Pieter Joost van Wattum
Yale University
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Featured researches published by Pieter Joost van Wattum.
Movement Disorders | 2000
Pieter Joost van Wattum; Phillip Branch Chappell; Daniel Zelterman; Lawrence Scahill; James F. Leckman
The purpose of this study was to replicate findings from an earlier pilot study in which we found a dose‐related effect of the opioid antagonist naloxone on tic behavior in patients with Tourettes syndrome (TS). Fifteen subjects with TS were challenged with randomized doses (30 and 300 μg/kg) of naloxone at 3‐day intervals. Videotaped recordings of tic behavior were counted in a “blind” fashion. We found that naloxone had opposite effects on tics at different dosages. The low dose caused a significant decrease in tics, whereas the high dose caused a significant increase in tics. Therefore, activity at opioid receptors appears to influence the expression of TS, and the difference in response to naloxone in TS subjects may be based on a dose‐response effect.
Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America | 2003
David Szydlo; Pieter Joost van Wattum; Joseph L. Woolston
Diabetes mellitus (DM) presents itself in two forms: insulin-dependent (type 1 DM) and non-insulin-dependent (type 2 DM). Although type 2 DM usually has an adult onset, in recent years there has been a significant rise in the number of children diagnosed with type 2 DM in the United States. Reasons for this increased frequency are believed to be a larger percentage of children who are overweight, a family history of diabetes, and a considerable increase in the use of psychotropic medication in children. The diagnosis of DM is a significant stressor not only for patients but also for their environment. Children with DM are sometimes stigmatized by their peers and relatives who do not understand the illness or are frightened by it. Some children also may need to alter several of their customary routines and are often scared to participate in activities in which they were previously engaged. The familys response to the diagnosis of DM may have a negative effect on glycemic control. Differences have been found in the way patients with type 1 DM and type 2 DM cope with and adapt to their diagnosis.
Perceptual and Motor Skills | 2001
Lawrence Scahill; Paul J. Lombroso; Gary W. Mack; Pieter Joost van Wattum; Heping Zhang; Amy Vitale; James F. Leckman
The effects of heat on tic symptoms were studied in a sample of 78 adults with Tourette syndrome. 62 men and 16 women completed a survey concerning the type, onset, and course of their tics. 10 adult male subjects also participated in a thermal challenge during which ambient temperature was raised from 22°C to 35°C following a control period. Of the 78, 24% or 19 reported increased tics upon exposure to heat. Compared to the remaining 59 subjects, there were no differences in sex distribution, current age, or overall course of illness. In the thermal challenge, there was general increase in tics that was correlated with sweat rate (r = .55, p=.001). This effect was prominent in 5 of 10 subjects (rs = .29 to .63). There were no mean differences in current age, age of onset, or current severity of symptoms between the five subjects of each group. Tic symptoms in a subgroup of patients with Tourette syndrome may be sensitive to heat. Abnormal heat regulation is not a likely explanation for the observed increase in tics. The increase may be due to normal heat-loss mechanisms through dopaminergic pathways.
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2012
Pavle Joksovic; Nick Mellos; Pieter Joost van Wattum; Catherine Chiles
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2001
Pieter Joost van Wattum
General Hospital Psychiatry | 2001
Pieter Joost van Wattum; Catherine Chiles
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2006
Pieter Joost van Wattum
Psychosomatics | 2003
Catherine Chiles; Pieter Joost van Wattum
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2013
Pavle Joksovic; Nick Mellos; Pieter Joost van Wattum; Catherine Chiles
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2014
Pieter Joost van Wattum