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Featured researches published by Leilei Zheng.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2010

Mismatch negativity in treatment-resistant depression and borderline personality disorder.

Wei He; Hao Chai; Leilei Zheng; Wenjun Yu; Wanzhen Chen; Jianming Li; Wei Chen; Wei Wang

OBJECTIVEnCognitive dysfunctions, such as attentional impairment, are central features of both treatment-resistant depression (TRD) and borderline personality disorder (BPD). The treatment failure of TRD due to its comorbidity with BPD is debated in the literature. The mismatch negativity (MMN) of the event-related potentials provides an objective marker of involuntary stimulus selective processing, which might help shed light on this issue and provide an avenue for investigating a possible endophenotypic marker for TRD.nnnMETHODnWe investigated MMN in 22 patients with TRD, 19 with BPD, and 22 with TRD cormorbid with BPD (TRD+BPD), as well as in 32 healthy volunteers, by employing an acoustic frequency deviance paradigm. In addition, we measured the depressive mood using the Plutchik-van Praag (PVP) depression inventory.nnnRESULTSnThere was no significant between-group difference for the N1 latencies/amplitudes, both to the standard and deviant stimuli, and no significant between-group difference for MMN latencies. However, MMN amplitudes were higher in the TRD group than those in the other three groups. PVP scores were highest in TRD+BPD, then TRD, BPD patients, and lowest in healthy subjects. The higher MMN was not correlated with PVP score, nor with the duration of life-long depression, which can be considered as a neurophysiological marker for TRD.nnnCONCLUSIONnAn atypical lack of inhibition on the irrelevant stimuli or increased cortical neuronal activity, especially frontal area, or both, might be responsible for the finding.


Psychopathology | 2011

Alexithymia and Personality Disorder Functioning Styles in Paranoid Schizophrenia

Shaohua Yu; Huichun Li; Weibo Liu; Leilei Zheng; Ying Ma; Qiaozhen Chen; Yiping Chen; Hualiang Yu; Yunrong Lu; Bing Pan; Wei Wang

Objectives: Personality disorder functioning styles might contribute to the inconclusive findings about alexithymic features in schizophrenia. We therefore studied the relationship between alexithymia and personality styles in paranoid schizophrenia. Methods: We administered the Chinese versions of the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20), the Parker Personality Measure (PERM), the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale as well as the Hamilton Anxiety and Depression Scales to 60 paranoid schizophrenia patients and 60 healthy control subjects. Results: Patients scored significantly higher on the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, TAS ‘difficulty identifying feelings’ and ‘difficulty describing feelings’, Hamilton Depression Scale and most PERM scales. In healthy subjects, difficulty identifying feelings predicted the PERM ‘dependent’ style, and the Hamilton Anxiety Scale predicted difficulty identifying feelings and difficulty describing feelings. In patients, difficulty identifying feelings nonspecifically predicted all the PERM scales; by contrast, the PERM ‘antisocial’ style predicted difficulty identifying feelings, the ‘avoidant’ style predicted difficulty describing feelings, and the ‘histrionic’ and ‘paranoid (–)’ styles predicted ‘externally oriented thinking’. Conclusions: Personality disorder functioning styles – instead of anxiety, depression, psychotic symptoms or disease duration – were specifically associated with alexithymia scales in our patients, which sheds light on a cognitive-personological substrate in paranoid schizophrenia on the one hand, and calls for a longitudinal design to discover how premorbid or postacute residual personality styles contribute to the sluggish disorder on the other.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2011

Recognition of facial emotion and perceived parental bonding styles in healthy volunteers and personality disorder patients

Leilei Zheng; Hao Chai; Wanzhen Chen; Rongrong Yu; Wei He; Zhengyan Jiang; Shaohua Yu; Huichun Li; Wei Wang

Aims:u2002 Early parental bonding experiences play a role in emotion recognition and expression in later adulthood, and patients with personality disorder frequently experience inappropriate parental bonding styles, therefore the aim of the present study was to explore whether parental bonding style is correlated with recognition of facial emotion in personality disorder patients.


SpringerPlus | 2016

Electrocardiographic changes caused by lithium intoxication in an elderly patient

Yiping Chen; Leilei Zheng; Weibo Liu; Huichun Li; Shaohua Yu; Qiaozhen Chen; Bin Pan; Hualiang Yu; Ri-Sheng Yu

Lithium intoxication can cause serious cardiac toxicity and is associated with electrocardiogram (ECG) changes. This paper described a case of a 76-year-old man who was lithium intoxicated and showed a variety of ECG abnormalities including sinus bradycardia, rapid atrial fibrillation, second-degree atrioventricular block and T wave changes. We monitored his ECGs during the after 3xa0days consecutively. After hemodialysis, his ECG abnormalities partially eased along with his serum lithium concentration decreased.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2017

Altered effective brain connectivity at early response of antipsychotics in first-episode schizophrenia with auditory hallucinations

Leilei Zheng; Weibo Liu; Wei He; Shaohua Yu; Guodong Zhong

OBJECTIVEnThis study aimed to examine the alterations of cortical connectivity in first-episode schizophrenia (FES) with auditory hallucinations at early response of antipsychotics.nnnMETHODSnThis was a nonexperimental control of medication study. We measured the cortical activity of 20 medicated patients with FES (medicated group), 19 nonmedicated patients with FES (nonmedicated group), and 22 healthy controls using electroencephalogram during eye-open resting state. Source reconstruction analysis was performed to determine the brain regions that showed significant group difference. A dynamic causal modelling (DCM) analysis was used to estimate the effective connectivity between sources.nnnRESULTnBoth FES groups expressed increased activity in the right middle frontal gyrus (RMFG) and left/right superior temporal gyrus (L/RSTG) relative to that in the controls (p<0.05), and the nonmedicated group presented even higher activity than the medicated group (p<0.05). The effective connectivity from RMFG to LSTG was weaker in the nonmedicated group relative to that in the medicated group (p<0.01), although patients in the medicated group showed no difference with healthy controls in RMFG to L/RSTG connections. The Bayesian model selection analysis found modulatory lateralization in the nonmedicated group.nnnCONCLUSIONnThe patients with FES showed frontotemporal hyperactivity and disconnectivity. The effective connections accompanied with modulation were improved when hallucination diminished at early response of routine medication.nnnSIGNIFICANCEnThis study provided the first evidence of early drug response-related alterations in effective brain connectivity.


Neuroscience Letters | 2015

The predictive value of baseline NAA/Cr for treatment response of first-episode schizophrenia: A 1H MRS study

Weibo Liu; Hualiang Yu; Biao Jiang; Bing Pan; Shaohua Yu; Huichun Li; Leilei Zheng

The study focused on the predictive value of baseline metabolite ratios in bilateral hippocampus of first-episode schizophrenia by using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((1)H MRS). (1)H MRS data were acquired from 23 hallucination and 17 non-hallucination first-episode schizophrenia patients compared with 17 healthy participants. Clinical characteristics of patients were rated using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) before and after 3-month treatment. The schizophrenia patients showed lower NAA/Cr ratio than healthy participants respectively (p=0.024; p=0.001), and non-hallucination patients had even lower NAA/Cr ratio than hallucination patients (p=0.033). After 3-month treatment, hallucination patients had greater improvement in negative symptoms than non-hallucination patients (p=0.018). The reduction of PANSS total score and negative factor score was positively correlated with the left NAA/Cr in both group patients (p<0.05). Given that the bilateral hippocampal baseline NAA/Cr had predictive value for the whole treatment response, and the left hippocampal NAA/Cr can predict the prognosis of negative symptoms during acute phase medication in first-episode schizophrenia.


Gastroenterology Research and Practice | 2016

Association of Psychological Characteristics and Functional Dyspepsia Treatment Outcome: A Case-Control Study

Yiping Chen; Caihua Wang; Jinyu Wang; Leilei Zheng; Weibo Liu; Huichun Li; Shaohua Yu; Bin Pan; Hualiang Yu; Ri-Sheng Yu

This study was to investigate the association of psychological characteristics and functional dyspepsia treatment outcome. 109 patients who met the criteria for FD were enrolled. Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (EPQ), Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL90), and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) were used to measure personality, psychological symptoms, and sleep quality in our patients. Leeds Dyspepsia Questionnaire (LDQ) was used to assess dyspeptic symptoms at baseline and after eight weeks of treatment. The LDQ scores change after therapy, and the degraded rate of LDQ was used to assess the prognosis of patients. Logistic regression model was used to assess the effect of the personality, psychological symptoms, and sleep quality on the prognosis of patients. Our result revealed that poor sleep quality (OR = 7.68, 95% CI 1.83–32.25) and bad marriage status (OR = 1.22, 95% CI 1.10–1.36) had the negative effect on the prognosis of FD, while extroversion in personality traits (OR = 0.86, 95% CI 0.76–0.96) had positive effect on the prognosis of FD. We should pay attention to the sleep quality, the personality, and the marriage status of FD patients; psychological intervention may have benefit in refractory FD.


Psychopathology | 2015

EEG theta power and coherence to octave illusion in first-episode paranoid schizophrenia with auditory hallucinations.

Leilei Zheng; Hao Chai; Shaohua Yu; You Xu; Wanzhen Chen; Wei Wang

Background: The exact mechanism behind auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia remains unknown. A corollary discharge dysfunction hypothesis has been put forward, but it requires further confirmation. Electroencephalography (EEG) of the Deutsch octave illusion might offer more insight, by demonstrating an abnormal cerebral activation similar to that under auditory hallucinations in schizophrenic patients. Methods: We invited 23 first-episode schizophrenic patients with auditory hallucinations and 23 healthy participants to listen to silence and two sound sequences, which consisted of alternating 400- and 800-Hz tones. EEG spectral power and coherence values of different frequency bands, including theta rhythm (3.5-7.5 Hz), were computed using 32 scalp electrodes. Task-related spectral power changes and task-related coherence differences were also calculated. Clinical characteristics of patients were rated using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. Results: After both sequences of octave illusion, the task-related theta power change values of frontal and temporal areas were significantly lower, and the task-related theta coherence difference values of intrahemispheric frontal-temporal areas were significantly higher in schizophrenic patients than in healthy participants. Moreover, the task-related power change values in both hemispheres were negatively correlated and the task-related coherence difference values in the right hemisphere were positively correlated with the hallucination score in schizophrenic patients. Limitations: We only tested the Deutsch octave illusion in primary schizophrenic patients with acute first episode. Further studies might adopt other illusions or employ other forms of schizophrenia. Conclusion: Our results showed a lower activation but higher connection within frontal and temporal areas in schizophrenic patients under octave illusion. This suggests an oversynchronized but weak frontal area to exert an action to the ipsilateral temporal area, which supports the corollary discharge dysfunction hypothesis.


BMC Psychiatry | 2016

Event-related potentials elicited by the Deutsch "high-low" word illusion in the patients with first-episode schizophrenia with auditory hallucinations.

You Xu; Hao Chai; Bingren Zhang; Qianqian Gao; Hongying Fan; Leilei Zheng; Hongjing Mao; Yonghua Zhang; Wei Wang

BackgroundThe exact cerebral structural and functional mechanisms under the auditory verbal hallucinations (AVHs) in schizophrenia are still unclear. The Deutsch “high-low” word illusion might trigger attentional responses mimicking those under AVHs.MethodsWe therefore have invited 16 patients with first-episode, paranoid schizophrenia, and 16 age- and gender-matched healthy volunteers to undergo the “oddball” event-related potentials elicited by the illusion. The clinical characteristics of patients were measured with the positive and negative symptom scale.ResultsBesides the longer reaction time to the illusion, the standard P2 latency was shortened, the N2 latency was prolonged, and both N1 and P3 amplitudes were reduced in patients. The P3 source analyses showed the activated bilateral temporal lobes, parietal lobe and cingulate cortex in both groups, left inferior temporal gyrus in controls, and left postcentral gyrus in schizophrenia. Moreover, the N1 amplitude was positively correlated with the paranoid score in patients.ConclusionsOur results were in line with previous neurophysiological and neuroimaging reports of hallucination or auditory processing in schizophrenia, and illustrated a whole process of cerebral information processing from N1 to P3, indicating this illusion had triggered a dynamic cerebral response similar to that of the AVHs had engaged.


Translational Neuroscience | 2014

Theta power and coherence illustrate cerebral processing of octave illusion

Leilei Zheng; Hao Chai; You Xu; Wanzhen Chen; Jing Hu; Wei Wang

BackgroundUnderstanding how cerebral regions are synchronized when hearing illusions might help to explain some of the mechanisms of hallucination in psychiatric disorders. EEG theta coherence in response to the octave illusion in healthy volunteers might be used for this purpose.MethodsRight-handed healthy volunteers were invited to hear silence, normal and reversed sequences of the octave illusion.ResultsAfter hearing both normal and reversed sequences of the octave illusion, 11 people reported hearing the high tone in the left ear (RL) and 18 in the right (RR). The task-related power change in the right frontal and temporal areas and the task-related coherence difference in the right medial frontal and temporal areas were significantly increased in the RR group compared to the RL group.ConclusionWhen processing the octave illusion, the right ear predominance was linked to a higher reactivity in the right frontal and right temporal areas in healthy right-handers.

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Wei He

Zhejiang University

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