Dalia Brandes
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Featured researches published by Dalia Brandes.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2002
Dalia Brandes; Gershon Ben-Schachar; Assaf Gilboa; Omer Bonne; Sara Freedman; Arieh Y. Shalev
Chronic post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been associated with cognitive impairments involving memory and attention. The association between cognitive impairment and early PTSD symptoms is unknown, yet such association may lead to poorer processing of traumatic memories and thereby contribute to subsequent PTSD. This study evaluated the relationship between PTSD symptoms and cognitive functioning within 10 days of traumatic events. Forty-eight survivors were assessed for symptoms of PTSD, anxiety, depression and dissociation and for immediate and delayed verbal and figural memory, attention, learning and IQ. Survivors with high levels of PTSD symptoms showed impaired attention and immediate recall for figural information and lower IQ. They did not show, however, an impairment of verbal recall and learning. The observed difference was not explained by anxiety or dissociation. It disappeared, however, when the effect of depressive symptoms was controlled for. Lower IQ and impaired attention are associated with early PTSD and depressive symptoms. Poorer attention may have a role in shaping traumatic memories.
Biological Psychiatry | 2003
Omer Bonne; Asaf Gilboa; Yoram Louzoun; Dalia Brandes; Ilan Yona; Hava Lester; Gavriel Barkai; Nanette Freedman; Roland Chisin; Arieh Y. Shalev
BACKGROUND Brain imaging research in posttraumatic stress disorder has been largely performed on patients with chronic disease, often heavily medicated, with current or past alcohol and substance abuse. Additionally, virtually only activation brain imaging paradigms have been done in posttraumatic stress disorder, whereas in other mental disorders both resting and activation studies have been performed. METHODS Twenty-eight (11 posttraumatic stress disorder) trauma survivors underwent resting state hexamethylpropyleneamineoxime single photon emission computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging 6 months after trauma. Eleven nontraumatized subjects served as healthy controls. RESULTS Regional cerebral blood flow in the cerebellum was higher in posttraumatic stress disorder than in both control groups. Regional cerebral blood flow in right precentral, superior temporal, and fusiform gyri in posttraumatic stress disorder was higher than in healthy controls. Cerebellar and extrastriate regional cerebral blood flow were positively correlated with continuous measures of depression and posttraumatic stress disorder. Cortisol level in posttraumatic stress disorder was negatively correlated with medial temporal lobe perfusion. Anterior cingulate perfusion and cortisol level were positively correlated in posttraumatic stress disorder and negatively correlated in trauma survivors without posttraumatic stress disorder. CONCLUSIONS Recent posttraumatic stress disorder is accompanied by elevated regional cerebral blood flow, particularly in the cerebellum. This warrants attention because the cerebellum is often used as a reference region in regional cerebral blood flow studies. The inverse correlation between plasma cortisol and medial temporal lobe perfusion may herald hippocampal damage.
Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2002
Sara Freedman; Natali Gluck; Rivka Tuval-Mashiach; Dalia Brandes; Tuvia Peri; Arieh Y. Shalev
Gender differences in psychological responses to motor vehicle accidents were examined as part of a large-scale prospective study of PTSD. Participants were recruited from an emergency room (n = 275) and interviewed 1 week, 1 month, and 4 months later. No gender differences were seen in the prevalence or recovery from PTSD, or in symptom levels at 1- and 4 months. Women had a higher prevalence of lifetime- and postaccident generalized anxiety disorder. Gender differences were found regarding the type, but not the total number, of potentially traumatic events previously experienced. These results suggest that gender differences in responses to traumatic events are not explained by exposure as such, but rather may result from gender-specific attributes of the event.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2003
Omer Bonne; Dalia Brandes; Ronen Segman; Roger K. Pitman; Rachel Yehuda; Arieh Y. Shalev
Hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis abnormalities have been described in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and among the recently traumatized. Plasma cortisol and continuous measures of PTSD symptoms were obtained from 21 survivors, at 1 week and 6 months after traumatic events. Eight survivors met Clinician Administered PTSD Scale criteria for PTSD at 6 months. Cortisol levels at 1 week did not predict subsequent PTSD. Survivors with and without PTSD had similar mean levels of cortisol at both time points. Cortisol levels at 6 months negatively correlated with self-reported PTSD symptoms within PTSD subjects.
American Journal of Psychiatry | 1998
Arieh Y. Shalev; Sara Freedman; Tuvia Peri; Dalia Brandes; Tali Sahar; Scott P. Orr; Roger K. Pitman
American Journal of Psychiatry | 2001
Omer Bonne; Dalia Brandes; Asaf Gilboa; J. Moshe Gomori; Martha Elizabeth Shenton; Roger K. Pitman; Arieh Y. Shalev
Archives of General Psychiatry | 1998
Arieh Y. Shalev; Tali Sahar; Sara Freedman; Tuvia Peri; Natali Glick; Dalia Brandes; Scott P. Orr; Roger K. Pitman
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 1996
Gelpin E; Omer Bonne; Tuvia Peri; Dalia Brandes; Arieh Y. Shalev
American Journal of Psychiatry | 2000
Arieh Y. Shalev; Tuvia Peri; Dalia Brandes; Sara Freedman; Scott P. Orr; Roger K. Pitman
British Journal of Psychiatry | 1999
Sara Freedman; Dalia Brandes; Tuvia Peri; Arieh Y. Shalev