PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Brain imaging identifies differences in childhood bipolar disorder, ADHD

2010-10-13
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago are the first to use brain imaging to examine the effects of emotion on working memory function in children with pediatric bipolar disorder or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

The study is published in the October issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

PBD and ADHD are very severe developmental disorders that share behavioral characteristics such as impulsivity, irritability and attention problems.

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, researchers at UIC examined the brain activity of children as they performed a working memory task while viewing faces with different emotions, such as angry, happy or neutral expressions.

The children, ages 10 to 18, were asked to remember the faces and to press a button in the MR-scanner if they saw the same face that was presented two trials earlier. The study involved 23 non-medicated children with bipolar disorder, 14 non-medicated children with ADHD and 19 healthy controls.

"It's a simple yet elegant working memory test that tells us a lot about how their brain remembers stimuli like faces or objects," said Alessandra Passarotti, assistant professor of psychiatry at UIC and lead author of the study. "We also added in an emotional component -- because both disorders show emotional deficits -- to study how their working memory is affected by emotional challenge."

The researchers found that while both disorders show dysfunction in the prefrontal cortex relative to healthy controls, the ADHD group had the most severe dysfunction in this important region. The prefrontal cortex controls behavior, such as impulsivity, and executive function, as well as complex cognitive processes such as working memory, attention and language.

From a treatment, learning and intervention perspective, the next step for researchers and clinicians is to figure out how to help patients use their prefrontal cortex, Passarotti said.

The researchers also found that while the ADHD group had greater dysfunction in working memory circuits in the brain, the bipolar group had more deficits in regions of the brain involved in emotion-processing and regulation.

Now that researchers are starting to differentiate between the two disorders at a brain network level, rather than just at a behavioral level, the long-term goal is to develop diagnostic tests based on neurological and behavioral markers of illness that can be used in a clinical setting. Currently patients are diagnosed using clinical measures, questionnaires, behavior scales and interviews with parents.

It is difficult for physicians to differentiate between the two disorders behaviorally, which may lead to an incorrect diagnosis and wrong medications, a worsening of symptoms, and greater frustration for children and parents, said Passarotti, a researcher in UIC's Institute for Juvenile Research.

She said that while researchers still do not understand all of the neurological deficits that characterize ADHD and PBD profiles, they know that drug treatment that works for ADHD does not work for bipolar disorder.

"In fact, if you give a stimulant to a child with bipolar disorder, they become more manic, and this makes their illness even worse, whereas if you give the mood-regulation medicine commonly prescribed for PBD to a child with ADHD, they still show a lot of attention deficits and do not show any improvement," Passarotti said.

"Our hope is that by better differentiating between these two severe developmental illnesses, we can help develop more accurate diagnoses and more targeted treatments for PBD and ADHD."

INFORMATION: Co-authors of the study are Dr. Mani Pavuluri, the Berger-Colbeth Term Chair in Child Psychiatry and director of the Pediatric Brain Research and Intervention Center at UIC, and John Sweeney, professor of psychiatry, neurology and psychology and director of the Center for Cognitive Medicine at UIC.

[Editor's Note: Images available upon request.]

For more information about UIC, visit www.uic.edu


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Consuming vegetables linked to decreased breast cancer risk in African-American women

2010-10-13
(Boston) - Investigators from the Slone Epidemiology Center at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have reported that African American women who consume more vegetables are less likely to develop estrogen receptor-negative breast cancer than women with low vegetable intake. The study results, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, were based on data from the Black Women's Health Study (BWHS), a large follow-up study of 59,000 African American women from across the U.S. conducted by investigators at the Slone Epidemiology Center since 1995. The investigators ...

Looking back key to moving forward

2010-10-13
Despite modest economic gains, gloomy unemployment numbers and low workplace morale still loom large within corporate America. Whether or not companies can capitalize on the momentum of this fragile financial revitalization is dependent on more than enhancing consumer confidence or introducing new products to the marketplace—it falls largely on employees working for organizations and their level of commitment to corporate success. Researchers from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University and the Haas School of Business at the University of California, ...

Second-generation device more effective in capturing circulating tumor cells

Second-generation device more effective in capturing circulating tumor cells
2010-10-13
VIDEO: Rotating image of circulating tumor cell cluster isolated from the blood of a patient with metastatic prostate cancer using the HB-Chip. Click here for more information. A redesigned version of the CTC-Chip – a microchip-based device for capturing rare circulating tumor cells (CTCs) – appears to be more effective and should be easier to manufacture than the original. Called the HB-(herringbone) Chip, the new device also may provide more comprehensive and easily ...

Diabetes gene linked to degeneration of enzyme involved in Alzheimer's disease onset and progression

2010-10-13
Mount Sinai School of Medicine researchers have found that a gene associated with the onset of Type 2 diabetes also is found at lower-than-normal levels in people with Alzheimer's disease. The research, led by Giulio Maria Pasinetti, MD, PhD, The Saunder Family Professor in Neurology, and Professor of Psychiatry and Geriatrics and Adult Development at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, was published this month in Aging Cell. The new study provides insight into a potential mechanism that might explain the relationship between Type 2 diabetes and the onset and progression ...

New studies examine links between XMRV and human disease

2010-10-13
Xenotropic murine leukemia virus–related virus (XMRV) has been the subject of many studies since its discovery in 2006, but conflicting reports have created an unclear picture of XMRV's role in human disease. In three recent studies published in the November 15 issue of The Journal of Infectious Diseases, now available online, the evidence supports a possible link between XMRV and prostate cancer but not other links involving chronic fatigue syndrome, HIV infection, or hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. (Please see below for links to these articles online.) In one of ...

National committee releases findings on transforming and improving the nursing profession

2010-10-13
CORAL GABLES, FL (October 12, 2010)--Still hampered by workforce shortages and barriers that impede their ranks from delivering health care to the full extent of their education and training, nurses may have gotten the much-needed shot in the arm they need to transform their profession with the release of an Institute of Medicine (IOM) report recommending sweeping changes for improving their profession. The report, the product of a special committee chaired by University of Miami President Donna E. Shalala, recommends everything from higher levels of education and training ...

Blocking an oncogene in liver cancer could be potential therapy option

2010-10-13
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Scientists have found that a synthetic molecule they designed can block activation of a gene in liver cancer cells, halting a process that allows some of those cancer cells to survive chemotherapy. Without the interference of this gene's function, certain liver cancer cells appear to be protected from the toxic effects of chemotherapy drugs. Blocking the oncogene, called STAT3, prevents a protein from protecting the cells, the research suggests. As a result, more liver cancer cells succumb to treatment. Researchers hope an anti-cancer drug based ...

Metabolic status before pregnancy predicts subsequent gestational diabetes

2010-10-13
OAKLAND, Calif. — Cardio-metabolic risk factors such as high blood sugar and insulin, and low high density lipoprotein cholesterol that are present before pregnancy, predict whether a woman will develop diabetes during a future pregnancy, according to a Kaiser Permanente study in the current issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology. The study suggests that metabolic screening of all women before pregnancy, particularly overweight women, could help identify those more likely to develop gestational diabetes mellitus, known as GDM, in a subsequent pregnancy and help ...

Hospital readmission studies: Influencing factors identified

2010-10-13
In two studies published today in the Journal of Hospital Medicine, the risk factors for readmission to the hospital are examined based upon general medicine inpatients and those with at least two admissions in a six-month period. Alongside clinical factors such as having cancer, chronic diseases such as heart failure or lung disease, or being on high-risk medications, the studies identified other factors which increase the likelihood of a patient being readmitted which could help hospitalists focus in on these groups. In the first study, Nazima Allaudeen, MD, and colleagues ...

Freemake: First CUDA-Supported Free Video Converter

Freemake: First CUDA-Supported Free Video Converter
2010-10-13
Freemake Video Converter (http://www.freemake.com/free_video_converter) has recently integrated CUDA technology that can speed up the conversion process by many times. Thus, the videos can be converted to AVI, iPod, iPhone, PSP, and Android devices in a few minutes instead of hours. Freemake Video Converter, version 1.2, features much higher conversion speed and significant gains in performance due to CUDA technology. Therefore, this free converter can be considered one of the pioneers among video tools. Now PC users can convert long videos to HD formats much faster ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Enhancing ocean wind observation accuracy: New rain correction approach for FY-3E WindRAD

New immobilization strategy enables reliable surface plasmon resonance analysis of membrane proteins

Single organic molecule triggers Kondo effect in molecular-scale “Kondo box”

Drug toxicity predicted by differences between preclinical models and humans

Behind the numbers: The growing mental health crisis among international students in America

Radiative coupled evaporation cooling hydrogel for above‑ambient heat dissipation and flame retardancy

Constructing double heterojunctions on 1T/2H‑MoS2@Co3S4 electrocatalysts for regulating Li2O2 formation in lithium‑oxygen batteries

Massively parallel implementation of nonlinear functions using an optical processor

Electrohydrodynamics pump and machine learning enable portable, high-performance excimer laser

UniSA leads national pilot to improve medication safety in aged care

Engineered biochar emerges as a powerful, affordable tool to combat water pollution

City of Hope appoints leading lung cancer expert Dr. Christine M. Lovly to head national thoracic oncology program

Green space to fewer hospitalizations for mental health

Supervised exercise improves strength and physical performance in patients with advanced breast cancer

NIH award to explore improved delivery systems for school-based substance use prevention and treatment programs

Woodpeckers grunt like tennis stars when drilling

International research team awarded €10 million ERC Synergy Grant to revolutionize drug delivery

Research Spotlight: State-of-the-art 7 Tesla MRI reveals how the human brain anticipates and regulates the body’s needs

Rice and Houston Methodist researchers to study brain-implant interface with Dunn Foundation award

OU biochemists lead global hunt for new antibiotics

October research news from the Ecological Society of America

Kinase atlas uncovers hidden layers of cell signaling regulation

Texas Tech scientists develop novel acceleration technique for crop creation

Worcester Polytechnic Institute to lead $5.2 million state-funded effort to build Central Massachusetts BioHub

China commands 47% of remote sensing research, while U.S. produces just 9%, NYU Tandon study reveals

Grocery store records reveal London food deserts

Hotter than your average spa bath: Extreme warming of Amazon lakes in 2023

Genetic variants fine-tune grain dormancy and crop resilience in barley

Cosmic dust record reveals Arctic ice varied with atmospheric warming, not ocean heat

Mechanical shear forces can trigger gas bubble formation in magmas

[Press-News.org] Brain imaging identifies differences in childhood bipolar disorder, ADHD