophrenia patients, which accounted for 36%–41% of all inpatient treatments up to 1993, dropped to 20% in 2004, while that of other psychoses remained about the same (8%–10%) throughout the study period. This contrasts with a 2–3 fold increase in other patient groups. The annual treatment prevalence for people with schizophrenia declined from 7.3 to 2.2 per 10000 population since the 1990s and affected patients of all ages and of both sexes equally. The treatment prevalence for other psychoses remained virtually unchanged (1.3 per 10000). For all other mental disorders, there was an up to twofold increase. The study suggests that the downsizing of psychiatric hospitals has resulted in a far-reaching redistribution of overall inpatient treatment resources. The considerable decrease in inpatient treatment for people with schizophrenia emphasizes the need to further investigate the current state of coverage for and the appropriateness of health care available to this patient group. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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47. Big Five personality traits may inform public health policy and preventive medicine: Evidence from a cross-sectional and a prospective longitudinal epidemiologic study in a Swiss community.
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Hengartner, Michael P., Kawohl, Wolfram, Haker, Helene, Rössler, Wulf, and Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta
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PERSONALITY , *HEALTH policy , *MEDICINE , *PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *NEUROTICISM , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ETHNIC groups , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MYERS-Briggs Type Indicator , *PERSONALITY disorders , *RESEARCH , *SELF-evaluation , *EVALUATION research , *ANXIETY disorders , *CROSS-sectional method , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Background: Some evidence documents the importance of personality assessments for health research and practise. However, no study has opted to test whether a short self-report personality inventory may comprehensively inform health policy.Methods: Data were taken from a population-based epidemiologic survey in Zurich, Switzerland, conducted from 2010-2012. A short form of the Big Five Inventory was completed by n=1155 participants (54.4% women; mean age=29.6 years), while health-related outcomes were taken from a comprehensive semi-structured clinical interview. A convenience subsample averaging n=171 participants additionally provided laboratory measures and n=133 were subsequently followed-up at least once over a maximal period of 6 months.Results: Personality traits, in particular high neuroticism and low conscientiousness, related significantly to poor environmental resources such as low social support (R(2)=0.071), health-impairing behaviours such as cannabis use (R(2)=0.071), and psychopathology, including negative affect (R(2)=0.269) and various mental disorders (R(2)=0.060-0.195). The proportion of total variance explained was R(2)=0.339 in persons with three or more mental disorders. Personality significantly related to some laboratory measures including total cholesterol (R(2)=0.095) and C-Reactive Protein (R(2)=0.062). Finally, personality prospectively predicted global psychopathological distress and vegetative symptoms over a 6-month observation period.Conclusions: Personality relates consistently to poor socio-environmental resources, health-impairing behaviours and psychopathology. We also found some evidence for an association with metabolic and immune functions that are assumed to influence health. A short personality inventory could provide valuable information for preventive medicine when used as a means to screen entire populations for distinct risk exposure, in particular with respect to psychopathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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48. Tracing the associations between sex, the atypical and the combined atypical-melancholic depression subtypes: A path analysis.
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Rodgers, Stephanie, Vandeleur, Caroline L., Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, Aleksandrowicz, Aleksandra A., Strippoli, Marie-Pierre F., Castelao, Enrique, Glaus, Jennifer, Lasserre, Aurélie M., Müller, Mario, Rössler, Wulf, Angst, Jules, and Preisig, Martin
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MENTAL depression , *BODY mass index , *MENTAL health , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *DATA analysis , *AGE factors in disease , *DEMOGRAPHY , *ANXIETY disorders , *CROSS-sectional method - Abstract
Background: Numerous studies have examined determinants leading to preponderance of women in major depressive disorder (MDD), which is particularly accentuated for the atypical depression subtype. It is thus of interest to explore the specific indirect effects influencing the association between sex and established depression subtypes.Methods: The data of 1624 subjects with a lifetime diagnosis of MDD derived from the population-based PsyCoLaus data were used. An atypical (n=256), a melancholic (n=422), a combined atypical and melancholic features subtype (n=198), and an unspecified MDD group (n=748) were constructed according to the DSM-IV specifiers. Path models with direct and indirect effects were applied to the data.Results: Partial mediation of the female-related atypical and combined atypical-melancholic depression subtypes was found. Early anxiety disorders and high emotion-orientated coping acted as mediating variables between sex and the atypical depression subtype. In contrast, high Body Mass Index (BMI) served as a suppression variable, also concerning the association between sex and the combined atypical-melancholic subtype. The latter association was additionally mediated by an early age of MDD onset and early/late anxiety disorders.Limitations: The use of cross-sectional data does not allow causal conclusions.Conclusions: This is the first study that provides evidence for a differentiation of the general mechanisms explaining sex differences of overall MDD by depression subtypes. Determinants affecting the pathways begin early in life. Since some of them are primarily of behavioral nature, the present findings could be a valuable target in mental health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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49. Symptom-based subtypes of depression and their psychosocial correlates: A person-centered approach focusing on the influence of sex.
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Rodgers, Stephanie, Grosse Holtforth, Martin, Müller, Mario, Hengartner, Michael P., Rössler, Wulf, and Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta
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MENTAL depression , *SUSTAINABLE development , *MENTAL health services , *INTELLECTUAL disabilities , *PSYCHOMOTOR disorders , *DRUG abuse - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Reducing the complexity of major depressive disorder by symptom-based subtypes constitutes the basis of more specific treatments. To date, few studies have empirically derived symptom subtypes separated by sex, although the impact of sex has been widely accepted in depression research. Methods: The community-based sample included 373 males and 443 females from the Zurich Program for Sustainable Development of Mental Health Services (ZInEP) manifesting depressive symptoms in the past 12 months. Latent Class Analysis (LCA) was performed separately by sex to extract sex-related depression subtypes. The subtypes were characterized by psychosocial characteristics. Results: Three similar subtypes were found in both sexes: a severe typical subtype (males: 22.8%; females: 35.7%), a severe atypical subtype (males: 17.4%; females: 22.6%), and a moderate subtype (males: 25.2%; females: 41.8%). In males, two additional subgroups were identified: a severe irritable/angry-rejection sensitive (IARS) subtype (30%) comprising the largest group, and a small psychomotor retarded subtype (4%). Males belonging to the severe typical subtype exhibited the lowest masculine gender role orientation, while females of the typical subtype showed more anxiety disorders. The severe atypical subtype was associated with eating disorders in both sexes and with alcohol/drug abuse/dependence in females. In contrast, alcohol/drug abuse/dependence was associated with the severe IARS subtype in males. Limitations: The study had a cross-sectional design, allowing for no causal inferences. Conclusions: This study contributes to a better understanding of sex-related depression subtypes, which can be well distinguished on the basis of symptom profiles. This provides the base for future research investigating the etiopathogenesis and effective treatment of the heterogeneous depression disorder. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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50. ¿Son dos semanas, el criterio de la duración óptima de la depresión mayor?
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Angst, Jules, Hengartner, Michael P., Ajdacic-Gross, Vladeta, and Rössler, Wulf
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MENTAL depression , *DISEASE duration , *DIAGNOSIS , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Introduction: A clinically useful diagnostic classification should identify most patients who are treated. To our surprise, DSM-IV criteria for major depressive episodes (MDE) detected fewer than 50% of a community sample (the Zurich study) who had received treatment for depression. Treated subjects often experience episodes lasting under 2 weeks, or with fewer symptoms than required for a DSM diagnosis. Methods: Our paper focuses on the validity and clinical relevance of the length of depressive syndromes, defined by the presence of 5 or more of 9 diagnostic symptoms (DSM-IV). Results: We found depressive syndromes lasting under 2 weeks to be highly prevalent, and those lasting 4+ days to have equal validity (family history, age of onset, course) and treatment rates to episodes of 2-4 weeks. Conclusions: The 2-week criterion for MDE would appear questionable. Our results need confirmation by larger epidemiological studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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