9 results on '"Pick, Susannah"'
Search Results
2. Objective and subjective neurocognitive functioning in functional motor symptoms and functional seizures: preliminary findings.
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Pick, Susannah, Millman, L.S. Merritt, Sun, Yiqing, Short, Eleanor, Stanton, Biba, Winston, Joel S., Mehta, Mitul A., Nicholson, Timothy R., Reinders, Antje A.T.S., David, Anthony S., Edwards, Mark J., Goldstein, Laura H., Hotopf, Matthew, and Chalder, Trudie
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EXECUTIVE function , *SOMATOFORM disorders , *ATTENTION , *PSYCHOGENIC nonepileptic seizures , *METACOGNITIVE therapy , *COGNITIVE ability , *TEST validity - Abstract
This study aimed to provide a preliminary assessment of objective and subjective neurocognitive functioning in individuals with functional motor symptoms (FMS) and/or functional seizures (FS). We tested the hypotheses that the FMS/FS group would display poorer objective attentional and executive functioning, altered social cognition, and reduced metacognitive accuracy. Individuals with FMS/FS (n = 16) and healthy controls (HCs, n = 17) completed an abbreviated CANTAB battery, and measures of intellectual functioning, subjective cognitive complaints, performance validity, and comorbid symptoms. Subjective performance ratings were obtained to assess local metacognitive accuracy. The groups were comparable in age (p = 0.45), sex (p = 0.62), IQ (p = 0.57), and performance validity (p-values = 0.10–0.91). We observed no impairment on any CANTAB test in this FMS/FS sample compared to HCs, although the FMS/FS group displayed shorter reaction times on the Emotional Bias task (anger) (p = 0.01, np2 = 0.20). The groups did not differ in subjective performance ratings (p-values 0.15). Whilst CANTAB attentional set-shifting performance (total trials/errors) correlated with subjective performance ratings in HCs (p-values<0.005, rs = −0.85), these correlations were non-significant in the FMS/FS sample (p-values = 0.10–0.13, rs-values = −0.46–0.50). The FMS/FS group reported more daily cognitive complaints than HCs (p = 0.006, g = 0.92), which were associated with subjective performance ratings on CANTAB sustained attention (p = 0.001, rs = −0.74) and working memory tests (p < 0.001, rs = −0.75), and with depression (p = 0.003, rs = 0.70), and somatoform (p = 0.003, rs = 0.70) and psychological dissociation (p-values<0.005, rs-values = 0.67–0.85). These results suggest a discordance between objective and subjective neurocognitive functioning in this FMS/FS sample, reflecting intact test performance alongside poorer subjective cognitive functioning. Further investigation of neurocognitive functioning in FND subgroups is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Functional neurological disorder is a feminist issue
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McLoughlin, Caoimhe, Hoeritzauer, Ingrid, Cabreira, Verónica, Aybek, Selma, Adams, Caitlin, Alty, Jane, Ball, Harriet A, Baker, Janet, Kim, D, Burness, Chrissie, Dworetzky, Barbara A, Finkelstein, Sara, Garcin, Béatrice, Gelauff, Jeannette, Goldstein, Laura H, Jordbru, Anika, Huys, Anne-Catherine Ml, Laffan, Aoife, Lidstone, Sarah, Linden, Stefanie Caroline, Ludwig, Lea, Maggio, Julie, Morgante, Francesca, Mallam, Elizabeth, Nicholson, Clare, O'Neal, Mary, O'Sullivan, Suzanne, Pareés, Isabel, Petrochilos, Panayiota, Pick, Susannah, Phillips, Wendy, Roelofs, Karen, Newby, Rachel, Stanton, Biba, Gray, Cordelia, Joyce, Eileen M, Tijssen, Marina Aj, Chalder, Trudie, McCormick, Maxanne, Gardiner, Paula, Bègue, Indrit, Tuttle, Margaret C, Williams, Isobel, McRae, Sarah, Voon, Valerie, and McWhirter, Laura
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GENDER-DIFFERENCES ,SEX-DIFFERENCES ,SYMPTOMS ,230 Affective Neuroscience ,conversion disorder ,somatisation disorder ,PSYCHOGENIC NONEPILEPTIC SEIZURES ,ATAQUE-DE-NERVIOS ,610 Medicine & health ,Experimental Psychopathology and Treatment ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS ,functional neurological disorder ,GAIT DISORDERS ,neuropsychiatry ,Surgery ,HEALTH ,Neurology (clinical) ,610 Medizin und Gesundheit ,MOVEMENT-DISORDERS - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 291411.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) Functional neurological disorder (FND) is a common and disabling disorder, often misunderstood by clinicians. Although viewed sceptically by some, FND is a diagnosis that can be made accurately, based on positive clinical signs, with clinical features that have remained stable for over 100 years. Despite some progress in the last decade, people with FND continue to suffer subtle and overt forms of discrimination by clinicians, researchers and the public. There is abundant evidence that disorders perceived as primarily affecting women are neglected in healthcare and medical research, and the course of FND mirrors this neglect. We outline the reasons why FND is a feminist issue, incorporating historical and contemporary clinical, research and social perspectives. We call for parity for FND in medical education, research and clinical service development so that people affected by FND can receive the care they need. 28 maart 2023 7 p.
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- 2023
4. Dissociation and interoception in functional neurological disorder.
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Pick, Susannah, Rojas-Aguiluz, Maya, Butler, Morgan, Mulrenan, Heather, Nicholson, Timothy R., and Goldstein, Laura H.
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INTEROCEPTION , *NEUROLOGICAL disorders , *PSYCHOGENIC nonepileptic seizures - Abstract
Introduction: We aimed to examine susceptibility to dissociation and the impact of dissociation on interoceptive processing in individuals with functional neurological disorder (FND). We hypothesised that dissociative states would be elevated and interoceptive accuracy and awareness impaired at baseline in people with FND, and that such differences would be exacerbated following acute dissociation. Methods: Nineteen adults with FND were compared to 20 healthy controls. A modified heart-beat tracking task measured interoceptive accuracy and awareness (confidence) before and after a validated dissociation induction procedure. An exteroceptive processing control task was included. Mann–Whitney tests and r-values (effect size) were computed for between-group comparisons. Results: The FND group displayed elevated dissociation at baseline (p = 0.001, r = 0.528) compared to controls which increased following dissociation-induction (p < 0.001, r = 0.663). Interoceptive accuracy did not differ between groups at baseline (p = 0.967, r = 0.009); however, the FND group had lower accuracy scores post-induction (p = 0.021, r = 0.379). A negative correlation (trend) between change scores for dissociation and interoceptive accuracy was noted (rs = −0.411, p = 0.057). Confidence ratings on interoceptive and exteroceptive processing tasks were lower in the FND group (p-values < 0.05 or <0.01, r-values 0.331–0.489). Conclusions: Individuals with FND experienced greater susceptibility to dissociation, metacognitive deficits and impaired interoceptive accuracy than controls after acute dissociation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Emotional processing in functional neurological disorder: a review, biopsychosocial model and research agenda.
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Pick, Susannah, Goldstein, Laura H., Perez, David L., and Nicholson, Timothy R.
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NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,BIOPSYCHOSOCIAL model ,INTEROCEPTION ,PSYCHOGENIC nonepileptic seizures ,FACIAL expression & emotions (Psychology) - Abstract
Functional neurological disorder (FND) is a common and highly disabling disorder, but its aetiology remains enigmatic. Conceptually, there has been reduced emphasis on the role of psychosocial stressors in recent years, with a corresponding increase in neurobiological explanations. However, a wealth of evidence supports the role of psychosocial adversities (eg, stressful life events, interpersonal difficulties) as important risk factors for FND. Therefore, there is a need to integrate psychosocial (environmental) and neurobiological factors (eg, sensorimotor and cognitive functions) in contemporary models of FND. Altered emotional processing may represent a key link between psychosocial risk factors and core features of FND. Here, we summarise and critically appraise experimental studies of emotional processing in FND using behavioural, psychophysiological and/or neuroimaging measures in conjunction with affective processing tasks. We propose that enhanced preconscious (implicit) processing of emotionally salient stimuli, associated with elevated limbic reactivity (eg, amygdala), may contribute to the initiation of basic affective/defensive responses via hypothalamic and brainstem pathways (eg, periaqueductal grey). In parallel, affect-related brain areas may simultaneously exert a disruptive influence on neurocircuits involved in voluntary motor control, awareness and emotional regulation (eg, sensorimotor, salience, central executive networks). Limbic-paralimbic disturbances in patients with FND may represent one of several neurobiological adaptations linked to early, severe and/or prolonged psychosocial adversity. This perspective integrates neurobiological and psychosocial factors in FND and proposes a research agenda, highlighting the need for replication of existing findings, multimodal sampling across emotional response domains and further examination of emotional influences on sensorimotor and cognitive functions in FND populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Implicit attentional bias for facial emotion in dissociative seizures: Additional evidence.
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Pick, Susannah, Mellers, John D.C., and Goldstein, Laura H.
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FACIAL expression & emotions (Psychology) , *SPASMS , *PSYCHOGENIC nonepileptic seizures , *ANXIETY , *MENTAL depression , *COGNITION disorders , *CONVERSION disorder , *DIAGNOSIS , *PATIENTS - Abstract
This study sought to extend knowledge about the previously reported preconscious attentional bias (AB) for facial emotion in patients with dissociative seizures (DS) by exploring whether the finding could be replicated, while controlling for concurrent anxiety, depression, and potentially relevant cognitive impairments. Patients diagnosed with DS (n = 38) were compared with healthy controls (n = 43) on a pictorial emotional Stroop test, in which backwardly masked emotional faces (angry, happy, neutral) were processed implicitly. The group with DS displayed a significantly greater AB to facial emotion relative to controls; however, the bias was not specific to negative or positive emotions. The group effect could not be explained by performance on standardized cognitive tests or self-reported depression/anxiety. The study provides additional evidence of a disproportionate and automatic allocation of attention to facial affect in patients with DS, including both positive and negative facial expressions. Such a tendency could act as a predisposing factor for developing DS initially, or may contribute to triggering individuals' seizures on an ongoing basis. Psychological interventions such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) or AB modification might be suitable approaches to target this bias in clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. Differentiating psychogenic nonepileptic from epileptic seizures: A mixed-methods, content analysis study.
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Cardeña, Etzel, Pick, Susannah, and Litwin, Richard
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EPILEPSY , *PSYCHOGENIC nonepileptic seizures , *DEPERSONALIZATION , *CONTENT analysis , *SEIZURES (Medicine) , *SELF-injurious behavior , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *TIME perception - Abstract
Identification of clinical features that might distinguish psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) from epileptic seizures (ES) is of value for diagnosis, management, and understanding of both conditions. Previous studies have shown that patients' descriptions of their seizures reflect differences in content and delivery. We aimed to compare verbal descriptions of PNES and ES using a mixed-methods approach. We analyzed data from semi-structured interviews in which patients with video-electroencephalography (EEG)-confirmed ES (n = 30) or PNES (n = 10) described their seizures. Two masked raters independently coded the transcripts for relevant psychological categories and discrepancies that were noted and resolved. Additional analyses were conducted using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count system. The identified phenomena were descriptively compared, and inferential analyses assessed group differences in frequencies. A logistic regression analysis examined the predictive power of the most distinctive phenomena for diagnosis. As compared with ES, PNES reported longer seizures, more preseizure negative emotions (e.g., fear), anxiety symptoms (e.g., arousal, hyperventilation), altered vision/olfaction, and automatic behaviors. During seizures, PNES reported more fear, altered breathing, and dissociative phenomena (depersonalization, impaired time perception). Epileptic seizures reported more self-injurious behavior. Postseizure, PNES reported more fear and weeping and ES more amnesia and aches. The predictive power when including these variables was 97.5%. None of the single predictor variables was significant. The few but consistent linguistic differences related to the use of some pronouns and references to family. Although no single clinical feature definitively distinguishes PNES from ES, several features may be suggestive of a PNES diagnosis, including longer duration, negative emotion (i.e., fear) throughout the events, preseizure anxiety, ictal dissociation, and postseizure weeping. Fewer reports of ictal self-injury and postseizure amnesia and aches may also indicate the possibility of PNES. • No single feature distinguished PNES from ES. • Psychogenic nonepileptic seizures reported longer seizures, more negative emotions, and anxiety. • Epileptic seizures reported more ictal self-injury, postseizure amnesia, and aches. • Epileptic seizures used more words related to "he/she," "they," and "family." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. Adult-onset psychogenic nonepileptic seizures: A multicenter international study.
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Asadi-Pooya, Ali A., Valente, Kette, Restrepo, Anilu Daza, D' Alessio, Luciana, Homayoun, Maryam, Bahrami, Zahra, Alessi, Rudá, Paytan, Angélica Aroni, Kochen, Silvia, Myers, Lorna, Sawchuk, Tyson, Buchhalter, Jeffrey, Taha, Firas, Lazar, Lorraine M., Pick, Susannah, and Nicholson, Timothy
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PSYCHOGENIC nonepileptic seizures , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *AGE of onset , *RELIGIOUS differences , *CROSS-cultural studies , *OVERWEIGHT persons - Abstract
The aim of this multicenter international cross-cultural study was to compare clinical variables in a large sample of people with adult-onset psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES). In this retrospective study, we evaluated persons with documented PNES, who were older than 16 years of age at the onset, from four countries (i.e., Iran, Brazil, Venezuela, and Argentina) regarding their age, gender, PNES semiology, and possible predisposing factors. We included 389 patients (244 from Iran, 66 from Brazil, 51 from Venezuela, and 28 from Argentina). Age at diagnosis was 32 ± 9 years (range: 17–64 years), and age at the onset of seizures was 27 ± 8 years (range: 17–49 years). There was a female predominance in all countries. The demographic characteristics and factors associated with PNES were similar among the countries. However, there were significant semiological differences among the countries. This study corroborates the notion that PNES share more similarities than differences cross-culturally and across international borders. However, the background determined by cultural, ethnic, and religious differences may influence the semiology of PNES. Further cross-cultural studies involving more than two continents may advance our understanding of PNES. • We included 389 patients (244 from Iran, 66 from Brazil, 51 from Venezuela, and 28 from Argentina). • There was a female predominance in all countries. • The demographic characteristics and factors associated with PNES were similar among the countries. • However, there were significant semiological differences among the countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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9. Clinical characteristics of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures across the lifespan: An international retrospective study.
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Sawchuk, Tyson, Asadi-Pooya, Ali A., Myers, Lorna, Valente, Kette D., Restrepo, Anilu Daza, D' Alessio, Luciana, Homayoun, Maryam, Bahrami, Zahra, Alessi, Rudá, Paytan, Angélica Aroni, Kochen, Silvia, Taha, Firas, Lazar, Lorraine M., Pick, Susannah, Nicholson, Timothy R., and Buchhalter, Jeffrey
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PSYCHOGENIC nonepileptic seizures , *SEIZURES (Medicine) , *AGE groups , *TEENAGE girls , *AGE of onset , *BODY movement - Abstract
Previous studies from a few countries have reported semiological differences in younger children compared with adolescents or adults with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNESs). This study tested the hypothesis that semiological, demographic, and historical risk factors vary with different ages of PNES onset in a large cohort from different countries. In this retrospective study, we investigated patients consecutively referred for PNES, who were admitted to epilepsy monitoring units in Iran, Brazil, Venezuela, Canada, Argentina, and USA. Age, gender, age at seizure onset, seizure semiology, and factors predisposing to PNES (abuse, stressors) were documented according to routine diagnostic practices at each center. Participants were grouped according to their age at onset (i.e., childhood, adolescence, or adulthood). A total of 448 patients were studied. Female predominance was associated with adolescent- (85/122, 70%) and adult-onset (190/270, 70%) but not in childhood-onset PNES (28/56, 50%) (p = 0.011). Event frequency in the month preceding the diagnosis was higher in the childhood- [ x ¯ = 50, standard deviation (sd) = 82, p = 0.025] versus adolescent- (x ¯ = 24, sd = 36) or adult-onset groups (x ¯ = 29, sd = 61). Significant between-group differences were observed for generalized body movements (p = 0.0001) and ictal injury (p = 0.027), suggesting more severe ictal presentations in adult-onset PNES compared with younger ages. Adult-onset patients were also more likely to be taking an unnecessary antiepileptic medication (p = 0.010). While PNES may present at any age, there appear to be notable differences across the lifespan with respect to some of the clinical characteristics. Further international and cross-cultural studies may reveal other interesting characteristics of PNES. • We included 448 patients from 6 countries (Iran = 262, Brazil = 85, Venezuela = 43, Canada = 21, Argentina = 19, and USA = 18). • There was a female predominance in adolescent and adult-onset PNES but not in childhood-onset patients. • Frequency of PNES events was significantly higher in the childhood-onset versus adolescent and adult-onset patients. • Generalized body movements and ictal injury were more common in adult-onset PNES than younger onset age groups. • Unnecessary antiepileptic medication was more likely to be prescribed among adult-onset PNES patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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