Delfina de Achával
University of Buenos Aires
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Featured researches published by Delfina de Achával.
Schizophrenia Research | 2008
Mariana N. Castro; Daniel E. Vigo; Hylke Weidema; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Elvina M. Chu; Delfina de Achával; Martin Nogues; Ramón Leiguarda; Daniel P. Cardinali; Salvador M. Guinjoan
BACKGROUND The vulnerability-stress hypothesis is an established model of schizophrenia symptom formation. We sought to characterise the pattern of the cardiac autonomic response to mental arithmetic stress in patients with stable schizophrenia. METHODS We performed heart rate variability (HRV) analysis on recordings obtained before, during, and after a standard test of autonomic function involving mental stress in 25 patients with DSM-IV schizophrenia (S) and 25 healthy individuals (C). RESULTS Patients with schizophrenia had a normal response to the mental arithmetic stress test. Relative contributions of low-frequency (LF) HRV and high-frequency (HF) HRV influences on heart rate in patients were similar to controls both at rest (LF 64+/-19% (S) vs. 56+/-16% (C); HF 36+/-19% (S) vs. 44+/-16% (C), t=1.52, p=0.136) and during mental stress, with increased LF (S: 76+/-12%, C: 74+/-11%) and decreased HF (S: 24+/-12%, C: 26+/-11%) in the latter study condition. Whilst healthy persons recovered the resting pattern of HRV immediately after stress termination (LF 60+/-15%, HF 40+/-15%, F=18.5, p<0.001), in patients HRV remained unchanged throughout the observed recovery period, with larger LF (71+/-17%) and lower HF (29+/-17%) compared with baseline (F=7.3, p=0.013). CONCLUSIONS Patients with schizophrenia exhibit a normal response to the mental arithmetic stress test as a standard test of autonomic function but in contrast with healthy individuals, they maintain stress-related changes of cardiac autonomic function beyond stimulus cessation.
Schizophrenia Research | 2012
Delfina de Achával; Mirta Villarreal; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Jazmin Douer; Mariana N. Castro; Martina C. Mora; Charles B. Nemeroff; Elvina M. Chu; Karl Jürgen Bär; Salvador M. Guinjoan
BACKGROUND Social cognitive deficits contribute to functional disability in schizophrenia. Social cognitive tasks in healthy persons consistently evoke activation of medial prefrontal cortex, inferior frontal gyrus, temporoparietal gyrus, and posterior cingulate cortex/precuneus. We tested the hypothesis that patients with schizophrenia and their unaffected siblings share dysfunction of the same neural networks. METHODS Neural activation during emotion processing (EP), theory of mind (ToM), and control tasks was measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in 14 patients with schizophrenia, 14 nonpsychotic siblings of patients with schizophrenia, and 14 matched healthy subjects. RESULTS Compared with healthy controls, patients with schizophrenia showed reduced activation of right hemisphere structures involved in EP and ToM including inferior frontal gyrus, middle frontal gyrus, and right temporoparietal junction. These deficits were shared, in part, by unaffected siblings. The latter group demonstrated deficits in bilateral precuneus activation during ToM, not present in patients. CONCLUSIONS Schizophrenia appears to be associated with a deficit in activation of right hemisphere components of a ToM network. Such deficits are shared in part by those at high genetic risk but unaffected by schizophrenia.
Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2015
Salvador M. Guinjoan; Delfina de Achával; Mirta Villarreal; Valeria Abusamra; Charles B. Nemeroff
Schizophrenia is characterized by profound deficits in social competence and functioning, independent from active psychotic symptoms at different stages of the disease. Social deficits in schizophrenia are clinically well characterized, but their neurobiological underpinnings are undetermined. This article reviews recent evidence supporting heritable deficits in a circuit necessary for appropriate naming of emotions and mental states in others, centered at the temporoparietal junction of the nondominant hemisphere. The clinical implications of this model are discussed, including the potential use of rehabilitation techniques oriented to recognition and naming of emotions and mental states as a necessary step for social rehabilitation.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2014
Micaela Goldschmidt; Mirta Villarreal; Delfina de Achával; Lucas Drucaroff; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Mariana N. Castro; Jaime Pahissa; Joan A. Camprodon; Charles B. Nemeroff; Salvador M. Guinjoan
Personality disorders are common in nonpsychotic siblings of patients with schizophrenia, and some personality traits in this group may be associated with an increased risk for full-blown psychosis. We sought to establish if faulty right-hemisphere activation induced by social cognitive tasks, as previously described in patients with schizophrenia, is associated with specific personality symptoms in their unaffected siblings. We observed that cluster B personality symptoms in this group were inversely related to activation in the right temporo parietal junction (rTPJ, a structure critical in social cognitive processing) in response to a basic emotion processing task and also to social competence, whereas in contrast to our initial hypothesis, cluster A traits were not associated with right hemisphere activation during emotion processing or with social competence. These findings suggest the existence of clinical traits in at-risk individuals which share a common neurobiological substrate with schizophrenia, in regards to social performance.
Frontiers in Psychiatry | 2015
Amparo Ruiz-Tagle; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Delfina de Achával; Salvador M. Guinjoan
Social cognition was assessed in a clinical sample of personality disorder (PD) stable patients receiving ambulatory treatment (N = 17) and healthy matched controls (N = 17) using tests of recognition of emotions in faces and eyes, in a test of social faux pas and in theory of mind (ToM) stories. Results indicated that when compared with healthy controls, individuals with PD showed a clear tendency to obtain lower scoring in tasks assessing recognition of emotion in faces (T = −2.602, p = 0.014), eyes (T = −3.593, p = 0.001), ToM stories (T = −4.706, p = 0.000), and Faux pas (T = −2.227, p = 0.035). In the present pilot study, PD individuals with a normal cognitive efficiency showed an impaired performance at social cognition assessment including emotion recognition and ToM.
Schizophrenia Research | 2009
Mariana N. Castro; Daniel E. Vigo; Elvina M. Chu; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Delfina de Achával; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Ramón Leiguarda; Martin Nogues; Daniel P. Cardinali; Salvador M. Guinjoan
Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2013
Delfina de Achával; Mirta Villarreal; Arleen Salles; M. Julia Bertomeu; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Micaela Goldschmidt; Mariana N. Castro; Iris van der Poel; Charles B. Nemeroff; Salvador M. Guinjoan
Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2014
Mirta Villarreal; Lucas Drucaroff; Micaela Goldschmidt; Delfina de Achával; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Mariana N. Castro; M. Soledad Ladrón-de-Guevara; Geraldo Busatto Filho; Charles B. Nemeroff; Salvador M. Guinjoan
Schizophrenia Research | 2014
Mariana N. Castro; Mirta Villarreal; Natasha Bolotinsky; Eliana Papávero; Nicolás Deschle; Fernando Binder; Lucas Drucaroff; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Delfina de Achával; Karl-Jürgen Bär; Salvador M. Guinjoan
Schizophrenia Research | 2012
Mariana N. Castro; Mirta Villarreal; Oscar I. Jáuregui; Fernando Binder; Delfina de Achával; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Karl-Jürgen Bär; Salvador M. Guinjoan