Claudia I. Rupp
Innsbruck Medical University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Claudia I. Rupp.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2004
Armand Hausmann; Georg Kemmler; Michaela Walpoth; Sergei Mechtcheriakov; Karin Kramer-Reinstadler; T Lechner; Thomas Walch; E A Deisenhammer; M Kofler; Claudia I. Rupp; Hartmann Hinterhuber; Andreas Conca
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) has been reported to demonstrate slight effects in the treatment of depression. Hence, a novel bilateral versus unilateral and sham stimulation design was applied to further assess rTMS’ antidepressant effects. Forty one medication free patients with major depression, admitted to a psychiatric unit specialising in affective disorders, were consecutively randomised into 3 groups. Group A1 (n = 12) received unilateral active stimulation consisting of high frequency (hf) rTMS over the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (LDLPC) and subsequent sham low frequency (lf) rTMS over the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (RDLPC). Group A2 (n = 13) received simultaneous bilateral active stimulation consisting of hf-rTMS over the LDLPC and lf-rTMS over the RDLPC. Group C (n = 13) received bilateral sham stimulation. Stimulation was performed on 10 consecutive workdays. All patients received antidepressant medication on the first day of stimulation, which was continued during and after the stimulation period. As no significant difference in antidepressant outcome between group A1 and A2 was found, the two groups were pooled. The time course of the outcome variables Hamilton depression rating scale (HDRS21) and Beck depression inventory (days 0, 7, 14, 28) by repeated measures analysis of variance revealed no significant group differences (in terms of a group by time interaction), whereas there was a significant effect of time on all three outcome variables in all groups. The results suggest that rTMS as an “add on” strategy, applied in a unilateral and a bilateral stimulation paradigm, does not exert an additional antidepressant effect.
Schizophrenia Research | 2005
Claudia I. Rupp; W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker; Georg Kemmler; Christian Kremser; Robert M. Bilder; Sergei Mechtcheriakov; Philip R. Szeszko; Thomas Walch; Arne W. Scholtz; Martina Klimbacher; Claudia Maier; Gudrun Albrecht; Theresia Lechner-Schoner; Stefan Felber; Hartmann Hinterhuber
OBJECTIVE Olfactory deficits in schizophrenia patients have been suggested to reflect medial temporal and/or prefrontal brain abnormalities. In this study, we examined the relationship between different olfactory functions and volumes of the hippocampus-amygdala complex (HAC) and the orbitofrontal brain region using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). METHODS Thirty-three young men with schizophrenia (DSM-IV) and 40 healthy controls performed unirhinal olfactory assessment including the main olfactory functions (threshold, discrimination, and identification), and odor judgements (intensity, edibility, familiarity, and pleasantness). Volumes of regions in the medial temporal lobe (hippocampus and amygdala) and the prefrontal region (orbitofrontal gray and white matter) were measured on MRI scans. RESULTS Compared with controls, patients showed bilaterally impaired thresholds, quality discrimination and identification, as well as edibility judgements. Olfactory deficits were not attributable to smoking, premorbid intelligence, or impaired thresholds. Relative to controls, patients had bilateral reduced hippocampus and amygdala volumes. In patients, smaller hippocampus volumes were associated with poorer olfactory discrimination ability. CONCLUSIONS Olfactory deficits in schizophrenia appear to be associated with morphometric abnormalities in the medial temporal rather than the orbitofrontal region (OFR). These results indicate that olfactory quality discrimination deficits are related to structural hippocampus abnormalities. Future studies of genetic and behavioral high-risk samples seem warranted.
The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2004
Armand Hausmann; Barbara Mangweth; Michaela Walpoth; Christine Hoertnagel; Karin Kramer-Reinstadler; Claudia I. Rupp; Hartmann Hinterhuber
In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV; APA, 1994), bulimia nervosa (BN) is classified as an eating disorder. The disease is characterized by discrete periods of binge eating during which, large amounts of food are consumed and a sense of control over eating is absent, followed by differing types of purging behaviour to prevent weight gain. Since the first descriptions of the diagnosis, little is known about the aetiological background of the disease. BN is accompanied by, or due to, alterations of serotonin and/or norepinephrine activity. These changes may possibly be involved in the pathological eating behaviour and in causing associated depression.
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 2005
Barbara Mangweth; Armand Hausmann; Claudia Danzl; Thomas Walch; Claudia I. Rupp; Wilfried Biebl; James I. Hudson; Harrison G. Pope
Background: The risk factors for adolescent eating disorders are poorly understood. It is generally agreed, however, that interactions with one’s body and interactions with others are two important features in the development of anorexia and bulimia nervosa. Therefore, we assessed a variety of childhood body-focused behaviors and childhood social behaviors in eating-disordered patients as compared to non-eating-disordered subjects. Method: We compared 50 female inpatients with eating disorders (anorexia or bulimia nervosa), 50 female inpatients with polysubstance dependence, and 50 nonpatient female control subjects with no history of eating or substance abuse disorders (all defined by DSM-IV criteria), using a semi-structured interview of our own design. We asked questions about (1) childhood body-focused behaviors (e.g. thumb-sucking) and body-focused family experiences (e.g. bodily caresses), and (2) childhood social behaviors (e.g. numbers of close friends) and family social styles (e.g. authoritarian upbringing). Results: Many body-focused measures, such as feeding problems, auto-aggressive behavior, lack of maternal caresses, and family taboos regarding nudity and sexuality, characterized eating-disordered patients as opposed to both comparison groups, as did several social behaviors, such as adjustment problems at school and lack of close friends. However, nail-biting, insecure parental bonding, and childhood physical and sexual abuse were equally elevated in both psychiatric groups. Conclusion: It appears that eating-disordered patients, as compared to substance-dependent patients and healthy controls, show a distinct pattern of body-focused and social behaviors during childhood, characterized by self-harm, a rigid and ‘body-denying’ family climate, and lack of intimacy.
Eating and Weight Disorders-studies on Anorexia Bulimia and Obesity | 2010
Barbara Mangweth-Matzek; Claudia I. Rupp; Armand Hausmann; S. Gusmerotti; Georg Kemmler; Wilfried Biebl
BACKGROUND: Disturbed interactions with one’s body and with other persons are two major features in eating disorders. This study was designed to assess current and childhood characteristics of eating-disordered men. METHODS: The authors interviewed 32 men with eating disorders (anorexia nervosa: N=9, bulimia nervosa: N=15, eating disorders not otherwise specified: N=8) and 43 control participants with no such history similar in age and educational status. The Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV was used to assess Axis I disorders and a self-designed interview to assess actual social and sexual characteristics and childhood body-focused and social behaviors including sexual and physical abuse. RESULTS: The two groups differed significantly with regard to clinical, sexual and social features, with a three times higher rate of psychiatric disorders, fewer sexual and social relationships in the index group than in the controls. Eating-disordered men differed significantly from controls on most measures of body-focused and social behaviors, displaying higher rates of thumb sucking, nail biting, auto-aggressive behavior, and nudity as a familial taboo during childhood, as well as less parental bodily caressing than did controls. The index group reported significantly poorer relationships to their parents, fewer friends and persons of trust, and more often had adjustment problems at school than did their counterparts. CONCLUSIONS: Our data show that disturbed interactions with one’s body and with other persons in eating-disordered men are associated with a body-denying and distant family climate7/14/2013 4:48PM and an auto-aggressive, anxious and inhibited social behavior during childhood.
Archive | 2011
Claudia I. Rupp; Birgit Derntl; Hartmann Hinterhuber
Traditionell wird die Neuropsychologie eher mit neurologischen Erkrankungen assoziiert. Auch bei „organischen“ psychischen Storungen wie den Demenzen, die den ubergang zwischen neurologischen Erkrankungen und psychischen Storungen bilden und deren Kardinalsymptome kognitive Beeintrachtigungen sind, ist sie wissenschaftlich und klinisch etabliert. Die Neuropsychologie bei psychischen Storungen wie Schizophrenie, affektiven Storungen, Suchterkrankungen, Zwangsstorungen, Personlichkeitsstorungen etc, ist noch relativ jung (vgl. Kapitel Grundlagen der Neuropsychologie psychischer Storungen; Lautenbacher & Gauggel, 20041).
International Journal of Eating Disorders | 2006
Barbara Mangweth-Matzek; Claudia I. Rupp; Armand Hausmann; Karin Assmayr; Edith Mariacher; Georg Kemmler; Alexandra B. Whitworth; Wilfried Biebl
British Journal of Psychiatry | 2007
Philip R. Szeszko; Delbert G. Robinson; Serge Sevy; Sanjiv Kumra; Claudia I. Rupp; Julia D. Betensky; Todd Lencz; Manzar Ashtari; John Kane; Anil K. Malhotra; Handan Gunduz-Bruce; Barbara Napolitano; Robert M. Bilder
Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs | 2012
Claudia I. Rupp; Georg Kemmler; M. Kurz; Hartmann Hinterhuber; W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2003
Claudia I. Rupp; M. Kurz; Georg Kemmler; Dolores Mair; Armand Hausmann; Hartmann Hinterhuber; W. Wolfgang Fleischhacker