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Dive into the research topics where Joanne M. Wrench is active.

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Featured researches published by Joanne M. Wrench.


Epilepsia | 2004

Mood disturbance before and after seizure surgery: a comparison of temporal and extratemporal resections.

Joanne M. Wrench; Sarah J. Wilson; Peter F. Bladin

Summary:  Purpose: Mood disturbance is a common comorbid condition of temporal lobe epilepsy before and after seizure surgery. Few studies have examined mood disturbance in patients undergoing resections outside the temporal lobe (extratemporal resections). This study aimed to compare the early, postoperative evolution of mood disturbance in temporal and extratemporal lobe epilepsy patients to examine the effect of site of surgical resection on mood outcome.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2009

Hippocampal volume and depression: insights from epilepsy surgery

Joanne M. Wrench; Sarah J. Wilson; Peter F. Bladin; David C. Reutens

Background: Major depression is common after epilepsy surgery. It has previously been suggested that surgical removal of limbic system structures such as the hippocampus may contribute to this comorbidity. Recent magnetic resonance imaging studies have found smaller hippocampal volumes in depressed patients in comparison with controls. Aims: The current study examined whether preoperative hippocampal volumes were associated with depression experienced after epilepsy surgery. Patients undergoing mesial (n = 26) and non-mesial (n = 16) temporal lobe resections were assessed preoperatively, and for 1 year postoperatively. Assessment included a clinical interview and the Beck Depression Inventory. Hippocampal volumes were measured on the preoperative T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging scans of the patients and 41 neurologically normal controls. Results: A similar proportion of mesial and non-mesial temporal patients had a preoperative history of major depression. Postoperatively, 42% of mesial and 19% of non-mesial temporal patients were depressed. There was no relationship between hippocampal volume and preoperative depression in either group. Depression after surgery was associated with significantly smaller hippocampal volumes contralateral to the resection in the mesial temporal group (p = 0.005). This effect was seen in mesial temporal patients who developed de novo depression (p = 0.006). Hippocampal volume was unrelated to postoperative depression in the non-mesial group. Conclusion: This study highlights the role of neurobiological factors in the development of postoperative depression. These initial findings have implications for understanding depression following epilepsy surgery as well as the pathogenesis of depression more generally.


Epilepsia | 2011

Profiling the evolution of depression after epilepsy surgery.

Joanne M. Wrench; Genevieve Rayner; Sarah J. Wilson

Purpose:  Both neurobiologic and psychosocial factors have been proposed to account for the high prevalence of depression surrounding epilepsy surgery. Using a prospective longitudinal approach, this study aimed to profile the evolution of depression after epilepsy surgery at multiple time points, including early and longer‐term follow‐up. We also sought to identify neurobiologic and psychosocial predictors of depression before and after surgery, including whether patients undergoing mesial temporal lobe resection (MTR) were at greater risk of depression than patients undergoing nonmesial temporal lobe resection (NMTR).


Epilepsia | 2009

Profiles of psychosocial outcome after epilepsy surgery: The role of personality

Sarah J. Wilson; Joanne M. Wrench; Anne M. McIntosh; Peter F. Bladin; Samuel F. Berkovic

Purpose:  We have previously found that the developmental time frame of epilepsy onset influences adult personality traits and subsequent adjustment to intractable seizures. In the same cohort of patients we now investigate the influence of these factors on psychosocial outcome after surgical treatment.


JAMA Neurology | 2009

Personality Development in the Context of Intractable Epilepsy

Sarah J. Wilson; Joanne M. Wrench; Anne M. McIntosh; Peter F. Bladin; Samuel F. Berkovic

OBJECTIVES To investigate the developmental time frame of epilepsy onset on adult personality traits of neuroticism and extraversion and to consider their role in adjustment to intractable epilepsy. DESIGN Prospective, preoperative and postoperative survey of the psychological and psychosocial effects of intractable epilepsy and its surgical treatment. Data from the preoperative phase are reported. SETTING Comprehensive Epilepsy Program (CEP), Austin Health. PATIENTS Sixty adult patients with focal epilepsy undergoing inpatient monitoring. Groups of patients with epilepsy onset in different developmental periods were empirically derived and compared with each other and with normative personality data from 1571 cases. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Scores on the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire Revised-Short Form; the Beck Depression Inventory-II; the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (state form); and the Austin CEP Interview, a semistructured interview providing in-depth psychosocial assessment. RESULTS Patients with onset of epilepsy during the self-defining period of adolescence had higher neuroticism scores relative to normative data (95% confidence interval, 0.16 to 3.57) and other patients (-0.46 to -5.63). High neuroticism, particularly when accompanied by lower extraversion, predisposed to poor adjustment to intractable epilepsy as reflected by impaired mood (P < .01) and difficulties with family functioning (48% of patients). CONCLUSIONS These data provide initial evidence that onset of chronic neurologic illness in adolescence influences the development of adult personality traits. We also found a relationship between personality and adjustment to chronic epilepsy. The findings are relevant to the provision of psychologically informed neurologic care.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2010

Differential contributions of objective memory and mood to subjective memory complaints in refractory focal epilepsy

Genevieve Rayner; Joanne M. Wrench; Sarah J. Wilson

People with epilepsy frequently present with bitter memory complaints. Previous research variously attributes this to symptoms of mood disturbance or objective memory deficits. To investigate the influence of the epileptogenic region on this variability, we examined interrelationships between mood, objective memory, and memory complaints in a sample of patients with refractory focal epilepsy and controls (N = 96). Patients had either mesial temporal (MT, n = 39) or non mesial-temporal (NMT, n = 21) foci. In contrast to controls (n = 36), both patient groups were highly concerned about their memory (P<0.001) and were more likely to have a history of depression (P = 0.005). Multiple regression showed that objective memory dysfunction and current depressive symptoms predicted the memory complaints of patients with MT epilepsy (P = 0.005), whereas a history of depression predicted the complaints of patients with NMT epilepsy (P = 0.008). These findings suggest that patients have concerns about their memory underpinned by distinct psychological and neurobiological factors depending on the location of their epileptogenic focus.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2010

The amygdala and anxiety after epilepsy surgery

Sophia A. Halley; Joanne M. Wrench; David C. Reutens; Sarah J. Wilson

The relationship between amygdalar volume and anxiety after epilepsy surgery was explored. Participants comprised patients who underwent mesial temporal (n=26) or non-mesial temporal resections (n=16) and 41 neurologically normal controls. Anxiety was prospectively measured preoperatively and for the first 12 months postoperatively using criteria from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition. Amygdalar volumetry was performed on preoperative and control T1-weighted MRI scans. Resection of an ipsilateral amygdala of normal volume, relative to controls, was associated with postoperative anxiety in patients with mesial temporal resections, regardless of seizure outcome [F(1, 22)=5.17, P<0.05]. There was no relationship between amygdalar volume and anxiety in patients with non-mesial temporal resections, or between contralateral amygdalar volume and anxiety in patients with mesial temporal resections (P>0.05 for all comparisons). In conclusion, resection or deafferentation of an amygdala with a volume within the normal range was associated with increased postoperative anxiety.


Psychological Assessment | 2017

Assessment of emotion processing skills in acquired brain injury using an ability-based test of emotional intelligence.

Sarah E. Hall; Joanne M. Wrench; Sarah J. Wilson

Social and emotional problems are commonly reported after moderate to severe acquired brain injury (ABI) and pose a significant barrier to rehabilitation. However, progress in assessment of emotional skills has been limited by a lack of validated measurement approaches. This study represents the first formal psychometric evaluation of the use of the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test (MSCEIT) V2.0 as a tool for assessing skills in perceiving, using, understanding and managing emotions following ABI. The sample consisted of 82 participants aged 18–80 years in the postacute phase of recovery (2 months–7 years) after moderate to severe ABI. Participants completed the MSCEIT V2.0 and measures of cognition and mood. Sociodemographic and clinical variables were collated from participant interview and medical files. Results revealed deficits across all MSCEIT subscales (approximately 1 SD below the normative mean). Internal consistency was adequate at overall, area, and branch levels, and MSCEIT scores correlated in expected ways with key demographic, clinical, cognitive, and mood variables. MSCEIT performance was related to injury severity and clinician-rated functioning after ABI. Confirmatory factor analysis favored a 3-factor model of EI due to statistical redundancy of the Using Emotions branch. Overall, these findings suggest that the MSCEIT V2.0 is sensitive to emotion processing deficits after moderate to severe ABI, and can yield valid and reliable scores in an ABI sample. In terms of theoretical contributions, our findings support a domain-based, 3-factor approach for characterizing emotion-related abilities in brain-injured individuals.


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2018

The Role of Emotional Intelligence in Community Integration and Return to Work after Acquired Brain Injury.

Sarah E. Hall; Joanne M. Wrench; Madeleine Connellan; Neira Ott; Sarah J. Wilson

OBJECTIVE To investigate whether emotional intelligence (EI) skills measured via the Perceiving, Understanding, and Managing Emotions branches of the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test V2.0 are associated with community integration (CI) and return to work (RTW) after moderate-to-severe acquired brain injury (ABI), after accounting for other established predictors. DESIGN Retrospective cohort study. SETTING Outpatient follow-up services within 2 specialist ABI rehabilitation centers in Melbourne, Australia. PARTICIPANTS Individuals (N=82) with moderate-to-severe ABI discharged from inpatient rehabilitation and living in the community (2mo to 7y postinjury). INTERVENTION Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Community Integration Questionnaire scores for the total sample (N=82; age range 18-80) and RTW status (employed vs not employed) for the subset of participants employed prior to ABI (n=71; age range 19-66). RESULTS Hierarchical logistic and multiple regression analyses were used to examine the unique contribution of Perceiving, Understanding, and Managing Emotions scores to RTW and CI, after controlling for demographic, injury-related, psychological, and cognitive predictors. As a set, the 3 EI variables did not explain incremental variance in outcomes. However, individually, Understanding Emotions predicted RTW (adjusted odds ratio=3.10, P=.03), χ2 (12)=35.52, P<.001, and Managing Emotions predicted CI (β=0.23, P=.036), F12,69=5.14, P<.001. CONCLUSION Although the EI constructs in combination did not improve prediction beyond the effects of established variables, individual components of strategic EI may be important for specific participation outcomes after ABI.


Epilepsy Research | 2009

Characterising de novo depression after epilepsy surgery

Joanne M. Wrench; Sarah J. Wilson; Marie F. O'shea; David C. Reutens

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Neira Ott

University of Melbourne

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