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12,436 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Various empirical data suggest that individuals with Panic Disorder (PD) fail to appropriately assign significance to sensory stimuli within the internal and external milieu, including those stimuli which are patently threat-neutral. The failure to appropriately discriminate 'signal' stimuli from among 'noise' signals [Gordon, E., Liddell, B.J., Brown, K.J., Bryant, R., Clark, C.R., Das, P., et al. 2007. Integrating objective gene-brain-behavior markers of psychiatric disorders. J. Integr. Neurosci. 6, 1-34.] results in disturbances of information processing and attentional deployment, which manifests across multiple levels of functioning (e.g., brain, behaviour, autonomic). The present event-related potential (ERP) study, therefore, investigated attentive information processing in PD, using a standard two-tone auditory oddball paradigm, to assess patients' response to infrequent 'target' tones (i.e., signals) and frequent 'non-target' tones (i.e., noise). Simultaneously-recorded autonomic data provided converging measures of the concomitants of disordered information processing. PD patients (n=50) showed increased N1 amplitude to frequent non-target tones and reduced P3 amplitude to infrequent targets, compared to matched controls (n=98). There were no between-group differences for N1 targets, N2 or P2. Patients additionally showed increased heart rate, fewer spontaneous skin conductance responses (trend) to significant stimuli, and reduced P3 latency compared to controls, although the latter result was accounted for by patients who frequently experienced depersonalization and/or derealisation during panic. Patients showed several disturbances of attentive information processing in a simple auditory discrimination task: Increased N1 to repeated stimuli suggests impaired stimulus filtering, whereas reduced P3 amplitude and latency represent the under-allocation of neural resources for infrequent, goal-relevant stimuli, and their increased speed of processing, respectively. These disturbances likely contribute to patients' aversive outcomes in stimulus-rich environments.
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PMID:Event-related potential and autonomic signs of maladaptive information processing during an auditory oddball task in panic disorder. 1960 64

Depersonalization is a frequent symptom in depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), but sometimes, it may be severe and concurrently diagnosed as a disorder. The treatment of depersonalization disorder both alone and comorbid with other psychiatric disorders is as yet unclear. This report presents the successful treatment with aripiprazole of concurrent depersonalization disorder in 3 patients with depression or OCD. The psychiatric disorders were diagnosed through structured clinical interviews. Assessments were by means of Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale, the Clinical Global Impression-Improvement Scale, and the 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. Aripiprazole may be a beneficial psychotropic drug in the treatment of depersonalization disorder comorbid with OCD or depression, which is an important problem in clinical practice.
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PMID:Aripiprazole in depersonalization disorder comorbid with major depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder: 3 cases. 2499 87

The very few studies relating mindfulness and dissociation have found a negative association between them (depersonalization and absorption). However, all of these studies have been done in nonclinical populations, and there are no data on the relationship between these variables in psychiatric patients with auditory hallucinations. This study was designed to study the relationship between mindfulness and the two dissociative variables, absorption and depersonalization, as well as their predictive power for the severity of auditory hallucinations and the distress they cause in a clinical population. A total of 55 psychiatric patients with hallucinations were given the following tests: the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (K. Brown & R. Ryan, 2003), the Tellegen Absorption Scale (A. Tellegen & G. Atkinson, 1974), the Cambridge Depersonalization Scale (M. Sierra & G. E. Berrios, 2000), the Psychotic Symptom Rating Scales (G. Haddock, J. McCarron, N. Tarrier, & E. B. Faragher, 1999), and the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (S. R. Kay, L. A. Opler, & J.-P. Lindenmayer, 1988). A significant negative correlation was found between mindfulness and the dissociative variables and between mindfulness and the distress caused by the hallucinations. A positive correlation was found between absorption and distress caused by hallucinations and between depersonalization and the severity of hallucinations. Finally, the variable with the most predictive power for severity of the voices was depersonalization, and the variable with the most predictive power for distress caused by the voices was mindfulness. Interventions addressing training in mindfulness techniques could diminish the distress associated with hearing voices.
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PMID:Dissociation and mindfulness in patients with auditory verbal hallucinations. 2653 8