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Dive into the research topics where Pia Heppner is active.

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Featured researches published by Pia Heppner.


BMC Medicine | 2009

The association of posttraumatic stress disorder and metabolic syndrome: a study of increased health risk in veterans

Pia Heppner; Eric F. Crawford; Uzair Haji; Niloofar Afari; Richard L. Hauger; Boris A. Dashevsky; Paul S. Horn; Sarah E. Nunnink; Dewleen G. Baker

BackgroundThere is accumulating evidence for a link between trauma exposure, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and diminished health status. To assess PTSD-related biological burden, we measured biological factors that comprise metabolic syndrome, an important established predictor of morbidity and mortality, as a correlate of long-term health risk in PTSD.MethodsWe analyzed clinical data from 253 male and female veterans, corresponding to five factors linked to metabolic syndrome (systolic and diastolic blood pressure, waist-to-hip ratio and fasting measures of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, serum triglycerides and plasma glucose concentration). Clinical cut-offs were defined for each biological parameter based on recommendations from the World Health Organization and the National Cholesterol Education Program. Controlling for relevant variables including sociodemographic variables, alcohol/substance/nicotine use and depression, we examined the impact of PTSD on metabolic syndrome using a logistic regression model.ResultsTwo-fifths (40%) of the sample met criteria for metabolic syndrome. Of those with PTSD (n = 139), 43% met criteria for metabolic syndrome. The model predicted metabolic syndrome well (-2 log likelihood = 316.650, chi-squared = 23.731, p = 0.005). Veterans with higher severity of PTSD were more likely to meet diagnostic criteria for metabolic syndrome (Wald = 4.76, p = 0.03).ConclusionThese findings provide preliminary evidence linking higher severity of PTSD with risk factors for diminished health and increased morbidity, as represented by metabolic syndrome.


Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation | 2006

Regular walking and long-term maintenance of outcomes after pulmonary rehabilitation.

Pia Heppner; Cindy Morgan; Robert M. Kaplan; Andrew L. Ries

BACKGROUND Empirical evidence supports the role of exercise as part of pulmonary rehabilitation in improving symptoms of breathlessness (dyspnea), health-related quality of life, and exercise tolerance among patients with chronic lung disease. However, many studies show that these initial benefits tend to diminish 12 to 18 months after rehabilitation. Given the importance of exercise (ie, walking) during rehabilitation, we examined whether patient adherence to regular walking enhanced the long-term maintenance of functional benefits gained from an 8-week pulmonary rehabilitation program. METHODS One hundred twenty-three patients with moderate to severe chronic lung disease completed an 8-week pulmonary rehabilitation program and participated in a 12-month maintenance intervention trial. Measures of weekly walking, lung function, self-efficacy for walking, dyspnea during activities of daily living, exercise capacity (6-minute walk test, 6MW), perceived breathlessness after the 6MW, and health-related quality of life were obtained at postrehabilitation, and at 6, 12, and 24 months after completing pulmonary rehabilitation. Regular walkers were defined as those active on most days or every single day of the week on the average throughout the 24-month period, whereas irregular walkers walked on some days, rarely, or not at all. RESULTS The effects of the maintenance program on average frequency of walking were nonsignificant, with 44% of the maintenance patients and 38% of the standard care patients classified as regular walkers. There were no significant differences between walking groups on gender, healthcare utilization over the 24-month follow-up period, and postrehabilitation measures of lung function, 6MW distance, perceived breathlessness after 6MW, health-related quality of life, dyspnea, or age. Repeated measures analyses of variance using a 2 x 4 mixed model approach were applied to examine group differences and changes in outcomes over time. Overall, participants decreased in 6MW distance (P <.001), reported increases in perceived breathlessness after the 6MW (P <.05), and decreased in overall health-related quality of life (P <.001) from postrehabilitation to 24 months. Regular walkers reported significantly better health-related quality of life (P <.05) as compared to irregular walkers, averaging across time points. Irregular walkers declined significantly more than regular walkers on measures of shortness of breath during activities of daily living (P <.01) and walking self-efficacy (P <.001) from postrehabilitation to 24 months. CONCLUSIONS Findings suggest that participation in regular exercise such as walking after completing pulmonary rehabilitation is associated with slower declines in overall health-related quality of life and walking self-efficacy as well as less progression of dyspnea during activities of daily living. Regular exercise after rehabilitation may be protective against increases in dyspnea symptoms and perceived limitations in walking which are both characteristic of progressing chronic lung disease.


Headache | 2009

PTSD, combat injury, and headache in Veterans Returning from Iraq/Afghanistan

Niloofar Afari; Laura H. Harder; Naju J. Madra; Pia Heppner; Tobias Moeller-Bertram; Clay King; Dewleen G. Baker

Objective.— To examine the relationship between posttraumatic stress disorder, combat injury, and headache in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom veterans at the VA San Diego Healthcare System.


Addictive Behaviors | 2010

Female veterans of the OEF/OIF conflict: Concordance of PTSD symptoms and substance misuse

Sarah E. Nunnink; Gali Goldwaser; Pia Heppner; James O. E. Pittman; Caroline M. Nievergelt; Dewleen G. Baker

This study examined the post-deployment rates of comorbid PTSD and substance abuse in a cohort of female veterans who served in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF). Female OEF/OIF veterans and reservists (N=36) completed a battery of assessments as part of a larger study. Of the 36 participants, 11 (31%) screened positive for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 17 (47%) screened positive for high-risk drinking and 2 (6%) screened positive for drug abuse. Higher scores on measures of alcohol and drug use predicted positive PTSD status (p < or = 0.01) and alcohol misuse was significant in explaining unique variance of PTSD status (p < or = 0.05). Our findings suggest a trend toward increased problematic drinking among female OEF/OIF veterans and reservists and a relationship between substance misuse and PTSD. Future research should investigate needs for gender-specific PTSD and substance-abuse treatment needs.


Stress | 2013

Diminished vagal activity and blunted diurnal variation of heart rate dynamics in posttraumatic stress disorder

Agorastos Agorastos; Judith A. Boel; Pia Heppner; Torben Hager; Tobias Moeller-Bertram; Uzair Haji; Arame Motazedi; Matthew A. Yanagi; Dewleen G. Baker; Oliver Stiedl

Affected autonomic heart regulation is implicated in the pathophysiology of cardiovascular diseases and is associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, although sympathetic hyperactivation has been repeatedly shown in PTSD, research has neglected parasympathetic function. The objective of this study is the long-term assessment of heart rate (HR) dynamics and its diurnal changes as an index of autonomic imbalance in PTSD. Since tonic parasympathetic activity underlies long-range correlation of heartbeat interval fluctuations in the healthy state, we included nonlinear (unifractal) analysis as an important and sensitive readout to assess functional alterations. We conducted electrocardiogram recordings over a 24-h period in 15 deployed male subjects with moderate to high levels of combat exposure (PTSD: n = 7; combat controls: n = 8) in the supine position. HR dynamics were assessed in two 5-h sub-epochs in the time and frequency domains, and by nonlinear analysis based on detrended fluctuation analysis. Psychiatric symptoms were assessed using structured interviews, including the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale. Subjects with PTSD showed significantly higher baseline HR, higher LF/HF ratio in the frequency domain, blunted differences between day and night-time measures, as well as a higher scaling coefficient αfast during the day, indicating diminished tonic parasympathetic activity. Diminished diurnal differences and blunted tonic parasympathetic activity altering HR dynamics suggest central neuroautonomic dysregulation that could represent a possible link to increased cardiovascular disease in PTSD.


Military Psychology | 2009

The Relationship Between Childhood Trauma, Combat Exposure, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Male Veterans

Gina P. Owens; Boris A. Dashevsky; Kathleen M. Chard; Somaia Mohamed; Uzair Haji; Pia Heppner; Dewleen G. Baker

The current study investigated the effects of combat exposure, childhood trauma, and depression on posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) severity. Participants were 299 male veterans from the Korean War, World War II, Vietnam, and the first Gulf War who were being screened for admission to the PTSD unit. Participants were assessed with the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS), Combat Exposure Scale (CES), Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD), Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ), and Mississippi Scale for PTSD (MPTSD). Results of multiple regression analyses indicated that, as expected, combat exposure and depression were significant predictors of PTSD severity. When examined with combat exposure, childhood trauma has a complex relationship to PTSD severity. Examination of the interaction between the CES and CTQ suggests that when levels of combat are low and childhood trauma levels are high, the CTQ is related to higher levels of PTSD severity on the CAPS, regardless of depression. Treatment implications are discussed.


Psychosomatics | 2012

Metabolic Syndrome: Relative Risk Associated with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Severity and Antipsychotic Medication Use

Pia Heppner; James B. Lohr; Taylor P. Kash; Hua Jin; Hongjun Wang; Dewleen G. Baker

BACKGROUND In recent years, numerous lines of converging evidence have revealed an association between post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and impaired physical health outcomes, including cardiovascular disease and metabolic syndrome. Although these findings have been interpreted as indicating a direct association of PTSD with metabolic syndrome and obesity, previous studies have not addressed the important confound of antipsychotic drug usage in this population. Second generation antipsychotic medications themselves are associated with metabolic syndrome and obesity, and it is unclear whether the common utilization of these drugs in PTSD may account for some if not all of the observed metabolic problems. OBJECTIVE The present study examined the relative contributions of PTSD severity and use of antipsychotic medications to risk of metabolic syndrome among veterans. METHOD Cross-sectional clinical data, including five factors representing metabolic syndrome, psychiatric diagnoses, and medications were gathered from 253 veterans enrolling in mental health services. We used a logistic regression model to measure the relative association of antipsychotic medication use and PTSD severity on risk of metabolic syndrome. RESULTS We found that antipsychotic medication usage was not uniquely associated with elevated risk of metabolic syndrome (Wald = 0.30, ns) when PTSD severity and other sociodemographic, psychiatric, and behavioral variables were accounted for. Furthermore, PTSD severity continued to be a significant and unique predictor of risk for metabolic syndrome (Wald = 4.04, p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that chronic and moderately severe PTSD, independent of antipsychotic medications, is associated with increased risk of metabolic syndrome.


Psychosomatics | 2012

The Comorbidity of Self-Reported Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, and Traumatic Symptoms

Elizabeth J. Dansie; Pia Heppner; Helena Furberg; Jack Goldberg; Dedra Buchwald; Niloofar Afari

BACKGROUND Data from primary care and community samples suggest higher rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among individuals with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). OBJECTIVE This study investigated the co-occurrence of CFS, PTSD, and trauma symptoms and assessed the contribution of familial factors to the association of CFS with lifetime PTSD and current traumatic symptoms. METHOD Data on lifetime CFS and PTSD, as measured by self-report of a doctors diagnosis of the disorder, and standardized questionnaire data on traumatic symptoms, using the Impact of Events Scale (IES), were obtained from 8544 female and male twins from the community-based University of Washington Twin Registry. RESULTS Lifetime prevalence of CFS was 2% and lifetime prevalence of PTSD was 4%. Participants who reported a history of PTSD were over eight times more likely to report a history of CFS. Participants with scores ≥ 26 on the IES were over four times more likely to report CFS than those who had scores ≤ 25. These associations were attenuated but remained significant after adjusting for familial factors through within-twin pair analyses. CONCLUSION These results support similar findings that a lifetime diagnosis of CFS is strongly associated with both lifetime PTSD and current traumatic symptoms, although familial factors, such as shared genetic and environmental contributions, played a limited role in the relationship between CFS, PTSD, and traumatic symptoms. These findings suggest that future research should investigate both the familial and the unique environmental factors that may give rise to both CFS and PTSD.


Contemporary Clinical Trials | 2014

Design and rationale of a comparative effectiveness trial evaluating transcendental meditation against established therapies for PTSD.

Thomas Rutledge; Sanford Nidich; Robert H. Schneider; Paul J. Mills; John W. Salerno; Pia Heppner; Mayra A. Gomez; Carolyn Gaylord-King; Maxwell Rainforth

BACKGROUND Although meditation therapies such as the Transcendental Meditation (TM) technique are commonly used to assist with stress and stress-related diseases, there remains a lack of rigorous clinical trial research establishing the relative efficacy of these treatments overall and for populations with psychiatric illness. This study uses a comparative effectiveness design to assess the relative benefits of TM to those obtained from a gold-standard cognitive behavioral therapy for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a Veteran population. METHODS AND DESIGN This paper describes the rationale and design of an in progress randomized controlled trial comparing TM to an established cognitive behavioral treatment - Prolonged Exposure (PE) - and an active control condition (health education [HE]) for PTSD. This trial will recruit 210 Veterans meeting DSM-IV criteria for PTSD, with testing conducted at 0 and 3 months for PTSD symptoms, depression, mood disturbance, quality of life, behavioral factors, and physiological/biochemical and gene expression mechanisms using validated measures. The study hypothesis is that TM will be noninferior to PE and superior to HE on changes in PTSD symptoms, using the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS). DISCUSSION The described study represents a methodologically rigorous protocol evaluating the benefits of TM for PTSD. The projected results will help to establish the overall efficacy of TM for PTSD among Veterans, identify bio-behavioral mechanisms through which TM and PE may improve PTSD symptoms, and will permit conclusions regarding the relative value of TM against currently established therapies for PTSD.


Advances in Nursing Science | 2017

Efficacy of the Mantram Repetition Program for Insomnia in Veterans With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Naturalistic Study.

Danielle Beck; Lindsay Cosco Holt; Joseph Burkard; Taylor Andrews; Lin Liu; Pia Heppner; Jill E. Bormann

Statistics show that more than 80% of Veterans mention posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-related symptoms when seeking treatment. Sleep disturbances and nightmares are among the top 3 presenting problems. Current PTSD trauma-focused therapies generally do not improve sleep disturbances. The mantram repetition program (MRP), a mind-body-spiritual intervention, teaches a portable set of cognitive-spiritual skills for symptom management. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of the MRP on insomnia in Veterans with PTSD in a naturalistic, clinical setting. Results show that participation in the MRP significantly reduced insomnia, as well as decreased self-reported and clinician-assessed PTSD symptom burden.

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Niloofar Afari

University of California

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Uzair Haji

University of Cincinnati

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Boris A. Dashevsky

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Dedra Buchwald

Harborview Medical Center

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Helena Furberg

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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