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      Neuropsychological profile according to the clinical stage of young persons presenting for mental health care

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          Abstract

          Background

          Clinical staging of mental disorders proposes that individuals can be assessed at various sub-syndromal and later developed phases of illness. As an adjunctive rating, it may complement traditional diagnostic silo-based approaches. In this study, we sought to determine the relationships between clinical stage and neuropsychological profile in young persons presenting to youth-focused mental health services.

          Methods

          Neuropsychological testing of 194 help-seeking young people (mean age 22.6 years, 52% female) and 50 healthy controls. Clinical staging rated 94 persons as having an ‘attenuated syndrome’ (stage 1b) and 100 with a discrete or persistent disorder (stage 2/3).

          Results

          The discrete disorder group (stage 2/3) showed the most impaired neuropsychological profile, with the earlier stage (1b) group showing an intermediate profile, compared to controls. Greatest impairments were seen in verbal memory and executive functioning. To address potential confounds created by ‘diagnosis’, profiles for those with a mood syndrome or disorder but not psychosis were also examined and the neuropsychological impairments for the stage 2/3 group remained.

          Conclusions

          The degree of neuropsychological impairment in young persons with mental disorders appears to discriminate those with attenuated syndromes from those with a discrete disorder, independent of diagnostic status and current symptoms. Our findings suggest that neuropsychological assessment is a critical aspect of clinical evaluation of young patients at the early stages of a major psychiatric illness.

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          Most cited references34

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          Untreated depression and hippocampal volume loss.

          The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of antidepressant treatment on hippocampal volumes in patients with major depression. For 38 female outpatients, the total time each had been in a depressive episode was divided into days during which the patient was receiving antidepressant medication and days during which no antidepressant treatment was received. Hippocampal gray matter volumes were determined by high resolution magnetic resonance imaging and unbiased stereological measurement. Longer durations during which depressive episodes went untreated with antidepressant medication were associated with reductions in hippocampal volume. There was no significant relationship between hippocampal volume loss and time depressed while taking antidepressant medication or with lifetime exposure to antidepressants. Antidepressants may have a neuroprotective effect during depression.
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            Computerized assessment in neuropsychiatry using CANTAB: discussion paper.

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              Clinical staging of psychiatric disorders: a heuristic framework for choosing earlier, safer and more effective interventions.

              Diagnosis in psychiatry increasingly struggles to fulfil its key purposes, namely, to guide treatment and to predict outcome. The clinical staging model, widely used in clinical medicine yet virtually ignored in psychiatry, is proposed as a more refined form of diagnosis which could restore the utility of diagnosis, promote early intervention and also make more sense of the confusing array of biological research findings in psychiatry by organizing data into a coherent clinicopathological framework. A selective review of key papers in clinical medicine and psychiatry which describe clinical and clinicopathological staging, and a range of related issues. Clinical staging has immediate potential to improve the logic and timing of interventions in psychiatry just as it does in many complex and potentially serious medical disorders. Interventions could be evaluated in terms of their ability to prevent or delay progression from earlier to later stages of disorder, and they could be selected on clear-cut risk/benefit criteria. Biological variables and a range of candidate risk factors could be studied within and across stages, and their role, specificity and centrality in risk, onset and progression of disorder could be greatly clarified. A clinicopathological framework could be progressively constructed. Clinical staging with a restructure across and within diagnostic boundaries with the explicit operationalization of criteria for extent and progression of disorder should be actively explored in psychiatry as a heuristic strategy for the development and evaluation of earlier, safer, and more effective clinical interventions, and for clarifying the biological basis of psychiatric disorders.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                daniel.hermens@sydney.edu.au
                sharon.naismith@sydney.edu.au
                jim.lagopoulos@sydney.edu.au
                sze.lee@sydney.edu.au
                adam.guastella@sydney.edu.au
                e.scott@sydney.edu.au
                ian.hickie@sydney.edu.au
                Journal
                BMC Psychol
                BMC Psychol
                BMC psychology
                BioMed Central (London )
                2050-7283
                14 May 2013
                14 May 2013
                2013
                : 1
                : 1
                : 8
                Affiliations
                Clinical Research Unit, Brain and Mind Research Institute, University of Sydney, 100 Mallet Street, Camperdown, NSW 2050 Australia
                Article
                6
                10.1186/2050-7283-1-8
                4270041
                db222d82-e96a-490d-8c82-6c6e44ad8f5d
                © Hermens et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2013

                This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 26 November 2012
                : 1 May 2013
                Categories
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                © BioMed Central Ltd 2013

                neuropsychology,clinical staging,psychiatric,young adults

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