Refine
Year of publication
- 2020 (25) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (25)
Language
- English (25)
Keywords
- Psychiatry and Mental health (17)
- Biological Psychiatry (10)
- General Medicine (7)
- Pharmacology (medical) (7)
- Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) (1)
- Developmental and Educational Psychology (1)
- Experimental and Cognitive Psychology (1)
- MMPI (1)
- Medicine (miscellaneous) (1)
- Phychiatric Mental Health (1)
Institute
- Lehrstuhl für Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie (25)
- Medizinische Fakultät (25)
- Bezirkskrankenhaus (BKH) (9)
- Professur für Evidenzbasierte Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie (6)
- Lehrstuhl für Medizinische Psychologie und Soziologie (1)
- Nachhaltigkeitsziele (1)
- Universitätsklinikum (1)
- Ziel 10 - Weniger Ungleichheiten (1)
BackgroundEndurance exercise in general and marathon running in particular have become increasingly popular over the past decades. Recent investigations about personality structures in this cohort and comparisons to non-active cohorts are lacking.
MethodsIn the ReCaP study (Running effects on Cognition and Plasticity), a total of 100 marathon runners and 46 sedentary controls were recruited. After elimination of Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory 2 Restructured Form (MMPI-2-RF) profiles with insufficient validity, 79 marathon runners (MA) and 27 sedentary controls (SC) remained for final analyses. Depressive symptoms were evaluated with Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD).
ResultsMarathon runners had lower scores in scales measuring somatic and cognitive complaints, stress, demoralization, hopelessness and distrust. Within the marathon group, committed runners exhibited hypomanic traits compared to regular runners.
Discussion and ConclusionPersonality differences could be summarized as (sub-)depressive personality traits in SC compared to MA rather than typical (sub-) depressive symptoms in the meaning of depressive disorders. Future studies should further evaluate cause and consequence of endurance training and hypomanic or euthymic symptoms, as a two-way interaction exists.
Trial Registrationhttp://apps.who.int/trialsearch/Trial2.aspx?TrialID=DRKS00012496.
The role of environmental stress and DNA methylation in the longitudinal course of bipolar disorder
(2020)
Autoimmune encephalitis with psychosis: warning signs, step-by-step diagnostics and treatment
(2020)
Even today, patients with schizophrenia often have an unfavorable outcome. Negative symptoms and cognitive deficits are common features in many patients and prevent recovery. In recent years, aerobic endurance training has emerged as a therapeutic approach with positive effects on several domains of patients’ health. However, appropriately sized, multicenter randomized controlled trials that would allow better generalization of results are lacking. The exercise study presented here is a multicenter, rater-blind, two-armed, parallel-group randomized clinical trial in patients with clinically stable schizophrenia being conducted at five German tertiary hospitals. The intervention group performs aerobic endurance training on bicycle ergometers three times per week for 40–50 min/session (depending on the intervention week) for a total of 26 weeks, and the control group performs balance and tone training for the same amount of time. Participants are subsequently followed up for 26 weeks. The primary endpoint is all-cause discontinuation; secondary endpoints include psychopathology, cognition, daily functioning, cardiovascular risk factors, and explorative biological measures regarding the underlying mechanisms of exercise. A total of 180 patients will be randomized. With currently 162 randomized participants, our study is the largest trial to date to investigate endurance training in patients with schizophrenia. We hypothesize that aerobic endurance training has beneficial effects on patients’ mental and physical health, leading to lower treatment discontinuation rates and improving disease outcomes. The study results will provide a basis for recommending exercise interventions as an add-on therapy in patients with schizophrenia.The study is registered in the International Clinical Trials Database (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier [NCT number]: NCT03466112) and in the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS-ID: DRKS00009804).
Schizophrenia
(2020)