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Featured researches published by Nicola Thiel.


BMC Psychiatry | 2012

Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy in obsessive-compulsive disorder - A qualitative study on patients' experiences

Elisabeth Hertenstein; Nina Rose; Ulrich Voderholzer; Thomas Heidenreich; Christoph Nissen; Nicola Thiel; Nirmal Herbst; Anne Katrin Külz

BackgroundCognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) with exposure and response prevention (ERP) is the first-line treatment for patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). However, not all of them achieve remission on a longterm basis. Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) represents a new 8-week group therapy program whose effectiveness has been demonstrated in various mental disorders, but has not yet been applied to patients with OCD.The present pilot study aimed to qualitatively assess the subjective experiences of patients with OCD who participated in MBCT.MethodSemi-structured interviews were conducted with 12 patients suffering from OCD directly after 8 sessions of a weekly MBCT group program. Data were analyzed using a qualitative content analysis.ResultsParticipants valued the treatment as helpful in dealing with their OCD and OCD-related problems. Two thirds of the patients reported a decline in OCD symptoms. Benefits included an increased ability to let unpleasant emotions surface and to live more consciously in the present. However, participants also discussed several problems.ConclusionThe data provide preliminary evidence that patients with OCD find aspects of the current MBCT protocol acceptable and beneficial. The authors suggest to further explore MBCT as a complementary treatment strategy for OCD.


Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 2014

No Talking, Just Writing! Efficacy of an Internet-Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy with Exposure and Response Prevention in Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

Nirmal Herbst; Ulrich Voderholzer; Nicola Thiel; Ronja Schaub; Christine Knaevelsrud; Silke Stracke; Elisabeth Hertenstein; Christoph Nissen; Anne Katrin Külz

Background: Many patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) do not receive first-line treatment according to the current guidelines (cognitive behavioral therapy with exposure and response prevention, CBT with ERP) due to barriers to treatment. Internet-based therapy is designed to overcome these barriers. The present study evaluates the efficacy of an Internet-based writing therapy with therapeutic interaction based on the concept of CBT with ERP for patients with OCD. Methods: Thirty-four volunteers with OCD according to DSM-IV-criteria were included in the trial and randomized according to a waiting-list control design with follow-up measures at 8 weeks and 6 months. The intervention consisted of 14 sessions, either starting directly after randomization or with an 8-week delay. Main outcome measure was the change in the severity of OCD symptoms (Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale Self-Rating, Y-BOCS SR, and Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory-Revised, OCI-R). Results: Obsessive-compulsive symptoms were significantly improved in the treatment group compared to the waiting-list control group with large effect sizes of Cohens d = 0.82 (Y-BOCS SR) and d = 0.87 (OCI-R), using an intention-to-treat analysis. This effect remained stable at 6-month follow-up. Only 4 participants (12%) dropped out prematurely from the study. Of the 30 completers, 90% rated their condition as improved and would recommend the program to their friends. Conclusions: Internet-based writing therapy led to a significant improvement of obsessive-compulsive symptoms. Even though replications with larger sample sizes are needed, the results support the notion that Internet-based approaches have the potential for improving the treatment situation for patients with OCD.


Journal of Personality Disorders | 2013

The Effect of Personality Disorders on Treatment Outcomes in Patients With Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders

Nicola Thiel; Elisabeth Hertenstein; Christoph Nissen; Nirmal Herbst; Anne Katrin Külz; Ulrich Voderholzer

The effect of comorbid personality disorders (PD) on treatment outcomes in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is unclear. The authors systematically review results from investigations of therapy outcomes in adult patients with OCD and a comorbid PD. PsycINFO and MEDLINE were searched for original articles. Twenty-three studies assessing PDs through interviews were selected. Cluster A PDs, particularly schizotypal PD, narcissistic PD, and the presence of two or more comorbid PDs, were associated with poorer treatment outcomes in patients with OCD. With regard to other PDs and clusters, the results are inconsistent or the sample sizes are too small to reach a conclusion. OCD patients with different comorbid PDs differ in their therapeutic response to treatment. To optimize the treatment of OCD, the predictive value of PDs on the treatment outcome should be further investigated, and treatment of Axis I and II comorbidity requires more attention.


Annals of General Psychiatry | 2013

Quality of life changes following inpatient and outpatient treatment in obsessive-compulsive disorder: a study with 12 months follow-up

Elisabeth Hertenstein; Nicola Thiel; Nirmal Herbst; Tobias Freyer; Christoph Nissen; Anne Katrin Külz; Ulrich Voderholzer

BackgroundQuality of life (QoL) is increasingly recognized as a critical outcome parameter in mental health studies. The aim of this study was to investigate different domains of the QoL in persons with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) before and after a multimodal, disorder-specific in- and outpatient treatment.MethodsData of 73 persons with OCD treated in an inpatient setting followed by outpatient treatment were analyzed. The World Health Organization Quality of Life abbreviated (a multidimensional measure of the QoL) and the Beck Depression Inventory were administered prior to (baseline) and 12 months after the inpatient treatment (follow-up).ResultsAt baseline, participants reported a significantly diminished psychological, social, physical, and global QoL compared to the German general population. Environmental QoL was not impaired in the present sample. The QoL was significantly improved at follow-up, except for social QoL, but remained below norm values. The QoL improvement was predicted by improvements of depressive symptoms.ConclusionsThe results indicate that persons with OCD suffer from a very low QoL. The QoL was significantly improved after 12 months of intensive state-of-the-art treatment. However, the QoL indices remained considerably lower than population norm values, indicating the need for additional research into novel treatment options for persons with OCD.


Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 2014

Quality of Life Improvements after Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in Nonresponders to Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Primary Insomnia

Elisabeth Hertenstein; Nicola Thiel; Marianne Lüking; Anne Katrin Külz; Elisabeth Schramm; Chiara Baglioni; Kai Spiegelhalder; Dieter Riemann; Christoph Nissen

years; no relevant comorbidities). All participants had extensive experience with CBT-I according to evidence-based guidelines ( ≥ 6 sessions; period of time between CBT-I and inclusion in the present study: 2.2 ± 3.4 years) and continued suffering from clini-cally relevant insomnia (sleep onset latency or wake time after sleep onset: ≥30 min, ≥3 days/week). Seven participants were free of psychoactive medication; 3 had been on stable medication for ≥ 3 years. All participants were diagnosed in our sleep laboratory based on a clinical interview and standard physical examinations and provided written informed consent prior to the study. The study has been approved by the local ethics committee and has been registered in the German Clinical Trials Register prior to the enrollment of the first participant. The open pilot study comprised 2 baseline measurements [6 weeks before (T


BMC Psychiatry | 2014

The prediction of treatment outcomes by early maladaptive schemas and schema modes in obsessive-compulsive disorder

Nicola Thiel; Brunna Tuschen-Caffier; Nirmal Herbst; Anne Katrin Külz; Christoph Nissen; Elisabeth Hertenstein; Ellen Gross; Ulrich Voderholzer

BackgroundHigher levels of early maladaptive schemas (EMS) and schema modes according to schematherapy by Jeffrey Young are present in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) compared to healthy controls. This study examines the relationship of EMS and schema modes to OC symptom severity and the predictive value of EMS and schema modes on treatment outcome in inpatients receiving Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) with Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP). The main assumption was a negative association between the EMS of the domain ‘disconnection’ and dysfunctional coping and parent schema modes and the treatment outcome.MethodsEMS, schema modes, depression and traumatic childhood experiences were measured in 70 patients with OCD. To analyze the predictors, two regression analyses were conducted considering multiple variables, such as depression, as covariates.ResultsRegression analyses demonstrated that higher scores on the EMS named failure and emotional inhibition and depressive symptom severity at pretreatment were significantly related to poor outcome and explained a high percentage of the variance in OC symptoms at posttreatment. No influence on the treatment outcome was observed for schema modes, other EMS or other covariates.ConclusionsThe results support the approach to extend the CBT with ERP treatment with therapeutic elements focusing on maladaptive schemas, particularly in non-responders.


Verhaltenstherapie | 2015

Prävention psychischer und psychosomatischer Störungen in der gesundheitspolitischen Diskussion

Ann-Katrin Job; Melanie H. M. Mattei; Ilka Vasterling; Kurt Hahlweg; Uta Löffler; Behiye Sakalli; Malte Stopsack; Johannes Mander; Hinrich Bents; Sven Barnow; Rafael Rabenstein; Nina Pintzinger; Verena Knogler; Vivian Kirnbauer; Gerhard Lenz; Alexandra Schosser; Anne Katrin Külz; Ulrich Voderholzer; Sandra Schlegl; Alice Diedrich; Nicola Thiel; Elisabeth Hertenstein; Caroline Schwartz; Michael Rufer; Nirmal Herbst; Christoph Nissen; Thomas Hillebrand; Bernhard Osen; Katarina Stengler; Lena Jelinek

Wir haben einen Hype in der medialen Aufbereitung von Themen, die sich um Arbeitswelt, Burnout und psychische Erkrankung gruppieren. Die direkte kausale Verbindung von psychosozialen Belastungen in der modernen Arbeitswelt und daraus sich entwickelnden Gesundheitsgefährdungen ist für Laien überzeugend; die Diskussion aber wird nicht selten der Komplexität des Bedingungsgefüges von objektiven Arbeitsbelastungen, Persönlichkeit und individuellen biologischen und psychosozialen Vulnerabilitäten nicht gerecht. Dennoch gibt es genügend empirische Evidenz dafür, dass wir eine überproportionale ProduktivitätssteiWas war der Hintergrund der Gründung eines Kompetenzzentrums zur Prävention psychischer und psychosomatischer Störungen in der Arbeitsund Ausbildungswelt (PPAA)?


European Psychiatry | 2014

EPA-0269 – Initial evidence for the efficacy of acceptance and commitment therapy in primary insomnia

Elisabeth Hertenstein; Nicola Thiel; M. Lüking; Anne Katrin Külz; Elisabeth Schramm; Chiara Baglioni; Kai Spiegelhalder; Dieter Riemann; Christoph Nissen

Primary insomnia (PI) is a highly prevalent health problem worldwide and has been identified as a risk factor for major somatic and mental disorders. Still, less than 50% of all individuals with chronic PI show full remission with optimized first line treatment, indicating the need for additional research. The broad objective of this study was to test acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) as a supplement to first line treatment in order to improve non-pharmacological interventions for insomnia. Specific aims were i) to evaluate whether ACT is feasible in patients with PI and ii) to collect preliminary efficacy data. Improvements of subjective sleep quality and quality of life (QoL) were hypothesized. Eleven individuals with chronic PI without comorbidities who were non- or partial responders to Cognitive Behavior Therapy were included. They participated in six weekly ACT sessions in an outpatient group setting. Primary outcomes were subjective sleep quality as measured by sleep diary data, and quality of life as measured by the World Health Organization Quality of Life. Data were collected at two baselines, post-treatment and at three-months-follow-up. Ten individuals completed the study. Sleep parameters did not significantly change across the study. Importantly, the QoL across different domains was significantly improved after ACT. Sleep-related avoidance behavior was significantly reduced. Effect sizes for QoL and avoidance behavior changes were large. The data provide preliminary evidence that ACT as a group program is feasible in individuals with chronic PI and could be a helpful supplement to existing treatments especially with the aim of improving QoL.


Psychopathology | 2014

A comparison of schemas, schema modes and childhood traumas in obsessive-compulsive disorder, chronic pain disorder and eating disorders

Ulrich Voderholzer; Caroline Schwartz; Nicola Thiel; Anne Katrin Kuelz; Armin Hartmann; Carl Eduard Scheidt; Sandra Schlegl; Almut Zeeck


Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders | 2013

Cognitive functioning in medication-free obsessive-compulsive patients treated with cognitive-behavioural therapy

Ulrich Voderholzer; Caroline Schwartz; Tobias Freyer; Bartosz Zurowski; Nicola Thiel; Nirmal Herbst; Karina Wahl; Andreas Kordon; Fritz Hohagen; Anne Katrin Kuelz

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Anne Katrin Külz

University Medical Center Freiburg

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Elisabeth Hertenstein

University Medical Center Freiburg

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Ulrich Voderholzer

University Medical Center Freiburg

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Nirmal Herbst

University Medical Center Freiburg

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Chiara Baglioni

University Medical Center Freiburg

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Ann-Katrin Job

Braunschweig University of Technology

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