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More research needed on how fetal exposure affects later development

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Tue, 09/01/2020 - 09:13

The number of genes in humans seems inadequate to account for the diversity seen in people. While maternal and paternal factors do play a role in the development of offspring, increased attention is being paid to the forces that express these genes and the impact they have on the health of a person, including development of psychiatric conditions, according to Dolores Malaspina, MD.

Epigenetics, or changes that occur in a fetal phenotype that do not involve changes to the genotype, involve factors such as DNA methylation to control gene expression, histone modification or the wrapping of genes, or the silencing and activation of certain genes with noncoding RNA-associated factors, said Dr. Malaspina of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York.

When this occurs during pregnancy, “the fetus does not simply develop from a genetic blueprint of the genes from its father and mother. Instead, signals are received throughout the pregnancy as to the health of the mother and signals about the environment,” she said in a virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

There is an evolutionary advantage to this so-called survival phenotype. “If, during the pregnancy, there’s a deficit of available nutrition, that may be a signal to the fetus that food will be scarce. In the setting of food scarcity, certain physiological adaptations during development can make the fetus more likely to survive to adulthood,” Dr. Malaspina said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. But a fetus programmed to adapt to scarcity of food may also develop cardiovascular disease, metabolic disease, or mortality later in life if the prediction of scarce nutrition proved incorrect.

This approach to thinking about the developmental origins of health and disease, which examines how prenatal and perinatal exposure to environmental factors affect disease in adulthood, has also found a link between some exposures and psychiatric disorders. The most famous example, the Dutch Hunger Winter Families Study, found an increased risk of schizophrenia among children born during the height of the famine (Int J Epidemiol. 2007 Dec;36[6]:1196-204). During the Arab-Israeli war of 1967 (the Six-Day War), which took place in June, the fetuses of mothers who were pregnant during that month had a higher risk of schizophrenia if the fetus was in the second month (relative risk, 2.3; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-4.7) or third month (RR, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.2-5.2) of fetal life during June 1967, Dr. Malaspina and associates wrote (BMC Psychiatry. 2008 Aug 21;8:71).



“The key aspect is the ascertainment of individuals during a circumscribed period, the assessment and then the longitudinal follow-up,” she said. “Obviously, these are not easy studies to do, but enough of them have been done such that for the last decade at least, the general population should be aware of the developmental origins of health and disease.”

Maternal depression is another psychiatric condition that can serve as a prenatal exposure to adversity. A recent review found that children of women with untreated depression were 56% more likely to be born preterm and 96% more likely to have a low birth weight (Pediatr Res. 2019 Jan;85[2]:134-45). “Preterm birth and early birth along with low birth weight, these have ramifying effects throughout life, not only on neonatal and infant mortality, but on developmental disorders and lifetime morbidity,” she said. “These effects of maternal depression withstand all sorts of accounting for other correlated exposures, including maternal age and her medical complications or substance use.”

Maternal stress and depression can also harm neurocognitive development and effective functioning of the children, Dr. Malaspina noted. “The modulation of mood and affect can affect temperament and affect mental health. Studies exist linking maternal depression to autism, attention-deficit disorder, developmental delay, behavioral problems, sleep problems, externalizing behavior and depression, showing a very large effect of maternal depression on offspring well-being.”

To complicate matters, at least 15% of women will experience major depression during pregnancy, but of these, major depression is not being addressed in about half. Nonpharmacologic interventions can include cognitive-behavioral therapy and relaxation practices, but medication should be considered as well. “There’s an ongoing debate about whether antidepressant medications are harmful for the offspring,” she said. However, reviews conducted by Dr. Malaspina’s group have found low evidence of serious harm.

“My summary would be the depression itself holds much more evidence for disrupting offspring health and development than medications,” Dr. Malaspina said. “Most studies find no adverse birth effects when they properly controlled accounting for maternal age and the other conditions and other medications.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Malaspina reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

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The number of genes in humans seems inadequate to account for the diversity seen in people. While maternal and paternal factors do play a role in the development of offspring, increased attention is being paid to the forces that express these genes and the impact they have on the health of a person, including development of psychiatric conditions, according to Dolores Malaspina, MD.

Epigenetics, or changes that occur in a fetal phenotype that do not involve changes to the genotype, involve factors such as DNA methylation to control gene expression, histone modification or the wrapping of genes, or the silencing and activation of certain genes with noncoding RNA-associated factors, said Dr. Malaspina of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York.

When this occurs during pregnancy, “the fetus does not simply develop from a genetic blueprint of the genes from its father and mother. Instead, signals are received throughout the pregnancy as to the health of the mother and signals about the environment,” she said in a virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

There is an evolutionary advantage to this so-called survival phenotype. “If, during the pregnancy, there’s a deficit of available nutrition, that may be a signal to the fetus that food will be scarce. In the setting of food scarcity, certain physiological adaptations during development can make the fetus more likely to survive to adulthood,” Dr. Malaspina said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. But a fetus programmed to adapt to scarcity of food may also develop cardiovascular disease, metabolic disease, or mortality later in life if the prediction of scarce nutrition proved incorrect.

This approach to thinking about the developmental origins of health and disease, which examines how prenatal and perinatal exposure to environmental factors affect disease in adulthood, has also found a link between some exposures and psychiatric disorders. The most famous example, the Dutch Hunger Winter Families Study, found an increased risk of schizophrenia among children born during the height of the famine (Int J Epidemiol. 2007 Dec;36[6]:1196-204). During the Arab-Israeli war of 1967 (the Six-Day War), which took place in June, the fetuses of mothers who were pregnant during that month had a higher risk of schizophrenia if the fetus was in the second month (relative risk, 2.3; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-4.7) or third month (RR, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.2-5.2) of fetal life during June 1967, Dr. Malaspina and associates wrote (BMC Psychiatry. 2008 Aug 21;8:71).



“The key aspect is the ascertainment of individuals during a circumscribed period, the assessment and then the longitudinal follow-up,” she said. “Obviously, these are not easy studies to do, but enough of them have been done such that for the last decade at least, the general population should be aware of the developmental origins of health and disease.”

Maternal depression is another psychiatric condition that can serve as a prenatal exposure to adversity. A recent review found that children of women with untreated depression were 56% more likely to be born preterm and 96% more likely to have a low birth weight (Pediatr Res. 2019 Jan;85[2]:134-45). “Preterm birth and early birth along with low birth weight, these have ramifying effects throughout life, not only on neonatal and infant mortality, but on developmental disorders and lifetime morbidity,” she said. “These effects of maternal depression withstand all sorts of accounting for other correlated exposures, including maternal age and her medical complications or substance use.”

Maternal stress and depression can also harm neurocognitive development and effective functioning of the children, Dr. Malaspina noted. “The modulation of mood and affect can affect temperament and affect mental health. Studies exist linking maternal depression to autism, attention-deficit disorder, developmental delay, behavioral problems, sleep problems, externalizing behavior and depression, showing a very large effect of maternal depression on offspring well-being.”

To complicate matters, at least 15% of women will experience major depression during pregnancy, but of these, major depression is not being addressed in about half. Nonpharmacologic interventions can include cognitive-behavioral therapy and relaxation practices, but medication should be considered as well. “There’s an ongoing debate about whether antidepressant medications are harmful for the offspring,” she said. However, reviews conducted by Dr. Malaspina’s group have found low evidence of serious harm.

“My summary would be the depression itself holds much more evidence for disrupting offspring health and development than medications,” Dr. Malaspina said. “Most studies find no adverse birth effects when they properly controlled accounting for maternal age and the other conditions and other medications.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Malaspina reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

The number of genes in humans seems inadequate to account for the diversity seen in people. While maternal and paternal factors do play a role in the development of offspring, increased attention is being paid to the forces that express these genes and the impact they have on the health of a person, including development of psychiatric conditions, according to Dolores Malaspina, MD.

Epigenetics, or changes that occur in a fetal phenotype that do not involve changes to the genotype, involve factors such as DNA methylation to control gene expression, histone modification or the wrapping of genes, or the silencing and activation of certain genes with noncoding RNA-associated factors, said Dr. Malaspina of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York.

When this occurs during pregnancy, “the fetus does not simply develop from a genetic blueprint of the genes from its father and mother. Instead, signals are received throughout the pregnancy as to the health of the mother and signals about the environment,” she said in a virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

There is an evolutionary advantage to this so-called survival phenotype. “If, during the pregnancy, there’s a deficit of available nutrition, that may be a signal to the fetus that food will be scarce. In the setting of food scarcity, certain physiological adaptations during development can make the fetus more likely to survive to adulthood,” Dr. Malaspina said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. But a fetus programmed to adapt to scarcity of food may also develop cardiovascular disease, metabolic disease, or mortality later in life if the prediction of scarce nutrition proved incorrect.

This approach to thinking about the developmental origins of health and disease, which examines how prenatal and perinatal exposure to environmental factors affect disease in adulthood, has also found a link between some exposures and psychiatric disorders. The most famous example, the Dutch Hunger Winter Families Study, found an increased risk of schizophrenia among children born during the height of the famine (Int J Epidemiol. 2007 Dec;36[6]:1196-204). During the Arab-Israeli war of 1967 (the Six-Day War), which took place in June, the fetuses of mothers who were pregnant during that month had a higher risk of schizophrenia if the fetus was in the second month (relative risk, 2.3; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-4.7) or third month (RR, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.2-5.2) of fetal life during June 1967, Dr. Malaspina and associates wrote (BMC Psychiatry. 2008 Aug 21;8:71).



“The key aspect is the ascertainment of individuals during a circumscribed period, the assessment and then the longitudinal follow-up,” she said. “Obviously, these are not easy studies to do, but enough of them have been done such that for the last decade at least, the general population should be aware of the developmental origins of health and disease.”

Maternal depression is another psychiatric condition that can serve as a prenatal exposure to adversity. A recent review found that children of women with untreated depression were 56% more likely to be born preterm and 96% more likely to have a low birth weight (Pediatr Res. 2019 Jan;85[2]:134-45). “Preterm birth and early birth along with low birth weight, these have ramifying effects throughout life, not only on neonatal and infant mortality, but on developmental disorders and lifetime morbidity,” she said. “These effects of maternal depression withstand all sorts of accounting for other correlated exposures, including maternal age and her medical complications or substance use.”

Maternal stress and depression can also harm neurocognitive development and effective functioning of the children, Dr. Malaspina noted. “The modulation of mood and affect can affect temperament and affect mental health. Studies exist linking maternal depression to autism, attention-deficit disorder, developmental delay, behavioral problems, sleep problems, externalizing behavior and depression, showing a very large effect of maternal depression on offspring well-being.”

To complicate matters, at least 15% of women will experience major depression during pregnancy, but of these, major depression is not being addressed in about half. Nonpharmacologic interventions can include cognitive-behavioral therapy and relaxation practices, but medication should be considered as well. “There’s an ongoing debate about whether antidepressant medications are harmful for the offspring,” she said. However, reviews conducted by Dr. Malaspina’s group have found low evidence of serious harm.

“My summary would be the depression itself holds much more evidence for disrupting offspring health and development than medications,” Dr. Malaspina said. “Most studies find no adverse birth effects when they properly controlled accounting for maternal age and the other conditions and other medications.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Malaspina reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

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Pregnancy can be ‘a vulnerable time’ for developing mental disorders

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Thu, 09/24/2020 - 11:46

Pregnancy and the postpartum period are a “very vulnerable time for mental disorders,” according to Henry A. Nasrallah, MD.

A pregnant woman is examined by a health care provider
Courtney Hale/Getty Images

“Those changes that are helping pregnancy can also have psychiatric and psychopathological implications,” Dr. Nasrallah said in a virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah, University of Cincinnati
Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

Numerous dramatic changes in physiology, immune functions, cognition, neuroplasticity, and behavior occur during pregnancy, noted Dr. Nasrallah of the University of Cincinnati. For example, the volume of the brain actually decreases during pregnancy, but brain size recovers over the 6 months after delivery. “Clearly, this is a transitional and a transient phenomenon,” he said. “The decrease in brain volume is associated with changes in brain metabolism and an increase in intracellular pH after delivery.”

But these changes can also carry risks for psychiatric disorders, Dr. Nasrallah explained. Changes in the hippocampus, which is “very plastic throughout adulthood,” have been linked to aging, cognition, pregnancy, and motherhood. “The hippocampus is the ‘Grand Central Station’ of memory in the brain, and the hippocampus is affected by neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders, which disproportionately affect women,” he said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education.

Dr. Nasrallah said the hippocampus has particular susceptibility during pregnancy and in the postpartum period, or in women who have previously been pregnant.

Gender of the fetus can even affect the health of the mother, he added. In women who are pregnant with male fetuses, working memory and spatial ability are higher than in women who are pregnant with female fetuses, Dr. Nasrallah said. This is tied to higher numbers of proinflammatory cytokines present in male fetuses. In female fetuses, there are lower levels of interferon-gamma and interleukin (IL)-12 in the first trimester, and higher levels of IL-1 beta, tumor necrosis factor B, IL-5, and IL-10 in the second trimester.

In particular, the perinatal period is a time of great risk for depression and anxiety. Women are also at risk for postpartum depression, particularly women with bipolar disorder, Dr. Nasrallah said.

“Cytokine interleukin-10 and interleukin-6 are both increased during psychosis and during depression, so you can see the vulnerability for developing postpartum depression.” Some women “have other genes that make them susceptible for mood disorders, and the pregnancy can push them over the edge,” he said.

If women have bipolar disorder prior to delivery, “they have a very high risk of postpartum depression, possibly because of this immune dysregulation that serves the pregnancy, but unfortunately makes the woman vulnerable for postpartum psychiatric disorders,” Dr. Nasrallah said.

The effects of having children extend into middle age, Dr. Nasrallah said. Research has shown giving birth to more than one to two children can affect a woman’s risk for Alzheimer’s disease and risk for early-onset of the disease. Women who have three or fewer children later in life are also more likely to live longer, he said. In general, a longer reproductive period, duration of breastfeeding, and low number of pregnancies result in better cognition, while younger age at first pregnancy leads to worse cognition.

So-called pregnancy brain causes some cognitive functions to decline, and women may experience trouble concentrating and memory disturbance. “Other functions increase for the sake of the baby,” including a high reaction to threatening stimuli, absent-mindedness, motivation, reward, fear, executive functions, social cognition, salience, and attachment, Dr. Nasrallah said. In some cases, hormone-driven remodeling of the maternal brain can cause postpartum psychosis, which can reduce the anterior cingulate cortex, left parahippocampal gyrus volume, and left superior temporal gyrus volume.

Most changes in the brain, however, appear to be temporary, Dr. Nasrallah noted. Executive function improves 2-6 months after delivery, which includes goal and directed behavior, working memory, inhibitory function, and cognitive flexibility. In the postpartum period, “the gray matter increases in the first 3-4 months, especially in the brain areas that are involved in maternal behavior that includes amygdala, hypothalamus, and prefrontal cortex,” he added. “All of those changes correlate with positive maternal attachment, and so that makes it easier for the mother to bond with the baby.

“Don’t think of it as a negative,” he said. “The decline in brain volume is actually associated with better mothering and increased attachment between the mother and the baby, which is vital for survival of the baby.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Nasrallah reports no relevant financial disclosures.

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Pregnancy and the postpartum period are a “very vulnerable time for mental disorders,” according to Henry A. Nasrallah, MD.

A pregnant woman is examined by a health care provider
Courtney Hale/Getty Images

“Those changes that are helping pregnancy can also have psychiatric and psychopathological implications,” Dr. Nasrallah said in a virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah, University of Cincinnati
Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

Numerous dramatic changes in physiology, immune functions, cognition, neuroplasticity, and behavior occur during pregnancy, noted Dr. Nasrallah of the University of Cincinnati. For example, the volume of the brain actually decreases during pregnancy, but brain size recovers over the 6 months after delivery. “Clearly, this is a transitional and a transient phenomenon,” he said. “The decrease in brain volume is associated with changes in brain metabolism and an increase in intracellular pH after delivery.”

But these changes can also carry risks for psychiatric disorders, Dr. Nasrallah explained. Changes in the hippocampus, which is “very plastic throughout adulthood,” have been linked to aging, cognition, pregnancy, and motherhood. “The hippocampus is the ‘Grand Central Station’ of memory in the brain, and the hippocampus is affected by neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders, which disproportionately affect women,” he said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education.

Dr. Nasrallah said the hippocampus has particular susceptibility during pregnancy and in the postpartum period, or in women who have previously been pregnant.

Gender of the fetus can even affect the health of the mother, he added. In women who are pregnant with male fetuses, working memory and spatial ability are higher than in women who are pregnant with female fetuses, Dr. Nasrallah said. This is tied to higher numbers of proinflammatory cytokines present in male fetuses. In female fetuses, there are lower levels of interferon-gamma and interleukin (IL)-12 in the first trimester, and higher levels of IL-1 beta, tumor necrosis factor B, IL-5, and IL-10 in the second trimester.

In particular, the perinatal period is a time of great risk for depression and anxiety. Women are also at risk for postpartum depression, particularly women with bipolar disorder, Dr. Nasrallah said.

“Cytokine interleukin-10 and interleukin-6 are both increased during psychosis and during depression, so you can see the vulnerability for developing postpartum depression.” Some women “have other genes that make them susceptible for mood disorders, and the pregnancy can push them over the edge,” he said.

If women have bipolar disorder prior to delivery, “they have a very high risk of postpartum depression, possibly because of this immune dysregulation that serves the pregnancy, but unfortunately makes the woman vulnerable for postpartum psychiatric disorders,” Dr. Nasrallah said.

The effects of having children extend into middle age, Dr. Nasrallah said. Research has shown giving birth to more than one to two children can affect a woman’s risk for Alzheimer’s disease and risk for early-onset of the disease. Women who have three or fewer children later in life are also more likely to live longer, he said. In general, a longer reproductive period, duration of breastfeeding, and low number of pregnancies result in better cognition, while younger age at first pregnancy leads to worse cognition.

So-called pregnancy brain causes some cognitive functions to decline, and women may experience trouble concentrating and memory disturbance. “Other functions increase for the sake of the baby,” including a high reaction to threatening stimuli, absent-mindedness, motivation, reward, fear, executive functions, social cognition, salience, and attachment, Dr. Nasrallah said. In some cases, hormone-driven remodeling of the maternal brain can cause postpartum psychosis, which can reduce the anterior cingulate cortex, left parahippocampal gyrus volume, and left superior temporal gyrus volume.

Most changes in the brain, however, appear to be temporary, Dr. Nasrallah noted. Executive function improves 2-6 months after delivery, which includes goal and directed behavior, working memory, inhibitory function, and cognitive flexibility. In the postpartum period, “the gray matter increases in the first 3-4 months, especially in the brain areas that are involved in maternal behavior that includes amygdala, hypothalamus, and prefrontal cortex,” he added. “All of those changes correlate with positive maternal attachment, and so that makes it easier for the mother to bond with the baby.

“Don’t think of it as a negative,” he said. “The decline in brain volume is actually associated with better mothering and increased attachment between the mother and the baby, which is vital for survival of the baby.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Nasrallah reports no relevant financial disclosures.

Pregnancy and the postpartum period are a “very vulnerable time for mental disorders,” according to Henry A. Nasrallah, MD.

A pregnant woman is examined by a health care provider
Courtney Hale/Getty Images

“Those changes that are helping pregnancy can also have psychiatric and psychopathological implications,” Dr. Nasrallah said in a virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah, University of Cincinnati
Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

Numerous dramatic changes in physiology, immune functions, cognition, neuroplasticity, and behavior occur during pregnancy, noted Dr. Nasrallah of the University of Cincinnati. For example, the volume of the brain actually decreases during pregnancy, but brain size recovers over the 6 months after delivery. “Clearly, this is a transitional and a transient phenomenon,” he said. “The decrease in brain volume is associated with changes in brain metabolism and an increase in intracellular pH after delivery.”

But these changes can also carry risks for psychiatric disorders, Dr. Nasrallah explained. Changes in the hippocampus, which is “very plastic throughout adulthood,” have been linked to aging, cognition, pregnancy, and motherhood. “The hippocampus is the ‘Grand Central Station’ of memory in the brain, and the hippocampus is affected by neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders, which disproportionately affect women,” he said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education.

Dr. Nasrallah said the hippocampus has particular susceptibility during pregnancy and in the postpartum period, or in women who have previously been pregnant.

Gender of the fetus can even affect the health of the mother, he added. In women who are pregnant with male fetuses, working memory and spatial ability are higher than in women who are pregnant with female fetuses, Dr. Nasrallah said. This is tied to higher numbers of proinflammatory cytokines present in male fetuses. In female fetuses, there are lower levels of interferon-gamma and interleukin (IL)-12 in the first trimester, and higher levels of IL-1 beta, tumor necrosis factor B, IL-5, and IL-10 in the second trimester.

In particular, the perinatal period is a time of great risk for depression and anxiety. Women are also at risk for postpartum depression, particularly women with bipolar disorder, Dr. Nasrallah said.

“Cytokine interleukin-10 and interleukin-6 are both increased during psychosis and during depression, so you can see the vulnerability for developing postpartum depression.” Some women “have other genes that make them susceptible for mood disorders, and the pregnancy can push them over the edge,” he said.

If women have bipolar disorder prior to delivery, “they have a very high risk of postpartum depression, possibly because of this immune dysregulation that serves the pregnancy, but unfortunately makes the woman vulnerable for postpartum psychiatric disorders,” Dr. Nasrallah said.

The effects of having children extend into middle age, Dr. Nasrallah said. Research has shown giving birth to more than one to two children can affect a woman’s risk for Alzheimer’s disease and risk for early-onset of the disease. Women who have three or fewer children later in life are also more likely to live longer, he said. In general, a longer reproductive period, duration of breastfeeding, and low number of pregnancies result in better cognition, while younger age at first pregnancy leads to worse cognition.

So-called pregnancy brain causes some cognitive functions to decline, and women may experience trouble concentrating and memory disturbance. “Other functions increase for the sake of the baby,” including a high reaction to threatening stimuli, absent-mindedness, motivation, reward, fear, executive functions, social cognition, salience, and attachment, Dr. Nasrallah said. In some cases, hormone-driven remodeling of the maternal brain can cause postpartum psychosis, which can reduce the anterior cingulate cortex, left parahippocampal gyrus volume, and left superior temporal gyrus volume.

Most changes in the brain, however, appear to be temporary, Dr. Nasrallah noted. Executive function improves 2-6 months after delivery, which includes goal and directed behavior, working memory, inhibitory function, and cognitive flexibility. In the postpartum period, “the gray matter increases in the first 3-4 months, especially in the brain areas that are involved in maternal behavior that includes amygdala, hypothalamus, and prefrontal cortex,” he added. “All of those changes correlate with positive maternal attachment, and so that makes it easier for the mother to bond with the baby.

“Don’t think of it as a negative,” he said. “The decline in brain volume is actually associated with better mothering and increased attachment between the mother and the baby, which is vital for survival of the baby.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Nasrallah reports no relevant financial disclosures.

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Aggression is influenced by genetic, environmental factors

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Mon, 08/24/2020 - 12:24

Aggression in individuals is influenced by genetic and environmental factors, but can be reduced with treatment, according to Emil F. Coccaro, MD.

“It actually is a complex triad of emotion, cognition, and behavior. The emotion is anger, the cognition is hostility, and the behavior is aggression. And they sort of go in that order,” Dr. Coccaro said at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

Although aggression can be thought of in a numerous ways, premeditated and impulsive aggression are most relevant to behavioral studies in psychiatry, Dr. Coccaro explained. Premeditated aggression is goal oriented, while impulsive aggression comes from frustration or a response to a threat. Impulsive aggression is “typically social or frustrative in nature, and studies that we’ve done that show that individuals move toward a threat while nonaggressives move away it,” he said. Both types of aggression can be seen in the same individuals at different times.

Aggression also can be considered using a threshold model. Calm individuals, for example, might have a low baseline of aggression and a high threshold before they act out. An aggressive person, on the other hand, has a lower threshold and a higher baseline level. “Their delta to get to the point where they’re going to explode is much shorter, much lower than it is in someone who is healthy,” Dr. Coccaro said.

“What we think is that the threshold to explode is probably regulated by various neurobiological features. The baseline state of aggression also may be related to baseline neurobiological features, but also what’s going on in the environment, because the neurobiological features that send someone to exploding aggression are there all the time,” he explained.

Individuals with secondary aggression are likely to have an underlying condition, such as a primary disease of the brain, systemic or metabolic disorder, or a psychiatric disorder such as schizophrenia. “If someone’s schizophrenic and they’ve got voices telling them to hurt somebody, or delusions that someone’s going to hurt them, that’s not primary aggression, that’s secondary to the psychosis,” Dr. Coccaro noted.

An individual with primary aggression is likely to have intermittent explosive disorder (IED). IED is not a new diagnosis and has been listed in the DSM since the DSM-I as “passive-aggressive personality.” It was relisted in the DSM-II as “explosive personality,” then changed to IED in the DSM-3 as a diagnosis of exclusion that was poorly operationalized, according to Dr. Coccaro. The criteria for IED under the DSM-III did not define the number of recurrent outbursts needed, what they looked like, the time frame, and excluded people who were generally impulsive.

“That’s not really what these people look like and it’s not what impulsive aggression looks like,” he said. Although the DSM-IV removed the exclusion criteria for general impulsivity and aggression, “it was still purely operational.”

The DSM-5 criteria define IED as “verbal and physical aggression without destruction or assault, twice equally on average for 3 months, or three or more episodes of physical destruction/assault over a 1-year period. These individuals have outbursts “grossly out of proportion to provocation,” the aggression is generally impulsive, and it causes stress and impairment with an age of onset at older than 6 years.

“It’s not better accounted for a whole variety of things, but we actually made some of those exclusion criteria a little less stringent,” compared with criteria in the DSM-IV, Dr. Coccaro said. “That’s because it turns out that it doesn’t really matter much of the time what the comorbidity is. If you have this aggressiveness in the absence of those other conditions, it’s IED.”

According to a reanalysis of the National Comorbidity Survey, 11.7% of adolescents displayed aggressiveness within the last year and 17.3% over a lifetime, compared with 5.1% of adults within the last year and 8.0% within a lifetime. Under DSM-5 criteria, 6.4% of adolescents within the last year and 8.9% over a lifetime currently have IED, compared with 2.6% of adults within the last year and 4.0% over a lifetime, but “could go as high” as the percentage of individuals diagnosed with aggressiveness, Dr. Coccaro noted.

“People who are not called IED many times are not called IED because we didn’t have all the information we needed to actually make the diagnosis,” he said.

Individuals with DSM-5 IED can have as many as 30 episodes in 1 year, compared with those who are nonaggressive and are also more likely to damage property. “These are the big episodes, not simply the episodes where people are getting irritable and snapping at people. These are the big ones, where they’re really destroying objects and pushing or hitting people,” Dr. Coccaro said. About one-fourth of individuals with IED hurt victims badly enough that they require medical attention, one-fifth exhibit aggression toward a partner, and one-fourth receive aggression from their own partner.

In terms of comorbidity with other psychiatric disorders, “IEDs don’t have more comorbidity in general than other disorders,” Dr. Coccaro noted. Personality disorders such as paranoid, antisocial, borderline narcissistic, and obsessive-compulsive disorders are more common in individuals with IED. Aggression in these people present differently depending on the personality disorder. “Someone who’s paranoid might blow up at you if you get in their face. For an antisocial, they’ll blow up at you if you’re preventing them from doing what they want to do. Borderlines, you reject them or you abandon them, they’re going to blow up. Narcissists will blow up when you reject. OCD will also blow up when you mess around with their sense of order,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Genetics also play a role in whether a person may have IED. There is a “clear signal” in families, with about one-fourth of individuals with IED having a relative with IED, compared with 8% of nonaggressive individuals. These percentages were consistent, regardless of whether the individual had a comorbid condition, history of alcohol or drug use, or history of suicide, he said. Other factors that influence likelihood of IED are environment, behaviors such as smoking, and conditions such as traumatic brain injury. Experiencing aggression as a child is another factor.

“IED is the categorical expression of impulsive aggression, and it’s far more common than once thought,” Dr. Coccaro said. “And IED is totally unrecognized in its role in societal violence.”
 

 

 

Treatment can suppress, but not cure aggression

Medications used to treat aggression and impulsive aggression include lithium, SSRIs, mood stabilizers, neuroleptics, and beta-blockers. However, the treatments are not a “magic bullet,” Dr. Coccaro noted. “The meds tend to suppress aggressiveness, but not cure it.”

Timing of treatment is also a factor for medication. In studies of patients taking lithium for aggression, for example, “when they gave the drug to people who liked being aggressive, they didn’t like being on these drugs because it made them feel unprotected. It just was at odds with who they thought they were,” Dr. Coccaro said. “The people who took the drug and did well and really liked being on the drug with people who didn’t like that they were aggressive.”

Neurorehabilitation and cognitive-behavioral therapy specific to aggression, called cognitive relaxation and coping skills therapy, are nonpsychotropic approaches to treating aggression. “These therapeutic approaches are working not only to reduce progression, but also to reduce the social information processing problems that aggressive individuals have,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Another approach, known as interpretation bias training, teaches individuals with aggression to judge slightly angry-looking photos of people as not being angry. After 7-14 days of training, aggressive behavior in adolescents has been shown to be reduced. The changes were also visible on functional MRI.

“What they found was that when you treated them, the change in the amygdala went down when you looked at the angry faces and in the left lateral, post training, they became happier,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Coccaro reported serving as a consultant for Avanir, Azevan, and Bracket. He also reported receiving research grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and the Pritzker Pucker Family Foundation.

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Aggression in individuals is influenced by genetic and environmental factors, but can be reduced with treatment, according to Emil F. Coccaro, MD.

“It actually is a complex triad of emotion, cognition, and behavior. The emotion is anger, the cognition is hostility, and the behavior is aggression. And they sort of go in that order,” Dr. Coccaro said at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

Although aggression can be thought of in a numerous ways, premeditated and impulsive aggression are most relevant to behavioral studies in psychiatry, Dr. Coccaro explained. Premeditated aggression is goal oriented, while impulsive aggression comes from frustration or a response to a threat. Impulsive aggression is “typically social or frustrative in nature, and studies that we’ve done that show that individuals move toward a threat while nonaggressives move away it,” he said. Both types of aggression can be seen in the same individuals at different times.

Aggression also can be considered using a threshold model. Calm individuals, for example, might have a low baseline of aggression and a high threshold before they act out. An aggressive person, on the other hand, has a lower threshold and a higher baseline level. “Their delta to get to the point where they’re going to explode is much shorter, much lower than it is in someone who is healthy,” Dr. Coccaro said.

“What we think is that the threshold to explode is probably regulated by various neurobiological features. The baseline state of aggression also may be related to baseline neurobiological features, but also what’s going on in the environment, because the neurobiological features that send someone to exploding aggression are there all the time,” he explained.

Individuals with secondary aggression are likely to have an underlying condition, such as a primary disease of the brain, systemic or metabolic disorder, or a psychiatric disorder such as schizophrenia. “If someone’s schizophrenic and they’ve got voices telling them to hurt somebody, or delusions that someone’s going to hurt them, that’s not primary aggression, that’s secondary to the psychosis,” Dr. Coccaro noted.

An individual with primary aggression is likely to have intermittent explosive disorder (IED). IED is not a new diagnosis and has been listed in the DSM since the DSM-I as “passive-aggressive personality.” It was relisted in the DSM-II as “explosive personality,” then changed to IED in the DSM-3 as a diagnosis of exclusion that was poorly operationalized, according to Dr. Coccaro. The criteria for IED under the DSM-III did not define the number of recurrent outbursts needed, what they looked like, the time frame, and excluded people who were generally impulsive.

“That’s not really what these people look like and it’s not what impulsive aggression looks like,” he said. Although the DSM-IV removed the exclusion criteria for general impulsivity and aggression, “it was still purely operational.”

The DSM-5 criteria define IED as “verbal and physical aggression without destruction or assault, twice equally on average for 3 months, or three or more episodes of physical destruction/assault over a 1-year period. These individuals have outbursts “grossly out of proportion to provocation,” the aggression is generally impulsive, and it causes stress and impairment with an age of onset at older than 6 years.

“It’s not better accounted for a whole variety of things, but we actually made some of those exclusion criteria a little less stringent,” compared with criteria in the DSM-IV, Dr. Coccaro said. “That’s because it turns out that it doesn’t really matter much of the time what the comorbidity is. If you have this aggressiveness in the absence of those other conditions, it’s IED.”

According to a reanalysis of the National Comorbidity Survey, 11.7% of adolescents displayed aggressiveness within the last year and 17.3% over a lifetime, compared with 5.1% of adults within the last year and 8.0% within a lifetime. Under DSM-5 criteria, 6.4% of adolescents within the last year and 8.9% over a lifetime currently have IED, compared with 2.6% of adults within the last year and 4.0% over a lifetime, but “could go as high” as the percentage of individuals diagnosed with aggressiveness, Dr. Coccaro noted.

“People who are not called IED many times are not called IED because we didn’t have all the information we needed to actually make the diagnosis,” he said.

Individuals with DSM-5 IED can have as many as 30 episodes in 1 year, compared with those who are nonaggressive and are also more likely to damage property. “These are the big episodes, not simply the episodes where people are getting irritable and snapping at people. These are the big ones, where they’re really destroying objects and pushing or hitting people,” Dr. Coccaro said. About one-fourth of individuals with IED hurt victims badly enough that they require medical attention, one-fifth exhibit aggression toward a partner, and one-fourth receive aggression from their own partner.

In terms of comorbidity with other psychiatric disorders, “IEDs don’t have more comorbidity in general than other disorders,” Dr. Coccaro noted. Personality disorders such as paranoid, antisocial, borderline narcissistic, and obsessive-compulsive disorders are more common in individuals with IED. Aggression in these people present differently depending on the personality disorder. “Someone who’s paranoid might blow up at you if you get in their face. For an antisocial, they’ll blow up at you if you’re preventing them from doing what they want to do. Borderlines, you reject them or you abandon them, they’re going to blow up. Narcissists will blow up when you reject. OCD will also blow up when you mess around with their sense of order,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Genetics also play a role in whether a person may have IED. There is a “clear signal” in families, with about one-fourth of individuals with IED having a relative with IED, compared with 8% of nonaggressive individuals. These percentages were consistent, regardless of whether the individual had a comorbid condition, history of alcohol or drug use, or history of suicide, he said. Other factors that influence likelihood of IED are environment, behaviors such as smoking, and conditions such as traumatic brain injury. Experiencing aggression as a child is another factor.

“IED is the categorical expression of impulsive aggression, and it’s far more common than once thought,” Dr. Coccaro said. “And IED is totally unrecognized in its role in societal violence.”
 

 

 

Treatment can suppress, but not cure aggression

Medications used to treat aggression and impulsive aggression include lithium, SSRIs, mood stabilizers, neuroleptics, and beta-blockers. However, the treatments are not a “magic bullet,” Dr. Coccaro noted. “The meds tend to suppress aggressiveness, but not cure it.”

Timing of treatment is also a factor for medication. In studies of patients taking lithium for aggression, for example, “when they gave the drug to people who liked being aggressive, they didn’t like being on these drugs because it made them feel unprotected. It just was at odds with who they thought they were,” Dr. Coccaro said. “The people who took the drug and did well and really liked being on the drug with people who didn’t like that they were aggressive.”

Neurorehabilitation and cognitive-behavioral therapy specific to aggression, called cognitive relaxation and coping skills therapy, are nonpsychotropic approaches to treating aggression. “These therapeutic approaches are working not only to reduce progression, but also to reduce the social information processing problems that aggressive individuals have,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Another approach, known as interpretation bias training, teaches individuals with aggression to judge slightly angry-looking photos of people as not being angry. After 7-14 days of training, aggressive behavior in adolescents has been shown to be reduced. The changes were also visible on functional MRI.

“What they found was that when you treated them, the change in the amygdala went down when you looked at the angry faces and in the left lateral, post training, they became happier,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Coccaro reported serving as a consultant for Avanir, Azevan, and Bracket. He also reported receiving research grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and the Pritzker Pucker Family Foundation.

Aggression in individuals is influenced by genetic and environmental factors, but can be reduced with treatment, according to Emil F. Coccaro, MD.

“It actually is a complex triad of emotion, cognition, and behavior. The emotion is anger, the cognition is hostility, and the behavior is aggression. And they sort of go in that order,” Dr. Coccaro said at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

Although aggression can be thought of in a numerous ways, premeditated and impulsive aggression are most relevant to behavioral studies in psychiatry, Dr. Coccaro explained. Premeditated aggression is goal oriented, while impulsive aggression comes from frustration or a response to a threat. Impulsive aggression is “typically social or frustrative in nature, and studies that we’ve done that show that individuals move toward a threat while nonaggressives move away it,” he said. Both types of aggression can be seen in the same individuals at different times.

Aggression also can be considered using a threshold model. Calm individuals, for example, might have a low baseline of aggression and a high threshold before they act out. An aggressive person, on the other hand, has a lower threshold and a higher baseline level. “Their delta to get to the point where they’re going to explode is much shorter, much lower than it is in someone who is healthy,” Dr. Coccaro said.

“What we think is that the threshold to explode is probably regulated by various neurobiological features. The baseline state of aggression also may be related to baseline neurobiological features, but also what’s going on in the environment, because the neurobiological features that send someone to exploding aggression are there all the time,” he explained.

Individuals with secondary aggression are likely to have an underlying condition, such as a primary disease of the brain, systemic or metabolic disorder, or a psychiatric disorder such as schizophrenia. “If someone’s schizophrenic and they’ve got voices telling them to hurt somebody, or delusions that someone’s going to hurt them, that’s not primary aggression, that’s secondary to the psychosis,” Dr. Coccaro noted.

An individual with primary aggression is likely to have intermittent explosive disorder (IED). IED is not a new diagnosis and has been listed in the DSM since the DSM-I as “passive-aggressive personality.” It was relisted in the DSM-II as “explosive personality,” then changed to IED in the DSM-3 as a diagnosis of exclusion that was poorly operationalized, according to Dr. Coccaro. The criteria for IED under the DSM-III did not define the number of recurrent outbursts needed, what they looked like, the time frame, and excluded people who were generally impulsive.

“That’s not really what these people look like and it’s not what impulsive aggression looks like,” he said. Although the DSM-IV removed the exclusion criteria for general impulsivity and aggression, “it was still purely operational.”

The DSM-5 criteria define IED as “verbal and physical aggression without destruction or assault, twice equally on average for 3 months, or three or more episodes of physical destruction/assault over a 1-year period. These individuals have outbursts “grossly out of proportion to provocation,” the aggression is generally impulsive, and it causes stress and impairment with an age of onset at older than 6 years.

“It’s not better accounted for a whole variety of things, but we actually made some of those exclusion criteria a little less stringent,” compared with criteria in the DSM-IV, Dr. Coccaro said. “That’s because it turns out that it doesn’t really matter much of the time what the comorbidity is. If you have this aggressiveness in the absence of those other conditions, it’s IED.”

According to a reanalysis of the National Comorbidity Survey, 11.7% of adolescents displayed aggressiveness within the last year and 17.3% over a lifetime, compared with 5.1% of adults within the last year and 8.0% within a lifetime. Under DSM-5 criteria, 6.4% of adolescents within the last year and 8.9% over a lifetime currently have IED, compared with 2.6% of adults within the last year and 4.0% over a lifetime, but “could go as high” as the percentage of individuals diagnosed with aggressiveness, Dr. Coccaro noted.

“People who are not called IED many times are not called IED because we didn’t have all the information we needed to actually make the diagnosis,” he said.

Individuals with DSM-5 IED can have as many as 30 episodes in 1 year, compared with those who are nonaggressive and are also more likely to damage property. “These are the big episodes, not simply the episodes where people are getting irritable and snapping at people. These are the big ones, where they’re really destroying objects and pushing or hitting people,” Dr. Coccaro said. About one-fourth of individuals with IED hurt victims badly enough that they require medical attention, one-fifth exhibit aggression toward a partner, and one-fourth receive aggression from their own partner.

In terms of comorbidity with other psychiatric disorders, “IEDs don’t have more comorbidity in general than other disorders,” Dr. Coccaro noted. Personality disorders such as paranoid, antisocial, borderline narcissistic, and obsessive-compulsive disorders are more common in individuals with IED. Aggression in these people present differently depending on the personality disorder. “Someone who’s paranoid might blow up at you if you get in their face. For an antisocial, they’ll blow up at you if you’re preventing them from doing what they want to do. Borderlines, you reject them or you abandon them, they’re going to blow up. Narcissists will blow up when you reject. OCD will also blow up when you mess around with their sense of order,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Genetics also play a role in whether a person may have IED. There is a “clear signal” in families, with about one-fourth of individuals with IED having a relative with IED, compared with 8% of nonaggressive individuals. These percentages were consistent, regardless of whether the individual had a comorbid condition, history of alcohol or drug use, or history of suicide, he said. Other factors that influence likelihood of IED are environment, behaviors such as smoking, and conditions such as traumatic brain injury. Experiencing aggression as a child is another factor.

“IED is the categorical expression of impulsive aggression, and it’s far more common than once thought,” Dr. Coccaro said. “And IED is totally unrecognized in its role in societal violence.”
 

 

 

Treatment can suppress, but not cure aggression

Medications used to treat aggression and impulsive aggression include lithium, SSRIs, mood stabilizers, neuroleptics, and beta-blockers. However, the treatments are not a “magic bullet,” Dr. Coccaro noted. “The meds tend to suppress aggressiveness, but not cure it.”

Timing of treatment is also a factor for medication. In studies of patients taking lithium for aggression, for example, “when they gave the drug to people who liked being aggressive, they didn’t like being on these drugs because it made them feel unprotected. It just was at odds with who they thought they were,” Dr. Coccaro said. “The people who took the drug and did well and really liked being on the drug with people who didn’t like that they were aggressive.”

Neurorehabilitation and cognitive-behavioral therapy specific to aggression, called cognitive relaxation and coping skills therapy, are nonpsychotropic approaches to treating aggression. “These therapeutic approaches are working not only to reduce progression, but also to reduce the social information processing problems that aggressive individuals have,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Another approach, known as interpretation bias training, teaches individuals with aggression to judge slightly angry-looking photos of people as not being angry. After 7-14 days of training, aggressive behavior in adolescents has been shown to be reduced. The changes were also visible on functional MRI.

“What they found was that when you treated them, the change in the amygdala went down when you looked at the angry faces and in the left lateral, post training, they became happier,” Dr. Coccaro said.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Coccaro reported serving as a consultant for Avanir, Azevan, and Bracket. He also reported receiving research grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and the Pritzker Pucker Family Foundation.

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Clinical pearls for administering cognitive exams during the pandemic

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Patients have often been labeled as “poor historians” if they are not able to recollect their own medical history, whether through illness or difficulties in communication. But Fred Ovsiew, MD, speaking at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists, sees that label as an excuse on the part of the clinician.

Dr. Fred Ovsiew

“I strongly advise you to drop that phrase from your vocabulary if you do use it, because the patient is not the historian. The doctor, the clinician is the historian,” Dr. Ovsiew said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. “It is the clinician’s job to put the story together using the account by the patient as one source, but [also] interviewing a collateral informant and/or reviewing records, which is necessary in almost every case of a neuropsychiatric illness.”

Rather, clinicians taking history at the bedside should focus on why the patients cannot give a narrative account of their illness. Patients can have narrative incapacity on a psychogenic basis, such as in patients with conversion or somatoform disorder, he explained. “I think this is a result of the narrative incapacity that develops in people who have had trauma or adverse experiences in childhood and insecure attachment. This is shown on the adult attachment interview as a disorganized account of their childhoods.”

Other patients might not be able to recount their medical history because they are amnestic, which leaves their account vague because of a lack of access to information. “It may be frozen in time in the sense that, up to a certain point in their life, they can recount the history,” Dr. Ovsiew said. “But in recent years, their account becomes vague.”

Patients with right hemisphere lesions might not know that their account has incongruity and is implausible, while patients with dorsolateral prefrontal lesions might be aspontaneous, use few words to describe their situation, and have poor insight. Those with ventromedial prefrontal lesions can be impulsive and have poor insight, not considering alternative possibilities, Dr. Ovsiew noted.

Asking open-ended questions of the patient is the first step to identifying any potential narrative incapacity, followed by a detailed medical history by the clinician. When taking a medical history, try avoiding what Dr. Ovsiew calls the “anything like that?” problem, where a clinician asks a question about a cluster of symptoms that would make sense to a doctor, but not a patient. For example, a doctor might ask whether a patient is experiencing “chest pain or leg swelling – anything like that?” because he or she knows what those symptoms have in common, but the patient might not know the relationship between those symptoms. “You can’t count on the patient to tell you all the relevant information,” he said. “You have to know what to ask about.”

“Patients with brain disease have subtle personality changes, sometimes more obvious personality changes. These need to be inquired about,” Dr. Ovsiew said. He encouraged asking “non-DSM questions” to help identify specific symptoms of a neuropsychiatric illness. “The patient with apathy has reduced negative as well as positive emotions. The patient with depression has reduced positive emotions, but often tells you very clearly about the negative emotions of sadness, guilt. The patient with depression has diurnal variation in mood, a very telling symptom, especially when it’s disclosed spontaneously,” Dr. Ovsiew explained. “The point is, you need to know to ask about it.”

When taking a sleep history, clinicians should be aware of sleep disturbances apart from insomnia and early waking. REM sleep behavior disorder is a condition that should be inquired about. Obstructive sleep apnea is a condition that might not be immediately apparent to the patient, but a bed partner can identify whether a patient has problems breathing throughout the night.

“This is an important condition to uncover for the neuropsychiatrist because it contributes to treatment resistance and depression, and it contributes to cognitive impairment,” Dr. Ovsiew said. “These patients commonly have mild difficulties with attention and concentration.”

Always ask about head injury in every history, which can be relevant to later onset depression, PTSD, and cognitive impairment. Every head injury follows a trajectory of retrograde amnesia and altered state of consciousness (including coma), followed by a period of posttraumatic amnesia. Duration of these states can be used to assess the severity of brain injury, but the 15-point Glasgow Coma Scale is another way to assess injury severity, Dr. Ovsiew explained.

However, the two do not always overlap, he noted. “Someone may have a Glasgow Coma Scale score that is 9-12, predicting moderate brain injury, but they may have a short duration of amnesia. These don’t always follow the same path. There are many different ways of classifying how severe the brain injury is.”
 

 

 

Keep probes brief, straightforward

Cognitive exams of patients with suspected psychiatric disorders should be simple, easy to administer and focused on a single domain of cognition. “Probes should be brief. They should not require specialized equipment. The Purdue Pegboard Test might be a great neuropsychological instrument, but very few of us carry a pegboard around in our medical bags,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

The probe administered should also be accessible to the patient. The serial sevens clinical test, where a patient is asked to repeatedly subtract 7 from 100, is only effective at testing concentration if the patient is capable of completing the test. “There are going to be patients who can’t do the task, but it’s not because of concentration failure, it’s because of subtraction failure,” he said.

When assessing attention, effective tasks include having the patient perform the digit span test forward and backward, count backward from 20 to 1, listing the months of the year in reverse, and performing the Mental Alternation Test. However, Dr. Ovsiew explained there may be some barriers for patients in completing these tasks. “The person may be aphasic and not know the alphabet. The person may have English as a second language and not be skilled at giving the alphabet in English. In some cases, you may want to check and not assume that the patient can count and does know the alphabet.”

In assessing language, listen for aphasic abnormalities. “The patient, of course, is speaking throughout the interview, but you need to take a moment to listen for prosody, to listen to rate of speech, to listen for paraphasic errors or word-finding problems,” Dr. Ovsiew said. Any abnormalities should be probed further through confrontation naming tasks, which can be done in person and with some success through video, but not by phone. Naming to definition (“What do you call the part of a shirt that covers the arm?”) is one way of administering the test over the phone.

Visuospatial function can be assessed by clock drawing but also carries problems. Patients who do not plan their clock before beginning to draw, for example, may have an executive function problem instead of a visuospatial problem, Dr. Ovsiew noted. Patients in whom a clinician suspects hemineglect should be given a visual search task or line by section task. “I like doing clock drawing. It’s a nice screening test. It’s becoming, I think, less useful as people count on digital clocks and have trouble even imagining what an analog clock looks like.”

An approach that is better suited to in-person assessment, but also works by video, is the Poppelreuter figure visual perceptual function test, which is a prompt for the patient that involves common household items overlaying one another “in atypical positions and atypical configurations” where the patient is instructed to describe the items they see on the card. Another approach that works over video is the interlocking finger test, where the patient is asked to copy the hand positions made by the clinician.

Dr. Ovsiew admitted that visuospatial function is nearly impossible to assess over the phone. Asking topographical questions (“If you’re driving from Chicago to Los Angeles, is the Pacific Ocean in front of you, behind you, to your left, or to your right?”) may help judge visuospatial function, but this relies on the patient having the topographic knowledge to answer the questions. Some patients who are topographically disoriented can’t do them at all,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Bedside neuropsychiatry assesses encoding of a memory, its retention and its retrieval as well as verbal and visual cues. Each one of these aspects of memory can be impaired on its own and should be explored separately, Dr. Ovsiew explained. “Neuropsychiatric clinicians have a rough-and-ready, seat-of-the-pants way of approaching this that wouldn’t pass muster if you’re a psychologist, but is the best we can do at the bedside.”

To test retrieval and retention, the Three Words–Three Shapes test works well in person, with some difficulty by video, and is not possible to administer over the phone. In lieu of that test, giving the patient a simple word list and asking them to repeat the list in order. Using the word list, “these different stages of memory function can be parsed out pretty well at the bedside or chairside, and even by the phone. Figuring out where the memory failure is diagnostically important,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Executive function, which involves activation, planning, sequencing, maintaining, self-monitoring, and flexible employment of action and attention, is “complicated to evaluate because there are multiple aspects of executive function, multiple deficits that can be seen with executive dysfunction, and they don’t all correlate with each other.”

Within executive function evaluation, the Mental Alternation Test can assess working memory, motor sequencing can be assessed through the ring/fist, fist/edge/palm, alternating fist, and rampart tests. The Go/No-Go test can be used to assess response inhibition. For effortful retrieval evaluation, spontaneous word-list generation – such as thinking of all the items one can buy at a supermarket– can test category fluency, while a task to name all the words starting with a certain letter can assess letter stimulus.

Executive function “is of crucial importance in the neuropsychiatric evaluation because it’s strongly correlated with how well the person functions outside the office,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Ovsiew reported relationships with Wolters Kluwer Health in the form of consulting, receiving royalty payments, and related activities.

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Patients have often been labeled as “poor historians” if they are not able to recollect their own medical history, whether through illness or difficulties in communication. But Fred Ovsiew, MD, speaking at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists, sees that label as an excuse on the part of the clinician.

Dr. Fred Ovsiew

“I strongly advise you to drop that phrase from your vocabulary if you do use it, because the patient is not the historian. The doctor, the clinician is the historian,” Dr. Ovsiew said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. “It is the clinician’s job to put the story together using the account by the patient as one source, but [also] interviewing a collateral informant and/or reviewing records, which is necessary in almost every case of a neuropsychiatric illness.”

Rather, clinicians taking history at the bedside should focus on why the patients cannot give a narrative account of their illness. Patients can have narrative incapacity on a psychogenic basis, such as in patients with conversion or somatoform disorder, he explained. “I think this is a result of the narrative incapacity that develops in people who have had trauma or adverse experiences in childhood and insecure attachment. This is shown on the adult attachment interview as a disorganized account of their childhoods.”

Other patients might not be able to recount their medical history because they are amnestic, which leaves their account vague because of a lack of access to information. “It may be frozen in time in the sense that, up to a certain point in their life, they can recount the history,” Dr. Ovsiew said. “But in recent years, their account becomes vague.”

Patients with right hemisphere lesions might not know that their account has incongruity and is implausible, while patients with dorsolateral prefrontal lesions might be aspontaneous, use few words to describe their situation, and have poor insight. Those with ventromedial prefrontal lesions can be impulsive and have poor insight, not considering alternative possibilities, Dr. Ovsiew noted.

Asking open-ended questions of the patient is the first step to identifying any potential narrative incapacity, followed by a detailed medical history by the clinician. When taking a medical history, try avoiding what Dr. Ovsiew calls the “anything like that?” problem, where a clinician asks a question about a cluster of symptoms that would make sense to a doctor, but not a patient. For example, a doctor might ask whether a patient is experiencing “chest pain or leg swelling – anything like that?” because he or she knows what those symptoms have in common, but the patient might not know the relationship between those symptoms. “You can’t count on the patient to tell you all the relevant information,” he said. “You have to know what to ask about.”

“Patients with brain disease have subtle personality changes, sometimes more obvious personality changes. These need to be inquired about,” Dr. Ovsiew said. He encouraged asking “non-DSM questions” to help identify specific symptoms of a neuropsychiatric illness. “The patient with apathy has reduced negative as well as positive emotions. The patient with depression has reduced positive emotions, but often tells you very clearly about the negative emotions of sadness, guilt. The patient with depression has diurnal variation in mood, a very telling symptom, especially when it’s disclosed spontaneously,” Dr. Ovsiew explained. “The point is, you need to know to ask about it.”

When taking a sleep history, clinicians should be aware of sleep disturbances apart from insomnia and early waking. REM sleep behavior disorder is a condition that should be inquired about. Obstructive sleep apnea is a condition that might not be immediately apparent to the patient, but a bed partner can identify whether a patient has problems breathing throughout the night.

“This is an important condition to uncover for the neuropsychiatrist because it contributes to treatment resistance and depression, and it contributes to cognitive impairment,” Dr. Ovsiew said. “These patients commonly have mild difficulties with attention and concentration.”

Always ask about head injury in every history, which can be relevant to later onset depression, PTSD, and cognitive impairment. Every head injury follows a trajectory of retrograde amnesia and altered state of consciousness (including coma), followed by a period of posttraumatic amnesia. Duration of these states can be used to assess the severity of brain injury, but the 15-point Glasgow Coma Scale is another way to assess injury severity, Dr. Ovsiew explained.

However, the two do not always overlap, he noted. “Someone may have a Glasgow Coma Scale score that is 9-12, predicting moderate brain injury, but they may have a short duration of amnesia. These don’t always follow the same path. There are many different ways of classifying how severe the brain injury is.”
 

 

 

Keep probes brief, straightforward

Cognitive exams of patients with suspected psychiatric disorders should be simple, easy to administer and focused on a single domain of cognition. “Probes should be brief. They should not require specialized equipment. The Purdue Pegboard Test might be a great neuropsychological instrument, but very few of us carry a pegboard around in our medical bags,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

The probe administered should also be accessible to the patient. The serial sevens clinical test, where a patient is asked to repeatedly subtract 7 from 100, is only effective at testing concentration if the patient is capable of completing the test. “There are going to be patients who can’t do the task, but it’s not because of concentration failure, it’s because of subtraction failure,” he said.

When assessing attention, effective tasks include having the patient perform the digit span test forward and backward, count backward from 20 to 1, listing the months of the year in reverse, and performing the Mental Alternation Test. However, Dr. Ovsiew explained there may be some barriers for patients in completing these tasks. “The person may be aphasic and not know the alphabet. The person may have English as a second language and not be skilled at giving the alphabet in English. In some cases, you may want to check and not assume that the patient can count and does know the alphabet.”

In assessing language, listen for aphasic abnormalities. “The patient, of course, is speaking throughout the interview, but you need to take a moment to listen for prosody, to listen to rate of speech, to listen for paraphasic errors or word-finding problems,” Dr. Ovsiew said. Any abnormalities should be probed further through confrontation naming tasks, which can be done in person and with some success through video, but not by phone. Naming to definition (“What do you call the part of a shirt that covers the arm?”) is one way of administering the test over the phone.

Visuospatial function can be assessed by clock drawing but also carries problems. Patients who do not plan their clock before beginning to draw, for example, may have an executive function problem instead of a visuospatial problem, Dr. Ovsiew noted. Patients in whom a clinician suspects hemineglect should be given a visual search task or line by section task. “I like doing clock drawing. It’s a nice screening test. It’s becoming, I think, less useful as people count on digital clocks and have trouble even imagining what an analog clock looks like.”

An approach that is better suited to in-person assessment, but also works by video, is the Poppelreuter figure visual perceptual function test, which is a prompt for the patient that involves common household items overlaying one another “in atypical positions and atypical configurations” where the patient is instructed to describe the items they see on the card. Another approach that works over video is the interlocking finger test, where the patient is asked to copy the hand positions made by the clinician.

Dr. Ovsiew admitted that visuospatial function is nearly impossible to assess over the phone. Asking topographical questions (“If you’re driving from Chicago to Los Angeles, is the Pacific Ocean in front of you, behind you, to your left, or to your right?”) may help judge visuospatial function, but this relies on the patient having the topographic knowledge to answer the questions. Some patients who are topographically disoriented can’t do them at all,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Bedside neuropsychiatry assesses encoding of a memory, its retention and its retrieval as well as verbal and visual cues. Each one of these aspects of memory can be impaired on its own and should be explored separately, Dr. Ovsiew explained. “Neuropsychiatric clinicians have a rough-and-ready, seat-of-the-pants way of approaching this that wouldn’t pass muster if you’re a psychologist, but is the best we can do at the bedside.”

To test retrieval and retention, the Three Words–Three Shapes test works well in person, with some difficulty by video, and is not possible to administer over the phone. In lieu of that test, giving the patient a simple word list and asking them to repeat the list in order. Using the word list, “these different stages of memory function can be parsed out pretty well at the bedside or chairside, and even by the phone. Figuring out where the memory failure is diagnostically important,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Executive function, which involves activation, planning, sequencing, maintaining, self-monitoring, and flexible employment of action and attention, is “complicated to evaluate because there are multiple aspects of executive function, multiple deficits that can be seen with executive dysfunction, and they don’t all correlate with each other.”

Within executive function evaluation, the Mental Alternation Test can assess working memory, motor sequencing can be assessed through the ring/fist, fist/edge/palm, alternating fist, and rampart tests. The Go/No-Go test can be used to assess response inhibition. For effortful retrieval evaluation, spontaneous word-list generation – such as thinking of all the items one can buy at a supermarket– can test category fluency, while a task to name all the words starting with a certain letter can assess letter stimulus.

Executive function “is of crucial importance in the neuropsychiatric evaluation because it’s strongly correlated with how well the person functions outside the office,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Ovsiew reported relationships with Wolters Kluwer Health in the form of consulting, receiving royalty payments, and related activities.

Patients have often been labeled as “poor historians” if they are not able to recollect their own medical history, whether through illness or difficulties in communication. But Fred Ovsiew, MD, speaking at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists, sees that label as an excuse on the part of the clinician.

Dr. Fred Ovsiew

“I strongly advise you to drop that phrase from your vocabulary if you do use it, because the patient is not the historian. The doctor, the clinician is the historian,” Dr. Ovsiew said at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. “It is the clinician’s job to put the story together using the account by the patient as one source, but [also] interviewing a collateral informant and/or reviewing records, which is necessary in almost every case of a neuropsychiatric illness.”

Rather, clinicians taking history at the bedside should focus on why the patients cannot give a narrative account of their illness. Patients can have narrative incapacity on a psychogenic basis, such as in patients with conversion or somatoform disorder, he explained. “I think this is a result of the narrative incapacity that develops in people who have had trauma or adverse experiences in childhood and insecure attachment. This is shown on the adult attachment interview as a disorganized account of their childhoods.”

Other patients might not be able to recount their medical history because they are amnestic, which leaves their account vague because of a lack of access to information. “It may be frozen in time in the sense that, up to a certain point in their life, they can recount the history,” Dr. Ovsiew said. “But in recent years, their account becomes vague.”

Patients with right hemisphere lesions might not know that their account has incongruity and is implausible, while patients with dorsolateral prefrontal lesions might be aspontaneous, use few words to describe their situation, and have poor insight. Those with ventromedial prefrontal lesions can be impulsive and have poor insight, not considering alternative possibilities, Dr. Ovsiew noted.

Asking open-ended questions of the patient is the first step to identifying any potential narrative incapacity, followed by a detailed medical history by the clinician. When taking a medical history, try avoiding what Dr. Ovsiew calls the “anything like that?” problem, where a clinician asks a question about a cluster of symptoms that would make sense to a doctor, but not a patient. For example, a doctor might ask whether a patient is experiencing “chest pain or leg swelling – anything like that?” because he or she knows what those symptoms have in common, but the patient might not know the relationship between those symptoms. “You can’t count on the patient to tell you all the relevant information,” he said. “You have to know what to ask about.”

“Patients with brain disease have subtle personality changes, sometimes more obvious personality changes. These need to be inquired about,” Dr. Ovsiew said. He encouraged asking “non-DSM questions” to help identify specific symptoms of a neuropsychiatric illness. “The patient with apathy has reduced negative as well as positive emotions. The patient with depression has reduced positive emotions, but often tells you very clearly about the negative emotions of sadness, guilt. The patient with depression has diurnal variation in mood, a very telling symptom, especially when it’s disclosed spontaneously,” Dr. Ovsiew explained. “The point is, you need to know to ask about it.”

When taking a sleep history, clinicians should be aware of sleep disturbances apart from insomnia and early waking. REM sleep behavior disorder is a condition that should be inquired about. Obstructive sleep apnea is a condition that might not be immediately apparent to the patient, but a bed partner can identify whether a patient has problems breathing throughout the night.

“This is an important condition to uncover for the neuropsychiatrist because it contributes to treatment resistance and depression, and it contributes to cognitive impairment,” Dr. Ovsiew said. “These patients commonly have mild difficulties with attention and concentration.”

Always ask about head injury in every history, which can be relevant to later onset depression, PTSD, and cognitive impairment. Every head injury follows a trajectory of retrograde amnesia and altered state of consciousness (including coma), followed by a period of posttraumatic amnesia. Duration of these states can be used to assess the severity of brain injury, but the 15-point Glasgow Coma Scale is another way to assess injury severity, Dr. Ovsiew explained.

However, the two do not always overlap, he noted. “Someone may have a Glasgow Coma Scale score that is 9-12, predicting moderate brain injury, but they may have a short duration of amnesia. These don’t always follow the same path. There are many different ways of classifying how severe the brain injury is.”
 

 

 

Keep probes brief, straightforward

Cognitive exams of patients with suspected psychiatric disorders should be simple, easy to administer and focused on a single domain of cognition. “Probes should be brief. They should not require specialized equipment. The Purdue Pegboard Test might be a great neuropsychological instrument, but very few of us carry a pegboard around in our medical bags,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

The probe administered should also be accessible to the patient. The serial sevens clinical test, where a patient is asked to repeatedly subtract 7 from 100, is only effective at testing concentration if the patient is capable of completing the test. “There are going to be patients who can’t do the task, but it’s not because of concentration failure, it’s because of subtraction failure,” he said.

When assessing attention, effective tasks include having the patient perform the digit span test forward and backward, count backward from 20 to 1, listing the months of the year in reverse, and performing the Mental Alternation Test. However, Dr. Ovsiew explained there may be some barriers for patients in completing these tasks. “The person may be aphasic and not know the alphabet. The person may have English as a second language and not be skilled at giving the alphabet in English. In some cases, you may want to check and not assume that the patient can count and does know the alphabet.”

In assessing language, listen for aphasic abnormalities. “The patient, of course, is speaking throughout the interview, but you need to take a moment to listen for prosody, to listen to rate of speech, to listen for paraphasic errors or word-finding problems,” Dr. Ovsiew said. Any abnormalities should be probed further through confrontation naming tasks, which can be done in person and with some success through video, but not by phone. Naming to definition (“What do you call the part of a shirt that covers the arm?”) is one way of administering the test over the phone.

Visuospatial function can be assessed by clock drawing but also carries problems. Patients who do not plan their clock before beginning to draw, for example, may have an executive function problem instead of a visuospatial problem, Dr. Ovsiew noted. Patients in whom a clinician suspects hemineglect should be given a visual search task or line by section task. “I like doing clock drawing. It’s a nice screening test. It’s becoming, I think, less useful as people count on digital clocks and have trouble even imagining what an analog clock looks like.”

An approach that is better suited to in-person assessment, but also works by video, is the Poppelreuter figure visual perceptual function test, which is a prompt for the patient that involves common household items overlaying one another “in atypical positions and atypical configurations” where the patient is instructed to describe the items they see on the card. Another approach that works over video is the interlocking finger test, where the patient is asked to copy the hand positions made by the clinician.

Dr. Ovsiew admitted that visuospatial function is nearly impossible to assess over the phone. Asking topographical questions (“If you’re driving from Chicago to Los Angeles, is the Pacific Ocean in front of you, behind you, to your left, or to your right?”) may help judge visuospatial function, but this relies on the patient having the topographic knowledge to answer the questions. Some patients who are topographically disoriented can’t do them at all,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Bedside neuropsychiatry assesses encoding of a memory, its retention and its retrieval as well as verbal and visual cues. Each one of these aspects of memory can be impaired on its own and should be explored separately, Dr. Ovsiew explained. “Neuropsychiatric clinicians have a rough-and-ready, seat-of-the-pants way of approaching this that wouldn’t pass muster if you’re a psychologist, but is the best we can do at the bedside.”

To test retrieval and retention, the Three Words–Three Shapes test works well in person, with some difficulty by video, and is not possible to administer over the phone. In lieu of that test, giving the patient a simple word list and asking them to repeat the list in order. Using the word list, “these different stages of memory function can be parsed out pretty well at the bedside or chairside, and even by the phone. Figuring out where the memory failure is diagnostically important,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Executive function, which involves activation, planning, sequencing, maintaining, self-monitoring, and flexible employment of action and attention, is “complicated to evaluate because there are multiple aspects of executive function, multiple deficits that can be seen with executive dysfunction, and they don’t all correlate with each other.”

Within executive function evaluation, the Mental Alternation Test can assess working memory, motor sequencing can be assessed through the ring/fist, fist/edge/palm, alternating fist, and rampart tests. The Go/No-Go test can be used to assess response inhibition. For effortful retrieval evaluation, spontaneous word-list generation – such as thinking of all the items one can buy at a supermarket– can test category fluency, while a task to name all the words starting with a certain letter can assess letter stimulus.

Executive function “is of crucial importance in the neuropsychiatric evaluation because it’s strongly correlated with how well the person functions outside the office,” Dr. Ovsiew said.

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Ovsiew reported relationships with Wolters Kluwer Health in the form of consulting, receiving royalty payments, and related activities.

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Anxiety disorders begin earlier in life, differ by gender

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Anxiety disorders start very early in life and may manifest themselves first as other conditions like social anxiety disorder, according to Jeffrey R. Strawn, MD.

Teenage girl looking worried
AndreaObzerova/Getty Images

An adolescent presenting to a mental health clinician with anxiety at 16 years old, for example has likely struggled with her anxiety for years before visiting a clinic. “That child may have been someone who had separation anxiety earlier in life and who as, even an infant, had behavioral inhibitions, that reluctance or timidness to explore new things, that tendency to retreat from novel stimuli,” Dr. Strawn, associate professor of psychiatry, pediatrics and clinical pharmacology at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, said at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists. “Anxiety disorders are enduring and persistent, and they begin very early in life.”

Social anxiety disorder is one of the first anxiety disorders that appear in childhood or adolescents, which rises during puberty and during a time in a child’s life when they are dealing with new social pressures and challenges, such as graduating from elementary to middle school, Dr. Strawn noted. Generalized anxiety disorder is usually the next to emerge, followed by panic disorder. On the other hand, agoraphobia, another anxiety disorder that begins in childhood, “often represents behavioral avoidance as opposed to agoraphobia as we classically think about it as adult psychiatrists.”

Onset of anxiety disorders also differ by gender. “In terms of the emergence of these anxiety disorders, another thing that’s important to know is that the onset seems to be a bit different with regard to girls and boys. We see that break there emerging really around the time of puberty or as people are moving into late puberty, at least for girls,” Dr. Strawn said at the meeting presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. .

A shift occurs in amygdala prefrontal circuitry as children age, Dr. Strawn explained. Younger children do not have the ability to modulate the amygdala with their prefrontal cortex, but this amygdala–medial prefrontal cortex functional connectivity will change as children grow. A study by Dylan G. Gee, PhD, and colleagues found positive amygdala–medial prefrontal cortex functional connectivity at younger than 10 years old, and a “steady decline in amygdala activity” from 10-13 years to adulthood at 22 years old (J Neurosci. 2013 Mar 6;33[10]:4584-93).

“In essence, what we’re seeing is that there’s improvement or more effectiveness in terms of that connection between the prefrontal cortex, the amygdala, and that ability to amplify the brake to the amygdala,” Dr. Strawn said.
 

SSRIs, SNRIs for pediatric patients

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors can be effective for pediatric patients with anxiety disorders. Results from the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study (CAMS) show that patients with generalized separation or social anxiety disorder treated with sertraline or cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for 3 months responded better to treatment than placebo. A combination of sertraline and CBT performing best, compared with either intervention alone (N Engl J Med. 2008;359:2753-66).

When examining treatment response in 76 patients from CAMS, the researchers saw improvement at 4 weeks from baseline in patients with anxiety symptoms receiving CBT, but no significant change in improvement after 4 weeks up to 12 weeks (J Child Adolesc Psychopharm. 2017 Aug 1. doi: 10.1089/cap.2016.0198).

“What that actually means is that your improvement at week 4 is better than your improvement at baseline, and your improvement at week 8 is greater than your improvement at week 4. Similarly, in your improvement, week 12 is greater than your improvement at week 8,” Dr. Strawn said.

However, “that’s not the case for aggressively titrated sertraline,” which had no statistically significant difference in improvement at 8 weeks and 12 weeks, he explained. “What this actually means is that, if I have not had improvement by week 8, there is a three-to-one odds against improvement over those next 4 weeks. The take-home message here is really that an adequate trial for an SSRI in pediatric anxiety disorders is probably about 8 weeks – not 12, not longer.”

Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) are also effective in pediatric patients with anxiety disorders.

“Both SNRIs as well as SSRIs have certainly demonstrated efficacy in terms of treating pediatric patients with anxiety, but there is a very important difference here with regard to the trajectory of improvement and also the magnitude of improvement,” Dr. Strawn said. SNRIs like atomoxetine, duloxetine, or venlafaxine “do not improve as rapidly and do not improve to the same extent as kids who are treated with an SSRI.”

Dose is another factor that affects symptom improvement in patients with pediatric anxiety disorders. In a 2018 meta-analysis, Dr. Strawn and colleagues found that patients treated with a higher dose of SSRIs demonstrated more rapid improvement at 2 weeks, compared with patients who received SNRIs (P = .002), but there was no significant difference in overall response trajectory (J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2018 Apr;57[4]:235-44.E2).

Response to SSRIs can depend a patient’s genotype, Dr. Strawn said. The serotonin transporter promotor polymorphism has received “considerable attention in adults with depressive disorders primarily” but also might play a role in anxiety disorder response in pediatric patients. One study presented by his group at the 2019 annual meeting of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry showed that patients with a short-short copy of the serotonin transporter promoter polymorphism instead of a long copy had “shallower and less improvement over the course of treatment” when taking escitalopram.

“This is something that doesn’t necessarily compel us to use an SNRI over an SSRI, but it’s something that does give us some important information in terms of the trajectory of improvement,” he said.

When it comes to side effects of SNRIs and SSRIs, the profile is “pretty consistent with what we know to be the side effect profile in adults with depressive and anxiety disorders,” Dr. Strawn noted. “SNRIs tend to be a little bit better tolerated, both in terms of adverse event–related discontinuation and also in terms of their likelihood of producing activation.”

Patient and caregiver expectations can further affect response to treatment. In CAMS, “patients who had a greater expectation that the medicine would actually work tended to have much greater improvement in symptoms,” Dr. Strawn said. “I think this has implications in terms of how we actively manage expectations and discussions about the evidence for interventions with our patients in the clinic.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Strawn reported receiving research support from Edgemont Pharmaceuticals, Eli Lilly, Forest Research Laboratories, Lundbeck, the National Institutes of Health, Neuronetics, and Shire. He also reported receiving royalties from Springer Publishing, and is a consultant for and receives material support from Assurex/Genesight.

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Anxiety disorders start very early in life and may manifest themselves first as other conditions like social anxiety disorder, according to Jeffrey R. Strawn, MD.

Teenage girl looking worried
AndreaObzerova/Getty Images

An adolescent presenting to a mental health clinician with anxiety at 16 years old, for example has likely struggled with her anxiety for years before visiting a clinic. “That child may have been someone who had separation anxiety earlier in life and who as, even an infant, had behavioral inhibitions, that reluctance or timidness to explore new things, that tendency to retreat from novel stimuli,” Dr. Strawn, associate professor of psychiatry, pediatrics and clinical pharmacology at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, said at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists. “Anxiety disorders are enduring and persistent, and they begin very early in life.”

Social anxiety disorder is one of the first anxiety disorders that appear in childhood or adolescents, which rises during puberty and during a time in a child’s life when they are dealing with new social pressures and challenges, such as graduating from elementary to middle school, Dr. Strawn noted. Generalized anxiety disorder is usually the next to emerge, followed by panic disorder. On the other hand, agoraphobia, another anxiety disorder that begins in childhood, “often represents behavioral avoidance as opposed to agoraphobia as we classically think about it as adult psychiatrists.”

Onset of anxiety disorders also differ by gender. “In terms of the emergence of these anxiety disorders, another thing that’s important to know is that the onset seems to be a bit different with regard to girls and boys. We see that break there emerging really around the time of puberty or as people are moving into late puberty, at least for girls,” Dr. Strawn said at the meeting presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. .

A shift occurs in amygdala prefrontal circuitry as children age, Dr. Strawn explained. Younger children do not have the ability to modulate the amygdala with their prefrontal cortex, but this amygdala–medial prefrontal cortex functional connectivity will change as children grow. A study by Dylan G. Gee, PhD, and colleagues found positive amygdala–medial prefrontal cortex functional connectivity at younger than 10 years old, and a “steady decline in amygdala activity” from 10-13 years to adulthood at 22 years old (J Neurosci. 2013 Mar 6;33[10]:4584-93).

“In essence, what we’re seeing is that there’s improvement or more effectiveness in terms of that connection between the prefrontal cortex, the amygdala, and that ability to amplify the brake to the amygdala,” Dr. Strawn said.
 

SSRIs, SNRIs for pediatric patients

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors can be effective for pediatric patients with anxiety disorders. Results from the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study (CAMS) show that patients with generalized separation or social anxiety disorder treated with sertraline or cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for 3 months responded better to treatment than placebo. A combination of sertraline and CBT performing best, compared with either intervention alone (N Engl J Med. 2008;359:2753-66).

When examining treatment response in 76 patients from CAMS, the researchers saw improvement at 4 weeks from baseline in patients with anxiety symptoms receiving CBT, but no significant change in improvement after 4 weeks up to 12 weeks (J Child Adolesc Psychopharm. 2017 Aug 1. doi: 10.1089/cap.2016.0198).

“What that actually means is that your improvement at week 4 is better than your improvement at baseline, and your improvement at week 8 is greater than your improvement at week 4. Similarly, in your improvement, week 12 is greater than your improvement at week 8,” Dr. Strawn said.

However, “that’s not the case for aggressively titrated sertraline,” which had no statistically significant difference in improvement at 8 weeks and 12 weeks, he explained. “What this actually means is that, if I have not had improvement by week 8, there is a three-to-one odds against improvement over those next 4 weeks. The take-home message here is really that an adequate trial for an SSRI in pediatric anxiety disorders is probably about 8 weeks – not 12, not longer.”

Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) are also effective in pediatric patients with anxiety disorders.

“Both SNRIs as well as SSRIs have certainly demonstrated efficacy in terms of treating pediatric patients with anxiety, but there is a very important difference here with regard to the trajectory of improvement and also the magnitude of improvement,” Dr. Strawn said. SNRIs like atomoxetine, duloxetine, or venlafaxine “do not improve as rapidly and do not improve to the same extent as kids who are treated with an SSRI.”

Dose is another factor that affects symptom improvement in patients with pediatric anxiety disorders. In a 2018 meta-analysis, Dr. Strawn and colleagues found that patients treated with a higher dose of SSRIs demonstrated more rapid improvement at 2 weeks, compared with patients who received SNRIs (P = .002), but there was no significant difference in overall response trajectory (J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2018 Apr;57[4]:235-44.E2).

Response to SSRIs can depend a patient’s genotype, Dr. Strawn said. The serotonin transporter promotor polymorphism has received “considerable attention in adults with depressive disorders primarily” but also might play a role in anxiety disorder response in pediatric patients. One study presented by his group at the 2019 annual meeting of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry showed that patients with a short-short copy of the serotonin transporter promoter polymorphism instead of a long copy had “shallower and less improvement over the course of treatment” when taking escitalopram.

“This is something that doesn’t necessarily compel us to use an SNRI over an SSRI, but it’s something that does give us some important information in terms of the trajectory of improvement,” he said.

When it comes to side effects of SNRIs and SSRIs, the profile is “pretty consistent with what we know to be the side effect profile in adults with depressive and anxiety disorders,” Dr. Strawn noted. “SNRIs tend to be a little bit better tolerated, both in terms of adverse event–related discontinuation and also in terms of their likelihood of producing activation.”

Patient and caregiver expectations can further affect response to treatment. In CAMS, “patients who had a greater expectation that the medicine would actually work tended to have much greater improvement in symptoms,” Dr. Strawn said. “I think this has implications in terms of how we actively manage expectations and discussions about the evidence for interventions with our patients in the clinic.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Strawn reported receiving research support from Edgemont Pharmaceuticals, Eli Lilly, Forest Research Laboratories, Lundbeck, the National Institutes of Health, Neuronetics, and Shire. He also reported receiving royalties from Springer Publishing, and is a consultant for and receives material support from Assurex/Genesight.

Anxiety disorders start very early in life and may manifest themselves first as other conditions like social anxiety disorder, according to Jeffrey R. Strawn, MD.

Teenage girl looking worried
AndreaObzerova/Getty Images

An adolescent presenting to a mental health clinician with anxiety at 16 years old, for example has likely struggled with her anxiety for years before visiting a clinic. “That child may have been someone who had separation anxiety earlier in life and who as, even an infant, had behavioral inhibitions, that reluctance or timidness to explore new things, that tendency to retreat from novel stimuli,” Dr. Strawn, associate professor of psychiatry, pediatrics and clinical pharmacology at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, said at Focus on Neuropsychiatry presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists. “Anxiety disorders are enduring and persistent, and they begin very early in life.”

Social anxiety disorder is one of the first anxiety disorders that appear in childhood or adolescents, which rises during puberty and during a time in a child’s life when they are dealing with new social pressures and challenges, such as graduating from elementary to middle school, Dr. Strawn noted. Generalized anxiety disorder is usually the next to emerge, followed by panic disorder. On the other hand, agoraphobia, another anxiety disorder that begins in childhood, “often represents behavioral avoidance as opposed to agoraphobia as we classically think about it as adult psychiatrists.”

Onset of anxiety disorders also differ by gender. “In terms of the emergence of these anxiety disorders, another thing that’s important to know is that the onset seems to be a bit different with regard to girls and boys. We see that break there emerging really around the time of puberty or as people are moving into late puberty, at least for girls,” Dr. Strawn said at the meeting presented by Global Academy for Medical Education. .

A shift occurs in amygdala prefrontal circuitry as children age, Dr. Strawn explained. Younger children do not have the ability to modulate the amygdala with their prefrontal cortex, but this amygdala–medial prefrontal cortex functional connectivity will change as children grow. A study by Dylan G. Gee, PhD, and colleagues found positive amygdala–medial prefrontal cortex functional connectivity at younger than 10 years old, and a “steady decline in amygdala activity” from 10-13 years to adulthood at 22 years old (J Neurosci. 2013 Mar 6;33[10]:4584-93).

“In essence, what we’re seeing is that there’s improvement or more effectiveness in terms of that connection between the prefrontal cortex, the amygdala, and that ability to amplify the brake to the amygdala,” Dr. Strawn said.
 

SSRIs, SNRIs for pediatric patients

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors can be effective for pediatric patients with anxiety disorders. Results from the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study (CAMS) show that patients with generalized separation or social anxiety disorder treated with sertraline or cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for 3 months responded better to treatment than placebo. A combination of sertraline and CBT performing best, compared with either intervention alone (N Engl J Med. 2008;359:2753-66).

When examining treatment response in 76 patients from CAMS, the researchers saw improvement at 4 weeks from baseline in patients with anxiety symptoms receiving CBT, but no significant change in improvement after 4 weeks up to 12 weeks (J Child Adolesc Psychopharm. 2017 Aug 1. doi: 10.1089/cap.2016.0198).

“What that actually means is that your improvement at week 4 is better than your improvement at baseline, and your improvement at week 8 is greater than your improvement at week 4. Similarly, in your improvement, week 12 is greater than your improvement at week 8,” Dr. Strawn said.

However, “that’s not the case for aggressively titrated sertraline,” which had no statistically significant difference in improvement at 8 weeks and 12 weeks, he explained. “What this actually means is that, if I have not had improvement by week 8, there is a three-to-one odds against improvement over those next 4 weeks. The take-home message here is really that an adequate trial for an SSRI in pediatric anxiety disorders is probably about 8 weeks – not 12, not longer.”

Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) are also effective in pediatric patients with anxiety disorders.

“Both SNRIs as well as SSRIs have certainly demonstrated efficacy in terms of treating pediatric patients with anxiety, but there is a very important difference here with regard to the trajectory of improvement and also the magnitude of improvement,” Dr. Strawn said. SNRIs like atomoxetine, duloxetine, or venlafaxine “do not improve as rapidly and do not improve to the same extent as kids who are treated with an SSRI.”

Dose is another factor that affects symptom improvement in patients with pediatric anxiety disorders. In a 2018 meta-analysis, Dr. Strawn and colleagues found that patients treated with a higher dose of SSRIs demonstrated more rapid improvement at 2 weeks, compared with patients who received SNRIs (P = .002), but there was no significant difference in overall response trajectory (J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2018 Apr;57[4]:235-44.E2).

Response to SSRIs can depend a patient’s genotype, Dr. Strawn said. The serotonin transporter promotor polymorphism has received “considerable attention in adults with depressive disorders primarily” but also might play a role in anxiety disorder response in pediatric patients. One study presented by his group at the 2019 annual meeting of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry showed that patients with a short-short copy of the serotonin transporter promoter polymorphism instead of a long copy had “shallower and less improvement over the course of treatment” when taking escitalopram.

“This is something that doesn’t necessarily compel us to use an SNRI over an SSRI, but it’s something that does give us some important information in terms of the trajectory of improvement,” he said.

When it comes to side effects of SNRIs and SSRIs, the profile is “pretty consistent with what we know to be the side effect profile in adults with depressive and anxiety disorders,” Dr. Strawn noted. “SNRIs tend to be a little bit better tolerated, both in terms of adverse event–related discontinuation and also in terms of their likelihood of producing activation.”

Patient and caregiver expectations can further affect response to treatment. In CAMS, “patients who had a greater expectation that the medicine would actually work tended to have much greater improvement in symptoms,” Dr. Strawn said. “I think this has implications in terms of how we actively manage expectations and discussions about the evidence for interventions with our patients in the clinic.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company. Dr. Strawn reported receiving research support from Edgemont Pharmaceuticals, Eli Lilly, Forest Research Laboratories, Lundbeck, the National Institutes of Health, Neuronetics, and Shire. He also reported receiving royalties from Springer Publishing, and is a consultant for and receives material support from Assurex/Genesight.

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Some telepsychiatry ‘here to stay’ post COVID

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 16:03

The COVID-19 pandemic has changed life in numerous ways, including use of telehealth services for patients in all specialties. But telepsychiatry is an area not likely to go away even after the pandemic is over, according to Sanjay Gupta, MD.

Senior woman using telemendicine
Jean-philippe WALLET/Getty Images

The use of telepsychiatry has escalated significantly,” said Dr. Gupta, of the DENT Neurologic Institute, in Amherst, N.Y., in a bonus virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

About 90% of clinicians are performing telepsychiatry, Dr. Gupta noted, through methods such as phone consults, email, and video chat. As patients with psychiatric issues grapple with issues related to COVID-19 involving lockdowns, restrictions on travel, and consumption of news, they are presenting with addiction, depression, paranoia, mood lability, and other problems.

One issue immediately facing clinicians is whether to keep patients on long-acting injectables as a way to maintain psychological stability in patients with bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and alcoholism – something Dr. Gupta and session moderator Henry A. Nasrallah, MD, advocated. “We should never stop the long-acting injectable to switch them to oral medication. Those patients are very likely to relapse,” Dr. Nasrallah said.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta, chief medical officer of the BryLin Behavioral Health System in Buffalo, N.Y.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta

During the pandemic, clinicians need to find “safe and novel ways of providing the injection,” and several methods have been pioneered. For example, if a patient with schizophrenia is on lockdown, a nurse can visit monthly or bimonthly to administer an injection, check on the patient’s mental status, and assess whether that patient needs an adjustment to their medication. Other clinics are offering “drive-by” injections to patients who arrive by car, and a nurse wearing a mask and a face shield administers the injection from the car window. Monthly naltrexone also can be administered using one of these methods, and telepsychiatry can be used to monitor patients, Dr. Gupta noted at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education.

“In my clinic, what happens is the injection room is set up just next to the door, so they don’t have to walk deep into the clinic,” Dr. Gupta said. “They walk in, go to the left, [and] there’s the injection room. They sit, get an injection, they’re out. It’s kept smooth.”
 

Choosing the right telehealth option

Clinicians should be aware of important regulatory changes that occurred that made widespread telehealth more appealing during the COVID-19 pandemic. Payment parity with in-office visits makes telehealth a viable consideration, while some states have begun offering telehealth licenses to practice across state lines. There is wide variation with regard to which states provide licensure and prescribing privileges for out-of-state clinicians without seeing those patients in person. “The most important thing: The psychiatry service is provided in the state where the patient is located,” Dr. Gupta said. Clinicians should check with that state’s board to figure out specific requirements. “Preferably if you get it in writing, it’s good for you,” he said.

Deciding who the clinician is seeing – consulting with patients or other physicians/clinicians – and what type of visits a clinician will conduct is an important step in transitioning to telepsychiatry. Visits from evaluation through ongoing care are possible through telepsychiatry, or a clinician can opt to see just second opinion visits, Dr. Gupta said. It is also important to consider the technical ability of the patient to do video conferencing.

As HIPAA requirements for privacy have relaxed, clinicians now have an array of teleconferencing options to choose from; platforms such as FaceTime, Doximity, Vidyo, Doxy.me, Zoom, and video chat through EMR are popular options. However, when regular HIPAA requirements are reinstated after the pandemic, clinicians will need to find a compliant platform and sign a business associate agreement to stay within the law.

“Right now, my preferred use is FaceTime,” Dr. Gupta said. “Quick, simple, easy to use. A lot of people have an iPhone, and they know how to do it. I usually have the patient call me and I don’t use my personal iPhone; my clinic has an iPhone.”

How a clinician looks during a telepsychiatry visit is also important. Lighting, position of the camera, and clothing should all be considered. Keep the camera at eye level, test the lighting in the room where the call will take place, and use artificial lighting sources behind a computer, Dr. Gupta said. Other tips for telepsychiatry visits include silencing devices and microphones before a session begins, wearing solid-colored clothes, and having an identification badge visible to the patient. Sessions should be free of background distractions, such as a dog barking or a child interrupting, with the goal of creating an environment where the patient feels free to answer questions.

Contingency planning is a must for video visits, Dr. Gupta said. “I think the simplest thing is to see the patient. But all the stuff that’s the wraparound is really hard, because issues can arise suddenly, and we need to plan.” If a patient has a medical issue or becomes actively suicidal during a session, it is important to know contact information for the local police and crisis services. Clinicians also must plan for technology failure and provide alternative options for continuing the sessions, such as by phone.
 

 

 

Selecting patients for telepsychiatry

Not all patients will make the transition to telepsychiatry. “You can’t do telepsychiatry with everyone. It is a risk, so pick and choose,” Dr. Gupta said.

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah
Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

“Safety is a big consideration for conducting a telepsychiatry visit, especially when other health care providers are present. For example, when performing telehealth visits in a clinic, nursing home, or correctional facility, “I feel a lot more comfortable if there’s another health care clinician there,” Dr. Gupta said.

Clinicians may want to avoid a telepsychiatry visit for a patient in their own home for reasons of safety, reliability, and privacy. A longitudinal history with collateral information from friends or relatives can be helpful, but some subtle signs and body language may get missed over video, compared with an in-person visit. “Telepsychiatry can be a barrier at times. If there is substance abuse, we may not smell alcohol. Sometimes you may not see if the patient is using substances. You have to really reconsider if [there] is violence and self-injurious behavior,” he said.

Discussing the pros and cons of telepsychiatry is important to obtaining patient consent. While consent requirements have relaxed under the COVID-19 pandemic, consent should ideally be obtained in writing, but can also be obtained verbally during a crisis. A plan should be developed for what will happen in the case of technology failure. “The patient should also know you’re maintaining privacy, you’re maintaining confidentiality, but there is a risk of hacking,” Dr. Gupta said. “Those things can happen, [and] there are no guarantees.”

If a patient is uncomfortable after beginning telepsychiatry, moving to in-person visits is also an option. “Many times, I do that if I’m not getting a good handle on things,” Dr. Gupta said. Situations where patients insist on in-patient visits over telepsychiatry are rare in his experience, Dr. Gupta noted, and are usually the result of the patient being unfamiliar with the technology. In cases where a patient cannot be talked through a technology barrier, visits can be done in the clinic while taking proper precautions.

“If it is a first-time visit, then I do it in the clinic,” Dr. Gupta said. “They come in, they have a face mask, and we use our group therapy room. The patients sit in a social-distanced fashion. But then, you document why you did this in-person visit like that.”

Documentation during COVID-19 also includes identifying the patient at the first visit, the nature of the visit (teleconference or other), parties present, referencing the pandemic, writing the location of the patient and the clinician, noting the patient’s satisfaction, evaluating the patient’s mental status, and recording what technology was used and any technical issues that were encountered.

Some populations of patients are better suited to telepsychiatry than others. It is more convenient for chronically psychiatrically ill patients in group homes and their staff to communicate through telepsychiatry, Dr. Gupta said. Consultation liaison in hospitals and emergency departments through telepsychiatry can limit the spread of infection, while increased access and convenience occurs as telepsychiatry is implemented in correctional facilities and nursing homes.

“What we are doing now, some of it is here to stay,” Dr. Gupta said.

In situations where a patient needs to switch providers, clinicians should continue to follow that patient until his first patient visit with that new provider. It is also important to set boundaries and apply some level of formality to the telepsychiatry visit, which means seeing the patient in a secure location where he can speak freely and privately.

“The best practices are [to] maintain faith [and] fidelity of the psychiatric assessment,” Dr. Gupta said. “Keep the trust and do your best to maintain patient privacy, because the privacy is not the same as it may be in a face-to-face session when you use televideo.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Dr. Gupta reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Nasrallah disclosed serving as a consultant for and on the speakers bureaus of several pharmaceutical companies, including Alkermes, Janssen, and Lundbeck. He also disclosed serving on the speakers bureau of Otsuka.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has changed life in numerous ways, including use of telehealth services for patients in all specialties. But telepsychiatry is an area not likely to go away even after the pandemic is over, according to Sanjay Gupta, MD.

Senior woman using telemendicine
Jean-philippe WALLET/Getty Images

The use of telepsychiatry has escalated significantly,” said Dr. Gupta, of the DENT Neurologic Institute, in Amherst, N.Y., in a bonus virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

About 90% of clinicians are performing telepsychiatry, Dr. Gupta noted, through methods such as phone consults, email, and video chat. As patients with psychiatric issues grapple with issues related to COVID-19 involving lockdowns, restrictions on travel, and consumption of news, they are presenting with addiction, depression, paranoia, mood lability, and other problems.

One issue immediately facing clinicians is whether to keep patients on long-acting injectables as a way to maintain psychological stability in patients with bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and alcoholism – something Dr. Gupta and session moderator Henry A. Nasrallah, MD, advocated. “We should never stop the long-acting injectable to switch them to oral medication. Those patients are very likely to relapse,” Dr. Nasrallah said.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta, chief medical officer of the BryLin Behavioral Health System in Buffalo, N.Y.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta

During the pandemic, clinicians need to find “safe and novel ways of providing the injection,” and several methods have been pioneered. For example, if a patient with schizophrenia is on lockdown, a nurse can visit monthly or bimonthly to administer an injection, check on the patient’s mental status, and assess whether that patient needs an adjustment to their medication. Other clinics are offering “drive-by” injections to patients who arrive by car, and a nurse wearing a mask and a face shield administers the injection from the car window. Monthly naltrexone also can be administered using one of these methods, and telepsychiatry can be used to monitor patients, Dr. Gupta noted at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education.

“In my clinic, what happens is the injection room is set up just next to the door, so they don’t have to walk deep into the clinic,” Dr. Gupta said. “They walk in, go to the left, [and] there’s the injection room. They sit, get an injection, they’re out. It’s kept smooth.”
 

Choosing the right telehealth option

Clinicians should be aware of important regulatory changes that occurred that made widespread telehealth more appealing during the COVID-19 pandemic. Payment parity with in-office visits makes telehealth a viable consideration, while some states have begun offering telehealth licenses to practice across state lines. There is wide variation with regard to which states provide licensure and prescribing privileges for out-of-state clinicians without seeing those patients in person. “The most important thing: The psychiatry service is provided in the state where the patient is located,” Dr. Gupta said. Clinicians should check with that state’s board to figure out specific requirements. “Preferably if you get it in writing, it’s good for you,” he said.

Deciding who the clinician is seeing – consulting with patients or other physicians/clinicians – and what type of visits a clinician will conduct is an important step in transitioning to telepsychiatry. Visits from evaluation through ongoing care are possible through telepsychiatry, or a clinician can opt to see just second opinion visits, Dr. Gupta said. It is also important to consider the technical ability of the patient to do video conferencing.

As HIPAA requirements for privacy have relaxed, clinicians now have an array of teleconferencing options to choose from; platforms such as FaceTime, Doximity, Vidyo, Doxy.me, Zoom, and video chat through EMR are popular options. However, when regular HIPAA requirements are reinstated after the pandemic, clinicians will need to find a compliant platform and sign a business associate agreement to stay within the law.

“Right now, my preferred use is FaceTime,” Dr. Gupta said. “Quick, simple, easy to use. A lot of people have an iPhone, and they know how to do it. I usually have the patient call me and I don’t use my personal iPhone; my clinic has an iPhone.”

How a clinician looks during a telepsychiatry visit is also important. Lighting, position of the camera, and clothing should all be considered. Keep the camera at eye level, test the lighting in the room where the call will take place, and use artificial lighting sources behind a computer, Dr. Gupta said. Other tips for telepsychiatry visits include silencing devices and microphones before a session begins, wearing solid-colored clothes, and having an identification badge visible to the patient. Sessions should be free of background distractions, such as a dog barking or a child interrupting, with the goal of creating an environment where the patient feels free to answer questions.

Contingency planning is a must for video visits, Dr. Gupta said. “I think the simplest thing is to see the patient. But all the stuff that’s the wraparound is really hard, because issues can arise suddenly, and we need to plan.” If a patient has a medical issue or becomes actively suicidal during a session, it is important to know contact information for the local police and crisis services. Clinicians also must plan for technology failure and provide alternative options for continuing the sessions, such as by phone.
 

 

 

Selecting patients for telepsychiatry

Not all patients will make the transition to telepsychiatry. “You can’t do telepsychiatry with everyone. It is a risk, so pick and choose,” Dr. Gupta said.

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah
Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

“Safety is a big consideration for conducting a telepsychiatry visit, especially when other health care providers are present. For example, when performing telehealth visits in a clinic, nursing home, or correctional facility, “I feel a lot more comfortable if there’s another health care clinician there,” Dr. Gupta said.

Clinicians may want to avoid a telepsychiatry visit for a patient in their own home for reasons of safety, reliability, and privacy. A longitudinal history with collateral information from friends or relatives can be helpful, but some subtle signs and body language may get missed over video, compared with an in-person visit. “Telepsychiatry can be a barrier at times. If there is substance abuse, we may not smell alcohol. Sometimes you may not see if the patient is using substances. You have to really reconsider if [there] is violence and self-injurious behavior,” he said.

Discussing the pros and cons of telepsychiatry is important to obtaining patient consent. While consent requirements have relaxed under the COVID-19 pandemic, consent should ideally be obtained in writing, but can also be obtained verbally during a crisis. A plan should be developed for what will happen in the case of technology failure. “The patient should also know you’re maintaining privacy, you’re maintaining confidentiality, but there is a risk of hacking,” Dr. Gupta said. “Those things can happen, [and] there are no guarantees.”

If a patient is uncomfortable after beginning telepsychiatry, moving to in-person visits is also an option. “Many times, I do that if I’m not getting a good handle on things,” Dr. Gupta said. Situations where patients insist on in-patient visits over telepsychiatry are rare in his experience, Dr. Gupta noted, and are usually the result of the patient being unfamiliar with the technology. In cases where a patient cannot be talked through a technology barrier, visits can be done in the clinic while taking proper precautions.

“If it is a first-time visit, then I do it in the clinic,” Dr. Gupta said. “They come in, they have a face mask, and we use our group therapy room. The patients sit in a social-distanced fashion. But then, you document why you did this in-person visit like that.”

Documentation during COVID-19 also includes identifying the patient at the first visit, the nature of the visit (teleconference or other), parties present, referencing the pandemic, writing the location of the patient and the clinician, noting the patient’s satisfaction, evaluating the patient’s mental status, and recording what technology was used and any technical issues that were encountered.

Some populations of patients are better suited to telepsychiatry than others. It is more convenient for chronically psychiatrically ill patients in group homes and their staff to communicate through telepsychiatry, Dr. Gupta said. Consultation liaison in hospitals and emergency departments through telepsychiatry can limit the spread of infection, while increased access and convenience occurs as telepsychiatry is implemented in correctional facilities and nursing homes.

“What we are doing now, some of it is here to stay,” Dr. Gupta said.

In situations where a patient needs to switch providers, clinicians should continue to follow that patient until his first patient visit with that new provider. It is also important to set boundaries and apply some level of formality to the telepsychiatry visit, which means seeing the patient in a secure location where he can speak freely and privately.

“The best practices are [to] maintain faith [and] fidelity of the psychiatric assessment,” Dr. Gupta said. “Keep the trust and do your best to maintain patient privacy, because the privacy is not the same as it may be in a face-to-face session when you use televideo.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Dr. Gupta reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Nasrallah disclosed serving as a consultant for and on the speakers bureaus of several pharmaceutical companies, including Alkermes, Janssen, and Lundbeck. He also disclosed serving on the speakers bureau of Otsuka.

The COVID-19 pandemic has changed life in numerous ways, including use of telehealth services for patients in all specialties. But telepsychiatry is an area not likely to go away even after the pandemic is over, according to Sanjay Gupta, MD.

Senior woman using telemendicine
Jean-philippe WALLET/Getty Images

The use of telepsychiatry has escalated significantly,” said Dr. Gupta, of the DENT Neurologic Institute, in Amherst, N.Y., in a bonus virtual meeting presented by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists.

About 90% of clinicians are performing telepsychiatry, Dr. Gupta noted, through methods such as phone consults, email, and video chat. As patients with psychiatric issues grapple with issues related to COVID-19 involving lockdowns, restrictions on travel, and consumption of news, they are presenting with addiction, depression, paranoia, mood lability, and other problems.

One issue immediately facing clinicians is whether to keep patients on long-acting injectables as a way to maintain psychological stability in patients with bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and alcoholism – something Dr. Gupta and session moderator Henry A. Nasrallah, MD, advocated. “We should never stop the long-acting injectable to switch them to oral medication. Those patients are very likely to relapse,” Dr. Nasrallah said.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta, chief medical officer of the BryLin Behavioral Health System in Buffalo, N.Y.
Dr. Sanjay Gupta

During the pandemic, clinicians need to find “safe and novel ways of providing the injection,” and several methods have been pioneered. For example, if a patient with schizophrenia is on lockdown, a nurse can visit monthly or bimonthly to administer an injection, check on the patient’s mental status, and assess whether that patient needs an adjustment to their medication. Other clinics are offering “drive-by” injections to patients who arrive by car, and a nurse wearing a mask and a face shield administers the injection from the car window. Monthly naltrexone also can be administered using one of these methods, and telepsychiatry can be used to monitor patients, Dr. Gupta noted at the meeting, presented by Global Academy for Medical Education.

“In my clinic, what happens is the injection room is set up just next to the door, so they don’t have to walk deep into the clinic,” Dr. Gupta said. “They walk in, go to the left, [and] there’s the injection room. They sit, get an injection, they’re out. It’s kept smooth.”
 

Choosing the right telehealth option

Clinicians should be aware of important regulatory changes that occurred that made widespread telehealth more appealing during the COVID-19 pandemic. Payment parity with in-office visits makes telehealth a viable consideration, while some states have begun offering telehealth licenses to practice across state lines. There is wide variation with regard to which states provide licensure and prescribing privileges for out-of-state clinicians without seeing those patients in person. “The most important thing: The psychiatry service is provided in the state where the patient is located,” Dr. Gupta said. Clinicians should check with that state’s board to figure out specific requirements. “Preferably if you get it in writing, it’s good for you,” he said.

Deciding who the clinician is seeing – consulting with patients or other physicians/clinicians – and what type of visits a clinician will conduct is an important step in transitioning to telepsychiatry. Visits from evaluation through ongoing care are possible through telepsychiatry, or a clinician can opt to see just second opinion visits, Dr. Gupta said. It is also important to consider the technical ability of the patient to do video conferencing.

As HIPAA requirements for privacy have relaxed, clinicians now have an array of teleconferencing options to choose from; platforms such as FaceTime, Doximity, Vidyo, Doxy.me, Zoom, and video chat through EMR are popular options. However, when regular HIPAA requirements are reinstated after the pandemic, clinicians will need to find a compliant platform and sign a business associate agreement to stay within the law.

“Right now, my preferred use is FaceTime,” Dr. Gupta said. “Quick, simple, easy to use. A lot of people have an iPhone, and they know how to do it. I usually have the patient call me and I don’t use my personal iPhone; my clinic has an iPhone.”

How a clinician looks during a telepsychiatry visit is also important. Lighting, position of the camera, and clothing should all be considered. Keep the camera at eye level, test the lighting in the room where the call will take place, and use artificial lighting sources behind a computer, Dr. Gupta said. Other tips for telepsychiatry visits include silencing devices and microphones before a session begins, wearing solid-colored clothes, and having an identification badge visible to the patient. Sessions should be free of background distractions, such as a dog barking or a child interrupting, with the goal of creating an environment where the patient feels free to answer questions.

Contingency planning is a must for video visits, Dr. Gupta said. “I think the simplest thing is to see the patient. But all the stuff that’s the wraparound is really hard, because issues can arise suddenly, and we need to plan.” If a patient has a medical issue or becomes actively suicidal during a session, it is important to know contact information for the local police and crisis services. Clinicians also must plan for technology failure and provide alternative options for continuing the sessions, such as by phone.
 

 

 

Selecting patients for telepsychiatry

Not all patients will make the transition to telepsychiatry. “You can’t do telepsychiatry with everyone. It is a risk, so pick and choose,” Dr. Gupta said.

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah
Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

“Safety is a big consideration for conducting a telepsychiatry visit, especially when other health care providers are present. For example, when performing telehealth visits in a clinic, nursing home, or correctional facility, “I feel a lot more comfortable if there’s another health care clinician there,” Dr. Gupta said.

Clinicians may want to avoid a telepsychiatry visit for a patient in their own home for reasons of safety, reliability, and privacy. A longitudinal history with collateral information from friends or relatives can be helpful, but some subtle signs and body language may get missed over video, compared with an in-person visit. “Telepsychiatry can be a barrier at times. If there is substance abuse, we may not smell alcohol. Sometimes you may not see if the patient is using substances. You have to really reconsider if [there] is violence and self-injurious behavior,” he said.

Discussing the pros and cons of telepsychiatry is important to obtaining patient consent. While consent requirements have relaxed under the COVID-19 pandemic, consent should ideally be obtained in writing, but can also be obtained verbally during a crisis. A plan should be developed for what will happen in the case of technology failure. “The patient should also know you’re maintaining privacy, you’re maintaining confidentiality, but there is a risk of hacking,” Dr. Gupta said. “Those things can happen, [and] there are no guarantees.”

If a patient is uncomfortable after beginning telepsychiatry, moving to in-person visits is also an option. “Many times, I do that if I’m not getting a good handle on things,” Dr. Gupta said. Situations where patients insist on in-patient visits over telepsychiatry are rare in his experience, Dr. Gupta noted, and are usually the result of the patient being unfamiliar with the technology. In cases where a patient cannot be talked through a technology barrier, visits can be done in the clinic while taking proper precautions.

“If it is a first-time visit, then I do it in the clinic,” Dr. Gupta said. “They come in, they have a face mask, and we use our group therapy room. The patients sit in a social-distanced fashion. But then, you document why you did this in-person visit like that.”

Documentation during COVID-19 also includes identifying the patient at the first visit, the nature of the visit (teleconference or other), parties present, referencing the pandemic, writing the location of the patient and the clinician, noting the patient’s satisfaction, evaluating the patient’s mental status, and recording what technology was used and any technical issues that were encountered.

Some populations of patients are better suited to telepsychiatry than others. It is more convenient for chronically psychiatrically ill patients in group homes and their staff to communicate through telepsychiatry, Dr. Gupta said. Consultation liaison in hospitals and emergency departments through telepsychiatry can limit the spread of infection, while increased access and convenience occurs as telepsychiatry is implemented in correctional facilities and nursing homes.

“What we are doing now, some of it is here to stay,” Dr. Gupta said.

In situations where a patient needs to switch providers, clinicians should continue to follow that patient until his first patient visit with that new provider. It is also important to set boundaries and apply some level of formality to the telepsychiatry visit, which means seeing the patient in a secure location where he can speak freely and privately.

“The best practices are [to] maintain faith [and] fidelity of the psychiatric assessment,” Dr. Gupta said. “Keep the trust and do your best to maintain patient privacy, because the privacy is not the same as it may be in a face-to-face session when you use televideo.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Dr. Gupta reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Nasrallah disclosed serving as a consultant for and on the speakers bureaus of several pharmaceutical companies, including Alkermes, Janssen, and Lundbeck. He also disclosed serving on the speakers bureau of Otsuka.

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