Carlos S. Castillo
University of Iowa
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Developmental Neuropsychology | 2004
Jeffrey E. Max; Amy E. Lansing; Sharon L. Koele; Carlos S. Castillo; Hirokazu Bokura; Russell Schachar; Nicole Collings; Kathryn E. Williams
To better characterize pediatric psychopathology after neurological insult, secondary attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (SADHD)-or ADHD that develops after traumatic brain injury (TBI)-and its clinical and neuroimaging correlates were investigated. Outcome data were available for 118 children, ages 5 through 14 at the time of hospitalization following TBI (severe TBI n = 37; mild-moderate TBI n = 57) and orthopedic injury (n = 24). Standardized psychiatric, adaptive functioning, cognitive functioning, family functioning, and family psychiatric history assessments were conducted on all participants. Severity of injury and neuroimaging lesion assessments were conducted on TBI participants only. The diagnosis of SADHD was mutually exclusive with preinjury ADHD, which occurred in 13 of 94 TBI participants and 4 of 24 orthopedic injury participants. SADHD occurred in 13 of 34 eligible participants with severe TBI but resolved in 4 of 13 of these participants. SADHD also occurred in 1 of 8 eligible moderate TBI participants, only in the presence of preinjury ADHD traits and 3 of 39 of eligible mild TBI cases. SADHD occurred in 1 of 20 of eligible participants with orthopedic injury without any brain injury. SADHD was significantly associated with TBI severity recorded by categorical and dimensional measures, intellectual and adaptive functioning deficits, and personality change due to TBI, but not with lesion area or location. These results suggest that SADHD is a clinically important syndrome after severe TBI in children and adolescents.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1998
Jeffrey E. Max; Carlos S. Castillo; Donald A. Robin; Scott D. Lindgren; Wilbur L. Smith; Yutaka Sato; Stephan Arndt
The purpose of this study was to quantify and to identify predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptomatology after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Fifty children aged 6 to 14 years, hospitalized after TBI, were assessed soon after TBI regarding injury severity and preinjury psychiatric, socioeconomic, family functioning, and family psychiatric history status; neuroimaging was also analyzed. Psychiatric assessments were repeated 3, 6, 12, and 24 months after TBI. Only 2 of 46 (4%) subjects with at least one follow-up assessment developed PTSD. However, the frequency with which subjects experienced at least one PTSD symptom ranged from 68% in the first 3 months to 12% at 2 years in assessed children. The presence of an internalizing disorder at time of injury followed by greater injury severity were the most consistent predictors of PTSD symptomatology. It is apparent, therefore, that PTSD and subsyndromal posttraumatic stress disturbances occur despite neurogenic amnesia. These problems should be treated, particularly if symptoms persist beyond 3 months.
American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 1997
Susan K. Schultz; Carlos S. Castillo; J. Todd Rosier; Robert G. Robinson
The authors examined the course of anxiety up to 2 years after stroke in relation to depressive symptoms, impairment in activities of daily living (ADLs), and social functioning. One hundred forty-two patients were evaluated at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months after stroke. Anxiety was associated with greater depression severity at all follow-up visits. Depression severity was associated with impairment in ADLs at followup; association of anxiety and impairment in ADLs was present only at the intake visit, with independent effects only for women. Women reported more symptoms of both anxiety and depression during the 2-year period. Younger patients reported more anxiety symptoms, but there was no difference between age-groups in depressive symptoms. Severity of anxiety was also related to higher depression scores at initial hospitalization, but not in the remainder of the 2-year period. In summary, anxiety is associated with increased severity of depressive symptoms and greater impairment in function primarily during the acute hospitalization period. Women and younger patients also may be more vulnerable to anxiety after stroke.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1998
Jeffrey E. Max; Carlos S. Castillo; Hirokazu Bokura; Donald A. Robin; Scott D. Lindgren; Wilbur L. Smith; Yutaka Sato; Philip J. Mattheis
Our goal was to prospectively study the course of oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) symptomatology in children and adolescents in the first 2 years after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Fifty children aged 6 to 14, hospitalized after TBI, were assessed soon after TBI regarding injury severity; preinjury psychiatric, socioeconomic, family functioning, and family psychiatric history status; and neuroimaging was analyzed. ODD symptomatology in the first year after TBI was related to preinjury family function, social class, and preinjury ODD symptomatology. Increased severity of TBI predicted ODD symptomatology 2 years after injury. Change (from before TBI) in ODD symptomatology at 6, 12, and 24 months after TBI was influenced by socioeconomic status. Only at 2 years after injury was severity of injury a predictor of change in ODD symptomatology. The influence of psychosocial factors appears greater than severity of injury in accounting for ODD symptomatology and change in such symptomatology in the first but not the second year after TBI in children and adolescents. This appears related to persistence of new ODD symptomatology after more serious TBI.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1998
Jeffrey E. Max; Carlos S. Castillo; Scott D. Lindgren; Stephan Arndt
OBJECTIVE To evaluate reliability and validity for the Neuropsychiatric Rating Schedule (NPRS) interview designed to permit diagnosis of organic personality syndrome (OPS) or personality change due to a general medical condition (PC). METHOD Subjects from prospective (n = 50) and retrospective (n = 72) studies of traumatic brain injury were aged 6 through 18 years. Parents and children were informants for the NPRS. Convergent and discriminant validity of subtypes of OPS/PC were assessed against standard scales completed by parents and teachers. Interrater reliability data (n = 20), test-retest reliability data (n = 42), as well as sensitivity-to-change data (n = 37) were collected. RESULTS All subtypes of OPS/PC were diagnosed, but apathy and paranoia subtypes were rare. Rating scale data supported convergent validity of OPS/PC subtypes generated with the NPRS. Affective instability, rage/aggression, and inappropriate social judgment were moderately to highly correlated, but apathy and paranoia could be discriminated from each of these subtypes. Interrater agreement for NPRS items was fair to excellent for all but one item (paranoia). Test-retest reliability was fair to good, and sensitivity to change was demonstrated. CONCLUSION The NPRS generated reliable and valid diagnoses of the common subtypes of OPS/PC.
Current Opinion in Psychiatry | 1994
Carlos S. Castillo; Robert G. Robinson
During the past year, significant contributions have been made to the literature on post-stroke depression. These studies have confirmed the importance of left-anterior cerebral hemisphere lesion in the production of major depression and identified this as a phenomenon which is most evident during t
Current Opinion in Psychiatry | 1991
Carlos S. Castillo; Robert G. Robinson
Depression is the most common neuropsychiatric disorder found in patients with stroke. Our recent studies have shown that personal/family psychiatric history, pre-existing subcortical atrophy, and reversed hemispheric asymmetries are factors which can affect the association previously reported between major depression and left frontal or basal ganglia stroke. We discuss how these factors may have contributed to the inability of other researchers in recent studies to find these clinical-pathological correlations
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1997
Jeffrey E. Max; Donald A. Robin; Scott D. Lindgren; Wilbur L. Smith; Yutaka Sato; Philip J. Mattheis; Julie A. G. Stierwalt; Carlos S. Castillo
Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1998
Jeffrey E. Max; Donald A. Robin; Scott D. Lindgren; Wilbur L. Smith; Yutaka Sato; Philip J. Mattheis; Julie A. G. Stierwalt; Carlos S. Castillo
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1998
Jeffrey E. Max; Stephan Arndt; Carlos S. Castillo; Hirokazu Bokura; Donald A. Robin; Scott D. Lindgren; Wilbur L. Smith; Yutaka Sato; Philip J. Mattheis
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University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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