12 results on '"Benmessaoud D"'
Search Results
2. P-698 - Analysis of SMARCA2 and genes encoding interactors of SWI/SNF SMARCA2/BRM protein in schizophrenia patients from an algerian trio cohort
- Author
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Benmessaoud, D., primary, Bestel, A.-M.L., additional, Delepine, M., additional, Hager, J., additional, Moalic, J.-M., additional, Gorwood, P., additional, Kacha, F., additional, and Simonneau, M., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. SMARCA2 common variant association and rare variant excess in Schizophrenia patients from an Algerian Trio Cohort
- Author
-
Benmessaoud, D., primary, Lepagnol-Bestel, A.-M., additional, Delepine, M., additional, Hager, J., additional, Moalic, J.-M., additional, Gorwood, P., additional, Kacha, F., additional, and Simonneau, M., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. P03-177 - SMARCA2 common variant association and rare variant excess in Schizophrenia patients from an Algerian Trio Cohort
- Author
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Benmessaoud, D., Lepagnol-Bestel, A.-M., Delepine, M., Hager, J., Moalic, J.-M., Gorwood, P., Kacha, F., and Simonneau, M.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Excess of transmission of the G allele of the -1438A/G polymorphism of the 5-HT2A receptor gene in patients with schizophrenia responsive to antipsychotics
- Author
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Hamon Michel, Ramoz Nicolas, Boni Claudette, Hamdani Nora, Benmessaoud Dalila, Kacha Farid, and Gorwood Philip
- Subjects
Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background The -1438A/G polymorphism of the 5-HT2A gene has been found to be associated with clinical response to clozapine and other second generation antipsychotics. Testing the impact of this marker on response to first generation antipsychotics (which have a lower affinity for the 5-HT2A receptor) provides the opportunity to help disentangling the two different roles that this polymorphism might have. A psychopharmacogenetic role should be detected only for antipsychotics with high affinity to the 5-HT2A receptor (therefore to second generation antipsychotics). An alternative role would imply tagging a subgroup of patients responsive to any antipsychotic, whatever their affinity, meaning that the association is more depending on non pharmacological charaterictics, such as clinical specificities. Methods A family-based sample of 100 Algerian patients with schizophrenia (according to DSM-IV criteria) and their 200 biological parents was recruited, in order to avoid stratification biases. Patients were all treated, or have been treated, by conventional antipsychotics (mainly haloperidol) for at least four weeks, at appropriate dosage. May and Dencker scale was used to distinguish responders and non responders. Results No allele of the -1438A/G polymorphism of the 5-HT2A gene was transmitted in excess (50 transmitted for 38 untransmitted) in the whole sample of patients with schizophrenia (p = .90). In contrast, a significant excess of transmission of the G allele was observed (p = .02) in the subgroup of patients with good treatment response (17 transmitted for 6 untransmitted). Conclusion Using a TDT approach, we showed that the G allele of the -1438A/G polymorphism of the gene coding for the 5-HT2A receptor was associated to schizophrenia with good response to conventional antipsychotics, although this conclusion is based on 88 informative patients only. Because previous data showed the same result with atypical antipsychotics, it can be concluded that the G allele tags a subgroup of schizophrenic patients with greater chance of improvement with antipsychotics of either type.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Accessibility of psychiatric vocabulary: An international study about schizophrenia essential features
- Author
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Françoise Askevis-Leherpeux, Jean-Baptiste Hazo, Mohamed Agoub, Antoine Baleige, Victoria Barikova, Dalila Benmessaoud, Floriane Brunet, Mauro-Giovanni Carta, Giulio Castelpietra, David Crepaz-Keay, Nicolas Daumerie, Vincent Demassiet, Audrey Fontaine, Neringa Grigutyte, Mathilde Guernut, Jugal Kishore, Marta Kiss, Marie Koenig, Marc Laporta, Elkhansaa Layoussif, Youssouf Limane, Marcelino Lopez, Gioia Mura, Jean-François Pelletier, Mbolatiana Raharinivo, Geoffrey Reed, Sami Richa, Rebecca Robles-Garcia, Shekhar Saxena, Marina Skourteli, Fabio Tassi, Anne-Claire Stona, Catherine Thévenon, Michel Triantafyllou, Fotis Vasilopoulos, Stéphanie Wooley, Jean-Luc Roelandt, Askevis-Leherpeux, F., Hazo, J. -B., Agoub, M., Baleige, A., Barikova, V., Benmessaoud, D., Brunet, F., Carta, M. -G., Castelpietra, G., Crepaz-Keay, D., Daumerie, N., Demassiet, V., Fontaine, A., Grigutyte, N., Guernut, M., Kishore, J., Kiss, M., Koenig, M., Laporta, M., Layoussif, E., Limane, Y., Lopez, M., Mura, G., Pelletier, J. -F., Raharinivo, M., Reed, G., Richa, S., Robles-Garcia, R., Saxena, S., Skourteli, M., Tassi, F., Stona, A. -C., Thevenon, C., Triantafyllou, M., Vasilopoulos, F., Wooley, S., and Roelandt, J. -L.
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Schizophrenia ,Humans ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Vocabulary ,Biological Psychiatry ,Human - Abstract
N/A
- Published
- 2020
7. How service users and carers understand, perceive, rephrase, and communicate about 'depressive episode' and 'schizophrenia' diagnoses: an international participatory research
- Author
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Françoise Askevis-Leherpeux, David Crepaz-Keay, Dalila Benmessaoud, Victoria Barikova, Mohamed Agoub, Marcelino Lopez, Antoine Baleige, Marta Kiss, Gioia Mura, Marina Skourteli, Giulio Castelpietra, Jean-François Pelletier, Catherine Thevenon, Jugal Kishore, Stéphanie Wooley, Floriane Brunet, Neringa Grigutyte, Michel Triantafyllou, Audrey Fontaine, Jean-Luc Roelandt, Vincent Demassiet, Mbolatiana Raharinivo, Mauro-Giovanni Carta, Mathilde Guernut, Nicolas Daumerie, Anne-Claire Stona, M. Koenig, Fotis Vasilopoulos, Sami Richa, Rebecca Robles-Garcia, Youssouf Limane, Elkhansaa Layoussif, Shekhar Saxena, Marc Laporta, Geoffrey M. Reed, Roelandt, J. -L., Baleige, A., Koenig, M., Demassiet, V., Agoub, M., Barikova, V., Benmessaoud, D., Brunet, F., Carta, M. -G., Castelpietra, G., Crepaz-Keay, D., Daumerie, N., Fontaine, A., Grigutyte, N., Kishore, J., Kiss, M., Laporta, M., Layoussif, E., Limane, Y., Lopez, M., Mura, G., Pelletier, J. -F., Raharinivo, M., Richa, S., Robles-Garcia, R., Stona, A. -C., Skourteli, M., Thevenon, C., Triantafyllou, M., Vasilopoulos, F., Wooley, S., Reed, G., Guernut, M., Saxena, S., and Askevis-Leherpeux, F.
- Subjects
Vocabulary ,Participatory research ,Community-Based Participatory Research ,Health (social science) ,Social Psychology ,Carers ,Epidemiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming) ,Poison control ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,International Classification of Diseases ,International Classification of Disease ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Original Paper ,Communication ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Cognition ,Service users ,Mental illness ,medicine.disease ,Clinical utility ,Mental health ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Feeling ,Caregivers ,Carer ,Schizophrenia ,Psychology - Abstract
Background For ICD-11, the WHO emphasized the clinical utility of communication and the need to involve service users and carers in the revision process. Aims The objective was to assess whether medical vocabulary was accessible, which kinds of feelings it activated, whether and how users and carers would like to rephrase terms, and whether they used diagnosis to talk about mental health experiences. Method An innovative protocol focused on two diagnoses (depressive episode and schizophrenia) was implemented in 15 different countries. The same issues were discussed with users and carers: understanding, feelings, rephrasing, and communication. Results Most participants reported understanding the diagnoses, but associated them with negative feelings. While the negativity of “depressive episode” mostly came from the concept itself, that of “schizophrenia” was largely based on its social impact and stigmatization associated with “mental illness”. When rephrasing “depressive episode”, a majority kept the root “depress*”, and suppressed the temporal dimension or renamed it. Almost no one suggested a reformulation based on “schizophrenia”. Finally, when communicating, no one used the phrase “depressive episode”. Some participants used words based on “depress”, but no one mentioned “episode”. Very few used “schizophrenia”. Conclusion Data revealed a gap between concepts and emotional and cognitive experiences. Both professional and experiential language and knowledge have to be considered as complementary. Consequently, the ICD should be co-constructed by professionals, service users, and carers. It should take the emotional component of language, and the diversity of linguistic and cultural contexts, into account.
- Published
- 2020
8. De Novo Variants Found in Three Distinct Schizophrenia Populations Hit a Common Core Gene Network Related to Microtubule and Actin Cytoskeleton Gene Ontology Classes.
- Author
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Loe-Mie Y, Plançon C, Dubertret C, Yoshikawa T, Yalcin B, Collins SC, Boland A, Deleuze JF, Gorwood P, Benmessaoud D, Simonneau M, and Lepagnol-Bestel AM
- Abstract
Schizophrenia (SZ) is a heterogeneous and debilitating psychiatric disorder with a strong genetic component. To elucidate functional networks perturbed in schizophrenia, we analysed a large dataset of whole-genome studies that identified SNVs, CNVs, and a multi-stage schizophrenia genome-wide association study. Our analysis identified three subclusters that are interrelated and with small overlaps: GO:0007017~Microtubule-Based Process, GO:00015629~Actin Cytoskeleton, and GO:0007268~SynapticTransmission. We next analysed three distinct trio cohorts of 75 SZ Algerian, 45 SZ French, and 61 SZ Japanese patients. We performed Illumina HiSeq whole-exome sequencing and identified de novo mutations using a Bayesian approach. We validated 88 de novo mutations by Sanger sequencing: 35 in French, 21 in Algerian, and 32 in Japanese SZ patients. These 88 de novo mutations exhibited an enrichment in genes encoding proteins related to GO:0051015~actin filament binding ( p = 0.0011) using David, and enrichments in GO: 0003774~transport ( p = 0.019) and GO:0003729~mRNA binding ( p = 0.010) using Amigo. One of these de novo variant was found in CORO1C coding sequence. We studied Coro1c haploinsufficiency in a Coro1c
+/- mouse and found defects in the corpus callosum. These results could motivate future studies of the mechanisms surrounding genes encoding proteins involved in transport and the cytoskeleton, with the goal of developing therapeutic intervention strategies for a subset of SZ cases.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Accessibility of psychiatric vocabulary: An international study about schizophrenia essential features.
- Author
-
Askevis-Leherpeux F, Hazo JB, Agoub M, Baleige A, Barikova V, Benmessaoud D, Brunet F, Carta MG, Castelpietra G, Crepaz-Keay D, Daumerie N, Demassiet V, Fontaine A, Grigutyte N, Guernut M, Kishore J, Kiss M, Koenig M, Laporta M, Layoussif E, Limane Y, Lopez M, Mura G, Pelletier JF, Raharinivo M, Reed G, Richa S, Robles-Garcia R, Saxena S, Skourteli M, Tassi F, Stona AC, Thévenon C, Triantafyllou M, Vasilopoulos F, Wooley S, and Roelandt JL
- Subjects
- Humans, Schizophrenic Psychology, Vocabulary, Schizophrenia
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. How service users and carers understand, perceive, rephrase, and communicate about "depressive episode" and "schizophrenia" diagnoses: an international participatory research.
- Author
-
Roelandt JL, Baleige A, Koenig M, Demassiet V, Agoub M, Barikova V, Benmessaoud D, Brunet F, Carta MG, Castelpietra G, Crepaz-Keay D, Daumerie N, Fontaine A, Grigutyte N, Kishore J, Kiss M, Laporta M, Layoussif E, Limane Y, Lopez M, Mura G, Pelletier JF, Raharinivo M, Richa S, Robles-Garcia R, Stona AC, Skourteli M, Thévenon C, Triantafyllou M, Vasilopoulos F, Wooley S, Reed G, Guernut M, Saxena S, and Askevis-Leherpeux F
- Subjects
- Communication, Community-Based Participatory Research, Humans, International Classification of Diseases, Caregivers, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenia therapy
- Abstract
Background: For ICD-11, the WHO emphasized the clinical utility of communication and the need to involve service users and carers in the revision process., Aims: The objective was to assess whether medical vocabulary was accessible, which kinds of feelings it activated, whether and how users and carers would like to rephrase terms, and whether they used diagnosis to talk about mental health experiences., Method: An innovative protocol focused on two diagnoses (depressive episode and schizophrenia) was implemented in 15 different countries. The same issues were discussed with users and carers: understanding, feelings, rephrasing, and communication., Results: Most participants reported understanding the diagnoses, but associated them with negative feelings. While the negativity of "depressive episode" mostly came from the concept itself, that of "schizophrenia" was largely based on its social impact and stigmatization associated with "mental illness". When rephrasing "depressive episode", a majority kept the root "depress*", and suppressed the temporal dimension or renamed it. Almost no one suggested a reformulation based on "schizophrenia". Finally, when communicating, no one used the phrase "depressive episode". Some participants used words based on "depress", but no one mentioned "episode". Very few used "schizophrenia"., Conclusion: Data revealed a gap between concepts and emotional and cognitive experiences. Both professional and experiential language and knowledge have to be considered as complementary. Consequently, the ICD should be co-constructed by professionals, service users, and carers. It should take the emotional component of language, and the diversity of linguistic and cultural contexts, into account.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Association of DISC1 gene with schizophrenia in families from two distinct French and Algerian populations.
- Author
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Lepagnol-Bestel AM, Dubertret C, Benmessaoud D, Simonneau M, Adès J, Kacha F, Hamdani N, Gorwood P, and Ramoz N
- Subjects
- Algeria, Demography, Family, Female, France, Humans, Male, Phenotype, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Young Adult, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetics, Population, Nerve Tissue Proteins genetics, Schizophrenia genetics
- Abstract
Objective: The Disrupted-in-Schizophrenia-1 (DISC1) gene is a promising genetic risk factor for major mental illnesses, especially schizophrenia. Several variants encompassing the DISC1 gene have been associated with schizophrenia and specific clinical features. Negative results were nevertheless observed, stratification biases, heterogeneity of the analyzed samples and low statistical power being potentially involved., Methods: We analyzed four single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), including three non-synonymous SNPs, of DISC1 in two independent samples of trios, from France and Algeria, using family-based association tests to elude statistical limits., Results: In 114 French schizophrenia trios, the C allele of non-synonymous rs6675281/Leu607Phe/C1872T was significantly over-transmitted [odds ratio (OR)=2.3, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.1-4.4]. This same SNP was also more frequently transmitted in the 100 Algerian schizophrenia trios (OR=2.6, 95% CI=0.9-7.3). In the combined 214 trios, a significant over-transmission of the C allele of rs6675281 to the affected probands was observed (P=0.002), even after correction for multiple testing (P corrected=0.01 OR=2.4 and 95% CI=1.3-4.2). Assessing if a dimension of schizophrenia could be more specifically involved, we found that patients with the C allele had a significantly higher Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms total score (P=0.0002)., Conclusion: The analysis adds convergent evidence in favor of a significant role of the DISC1 gene as a risk factor for schizophrenia, as present in two different samples, in family trios rather than with a case--control approach, and even when multiple tests are controlled for. We could further potentially attribute this effect to the negative dimension of schizophrenia.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Excess of transmission of the G allele of the -1438A/G polymorphism of the 5-HT2A receptor gene in patients with schizophrenia responsive to antipsychotics.
- Author
-
Benmessaoud D, Hamdani N, Boni C, Ramoz N, Hamon M, Kacha F, and Gorwood P
- Subjects
- Adenine, Adult, Algeria, Clozapine therapeutic use, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Family, Female, Gene Frequency, Guanine, Haloperidol therapeutic use, Humans, Lithium Carbonate therapeutic use, Male, Patient Selection, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Risperidone therapeutic use, Treatment Outcome, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Receptor, Serotonin, 5-HT2A genetics, Schizophrenia drug therapy, Schizophrenia genetics
- Abstract
Background: The -1438A/G polymorphism of the 5-HT2A gene has been found to be associated with clinical response to clozapine and other second generation antipsychotics. Testing the impact of this marker on response to first generation antipsychotics (which have a lower affinity for the 5-HT2A receptor) provides the opportunity to help disentangling the two different roles that this polymorphism might have. A psychopharmacogenetic role should be detected only for antipsychotics with high affinity to the 5-HT2A receptor (therefore to second generation antipsychotics). An alternative role would imply tagging a subgroup of patients responsive to any antipsychotic, whatever their affinity, meaning that the association is more depending on non pharmacological charaterictics, such as clinical specificities., Methods: A family-based sample of 100 Algerian patients with schizophrenia (according to DSM-IV criteria) and their 200 biological parents was recruited, in order to avoid stratification biases. Patients were all treated, or have been treated, by conventional antipsychotics (mainly haloperidol) for at least four weeks, at appropriate dosage. May and Dencker scale was used to distinguish responders and non responders., Results: No allele of the -1438A/G polymorphism of the 5-HT2A gene was transmitted in excess (50 transmitted for 38 untransmitted) in the whole sample of patients with schizophrenia (p = .90). In contrast, a significant excess of transmission of the G allele was observed (p = .02) in the subgroup of patients with good treatment response (17 transmitted for 6 untransmitted)., Conclusion: Using a TDT approach, we showed that the G allele of the -1438A/G polymorphism of the gene coding for the 5-HT2A receptor was associated to schizophrenia with good response to conventional antipsychotics, although this conclusion is based on 88 informative patients only. Because previous data showed the same result with atypical antipsychotics, it can be concluded that the G allele tags a subgroup of schizophrenic patients with greater chance of improvement with antipsychotics of either type.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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