22 results on '"Dombrovski, Alexandre Y."'
Search Results
2. A lifetime of challenges: Real-life decision outcomes in early- and late-onset suicide attempters
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Perry, Michelle, Buerke, Morgan, Szücs, Anna, Allen, Timothy A., Bruine de Bruin, Wändi, Szántó, Katalin, and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y.
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- 2021
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3. Predictors of serious suicidal behavior in late-life depression
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Szanto, Katalin, Galfalvy, Hanga, Kenneally, Laura, Almasi, Rebeka, and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y
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- 2020
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4. Familial and social transmission of suicidal behavior in older adults
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Kenneally, Laura B., Szűcs, Anna, Szántó, Katalin, and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y.
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- 2019
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5. Selective maintenance of value information helps resolve the exploration/exploitation dilemma
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Hallquist, Michael N. and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y.
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- 2019
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6. Suicidal urges and attempted suicide at multiple time scales in borderline personality disorder.
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Kaurin, Aleksandra, Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Hallquist, Michael N., and Wright, Aidan G.C.
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ATTEMPTED suicide , *BORDERLINE personality disorder , *SUICIDAL behavior , *AT-risk behavior , *SUICIDAL ideation - Abstract
There is strong evidence for an enduring suicidal diathesis among individuals with a history of suicide attempts, particularly among people diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD). However, the progression of suicidal crises among people predisposed to suicidal behavior remains poorly understood. Via multilevel structural equation modeling we tested the hypothesis that a history of attempted suicide predicts a stronger dynamic link between affect and impulsivity with suicidal ideation (i.e., suicidal urges) — both moment-to-moment and day-to-day. 153 patients diagnosed with BPD, 105 of whom had a history of medically serious suicide attempts completed a 21-day ecological momentary assessment protocol (17,926 total assessments). Individuals with higher average levels of negative affect reported more suicidal thoughts. Moments characterized by more negative affect, hostility, impulsivity, and less positive affect were also characterized by elevated suicidal ideation. For hostility and positive affect, these significant links generalized to the daily level. At the same time, for negative affect and hostility the within-person coupling was stronger among attempters in comparison to non-attempters, and these effects did not significantly differ across timescales. Follow-up studies replicating our findings of the dysregulation-suicidality nexus in clinically more diverse samples are needed. The diathesis for suicidal behavior manifests in tighter dynamic links between negative affect or hostility and suicidal ideation. Because these within-person links were amplified in attempters compared to non-attempters, differential coupling patterns may index potentially lethal processes that generalize beyond BPD reflecting distinct diathesis components. • Assessed the risk for suicidal behavior across timescales in daily life • Used a 21-day ambulatory assessment protocol • Used a case-control design including suicide attempters and non-attempters • Dynamic links between affect and suicidal ideation were tighter among attempters. • Models are useful for identifying who and when is at the highest risk for dying by suicide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Late-Onset Suicide: A Dementia Prodrome?
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Gujral, Swathi, Butters, Meryl A., Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., and Szanto, Katalin
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Objectives: This study examined whether late-onset (versus early-onset) suicidal behavior is associated with worse cognition.Methods: Participants included 278 adults aged 50+ years (56 nonpsychiatric comparison group; 67 nonsuicidal depressed older adults; 63 depressed suicide ideators; and 44 late-onset (55+ years) and 48 early-onset suicide attempters (<55 years). Using a case-control design, this study examined group differences in global cognition, episodic memory, information processing speed, and executive functioning, assessed using the Repeatable Battery of Neuropsychological Status and the Trail Making Test from the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System. Linear regression was used for data analyses.Results: Both attempter groups displayed worse executive functioning than nonsuicidal depressed older adults. Late-onset attempters additionally displayed poorer global cognition and processing speed than nonsuicidal depressed older adults and poorer memory than early-onset attempters.Conclusions: Late-onset suicidal behavior is associated with worse performance in a broad range of cognitive domains, possibly reflective of a dementia prodrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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8. Value-Based Choice, Contingency Learning, and Suicidal Behavior in Mid- and Late-Life Depression.
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Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Hallquist, Michael N., Brown, Vanessa M., Wilson, Jonathan, and Szanto, Katalin
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SUICIDAL behavior , *MENTAL depression , *PSYCHIATRY , *BRAIN stimulation , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Abstract Background Suicidal behavior is associated with impaired decision making in contexts of uncertainty. Existing studies, however, do not definitively address whether suidice attempers have 1) impairment in learning from experience or 2) impairment in choice based on comparison of estimated option values. Our reinforcement learning model–based behavioral study tested these hypotheses directly in middle-aged and older suicide attempters representative of those who die by suicide. Methods Two samples (sample 1, n = 135; sample 2, n = 125) of suicide attempters with depression (n attempters = 54 and 39, respectively), suicide ideators, nonsuicidal patients with depression, and healthy control participants completed a probabilistic three-choice decision-making task. A second experiment in sample 2 experimentally dissociated long-term learned value from reward magnitude. Analyses combined computational reinforcement learning and mixed-effects models of decision times and choices. Results With regard to learning, suicide attempters (vs. all comparison groups) were less sensitive to one-back reinforcement, as indicated by a reduced effect on both choices and decision times. Learning deficits scaled with attempt lethality and were partially explained by poor cognitive control. With regard to value-based choice, suicide attempters (vs. all comparison groups) displayed abnormally long decision times when choosing between similarly valued options and were less able to distinguish between the best and second-best options. Group differences in value-based choice were robust to controlling for cognitive performance, comorbidities, impulsivity, psychotropic exposure, and possible brain damage from attempts. Conclusions Serious suicidal behavior is associated with impaired reward learning, likely undermining the search for alternative solutions. Attempted suicide is associated with impaired value comparison during the choice process, potentially interfering with the consideration of deterrents and alternatives in a crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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9. Impulsive Traits and Unplanned Suicide Attempts Predict Exaggerated Prefrontal Response to Angry Faces in the Elderly.
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Vanyukov, Polina M., Szanto, Katalin, Siegle, Greg J., Hallquist, Michael N., Reynolds III, Charles F., Aizenstein, Howard J., and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y.
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The article presents a study which evaluated the neural responses of older suicide attempters to emotional faces. The relationship of these neural responses to impulsivity was also examined. In a sample of 18 depressed elderly with histories of suicide attempts, neuro-hemodynamic responses to angry faces were recorded using functional magnetic resonance imaging. The study found that depression and history of attempted suicides are not associated with neural responses to angry faces.
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- 2015
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10. Impaired Executive Function in Contemplated and Attempted Suicide in Late Life.
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Gujral, Swathi, Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Butters, Meryl, Clark, Luke, Reynolds III, Charles F., Szanto, Katalin, and Reynolds, Charles F 3rd
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OBJECTIVE: Executive deficits may play an important role in late-life suicide. Yet, current evidence in this area is inconclusive and does not indicate whether these deficits are broadly associated with suicidal ideation or are specific to suicidal behavior. This study examined global cognition and specifically executive function impairments as correlates of suicidal ideation and suicidal behavior in depressed older adults, with the goal of extending an earlier preliminary study. DESIGN: Case-control study. SETTING: University-affiliated psychiatric hospital. PARTICIPANTS: All participants were age 60+: 83 depressed suicide attempters, 43 depressed individuals having suicidal ideation with a specific plan, 54 nonsuicidal depressed participants, and 48 older adults with no history of psychiatric disorders. MEASUREMENTS: Global cognitive function was assessed with Dementia Rating Scale (DRS) and executive function with Executive Interview (EXIT). RESULTS: Both suicide attempters and suicide ideators performed worse than the two comparison groups on the EXIT, with no difference between suicide attempters and suicide ideators. On the DRS total score, as well as on Memory and Attention subscales, suicide attempters and ideators and nonsuicidal depressed subjects performed similarly and were impaired relative to nonpsychiatric control subjects. Controlling for education, substance use disorders, and medication exposure did not affect group differences in performance on either the EXIT or the DRS. CONCLUSIONS: Executive deficits, captured with a brief instrument, are associated broadly with suicidal ideation in older depressed adults but do not appear to directly facilitate suicidal behavior. Our data are consistent with the idea that different vulnerabilities may operate at different stages in the suicidal process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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11. Integrating a functional view on suicide risk into idiographic statistical models.
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Kaurin, Aleksandra, Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Hallquist, Michael N., and Wright, Aidan G.C.
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SUICIDE , *ATTEMPTED suicide , *BORDERLINE personality disorder , *SUICIDAL ideation , *STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Acute risk of death by suicide manifests in heightened suicidal ideation in certain contexts and time periods. These increases are thought to emerge from complex and mutually reinforcing relationships between dispositional vulnerability factors and individually suicidogenic short-term stressors. Together, these processes inform clinical safety planning and our therapeutic tools accommodate a reasonable degree of idiosyncrasy when we individualize interventions. Unraveling these multifaceted factors and processes on a quantitative level, however, requires estimation frameworks capable of representing idiosyncrasies relevant to intervention and psychotherapy. Using, data from a 21-day ambulatory assessment protocol that included six random prompts per day, we developed personalized (i.e., idiographic) models of interacting risk factors and suicidal ideation via Group Iterative Multiple Model Estimation (GIMME) in a sample of people diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (N = 95) stratified for a history of high lethality suicide attempts. Our models revealed high levels of heterogeneity in state risk factors related to suicidal ideation, with no features shared among the majority of participants or even among relatively homogenous clusters of participants (i.e., empirically derived subgroups). We discuss steps toward clinical implementation of personalized models, which can eventually capture suicidogenic changes in proximal risk factors and inform safety planning and interventions. • Acute suicide risk results from volatile, contextualized dynamic processes. • Idiographic models depict within-person dynamics of suicide risk. • Models reveal high levels of heterogeneity across individuals. • More work is needed before personalized models can be applied in clinical settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Social Emotion Recognition, Social Functioning, and Attempted Suicide in Late-Life Depression.
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Szanto, Katalin, Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Sahakian, Barbara J., Mulsant, Benoit H., Houck, Patricia R., Reynolds III, Charles F., and Clark, Luke
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Objectives: Lack of feeling connected and poor social problem solving have been described in suicide attempters. However, cognitive substrates of this apparent social impairment in suicide attempters remain unknown. One possible deficit, the inability to recognize others' complex emotional states has been observed not only in disorders characterized by prominent social deficits (autism-spectrum disorders and frontotemporal dementia) but also in depression and normal aging. This study assessed the relationship between social emotion recognition, problem solving, social functioning, and attempted suicide in late-life depression. Design, Participants, Measurements: There were 90 participants: 24 older depressed suicide attempters, 38 nonsuicidal depressed elders, and 28 comparison subjects with no psychiatric history. We compared performance on the Reading the Mind in the Eyes test and measures of social networks, social support, social problem solving, and chronic interpersonal difficulties in these three groups. Results: Suicide attempters committed significantly more errors in social emotion recognition and showed poorer global cognitive performance than elders with no psychiatric history. Attempters had restricted social networks: they were less likely to talk to their children, had fewer close friends, and did not engage in volunteer activities, compared to nonsuicidal depressed elders and those with no psychiatric history. They also reported a pattern of struggle against others and hostility in relationships, felt a lack of social support, perceived social problems as impossible to resolve, and displayed a careless/impulsive approach to problems. Conclusions: Suicide attempts in depressed elders were associated with poor social problem solving, constricted social networks, and disruptive interpersonal relationships. Impaired social emotion recognition in the suicide attempter group was related to global cognitive decline, thus it is possible that cognitive decline is one of the risk factors for suicide attempt in late-life, interacting with social deficits and psychosocial factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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13. Deterministic learning and attempted suicide among older depressed individuals: Cognitive assessment using the Wisconsin Card Sorting Task
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McGirr, Alexander, Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Butters, Meryl A., Clark, Luke, and Szanto, Katalin
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MENTAL depression , *SUICIDAL behavior in older people , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *DAS-Naglieri Cognitive Assessment System , *WISCONSIN Card Sorting Test , *PUBLIC health , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Late-life suicide is an under-investigated public health problem. Among the putative vulnerabilities for this complex multifactorial behaviour are deficits in cognitive control, an ability to integrate and prioritize multiple cognitive processes in order to flexibly adapt behaviour and meet situational demands. We investigated cognitive control during rule learning in a complex and changing environment in older individuals with suicide attempts of varying lethality. Method: Ninety-three participants over the age of 60 (30 healthy controls, 29 depressed never suicidal, 20 low-lethality suicide attempters, 14 high-lethality suicide attempters) underwent structured clinical and cognitive assessments. Participants then completed the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), a well-studied task of cognitive control during rule learning. Results: High-lethality attempters demonstrated a pattern of deficits involving poor conceptual reasoning, perseverative errors and total errors. Compared to low-lethality attempters and healthy controls, high-lethality attempters demonstrated poor conceptual reasoning, as well as increased rates of perseverative errors and total errors. Compared to non-suicidal depressed participants, high-lethality attempters also made more conceptual errors. Conclusion: High-lethality suicide attempts among older people are associated with impaired cognitive control during rule learning as detected by the WCST. Our data suggest that impairment in cognitive control during rule learning may represent a vulnerability distinct from the impulsive diathesis, typically manifesting in young, low-lethality attempters. This vulnerability may contribute to the high incidence of serious or, often, fatal suicidal acts in old age. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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14. Lethal Forethought: Delayed Reward Discounting Differentiates High- and Low-Lethality Suicide Attempts in Old Age
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Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Szanto, Katalin, Siegle, Greg J., Wallace, Meredith L., Forman, Steven D., Sahakian, Barbara, Reynolds, Charles F., and Clark, Luke
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SUICIDAL behavior , *DECISION making , *MENTAL depression , *CHOICE (Psychology) , *IMPULSIVE personality , *COGNITION - Abstract
Background: The decision to commit suicide may be impulsive, but lethal suicidal acts often involve planning and forethought. People who attempt suicide make disadvantageous decisions in other contexts, but nothing is known about the way they decide about the future. Can the willingness to postpone future gratification differentiate between individuals prone to serious, premeditated and less serious, unplanned suicidal acts? Methods: Four groups of depressed participants aged 60 and older made choices between smaller immediate and larger delayed monetary rewards: 15 who had made high-lethality suicide attempts, 14 who had made low-lethality suicide attempts, 12 who seriously contemplated suicide, and 42 people with depression, but no history of suicidal thoughts. The reference group was 31 psychiatrically healthy elders. Results: Individuals who had made low-lethality attempts displayed an exaggerated preference for immediate rewards compared with nonsuicidal depressed and healthy control subjects. Those who had carried out high-lethality suicide attempts were more willing to delay future rewards, compared with low-lethality attempters. Better planned suicide attempts were also associated with willingness to wait for larger rewards. These effects were unchanged after accounting for education, global cognitive function, substance use disorders, psychotropic medications, and possible brain injury from attempts. Discount rates were correlated with having debt, but were not significantly associated with income, hopelessness, depressive severity, premorbid IQ, age at first attempt, or choice of violent means. Conclusions: Although clinicians often focus on impulsivity in patients at risk for suicide, these data suggest that identifying biological characteristics and treatments for nonimpulsive suicidal older people may be even more important. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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15. Sex Differences in Correlates of Suicide Attempt Lethality in Late Life.
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Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Szanto, Katalin, Duberstein, Paul, Conner, Kenneth R., Houck, Patricia R., and Conwell, Yeates
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Objective: Suicide attempts are more lethal in men than in women and this sex difference is more pronounced in old age, when suicide rates in men are highest in most countries, including the United States. To understand this sex difference, the authors assessed correlates of suicide attempt lethality in older men and women. Method: Our cross-sectional study enrolled 125 adults (84 aged 50-69 and 41 aged 70 and older) with major depression and a suicide attempt admitted to community and university hospitals in Rochester, NY and Pittsburgh, PA. Assessments included a structured diagnostic interview, the Lethality Scale, the Suicide Intent Scale, the Cumulative illness Rating Scale (CIRS) measuring burden of physical illness, and the Mini-Mental Status Examination (MMSE). Results: Attempt lethality was higher in older (70+) than in younger (50- 69) men and lower in older than in younger women. Association between suicidal intent and attempt lethality was the strongest in older men compared with the other groups. Higher attempt lethality in older men was partly explained by their higher levels of intent, and not by CIRS, MMSE, substance use disorders, or living alone. In younger, but not in older women, suicide intent was correlated with attempt lethality. Conclusion: Older men act more decisively on their suicidal intent than older women and this difference is more pronounced with increasing age. These findings might partially explain the sex differences in suicide deaths worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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16. Cognitive Performance in Suicidal Depressed Elderly: Preliminary Report.
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Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Butters, Meryl A., Reynolds III, Charles F., Houck, Patricia R., Clark, Luke, Mazumdar, Sati, and Szanto, Katalin
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Objective: Deficits in executive functions may play an important role in late-life suicide; however the association is understudied. This study examined cognitive function in general and executive functioning specifically in depressed elderly with and without suicidal ideation and attempts. Design: Case-control study. Setting: University-affiliated psychiatric hospital. Participants: We compared 32 suicidal depressed participants aged 60 and older with 32 non-suicidal depressed participants equated for age, education, and gender. Measurements: We assessed global cognitive function and executive function with the Dementia Rating Scale (DRS) and the Executive Interview (EXIT25), respectively. Results: Suicidal and non-suicidal depressed groups were comparable in terms of severity of depression and burden of physical illness. Suicidal participants performed worse on the EXIT25, and on the DRS total scale, as well as on Memory and Attention subscales. The differences were not explained by the presence of dementia, substance use, medication exposure, or brain injury from suicide attempts. Conclusions: Poor performance on tests of executive function, attention, and memory is associated with suicidal behavior in late-life depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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17. Residual symptoms and recurrence during maintenance treatment of late-life depression
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Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., Mulsant, Benoit H., Houck, Patricia R., Mazumdar, Sati, Lenze, Eric J., Andreescu, Carmen, Cyranowski, Jill M., and Reynolds, Charles F.
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DEPRESSED persons , *DRUG therapy , *THERAPEUTICS , *MEDICAL research - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Many older patients who recover from an episode of major depression continue to suffer from depressed mood, anxiety, and sleep problems. Our study assesses the impact of these residual symptoms on the risk of recurrence during maintenance treatment of late-life depression. Method: We analyzed data from a randomized clinical trial of maintenance treatment in patients with unipolar depression aged ≥70, 116 of whom remitted and remained stable during open pharmacotherapy and interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) and were randomized to clinical management/pharmacotherapy; clinical management/placebo; monthly maintenance IPT/ pharmacotherapy; or monthly maintenance IPT/placebo. We assessed the impact of overall residual symptoms (based on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D) total score) and of specific residual symptom clusters — mood symptoms (depressed mood, guilt, suicidality, energy/interests), sleep disturbance (early, middle, late insomnia), and anxiety (agitation, psychic and somatic anxiety, hypochondriasis) measured at randomization. Sleep disturbance was also assessed with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). We used Cox proportional hazards regression models controlling for assignment to antidepressant medication versus placebo to identify predictors of recurrence. Results: Residual anxiety and residual sleep disturbance (as measured by the PSQI but not the HAM-D) independently predicted early recurrence. Limitations: Use of HAM-D clusters to define residual symptoms; analysis limited to completers of acute and continuation treatment. Conclusions: In patients with late-life depression who have remitted with pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy, the deleterious effect of residual symptoms is due to persisting anxiety and, possibly, residual sleep disturbance. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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18. Poster Number: EI 20 - The Personality of Older Attempters: A Key to Heterogeneity in Suicidal Behavior.
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Szucs, Anna, Szanto, Katalin, and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y.
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- 2018
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19. 151. Salience and Default Mode Network Coupling Role in Expectancy-Mood Interactions in Depression.
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Handoko, Kevin, Neppach, Alyssa, Karim, Helmet, Dombrovski, Alexandre Y., and Pecina, Marta
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DEFAULT mode network - Published
- 2024
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20. Protective effects of reasons for living against suicidal ideation in daily life.
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Tsypes, Aliona, Kaurin, Aleksandra, Wright, Aidan G.C., Hallquist, Michael N., and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y.
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SUICIDAL ideation , *BORDERLINE personality disorder , *EVERYDAY life , *PERSONALITY , *ECOLOGICAL momentary assessments (Clinical psychology) , *EXTRAVERSION - Abstract
How do individuals resist suicidal urges in a crisis? Deterrents for suicide can be conceptualized as reasons for living (RFL), but our understanding of their protective effects is predominantly informed by cross-sectional research. We examined the protective effects of RFL on suicidal ideation (SI) in daily life in a high-risk sample. We also tested whether personality traits moderated the strength of the dynamic RFL-SI link. Adults with a borderline personality disorder diagnosis (N = 153 , n suicide attempters = 105) completed a 21-day ambulatory assessment protocol. Daily endorsements of RFL were negatively linked to SI at the within-person but not the between-person level. Whereas suicide attempters endorsed RFL less frequently than non-attempters, the protective effect of RFL was undiminished in this group. Furthermore, RFL's protective effect was particularly pronounced in those with higher average levels of suicidal ideation. While people high on extraversion endorsed RFL more often, this increase was not protective against SI, indicating that RFL reflect heterogeneous underlying psychological processes, only some of which protect against SI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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21. 99. Antagonism Facets Uniquely Affect Cooperation: Narcissism and Callousness are Differentially Associated With Tit-For-Tat Reciprocity.
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Allen, Timothy A., Koudys, Jacob W., Brown, Vanessa M., Hallquist, Michael N., and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y.
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NARCISSISM , *RECIPROCITY (Psychology) , *COOPERATION - Published
- 2023
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22. Behavioral empathy failures and suicidal behavior.
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Zhang, Ke, Szanto, Katalin, Clark, Luke, and Dombrovski, Alexandre Y.
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SUICIDAL behavior , *EMPATHY , *SOCIAL conflict , *SOCIAL influence , *OLDER people , *SUICIDE risk factors - Abstract
Impaired decision-making has recently gained recognition as a component of the suicidal diathesis. Yet, although precipitants and particularly deterrents to suicidal behavior are often interpersonal, little is known about social decision-making in suicidal individuals. This study employed a novel version of the Ultimatum Game to investigate how empathy moderates responses to social conflict in 149 older adults, comprising groups of suicide attempters (n = 49), suicide ideators (n = 32), non-suicidal depressed controls (n = 33), and a non-psychiatric control group (n = 35). Participants acted as responder to a series of single-shot financial offers that varied in fairness. Some offers were paired with social context information on the proposer, designed to evoke either empathy or punishment. Offer acceptance was sensitive to Fairness and Social Context, such that participants accepted more offers in the empathy condition and fewer offers in the punishment condition. A Group * Context interaction was observed, wherein the suicide attempters adjusted their acceptance rates less in the empathy condition than the non-psychiatric controls. Thus, older adults with a history of suicide attempt were less influenced by empathy scenarios, indicating that a failure to integrate others' emotions into decisions may undermine social deterrents to suicide. • Social context influences acceptance of unfair offers on an Ultimatum Game. • Older adults with past suicide attempts showed a blunted response to empathy scenarios. • Suicide attempters displayed intact sensitivity to offer fairness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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