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Featured researches published by Martha J. Falkenstein.


JAMA Psychiatry | 2013

Deficits in Conditioned Fear Extinction in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and Neurobiological Changes in the Fear Circuit

Mohammed R. Milad; Sharon C. Furtak; Jennifer L. Greenberg; Aparna Keshaviah; Jooyeon J. Im; Martha J. Falkenstein; Michael A. Jenike; Scott L. Rauch; Sabine Wilhelm

IMPORTANCE Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) may be characterized by impaired self-regulation and behavioral inhibition. Elevated fear and anxiety are common characteristics of this disorder. The neurobiology of fear regulation and consolidation of safety memories have not been examined in this patient population. OBJECTIVE To examine the psychophysiological and neurobiological correlates of conditioned fear extinction in patients with OCD. DESIGN Cross-sectional, case-control, functional magnetic resonance imaging study. SETTING Academic medical center. PARTICIPANTS Twenty-one patients with OCD and 21 healthy participants. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Skin conductance responses and blood oxygenation level-dependent responses. RESULTS The between-group difference noted in our psychophysiological measure (skin conductance responses) was during extinction recall: patients with OCD showed impaired extinction recall relative to control subjects. Regarding the functional magnetic resonance imaging data, patients with OCD showed significantly reduced activation in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex across training phases. Moreover, reduced activation in the patients with OCD was noted in the caudate and hippocampus during fear conditioning, as well as in the cerebellum, posterior cingulate cortex, and putamen during extinction recall. Contrary to our prediction, OCD symptom severity was positively correlated with the magnitude of extinction memory recall. Also contrary to our prediction, functional responses of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex were positively correlated with symptom severity, and functional responses of the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex were inversely correlated with symptom severity. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE As expected, our study showed that fear extinction and its neural substrates are impaired in patients with OCD. However, this study also yielded some surprising and unexpected results regarding the correlates between extinction capacity and its neural substrates and the severity of symptoms expressed in this disorder. Thus, our data report neural correlates of deficient fear extinction in patients with OCD. The negative correlations between fear extinction deficits and Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale symptoms in OCD suggest that there may be other factors, in addition to fear extinction deficiency, that contribute to the psychopathology of OCD.


Depression and Anxiety | 2010

Pilot trial of dialectical behavior therapy-enhanced habit reversal for trichotillomania

Nancy J. Keuthen; Barbara O. Rothbaum; Stacy Shaw Welch; Caitlin Taylor; Martha J. Falkenstein; Mary Heekin; Cathrine Arndt Jordan; Kiara R. Timpano; Suzanne A. Meunier; Jeanne M. Fama; Michael A. Jenike

Background: Not all hair pullers improve acutely with cognitive–behavioral treatment (CBT) and few maintain their gains over time. Methods: We conducted an open clinical trial of a new treatment that addresses affectively triggered pulling and emphasizes relapse prevention in addition to standard CBT approaches. Ten female participants satisfying DSM‐IV criteria for trichotillomania (TTM) at two study sites received Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)‐enhanced CBT consisting of 11 weekly sessions and 4 maintenance sessions over the following 3 months. Independent assessors rated hair pulling impairment and global improvement at several study time points. Participants completed self‐report measures of hair pulling severity and emotion regulation. Results: Significant improvement in hair pulling severity and emotion regulation, as well as hair pulling impairment and anxiety and depressive symptoms, occurred during acute treatment and were maintained during the subsequent 3 months. Significant correlations were reported between changes in emotion regulation and hair pulling severity during both the acute treatment and maintenance phases. Conclusions: This study offers preliminary evidence for the efficacy of DBT‐enhanced CBT for TTM and suggests the importance of addressing emotion regulation during TTM treatment. Depression and Anxiety, 2010.


Journal of behavioral addictions | 2012

DBT-enhanced cognitive-behavioral treatment for trichotillomania: A randomized controlled trial

Nancy J. Keuthen; Barbara O. Rothbaum; Jeanne M. Fama; Erin M. Altenburger; Martha J. Falkenstein; Susan Sprich; Megan C. Kearns; Suzanne A. Meunier; Michael A. Jenike; Stacy Shaw Welch

Background and aims Limited treatment options are available for trichotillomania (TTM) and most have modest outcomes. Suboptimal treatment results may be due to the failure of existing approaches to address all TTM styles. Methods Thirty-eight DSM-IV TTM participants were randomly assigned across two study sites to Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) -enhanced cognitive-behavioral treatment (consisting of an 11-week acute treatment and 3-month maintenance treatment) or a minimal attention control (MAC) condition. MAC participants had active treatment after the 11-week control condition. Follow-up study assessments were conducted three and six months after the maintenance period. Results Open trial treatment resulted in significant improvement in TTM severity, emotion regulation (ER) capacity, experiential avoidance, anxiety and depression with changes generally maintained over time. In the randomized controlled trial, those with active treatment had greater improvement than those in the MAC condition for both TTM severity and ER capacity. Correlations between changes in TTM severity and ER capacity were not reported at post-treatment but did occur in maintenance and follow-up indicating reduced TTM severity with improved ER capacity. Conclusions DBT-enhanced cognitive-behavioral treatment is a promising treatment for TTM. Future studies should compare this approach to other credible treatment interventions and investigate the efficacy of this approach in more naturalistic samples with greater comorbidity.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2014

Stepped care in the treatment of trichotillomania.

Kate Rogers; Maria Banis; Martha J. Falkenstein; Elizabeth J. Malloy; Lauren McDonough; Samuel O. Nelson; Natalie Rusch; David A. F. Haaga

OBJECTIVE There are effective treatments of trichotillomania (TTM), but access to expert providers is limited. This study tested a stepped care model aimed at improving access. METHOD Participants were 60 (95% women, 75% Caucasian, 2% Hispanic) adults (M = 33.18 years) with TTM. They were randomly assigned to immediate versus waitlist (WL) conditions for Step 1 (10 weeks of web-based self-help via StopPulling.com). After Step 1, participants chose whether to engage in Step 2 (8 sessions of in-person habit reversal training [HRT]). RESULTS In Step 1, the immediate condition had a small (d = .21) but significant advantage, relative to WL, in reducing TTM symptom ratings by interviewers (masked to experimental condition but not to assessment point); there were no differences in self-reported TTM symptoms, alopecia, functional impairment, or quality of life. Step 1 was more effective for those who used the site more often. Stepped care was highly acceptable: Motivation did not decrease during Step 1; treatment satisfaction was high, and 76% enrolled in Step 2. More symptomatic patients self-selected into HRT, and on average they improved significantly. Over one third (36%) made clinically significant improvement in self-reported TTM symptoms. Considering the entire stepped care program, participants significantly reduced symptoms, alopecia, and impairment, and increased quality of life. For quality of life and symptom severity, there was some relapse by 3-month follow-up. CONCLUSIONS Stepped care is acceptable, and HRT was associated with improvement. Further work is needed to determine which patients with TTM can benefit from self-help and how to reduce relapse.


NeuroImage: Clinical | 2014

Aberrant error processing in relation to symptom severity in obsessive-compulsive disorder: A multimodal neuroimaging study

Yigal Agam; Jennifer L. Greenberg; Marlisa Isom; Martha J. Falkenstein; Eric Jenike; Sabine Wilhelm; Dara S. Manoach

BACKGROUND Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is characterized by maladaptive repetitive behaviors that persist despite feedback. Using multimodal neuroimaging, we tested the hypothesis that this behavioral rigidity reflects impaired use of behavioral outcomes (here, errors) to adaptively adjust responses. We measured both neural responses to errors and adjustments in the subsequent trial to determine whether abnormalities correlate with symptom severity. Since error processing depends on communication between the anterior and the posterior cingulate cortex, we also examined the integrity of the cingulum bundle with diffusion tensor imaging. METHODS Participants performed the same antisaccade task during functional MRI and electroencephalography sessions. We measured error-related activation of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the error-related negativity (ERN). We also examined post-error adjustments, indexed by changes in activation of the default network in trials surrounding errors. RESULTS OCD patients showed intact error-related ACC activation and ERN, but abnormal adjustments in the post- vs. pre-error trial. Relative to controls, who responded to errors by deactivating the default network, OCD patients showed increased default network activation including in the rostral ACC (rACC). Greater rACC activation in the post-error trial correlated with more severe compulsions. Patients also showed increased fractional anisotropy (FA) in the white matter underlying rACC. CONCLUSIONS Impaired use of behavioral outcomes to adaptively adjust neural responses may contribute to symptoms in OCD. The rACC locus of abnormal adjustment and relations with symptoms suggests difficulty suppressing emotional responses to aversive, unexpected events (e.g., errors). Increased structural connectivity of this paralimbic default network region may contribute to this impairment.


Body Image | 2013

The phenomenology of self-reported body dysmorphic disorder by proxy

Jennifer L. Greenberg; Martha J. Falkenstein; Lillian Reuman; Jeanne M. Fama; Luana Marques; Sabine Wilhelm

Body dysmorphic disorder by proxy (BDDBP), a preoccupation with a perceived defect in another persons appearance may represent a variant of BDD. However, BDDBP has received little empirical attention. We present here the phenomenology of 11 individuals with self-reported BDDBP. Participants completed an internet-based survey that assessed symptoms, psychosocial impact, and treatment history. Participants (8 females, 3 males) reported preoccupation with a wide array of individuals (e.g., spouse, stranger). Body parts of concern most commonly involved the face and head. Most participants spent several (e.g., 3-8) hours per day preoccupied by perceived defects in the person of concern (POC). All participants engaged in rituals to try to alleviate distress or improve the POCs appearance. Most avoided social/occupational activities, including contact with the POC. The impact of BDDBP was profound, particularly on relationships. Findings may help elucidate diagnostic criteria, course, and treatment.


Behavior Modification | 2016

Comprehensive Behavioral Treatment of Trichotillomania: A Treatment Development Study.

Martha J. Falkenstein; Suzanne Mouton-Odum; Charles S. Mansueto; Ruth Goldfinger Golomb; David A. F. Haaga

This study aimed to concretize and pilot test comprehensive behavioral (ComB) treatment of trichotillomania (TTM), to facilitate rigorous testing of its efficacy. ComB provides a conceptualization to develop individualized treatment and choose interventions for managing distinct factors that maintain the individual’s hair pulling. It has been used by clinicians for almost three decades, yet was not previously manualized or studied empirically. A manual was drafted and revised based on patient (N = 16) and therapist feedback, an intervention choice study demonstrated therapists reliably selected model-consistent interventions, and a therapist adherence measure was developed and tested. Uncontrolled preliminary data showed ComB to be highly acceptable, and it led to reduced TTM symptom severity and impairment, with large effects. Quality of life and disability also improved, with effects maintained at follow-up. This study resulted in the development of a manual and measures to be used in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of ComB for TTM.


Psychological Assessment | 2014

Validating indicators of treatment response: application to trichotillomania.

Samuel O. Nelson; Kate Rogers; Natalie Rusch; Lauren McDonough; Elizabeth J. Malloy; Martha J. Falkenstein; Maria Banis; David A. F. Haaga

Different studies of the treatment of trichotillomania (TTM) have used varying standards to determine the proportion of patients who obtain clinically meaningful benefits, but there is little information on the similarity of results yielded by these methods or on their comparative validity. Data from a stepped-care (Step 1: Web-based self-help; Step 2: Individual behavior therapy; N = 60) treatment study of TTM were used to evaluate 7 potential standards: complete abstinence, ≥ 25% symptom reduction, recovery of normal functioning, and clinical significance (recovery + statistically reliable change), each of the last 3 being measured by self-report (Massachusetts General Hospital Hairpulling Scale; MGH-HPS) or interview (Psychiatric Institute Trichotillomania Scale). Depending on the metric, response rates ranged from 25 to 68%. All standards were significantly associated with one another, though less strongly for the 25% symptom reduction metrics. Concurrent (with deciding to enter Step 2 treatment) and predictive (with 3-month follow-up treatment satisfaction, TTM-related impairment, quality of life, and diagnosis) validity results were variable but generally strongest for clinical significance as measured via self-report. Routine reporting of the proportion of patients who make clinically significant improvement on the MGH-HPS, supplemented by data on complete abstinence, would bolster the interpretability of TTM treatment outcome findings.


Archive | 2013

Measuring and Characterizing Unconditional Self-Acceptance

Martha J. Falkenstein; David A. F. Haaga

The theoretical conceptualization of self-acceptance has been in development for the last century. Early research focused on studying self-acceptance in relation to acceptance of others, whereas more recently researchers have emphasized trying to understand the association of self-acceptance with other aspects of psychological well-being, and the differentiation of self-acceptance from self-esteem. To facilitate empirical work on these issues, a number of measures of unconditional self-acceptance have been developed. Research using one of these measures, the Unconditional Self-Acceptance Questionnaire (USAQ), based on Ellis’s rational emotive behavior therapy (REBT) model, has uncovered extensive empirical support for an association of self-acceptance with psychological health. More research is needed, however, on aspects of the reliability and validity of this scale, and more generally on theoretical views of self-acceptance. This chapter will address these issues.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2018

Sensory over-responsivity in trichotillomania (hair-pulling disorder)

Martha J. Falkenstein; Christine A. Conelea; Lauryn E. Garner; David A. F. Haaga

OBJECTIVE This study was an initial investigation of sensory-over responsivity (SOR) to external sensations among individuals with trichotillomania (TTM). METHODS Adults endorsing DSM-5 TTM criteria (N = 609) and a non-affected comparison sample (N = 268) completed a self-report survey. RESULTS The majority of the TTM group endorsed SOR symptoms; three-quarters endorsed at least mild tactile and auditory SOR. About 15% endorsed SOR symptoms in the severe to extreme range. TTM participants had significantly higher mean scores in both auditory (t (652.89) = -6.51, p < .001, d = .45) and tactile (t (655.24) = -8.38, p < .001, d = .58) modalities than comparison participants, with medium effect sizes. Greater levels of SOR were related to greater levels of perfectionism and by-proxy pulling urges. SOR was significantly and positively correlated with functional impairment when controlling for TTM severity. CONCLUSION This study expands prior work in obsessive-compulsive related disorders by contributing the first data about associations between TTM and over-responsivity to external sensations. Findings collectively suggest SOR may be related to maladaptive emotion regulation processes in TTM. A novel measure of SOR was developed and administered in this study.

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