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Featured researches published by C. Morgan.


Psychological Medicine | 2011

Abnormal cortisol awakening response predicts worse cognitive function in patients with first-episode psychosis

M. Aas; Paola Dazzan; Valeria Mondelli; Timothea Toulopoulou; A. Reichenberg; M. Di Forti; Helen L. Fisher; Rowena Handley; Nilay Hepgul; Tiago Reis Marques; Ana Miorelli; Heather Taylor; Manuela Russo; Benjamin Wiffen; Andrew Papadopoulos; Katherine J. Aitchison; C. Morgan; Robin M. Murray; Carmine M. Pariante

BACKGROUND Cognitive impairment, particularly in memory and executive function, is a core feature of psychosis. Moreover, psychosis is characterized by a more prominent history of stress exposure, and by dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. In turn, stress exposure and abnormal levels of the main HPA axis hormone cortisol are associated with cognitive impairments in a variety of clinical and experimental samples; however, this association has never been examined in first-episode psychosis (FEP). METHOD In this study, 30 FEP patients and 26 controls completed assessment of the HPA axis (cortisol awakening response and cortisol levels during the day), perceived stress, recent life events, history of childhood trauma, and cognitive function. The neuropsychological battery comprised general cognitive function, verbal and non-verbal memory, executive function, perception, visuospatial abilities, processing speed, and general knowledge. RESULTS Patients performed significantly worse on all cognitive domains compared to controls. In patients only, a more blunted cortisol awakening response (that is, more abnormal) was associated with a more severe deficit in verbal memory and processing speed. In controls only, higher levels of perceived stress and more recent life events were associated with a worse performance in executive function and perception and visuospatial abilities. CONCLUSIONS These data support a role for the HPA axis, as measured by cortisol awakening response, in modulating cognitive function in patients with psychosis; however, this association does not seem to be related to the increased exposure to psychosocial stressors described in these patients.


Schizophrenia Research | 2007

Duration of untreated psychosis and neuropsychological function in first episode psychosis.

Julia Lappin; Kevin Morgan; C. Morgan; Paola Dazzan; Abraham Reichenberg; Jolanta Zanelli; Paul Fearon; Peter B. Jones; Tuhina Lloyd; Jane Tarrant; Annette Farrant; Julian Leff; Robin M. Murray

PURPOSE We investigated whether duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) prior to first presentation was associated with cognitive function in first episode psychosis (FEP) subjects. We predicted that longer DUP would be associated with greater neurocognitive impairment. METHOD 180 subjects with schizophrenia (and 93 subjects with Other Psychoses) performed a neurocognitive battery assessing IQ, verbal learning, working memory, visual learning and speed of processing. DUP was defined as the number of days between first onset of psychotic symptoms and first contact with psychiatric services. RESULTS Longer DUP was associated with impaired performance in verbal IQ (p=0.04), verbal learning (p=0.02), and verbal working memory (p=0.04) in FEP subjects with schizophrenia. These associations remained significant for verbal IQ when scores were corrected for age, gender, educational level and ethnicity. CONCLUSIONS Longer DUP is associated with poorer neurocognitive ability in schizophrenia subjects at time of first presentation. Since this was a cross-sectional study we can not tell whether longer DUP was a cause or a consequence of the poorer performance.


Schizophrenia Research | 2012

Linear and non-linear associations of symptom dimensions and cognitive function in first-onset psychosis

Eugenia Kravariti; Manuela Russo; Evangelos Vassos; Kevin Morgan; Paul Fearon; Jolanta Zanelli; Arsime Demjaha; Julia Lappin; Elias Tsakanikos; Paola Dazzan; C. Morgan; Gillian A. Doody; Glynn Harrison; Peter B. Jones; Robin M. Murray; Abraham Reichenberg

BACKGROUND Associations between symptom dimensions and cognition have been mainly studied in non-affective psychosis. The present study investigated whether previously reported associations between cognition and four symptom dimensions (reality distortion, negative symptoms, disorganisation and depression) in non-affective psychosis generalise to a wider spectrum of psychoses. It also extended the research focus to mania, a less studied symptom dimension. METHODS Linear and non-linear (quadratic, curvilinear or inverted-U-shaped) associations between cognition and the above five symptom dimensions were examined in a population-based cohort of 166 patients with first-onset psychosis using regression analyses. RESULTS Negative symptoms showed statistically significant linear associations with IQ and processing speed, and a significant curvilinear association with verbal memory/learning. Significant quadratic associations emerged between mania and processing speed and mania and executive function. The contributions of mania and negative symptoms to processing speed were independent of each other. The findings did not differ between affective and non-affective psychoses, and survived correction for multiple testing. CONCLUSIONS Mania and negative symptoms are associated with distinct patterns of cerebral dysfunction in first-onset psychosis. A novel finding is that mania relates to cognitive performance by a complex response function (inverted-U-shaped relationship). The associations of negative symptoms with cognition include both linear and quadratic elements, suggesting that this dimension is not a unitary concept. These findings cut across affective and non-affective psychoses, suggesting that different diagnostic entities within the psychosis spectrum lie on a neurobiological continuum.


Archive | 2008

Society and psychosis

C. Morgan; Kwame McKenzie; Paul Fearon


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2005

Social isolation, ethnicity, and psychosis: Findings from the AESOP first onset psychosis study

C. Morgan; James B. Kirkbride; R Mallett; Gerard Hutchinson; Paul Fearon; Kevin Morgan; Paola Dazzan; Thomas Jamieson-Craig; Glynn Harrison; Philip H. Jones; Robin M. Murray; Julian Leff


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2005

Patterns of psychosis in black and white minority groups in urban UK: The AESOP study

Paul Fearon; James B. Kirkbride; C. Morgan; T Lloyd; Kevin Morgan; Paola Dazzan; Gerard Hutchinson; J Holloway; J Tarrant; R Mallett; G Harrison; Julian Leff; Peter B. Jones; Robin M. Murray


Archive | 2008

Society and Psychosis: Introduction

C. Morgan; Kwame McKenzie; Paul Fearon


Schizophrenia Research | 2006

TC4E CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT AS A RISK FACTOR FOR PSYCHOSIS.

Helen L. Fisher; C. Morgan; Paul Fearon; Kevin Morgan; P. Dazzan; G. Doody; Tom Craig; Glynn Harrison; Julian Leff; Philip H. Jones; R.M. Murray


Schizophrenia Research | 2006

Symptom dimensions and ethnicity in the AESOP first onset psychosis study

Arsime Demjaha; Kevin Morgan; C. Morgan; P. Dazzan; Sabine Landau; Kimberlie Dean; Paul Fearon; Julian Leff; Philip H. Jones; Robin M. Murray


Schizophrenia Research | 2008

2 – The association between minor physical anomalies and IQ in first episode psychosis

B. Dimambro; Tuhina Lloyd; P. Dazzan; Kimberlie Dean; Paul Fearon; G. Doody; Jane Tarrant; Kevin Morgan; C. Morgan; Gerard Hutchinson; Julian Leff; Glynn Harrison; R.M. Murray; Peter B. Jones

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Kevin Morgan

University of Nottingham

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Gerard Hutchinson

University of the West Indies

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P. Dazzan

King's College London

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G. Doody

University of Nottingham

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