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Dive into the research topics where Radhika Rao is active.

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Featured researches published by Radhika Rao.


Biological Psychiatry | 2000

A search for susceptibility loci for anorexia nervosa: methods and sample description

Walter H. Kaye; Lisa R. Lilenfeld; Wade H. Berrettini; Michael Strober; Bernie Devlin; Kelly L. Klump; David Goldman; Cynthia M. Bulik; Katherine A. Halmi; Manfred M. Fichter; Allan S. Kaplan; D. Blake Woodside; Janet Treasure; Katherine Plotnicov; Christine Pollice; Radhika Rao; Claire McConaha

BACKGROUND Eating disorders have not traditionally been viewed as heritable illnesses; however, recent family and twin studies lend credence to the potential role of genetic transmission. The Price Foundation funded an international, multisite study to identify genetic factors contributing to the pathogenesis of anorexia nervosa (AN) by recruiting affective relative pairs. This article is an overview of study methods and the clinical characteristics of the sample. METHODS All probands met modified DSM-IV criteria for AN; all affected first, second, and third degree relatives met DSM-IV criteria for AN, bulimia nervosa (BN), or eating disorder not otherwise specified (NOS). Probands and affected relatives were assessed diagnostically with the Structured Interview for Anorexia and Bulimia. DNA was collected from probands, affected relatives and a subset of their biological parents. RESULTS Assessments were obtained from 196 probands and 237 affected relatives, over 98% of whom are of Caucasian ancestry. Overall, there were 229 relative pairs who were informative for linkage analysis. Of the proband-relative pairs, 63% were AN-AN, 20% were AN-BN, and 16% were AN-NOS. For family-based association analyses, DNA has been collected from both biological parents of 159 eating-disordered subjects. Few significant differences in demographic characteristics were found between proband and relative groups. CONCLUSIONS The present study represents the first large-scale molecular genetic investigation of AN. Our successful recruitment of over 500 subjects, consisting of affected probands, affected relatives, and their biological parents, will provide the basis to investigate genetic transmission of eating disorders via a genome scan and assessment of candidate genes.


Biological Psychiatry | 1996

The relationship between longitudinal clinical course and sleep and cortisol changes in adolescent depression

Uma Rao; Ronald E. Dahl; Neal D. Ryan; Boris Birmaher; Douglas E. Williamson; Donna E. Giles; Radhika Rao; Joan Kaufman; Beverly Nelson

This study examined the relationship between longitudinal clinical course and sleep and cortisol findings in adolescent unipolar major depressive disorder (MDD). Subjects were 28 adolescents (15.4 +/- 1.3 years) systematically diagnosed with unipolar MDD and 35 group-matched normal controls who participated in EEG sleep and neuroendocrine studies. Follow-up clinical assessments were conducted 7.0 +/- 0.5 years later in 94% of the original cohort. Although initial group comparisons failed to show significant differences in biologic measures, analyses incorporating clinical follow-up reveal that changes in sleep and cortisol measures are associated with differential longitudinal course. Normal controls who would develop depression after the biologic studies had shown significantly higher density of rapid eye movements (REM) and a trend for reduced REM latency compared to controls with no psychiatric disorder at follow-up. Depressed subjects with a recurrent unipolar course showed a trend towards elevated plasma cortisol near sleep onset compared to MDD subjects with no further episodes during the follow-up interval.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1999

Factors Associated With the Development of Substance Use Disorder in Depressed Adolescents

Uma Rao; Neal D. Ryan; Ronald E. Dahl; Boris Birmaher; Radhika Rao; Douglas E. Williamson; James M. Perel

OBJECTIVE To document rates of substance use disorders (SUD) in adolescents with unipolar major depressive disorder and to examine demographic, clinical, and biological factors associated with the development of SUD. METHOD Twenty-eight adolescents with unipolar major depression and no SUD history and 35 group-matched normal controls who participated in a cross-sectional sleep polysomnography and neuroendocrine study were reassessed clinically 7 years later. RESULTS The risk for SUD was high in both groups (34.6% in the depressed group and 24.2% in the controls). Depressed adolescents had earlier onset of SUD than controls. Depressed adolescents who developed SUD had more significant psychosocial impairment than depressed adolescents who did not develop SUD. More anxiety traits and elevated cortisol secretion near sleep onset were associated with SUD in depressed teenagers, whereas less emotional responsiveness to exciting stimuli and higher density of eye movements during REM sleep were related to depression without SUD. CONCLUSIONS Depressed adolescents who have anxiety traits and whose hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis is active when the system is normally quiescent may be at risk for developing SUD. Co-occurrence of depression and SUD is associated with serious psychosocial morbidity. Identification of risk factors for SUD in depressed teenagers may be helpful in developing more effective treatment and prevention programs.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1997

Psychiatric disorders in women with bulimia nervosa and their first-degree relatives: Effects of comorbid substance dependence

Lisa R. Lilenfeld; Walter H. Kaye; Catherine G. Greeno; Kathleen R. Merikangas; Katherine Plotnicov; Christine Pollice; Radhika Rao; Michael Strober; Cynthia M. Bulik; Linda M. Nagy

OBJECTIVE Women with bulimia nervosa (BN) and comorbid substance dependence often display impulsive behaviors. We assessed Axis I and II psychiatric diagnoses in their first-degree relatives in order to understand the etiological factors that may contribute to this subtype of BN. METHOD We used contemporary family-epidemiological methodology to compare the lifetime prevalence of psychiatric disorders among 47 women with BN and 44 non-eating-disordered community control women, and their first-degree relatives (177 and 190, respectively). BN probands were stratified by the presence (n = 20) or absence (n = 27) of a lifetime history of alcohol and/or drug dependence. RESULTS Social phobia, conduct disorder, and clusters B and C personality disorders were significantly more prevalent among BN probands with substance dependence than among BN probands without substance dependence or control women probands. Substance use disorders, social phobia, panic disorder, and cluster B personality disorders were significantly more prevalent among the relatives of BN probands with substance dependence than the relatives of the other two groups. DISCUSSION Women with BN and substance dependence have problems with social anxiety, antisocial behavior, and a variety of personality disturbances, and come from families where there are problems with substance use disorders, anxiety, impulsivity, and affective instability. These data raise the possibility that a familial vulnerability for impulsivity and affective instability may contribute to the development of substance dependence in a subgroup of women with BN.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 2000

Personality disorders among subjects recovered from eating disorders.

Hisato Matsunaga; Walter H. Kaye; Claire McConaha; Katherine Plotnicov; Christine Pollice; Radhika Rao

OBJECTIVE Personality disorders are common in symptomatic eating disorders subjects. Because personality symptoms could be exaggerated by malnutrition or Axis I disorders, we studied women who had recovered from eating disorders for at least 1 year to see if personality disorder symptoms persisted in the well state. METHOD Personality disorders were evaluated in 10 women recovered from anorexia nervosa (AN), 28 women recovered from bulimia nervosa (BN), and 16 women recovered from AN and BN, using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R personality disorders. RESULTS Fourteen of 54 subjects (26%) met the criteria for at least one personality disorder, such as self-defeating, obsessive-compulsive, or borderline personality disorder. Cluster B personality disorders were closely associated with bulimic subtypes. CONCLUSIONS While a recovery from eating disorders may have an attenuating influence on the symptoms of personality disorders, such personality disorder diagnoses persist after recovery in some recovered subjects.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1999

Familial aggregation of eating disorders: Results from a controlled family study of bulimia nervosa

Dan J. Stein; Lisa R. Lilenfeld; Katherine Plotnicov; Christine Pollice; Radhika Rao; Michael Strober; Walter H. Kaye

OBJECTIVE While familial aggregation of bulimia nervosa (BN) is known to occur, the extent to which aggregation of a broader spectrum of eating disorders (ED) occurs in the families of individuals with BN is less certain. METHOD Direct interviews and blind best-estimate diagnostic procedures were used to assess lifetime histories of EDs among first-degree relatives (n = 177) of probands with BN (n = 47) and first-degree relatives (n = 190) of non-ED control probands (n = 44). RESULTS Forty-three percent of sisters and 26% of mothers of BN probands had a lifetime ED diagnosis, with eating disorder not otherwise specified (ED-NOS) diagnoses being most common. These rates were significantly higher than among sisters (5%) and mothers (5%) of controls. Few male relatives of either cohort had an ED. CONCLUSIONS Diagnostic assessment using contemporary family-epidemiology methodology revealed very strong familial aggregation of a broad spectrum of EDs among female relatives of women with BN.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1999

Psychopathological characteristics of recovered bulimics who have a history of physical or sexual abuse

Hisato Matsunaga; Walter H. Kaye; Claire McConaha; Katherine Plotnicov; Christine Pollice; Radhika Rao; Dan J. Stein

We sought to clarify the influence of a history of sexual or physical abuse on a variety of psychopathologies in subjects with bulimia nervosa (BN). To avoid confounding effects, the presence of a history of sexual or physical abuse, lifetime axis I disorders, and personality disorders were assessed through direct structured interviews in 44 subjects recovered from BN for at least 1 year. Twenty abused subjects (45%) were significantly more likely than 24 subjects without abuse to have severe general psychopathology and eating disturbance. Compared with nonabused subjects, abused subjects showed a trend toward more frequent lifetime diagnoses of posttraumatic stress disorder and substance dependence. These results suggest that abusive experiences may be associated with some psychopathology of BN, particularly related to anxiety, substance abuse, and more severe core eating disorder pathology.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2001

Physical and sexual abuse histories in patients with eating disorders:A comparison of Japanese and American patients

Toshihiko Nagata; Walter H. Kaye; Nobuo Kiriike; Radhika Rao; Claire McConaha; Katherine Plotnicov

Abstract Physical and sexual abuse among patients with eating disorders has been a focus of attention in Western countries, however, there is no study comparing the incidence of these factors in Western and Asian countries. Japanese subjects consisted of 38 patients with anorexia nervosa restricting type (AN‐R), 46 patients with anorexia nervosa binge eating/purging type (AN‐BP), 76 patients with bulimia nervosa purging type (BN) and 99 controls. Subjects from the USA consisted of 29 AN‐R, 34 AN‐BP and 16 BN. The Physical and Sexual Abuse Questionnaire was administered to all subjects. Minor sexual abuse such as confronting exhibitionism or being fondled by a stranger tended to be more prevalent among Japanese subjects, while victimization by rape or incest was more prevalent among USA subjects. Conversely, physical abuse history was similarly distributed across each diagnostic subgroup in both countries. Events related to physical abuse, such as an abusive family background, may contribute whether eating disorder patients are restricting or bulimic and regardless of culture.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1997

A comparison of subgroups of inpatients with anorexia nervosa

Toshihiko Nagata; Claire McConaha; Radhika Rao; Mae S. Sokol; Walter H. Kaye

OBJECTIVE Classification of subgroups of people with anorexia nervosa has been in flux. It has not been clear whether anorexics who only purge should be grouped with pure restricters or with people who both binge and purge. METHODS We compared 27 restricting-type anorexics (RAN), 26 bulimic anorexics (BAN), and 34 restricting anorexics with purging behaviors (RAN-P). All subjects were underweight and recently admitted to a hospital. We excluded subjects who had not had a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa for at least 1 year duration. RESULTS The three groups of subjects had similar scores for Depression and Anxiety on the Beck Depression Inventory, the Spielberger State and Trait Anxiety Inventory, and on the EDI subscales aside from higher scores for BAN subjects on the Bulimia subscale. DISCUSSION These three subgroups of anorexia nervosa have similar degrees of dysphoric moods and core eating disorder symptoms when underweight and malnourished.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 1995

Differences in weight gain between restrictor and bulimic anorectics.

Shira K. Neuberger; Radhika Rao; Theodore E. Weltzin; Catherine G. Greeno; Walter H. Kaye

After admission for weight restoration, restrictor anorectics (n = 17) gained significantly less weight than bulimic anorectics (n = 17) in a 30-day period. However, these groups had similar caloric intake. Severity of illness was found to be a predictor of rate of weight gain for restrictor anorectics, but not for bulimic anorectics.

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Walter H. Kaye

University of California

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Boris Birmaher

University of Pittsburgh

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Neal D. Ryan

University of Pittsburgh

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Ronald E. Dahl

University of California

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Uma Rao

University of Tennessee

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