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Current Psychiatry Reviews
ISSN: 1573-4 005

Current Psychiatry Reviews
Volume 2, Number 4, November 2006
Contents

Mood Charting and Technology: New Approach to Monitoring
Patients with Mood Disorders Pp. 423-429
Michael Bauer, Paul Grof, Natalie Rasgon, Tasha Glenn,
Martin Alda, Stefan Priebe, Roland Ricken and Peter C. Whybrow
[Abstract]
Trait vs. State Markers for Schizophrenia: Identification
and Characterization Through Visual Processes Pp.
431-438
Yue Chen, L. Cinnamon Bidwell and Daniel Norton
[Abstract]
Schizophrenia and the Neglect Syndrome: Parietal Contributions
to Cognitive Dysfunction in Schizophrenia Pp. 439-451
Céline Cavezian, Christopher Striemer, Mohamed
Saoud, Yves Rossetti and James Danckert
[Abstract]
Antidepressants Alter Mesostriatal Dopamine Interactions
with Serotonin Signaling Pp. 453-461
Fu-Ming Zhou and John A. Dani
[Abstract]
Phenomenology and Neurobiology of Child-hood Onset
Schizophrenia Pp. 463-472
Anna E. Ordoñez and Nitin Gogtay
[Abstract]
Hallucinations and Delusions in Children and Adolescents
Pp. 473-485
Frank Larøi, Martial Van der Linden and Jean-Louis
Goëb
[Abstract]
Understanding and Improving Treatment Adherence in
Patients with Psychotic Disorders: A Review and a Proposed
Intervention Pp. 487-494
Anton B.P. Staring, Cornelis L. Mulder, Mark van der Gaag,
Jean Paul Selten, Anton J.M. Loonen and Michiel W. Hengeveld
[Abstract]
Abstracts

[Back to top]
Mood Charting and Technology: New Approach to Monitoring
Patients with Mood Disorders
Michael Bauer, Paul Grof, Natalie Rasgon, Tasha Glenn,
Martin Alda, Stefan Priebe, Roland Ricken and Peter C. Whybrow
Bipolar disorder remains a serious public health problem with
a significant personal and economic burden. In line with the
widespread recognition of the value of active patient involvement
in their care, daily mood charting may increase the patient’s
understanding of their condition and improve adherence with
complex medication regimes. Knowledge about the course and
pattern of an individual’s disorder may also allow earlier
recognition of new episodes and help determine the optimal
treatment strategy. Mood charting is also an essential tool
for longitudinal studies of patient outcomes. Traditionally,
patients have used paper-based tools for this daily self-assessment,
but these forms are associated with problems of data quality,
poor compliance, high costs for data entry, and only provide
limited feedback for the patient and physician. As computer
technology has gained acceptance by the public worldwide,
new options are available to automate monitoring of patients
with mood disorders. This article will review mood charting
and describe our experience with the development, validation
and use of ChronoRecord, an automated instrument for mood
charting.
[Back to top]
Trait vs. State Markers for Schizophrenia: Identification
and Characterization Through Visual Processes
Yue Chen, L. Cinnamon Bidwell and Daniel Norton
One central issue in schizophrenia research is to identify
and characterize behavioral and biological markers that are
intrinsic to the complex psychiatric disorder and that can
serve as targets for detection, treatment, and prevention.
A trait marker represents the properties of the behavioral
and biological processes that play an antecedent, possibly
causal, role in the pathophysiology of the psychiatric disorder,
whereas a state marker reflects the status of clinical manifestations
in patients. Certain visual functions, while deficient in
schizophrenia, may be independent of psychosis. The question
of what types of visual functions can serve as trait or state
markers is beginning to be understood. Examining clinically
unaffected relatives of schizophrenia patients and patients
with bipolar disorder can provide information about the relationship
between a schizophrenic disposition and visual response traits.
In this effort, researchers found that motion integration
is dysfunctional in schizophrenia patients but not in their
relatives or bipolar patients, whereas motion discrimination
is dysfunctional in schizophrenia patients and their relatives,
but not in bipolar patients. By synthesizing these findings,
this review suggests that distinguishing enduring trait markers
from transient state markers for schizophrenia through visual
processes is helpful for developing neurobiologically and
psychologically based intervention strategies.
[Back to top]
Schizophrenia and the Neglect Syndrome: Parietal Contributions
to Cognitive Dysfunction in Schizophrenia
Céline Cavezian, Christopher Striemer, Mohamed
Saoud, Yves Rossetti and James Danckert
Many of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia, including
hallucinations and passivity phenomena, have been related
to dysfunction within association cortices. In addition, many
of the cognitive deficits observed in patients with schizophrenia
can also be characterised as impairments of higher level cognitions
known to depend on these same association cortices. While
most attention has been directed towards dysfunction of the
frontal and temporal cortices, there is mounting evidence
for impaired functioning of the parietal cortices as well.
That is, there is a substantial body of research demonstrating
impaired spatial and motor behaviours in patients with schizophrenia
- behaviours known to depend on the parietal cortex. In this
selective review we contrast some of these impairments with
a neurological syndrome that commonly arises from damage to
the right parietal cortex, known as unilateral neglect. Although
the spatial impairments characteristic of neglect are far
more severe than those observed in patients with schizophrenia,
there are some important parallels that make the comparison
worthwhile. We intend to outline those parallels and highlight
ways in which they may inform models of schizophrenia.
[Back to top]
Antidepressants Alter Mesostriatal Dopamine Interactions
with Serotonin Signaling
Fu-Ming Zhou and John A. Dani
The striatum and its dense dopaminergic innervation originating
in the substantia nigra pars compacta and the ventral tegmental
area compose the mesostriatal dopamine system. The nigrostriatal
system is particularly involved in habit learning and in motor
coordination; the dopaminergic projections from the ventral
tegmental area to the ventral striatum are most well known
for their role in shaping behaviors leading to reward. In
close proximity to the very dense dopaminergic innervation,
the stratum also receives more moderate serotonergic innervation.
After vesicular release from their terminals, dopamine and
serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) signals are controlled
by transporter reuptake. Dopamine transporters (DATs) reuptake
dopamine, and they are expressed at a very high density in
the striatum. Serotonin transporters (SERTs) normally efficiently
reuptake 5-HT, but DATs also display a low affinity for 5-HT.
When selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs, e.g.,
antidepressants such as fluoxetine) elevate extracellular
5-HT, the dense striatal DATs uptake 5-HT into dopamine terminals.
Subsequently, 5-HT enters dopaminergic synaptic vesicles,
where it is co-released with dopamine. Evidence indicates
that the small 5-HT release accompanying the dopamine signal
takes roughly a couple weeks to develop. Antidepressants that
block serotonin transporters or other factors that elevate
extracellular serotonin alter the temporal and spatial relationship
between dopamine and serotonin signaling in the striatum.
[Back to top]
Phenomenology and Neurobiology of Child-hood Onset
Schizophrenia
Anna E. Ordoñez and Nitin Gogtay
Childhood-onset schizophrenia (COS; defined as onset by age
12) is rare, difficult to diagnose, and represents a severe
and chronic phenotype of the adult illness. A study of childhood
onset psychoses has been ongoing at the NIMH since 1990, where
children with childhood onset schizophrenia (COS) and severe
atypical psychoses (provisionally labeled “multidimensionally
impaired” or MDI by the NIMH team) are studied. Familial
risk factors, genetic analyses, neurocognitive functioning,
and brain imaging data are obtained every two years on probands
and all first degree relatives. Multiple analysis from the
NIMH study have found that COS subjects have more severe premorbid
neurodevelopmental abnormalities, a higher rate of genetic
anomalies, and a robust cortical gray matter (GM) loss during
adolescence, which proceeds in a ‘back to front wave
like fashion’ and appears to be an exaggeration of the
normal cortical gray matter developmental pattern. These cortical
GM changes in COS are diagnostically specific and seemingly
unrelated to the effects of medications, as they are not shared
by medication matched MDI patients, or psychosis not otherwise
specified (NOS) patients who have converted to bipolar I at
follow up.
[Back to top]
Hallucinations and Delusions in Children and Adolescents
Frank Larøi, Martial Van der Linden and Jean-Louis
Goëb
Studies have shown that hallucinations and delusions occur
in a number of different populations including psychiatric
and non-psychiatric patients and in non clinical (i.e. normal)
individuals. However, the majority of these studies have included
adult populations. The goal of the present article is to review
the research on hallucinations and delusions in children and
adolescents. The prevalence, characteristics and nature of
hallucinations and delusions in both non clinical and clinical
child and adolescent populations will be presented. In addition,
a section on assessment strategies is included. Finally, the
paper will conclude with a discussion of important issues
and questions, including definitional issues, the predictive
value of hallucinations and delusions, in addition to various
clinical and theoretical implications.
[Back to top]
Understanding and Improving Treatment Adherence in
Patients with Psychotic Disorders: A Review and a Proposed
Intervention
Anton B.P. Staring, Cornelis L. Mulder, Mark van der Gaag,
Jean Paul Selten, Anton J.M. Loonen and Michiel W. Hengeveld
Non-adherence to treatment of patients with psychotic disorders
is related to higher rates of relapse, hospitalization, and
suicide. Important predictors of non-adherence include poor
social structure, cognitive deficits, negative medication
attitude, side effects, depression, a sealing-over recovery
style, feelings of stigmatization, denial of treatment need,
and lack of insight. Attempts to improve adherence have shown
that psychoeducation alone is not fully effective, and that
motivational interviewing, behavioral strategies, and linking
a patient’s personal goals to treatment may increase
adherence. Based on the empirical data reviewed, we formed
four clusters of possible causes of non-adherence, each of
which can be targeted by a specific module of our developed
Treatment Adherence Therapy (TAT). These four modules are:
self-enhancement, motivational interviewing,
medication dosage trials, and behavioral training.
An individual patient may benefit from one or more of these
modules; and thus the contents of TAT vary in accordance with
individual causes of non-adherence. Basically, TAT aims to
help patients work out what they want regarding treatment
and then support them in following this through. TAT will
be investigated in a multicenter randomized clinical trial
in the Netherlands, starting March 2006.
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