keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38195548/d-cycloserine-enhances-the-bidirectional-range-of-nmdar-dependent-hippocampal-synaptic-plasticity
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefan Vestring, Alexandra Dorner, Jonas Scholliers, Konstantin Ehrenberger, Andrea Kiss, Luis Arenz, Alice Theiss, Paul Rossner, Sibylle Frase, Catherine Du Vinage, Elisabeth Wendler, Tsvetan Serchov, Katharina Domschke, Josef Bischofberger, Claus Normann
The partial N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) agonist D-Cycloserine (DCS) has been evaluated for the treatment of a wide variety of psychiatric disorders, including dementia, schizophrenia, depression and for the augmentation of exposure-based psychotherapy. Most if not all of the potential psychiatric applications of DCS target an enhancement or restitution of cognitive functions, learning and memory. Their molecular correlate is long-term synaptic plasticity; and many forms of synaptic plasticity depend on the activation of NMDA receptors...
January 9, 2024: Translational Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38153890/-voice-disorders-associated-with-novel-coronavirus-infection
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M A Kryshtopava, T L Alenskaya, M K Azaronak, L G Petrova
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the features of voice disorders associated with novel coronavirus infection and to develop the clinical algorithm for diagnostic and treatment these patients. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A prospective observational study was conducted in patients with dysphonia after COVID-19 ( n =60). All patients underwent a comprehensive voice assessment before and after the proposed treatment. The follow-up period was 1 month. RESULTS: Functional dysphonia or aphonia with a stable (refractory) or recurrent course was diagnosed in 58 (97%) patients...
2023: Vestnik Otorinolaringologii
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38049598/effects-of-psychotherapy-on-brain-activation-during-negative-emotional-processing-in-patients-with-posttraumatic-stress-disorder-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#23
REVIEW
Inga Aarts, A L Thorsen, C Vriend, C Planting, O A van den Heuvel, K Thomaes
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating condition which has been related to problems in emotional regulation, memory and cognitive control. Psychotherapy has a non-response rate of around 50% and understanding the neurobiological working mechanisms might help improve treatment. To integrate findings from multiple smaller studies, we performed the first meta-analysis of changes in brain activation with a specific focus on emotional processing after psychotherapy in PTSD patients. We performed a meta-analysis of brain activation changes after treatment during emotional processing for PTSD with seed-based d mapping using a pre-registered protocol (PROSPERO CRD42020211039)...
December 5, 2023: Brain Imaging and Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38022985/a-systematic-review-and-activation-likelihood-estimation-meta-analysis-of-fmri-studies-on-arousing-or-wake-promoting-effects-in-buddhist-meditation
#24
Inder S Chaudhary, Gary Chon-Wen Shyi, Shih-Tseng Tina Huang
Conventional Buddhist texts illustrate meditation as a condition of relaxed alertness that must fend against extreme hypoarousal (sleep, drowsiness) and extreme hyperarousal (restlessness). Theoretical, neurophysiological, and neuroimaging investigations of meditation have highlighted the relaxing effects and hypoarousing without emphasizing the alertness-promoting effects. Here we performed a systematic review supported by an activation-likelihood estimate (ALE) meta-analysis in an effort to counterbalance the surfeit of scholarship emphasizing the hypoarousing and relaxing effects of different forms of Buddhist meditation...
2023: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38020584/eye-movements-in-response-to-different-cognitive-activities-measured-by-eyetracking-a-prospective-study-on-some-of-the-neurolinguistics-programming-theories
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mathieu Marconi, Noelia Do Carmo Blanco, Christophe Zimmer, Alice Guyon
The eyes are in constant movement to optimize the interpretation of the visual scene by the brain. Eye movements are controlled by complex neural networks that interact with the rest of the brain. The direction of our eye movements could thus be influenced by our cognitive activity (imagination, internal dialogue, memory, etc.). A given cognitive activity could then cause the gaze to move in a specific direction (a brief movement that would be instinctive and unconscious). Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP), which was developed in the 1970s by Richard Bandler and John Grinder (psychologist and linguist respectively), issued a comprehensive theory associating gaze directions with specific mental tasks...
2023: Journal of Eye Movement Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38007783/application-of-noninvasive-brain-stimulation-for-sleep-quality-enhancement-and-cognitive-improvement
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuran Ma
Sleep is a fundamental process for maintaining our physical and mental health by adjusting brain homeostasis and repairing axons to refresh memories. Due to its essentiality, sleep disorders and insufficiency can cause both physiological and behavioral risks. This report diverges from traditional medical treatments and focuses mainly on physiotherapy-based neuroregulatory techniques for sleep treatment. Noninvasive brain stimulation (NiBS) techniques have been developed to enhance patients' sleep and memory, including transcranial electrical stimulation (tES), transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), closed-loop stimulation, and Slow-wave sleep (SWS) brain-wave music...
November 23, 2023: Studies in Health Technology and Informatics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38002478/management-strategies-for-borderline-personality-disorder-and-bipolar-disorder-comorbidities-in-adults-with-adhd-a-narrative-review
#27
REVIEW
Luke MacDonald, Joseph Sadek
This narrative review examines two of the common comorbidities of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, bipolar disorder (BD), and borderline personality disorder (BPD), which each share several common features with ADHD that can make assessment and diagnosis challenging. The review highlights some of the key symptomatic differences between adult ADHD and these disorders, allowing for more careful consideration before establishing a formal diagnosis. When the disorders are found to be comorbid, further complications may arise; thus, the review will also help to provide evidence-based treatment recommendations as well as suggestions on how to minimize adverse events...
October 26, 2023: Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37987270/mdma-based-psychotherapy-in-treatment-resistant-post-traumatic-stress-disorder-ptsd-a-brief-narrative-overview-of-current-evidence
#28
REVIEW
Kainat Riaz, Sejal Suneel, Mohammad Hamza Bin Abdul Malik, Tooba Kashif, Irfan Ullah, Abdul Waris, Marco Di Nicola, Marianna Mazza, Gabriele Sani, Giovanni Martinotti, Domenico De Berardis
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating mental health disorder that causes significant dysfunction in individuals. Currently, there are many approved pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy treatment options for PTSD, but unfortunately, half of the patients do not respond to traditional therapies. In this article, we review clinical trials and research on 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA)-assisted psychotherapy in PTSD patients, its pharmacokinetics, and current treatment guidelines for PTSD...
November 3, 2023: Diseases (Basel)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37982041/visualizing-compassion-episodic-simulation-as-contemplative-practice
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christine D Wilson-Mendenhall, John D Dunne, Richard J Davidson
Contemplative interventions designed to cultivate compassion are receiving increasing empirical attention. Accumulating evidence suggests that these interventions bolster prosocial motivation and warmth towards others. Less is known about how these practices impact compassion in everyday life. Here we consider one mechanistic pathway through which compassion practices may impact perception and action in the world: simulation . Evidence suggests that vividly imagining a situation simulates that experience in the brain as if it were, to a degree, actually happening...
October 2023: Mindfulness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37974088/the-multi-level-outcome-study-of-psychoanalysis-for-chronically-depressed-patients-with-early-trauma-mode-rationale-and-design-of-an-international-multicenter-randomized-controlled-trial
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gilles Ambresin, Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber, Tamara Fischmann, Nikolai Axmacher, Elke Hattingen, Ravi Bansal, Bradley S Peterson
BACKGROUND: Whether and how psychotherapies change brain structure and function is unknown. Its study is of great importance for contemporary psychotherapy, as it may lead to discovery of neurobiological mechanisms that predict and mediate lasting changes in psychotherapy, particularly in severely mentally ill patients, such as those with chronic depression. Previous studies have shown that psychoanalytic psychotherapies produce robust and enduring improvements in not only symptom severity but also personality organization in patients who have chronic depression and early life trauma, especially if therapy is delivered at a high weekly frequency...
November 16, 2023: BMC Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37947043/an-8-week-compassion-and-mindfulness-based-exposure-therapy-program-improves-posttraumatic-stress-symptoms
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Auretta Sonia Kummar, Helen Correia, Jane Tan, Hakuei Fujiyama
The persistence of posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) can be debilitating. However, many people experiencing such symptoms may not qualify for or may not seek treatment. Potentially contributing to ongoing residual symptoms of PTSS is emotion dysregulation. Meanwhile, the research area of mindfulness and compassion has grown to imply emotion regulation as one of its underlying mechanisms; yet, its influence on emotion regulation in PTSS cohort is unknown. Here, we explored the potential effectiveness of an 8-week Compassion-oriented and Mindfulness-based Exposure Therapy (CoMET) for individuals with PTSS using a waitlist control design...
November 10, 2023: Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37900518/a-comprehensive-review-of-the-generalized-anxiety-disorder
#32
REVIEW
Aneesh K Mishra, Anuj R Varma
Excessive, uncontrollable, and usually unjustified worry about certain things is a sign of the mental and behavioral disease known as generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). Genetic research suggests that numerous genes are likely implicated in the development of GAD, even if much is yet unclear about this. As a result, if someone in a family has GAD, there is a high likelihood that someone else will also suffer from the illness, as well as another anxiety disorder. Individuals with GAD are frequently overly bothered about workaday affairs like health, assets, demise, family, accord issues, or effort challenges...
September 2023: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37891737/logics-of-discovery-ii-lessons-from-poetry-parataxis-as-a-method-that-can-complement-the-narrative-compulsion-in-vogue-in-contemporary-mental-health-care
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giovanni Stanghellini
This paper highlights the limitations of narrative logic in mental health care, and in particular of "narrative vigilance"-the tendency to watch over experience via narrativisation, and to tether the concrete particulars of experience to the hypothetical structure of a narrative signification. Narrative logic is grounded in hypotaxis-the syntactic structuring whereby a discourse is characterised by different levels of subordination using linking words that connect, especially in terms of temporal and explanatory consequentiality...
September 25, 2023: Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37871195/disgust-as-a-transdiagnostic-index-of-mental-illness-a-narrative-review-of-clinical-populations
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura Culicetto, Francesca Ferraioli, Chiara Lucifora, Alessandra Falzone, Gabriella Martino, Giuseppe Craparo, Alessio Avenanti, Carmelo Mario Vicario
Disgust is a basic emotion of rejection, providing an ancestral defensive mechanism against illness. Based on research that documents altered experiences of disgust across several psychopathological conditions, we conducted a narrative review to address the hypothesis that altered disgust may serve as a transdiagnostic index of mental illness. Our synthesis of the literature from past decades suggests that, compared to healthy populations, patients with mental disorders exhibit abnormal processing of disgust in at least one of the analyzed dimensions...
2023: Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37823233/novel-treatments-for-anorexia-nervosa-insights-from-neuroplasticity-research
#35
REVIEW
Johanna Louise Keeler, Carol Kan, Janet Treasure, Hubertus Himmerich
OBJECTIVE: Treatment for anorexia nervosa (AN) remains challenging; there are no approved psychopharmacological interventions and psychotherapeutic strategies have variable efficacy. The investigation of evidence-based treatments has so far been compounded by an underdeveloped understanding into the neurobiological changes associated with the acute stages of AN. There is converging evidence of deficiencies in neuroplasticity in AN. METHOD: This paper provides an overview of neuroimaging, neuropsychological, molecular and qualitative findings relating to neuroplasticity in AN, translating these findings to the identification of novel biological and psychotherapeutic strategies...
October 12, 2023: European Eating Disorders Review: the Journal of the Eating Disorders Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37820789/changes-in-brain-network-connections-after-exposure-and-response-prevention-therapy-for-obsessive-compulsive-disorder-in-adolescents-and-adults
#36
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Hannah C Becker, Adriene M Beltz, Joseph A Himle, James L Abelson, Stefanie Russman Block, Stephan F Taylor, Kate D Fitzgerald
BACKGROUND: Functional alterations of tripartite neural networks during cognitive control (i.e., frontoparietal network [FPN], cingulo-opercular network, and default mode network) occur in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and may contribute to illness expression. However, the degree to which changes in these networks are elicited by gold standard treatment (e.g., exposure and response prevention [EX/RP]) remains unknown. Understanding how EX/RP modulates network connectivity in adolescent versus adult patients with OCD may aid the identification of developmentally sensitive treatment targets that enhance cognitive control...
January 2024: Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37806711/treatment-resistant-depression-in-children-and-adolescents
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jung-Chi Chang, Hai-Ti-Lin, Yen-Ching Wang, Susan Shur-Fen Gau
Major depressive disorder (MDD) in children and adolescents is a significant health problem, causing profound impairments in social, academic, and family functioning and substantial morbidity and mortality. Up to 15% of children and adolescents suffer from MDD, and a proportion, around 30 to 40% of them, failed to respond to initial selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) treatment. The only evidence-based recommendation is medication switching to another SSRI and augmentation with cognitive behavioral therapy...
2023: Progress in Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37793581/storm-on-predictive-brain-a-neurocomputational-account-of-ketamine-antidepressant-effect
#38
REVIEW
Hugo Bottemanne, Lucie Berkovitch, Christophe Gauld, Alexander Balcerac, Liane Schmidt, Stephane Mouchabac, Philippe Fossati
For the past decade, ketamine, an N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAr) antagonist, has been considered a promising treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD). Unlike the delayed effect of monoaminergic treatment, ketamine may produce fast-acting antidepressant effects hours after a single administration at subanesthetic dose. Along with these antidepressant effects, it may also induce transient dissociative (disturbing of the sense of self and reality) symptoms during acute administration which resolve within hours...
October 2, 2023: Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37759875/repetitive-transcranial-magnetic-stimulation-rtms-in-post-traumatic-stress-disorder-study-protocol-of-a-nationwide-randomized-controlled-clinical-trial-of-neuro-enhanced-psychotherapy-traumastim
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Florian Ferreri, Stephane Mouchabac, Vincent Sylvestre, Bruno Millet, Wissam El Hage, Vladimir Adrien, Alexis Bourla
The use of high-frequency Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (HF-rTMS) of the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) in treating Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is currently regarded as a level B intervention (probable effectiveness). HF-rTMS has attracted interest as a neuromodulation therapeutic method for PTSD. Prolonged exposure and reactivation therapy are also regarded as first-line treatments for PTSD. Randomized controlled clinical studies examining the effectiveness of several HF-rTMS sessions coupled with psychotherapy have not yet been completed...
August 31, 2023: Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37746867/preliminary-data-that-psychological-treatment-and-baseline-anxiety-are-associated-with-a-decrease-in-postprandial-fullness-and-early-satiation-for-individuals-with-bulimia-nervosa-and-related-other-specified-feeding-or-eating-disorder
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
K Jean Forney, Helen Burton Murray, Lina Himawan, Adrienne S Juarascio
OBJECTIVE: Gastrointestinal symptoms, particularly postprandial fullness, are frequently reported in eating disorders. Limited data exist evaluating how these symptoms change in response to outpatient psychological treatment. The current study sought to describe the course of postprandial fullness and early satiation across psychological treatment for adults with bulimia nervosa and related other specified feeding or eating disorders and to test if anxiety moderates treatment response...
September 25, 2023: International Journal of Eating Disorders
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