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Featured researches published by Matthias Franz.


Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 2003

Psychological distress and socioeconomic status in single mothers and their children in a German city

Matthias Franz; H. Lensche; Norbert Schmitz

Abstract.Background: The proportion of single mothers in western countries is continuously growing. In contrast to other western countries, support programs in Germany especially for single mothers are rare. This study identifies for the first time in Germany within a large epidemiological sample different subgroups of higher distressed single mothers as important potential target groups for psychosocial support interventions. Facing limited resources, data about these subgroups are helpful to develop and establish specific support programs. Method: In a cross-section study, family status of a complete cohort of school beginners in Duesseldorf (N = 5178 children, aged 5–7 years) was screened within the school eligibility test (recruitment rate 97.5 %, N = 5048). Out of a total of 891 single mothers, 531 fulfilling inclusion criteria (speaking fluent German, not married, living together with the tested child, informed consent) were compared to a control group of married mothers out of the same sample (N = 278). Socioeconomic status, social network and psychological distress of mothers (SCL-90-R) and children (CBCL) were investigated. Results: Socioeconomic status (income, education) of single mothers was lower while psychological distress (SCL-90-R) was elevated compared to the control group. Single mothers without additional personal support for their child, younger, as well as poor single mothers showed higher values of psychological distress. In sons of single mothers, increased behavior problems were found (CBCL). Of all children screened, 907 (18 %) lived in single-parent families. Conclusion: An increased psychological distress of single mothers and their sons could be shown for the first time in Germany within a large epidemiologic sample. This has implications for the planning of preventive interventions and evaluation of associations, e. g., between social variables and distress of single mothers and their children within longitudinal study designs.


Nuclear Medicine Communications | 2006

Striatal dopamine transporter density in drug naive patients with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

Rolf Larisch; Wolfgang Sitte; Christina Antke; Matthias Franz; Wolfgang Tress; Hans-Wilhelm Müller

Background and aimDopamine transporters are the target of psychostimulants used for treatment of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Therefore, the present study aimed to evaluate striatal dopamine transporter density in adult patients with ADHD. MethodsTwenty patients (11 female, nine male; mean age 35±7 years) and 20 control subjects (11 female, nine male, mean age 32±8 years) were examined with SPECT using the specific radiotracer 123I-FP-CIT. The ratio of striatal to cortical radioactivity concentration was used for semiquantitative evaluation of dopamine transporter binding potential (V3″). There was a significant influence of age (P<0.001) and a trend towards an influence of gender (P=0.053) on V3″. An ANCOVA with these covariates showed a slightly higher V3″ in the patients than in the control subjects (4.24±0.48 vs. 4.03±0.56; P=0.02). ConclusionThis study provides further in-vivo evidence for an involvement of the dopamine transporter in ADHD. However, compared to previous studies, the increase of dopamine transporter density in the patient group is less pronounced here.


Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry | 2007

In vivo evaluation of noncarious cervical lesions in sleep bruxism subjects

Michelle A. Ommerborn; Christine Schneider; Maria Giraki; Ralf Schäfer; Preeti Singh; Matthias Franz; Wolfgang H.-M. Raab

STATEMENT OF PROBLEM Occlusal load has frequently been suggested to be involved in the development of a noncarious cervical lesion (NCL). However, there is a lack of clinical studies evaluating NCLs and occlusal parameters in sleep bruxism (SB) subjects. PURPOSE The purpose of this clinical study was to assess the frequency of NCLs and determine potential occlusal differences between SB subjects and healthy control subjects. MATERIAL AND METHODS A total of 91 volunteers, 58 women and 33 men, with a mean (SD) age of 28.37 (4.89) years (range of 20 to 39 years), participated in this investigation. The clinical assessment of SB was based on the criteria of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. The participants were divided into 2 groups; 58 subjects were assigned to the SB group and 33 subjects to the control group, following a thorough dental examination that was performed by a single trained dentist. Additionally, the following parameters were recorded: mean number of teeth present, existence/absence of NCLs, frequency of NCLs relating to the type of tooth, type of occlusal guidance scheme, existence of a slide from centric occlusion (CO) to maximum intercuspation (MI), length of the slide, and report of tooth hypersensitivity. Group differences were statistically analyzed using chi-square tests for the qualitative variables and Mann-Whitney U tests for the quantitative variables (alpha=.05). RESULTS NCLs were significantly more prevalent in SB subjects (39.7%) than in the control subjects (12.1%) (P=.006). In SB subjects, the first premolars were the teeth most affected, and in control subjects, the first molars were most affected. Tooth hypersensitivity was reported in 62.1% of the SB subjects and in 36.4% of the control subjects (P=.018). The evaluation of occlusal guidance schemes revealed no significant difference between the groups. In SB subjects (70.7%), a slide from CO to MI was significantly more prevalent than in control subjects (42.4%) (P=.008). Moreover, SB subjects demonstrated a significantly longer mean (SD) slide of 0.77 (0.69) mm compared to that of control subjects of 0.4 (0.57) mm (P=.008). CONCLUSIONS Within the limitations of this study, SB subjects demonstrated significantly more NCLs than the control group; whereas, the type of occlusal guidance scheme seems to be of minor importance in the development of NCLs.


Journal of Neurology | 2011

Alexithymia and impaired facial affect recognition in multiple sclerosis

D. Prochnow; J. Donell; Ralf Schäfer; S. Jörgens; Hans Hartung; Matthias Franz; R. J. Seitz

Despite the high relevance of emotion processing for social functioning, the study of the impairment of facial affect in multiple sclerosis (MS) has received little attention. Previous research reported evidence for emotion processing deficits but the nature and extent are not fully explained. Thirty-five MS patients underwent dedicated neuropsychological assessment of emotion processing using two facial affect recognition tasks and self-report measures of alexithymia. For comparison, healthy participants served as controls. Relative to healthy controls, MS patients were impaired in facial affect recognition on four of the six Ekman basic emotions, except happiness and disgust. The MS patients were more alexithymic than the healthy controls. These data provide evidence for deficits in the recognition of emotional face expressions and emotional introspection.


Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 2010

Increased Activation of the Supragenual Anterior Cingulate Cortex during Visual Emotional Processing in Male Subjects with High Degrees of Alexithymia: An Event-Related fMRI Study

Alexander Heinzel; Ralf Schäfer; Hans Wilhelm Müller; Andre Schieffer; Ariane Ingenhag; Simon B. Eickhoff; Georg Northoff; Matthias Franz; Hubertus Hautzel

Background: One of the most prominent neurobiological models of alexithymia assumes an altered function of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) as the crucial neural correlate of alexithymia. So far functional imaging studies have yielded inconclusive results. Therefore, we tested this hypothesis in healthy alexithymics and nonalexithymics in an event-related fMRI study. Methods:Thirty high- and 30 low-alexithymic right-handed male subjects (selected by the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale, TAS-20) were investigated with event-related fMRI using a picture viewing paradigm. The stimuli consisted of happy, fearful and neutral facial expressions (Ekman-Friesen) as well as positive, negative and neutral pictures from the International Affective Picture System. Results: Contrasting the high-alexithymic with the low-alexithymic group we observed increased activation of the supragenual ACC for different emotional valences as well as for different emotional stimuli. Moreover, there was a positive correlation of the ACC with the individual TAS-20 scores but no correlations with the individual Beck Depression Inventory scores. Additionally, there was no difference in activity of the amygdala. Conclusions: We demonstrated that the supragenual ACC is constantly activated more strongly in alexithymic subjects and that this activation is related to the symptoms of alexithymia and not to associated symptoms such as depression. Therefore, our findings support the hypothesis of an altered function of the ACC in alexithymia.


Behavioral and Brain Functions | 2008

On the neural networks of empathy: A principal component analysis of an fMRI study

Jason S. Nomi; Dag Scherfeld; Skara Friederichs; Ralf Schäfer; Matthias Franz; Hans-Jörg Wittsack; Nina P. Azari; John H. Missimer; Rüdiger J. Seitz

BackgroundHuman emotional expressions serve an important communicatory role allowing the rapid transmission of valence information among individuals. We aimed at exploring the neural networks mediating the recognition of and empathy with human facial expressions of emotion.MethodsA principal component analysis was applied to event-related functional magnetic imaging (fMRI) data of 14 right-handed healthy volunteers (29 +/- 6 years). During scanning, subjects viewed happy, sad and neutral face expressions in the following conditions: emotion recognition, empathizing with emotion, and a control condition of simple object detection. Functionally relevant principal components (PCs) were identified by planned comparisons at an alpha level of p < 0.001.ResultsFour PCs revealed significant differences in variance patterns of the conditions, thereby revealing distinct neural networks: mediating facial identification (PC 1), identification of an expressed emotion (PC 2), attention to an expressed emotion (PC 12), and sense of an emotional state (PC 27).ConclusionOur findings further the notion that the appraisal of human facial expressions involves multiple neural circuits that process highly differentiated cognitive aspects of emotion.


Neurocase | 2007

Alexithymia-like Disorder in Right Anterior Cingulate Infarction

Ralf Schäfer; Kerstin Popp; Silke Jörgens; Robert Lindenberg; Matthias Franz; Rüdiger J. Seitz

The frontal midline structures have been demonstrated by functional neuroimaging to be involved in the affective control of human behavior. However, due to the rareness of diseases affecting this part of the brain little is known about behavioral abnormalities following damage to these brain areas. We present a patient with a right anterior cingulate infarct who presented with an alexithymia-like disorder. Event-related potentials revealed an abnormality of emotional face perception in the right cerebral hemisphere. We suggest that the anterior cingulate lesion induced a deficit of emotion processing including emotional face perception probably due to an interference in a critical node of a large-scale network subserving affective control of behavior.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2012

Alexithymia in healthy young men: A voxel-based morphometric study

Alexander Heinzel; Martina Minnerop; Ralf Schäfer; Hans-Wilhelm Müller; Matthias Franz; Hubertus Hautzel

BACKGROUND Alexithymia is a personality construct predominately associated with an impaired ability to identify and communicate emotions. Functional imaging studies showed that an altered function of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) may be relevant in alexithymia. In this study we investigated if the altered functional anatomy is related to structural changes (A) in the whole brain and (B) specifically in the ACC by applying a region-of-interest analysis. METHODS 33 high- and 31 low-alexithymic right-handed young male subjects (selected by the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale, TAS-20) were investigated using voxel-based morphometry (VBM) on high-resolution 3D magnetic resonance images. The group differences were analyzed by applying voxel-wise comparisons using two-sample t-tests. Moreover regression analyses with regard to the individual TAS-20 sum scores were calculated. RESULTS Neither the subtraction analyses nor the correlation analyses revealed significant differences between high- and low-alexithymic subjects. Thus, according to our results, the null hypothesis of no structural difference between the groups could not be rejected. LIMITATIONS The findings cannot be generalized to female subjects. CONCLUSIONS Our results did not reveal morphological differences between high- and low-alexithymic subjects. The functional differences known from imaging studies could not be attributed to underlying anatomical changes. Thus, the personality trait of alexithymia might be associated with fewer morphological abnormalities than previously assumed.


Journal of Psychophysiology | 2003

Psychophysiological Response Patterns of High and Low Alexithymics Under Mental and Emotional Load Conditions

Matthias Franz; Ralf Schaefer; Christine Schneider

Abstract Compared to normals or low alexithymics, high alexithymic subjects show a modified psychophysiological reactivity under experimental stress. This study aims to differentiate these effects under different load conditions (mental vs. emotional load, 5min each). High (N = 33) and low (N = 33) alexithymic subjects were identified by the German version of the Toronto-Alexithymia-Scale (TAS-20). Subjects were exposed to two tasks of the continuous performance test as a mental load condition and two unpleasant movie sequences as an emotional load condition. Heart rate and electrodermal activity (nonspecific skin conductance reactions) were continuously recorded during stimuli presentation. High alexithymic subjects showed a decreased number of nonspecific skin conductance reactions under all load conditions compared to low alexithymics. Initial heart rate acceleration of high alexithymic subjects under mental load was stronger, whereas under emotional load high alexithymic subjects showed a stronger ini...


International Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2007

Maladaptive coping strategies in patients with bruxism compared to non-bruxing controls.

Christine Schneider; Alexandra Goertz; Matthias Franz; Michelle A. Ommerborn; Maria Giraki; Wolfgang H.-M. Raab; Ralf Schaefer

Background: Sleep bruxism is the non-functional grinding or clenching of teeth during sleep. It may lead to tooth damage and myofascial pain. Although stress is discussed as a main causal agent, there is a lack of studies concerning coping strategies in patients with sleep bruxism. Purpose: The aim of the present study was to investigate whether bruxers, compared to non-bruxing individuals, apply maladaptive coping strategies. Method: Seventy-five sleep bruxers and 38 non-bruxers were selected by dental examination and tested by a German coping questionnaire (SVF78). Results: A significant difference in positive coping strategies was observed between the two groups. Bruxers reported less positive coping strategies, mainly less “reaction control” and “positive self-instructions.” In general, males reported less negative coping strategies. Conclusion: The reported effects demonstrate a deficit of functional coping strategies in bruxers, whereas strategies that enhance stress do not seem to be associated with sleep bruxism. Findings do not admit the conclusion that there is a causal association of maladaptive coping and bruxism. However, they support the approach of a multidisciplinary therapy involving psychological treatment.

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Ralf Schäfer

University of Düsseldorf

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Wolfgang Tress

University of Düsseldorf

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Wolfgang Sitte

University of Düsseldorf

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Maria Giraki

University of Düsseldorf

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