Carly Samson
King's College London
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Featured researches published by Carly Samson.
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2015
Gemma Modinos; Huai-Hsuan Tseng; Irina Falkenberg; Carly Samson; Philip McGuire; Paul Allen
Neurobiological and behavioral findings suggest that psychosis is associated with corticolimbic hyperactivity during the processing of emotional salience. This has not been widely studied in the early stages of psychosis, and the impact of these abnormalities on psychotic symptoms and global functioning is unknown. We sought to address this issue in 18 patients with first-episode psychosis (FEP), 18 individuals at ultra high risk of psychosis (UHR) and 22 healthy controls (HCs). Corticolimbic response and subjective ratings to emotional and neutral scenes were measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging. The clinical and functional impact of corticolimbic abnormalities was assessed with regression analyses. The FEP and UHR groups reported increased subjective emotional arousal to neutral scenes compared with HCs. Across groups, emotional vs neutral scenes elicited activation in the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, inferior frontal gyrus/anterior insula and amygdala. Although FEP and UHR participants showed reduced activation in these regions when viewing emotional scenes compared with controls, this was driven by increased activation to neutral scenes. Corticolimbic hyperactivity to neutral scenes predicted higher levels of positive symptoms and poorer levels of functioning. These results indicate that disruption of emotional brain systems may represent an important biological substrate for the pathophysiology of early psychosis and UHR states.
Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2018
Paul Allen; Matilda Azis; Gemma Modinos; Matthijs G. Bossong; Ilaria Bonoldi; Carly Samson; Beverly Quinn; Matthew J. Kempton; Oliver Howes; James Stone; Maria Calem; Jesus Perez; Sagnik Bhattacharayya; Matthew R. Broome; Anthony A. Grace; Fernando Zelaya; Philip McGuire
We recently reported that resting hippocampal, basal ganglia and midbrain perfusion is elevated in people at ultra high risk (UHR) for psychosis. The present study sought to replicate our previous finding in an independent UHR cohort, and examined the relationship between resting perfusion in these regions, psychosis and depression symptoms, and traumatic experiences in childhood. Pseudo-Continuous Arterial Spin Labelling (p-CASL) imaging was used to measure resting cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in 77 UHR for psychosis individuals and 25 healthy volunteers in a case-control design. UHR participants were recruited from clinical early detection services at 3 sites in the South of England. Symptoms levels were assessed using the Comprehensive Assessment of At Risk Mental States (CAARMS), the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D), and childhood trauma was assessed retrospectively using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ). Right hippocampal and basal ganglia rCBF were significantly increased in UHR subjects compared to controls, partially replicating our previous finding in an independent cohort. In UHR participants, positive symptoms were positively correlated with rCBF in the right pallidum. CTQ scores were positively correlated with rCBF values in the bilateral hippocampus and negatively associated with rCBF in the left prefrontal cortex. Elevated resting hippocampal and basal ganglia activity appears to be a consistent finding in individuals at high risk for psychosis, consistent with data from preclinical models of the disorder. The association with childhood trauma suggests that its influence on the risk of psychosis may be mediated through an effect on hippocampal function.
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2016
Luís Madeira; Ilaria Bonoldi; Matteo Rocchetti; Carly Samson; Matilda Azis; Beverly Queen; Matthijs G. Bossong; Jesus Perez; James Stone; Paul Allen; Oliver Howes; Philip McGuire; Andrea Raballo; Paolo Fusar-Poli; Massimo Ballerini; Giovanni Stanghellini
BACKGROUND Contemporary phenomenological research has considered abnormal bodily phenomena (ABP) to be a phenotypic trait of subjects with schizophrenia in their first psychotic episode. Yet the prevalence of ABP and their clinical significance in subjects at Ultra High Risk (UHR) of psychosis remain unidentified. This study is an exploratory investigation of ABP in UHR subjects and matched healthy controls (HCs) examining their relation to clinical features and basic self-disturbances. METHODS A sample of 26 UHR and 14 HC subjects from three prodromal and early intervention clinics in South London, West London and Cambridge was assessed with the Abnormal Bodily Phenomena questionnaire (ABPq), Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States (CAARMS), the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), the Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale (SOFAS) and the Examination of Anomalous Self Experiences (EASE) checklist. RESULTS In our sample ABP occurred in 73.1% of UHR subjects and prominent ABP (proABP) were referred in 53.8% of them. No HC subject reported ABP. The UHR group with proABP had lower CAARMS total score (t=-9.265, p=0.006). There were no differences in PANSS total score (t=-1.235, p=0.277), SOFAS score (H(2) 22.27, p=0.666) and EASE total scores (z=8.565, adjusted p=0.185) in the UHR subjects with prominent ABP versus those that did not. DISCUSSION This initial investigation suggests that ABP could be a prevalent phenotypic feature of UHR subjects.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2018
Gemma Modinos; Fatma Şimşek; Matilda Azis; Matthijs G. Bossong; Ilaria Bonoldi; Carly Samson; Beverly Quinn; Jesus Perez; Matthew R. Broome; Fernando Zelaya; David Lythgoe; Oliver Howes; James Stone; Anthony A. Grace; Paul Allen; Philip McGuire
Preclinical models propose that the onset of psychosis is associated with hippocampal hyperactivity, thought to be driven by cortical GABAergic interneuron dysfunction and disinhibition of pyramidal neurons. Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that resting hippocampal perfusion is increased in subjects at ultra-high risk (UHR) for psychosis, but how this may be related to GABA concentrations is unknown. The present study used a multimodal neuroimaging approach to address this issue in UHR subjects. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy and pulsed-continuous arterial spin labeling imaging were acquired to investigate the relationship between medial prefrontal (MPFC) GABA+ levels (including some contribution from macromolecules) and hippocampal regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in 36 individuals at UHR of psychosis, based on preclinical evidence that MPFC dysfunction is involved in hippocampal hyperactivity. The subjects were then clinically monitored for 2 years: during this period, 7 developed a psychotic disorder and 29 did not. At baseline, MPFC GABA+ levels were positively correlated with rCBF in the left hippocampus (region of interest analysis, p = 0.044 family-wise error corrected, FWE). This correlation in the left hippocampus was significantly different in UHR subjects who went on to develop psychosis relative to those who did not (p = 0.022 FWE), suggesting the absence of a correlation in the latter subgroup. These findings provide the first human evidence that MPFC GABA+ concentrations are related to resting hippocampal perfusion in the UHR state, and offer some support for a link between GABA levels and hippocampal function in the development of psychosis.
NeuroImage: Clinical | 2016
Huai-Hsuan Tseng; Jonathan P. Roiser; Gemma Modinos; Irina Falkenberg; Carly Samson; Philip McGuire; Paul Allen
Emotional processing dysfunction is widely reported in patients with chronic schizophrenia and first-episode psychosis (FEP), and has been linked to functional abnormalities of corticolimbic regions. However, corticolimbic dysfunction is less studied in people at ultra-high risk for psychosis (UHR), particularly during processing prosodic voices. We examined corticolimbic response during an emotion recognition task in 18 UHR participants and compared them with 18 FEP patients and 21 healthy controls (HC). Emotional recognition accuracy and corticolimbic response were measured during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using emotional dynamic facial and prosodic voice stimuli. Relative to HC, both UHR and FEP groups showed impaired overall emotion recognition accuracy. Whilst during face trials, both UHR and FEP groups did not show significant differences in brain activation relative to HC, during voice trials, FEP patients showed reduced activation across corticolimbic networks including the amygdala. UHR participants showed a trend for increased response in the caudate nucleus during the processing of emotionally valenced prosodic voices relative to HC. The results indicate that corticolimbic dysfunction seen in FEP patients is also present, albeit to a lesser extent, in an UHR cohort, and may represent a neural substrate for emotional processing difficulties prior to the onset of florid psychosis.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2018
Gemma Modinos; Fatma Şimşek; Matilda Azis; Matthijs G. Bossong; Ilaria Bonoldi; Carly Samson; Beverly Quinn; Jesus Perez; Matthew R. Broome; Fernando Zelaya; David Lythgoe; Oliver Howes; James Stone; Anthony A. Grace; Paul Allen; Philip McGuire
This article was originally published under NPG’s License to Publish, but has now been made available under a [CC BY 4.0] license. The PDF and HTML versions of the paper have been modified accordingly.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2016
Luís Madeira; Ilaria Bonoldi; Matteo Rocchetti; Martina Brandizzi; Carly Samson; Matilda Azis; Beverly Queen; Matthijs G. Bossong; Paul Allen; Jesus Perez; Oliver Howes; Philip McGuire; Paolo Fusar-Poli
Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2017
Matilda Azis; Paul Allen; Gemma Modinos; Ilaria Bonoldi; Matthijs G. Bossong; Carly Samson; Beverly Quinn; Philip McGuire
Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2017
Gemma Modinos; Fatma Simsek; Jamie Horder; Matthijs G. Bossong; Carly Samson; Matilda Azis; Beverly Quinn; Ilaria Bonoldi; Oliver Howes; James Stone; Paul Allen; Philip McGuire
Schizophrenia Research | 2014
Matthijs G. Bossong; Paul Allen; Carly Samson; Haleema Rasheed; Beverly Quinn; Ilaria Bonoldi; Gemma Modinos; James Stone; Oliver Howes; Philip McGuire