16 results on '"Toazza R"'
Search Results
2. Thrifty-Eating Behavior Phenotype at the Food Court - Programming Goes Beyond Food Preferences.
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Dalle Molle R, de Mendonça Filho EJ, Minuzzi L, Machado TD, Reis RS, Rodrigues DM, Mucellini AB, Franco AR, Buchweitz A, Toazza R, Bortoluzzi A, Salum GA, Boscenco S, Meaney MJ, Levitan RD, Manfro GG, and Silveira PP
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- Adolescent, Canada, Humans, Phenotype, Reward, Feeding Behavior, Food Preferences
- Abstract
Introduction: Prenatal growth impairment leads to higher preference for palatable foods in comparison to normal prenatal growth subjects, which can contribute to increased body fat mass and a higher risk for developing chronic diseases in small-for-gestational-age (SGA) individuals throughout life. This study aimed to investigate the effect of SGA on feeding behavior in children and adolescents, as well as resting-state connectivity between areas related to reward, self-control, and value determination, such as orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DL-PFC), amygdala and dorsal striatum (DS)., Methods: Caregivers and their offspring were recruited from two independent cohorts in Brazil (PROTAIA) and Canada (MAVAN). Both cohorts included anthropometric measurements, food choice tasks, and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data., Results: In the Brazilian sample (17 ± 0.28 years, n=70), 21.4% of adolescents were classified as SGA. They exhibited lower monetary-related expenditure to buy a snack compared to controls in the food choice test. Decreased functional connectivity (n=40) between left OFC and left DL-PFC; and between right OFC and: left amygdala, right DS, and left DS were observed in the Brazilian SGA participants. Canadian SGA participants (14.9%) had non-significant differences in comparison with controls in a food choice task at 4 years old ( ± 0.01, n=315). At a follow-up brain scan visit (10.21 ± 0.140 years, n=49), SGA participants (28.6%) exhibited higher connectivity between the left OFC and left DL-PFC, also higher connectivity between the left OFC and right DL-PFC. We did not observe significant anthropometric neither nutrients' intake differences between groups in both samples., Conclusions: Resting-state fMRI results showed that SGA individuals had altered connectivity between areas involved in encoding the subjective value for available goods and decision-making in both samples, which can pose them in disadvantage when facing food options daily. Over the years, the cumulative exposure to particular food cues together with the altered behavior towards food, such as food purchasing, as seen in the adolescent cohort, can play a role in the long-term risk for developing chronic non-communicable diseases., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Dalle Molle, de Mendonça Filho, Minuzzi, Machado, Reis, Rodrigues, Mucellini, Franco, Buchweitz, Toazza, Bortoluzzi, Salum, Boscenco, Meaney, Levitan, Manfro and Silveira.)
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- 2022
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3. Diminished insulin sensitivity is associated with altered brain activation to food cues and with risk for obesity - Implications for individuals born small for gestational age.
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Mucellini AB, Miguel PM, Dalle Molle R, Rodrigues DM, Machado TD, Reis RS, Toazza R, Salum GA, Bortoluzzi A, Franco AR, Buchweitz A, Barth B, Agranonik M, Nassim M, Meaney MJ, Manfro GG, and Silveira PP
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- Adolescent, Blood Glucose metabolism, Brain physiology, Cues, Gestational Age, Humans, Insulin, Meals, Obesity complications, Insulin Resistance
- Abstract
While classically linked to memory, the hippocampus is also a feeding behavior modulator due to its multiple interconnected pathways with other brain regions and expression of receptors for metabolic hormones. Here we tested whether variations in insulin sensitivity would be correlated with differential brain activation following exposure to palatable food cues, as well as with variations in implicit food memory in a cohort of healthy adolescents, some of whom were born small for gestational age (SGA). Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR) was positively correlated with activation in the cuneus, and negatively correlated with activation in the middle frontal lobe, superior frontal gyrus and precuneus when presented with palatable food images versus non-food images in healthy adolescents. Additionally, HOMA-IR and insulinemia were higher in participants with impaired food memory. SGA individuals had higher snack caloric density and greater chance for impaired food memory. There was also an interaction between the HOMA-IR and birth weight ratio influencing external eating behavior. We suggest that diminished insulin sensitivity correlates with activation in visual attention areas and inactivation in inhibitory control areas in healthy adolescents. Insulin resistance also associated with less consistency in implicit memory for a consumed meal, which may suggest lower ability to establish a dietary pattern, and can contribute to obesity. Differences in feeding behavior in SGA individuals were associated with insulin sensitivity and hippocampal alterations, suggesting that cognition and hormonal regulation are important components involved in their food intake modifications throughout life., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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4. Scale for developmental dyslexia screening: evidence of validity and reliability.
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Bassôa A, Costa AC, Toazza R, and Buchweitz A
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- Child, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Humans, Reading, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Writing, Dyslexia diagnosis
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the empirical validity and reliability of a screener for risk of developmental dyslexia (DD) by elementary school teachers., Methods: The scale was tested with 12 teachers who answered questions about their students (95 students total, all in the third year of elementary school); the students, in turn, performed reading and writing tasks which were used to investigate the association between screening scores and performance. The following analyses were carried out: (1) factor analysis; (2) internal consistency; (3) relationship between each scale item and the construct of interest, as measured by item response theory (IRT); (4) correlation of each scale item with external variables (reading and writing tests); and (5) the temporal stability of teachers' evaluations., Results: The analyses showed: (1) one factor was extracted; (2) strong internal consistency - the items in the scale are good indicators for screening of this construct; (3) items were monotonic (IRT), i.e., item variability is associated with one construct; (4) moderate Spearman correlation (11/17 items); (5) temporal stability - the result of screening did not vary over time., Conclusion: This study shows evidence of validity and reliability of the proposed scale in its intended use of screening for developmental dyslexia. The percentage of children at risk for developmental dyslexia, according to the scale, was approximately 9%, which is in agreement with the international literature on the prevalence of dyslexia.
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- 2021
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5. Memory and language impairments are associated with anxiety disorder severity in childhood.
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Sbicigo JB, Toazza R, Becker N, Ecker K, Manfro GG, and Salles JF
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- Anxiety Disorders complications, Anxiety, Separation complications, Anxiety, Separation physiopathology, Child, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Female, Humans, Language Disorders etiology, Male, Memory Disorders etiology, Phobia, Social complications, Phobia, Social physiopathology, Severity of Illness Index, Anxiety Disorders physiopathology, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Language Disorders physiopathology, Memory Disorders physiopathology
- Abstract
Introduction Children with anxiety disorders have been suggested to possess deficits in verbal fluency, shifting and attention, with inconsistent results regarding working memory and its subcomponents. This study extends previous findings by analyzing the performance of children with anxiety disorders in a wide range of neuropsychological functions. Methods We evaluated 54 children with a primary diagnosis of an anxiety disorder according to diagnostic criteria from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition (DSM-5) using subtests of a neuropsychological battery. The severity of anxiety disorders was assessed using the Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale (PARS). We calculated the frequency of neuropsychological impairments (-1.5 standard deviation of the normative sample). Comparisons between groups were performed based on the severity of anxiety symptoms, as well as in the presence of one vs. more diagnoses of anxiety disorder. Results We found higher impairment in visuospatial working memory (23.1%), semantic memory (27.8%), oral language (35.4%) and word writing (44.4%) in anxious children. Moreover, children with higher anxiety severity presented lower performance in visuospatial working memory, inferential processing, word reading, writing comprehension, copied writing, and semantic verbal fluency (d = 0.49 to 0.96 [Cohen's d]). The higher the number of anxiety diagnoses, the lower the performance in episodic memory and oral and written language (d = 0.56 to 0.77). Conclusion Our data suggested the presence of memory (visuospatial working memory and semantic memory) and language deficits (oral and writing) in some children with an anxiety disorder. Severity and number of anxiety diagnoses were associated with lower performance in memory and language domains in childhood.
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- 2020
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6. Perceived maternal care is associated with emotional eating in young adults.
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Ergang BC, Molle RD, Reis RS, Rodrigues DM, Mucellini AB, Toazza R, Cunha ACA, Silveira PP, Manfro GG, and Machado TD
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- Adolescent, Anthropometry, Anxiety psychology, Feeding and Eating Disorders psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Mothers, Neuropsychological Tests, Nutritional Status, Object Attachment, Sex Characteristics, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Eating psychology, Emotions physiology, Mother-Child Relations psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: Early life adversity, including the perception of poor quality of maternal care, is associated with long-term metabolic and psychosocial consequences. The negative quality of mother/child relationship is associated with emotional overeating in young children, which is defined by eating in response to emotional arousal states such as fear, anger or anxiety. However, it is not known if this association persists through adolescence. Therefore, we aimed at verifying if maternal care during infancy can influence emotional eating in young adults., Methods: Seventy-five adolescents, residents of Porto Alegre, who participated in the PROTAIA Program (anxiety disorder in childhood and adolescence program), answered the Parental Bonding Instrument (PBI - assessment of perceived maternal care), and the Dutch Eating Behavior Questionnaire (DEBQ). Regression analysis models were built to predict Emotional Eating, a domain of the DEBQ, using maternal care, gender, and anxiety as independent variables., Results: The model was statistically significant when adjusted for potential confounders (r
2 = 0.272; p < 0.0001). Emotional eating was significantly predicted by levels of maternal care, anxiety and gender (beta = -0.316; p = 0.006)., Conclusion: The results demonstrated a negative association between the quality of maternal care and emotional eating in young adults, suggesting that the early environment could be involved on the development of eating disorders or on the differential eating behavior in adolescents with emotional disorders., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2019
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7. Decoupling of the Occipitotemporal Cortex and the Brain's Default-Mode Network in Dyslexia and a Role for the Cingulate Cortex in Good Readers: A Brain Imaging Study of Brazilian Children.
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Buchweitz A, Costa AC, Toazza R, de Moraes AB, Cara VM, Esper NB, Aguzzoli C, Gregolim B, Dresch LF, Soldatelli MD, da Costa JC, Portuguez MW, and Franco AR
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping methods, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Dyslexia physiopathology, Gyrus Cinguli physiopathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Neuroimaging methods, Reading
- Abstract
The goal of the present study was to investigate intrinsic and reading-related brain function associated with dyslexia and typical readers in monolingual Brazilian children. Two fMRI studies were carried out: a resting-state and a word-reading study. The results show (a) underconnectivity between the occipitotemporal region (visual word form area) and the brain's default-mode network in dyslexic readers and (b) more activation of the anterior cingulate cortex for typical readers relative to dyslexic readers. The findings provide evidence for brain connectivity and function differences in an underrepresented population in fMRI studies of dyslexia; the results suggest atypical intrinsic function, and differences in directed attention processes in dyslexia.
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- 2019
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8. Group Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Attention Bias Modification for Childhood Anxiety Disorders: A Factorial Randomized Trial of Efficacy.
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Salum GA, Petersen CS, Jarros RB, Toazza R, DeSousa D, Borba LN, Castro S, Gallegos J, Barrett P, Abend R, Bar-Haim Y, Pine DS, Koller SH, and Manfro GG
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- Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, Child, Double-Blind Method, Female, Humans, Male, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Attentional Bias, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Psychotherapy, Group
- Abstract
Background: The objective of this study is to assess group differences in symptom reduction between individuals receiving group cognitive behavioral therapy (G-CBT) and attention bias modification (ABM) compared to their respective control interventions, control therapy (CT), and attention control training (ACT), in a 2 × 2 factorial design., Methods: A total of 310 treatment-naive children (7-11 years of age) were assessed for eligibility and 79 children with generalized, separation or social anxiety disorder were randomized and received G-CBT (n = 42) or CT (n = 37). Within each psychotherapy group, participants were again randomized to ABM (n = 38) or ACT (n = 41) in a 2 × 2 factorial design resulting in four groups: G-CBT + ABM (n = 21), G-CBT + ACT (n = 21), CT + ABM (n = 17), and CT + ACT (n = 20). Primary outcomes were responder designation as defined by Clinical Global Impression-Improvement (CGI-I) scale (≤2) and change on the Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale (PARS)., Results: There were significant improvements of symptoms in all groups. No differences in response rates or mean differences in PARS scores were found among groups: G-CBT + ABM group (23.8% response; 3.9 points, 95% confidence interval [CI] -0.3 to 8.1), G-CBT + ACT (42.9% response; 5.6 points, 95% CI 2.2-9.0), CT + ABM (47.1% response; 4.8 points 95% CI 1.08-8.57), and CT + ACT (30% response; 0.8 points, 95% CI -3.0 to 4.7). No evidence or synergic or antagonistic effects were found, but the combination of G-CBT and ABM was found to increase dropout rate., Conclusions: We found no effect of G-CBT or ABM beyond the effects of comparison groups. Results reveal no benefit from combining G-CBT and ABM for anxiety disorders in children and suggest potential deleterious effects of the combination on treatment acceptability.
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- 2018
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9. Decreased comfort food intake and allostatic load in adolescents carrying the A3669G variant of the glucocorticoid receptor gene.
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Rodrigues DM, Reis RS, Dalle Molle R, Machado TD, Mucellini AB, Bortoluzzi A, Toazza R, Pérez JA, Salum GA, Agranonik M, Minuzzi L, Levitan RD, Buchweitz A, Franco AR, Manfro GG, and Silveira PP
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- Adolescent, Adolescent Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Alleles, Anxiety genetics, Anxiety metabolism, Anxiety psychology, Brazil, Child, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Cohort Studies, Female, Genetic Association Studies, Humans, Insulin Resistance, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prospective Studies, Stress, Psychological genetics, Stress, Psychological metabolism, Stress, Psychological psychology, Allostasis, Appetite Regulation, Energy Intake, Food Preferences, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
- Abstract
Background: The A3669G single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) gene NR3C1 is associated with altered tissue sensitivity to glucocorticoids (GCs). GCs modulate the food reward circuitry and are implicated in increased intake of palatable foods, which can lead to the metabolic syndrome and obesity. We hypothesized that presence of the G variant of the A3669G SNP would affect preferences for palatable foods and alter metabolic, behavioural, and neural outcomes., Methods: One hundred thirty-one adolescents were genotyped for the A3669G polymorphism, underwent anthropometric assessment and nutritional evaluations, and completed behavioural measures. A subsample of 74 subjects was followed for 5 years and performed a brain functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigm to verify brain activity in response to food cues., Results: Sugar and total energy consumption were lower in A3669G G allele variant carriers. On follow-up, this group also had reduced serum insulin concentrations, increased insulin sensitivity, and lower anxiety scores. Because of our unbalanced sample sizes (31/37 participants non-G allele carriers/total), our imaging data analysis failed to find whole brain-corrected significant results in between-group t-tests., Conclusion: These results highlight that a genetic variation in the GR gene is associated, at the cellular level, with significant reduction in GC sensitivity, which, at cognitive and behavioural levels, translates to altered food intake and emotional stress response. This genetic variant might play a major role in decreasing risk for metabolic and psychiatric diseases., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2017
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10. Attention, memory, visuoconstructive, and executive task performance in adolescents with anxiety disorders: a case-control community study.
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Jarros RB, Salum GA, Silva CT, Toazza R, Becker N, Agranonik M, Salles JF, and Manfro GG
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- Adolescent, Case-Control Studies, Child, Cognition, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Neuropsychological Tests, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychology, Adolescent, Severity of Illness Index, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Attention, Executive Function, Memory, Space Perception, Visual Perception
- Abstract
Objective:: The aim of the present study was to assess children and adolescents with mild and severe anxiety disorders for their performance in attention, verbal episodic memory, working memory, visuoconstructive skills, executive functions, and cognitive global functioning and conduct comparative analyses with the performance of children free from anxiety disorders., Methods:: Our sample comprised 68 children and adolescents aged 10 to 17 years (41 with current diagnoses of anxiety disorders and 27 controls) selected from a larger cross-sectional community sample of adolescents. Children and adolescents with anxiety disorders were categorized into two groups on the basis of anxiety severity (mild or severe). All participants underwent a neuropsychological assessment battery to evaluate attention, verbal episodic memory, working memory, visuoconstructive skills, and executive and cognitive functions., Results:: No differences were found in any neuropsychological tests, with the single exception that the group with mild anxiety had better performance on the Digit Span backward test compared to subjects with severe anxiety and to controls (p = 0.041; η2 = 0.11)., Conclusions:: Not only might anxiety disorders spare main cognitive functions during adolescence, they may even enhance certain working memory processes.
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- 2017
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11. Amygdala-based intrinsic functional connectivity and anxiety disorders in adolescents and young adults.
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Toazza R, Franco AR, Buchweitz A, Molle RD, Rodrigues DM, Reis RS, Mucellini AB, Esper NB, Aguzzoli C, Silveira PP, Salum GA, and Manfro GG
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- Adolescent, Amygdala diagnostic imaging, Anxiety Disorders diagnostic imaging, Brain diagnostic imaging, Emotions, Female, Functional Neuroimaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Amygdala physiopathology, Anxiety Disorders physiopathology, Brain physiopathology, Nerve Net physiopathology
- Abstract
Anxiety disorders (AD) are the most prevalent group of psychiatric disorders in adolescents and young adults. Nevertheless, the pathophysiology of anxiety disorders is still poorly understood. This study investigated differences in the functional connectivity of intrinsic amygdala-based networks of participants with and without AD. Resting state fMRI data were obtained from 18 participants with an AD and 19 healthy comparison individuals. Psychiatric diagnosis was assessed using standardized structured interviews. The comparison between groups was carried out using functional connectivity maps from six seed regions defined using probabilistic maps bilaterally within the amygdala (basolateral, superficial and centromedial amygdala). We found significant between-group differences in five clusters, which showed aberrant functional connectivity with the left basolateral amygdala: right precentral gyrus, right cingulate gyrus, bilateral precuneus, and right superior frontal gyrus in subjects with AD as compared with the comparison subjects. For the comparison subjects, the correlations between the amygdala and the five clusters were either non-significant, or negative. The present study suggests there is an intrinsic disruption in the communication between left basolateral amygdala and a network of brain regions involved with emotion regulation, and with the default mode network in adolescents and young adults with anxiety disorders., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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12. Interaction between perceived maternal care, anxiety symptoms, and the neurobehavioral response to palatable foods in adolescents.
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Machado TD, Dalle Molle R, Reis RS, Rodrigues DM, Mucellini AB, Minuzzi L, Franco AR, Buchweitz A, Toazza R, Ergang BC, Cunha AC, Salum GA, Manfro GG, and Silveira PP
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- Adolescent, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain physiology, Eating physiology, Eating psychology, Feeding Behavior psychology, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Object Attachment, Parents, Saliva chemistry, Snacks, Young Adult, Anxiety physiopathology, Feeding Behavior physiology, Hydrocortisone analysis, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System physiopathology, Mother-Child Relations, Pituitary-Adrenal System physiopathology
- Abstract
Studies in rodents have shown that early life trauma leads to anxiety, increased stress responses to threatening situations, and modifies food intake in a new environment. However, these associations are still to be tested in humans. This study aimed to verify complex interactions among anxiety diagnosis, maternal care, and baseline cortisol on food intake in a new environment in humans. A community sample of 32 adolescents and young adults was evaluated for: psychiatric diagnosis using standardized interviews, maternal care using the Parental Bonding Inventory (PBI), caloric consumption in a new environment (meal choice at a snack bar), and salivary cortisol. They also performed a brain fMRI task including the visualization of palatable foods vs. neutral items. The study found a three-way interaction between anxiety diagnosis, maternal care, and baseline cortisol levels on the total calories consumed (snacks) in a new environment. This interaction means that for those with high maternal care, there were no significant associations between cortisol levels and food intake in a new environment. However, for those with low maternal care and who have an anxiety disorder (affected), cortisol was associated with higher food intake; whereas for those with low maternal care and who did not have an anxiety disorder (resilient), cortisol was negatively associated with lower food intake. In addition, higher anxiety symptoms were associated with decreased activation in the superior and middle frontal gyrus when visualizing palatable vs. neutral items in those reporting high maternal care. These results in humans mimic experimental research findings and demonstrate that a combination of anxiety diagnosis and maternal care moderate the relationship between the HPA axis functioning, anxiety, and feeding behavior in adolescents and young adults.
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- 2016
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13. Phonemic verbal fluency and severity of anxiety disorders in young children.
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Toazza R, Salum GA, Jarros RB, DeSousa D, Salles JF, and Manfro GG
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- Analysis of Variance, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity complications, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity psychology, Child, Female, Humans, Language Tests, Male, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Severity of Illness Index, Speech Production Measurement, Anxiety Disorders complications, Child Language, Phonetics, Speech
- Abstract
Introduction: Previous studies have implicated impaired verbal fluency as being associated with anxiety disorders in adolescents., Objectives: To replicate and extend previously reported evidence by investigating whether performance in phonemic verbal fluency tasks is related to severity of anxiety symptoms in young children with anxiety disorders. We also aim to investigate whether putative associations are independent from co-occurring attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms., Methods: Sixty children (6-12 years old) with primary diagnoses of anxiety disorders participated in this study. Severity of symptoms was measured using clinician-based, parent-rated and self-rated validated scales. Verbal fluency was assessed using a simple task that measures the number of words evoked in 1-minute with the letter F, from which we quantified the number of isolated words, number of clusters (groups of similar words) and number of switches (transitions between clusters and/or between isolated words)., Results: There was a significant association between the number of clusters and anxiety scores. Further analysis revealed associations were independent from co-occurring ADHD symptoms., Conclusion: We replicate and extend previous findings showing that verbal fluency is consistently associated with severity in anxiety disorders in children. Further studies should explore the potential effect of cognitive training on symptoms of anxiety disorders.
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- 2016
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14. Phonemic verbal fluency is associated with pediatric anxiety disorders: evidence from a community study.
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Toazza R, Salum GA, Flores SM, Jarros RB, Pine DS, de Salles JF, and Manfro GG
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- Adolescent, Anxiety Disorders complications, Child, Cognition Disorders complications, Comorbidity, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Speech Disorders complications, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Cognition Disorders psychology, Speech Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Background: Anxiety disorders typically begin in childhood and adolescence and predict risk for many problems throughout life. Although some neuropsychological correlates have been described, more research is needed, particularly in adolescents. This study compares neurocognitive characteristics of anxious adolescents with and without comorbidity to externalizing disorders to those of typically developing comparison (TDC) adolescents and adolescents with externalizing disorders alone., Methods: The study included 57 adolescents 12-18 years of age (TDC, n=23; anxiety, n=16; externalizing, n=11; comorbid, n=7). We used a neuropsychological battery to assess eight domains: Orientation, attention, visual perception, memory, arithmetic, language, praxis, and executive function., Results: Multivariate analysis of variance revealed a main effect of group in the neurocognitive domains evaluated (F8,48=2.32, p=0.034, ηp(2)=0.279). Post-hoc analysis revealed that executive functions score differed among groups, specifically in the task of verbal fluency (F[df=3]=5.01, p=0.004, ηp(2)=0.221), with both the anxious groups (anxiety and comorbid) presenting a lower score than the TDC and externalizing groups. This effect was independent of age, intelligence, and levels of education., Conclusions: Verbal fluency is specifically impaired in adolescents with anxiety disorders. This extends results from neuroimaging research implicating prefrontal areas in pediatric anxiety disorder neurobiology, and has potential implications to new therapeutics.
- Published
- 2014
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15. Anxiety disorders in adolescence are associated with impaired facial expression recognition to negative valence.
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Jarros RB, Salum GA, Belem da Silva CT, Toazza R, de Abreu Costa M, Fumagalli de Salles J, and Manfro GG
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- Adolescent, Analysis of Variance, Child, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Photic Stimulation, Sex Factors, Anxiety Disorders complications, Emotions, Facial Expression, Prosopagnosia complications, Recognition, Psychology
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of the present study was to test the ability of adolescents with a current anxiety diagnosis to recognize facial affective expressions, compared to those without an anxiety disorder., Methods: Forty cases and 27 controls were selected from a larger cross sectional community sample of adolescents, aged from 10 to 17 years old. Adolescent's facial recognition of six human emotions (sadness, anger, disgust, happy, surprise and fear) and neutral faces was assessed through a facial labeling test using Ekman's Pictures of Facial Affect (POFA)., Results: Adolescents with anxiety disorders had a higher mean number of errors in angry faces as compared to controls: 3.1 (SD=1.13) vs. 2.5 (SD=2.5), OR=1.72 (CI95% 1.02 to 2.89; p=0.040). However, they named neutral faces more accurately than adolescents without anxiety diagnosis: 15% of cases vs. 37.1% of controls presented at least one error in neutral faces, OR=3.46 (CI95% 1.02 to 11.7; p=0.047). No differences were found considering other human emotions or on the distribution of errors in each emotional face between the groups., Conclusion: Our findings support an anxiety-mediated influence on the recognition of facial expressions in adolescence. These difficulty in recognizing angry faces and more accuracy in naming neutral faces may lead to misinterpretation of social clues and can explain some aspects of the impairment in social interactions in adolescents with anxiety disorders., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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16. The multidimensional evaluation and treatment of anxiety in children and adolescents: rationale, design, methods and preliminary findings.
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Salum GA, Isolan LR, Bosa VL, Tocchetto AG, Teche SP, Schuch I, Costa JR, Costa Mde A, Jarros RB, Mansur MA, Knijnik D, Silva EA, Kieling C, Oliveira MH, Medeiros E, Bortoluzzi A, Toazza R, Blaya C, Leistner-Segal S, Salles JF, Silveira PP, Goldani MZ, Heldt E, and Manfro GG
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Anxiety Disorders epidemiology, Brazil epidemiology, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Mass Screening methods, Program Evaluation, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Mental Health Services, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Objective: This study aims to describe the design, methods and sample characteristics of the Multidimensional Evaluation and Treatment of Anxiety in Children and Adolescents - the PROTAIA Project., Method: Students between 10 and 17 years old from all six schools belonging to the catchment area of the Primary Care Unit of Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre were included in the project. It comprises five phases: (1) a community screening phase; (2) a psychiatric diagnostic phase; (3) a multidimensional assessment phase evaluating environmental, neuropsychological, nutritional, and biological factors; (4) a treatment phase, and (5) a translational phase., Results: A total of 2,457 subjects from the community were screened for anxiety disorders. From those who attended the diagnostic interview, we identified 138 individuals with at least one anxiety disorder (apart from specific phobia) and 102 individuals without any anxiety disorder. Among the anxiety cases, generalized anxiety disorder (n = 95; 68.8%), social anxiety disorder (n = 57; 41.3%) and separation anxiety disorder (n = 49; 35.5%) were the most frequent disorders., Conclusion: The PROTAIA Project is a promising research project that can contribute to the knowledge of the relationship between anxiety disorders and anxiety-related phenotypes with several genetic and environmental risk factors.
- Published
- 2011
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