Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 7 de 7
Filter
1.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38410090

ABSTRACT

Beyond NICE: Updated Systematic Review on the Current Evidence of Using Puberty Blocking Pharmacological Agents and Cross-Sex-Hormones in Minors with Gender Dysphoria Abstract: Objective: The suppression of physiological puberty using puberty-blocking pharmacological agents (PB) and prescribing cross-sex hormones (CSH) to minors with gender dysphoria (GD) is a current matter of discussion, and in some cases, PB and CSH are used in clinical practice for this particular population. Two systematic reviews (one on PB, one on CSH treatment) by the British National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) from 2020 indicated no clear clinical benefit of such treatments regarding critical outcome variables. In particular, these two systematic NICE reviews on the use of PB and CSH in minors with GD detected no clear improvements of GD symptoms. Moreover, the overall scientific quality of the available evidence, as discussed within the above-mentioned two NICE reviews, was classified as "very low certainty" regarding modified GRADE criteria. Method: The present systematic review presents an updated literature search on this particular topic (use of PB and CSH in minors with GD) following NICE principles and PICO criteria for all relevant new original research studies published since the release of the two above-mentioned NICE reviews (updated literature search period was July 2020-August 2023). Results: The newly conducted literature search revealed no newly published original studies targeting NICE-defined critical and important outcomes and the related use of PB in minors with GD following PICO criteria. For CSH treatment, we found two new studies that met PICO criteria, but these particular two studies had low participant numbers, yielded no significant additional clear evidence for specific and clearly beneficial effects of CSH in minors with GD, and could be classified as "low certainty" tfollowing modified GRADE criteria. Conclusions: The currently available studies on the use of PB and CSH in minors with GD have significant conceptual and methodological flaws. The available evidence on the use of PB and CSH in minors with GD is very limited and based on only a few studies with small numbers, and these studies have problematic methodology and quality. There also is a lack of adequate and meaningful long-term studies. Current evidence doesn't suggest that GD symptoms and mental health significantly improve when PB or CSH are used in minors with GD. Psychotherapeutic interventions to address and reduce the experienced burden can become relevant in children and adolescents with GD. If the decision to use PB and/or CSH is made on an individual case-by-case basis and after a complete and thorough mental health assessment, potential treatment of possibly co-occurring mental health problems as well as after a thoroughly conducted and carefully executed individual risk-benefit evaluation, doing so as part of clinical studies or research projects, as currently done in England, can be of value in terms of generation of new research data. The electronic supplement (ESM) 1 is an adapted and abreviated English version of this work.


Subject(s)
Gender Dysphoria , Puberty , Humans , Gender Dysphoria/drug therapy , Gender Dysphoria/psychology , Adolescent , Child , Female , Male , Puberty/drug effects , Puberty/psychology , Minors/psychology , Gonadal Steroid Hormones/therapeutic use , Puberty Suppression
2.
Front Neurol ; 13: 847919, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35350399

ABSTRACT

The goal of the study was to determine whether dyslexia is associated with differences in local brain volume, and whether these local brain volume differences show cross-sectional age-effects. We investigated the local volume of gray and white brain matter with voxel-based morphometry (VBM) as well as reading performance in three age groups of dyslexic and neurotypical normal reading subjects (children, teenagers and adults). Performance data demonstrate a steady improvement of reading skills in both neurotypical as well as dyslexic readers. However, the pattern of gray matter volumes tell a different story: the children are the only group with significant differences between neurotypical and dyslexic readers in local gray matter brain volume. These differences are localized in brain areas associated with the reading network (angular, middle temporal and inferior temporal gyrus as well as the cerebellum). Yet the comparison of neurotypical and normal readers over the age groups shows that the steady increase in performance in neurotypical readers is accompanied by a steady decrease of gray matter volume, whereas the brain volumes of dyslexic readers do not show this linear correlation between brain volume and performance. This is further evidence that dyslexia is a disorder with a neuroanatomical basis in the form of a lower volume of gray matter in parts of the reading network in early dyslexic readers. The present data point out that network shaping processes in gray matter volume in the reading network does take place over age in dyslexia. Yet this neural foundation does not seem to be sufficient to allow normal reading performances even in adults with dyslexia. Thus dyslexia is a disorder with lifelong consequences, which is why consistent support for affected individuals in their educational and professional careers is of great importance. Longitudinal studies are needed to verify whether this holds as a valid pattern or whether there is evidence of greater interindividual variance in the neuroanatomy of dyslexia.

3.
Assessment ; 27(5): 1007-1015, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30010386

ABSTRACT

Assessment of selective mutism (SM) is hampered by the lack of diagnostic measures. The Frankfurt Scale of Selective Mutism was developed for kindergarteners, schoolchildren, and adolescents, including the diagnostic scale (DS) and the severity scale (SS). The objective of this study was to evaluate this novel, parent-rated questionnaire among individuals aged 3 to 18 years (n = 334) with SM, social phobia, internalizing disorders, and a control group. Item analysis resulted in high item-total correlations, and internal consistency in both scales was excellent with Cronbach's α = .90-.98. Exploratory factor analysis of the SS consistently yielded a one-factor solution. Mean sum scores of the DS differed significantly between the diagnostic groups, and the receiver operating characteristic analysis resulted in optimal cutoffs for distinguishing SM from all other groups with the area under the curves of 0.94-1.00. The SS sum scores correlated significantly with SM's clinician-rated symptom severity.


Subject(s)
Mutism , Adolescent , Child , Humans , Mutism/diagnosis , Parents , Psychometrics , Reproducibility of Results , Surveys and Questionnaires
4.
Psychopathology ; 49(2): 95-107, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27089281

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Selective mutism (SM) is an anxiety disorder with a close link to childhood social phobia (SP). Our studies compare behavioral problem profiles in children and adolescents with SM and SP and control groups and assess the comorbidity patterns of SM and SP. METHODS: Participants aged 3-18 years with SM (n = 95), SP (n = 74) and internalizing disorders (INT, n = 46) and a typically developing control group (CG, n = 119) were assessed with the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL); adolescents were additionally assessed with the Youth Self-Report (YSR). Comorbidity was assessed in SM and SP participants with a diagnostic interview. RESULTS: SP was detected in 94% of children with SM. SM participants showed different behavioral and psychiatric symptoms than SP: they were more frequently affected by lifetime separation anxiety disorder (SM: 45%, SP: 26%) and oppositional defiant disorder (SM: 22%, SP: 5%), and less by generalized anxiety disorder (SM: 6%, SP: 20%) and major depression (SM: 12%, SP: 26%). Adolescents with SM showed high rates of agoraphobia (SM 27%; SP 10%) and more social problems (YSR), and were more withdrawn (CBCL, YSR) than those with SP alone. Specific behavioral problems of SM and SP compared to INT and CG were observed. CONCLUSION: SM and SP represent separate but closely related disorders, distinct from other INT and CG, with specific patterns of lifetime comorbidities.


Subject(s)
Child Behavior Disorders/diagnosis , Mutism/diagnosis , Phobia, Social/diagnosis , Adolescent , Anxiety Disorders/diagnosis , Child , Child Behavior Disorders/psychology , Comorbidity , Female , Humans , Male , Mutism/psychology , Neuropsychological Tests , Phobia, Social/psychology , Reference Values , Self Report
5.
Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ; 25(10): 1113-20, 2016 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26970743

ABSTRACT

Behavioral inhibition (BI) is a suspected precursor of selective mutism. However, investigations on early behavioral inhibition of children with selective mutism are lacking. Children aged 3-18 with lifetime selective mutism (n = 109), social phobia (n = 61), internalizing behavior (n = 46) and healthy controls (n = 118) were assessed using the parent-rated Retrospective Infant Behavioral Inhibition (RIBI) questionnaire. Analyses showed that children with lifetime selective mutism and social phobia were more inhibited as infants and toddlers than children of the internalizing and healthy control groups, who displayed similar low levels of behavioral inhibition. Moreover, behavioral inhibition was higher in infants with lifetime selective mutism than in participants with social phobia according to the Total BI score (p = 0.012) and the Shyness subscale (p < 0.001). Infant behavioral inhibition, particularly towards social stimuli, is a temperamental feature associated with a lifetime diagnosis of selective mutism. Results yield first evidence of the recently hypothesized temperamental origin of selective mutism. Children at risk should be screened for this debilitating child psychiatric condition.


Subject(s)
Inhibition, Psychological , Mutism/psychology , Phobia, Social/psychology , Shyness , Temperament , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Parents , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Retrospective Studies , Surveys and Questionnaires
6.
Z Kinder Jugendpsychiatr Psychother ; 32(3): 167-76, 2004 Jul.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15357013

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study investigated to what extent young kindergarten children already benefit from training phonological awareness. METHODS: The training program used here was the German "Würzburg training program of phonological awareness". The control group participated in the regular kindergarten program. A total of 80 children, one and two years before entering school, participated in the study. Tests of phonological awareness were assessed before and after the training as well as after six months. RESULTS: Young kindergarten children (two years before entering school) compared to preschoolers (one year before entering school) had significant lower phonological awareness skills. However both cohorts showed noticeable significant training effects, but preschoolers benefited significantly more from training phonological awareness. Long-term effects were obtained for both cohorts. CONCLUSIONS: Already young kindergarten children do benefit effectively from preschool phonological awareness training. Effects of this training on reading and spelling in school will be investigated further.


Subject(s)
Awareness , Child, Preschool/education , Phonetics , Age Factors , Child , Child Day Care Centers , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Reading , Retention, Psychology , Writing
7.
Neuroimage ; 17(1): 431-46, 2002 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12482096

ABSTRACT

This paper presents an evaluation of a common approach that has been considered as a promising option for exploratory fMRI data analyses. The approach includes two stages: creating from the data a sequence of partitions with increasing number of subsets (clustering) and selecting the one partition in this sequence that exhibits the clearest indications of an existing structure (cluster validation). In order to achieve that the selected partition is actually the best characterization of the data structure, previous studies were directed to find the most appropriate validity function(s). In our analysis protocol, we first optimize the sequence of partitions according to the given objective function. Our study showed that an insufficient optimization of the partition, for one or more numbers of clusters, can easily yield a spurious validation result which, in turn, may lead the analyst to a misleading interpretation of the fMRI experiment. However, a sufficient optimization, for each included number of clusters, provided the basis for a reliable, adequate characterization of the data Furthermore, it enabled an adequate evaluation of the validity functions. These findings were obtained independently for three clustering algorithms (representing the hard and fuzzy clustering variant) and three up-to-date cluster validity functions. The findings were derived from analyses of Gaussian clusters, simulated data sets that mimic typical fMRI response signals, andreal fMRI data. Based on our results we propose a number of options of how to configure improved clustering tools.


Subject(s)
Cluster Analysis , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/statistics & numerical data , Algorithms , Brain/anatomy & histology , Brain/physiology , Computer Simulation , Fingers/innervation , Fingers/physiology , Humans , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Reproducibility of Results
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...