Allen Y. Tien
Johns Hopkins University
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Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 1991
Allen Y. Tien
SummaryHallucinations are often manifestations of severe psychiatric conditions seen clinically. However, unde is known about the distribution of incident hallucinations in the community, nor whether there has been a change over the past century. Data from the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program is used here to provide descriptive information on the community distribution, and data from the Sidgewick study from a century earlier provides comparative information. In the ECA data, the incidence of visual hallucinations was slightly higher in males (about 20 per 1000 per year) than females (about 13 per 1000 per year) across the age span from 18 to 80 years old, with a subsequent increase in the rate for females (up to about 40 per 1000 per year) after age 80. For auditory hallucinations there was an age 25–30 peak in males with a trough for females, and a later age 40–50 peak for females. Overall, there were substantial gender differences, and the effect of aging to increase the incidence of hatlucinations was the most consistent and prominent. The Sidgewick study showed a much higher proportion of visual hallucinations than the ECA program. This might be due to factors affecting brain function as well as social and psychological changes over time, although methodological weaknesses in both studies might also be responable
Biological Psychiatry | 1997
Godfrey D. Pearlson; Patrick E. Barta; Richard E. Powers; Rajiv R. Menon; Stephanie S. Richards; Elizabeth H. Aylward; Elizabeth B. Federman; Gary A. Chase; Richard G. Petty; Allen Y. Tien
Prior magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies report both medial and lateral cortical temporal changes and disturbed temporal lobe asymmetries in schizophrenic patients compared with healthy controls. The specificity of temporal lobe (TL) changes in schizophrenia is unknown. We determined the occurrence and specificity of these TL changes. Forty-six schizophrenic patients were compared to 60 normal controls and 27 bipolar subjects on MRI measures of bilateral volumes of anterior and posterior superior temporal gyrus (STG), amygdala, entorhinal cortex, and multiple medial temporal structures, as well as global brain measures. Several regional comparisons distinguished schizophrenia from bipolar disorder. Entorhinal cortex, not previously assessed using MRI in schizophrenia, was bilaterally smaller than normal in schizophrenia but not in bipolar disorder. Schizophrenic but not bipolar patients had an alteration of normal posterior STG asymmetry. Additionally, left anterior STG and right amygdala were smaller than predicted in schizophrenia but not bipolar disorder. Left amygdala was smaller and right anterior STG larger in bipolar disorder but not schizophrenia.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1997
Joseph J. Gallo; Peter V. Rabins; Constantine G. Lyketsos; Allen Y. Tien; James C. Anthony
OBJECTIVES: We hypothesized that depressive symptoms not meeting full standard criteria for Major Depression would be associated with significant functional impairment among older adults over the course of a 13‐year follow‐up interval. Specifically, we developed criteria for a form of depression whose core symptoms did not include sadness or dysphoria.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 1996
Godfrey D. Pearlson; Richard G. Petty; Christopher A. Ross; Allen Y. Tien
There is considerable evidence of disturbances of multiple brain areas in schizophrenia. The clinical features and findings form pathologic and neuro-imaging studies suggest primary involvement of a system of parallel distributed networks within the neocortex--the phylogenetically recent heteromodal association cortex (HASC). There is evidence that HASC is a family of higher-order parallel distributed networks of circuits, mediating complex representationally guided behaviors. We argue that HADC regions are especially involved in schizophrenia. Lesions of HASC in the disease are likely to be neurodevelopmental in origin (as evidenced by such examples as reversed planum temporale asymmetry) which have been identified by magnetic resonance imaging as specific regions of disproportionately reduced local gray matter volumes, and by neuropathologic examination as cellular migration disruptions. We believe the hypothesis of preferential heteromodal cortical abnormalities has heuristic value, and briefly indicate how it opens new avenues for investigating this debilitating condition.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1995
Thomas E. Schlaepfer; Gordon J. Harris; Allen Y. Tien; Luon W. Peng; Seong Lee; Godfrey D. Pearlson
There are both reproductive and nonreproductive behavioral differences between men and women. Brain regions involved in determining sexual behavior have been reported to differ between the sexes. Nonreproductive, cognitive functional differences between sexes might be reflected in higher-order cortical structural dimorphisms, which have not previously been studied. We hypothesized that cortical regions involved in verbal behavior (which is sexually dimorphic) would differ between sexes. Using magnetic resonance imaging, we assessed gray matter volumes in several cortical regions in 17 women and 43 men. Women had 23.2% (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) and 12.8% (superior temporal gyrus) greater gray matter percentages (corrected for overall brain size and age) than men in a language-related cortical region, but not in a more visuospatially related cortical region. These data seem to establish sexually dimorphic structural differences in the cerebral cortex, consistent with prior cerebral blood flow reports.
Psychological Medicine | 2001
Wen Hung Kuo; Joseph J. Gallo; Allen Y. Tien
BACKGROUND Utilizing a prospectively designed community sample, we set out to estimate the rate of newly-incident suicidal ideation and attempts (non-fatal suicide behaviour) in a community sample, to evaluate antecedent sociodemographic characteristics and psychiatric disorders, and to assess use of mental health services in relation to non-fatal suicide behaviour. METHOD Prospectively-gathered data was utilized from 3481 continuing participants in the 13-year follow-up of the Baltimore sample of the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area survey interviewed in 1981, 1982 and 1993/6. RESULTS The incidence of suicide attempts was estimated at 148.8 per 100,000 person-years and ideation at 419.9 per 100,000 person-years. Persons in the youngest age group, in the lowest socioeconomic status, and previously married persons were at increased risk for non-fatal suicide behaviour during the follow-up interval. Persons who reported suicidal ideation at baseline were more likely to report having attempted suicide at follow-up (RR = 6.09, 95% CI 2.58-14.36). Psychiatric disorders, especially depression and substance abuse, were associated with new-onset of non-fatal suicidal behaviour. While persons who reported newly-incident suicidal behaviour were more likely to report use of mental health services, few said that suicidal ideation or attempts were the reason for the visits. CONCLUSIONS Suicidal ideation is a common and important antecedent to suicide attempts and deserves more attention in community and general medical settings.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1990
Allen Y. Tien; James C. Anthony
Clinical and laboratory studies link alcohol and other drug use to the occurrence of psychotic experiences, but epidemiologic evidence has been lacking. In this study, the quantitative relationships between alcohol or other drug use and psychotic experiences were examined by analysis of prospective data from 4994 adult household residents sampled in a multisite survey of mental disorders in the population, the NIMH Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program. After control for sociodemographic factors and preexisting psychiatric conditions, the risk for onset of self-reported delusions or hallucinations was observed to be greater for daily users of marijuana or cocaine and for users of anxiolytics or sympathomimetics compared with nonusers. After control for daily cocaine use and alcohol disorder, the risk of onset of psychotic experiences for daily users of marijuana was double that for nonusers. Alcohol disorder in men was associated with eightfold risk and in women with threefold risk. Baseline depressive episodes, manic episodes, agoraphobia, and obsessive-compulsive disorder also were associated with increased risk of onset of psychotic experiences.
Schizophrenia Research | 1995
Rajiv R. Menon; Patrick E. Barta; Elizabeth H. Aylward; Stephanie S. Richards; David D. Vaughn; Allen Y. Tien; Gordon J. Harris; Godfrey D. Pearlson
We report an MRI morphometric study of the posterior segment of the superior temporal gyrus (STG) in twenty young male schizophrenics and their individually matched normal controls. In particular the more posterior segment of STG was examined, since it has been identified as the approximate site of Wernickes language area and is a marker for the planum temporale, a region believed to be abnormal in schizophrenia. Total volumes and grey and white matter volumes were measured in middle and posterior STG in each hemisphere. STG grey matter volumes and percentages were significantly reduced bilaterally in both regions in schizophrenic subjects. No significant differences between patients and controls were noted in STG white matter volumes. A significant correlation was detected between delusion scores in schizophrenics and the total volume of the left dominant posterior STG. Replicating the findings of a recent study (Shenton et al., 1992), we found an inverse correlation between thought disorder scores and grey matter reduction in the left posterior STG in schizophrenia.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1996
Allen Y. Tien; David E. Ross; Godfrey D. Pearlson; Milton E. Strauss
The aim of this study was to examine multivariate patterns of relationships between oculomotor performance, psychopathology, and neuropsychology. Performance on smooth pursuit and saccadic eye movement tasks was assessed in three DSM-III-R diagnosis-based groups of subjects; normal (N = 55), schizophrenic (N = 29), and bipolar disorder (N = 26) and analyzed in relation to age, gender, scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms, Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms, and Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale scores, Shipley intelligence quotient, and Wisconsin Card Sorting Test performance. The greatest difference was a higher proportion of errors in the antisaccade task in the schizophrenic and bipolar groups, which was related to worse Wisconsin Card Sorting Test performance and was not accounted for by gender, age, education, or intelligence quotient. A significant gender and bipolar interaction showed bipolar women to have worse antisaccade performance. Abnormal smooth pursuit was more specific to schizophrenia. Antisaccade task and sine wave root-mean-square error were correlated in bipolar but not schizophrenic subjects. Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms and Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms scores had independent associations with the antisaccade task. Faster reaction times in the schizophrenic group to antisaccade errors were observed, suggesting an abnormality in visual attention processing and perhaps sensory gating functions. These results confirm abnormal smooth pursuit in schizophrenia and suggest that impairments in saccadic function are less specific to diagnostic group. Oculomotor performance and psychopathology seem related in complex ways to age, gender, intelligence quotient, and executive neuropsychological and possibly visual attention functions.
Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences | 1996
Allen Y. Tien; Spevack Tv; Jones Dw; Godfrey D. Pearlson; Thomas E. Schlaepfer; Milton E. Strauss
Computer-based testing in neuropsychology potentially offers important advantages. These include improvement in reliability and more efficient use of resources. For tests such as the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) in which examiners must provide on-going feedback to subjects, reliability may be decreased by variability and errors in test presentation, errors in response recording and feedback, and errors in scoring. In addition, an important aspects of neuropsychological assessment is qualitative, that is, observations of the processes by which the subject responds to the test situation. The mechanics of administering the WCST hinder the examiner from allocating attention for observing these processes. Accordingly, we have automated both the administration and the scoring of the WCST. Although potential benefits of computerizing the WCST seem likely, it is possible that factors which cannot at present be duplicated by a computer may effect performance. This study compared performance between the standard manual Heaton version of the WCST and the computerized version. In a group of 33 normal and psychiatric subjects, there were significant differences in the number of Errors and the number of Correct responses, but no significant differences in performance were found for Perseverative Responses, Perseverative Errors, and Set Breaks. The mean number of Categories achieved was 2.0 for the computer administered version and 2.4 for the manual version: this difference was only marginally significant (p = 0.065). The computerized form of the WCST appears to yield similar quantitative results on scores which are most specifically affected by brain injuries in testing with the manual form. Lower variance was seen in the computer scores. This result is consistent with more reliable administration and accuracy in data acquisition and scoring in the computer version. The results overall indicate that the computer version is not a substitute for a human examiner, rather, the computer can function as a reliable partner, carrying out the mechanics of test presentation and scoring, freeing the examiner to more fully support the subject in taking the test and to observe the non-quantitative aspects of test performance.