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Dive into the research topics where Harold Kudler is active.

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Featured researches published by Harold Kudler.


Biological Psychiatry | 1989

The corticotropin-releasing hormone test in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder

Mark A. Smith; Jonathan R. T. Davidson; James C. Ritchie; Harold Kudler; Stephen Lipper; Phillip Chappell; Charles B. Nemeroff

To evaluate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), we measured adrenocorticotropin hormone (ACTH) and cortisol responses following administration of corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) in 8 combat veterans with chronic PTSD. The PTSD patients had a significantly lower ACTH response to CRH compared to a control group of normal volunteers. Blunted ACTH responses occurred in patients with PTSD alone, as well as those PTSD patients who also had major depression. The cortisol response, although reduced, was not significantly different from normal. The blunted ACTH response to CRH in PTSD patients is similar to that seen in other psychiatric disorders, such as depression, panic disorder, and anorexia nervosa.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1989

Validity and Reliability of the Dsm-iii Criteria for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Experience with a Structured Interview

Jonathan R. T. Davidson; Rebecca Smith; Harold Kudler

The DSM-III criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were operationally defined for use in a structured interview. Acceptable interrater and test-retest reliabilities were shown; diagnostic validity was demonstrated relative to a standard diagnostic interview procedure; construct validity was shown in relation to a PTSD self-rating scale and to degree of combat exposure; the structured interview score correlated significantly with observer symptom scales for depression and anxiety.


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2010

A guide to guidelines for the treatment of PTSD and related conditions

David Forbes; Mark Creamer; Jonathan Ian Bisson; Judith A. Cohen; Bruce E. Crow; Edna B. Foa; Terence M. Keane; Harold Kudler; Robert J. Ursano

In recent years, several practice guidelines have appeared to inform clinical work in the assessment and treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder. Although there is a high level of consensus across these documents, there are also areas of apparent difference that may lead to confusion among those to whom the guidelines are targeted-providers, consumers, and purchasers of mental health services for people affected by trauma. The authors have been responsible for developing guidelines across three continents (North America, Europe, and Australia). The aim of this article is to examine the various guidelines and to compare and contrast their methodologies and recommendations to aid clinicians in making decisions about their use.


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 1995

Smoking in Vietnam combat veterans with post‐traumatic stress disorder

Jean C. Beckham; Allison A. Roodman; Robert H. Shipley; Michael A. Hertzberg; Garry H. Cunha; Harold Kudler; Edward D. Levin; Jed E. Rose; John A. Fairbank

The present study investigated smoking prevalence, smoking motives, demographic variables and psychological symptoms in 124 help-seeking, male Vietnam combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). A high percentage of these veterans smoked (60%). Vietnam veterans with PTSD who smoked were more likely than those who did not smoke to report higher levels of PTSD symptoms, depression and trait anxiety. Increased depression was associated with increased automatic smoking. Smokers reported a high frequency of smoking in response to military memories. Implications for smoking interventions, cessation, and relapse prevention efforts are discussed.


Annals of Clinical Psychiatry | 2000

Lack of efficacy for fluoxetine in PTSD: a placebo controlled trial in combat veterans.

Michael A. Hertzberg; Michelle E. Feldman; Jean C. Beckham; Harold Kudler; Jonathan R. T. Davidson

BACKGROUND Fluoxetine and placebo were studied in a population of combat veterans with severe, chronic PTSD. METHODS Twelve male veterans with PTSD were enrolled in a 12 week double-blind evaluation of fluoxetine and placebo. Mean fluoxetine dose at endpoint (week 12) was 48 mg/day with a range of 10 mg to 60 mg. RESULTS One fluoxetine patient responded (17%) and two of the six placebo patients responded (33%). CONCLUSIONS Fluoxetine patients did not show a greater response than placebo patients in this small sample of male combat veterans with severe, chronic PTSD. Fluoxetine has displayed an efficacious response in controlled studies of patients with PTSD who were predominantly female, suffered civilian (noncombat) traumas, and were overall experiencing less severe PTSD. The reasons for the low response rate to fluoxetine in our study is unknown and will await further study examining variables other than symptoms that might influence outcome, such as gender, comorbidity, prior treatment history, trauma type, severity and chronicity.


Psychosomatics | 1995

Religious coping and cognitive symptoms of depression in elderly medical patients.

Harold G. Koenig; Harvey J. Cohen; Dan G. Blazer; Harold Kudler; K. Ranga Rama Krishnan; Thomas E. Sibert

The investigators examined associations between depressive symptom type and religious coping in 832 consecutively admitted older medical inpatients. Cognitive symptoms of depression, but not somatic symptoms, were related to religious coping. Boredom, loss of interest, social withdrawal, feeling downhearted and blue, restlessness, feeling like a failure, feeling hopeless, or feeling that other people were better off were all significantly less common among religious copers. Difficulty initiating new activities was the only somatic symptom related to this coping behavior. Religious coping, a strategy heavily dependent on cognitive processes, is associated with fewer cognitive but not somatic symptoms of depression in medically ill older patients


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 1989

Familial psychiatric illness in chronic posttraumatic stress disorder.

Jonathan R. T. Davidson; Rebecca Smith; Harold Kudler

One hundred and eight veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were compared with 60 age-matched controls with regard to family history of psychiatric illness. Depressed controls had a higher morbidity risk (MR) for depression and generalized anxiety in siblings/parents and children, respectively. Patients with PTSD did not differ from alcoholics or nonpsychiatric controls on the basis of family history. PTSD was associated with greater familial anxiety when compared with controls who had experienced combat. When World War II and Vietnam veterans with PTSD were compared, a higher MR for alcohol and drug abuse was found in siblings/parents of Vietnam veterans, and a higher MR was found for other chronic psychiatric disorders in the children of Vietnam veterans.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 1989

Antidepressant use in elderly medical inpatients

Harold G. Koenig; Veeraindar Goli; Frank Shelp; Harold Kudler; Harvey J. Cohen; Keith G. Meador; Dan G. Blazer

The authors conducted a clinical trial to examine the efficacy and safety of nortriptyline in the treatment of major depression in elderly medical inpatients. The diagnosis of major depression was made by a psychiatrist in 41 of 680 patients 65 years of age or older. The study was halted at the midpoint because of inadequate patient recruitment, primarily a consequence of medical illnesses that prevented more than 80% of eligible patients from participating in or completing the clinical trial. Major or minor medical contraindications to the use of antidepressants were present in over 90% of depressed patients. Short-term follow-up was cnducted on untreated depressed patients, those receiving antidepressants at the time of assessment, and those in whom antidepressant treatment was initiated after assessment. Non-randomized exposure to antide-pressants did not predict remission of depression at follow-up due to spontaneous remission in the untreated group. Given the prevalence of medical contraindications to antidepressant use among depressed elderly patients and the problems with side effects in treated patients, there were few depressed, elderly hospitalized patients who were candidates for antidepressant therapy.


Journal of Clinical Psychology | 1997

Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory profiles of Vietnam combat veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder and their children

Jean C. Beckham; Loretta C. Braxton; Harold Kudler; Michelle E. Feldman; Barbara L. Lytle; Scott M. Palmer

Forty children of 28 fathers who are Vietnam veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) completed the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. Each of the fathers had at least one elevated clinical scale. Fathers averaged eight elevated clinical scales, and compared to more recent norms, fathers averaged seven elevated clinical scales. Seventy-eight percent of the children had at least one clinically elevated scale (averaging three elevated clinical scales). Compared to contemporary normal adolescents and adults, 65% of children had at least one clinically elevated scale (still averaging three elevated clinical scales). No consistent MMPI profile patterns emerged within or across the two groups. No gender differences were detected among child MMPI profiles. Forty percent of the children reported illegal drug use, and 35% reported behavior problems. Fifteen percent of children reported previous violent behavior. Eighty-three percent of the children reported elevated Cook-Medley hostility scores as compared to an age-matched national normative sample. Children with higher PK scores were also significantly more likely to report higher Cook-Medley hostility scores. Forty-five percent of children reported significant elevations on the PTSD/PK subscales.


Journal of Anxiety Disorders | 1987

Personality in chronic post-traumatic stress disorder:: A study of the eysenck inventory

Jonathan R. T. Davidson; Harold Kudler; Rebecca Smith

Abstract Personality variables were assessed in 30 patients with chronic post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). World War II/Korean War (WWII/K) veterans with PTSD were significantly more introverted and neurotic than age-matched non-psychiatric controls, whether or not the controls had been in combat. WWII/ K patients scored significantly higher than Vietnam War patients on both intro-version and denial (lie) scales. Eysenck measures did not change during treatment in PTSD patients; PTSD patients were significantly more neurotic than were major depressives.

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