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Prevalence of COVID-19 and psychotropic drug treatment in psychiatric in-patients in Germany in 2020: results from a nationwide pilot survey (2023)
Mueller, Juliane K. ; Ahrens, Kira F. ; Bauer, Michael ; Baune, Bernhard T. ; Borgwardt, Stefan ; Deckert, Jürgen ; Domschke, Katharina ; Ellwanger, Regina ; Fallgatter, Andreas ; Frodl, Thomas ; Gallinat, Jürgen ; Gottschalk, René ; Grabe, Hans J ; Hasan, Alkomiet ; Herpertz, Sabine C ; Hurlemann, Rene ; Jessen, Frank ; Kambeitz, Joseph ; Kircher, Tilo ; Kornhuber, Johannes ; Lieb, Klaus ; Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas ; Rupprecht, Rainer ; Scherbaum, Norbert ; Schlang, Christiane ; Schneider, Anja ; Schomerus, Georg ; Thoma, Andreas ; Unterecker, Stefan ; Walter, Martin ; Walter, Henrik ; Reif, Andreas ; Reif-Leonhard, Christine
Functional connectome differences predict preferred division of resources in humans [Abstract] (2013)
Hahn, Tim ; Notebaert, Karolien ; Anderl, Christine ; Reicherts, Philipp ; Wieser, Matthias ; Kopf, Juliane ; Reif, Andreas ; Windmann, Sabine
The effect of emotional content on brain activation and the late positive potential in a word n-back task (2013)
Kopf, Juliane ; Dresler, Thomas ; Reicherts, Philipp ; Herrmann, Martin J. ; Reif, Andreas
Introduction There is mounting evidence for the influence of emotional content on working memory performance. This is particularly important in light of the emotion processing that needs to take place when emotional content interferes with executive functions. In this study, we used emotional words of different valence but with similar arousal levels in an n-back task. Methods We examined the effects on activation in the prefrontal cortex by means of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) and on the late positive potential (LPP). FNIRS and LPP data were examined in 30 healthy subjects. Results Behavioral results show an influence of valence on the error rate depending on the difficulty of the task: more errors were made when the valence was negative and the task difficult. Brain activation was dependent both on the difficulty of the task and on the valence: negative valence of a word diminished the increase in activation, whereas positive valence did not influence the increase in activation, while difficulty levels increased. The LPP also differentiated between the different valences, and in addition was influenced by the task difficulty, the more difficult the task, the less differentiation could be observed. Conclusions Summarized, this study shows the influence of valence on a verbal working memory task. When a word contained a negative valence, the emotional content seemed to take precedence in contrast to words containing a positive valence. Working memory and emotion processing sites seemed to overlap and compete for resources even when words are carriers of the emotional content.
Reliance on functional resting-state network for stable task control predicts behavioral tendency for cooperation (2015)
Hahn, Tim ; Notebaert, Karolien ; Anderl, Christine ; Reicherts, Philipp ; Wieser, Matthias ; Kopf, Juliane ; Reif, Andreas ; Fehl, Katrin ; Semmann, Dirk ; Windmann, Sabine
Pathway-specific polygenic scores for predicting clinical lithium treatment response in patients with bipolar disorder (2025)
Sharew, Nigussie T. ; Clark, Scott R. ; Papiol, Sergi ; Heilbronner, Urs ; Degenhardt, Franziska ; Fullerton, Janice M. ; Hou, Liping ; Shekhtman, Tatyana ; Adli, Mazda ; Akula, Nirmala ; Akiyama, Kazufumi ; Ardau, Raffaella ; Arias, Bárbara ; Hasler, Roland ; Richard-Lepouriel, Hélène ; Perroud, Nader ; Backlund, Lena ; Bhattacharjee, Abesh Kumar ; Bellivier, Frank ; Benabarre, Antonio ; Bengesser, Susanne ; Biernacka, Joanna M. ; Birner, Armin ; Marie-Claire, Cynthia ; Cervantes, Pablo ; Chen, Hsi-Chung ; Chillotti, Caterina ; Cichon, Sven ; Cruceanu, Cristiana ; Czerski, Piotr M. ; Dalkner, Nina ; Del Zompo, Maria ; DePaulo, J. Raymond ; Étain, Bruno ; Jamain, Stephane ; Falkai, Peter ; Forstner, Andreas J. ; Frisen, Louise ; Frye, Mark A. ; Gard, Sébastien ; Garnham, Julie S. ; Goes, Fernando S. ; Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria ; Fallgatter, Andreas J. ; Stegmaier, Sophia ; Ethofer, Thomas ; Biere, Silvia ; Petrova, Kristiyana ; Schuster, Ceylan ; Adorjan, Kristina ; Budde, Monika ; Heilbronner, Maria ; Kalman, Janos L. ; Kohshour, Mojtaba Oraki ; Reich-Erkelenz, Daniela ; Schaupp, Sabrina K. ; Schulte, Eva C. ; Senner, Fanny ; Vogl, Thomas ; Anghelescu, Ion-George ; Arolt, Volker ; Dannlowski, Udo ; Dietrich, Detlef E. ; Figge, Christian ; Jäger, Markus ; Lang, Fabian U. ; Juckel, Georg ; Konrad, Carsten ; Reimer, Jens ; Schmauß, Max ; Schmitt, Andrea ; Spitzer, Carsten ; von Hagen, Martin ; Wiltfang, Jens ; Zimmermann, Jörg ; Andlauer, Till F. M. ; Fischer, Andre ; Bermpohl, Felix ; Ritter, Philipp ; Matura, Silke ; Gryaznova, Anna ; Falkenberg, Irina ; Yildiz, Cüneyt ; Kircher, Tilo ; Schmidt, Julia ; Koch, Marius ; Gade, Kathrin ; Trost, Sarah ; Haussleiter, Ida S. ; Lambert, Martin ; Rohenkohl, Anja C. ; Kraft, Vivien ; Grof, Paul ; Hashimoto, Ryota ; Hauser, Joanna ; Herms, Stefan ; Hoffmann, Per ; Jiménez, Esther ; Kahn, Jean-Pierre ; Kassem, Layla ; Kuo, Po-Hsiu ; Kato, Tadafumi ; Kelsoe, John ; Kittel-Schneider, Sarah ; Ferensztajn-Rochowiak, Ewa ; König, Barbara ; Kusumi, Ichiro ; Laje, Gonzalo ; Landén, Mikael ; Lavebratt, Catharina ; Leboyer, Marion ; Leckband, Susan G. ; Tortorella, Alfonso ; Manchia, Mirko ; Martinsson, Lina ; McCarthy, Michael J. ; McElroy, Susan ; Colom, Francesc ; Millischer, Vincent ; Mitjans, Marina ; Mondimore, Francis M. ; Nievergelt, Caroline M. ; Nöthen, Markus M. ; Novák, Tomas ; O'Donovan, Claire ; Ozaki, Norio ; Pfennig, Andrea ; Pisanu, Claudia ; Potash, James B. ; Reif, Andreas ; Reininghaus, Eva ; Rouleau, Guy A. ; Rybakowski, Janusz K. ; Schalling, Martin ; Schofield, Peter R. ; Schweizer, Barbara W. ; Severino, Giovanni ; Shilling, Paul D. ; Shimoda, Katzutaka ; Simhandl, Christian ; Slaney, Claire M. ; Squassina, Alessio ; Stamm, Thomas ; Stopkova, Pavla ; Maj, Mario ; Turecki, Gustavo ; Vieta, Eduard ; Veeh, Julia ; Viswanath, Biju ; Witt, Stephanie H. ; Wright, Adam ; Zandi, Peter P. ; Mitchell, Philip B. ; Bauer, Michael ; Alda, Martin ; Rietschel, Marcella ; McMahon, Francis J. ; Schulze, Thomas G. ; Baune, Bernhard T. ; Schubert, Klaus Oliver ; Amare, Azmeraw T.
Background Polygenic scores (PGSs) hold the potential to identify patients who respond favorably to specific psychiatric treatments. However, their biological interpretation remains unclear. In this study, we developed pathway-specific PGSs (PSPGSs) for lithium response and assessed their association with clinical lithium response in patients with bipolar disorder. Methods Using sets of genes involved in pathways affected by lithium, we developed 9 PSPGSs and evaluated their associations with lithium response in the International Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLi+Gen) (N = 2367), with validation in combined PsyCourse (Pathomechanisms and Signatures in the Longitudinal Course of Psychosis) (N = 105) and BipoLife (N = 102) cohorts. The association between each PSPGS and lithium response—defined both as a continuous ALDA score and a categorical outcome (good vs. poor responses)—was evaluated using regression models, with adjustment for confounders. The cutoff for a significant association was p < .05 after multiple testing correction. Results The PGSs for acetylcholine, GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid), and mitochondria were associated with response to lithium in both categorical and continuous outcomes. However, the PGSs for calcium channel, circadian rhythm, and GSK (glycogen synthase kinase) were associated only with the continuous outcome. Each score explained 0.29% to 1.91% of the variance in the categorical and 0.30% to 1.54% of the variance in the continuous outcomes. A multivariate model combining PSPGSs that showed significant associations in the univariate analysis (combined PSPGS) increased the percentage of variance explained (R2) to 3.71% and 3.18% for the categorical and continuous outcomes, respectively. Associations for PGSs for GABA and circadian rhythm were replicated. Patients with the highest genetic loading (10th decile) for acetylcholine variants were 3.03 times more likely (95% CI, 1.95 to 4.69) to show a good lithium response (categorical outcome) than patients with the lowest genetic loading (1st decile). Conclusions PSPGSs achieved predictive performance comparable to the conventional genome-wide PGSs, with the added advantage of biological interpretability using a smaller list of genetic variants.
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