Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari.
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2010
Alaor Santos Filho; Luiz Alberto B Hetem; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; Clarissa Trzesniak; R. Martin-Santos; T. Borduqui; F. de L. Osorio; Sonia Regina Loureiro; G. Busatto Filho; Antonio Waldo Zuardi; José Alexandre S. Crippa
Filho AS, Hetem LAB, Ferrari MCF, Trzesniak C, Martín‐Santos R, Borduqui T, de Lima Osório F, Loureiro SR, Busatto Filho G, Zuardi AW, Crippa JAS. Social anxiety disorder: what are we losing with the current diagnostic criteria?
Schizophrenia Research | 2011
Clarissa Trzesniak; Irismar Reis de Oliveira; Matthew J. Kempton; Amanda Galvão-de Almeida; Marcos Hortes Nisihara Chagas; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; Alaor Santos Filho; Antonio Waldo Zuardi; Daniel Almeida Prado; Geraldo F. Busatto; P.K. McGuire; Jaime Eduardo Cecílio Hallak; José Alexandre S. Crippa
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have reported a variety of brain abnormalities in association with schizophrenia. These include a higher incidence of cavum septum pellucidum (CSP), which is consistent with a neurodevelopmental model for this disorder. In this meta-analytic review, we describe and discuss the main CSP MRI findings in schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs) to date. We adopted as keywords cavum and schizophrenia or psychosis, and the inclusion criteria were articles in English, with samples of SSD patients compared to healthy subjects, which used MRI to assess CSP, without time limit. From 18 potential reports, fifteen were eligible to be part of the current review. These studies included 1054 patients with SSD and 866 healthy volunteers. Six out of 15 studies pointed to a higher prevalence of CSP of any size in SSD patients, while five out of 15 showed that subjects with SSD had a greater occurrence of a large CSP than healthy individuals. However, the meta-analysis demonstrated that only the incidence of a large CSP was significantly higher in SSD relative to healthy comparisons (odds ratio=1.59; 95%CI 1.07-2.38; p=0.02). Overall our results suggest that only a large CSP is associated with SSD while a small CSP may be considered a normal neuroanatomical variation. Our review revealed a large degree of variability in the methods employed across the MRI studies published to date, as well as evidence of publication bias. Studies in large, community-based samples with greater standardization of methods should clarify the true significance of CSP in SSD.
Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2010
Kátia C. Arrais; João Paulo Machado-de-Sousa; Clarissa Trzesniak; Alaor Santos Filho; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; Flávia de Lima Osório; Sonia Regina Loureiro; Antonio Egidio Nardi; Luiz Alberto B Hetem; Antonio Waldo Zuardi; Jaime Eduardo Cecílio Hallak; José Alexandre S. Crippa
BACKGROUND It has been suggested that individuals with social anxiety disorder (SAD) are exaggeratedly concerned about approval and disapproval by others. Therefore, we assessed the recognition of facial expressions by individuals with SAD, in an attempt to overcome the limitations of previous studies. METHODS The sample was formed by 231 individuals (78 SAD patients and 153 healthy controls). All individuals were treatment naïve, aged 18-30 years and with similar socioeconomic level. Participants judged which emotion (happiness, sadness, disgust, anger, fear, and surprise) was presented in the facial expression of stimuli displayed on a computer screen. The stimuli were manipulated in order to depict different emotional intensities, with the initial image being a neutral face (0%) and, as the individual moved on across images, the expressions increased their emotional intensity until reaching the total emotion (100%). The time, accuracy, and intensity necessary to perform judgments were evaluated. RESULTS The groups did not show statistically significant differences in respect to the number of correct judgments or to the time necessary to respond. However, women with SAD required less emotional intensity to recognize faces displaying fear (p=0.002), sadness (p=0.033) and happiness (p=0.002), with no significant differences for the other emotions or men with SAD. CONCLUSIONS The findings suggest that women with SAD are hypersensitive to threat-related and approval-related social cues. Future studies investigating the neural basis of the impaired processing of facial emotion in SAD using functional neuroimaging would be desirable and opportune.
Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2011
Clarissa Trzesniak; Matthew J. Kempton; Geraldo F. Busatto; Irismar Reis de Oliveira; Amanda Galvão-de Almeida; Joseph Kambeitz; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; Alaor Santos Filho; Marcos Hortes Nisihara Chagas; Antonio Waldo Zuardi; Jaime Eduardo Cecílio Hallak; P.K. McGuire; José Alexandre S. Crippa
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies have reported a variety of brain abnormalities in association with schizophrenia. These include a higher prevalence of an absent adhesio interthalamica (AI; also known massa intermedia), a gray matter junction that is present between the two thalami in approximately 80% of healthy subjects. In this meta-analytic review, we describe and discuss the main AI MRI findings in schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs) to date. The MEDLINE and ISI Web of Knowledge databases were searched up to December 2010, for studies that used MRI to assess AI in patients with SSD and controls. From fourteen potential reports, eleven were eligible to be part of the current review. These studies included 822 patients with SSD and 718 healthy volunteers. There was a large degree of variability in the MRI methods they employed. Patients with SSD had a higher prevalence of absent AI than healthy volunteers (odds ratio = 1.98; 95% confidence interval 1.33-2.94; p = 0.0008). This association was evident in both male and female SSD subjects, and there was no evidence that the prevalence was related to age or duration of illness. The significance of the absence of an AI for SSD may be clarified by studies in large, longitudinal community-based samples using standardized methods.
Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria | 2008
Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; Geraldo F. Busatto; Philip McGuire; José Alexandre S. Crippa
Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria | 2010
Marcos Hortes Nisihara Chagas; Antonio Egidio Nardi; Gisele Gus Manfro; Luiz Alberto B Hetem; Nathalia C. Andrada; Michelle N. Levitan; Giovanni Abrahão Salum; Luciano Isolan; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; José Alexandre S. Crippa
Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria | 2011
Michelle N. Levitan; Marcos Hortes Nisihara Chagas; José Alexandre S. Crippa; Gisele Gus Manfro; Luiz Alberto B Hetem; Nathalia C. Andrada; Giovanni Abrahão Salum; Luciano Isolan; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; Antonio Egidio Nardi
Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2009
Alaor Santos Filho; Daniele Leite B. Carvalho; Vitor Tumas; Luiz Alberto B Hetem; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; José Alexandre S. Crippa
Archive | 2011
Michelle N. Levitan; Marcos Hortes Nisihara Chagas; José Alexandre de Souza Crippa; Gisele Gus Manfro; Luiz Alberto B Hetem; Nathalia C. Andrada; Giovanni Abrahão Salum; Luciano Isolan; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; Antonio Egidio Nardi
Archive | 2010
Marcos Hortes; N. Chagas; Antonio Egidio Nardi; Gisele Gus Manfro; Luiz Alberto; B. Hetem; Nathalia C. Andrada; Michelle N. Levitan; Giovanni Abrahão Salum; Luciano Isolan; Maria Cecília Freitas Ferrari; José Alexandre; S. Crippa