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Dive into the research topics where Philip Sayegh is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip Sayegh.


Aging & Mental Health | 2010

Psychosocial factors and caregivers’ distress: Effects of familism and dysfunctional thoughts

Andrés Losada; María Márquez-González; Bob G. Knight; Javier Yanguas; Philip Sayegh; Rosa Romero-Moreno

Introduction: Caring for a relative with dementia is linked with negative psychological and physical consequences for the caregiver. The number of studies analyzing the influence of specific values and thoughts on caregivers’ distress remains sparse. Objectives and method: The aim of this study is to analyze the influence of both familism dimensions and dysfunctional thoughts specific to caregiving on depression in a sample of 334 dementia caregivers. Results: The results of this study suggest that familism can have positive influences on caregiving distress when the family is perceived as a source of support. However, the dimensions of familism pertaining to a strong adherence to values regarding both feelings of obligation to provide support as well as behaviors and attitudes that should be followed by different members of a family were linked with caregivers’ distress through their influence on dysfunctional thoughts. Conclusion: This study provides support for the importance of conceptualizing familism as a multidimensional construct with both positive and negative effects on caregivers’ emotional distress and suggests that familism affects emotional distress through dysfunctional thoughts rather than through burden appraisals. Clinical implications include attending to both the positive and negative effects of familism values and the potential value of targeting dysfunctional thoughts in cognitive-behavioral interventions with caregivers.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2015

Increased neurocognitive intra-individual variability is associated with declines in medication adherence in HIV-infected adults.

Nicholas S. Thaler; Philip Sayegh; Alyssa Arentoft; April D. Thames; Steven A. Castellon; Charlie H. Hinkin

OBJECTIVE There is cross-sectional evidence that neurocognitive intra-individual variability (IIV), or dispersion, is elevated in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease and is associated with declines in activities of daily living, including medication adherence. METHODS This longitudinal study extends this literature by examining whether increased neurocognitive IIV in HIV-positive persons over time predicts declines in medication adherence above and beyond changes in mean level of performance over a 6-month observation. RESULTS After controlling for drug use, declines in mean performance, and changes in depressive symptoms, results confirmed that increases in IIV were associated with overall poorer antiretroviral medication adherence. HIV-positive individuals with the greatest increases in dispersion demonstrated marked reductions in adherence by the third month that exceeded what was observed in less variable individuals. CONCLUSIONS Our results indicate that increases in dispersion are associated with poorer declines in medication adherence in HIV disease, which may have implications for the early detection and remediation of suboptimal antiretroviral adherence.


Human Brain Mapping | 2017

The effects of HIV and aging on subcortical shape alterations: A 3D morphometric study

Taylor P. Kuhn; Daniel Schonfeld; Philip Sayegh; Alyssa Arentoft; Jacob D. Jones; Charles H. Hinkin; Susan Y. Bookheimer; April D. Thames

Standard volumetric neuroimaging studies have demonstrated preferential atrophy of subcortical structures among individuals with HIV. However, to our knowledge, no study has investigated subcortical shape alterations secondary to HIV and whether advancing age impacts that relationship. This study employed 3D morphometry to examine the independent and interactive effects of HIV and age on shape differences in nucleus accumbens, amygdala, caudate, hippocampus, pallidum, putamen, and thalamus in 81 participants ranging in age from 24 to 76 including 59 HIV+ individuals and 22 HIV‐seronegative controls. T1‐weighted MRI underwent a preprocessing pipeline followed by automated subcortical segmentation. Parametric statistical analyses were used to determine independent effects of HIV infection and age on volume and shape in each region of interest (ROI) and the interaction between age and HIV serostatus in predicting volume/shape in each ROI. Significant main effects for HIV were found in the shape of right caudate and nucleus accumbens, left pallidum, and hippocampus. Age was associated with differences in shape in left pallidum, right nucleus accumbens and putamen, and bilateral caudate, hippocampus, and thalamus. Of greatest interest, an age × HIV interaction effect was found in the shape of bilateral nucleus accumbens, amygdala, caudate, and thalamus as well as right pallidum and putamen such that increasing age in HIV participants was associated with greater shape alterations. Traditional volumemetric analyses revealed main effects for both HIV and age but no age × HIV interaction. These findings may suggest that age and HIV infection conferred additional deleterious effects on subcortical shape abnormalities beyond the independent effects of these factors. Hum Brain Mapp 38:1025–1037, 2017.


Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology | 2015

Interactive effects of neurocognitive impairment and substance use on antiretroviral non-adherence in HIV disease.

Nicholas S. Thaler; Philip Sayegh; Michelle S. Kim; Steven A. Castellon; Charles H. Hinkin

While numerous studies have established the adverse independent effects of clinical conditions including neurocognitive dysfunction, psychiatric illness, and substance abuse/dependence on medication adherence among HIV-infected adults, fewer have studied their interactive effects. The current study examined this issue among 204 HIV-infected participants based upon current neurocognitive functioning and DSM-IV-diagnosed psychiatric illness and current substance abuse or dependence. Results confirmed that participants with any of these risk factors demonstrated poorer adherence than individuals with no risk factors. A neurocognitive status × substance abuse/dependence interaction was also identified such that participants with impaired neurocognition and a co-occurring substance abuse/dependence diagnosis demonstrated the poorest adherence. Results confirm the deleterious impact of these risk factors in isolation and also identify a specific interactive effect for individuals with comorbid neurocognitive impairment and a substance abuse/dependence disorder. Findings highlight the need for interventions that simultaneously address these problems.


Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology | 2014

Quality of Education Predicts Performance on the Wide Range Achievement Test-4th Edition Word Reading Subtest

Philip Sayegh; Alyssa Arentoft; Nicholas S. Thaler; Andy C. Dean; April D. Thames

The current study examined whether self-rated education quality predicts Wide Range Achievement Test-4th Edition (WRAT-4) Word Reading subtest and neurocognitive performance, and aimed to establish this subtests construct validity as an educational quality measure. In a community-based adult sample (N = 106), we tested whether education quality both increased the prediction of Word Reading scores beyond demographic variables and predicted global neurocognitive functioning after adjusting for WRAT-4. As expected, race/ethnicity and education predicted WRAT-4 reading performance. Hierarchical regression revealed that when including education quality, the amount of WRAT-4s explained variance increased significantly, with race/ethnicity and both education quality and years as significant predictors. Finally, WRAT-4 scores, but not education quality, predicted neurocognitive performance. Results support WRAT-4 Word Reading as a valid proxy measure for education quality and a key predictor of neurocognitive performance. Future research should examine these findings in larger, more diverse samples to determine their robust nature.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2016

Increased subcortical neural activity among HIV+ individuals during a lexical retrieval task

April D. Thames; Philip Sayegh; Kevin H. Terashima; Jessica M. Foley; Andrew Y. Cho; Alyssa Arentoft; Charles H. Hinkin; Susan Y. Bookheimer

BACKGROUND Deficits in lexical retrieval, present in approximately 40% of HIV+ patients, are thought to reflect disruptions to frontal-striatal functions and may worsen with immunosuppression. Coupling frontal-striatal tasks such as lexical retrieval with functional neuroimaging may help delineate the pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying HIV-associated neurological dysfunction. OBJECTIVE We examined whether HIV infection confers brain functional changes during lexical access and retrieval. It was expected that HIV+ individuals would demonstrate greater brain activity in frontal-subcortical regions despite minimal differences between groups on neuropsychological testing. Within the HIV+ sample, we examined associations between indices of immunosuppression (recent and nadir CD4+ count) and task-related signal change in frontostriatal structures. Method16 HIV+ participants and 12 HIV- controls underwent fMRI while engaged in phonemic/letter and semantic fluency tasks. Participants also completed standardized measures of verbal fluency RESULTS HIV status groups performed similarly on phonemic and semantic fluency tasks prior to being scanned. fMRI results demonstrated activation differences during the phonemic fluency task as a function of HIV status, with HIV+ individuals demonstrating significantly greater activation in BG structures than HIV- individuals. There were no significant differences in frontal brain activation between HIV status groups during the phonemic fluency task, nor were there significant brain activation differences during the semantic fluency task. Within the HIV+ group, current CD4+ count, though not nadir, was positively correlated with increased activity in the inferior frontal gyrus and basal ganglia. CONCLUSION During phonemic fluency performance, HIV+ patients recruit subcortical structures to a greater degree than HIV- controls despite similar task performances suggesting that fMRI may be sensitive to neurocompromise before overt cognitive declines can be detected. Among HIV+ individuals, reduced activity in the frontal-subcortical structures was associated with lower CD4+ count.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2016

Comparing the unmatched count technique and direct self-report for sensitive health-risk behaviors in HIV+ adults.

Alyssa Arentoft; Kathleen Van Dyk; April D. Thames; Philip Sayegh; Nicholas S. Thaler; Daniel Schonfeld; Joseph W. LaBrie; Charles H. Hinkin

ABSTRACT Researchers often rely on self-report measures to assess sensitive health-risk behaviors in HIV+ individuals, yet the accuracy of self-report has been questioned, particularly when inquiring about behaviors that may be embarrassing, risky, and/or taboo. We compared an anonymous reporting method – the unmatched count technique (UCT) – to direct self-report (DSR) in order to assess reporting differences for several health-risk behaviors related to medication adherence and sexual risk. Contrary to hypotheses, the UCT only produced a significantly higher estimated base rate for one sensitive behavior: reporting medication adherence to ones physician, which may have been contextually primed by our study design. Our results suggest that anonymous reporting methods may not increase disclosure compared to DSR when assessing several health-risk behaviors in HIV+ research volunteers. However, our results also suggest that contextual factors should be considered and investigated further, as they may influence perception of sensitive behavior.


Cogent psychology | 2016

Medication adherence in HIV-positive African Americans: The roles of age, health beliefs, and sensation seeking

Philip Sayegh; Nicholas S. Thaler; Alyssa Arentoft; Taylor P. Kuhn; Daniel Schonfeld; Steven A. Castellon; Ramani S. Durvasula; Hector F. Myers; Charles H. Hinkin

Abstract We examined how two critical constructs, health beliefs and sensation seeking, influence combination antiretroviral therapy adherence in HIV + African Americans, and whether these factors mediate the association between age and adherence. Two hundred and eighty-six HIV + African Americans participated in this observational study. Path analyses revealed that higher levels of a specific health belief, perceived utility of treatment, and lower levels of a sensation seeking component, Thrill and Adventure Seeking, directly predicted optimal adherence. The influence of age on adherence was partially mediated by lower Thrill and Adventure Seeking levels. Depression predicted adherence via perceived utility of treatment and Thrill and Adventure Seeking, whereas current substance abuse and dependence did via Thrill and Adventure Seeking. Poorer neurocognitive function had a direct, adverse effect on adherence. Our findings suggest that supporting the development of more positive perceptions about HIV treatment utility may help increase medication adherence among African Americans. This may be particularly relevant for those with higher levels of depression symptoms, which were directly associated with negative perceptions about treatment. Additionally, clinicians can assess sensation seeking tendencies to help identify HIV + African Americans at risk for suboptimal adherence. Compensatory strategies for medication management may help improve adherence among HIV + individuals with poorer neurocognitive function.


Journal of Hiv\/aids & Social Services | 2016

HIV-transmission-related risk behavior in HIV+ African American men: Exploring biological, psychological, cognitive, and social factors

Alyssa Arentoft; Kathleen Van Dyk; April D. Thames; Nicholas S. Thaler; Philip Sayegh; Charles H. Hinkin

ABSTRACT This article seeks to identify factors associated with HIV-transmission-related risk behavior among HIV+ African American men. We examined biological, psychological, cognitive, and social factors and recent HIV-transmission-related risk behavior (i.e., needle sharing, unprotected sex, exchange sex) among a sample of HIV+ African American men. A binary logistic regression showed that individuals under age 50 (OR = 4.2), with clinically-elevated masochism scores (OR = 3.9) on the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-III (MCMI-III), current substance abuse/dependence (OR = 2.6), and higher sensation-seeking (OR = 1.3) were more likely to report recent risk behavior. We conclude that reducing substance use, addressing self-defeating attitudes, and improving self-control may be avenues for future prevention and intervention research among HIV+ African American men engaging in HIV-transmission-related risk behavior.


Applied Neuropsychology | 2015

Neuropsychological Language Tests in Dementia Diagnosis in English-Speaking Hispanic and Non-Hispanic White Outpatients

Philip Sayegh

Neuropsychological language tests have limitations (e.g., unrepresentative norms) when applied to “Hispanics” and clinicians are likely aware that these tests may lead to inaccurate dementia diagnoses. Therefore, it was hypothesized that language tests would be weaker diagnostic predictors in Hispanics versus “Non-Hispanic Whites.” Participants included 436 English-speaking Hispanic and 436 Non-Hispanic White (randomly selected from 10,937) outpatients classified as having dementia or normal cognition at initial evaluation. When covarying for age, sex, education, and functional abilities, vegetable fluency significantly predicted diagnosis among Non-Hispanic Whites (odds ratio = 0.80, 95% confidence interval [0.69, 0.94], p < .01). Animal fluency and an abbreviated (30-item) Boston Naming Test (BNT) comparably predicted diagnosis across groups. Results remained similar when covarying for primary language among Hispanics. Findings suggest that vegetable fluency, but not animal fluency, was relatively unimportant in diagnosis for the English-speaking Hispanics in this study possibly because of cultural influences on the familiarity, salience, and relevance of this category’s items. Additionally, clinicians may have informally adjusted Hispanics’ 30-item BNT and animal fluency scores and discounted vegetable fluency to account for their limitations. Animal fluency and BNT may be preferable language tests when assessing dementia in English across groups, as they comparably predicted diagnosis in both groups.

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Bob G. Knight

University of Southern California

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Taylor P. Kuhn

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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