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Featured researches published by Ralf Pukrop.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2003

Effects of psychosocial interventions on quality of life in adult cancer patients: meta analysis of 37 published controlled outcome studies

Barbara Rehse; Ralf Pukrop

The present meta analysis summarized the results of 37 published, controlled studies that investigated the effectiveness of psychosocial interventions on quality of life (QoL) in adult cancer patients. The overall effect size of psychosocial interventions and the effect of potential moderating variables such as type and duration of intervention, sociodemographic and clinical parameters, characteristics of QoL measurement, and methodological quality of the selected studies were calculated using a meta analysis model suggested by Hunter and Schmidt. The overall effect size was 0.31 (correlation equivalent delta) which corresponds to a standardized mean difference of d=0.65 (N=3120 cancer patients). The most important moderating variable was duration of psychosocial intervention with durations of more than 12 weeks being significantly more effective than interventions of shorter duration. The meta analytical findings support the usefulness of psychosocial interventions for improving QoL in adult cancer patients.


Annals of Neurology | 2003

Outcome in psychogenic nonepileptic seizures: 1 to 10-year follow-up in 164 patients

Markus Reuber; Ralf Pukrop; Jürgen Bauer; Christoph Helmstaedter; Natalie Tessendorf; Christian E. Elger

Our knowledge of longer term outcome in psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNESs) patients is limited; we know less still about factors predicting prognosis. This study was intended to describe outcome in a large cohort and to identify predictive clinical and psychological factors to generate new ideas for treatment. One hundred sixty‐four adult patients with PNESs (66.7%) responded to outcome, personality, and psychosymptomatology questionnaires (Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology–Basic Questionnaire [DAPP‐BQ], Dissociative Experiences Scale, and Screening Test for Somatoform Symptoms) a mean of 11.9 years after manifestation and 4.1 years after diagnosis of PNES. Additional clinical data were retrieved from hospital records. The responses showed that 71.2% of patients continued to have seizures and 56.4% were dependent on social security. Dependence increased with follow‐up. Outcome was better in patients with greater educational attainments, younger onset and diagnosis, attacks with less dramatic features, fewer additional somatoform complaints, and lower dissociation scores. Better outcome was associated with lower scores of the higher order personality dimensions “inhibitedness,” “emotional dysregulation,” and “compulsivity” but not “dissocial behavior” (DAPP‐BQ). Outcome in PNESs is poor but variable. Clinical and personality factors can be used to provide an individualized prognosis. By generating a patient‐specific profile, they show particular maladaptive traits or tendencies that can identify goals for psychological therapy.


Schizophrenia Research | 2007

Neurocognitive indicators for a conversion to psychosis: Comparison of patients in a potentially initial prodromal state who did or did not convert to a psychosis

Ralf Pukrop; Stephan Ruhrmann; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Andreas Bechdolf; Anke Brockhaus-Dumke; Joachim Klosterkötter

The study aims to identify potential neurocognitive indicators of an enhanced risk for developing psychosis. N=44 patients meeting clinical inclusion criteria for initial prodromal states (IPS) who developed psychosis within a median interval of 10 months were compared to N=39 IPS patients not developing psychosis within a minimum interval of 1 year (median 36 months), and to N=44 healthy controls on a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery (pattern recognition, divided and sustained attention, spatial and verbal working memory, verbal/visual memory, speed of processing, executive and intellectual functions). IPS patients who converted to psychosis performed worse than healthy controls on all broad neurocognitive domains. They were more impaired than IPS patients not developing psychosis on the Subject Ordered Pointing Task (SOPT; working memory), verbal memory functions, verbal executive, verbal IQ and speed of processing tests. After a Bonferroni-Holms adjustment for multiple testing differences on SOPT, Digit-Symbol Test, and verbal IQ remained significant (effect sizes d=0.54-0.88). Neurocognitive predictors had a sensitivity of 0.75 and a specificity of 0.79. Results support several cognitive domains as indicators of vulnerability to psychosis, and additionally suggest that subtle deficits in verbal abilities (working and long-term memory, executive and intellectual functions) and decreased speed of processing may help to predict conversion to psychosis in a clinically defined IPS group.


Biological Psychiatry | 2008

Sensory gating in schizophrenia: P50 and N100 gating in antipsychotic-free subjects at risk, first-episode, and chronic patients.

Anke Brockhaus-Dumke; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Indira Tendolkar; Andreas Bechdolf; Ralf Pukrop; Joachim Klosterkoetter; Stephan Ruhrmann

BACKGROUND Abnormal sensory gating in schizophrenia has frequently been reported; however, only limited data on unmedicated patients and patients at risk to develop a psychosis have, as yet, been available. METHODS P50 and N100 suppression were assessed with an auditory double-click paradigm in five groups: 18 at-risk subjects who did not develop a full psychosis within the follow-up period of 2 years, 21 truly prodromal subjects who developed frank psychosis within the follow-up period, 46 antipsychotic-naïve subjects with first-episode schizophrenia, 20 antipsychotic-free subjects with chronic schizophrenia, and 46 healthy control subjects. RESULTS P50 and N100 suppression indices differed significantly between groups and were lowest in chronic schizophrenia patients. Compared with healthy control subjects, P50 suppression was significantly impaired in at-risk subjects, truly prodromal and first-episode patients (stimulus 2 [S2]/stimulus 1 [S1] P50 amplitude ratio), and chronic schizophrenia patients (difference and ratio), and N100 suppression was significantly reduced in truly prodromal and first-episode patients (S1-S2 difference) and in chronic schizophrenia patients (difference and ratio) but not at-risk subjects. At-risk subjects with and without conversion to psychosis did not significantly differ on any test parameter. CONCLUSIONS Sensory gating is already impaired in early stages of schizophrenia, though this is most prominent in chronic stages. Future studies will have to clarify the type and impact of variables modifying sensory gating disturbances, such as illness progression and genetic load. Furthermore, the meaning and nature of differences between P50 and N100 suppression need further elucidation.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2012

Preventing progression to first-episode psychosis in early initial prodromal states.

Andreas Bechdolf; Michael Wagner; Stephan Ruhrmann; Susan Harrigan; Ralf Pukrop; Anke Brockhaus-Dumke; Julia Berning; Birgit Janssen; Petra Decker; Ronald Bottlender; Kurt Maurer; Hans-Jürgen Möller; Wolfgang Gaebel; Heinz Häfner; Wolfgang Maier; Joachim Klosterkötter

BACKGROUND Young people with self-experienced cognitive thought and perception deficits (basic symptoms) may present with an early initial prodromal state (EIPS) of psychosis in which most of the disability and neurobiological deficits of schizophrenia have not yet occurred. AIMS To investigate the effects of an integrated psychological intervention (IPI), combining individual cognitive-behavioural therapy, group skills training, cognitive remediation and multifamily psychoeducation, on the prevention of psychosis in the EIPS. METHOD A randomised controlled, multicentre, parallel group trial of 12 months of IPI v. supportive counselling (trial registration number: NCT00204087). Primary outcome was progression to psychosis at 12- and 24-month follow-up. RESULTS A total of 128 help-seeking out-patients in an EIPS were randomised. Integrated psychological intervention was superior to supportive counselling in preventing progression to psychosis at 12-month follow-up (3.2% v. 16.9%; P = 0.008) and at 24-month follow-up (6.3% v. 20.0%; P = 0.019). CONCLUSIONS Integrated psychological intervention appears effective in delaying the onset of psychosis over a 24-month time period in people in an EIPS.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2006

Neurocognitive functioning in subjects at risk for a first episode of psychosis compared with first- and multiple-episode schizophrenia.

Ralf Pukrop; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Stephan Ruhrmann; Anke Brockhaus-Dumke; Indira Tendolkar; Andreas Bechdolf; Eveline Matuschek; Joachim Klosterkötter

Evidence from neurobiological studies suggests that schizophrenia arises from an early abnormality in brain development and possibly further progressive developmental mechanisms. Despite a delay between the acquisition of neuropathology and the triggering of psychosis, neurobiological susceptibility is likely to be expressed subclinically by biobehavioral markers in the premorbid stage. The exploratory study aims at identifying potential neurocognitive risk factors and investigating the unfolding of the illness within a cross-sectional design by comparing neurocognitive profiles in 179 healthy controls, 38 clinically identified subjects in an early initial prodromal state (EIPS) for psychosis, 90 subjects in a late initial prodromal state (LIPS), 86 first-episode patients with schizophrenia, and 88 multiple-episode patients. Subjects at risk were substantially impaired in verbal executive and verbal memory functions. Compared to EIPS subjects, LIPS subjects demonstrated additional attentional deficits. Both EIPS and LIPS subjects were superior to first-episode patients who presented a generalized neuropsychological deficit profile, and to multiple-episode patients who showed evidence for further decline. Although results were influenced by general intellectual abilities and demographic and clinical characteristics, they could not account for total group differences. Results support a neurodevelopmental model of psychosis with further progressive mechanisms and are consistent with a primary involvement of left frontotemporal networks in the prodromal phase.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2004

A randomized comparison of group cognitive-behavioural therapy and group psychoeducation in patients with schizophrenia

Andreas Bechdolf; B. Knost; C. Kuntermann; S. Schiller; J. Klosterkötter; M. Hambrecht; Ralf Pukrop

Objective:  Although the efficacy of cognitive‐behavioural therapy (CBT) in schizophrenia has been established in a number of studies, no information is available on the differential efficacy of CBT in comparison with patient psychoeduction (PE).


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2011

Neuropsychological Profiles in Different At-Risk States of Psychosis: Executive Control Impairment in the Early—and Additional Memory Dysfunction in the Late—Prodromal State

Ingo Frommann; Ralf Pukrop; Jürgen Brinkmeyer; Andreas Bechdolf; Stephan Ruhrmann; Julia Berning; Petra Decker; Michael Riedel; Hans-Jiirgen Möller; Wolfgang Wölwer; Wolfgang Gaebel; Joachim Klosterkötter; Wolfgang Maier; Michael Wagner

Impairments in neuropsychological functioning have been described in subjects clinically at high risk for psychosis, but the specific cognitive deficits in different clinical high-risk groups remain to be elucidated. The German Research Network on Schizophrenia employs a heuristic 2-stage model: a putatively late prodromal state (LPS), characterized by the onset of attenuated positive or brief psychotic symptoms, and an early prodromal state (EPS), mainly characterized by the presence of basic symptoms, which are predictive for psychosis within the next 10 years. A total of 205 subjects met the criteria for either an EPS or an LPS of psychosis and were assessed with a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery. Neurocognitive profiles of high-risk groups were compared with data of 87 healthy controls comparable with regard to gender, age, and premorbid verbal IQ. Patients in the LPS were impaired in all neurocognitive domains (memory/learning, executive control/processing speed, and working memory) examined, with memory being the worst. Deficits were less pronounced in patients in the EPS, with a specific deficit in the executive control/processing speed domain. Consistent with a progressive neurodevelopmental disorder, some cognitive abilities were already impaired in patients in the EPS, followed by further deterioration in the LPS. Specifically, deficits in executive control functioning were related to the presence of basic symptoms, indicating a vulnerability for psychosis. Memory deficits were associated with the onset of psychotic symptoms indicating further disease progression in the trajectory to psychosis and, thus, may be useful in predicting psychosis and targeting early intervention.


Epilepsy Research | 2003

Somatization, dissociation and general psychopathology in patients with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures.

Markus Reuber; Allan House; Ralf Pukrop; Jürgen Bauer; Christian E. Elger

The etiology of psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES) remains uncertain. Previous studies have shown that PNES patients are characterized by high levels of somatization, dissociation and general psychopathology but a correlation of measures of these features and PNES severity or outcome has never been demonstrated, although this would strengthen a possible etiological link. This study measured somatization (Screening Test for Somatoform Symptoms-2), dissociation (Dissociative Experience Scale, DES), and general psychopathology (Symptom Checklist-90-Revised, SCL-90) in 98 patients with PNES and 63 patients with epilepsy. All mean scores were raised in the PNES compared to the epilepsy group. However, only measures of somatization and general psychopathology discriminated between patients with PNES and epilepsy in a logistic regression model (even when patient gender was controlled for). In PNES patients, high somatization scores correlated with poor outcome and greater seizure severity even after correction was made for dissociation and psychopathology. Dissociation and psychopathology scores were not independently associated with outcome or severity. The results suggest that, as a group, patients with PNES are best characterized by their tendency to express psychosocial distress by producing unexplained somatic symptoms which are brought to medical attention. Although dissociation may be relevant in some individuals it does not appear to be an independent factor across the whole PNES patient group.


European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 2003

Determinants of subjective quality of life in post acute patients with schizophrenia

D Andreas BechdolfM.; Joachim Klosterkötter; M. Hambrecht; B. Knost; Christina Kuntermann; Sabine Schiller; Ralf Pukrop

Abstract.Although Quality of Life (QoL) is of growing interest in schizophrenia research, little is known about putative causal determinants of this multidimensional construct. The present study explored the utility of objective indicators, psychopathological symptoms and psychosocial concepts drawn from empirical findings in community samples and the vulnerability-stress-coping model of schizophrenia for predicting general subjective QoL in post acute patients with schizophrenia. The analyses were based on cross-sectional data from 66 post acute patients with schizophrenia. The relationships between QoL and possible determinants were investigated using correlational analysis, regression analysis and structural equation techniques.As a result no significant relationships between objective indicators and general QoL were found. The strongest significant determinants were depressive symptoms and the psychosocial concepts of negative coping, perceived social support and self-efficacy. The empirical causal modelling results indicated that depression led to a direct negative impact upon QoL, whereas the other determinants had direct negative or positive effects on depression and affected QoL indirectly. One could conclude that to enhance patients’ QoL, improvements in depressive symptoms, negative coping style, social support and self-efficacy seem to be most effective.

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Indira Tendolkar

Radboud University Nijmegen

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