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1.
Prim Care ; 49(4): 641-657, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36357068

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the urgent need for behavioral health care services. A substantial portion of mental health care transitioned to virtual care during the COVID-19 pandemic, remains virtual today, and will continue that way in the future. Mental health needs continue to grow, and there has been growing evidence showing the efficacy of virtual health for behavioral health conditions at the system, provider, and patient level. There is also a growing understanding of the barriers and challenges to virtual behavioral health care.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Psychiatry , Telemedicine , Humans , Pandemics , COVID-19/therapy , Mental Health
2.
Psychophysiology ; 56(5): e13329, 2019 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30672603

ABSTRACT

Low resting respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is observed in many mental health conditions, including anxiety disorders, mood disorders, schizophrenia spectrum disorders, disruptive behavior disorders, and nonsuicidal self-injury, among others. Findings for RSA reactivity are more mixed. We evaluate associations between RSA reactivity and empirically derived structural categories of psychopathology-including internalizing, externalizing, and thought problems-among physically healthy adults. We searched multiple electronic databases for studies of RSA among participants who were assessed either dimensionally using well-validated measures or diagnostically using structured interviews. Strict inclusion criteria were used to screen 3,605 published reports, which yielded 37 studies including 2,347 participants and 76 effect sizes. We performed a meta-analysis, with meta-analytic regressions of potential moderators, including psychopathology subtypes. The sample-wide meta-analytic association between RSA reactivity and psychopathology was quite small, but heterogeneity was considerable. Moderation analyses revealed significant RSA reactivity (withdrawal) specifically in externalizing samples. Additional moderators included (a) stimulus conditions used to elicit RSA reactivity (only negative emotion inductions were effective), (b) sex (women showed greater RSA reactivity than men), and (c) adherence to established methodological guidelines (e.g., higher electrocardiographic sampling rates yielded greater RSA reactivity). These findings indicate that associations between RSA reactivity and psychopathology are complex and suggest that future studies should include more standardized RSA assessments to increase external validity and decrease measurement error.


Subject(s)
Behavioral Symptoms/physiopathology , Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia/physiology , Humans
3.
Annu Rev Clin Psychol ; 13: 343-368, 2017 05 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28375718

ABSTRACT

This article reviews evidence that trait impulsivity-expressed early in life as the hyperactive-impulsive and combined presentations of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)-is a bottom-up, subcortically mediated vulnerability to all externalizing disorders. This vulnerability arises from deficient mesolimbic dopamine responding, which imbues psychological states (irritability, discontentment) that motivate excessive approach behavior (hyperactivity, impulsivity). Through complex interactions with (a) aversive motivational states that arise from largely independent subcortical systems, (b) emotion regulatory mechanisms that arise from top-down, cortical modulation of subcortical neural function, and (c) environmental risk factors that shape and maintain emotion dysregulation, trait impulsivity confers vulnerability to increasingly severe externalizing behaviors across development. This perspective highlights the importance of identifying transdiagnostic neural vulnerabilities to psychopathology; dovetails with the hierarchical, latent structure of psychopathology; and suggests that progression along the externalizing spectrum is an ontogenic process whereby a common, multifactorially inherited trait interacts with endogenous and exogenous influences to yield increasingly intractable externalizing behaviors across development.


Subject(s)
Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders , Impulsive Behavior/physiology , Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders/etiology , Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders/genetics , Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders/metabolism , Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders/physiopathology , Humans
4.
Int J Psychophysiol ; 119: 108-118, 2017 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28057475

ABSTRACT

Motivational models of psychopathology have long been advanced by psychophysiologists, and have provided key insights into neurobiological mechanisms of a wide range of psychiatric disorders. These accounts emphasize individual differences in activity and reactivity of bottom-up, subcortical neural systems of approach and avoidance in affecting behavior. Largely independent literatures emphasize the roles of top-down, cortical deficits in emotion regulation and executive function in conferring vulnerability to psychopathology. To date however, few models effectively integrate functions performed by bottom-up emotion generation system with those performed by top-down emotion regulation systems in accounting for alternative expressions of psychopathology. In this article, we present such a model, and describe how it accommodates the well replicated bifactor structure of psychopathology. We describe how excessive approach motivation maps directly into externalizing liability, how excessive passive avoidance motivation maps directly into internalizing liability, and how emotion dysregulation and executive function map onto general liability. This approach is consistent with the Research Domain Criteria initiative, which assumes that a limited number of brain systems interact to confer vulnerability to many if not most forms of psychopathology.


Subject(s)
Emotions/physiology , Executive Function/physiology , Mental Disorders/physiopathology , Models, Theoretical , Motivation/physiology , Self-Control , Humans
5.
Dev Psychopathol ; 28(4pt1): 1177-1208, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27739396

ABSTRACT

Trait impulsivity, which is often defined as a strong preference for immediate over delayed rewards and results in behaviors that are socially inappropriate, maladaptive, and short-sighted, is a predisposing vulnerability to all externalizing spectrum disorders. In contrast, anhedonia is characterized by chronically low motivation and reduced capacity to experience pleasure, and is common to depressive disorders. Although externalizing and depressive disorders have virtually nonoverlapping diagnostic criteria in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, heterotypic comorbidity between them is common. Here, we review common neural substrates of trait impulsivity, anhedonia, and irritability, which include both low tonic mesolimbic dopamine activity and low phasic mesolimbic dopamine responding to incentives during reward anticipation and associative learning. We also consider how other neural networks, including bottom-up emotion generation systems and top-down emotion regulation systems, interact with mesolimbic dysfunction to result in alternative manifestations of psychiatric illness. Finally, we present a model that emphasizes a translational, transdiagnostic approach to understanding externalizing/depression comorbidity. This model should refine ways in which internalizing and externalizing disorders are studied, classified, and treated.


Subject(s)
Anhedonia/physiology , Brain/physiopathology , Depressive Disorder, Major/physiopathology , Dopamine/metabolism , Impulsive Behavior/physiology , Irritable Mood/physiology , Depressive Disorder, Major/psychology , Humans , Reward
6.
Cephalalgia ; 35(11): 1025-30, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25631169

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Visual aura is present in about one-third of migraine patients and triggering by bright or flickering lights is frequently reported. METHOD: Using migraine with visual aura patients, we investigated the neurochemical profile of the visual cortex using magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Specifically, glutamate/creatine and GABA/creatine ratios were quantified in the occipital cortex of female migraine patients. RESULTS: GABA levels in the occipital cortex of migraine patients were lower than that of controls. Glutamate levels in migraine patients, but not controls, correlated with the blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) signal in the primary visual cortex during visual stimulation. CONCLUSION: Migraine with visual aura appears to disrupt the excitation-inhibition coupling in the occipital cortex.


Subject(s)
Glutamic Acid/analysis , Migraine with Aura/metabolism , Migraine with Aura/physiopathology , Occipital Lobe/metabolism , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/analysis , Adult , Brain Chemistry , Female , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Occipital Lobe/chemistry , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism
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