Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jack M. Gorman is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jack M. Gorman.


Biological Psychiatry | 2005

Mood Disorders in the Medically Ill: Scientific Review and Recommendations

Dwight L. Evans; Dennis S. Charney; Lydia Lewis; Robert N. Golden; Jack M. Gorman; K. Ranga Rama Krishnan; Charles B. Nemeroff; J. Douglas Bremner; Robert M. Carney; James C. Coyne; Mahlon R. DeLong; Nancy Frasure-Smith; Alexander H. Glassman; Philip W. Gold; Igor Grant; Lisa P. Gwyther; Gail Ironson; Robert L. Johnson; Andres M. Kanner; Wayne Katon; Peter G. Kaufmann; Francis J. Keefe; Terence A. Ketter; Thomas Laughren; Jane Leserman; Constantine G. Lyketsos; William M. McDonald; Bruce S. McEwen; Andrew H. Miller; Christopher M. O'Connor

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this review is to assess the relationship between mood disorders and development, course, and associated morbidity and mortality of selected medical illnesses, review evidence for treatment, and determine needs in clinical practice and research. DATA SOURCES Data were culled from the 2002 Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance Conference proceedings and a literature review addressing prevalence, risk factors, diagnosis, and treatment. This review also considered the experience of primary and specialty care providers, policy analysts, and patient advocates. The review and recommendations reflect the expert opinion of the authors. STUDY SELECTION/DATA EXTRACTION Reviews of epidemiology and mechanistic studies were included, as were open-label and randomized, controlled trials on treatment of depression in patients with medical comorbidities. Data on study design, population, and results were extracted for review of evidence that includes tables of prevalence and pharmacological treatment. The effect of depression and bipolar disorder on selected medical comorbidities was assessed, and recommendations for practice, research, and policy were developed. CONCLUSIONS A growing body of evidence suggests that biological mechanisms underlie a bidirectional link between mood disorders and many medical illnesses. In addition, there is evidence to suggest that mood disorders affect the course of medical illnesses. Further prospective studies are warranted.


Biological Psychiatry | 2005

Catechol-O-Methyltransferase (COMT) Genotypes and Working Memory: Associations with Differing Cognitive Operations

Gerard E. Bruder; John G. Keilp; Haiyan Xu; Marina Shikhman; Efrat Schori; Jack M. Gorman; T. Conrad Gilliam

BACKGROUND Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) is a strong candidate gene for schizophrenia and cognitive functions disrupted in this disorder. This report examines the relation of COMT genotypes to performance on a battery of working memory tests differing in the cognitive operations to be performed on the material. METHODS A large sample of 402 healthy adults were tested on four working memory tests: Spatial Delayed Response (SDR), Word Serial Position Test (WSPT), N-back, and Letter-Number Sequencing. A subsample (n = 246) was tested on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST). A saliva swab was used to obtain DNA from all participants. RESULTS Letter-Number Sequencing, which requires both storage and manipulation of information, was the only working memory test that showed expected differences among COMT genotypes, with the met/met group showing the best performance and the val/val group the poorest performance. As in previous studies, the met/met group also performed better than the val/val group on the WCST. CONCLUSIONS COMT genotypes were not associated with performance on tests measuring simple storage, maintenance of temporal order or updating of information in working memory. Genotype differences in Letter-Number Sequencing and WCST suggest that higher-order components of processing (e.g., mental manipulation) are more closely related to this gene.


Biological Psychiatry | 2004

The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor citalopram increases fear after acute treatment but reduces fear with chronic treatment: a comparison with tianeptine

Nesha S. Burghardt; Gregory M. Sullivan; Bruce S. McEwen; Jack M. Gorman; Joseph E. LeDoux

BACKGROUND Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are efficacious in the treatment of a variety of fear or anxiety disorders. Although they inhibit the reuptake of serotonin within hours of administration, therapeutic improvement only occurs after several weeks. In this study, we used fear conditioning to begin to understand how acute and chronic SSRI treatment might differentially affect well-characterized fear circuits. METHODS We evaluated the effects of acute and chronic treatment with the SSRI citalopram on the acquisition of auditory fear conditioning. To further understand the role of serotonin in modulating fear circuits, we compared these effects with those of acute and chronic administration of the antidepressant tianeptine, a purported serotonin reuptake enhancer. RESULTS We found that acute administration of the SSRI citalopram enhanced acquisition, whereas chronic treatment reduced the acquisition of auditory fear conditioning. In comparison, treatment with tianeptine had no effect acutely but also reduced the acquisition of tone conditioning when administered chronically. CONCLUSIONS Our findings with citalopram are consistent with the clinical effects of SSRI treatment seen in patients with anxiety disorders, in which anxiety is often increased during early stages of treatment and decreased after several weeks of treatment. The findings also indicate that auditory fear conditioning can be a useful tool in understanding differences in the effects of short-term and long-term antidepressant treatment with serotonergic medications.


Biological Psychiatry | 2005

Differential Time Courses and Specificity of Amygdala Activity in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Subjects and Normal Control Subjects

Xenia Protopopescu; Hong Pan; Oliver Tuescher; Marylene Cloitre; Martin Goldstein; Wolfgang Engelien; Jane Epstein; Yihong Yang; Jack M. Gorman; Joseph E. LeDoux; David Silbersweig; Emily Stern

BACKGROUND Previous neuroimaging studies have demonstrated exaggerated amygdala responses to negative stimuli in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The time course of this amygdala response is largely unstudied and is relevant to questions of habituation and sensitization in PTSD exposure therapy. METHODS We applied blood oxygen level dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging and statistical parametric mapping to study amygdala responses to trauma-related and nontrauma-related emotional words in sexual/physical abuse PTSD and normal control subjects. We examined the time course of this response by separate analysis of early and late epochs. RESULTS PTSD versus normal control subjects have a relatively increased initial amygdala response to trauma-related negative, but not nontrauma-related negative, versus neutral stimuli. Patients also fail to show the normal patterns of sensitization and habituation to different categories of negative stimuli. These findings correlate with measured PTSD symptom severity. CONCLUSIONS Our results demonstrate differential time courses and specificity of amygdala response to emotional and control stimuli in PTSD and normal control subjects. This has implications for pathophysiologic models of PTSD and treatment response. The results also extend previous neuroimaging studies demonstrating relatively increased amygdala response in PTSD and expand these results to a largely female patient population probed with emotionally valenced words.


Biological Psychiatry | 2004

Resting neural activity distinguishes subgroups of schizophrenia patients

Dolores Malaspina; Jill M. Harkavy-Friedman; Cheryl Corcoran; Lilianne R. Mujica-Parodi; David Printz; Jack M. Gorman; Ronald L. Van Heertum

BACKGROUND Schizophrenia is etiologically heterogeneous. It is anticipated, but unproven, that subgroups will differ in neuropathology and that neuroimaging may reveal these differences. The optimal imaging condition may be at rest, where greater variability is observed than during cognitive tasks, which more consistently reveal hypofrontality. We previously demonstrated symptom and physiologic differences between familial and sporadic schizophrenia patients and hypothesized that the groups would show different resting regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) patterns. METHODS Ten familial and sixteen sporadic schizophrenia patients and nine comparison subjects had single photon emission computed tomography imaging during passive visual fixation. Images were spatially normalized into Talairach coordinates and analyzed for group rCBF differences using SPM with a Z value threshold of 2.80, p < .001. RESULTS The subgroups had similar age, gender, illness duration, and medication treatment. Sporadic patients had hypofrontality (anterior cingulate, paracingulate cortices, left dorsolateral and inferior-orbitofrontal), whereas familial patients had left temporoparietal hypoperfusion; all of these regions show resting activity in healthy subjects. Both groups hyperperfused the cerebellum/pons and parahippocampal gyrus; additional hyperperfusion for sporadic patients was observed in the fusiform; familial patients also hyperperfused the hippocampus, dentate, uncus, amygdala, thalamus, and putamen. CONCLUSIONS Familial and sporadic schizophrenia patients had different resting rCBF profiles, supporting the hypothesis that certain subgroups have distinct neural underpinnings. Different neuropathologic processes among subgroups of schizophrenia patients may account for the prior contradictory results of resting imaging studies.


Biological Psychiatry | 2006

Diffusion tensor imaging in schizophrenia.

Monte S. Buchsbaum; Joseph I. Friedman; Bradley R. Buchsbaum; King-Wai Chu; Erin A. Hazlett; Randall E. Newmark; Jason S. Schneiderman; Yuliya Torosjan; Cheuk Y. Tang; Patrick R. Hof; Daniel G. Stewart; Kenneth L. Davis; Jack M. Gorman

BACKGROUND Alignment of white matter axons as inferred from diffusion tensor imaging has indicated changes in schizophrenia in frontal and frontotemporal white matter. METHODS Diffusion tensor anisotropy and anatomical magnetic resonance images were acquired in 64 patients with schizophrenia and 55 normal volunteers. Anatomical images were acquired with a magnetization prepared rapid gradient echo sequence, and diffusion tensor images used a pulsed gradient spin-echo acquisition. Images were aligned and warped to a standard brain, and anisotropy in normal volunteers and patients was compared using significance probability mapping. RESULTS Patients showed widespread areas of reduced anisotropy, including the frontal white matter, the corpus callosum, and the frontal longitudinal fasciculus. CONCLUSIONS These findings, which are consistent with earlier reports of frontal decreases in anisotropy, demonstrate that the effects are most prominent in frontal and callosal areas and are particularly widespread in frontal white matter regions.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1997

Risperidone in Adolescents With Schizophrenia: An Open Pilot Study

Jorge L. Armenteros; Agnes H. Whitaker; Michael. Welikson; Deborah J. Stedge; Jack M. Gorman

OBJECTIVE To assess critically the short-term efficacy and safety of risperidone in adolescents with schizophrenia. METHOD Subjects were adolescents who were attending a research day hospital as outpatients and who had received a diagnosis of schizophrenia. This was an open pilot study; after a 2-week washout period during which all psychotropic medications were gradually discontinued, subjects were treated with risperidone for 6 weeks. Dosage was regulated individually over a period of 3 weeks; starting dose was 2.0 mg/day followed by 1.0-mg increments every 2 days; maximum dose was not to exceed 10 mg/day. The main outcome measures included the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale of Schizophrenia, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, and the Clinical Global Impression. RESULTS Ten adolescents between 11 and 18 years of age were enrolled in the study. Risperidone produced clinically and statistically significant improvement on the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale for Schizophrenia. Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, and Clinical Global Impression at doses ranging from 4.0 mg/day to 10.0 mg/day (mean = 6.6). There were no major adverse reactions associated with risperidone use. CONCLUSIONS Risperidone appears to have been effective and well tolerated in this sample of adolescents with schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia Research | 2005

Variations in differential gene expression patterns across multiple brain regions in schizophrenia.

Pavel Katsel; K.L. Davis; Jack M. Gorman; Vahram Haroutunian

Large-scale gene expression studies in schizophrenia (SZ) have generally focused on the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Despite a wealth of evidence implicating multiple other brain regions in the disease, studies of other brain regions have been less frequent and have rarely been performed in the same subjects. We analyzed postmortem gene expression in the frontal, cingulate, temporal, parietal and occipital cortices (Brodmann areas 8, 10, 44, 46, 23/31, 24/32, 20, 21, 22, 36/28, 7 and 17, respectively) as well as in the hippocampus, caudate nucleus and putamen of persons with schizophrenia and control subjects (Ns = 13) using Affymetrix GeneChip microarrays. Under identical data filtering conditions, the superior temporal cortex (BA22) of schizophrenia subjects showed the maximal number of altered transcripts (approximately 1200) compared to controls. Anterior and posterior cingulate cortices (BA23/31, 24/32) and the hippocampus followed the superior temporal cortex with two-times lower numbers of altered transcripts. The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (BA46), a frequent target of SZ-associated studies, showed substantially fewer altered transcripts (approximately 33). These regional differences in differentially expressed genes could not be accounted for by factors such as total numbers of genes expressed or the filtering conditions and criteria used for identification of differentially expressed genes. These findings suggest that the temporal and cingulate cortices and the hippocampal formation represent brain regions of particular abnormality in SZ and may be more susceptible to the disease process(es) than other regions thus far studied.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2007

Preliminary Evidence for Cognitive Mediation During Cognitive–Behavioral Therapy of Panic Disorder

Stefan G. Hofmann; Alicia E. Meuret; David Rosenfield; Michael K. Suvak; David H. Barlow; Jack M. Gorman; M. Katherine Shear; Scott W. Woods

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and pharmacotherapy are similarly effective for treating panic disorder with mild or no agoraphobia, but little is known about the mechanism through which these treatments work. The present study examined some of the criteria for cognitive mediation of treatment change in CBT alone, imipramine alone, CBT plus imipramine, and CBT plus placebo. Ninety-one individuals who received 1 of these interventions were assessed before and after acute treatment, and after a 6-month maintenance period. Multilevel moderated mediation analyses provided preliminary support for the notion that changes in panic-related cognitions mediate changes in panic severity only in treatments that include CBT.


BMC Psychiatry | 2007

Correlations between Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) and Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (1H MRS) in schizophrenic patients and normal controls

Cheuk Y. Tang; Joseph I. Friedman; Dikoma C. Shungu; Linda Chang; Thomas Ernst; Daniel G. Stewart; Arash Hajianpour; David Carpenter; Johnny Ng; Xiangling Mao; Patrick R. Hof; Monte S. Buchsbaum; Kenneth L. Davis; Jack M. Gorman

BackgroundEvidence suggests that white matter integrity may play an underlying pathophysiological role in schizophrenia. N-acetylaspartate (NAA), as measured by Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS), is a neuronal marker and is decreased in white matter lesions and regions of axonal loss. It has also been found to be reduced in the prefrontal and temporal regions in patients with schizophrenia. Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) allows one to measure the orientations of axonal tracts as well as the coherence of axonal bundles. DTI is thus sensitive to demyelination and other structural abnormalities. DTI has also shown abnormalities in these regions.MethodsMRS and DTI were obtained on 42 healthy subjects and 40 subjects with schizophrenia. The data was analyzed using regions of interests in the Dorso-Lateral Prefrontal white matter, Medial Temporal white matter and Occipital white matter using both imaging modalities.ResultsNAA was significantly reduced in the patient population in the Medial Temporal regions. DTI anisotropy indices were also reduced in the same Medial Temporal regions. NAA and DTI-anisotropy indices were also correlated in the left medial temporal region.ConclusionOur results implicate defects in the medial temporal white matter in patients with schizophrenia. Moreover, MRS and DTI are complementary modalities for the study of white matter disruptions in patients with schizophrenia.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jack M. Gorman's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeremy D. Coplan

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge