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Featured researches published by Fotis Fotiou.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2000

Changes in pupil reaction to light in Alzheimer's disease patients: a preliminary report.

Fotis Fotiou; Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Magda Tsolaki; Antonis Goulas; A. Palikaras

The aim of this preliminary study was to compare the pupil reaction to light in Alzheimers disease (AD) patients before and after treatment and in normal controls. Ten AD patients diagnosed according to DSM-IV and NINCDS-ADRDA criteria (five medication-free and five under anticholinesterase treatment) and five age- and gender-matched controls took part in the study. Drug-free patients and all control subjects were free of any medication for at least four weeks. An optical method was used to assess the pupil reaction to a single flash. Medication-free AD patients manifested shorter latency and lower amplitude of maximum response to light in comparison to controls. These findings are in agreement with the presence of a cholinergic deficit in AD patients. Pharmacological treatment with donepezil, which is an anticholinesterase agent partially improves this deficit. The results of this preliminary investigation suggest that dynamic pupillometry could be a useful adjunct to assist the diagnosis of early AD, and the differential diagnosis between different types of dementia. AD patients seem to manifest a specific pattern of pupil reaction to light, and some characteristics of this pattern are detectable even in patients receiving anticholinesterase medication. However, this is only a preliminary report and further research is mandatory.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2003

Pattern-reversed visual evoked potentials in subtypes of major depression

Fotis Fotiou; Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Apostolos Iacovides; George Kaprinis

There are no articles in the international psychiatric literature reporting subclinical visual system disorders in depressed patients, although a disturbance of circadian rhythms is one of the prominent theories of the etiopathogenesis of depression. Fifty patients aged 21-60 years suffering from major depression according to DSM-IV criteria, and 20 controls took part in the study. Diagnosis was obtained with the aid of the Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry version 2.0. Psychometric assessment included the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale, the 1965 and 1971 Newcastle Scales, and the Diagnostic Melancholia Scale. All subjects had normal electroretinographic and flash-visual evoked potential (VEP) recordings. Pattern-reversed VEPs (PR-VEPs) were recorded from each eye separately. Three-way analysis of covariance, Students t-test and Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were used for the analysis. All recordings were within the normal range. N80 and P100 latency were significantly shorter in atypical and significantly longer in melancholic patients. There was a positive correlation between N80 and P100 latency and age of onset and melancholic indices, and a negative correlation with the presence and the number of life events precipitating onset. The results of the current study suggest that PR-VEPs are consistent with other biological data supporting the atypical-melancholic distinction. The most important finding was the strong negative relationship between PR-VEP latency and stressful life events. The current study also provided data inconsistent with the hyperarousal theory and in support of an arousal dysregulation hypothesis for major depression.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1999

Changes in pupil reaction to light in melancholic patients

Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Fotis Fotiou; Apostolos Iacovides; J. Tsiptsios; Antonis Goulas; Magda Tsolaki; Charalambos Ierodiakonou

The aim of the current study was to compare the pupil reaction to light in depressed patients and normal control subjects. Seven depressed patients with melancholic features according to DSM-IV criteria and 14 age- and gender-matched control subjects took part in the study. All were free of any medication for at least 2 weeks. All were aged between 25 and 50 years. An optical method was used to assess the pupil reaction to a single flash. Depressed patients manifested shorter latency for constriction than control subjects, and a marginal difference in the total work produced by acetylcholine. The results of the current study support the theory that there is a norepinephrine hypoactivity in melancholic depression, with less affected acetylcholine activity.


Neuropsychobiology | 2004

Neurobiological and Psychological Correlates of Suicidal Attempts and Thoughts of Death in Patients with Major Depression

Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Apostolos Iacovides; Fotis Fotiou; John Nimatoudis; Fransesca Bascialla; Christina Ioannidou; George Kaprinis; Per Bech

Suicide is a major problem for psychiatry. Depression is the most common mental disorder related to suicidal behavior. The present study aimed at investigating the relationship between the symptomatology related to death, dying, and suicide and neurobiological factors in depressed patients. Fifty patients aged 21–60 years suffering from major depression were investigated. Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry version 2.0 and the International Personality Disorder Examination were used to assist the clinical diagnosis. The psychometric assessment included the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale, the 1965 and 1971 Newcastle Depression Diagnostic Scales, the Diagnostic Melancholia Scale, the General Assessment of Functioning Scale, and the Personality Deviance Scale. Psychophysiological methods included electro-oculogram, flash electroretinogram under photopic and scotopic conditions, and pattern-reversal visual evoked potentials. Biological markers included the 1-mg dexamethasone suppression test, the 30-mg dexfenfluramine challenge test, and brain 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT. Statistical analysis included one-, two-, and three-way Manova and Mancova and the Scheffé test as post hoc test. Patients without thoughts of death had higher self-confidence levels and less overdependency on others and intropunitiveness. The suicidal patients had a significantly prolonged pattern-reversal visual evoked potential latency in comparison with the other patients. The findings of this were related to the status of the patient at the time of the interview but not to his/her history. They also provide neurobiological data to support the need for a combined presence of self-directed aggression and a higher arousal level or disinhibition of self-directed aggressive thoughts in order for a patient to become suicidal. Further study is needed to test whether psychophysiological methods, which are noninvasive and easy to perform, are of value in the therapeutic planning and monitoring of responses.


Annals of General Psychiatry | 2005

Is there a dysfunction in the visual system of depressed patients

Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Fotis Fotiou; Apostolos Iacovides; George Kaprinis

BackgroundThe aim of the current study was to identify a possible locus of dysfunction in the visual system of depressed patients.Materials and MethodsFifty Major Depressive patients aged 21–60 years and 15 age-matched controls took part in the study The diagnosis was obtained with the SCAN v 2.0. The psychometric assessment included the HDRS, the HAS, the Newcastle Scales, the Diagnostic Melancholia Scale and the GAF scale. Flash Electroretinogram and Electrooculogram were performed in all subjects. The statistical analysis included ANCOVA, Students t-test and Pearson Product Moment Correlation Coefficient were used.ResultsThe Electro-oculographic findings suggested that all subtypes of depressed patients had lower dark trough and light peak values in comparison to controls (p < 0.001), while Arden ratios were within normal range. Electroretinographic recordings did not reveal any differences between patients and controls or between subtypes of depression.DiscussionThe findings of the current study provide empirical data in order to assist in the understanding of the international literature and to explain the mechanism of action of therapies like sleep deprivation and light therapy.


Annals of General Hospital Psychiatry | 2004

Relationship among Dexamethasone Suppression Test, personality disorders and stressful life events in clinical subtypes of major depression: An exploratory study

Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Apostolos Iacovides; Fotis Fotiou; Michael Karamouzis; Aphrodite Demetriadou; George Kaprinis

BackgroundThe present study aimed to investigate the relationship between dexamethasone suppression test, personality disorder, stressful life events and depression.MaterialFifty patients (15 males and 35 females) aged 41.0 ± 11.4 years, suffering from Major Depression according to DSM-IV criteria entered the study.MethodDiagnosis was obtained with the aid of the SCAN v 2.0 and the IPDE. Psychometric assessment included the HDRS, HAS, the Newcastle Scale (version 1965 and 1971), the Diagnostic Melancholia Scale, the Personality Deviance Scale and the GAF scale. The 1 mg DST was used.Statistical AnalysisIncluded MANOVA, ANOVA with LSD post hoc test and chi-square test.ResultsSixteen (32%) patients were non-suppressors. Eight patients without Personality Disorder (PD) (23.5%), and 5 of those with PD of cluster B (50%) were non-suppressors. Atypical patients were the subtype with the highest rate of non-suppression (42.85%). No difference between suppressors and non-suppressors was detected in any of the scales.DiscussionThe results of the current study suggest that pathological DST is not a core feature of major depression. They also suggest that there are more than one subtypes of depression, concerning the response to stress. It seems that the majority of depressed patients (50%) does not experience high levels of stress either in terms of self reported experience or neuroendocrine function. The rest of patients however, either experience high levels of stress, or manifest its somatic analogue (DST non-suppression) or have a very low threshold of stress tolerance, which makes them to behave in a hostile way.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1997

Changes in psychophysiological processing of vision in myasthenia gravis

Fotis Fotiou; A. Goulas; Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Evangelos Koutlas; Paris Hamlatzis; Dimitrios Papakostopoulos

OBJECTIVE To investigate the possibility of impaired central nervous system (CNS) cholinergic transmission in myasthenia gravis (MG), and the effect of eye movements and particularly of micromovements in the psychophysiology of vision. MATERIALS AND METHODS Fourteen patients with clinical manifestations of external ophthalmoplegia due to different causes (nine patients with myasthenia gravis and five with ocular myopathy) were examined. Simultaneous recording of eye movements (optical method) and pattern reversal-visual evoked potentials (PR-VEPs) were performed. RESULTS Eye micromovements during fixation were impaired in both groups. A statistically significant difference (P < 0.01) was found in the amplitude of P100 of PR-VEPs before and after treatment in MG patients, and also between normal controls and MG patients before (P < 0.001) and after treatment (P < 0.01). P100 latency of the PR-VEPs in MG patients before and after treatment was delayed compared to normal controls, while there were no differences between ocular myopathy patients and normal controls. CONCLUSION The eye movement impairment observed in MG patients is not sufficient to explain abnormal PR-VEPs detected in these patients. These results provide neurophysiological evidence of impaired cholinergic transmission in the central nervous system in patients with MG and suggest that PR-VEPs offer an easily applicable non-invasive method to study the central effects of MG.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2004

Biological markers and psychophysiological methods as long term response predictors to fluoxetine treatment

Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Stergios Kaprinis; Apostolos Iacovides; Fotis Fotiou; George Kaprinis

In order to predict response to fluoxetine, the 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test (DSTassesses norepinephrine activity), the 30 mg-dexfenfluramine challenge test (assesses serotonin activity), electroretinogram and electrooculogram (both assess dopamine activity), Pattern-Reversal Visual Evoked Potentials (assess acetylcholine activity) and Tc-HMPAO Brain SPECT were used. The study included 14 female (aged 42.4F10.3 years) depressed patients according to DSM-IV (6 melancholics, 5 atypicals). All provided written informed consent, were free of any medication for at least two weeks prior to first assessment and diagnosis, were physically healthy with normal clinical and laboratory findings. The Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry version 2.0 (SCAN v 2.0) (Wing et al., 1990) and the International Personality Disorders Examination (IPDE) (Loranger et al., 1994) were used for the diagnosis. Fluoxetine 40 mg per os daily was administered. The follow-up period was 2 years. Statistical Analysis included two-way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) with repeated measures and LSD post-hoc test.


International Journal of Psychiatry in Clinical Practice | 2000

Do depressive patients with family history of dementia constitute a separate group? A case report study

Kostas N. Fountoulakis; Fotis Fotiou; Apostolos Iacovides; George Kaprinis

INTRODUCTION: Recently it has been suggested that patients with both depression and a family history of dementia are seven times as likely to develop Alzheimers disease as are controls. METHOD: Fifty patients aged 21 - 60 years suffering from DSM-IV Major Depression entered the study; three of them (6%) had a positive family history of dementia. Diagnosis was by SCAN v 2.0. The family history method was used to record family history. All depressed patients were investigated with the Dexamethasone Suppression Test (DST), brain SPECT, electro-oculogram (EOG), flash-electroretinogram (f-ERG) and Pattern-Reversal Visual Evoked Potentials (PR-VEPs). Students t-test was used to analyse the results. All patients with positive family history had atypical features. RESULTS: Two of them suffered from borderline personality disorder, in comparison to eight in the remainder of the sample and five in the rest of the atypicals. The age of onset of depression was lower. DST, SPECT, EOG and PR-VEPs findings were similar between groups. The only significant finding concerned the latency of the bs wave of the scotopic ERG (P < 0.01), but even in this, patients with positive history did not differ from the rest of the atypical patients. CONCLUSION: The present study provided limited data connecting atypical features of depression, personality traits, psychological stressors, hypercortisolaemia and family history of dementia. Further research with larger samples is essential. ( Int J Psych Clin Pract 2000; 4: 215 - 222)


Annals of General Hospital Psychiatry | 2003

Clinical and neuroimaging correlates of abnormal short-latency Somatosensory Evoked Potentials in elderly vascular dementia patients: A psychophysiological exploratory study.

Iacovos Tsiptsios; Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; Sitzoglou K; Anastasia Papanicolaou; Konstantinos Phokas; Fotis Fotiou; George Kaprinis

BackgroundShort Latency Somatosensory Evoked Potentials (SEPs) may serve to the testing of the somatosensory tract function, which is vulnerable and affected in vascular encephalopathy. The aim of the current study was to search for clinical and neuroimaging correlates of abnormal SEPs in vascular dementia (VD) patients.Materials and MethodsThe study included 14 VD patients, aged 72.93 ± 4.73 years, and 10 controls aged 71.20 ± 4.44 years. All subjects underwent a detailed clinical examination, blood and biochemical testing, brain MRI and were assessed with the MMSE. SEPs were recorded after stimulation from upper and lower limbs. The statistical Analysis included 1 and 2-way MANCOVAs and Factor analysisResultsThe N13 latency was significantly prolonged, the N19 amplitude was lower, the P27 amplitude was lower and the N11-P27 conduction time was prolonged in severely demented patients in comparison to controls. The N19 latency was prolonged in severely demented patients in comparison to both mildly demented and controls. The same was true for the N13-N19 conduction time, and for the P27 latency. Patients with subcortical lesions had all their latencies prolonged and lower P27 amplitude.DiscussionThe results of the current study suggest that there are significant differences between patients suffering from VD and healthy controls in SEPs, but these are detectable only when dementia is severe or there are lesions located in the subcortical regions. The results of the current study locate the abnormal SEPs in the white matter, and are in accord with the literature.

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Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Apostolos Iacovides

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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George Kaprinis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Antonis Goulas

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Fransesca Bascialla

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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G. Kaprinis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Magda Tsolaki

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Christina Ioannidou

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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George Gerasimou

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Tsiptsios I

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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