Angela Boccio
Stony Brook University
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Featured researches published by Angela Boccio.
Biological Psychiatry | 1992
Lynn E. DeLisi; Peter Stritzke; Henry Riordan; Victor Holan; Angela Boccio; Maureen Kushner; Joyce McClelland; Olga Van Eyl; Azad K. Anand
The present study is an examination of ventricular and temporal lobe size in 50 DSM-III-R first-episode schizophreniform or schizoaffective patients who were ill for less than 6 months. Two-year clinical follow-up and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan analyses are also reported from data collected on an initial group of 30 first-episode schizophrenic patients and controls. Left ventricular enlargement, which was present in our previously published report of first-episode cases of schizophrenia, is not present to the same extent in this larger group of schizophreniform patients closer to the onset of their illness, and no temporal lobe volume reduction was detected. However, lateral ventricular size at the time of the first-episode was generally correlated with outcome--the larger the ventricles, the poorer the outcome. No mean change in ventricular or temporal lobe size was found at rescanning 2 years later, but the degree of ventricular change was inversely correlated with the number of hospitalizations and the amount of time spent in hospital; it did not correlate with temporal lobe size. When rescanned, some patients showed change greater than 20% in ventricular size and 10% in temporal lobe size. Thus, these findings need further evaluation by serial scans over a longer time period before it can be determined that no progression of brain structural abnormalities is occurring as part of the pathology of schizophrenia, even in a subgroup of patients.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1991
Lynn E. DeLisi; Angela Boccio; Henry Riordan; Anne L. Hoff; Arlene Dorfman; Joyce McClelland; Maureen Kushner; Olga Van Eyl; Neal L. Oden
One hundred consecutive first admission patients with a DSM-III-R diagnosis of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or schizophreniform disorder were compared with 100 randomly selected community controls. Childhood histories of physical, medical, and perinatal trauma, as well as physical and cognitive development, were examined by structured interviews with all available mothers of patients and controls. The prevalence of specific psychiatric disorders and several medical illnesses among first degree and more distant relatives was determined by family history questionnaires. The patient group did not have an excess of childhood head injuries, serious infections, or perinatal/birth complications compared with controls. With social class level taken into account, it was found that the acquisition of reading skills occurred significantly later in patients than controls. Family histories of schizophrenia and thyroid disorders were significantly more frequent among patients than controls. These data fail to indicate any childhood physical or medical environmental trauma that could lead to an increased risk for schizophrenia, although patients were substance abusers to a greater extent than controls. This study also confirms the already known contribution of familial factors and suggests an association of the inheritance of thyroid disorders with schizophrenia. Delayed development of reading skills suggests that precursers of illness may appear early in life before psychosis is evident.
Schizophrenia Research | 1993
Lynn E. DeLisi; T. Lehner; N. Bass; Angela Boccio; R. Lofthouse; J. Ott; M. Poulter; Gail Shields; Tarulata Shah; Tim J. Crow
The sex chromosomes are strong candidates for a genetic locus for schizophrenia and the affective psychoses. Gender differences in the clinical expression of illness and familial risks, concordance for gender and illness in relatives, and an association of X chromosome anomalies with psychosis suggest an X chromosome locus. The presence of male-to-male transmission in some families, in the face of a lack of strong evidence for heterogeneity, specifically focuses the search within the pseudoautosomal region of the X and Y chromosomes where sequence homology and recombination takes place.
Schizophrenia Bulletin | 1992
Anne L. Hoff; Henry Riordan; Donald W. O'Donnell; Peter Stritzke; Chance Neale; Angela Boccio; Azad K. Anand; Lynn E. DeLisi
British Journal of Psychiatry | 1991
J Collinge; Lynn E. DeLisi; Angela Boccio; Eve C. Johnstone; A Lane; C Larkin; M Leach; R. Lofthouse; F Owen; Mark Poulter
Archives of General Psychiatry | 1994
Lynn E. DeLisi; Nick Bass; Angela Boccio; Gail Shields; Carla Morganti; Antonio Vita
Schizophrenia Research | 1991
Lynn E. DeLisi; Peter Stritzke; Victor Holan; Azad K. Anand; Angela Boccio; Maureen Kuschner; Henry Riordan; Joyce McClelland; Olga VanEyle
British Journal of Psychiatry | 1991
Lynn E. DeLisi; Timothy J. Crow; Kay E. Davies; Joseph D. Terwilliger; Jurg Ott; Ragnatham Ram; T.J. Flint; Angela Boccio
American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1993
Hilary Coon; M. Hoff; John Holik; Lynn E. DeLisi; Timothy Crowe; Robert Freedman; Gail Shields; Angela Boccio; Melissa Lerman; Elliot S. Gershon; Pablo V. Gejman; M. Leppert; William Byerley
Schizophrenia Research | 1991
M.H. Polymeropoulos; L.E. De Lisi; M. Poulter; R. Lofthouse; Tim J. Crow; H. Xiao; Angela Boccio; J.L. Weber; C.R. Merril