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Dive into the research topics where Rodolfo D. Fahrer is active.

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Featured researches published by Rodolfo D. Fahrer.


Neuropsychologia | 2010

Emotion processing and theory of mind in schizophrenia patients and their unaffected first-degree relatives

Delfina de Achával; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Mirta Villarreal; Ignacio O. Jáuregui; Araceli Chiodi; Mariana N. Castro; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Ramón Leiguarda; Elvina M. Chu; Salvador M. Guinjoan

Previous studies have suggested that social cognition is affected in individuals with schizophrenia. The purpose of this study was to explore to what extent social cognition deficits are shared by unaffected first-degree relatives, and the nature of the relationship between performance in different paradigms of social cognition. 20 Schizophrenia patients (7 females, 31+/-10 years), 20 healthy age- and gender-matched individuals, 20 unaffected first-degree relatives of the schizophrenia patients (11 females, 50+/-20 years), and 20 healthy individuals matched for age and gender were recruited. Patients showed deficits in the detection of social Faux Pas (0.80+/-0.17 vs. controls: 0.94+/-0.09, p=0.025) and the correct identification of Theory of Mind stories (0.71+/-0.13 vs. controls: 0.82+/-0.12, p=0.038). Relatives performed poorly in the Faces Test (0.83+/-0.14 vs. controls: 0.9+/-0.08, p=0.048), the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (0.59+/-0.17 vs. controls: 0.71+/-0.14, p=0.046) and the detection of social Faux Pas (0.8+/-0.2 vs. controls: 0.93+/-0.09, p=0.024). Abnormalities were independent of age, years of education, and general cognitive performance in patients and their relatives. Performance in an Emotion Processing task (Faces Test) was correlated with performance in theory of mind tests in healthy individuals and relatives of patients with schizophrenia only. These results suggest that schizophrenia patients and their unaffected first-degree relatives display similar but nonidentical patterns of social cognition processing.


European Journal of Neurology | 2010

Decision-making in Parkinson’s disease patients with and without pathological gambling

Malco Rossi; E. R. Gerschcovich; D. De Achaval; Santiago Perez-Lloret; Daniel Cerquetti; Angel Cammarota; M. Inés Nouzeilles; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Marcelo Merello; Ramón Leiguarda

Background and purpose:  Pathological gambling (PG) in Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a frequent impulse control disorder associated mainly with dopamine replacement therapy. As impairments in decision‐making were described independently in PG and PD, the objective of this study was to assess decision‐making processes in PD patients with and without PG.


Schizophrenia Research | 2008

Heart rate variability response to mental arithmetic stress in patients with schizophrenia: Autonomic response to stress in schizophrenia

Mariana N. Castro; Daniel E. Vigo; Hylke Weidema; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Elvina M. Chu; Delfina de Achával; Martin Nogues; Ramón Leiguarda; Daniel P. Cardinali; Salvador M. Guinjoan

BACKGROUND The vulnerability-stress hypothesis is an established model of schizophrenia symptom formation. We sought to characterise the pattern of the cardiac autonomic response to mental arithmetic stress in patients with stable schizophrenia. METHODS We performed heart rate variability (HRV) analysis on recordings obtained before, during, and after a standard test of autonomic function involving mental stress in 25 patients with DSM-IV schizophrenia (S) and 25 healthy individuals (C). RESULTS Patients with schizophrenia had a normal response to the mental arithmetic stress test. Relative contributions of low-frequency (LF) HRV and high-frequency (HF) HRV influences on heart rate in patients were similar to controls both at rest (LF 64+/-19% (S) vs. 56+/-16% (C); HF 36+/-19% (S) vs. 44+/-16% (C), t=1.52, p=0.136) and during mental stress, with increased LF (S: 76+/-12%, C: 74+/-11%) and decreased HF (S: 24+/-12%, C: 26+/-11%) in the latter study condition. Whilst healthy persons recovered the resting pattern of HRV immediately after stress termination (LF 60+/-15%, HF 40+/-15%, F=18.5, p<0.001), in patients HRV remained unchanged throughout the observed recovery period, with larger LF (71+/-17%) and lower HF (29+/-17%) compared with baseline (F=7.3, p=0.013). CONCLUSIONS Patients with schizophrenia exhibit a normal response to the mental arithmetic stress test as a standard test of autonomic function but in contrast with healthy individuals, they maintain stress-related changes of cardiac autonomic function beyond stimulus cessation.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2004

Cardiac parasympathetic dysfunction related to depression in older adults with acute coronary syndromes.

Salvador M. Guinjoan; M.Soledad Ladrón de Guevara; Carolina Correa; Silvina Schauffele; Leonardo Nicola-Siri; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Enrique Ortı́z-Frágola; José A. Martínez-Martínez; Daniel P. Cardinali

OBJECTIVE To determine whether depression is associated with cardiac autonomic alterations in elderly patients with recent acute coronary syndromes (ACSs). METHODS Cross-sectional study on the association between a major depressive episode or isolated depressive symptoms (21-item Hamilton depression score) and heart rate variability abnormalities in 56 adults (31 women, 55%) 60 years of age and older with a recent (24-72 h) myocardial infarction (MI) or unstable angina (UA). RESULTS Spectral and nonspectral parameters of respiratory sinus arrhythmia, indicative of parasympathetic activity on the heart, were decreased in patients with depression (high-frequency heart rate variability [log ms(2)] 2.12+/-0.4 vs. 2.52+/-0.5, P=.024; pNN50 [%] 1+/-2 vs. 9+/-15, P=.006; and rMSNN [ms] 16+/-6 vs. 28+/-22, P=.009). Also, high-frequency heart rate variability decreased with increasing depressive symptom severity. CONCLUSION In a sample of older adults suffering from ACSs, depression was associated with impaired parasympathetic control of the heart.


Neuropsychobiology | 2007

Depressive symptoms are related to decreased low-frequency heart rate variability in older adults with decompensated heart failure.

Salvador M. Guinjoan; Mariana N. Castro; Daniel E. Vigo; Hylke Weidema; Carlos Berbara; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Hugo Grancelli; Martin Nogues; Ramón Leiguarda; Daniel P. Cardinali

Background/Aims: Depression has been associated with increased mortality among individuals with heart failure, but the mechanism for this association is unsettled. Depression is often found to result in autonomic dysfunction which, if present in heart failure, might help explain worsened outcomes. Methods: This study was a cross-sectional evaluation of the relationship between depressive symptoms and cardiac autonomic function, as assessed by short-term heart rate variability (HRV) analysis in aged patients with acute/decompensated heart failure of coronary origin (CHF). A 21-item Hamilton Depression score and measures of short-term HRV were obtained in 31 inpatients ≧65 years of age, 24–72 h after admission to the coronary care unit with a diagnosis of CHF. Results: Clinical depression was present in 22.6% of participants. In the sample as a whole, increasing depressive symptoms were associated with decreased low-frequency HRV. Conclusion: These results may be important in light of recent indications that decreased low-frequency HRV is a predictor of mortality in patients with heart failure.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2004

Worsening of depressive symptoms 6 months after an acute coronary event in older adults is associated with impairment of cardiac autonomic function

M.Soledad Ladrón de Guevara; Silvina Schauffele; Leonardo Nicola-Siri; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Enrique Ortı́z-Frágola; José A. Martínez-Martínez; Daniel P. Cardinali; Salvador M. Guinjoan

BACKGROUND Depression increases mortality of coronary patients, and autonomic dysfunction has been proposed as an explanation for this association. METHODS In a sample of 38 adults > or = 60 years with myocardial infarction or unstable angina, we studied depression (presence of a major depressive episode and 21-item Hamilton depression score) and heart rate variability (HRV) of 550 normal beats shortly after admission to the coronary care unit (CCU). Thirty patients were alive at 6 months and were studied at that time as well. Spectral HRV measurements included power in the high-frequency range (HF, 0.15-0.55 Hz, a measure of parasympathetic activity) and low-frequency range (LF, 0.03-0.15 Hz). Nonspectral HRV measurements included standard deviation of normal beats (SDNN) and two measures of vagal activity: percentage of adjacent cycles differing by >50 ms (pNN50) and the root-mean-square of differences in successive beats (rMSNN). RESULTS Patients who died within 6 months (n=8) had a higher Hamilton-D score than survivors (13.9+/-6.5 vs. 18.4+/-5.6, P=0.039) and were more likely to have an episode of major depression upon admission to the CCU (71 vs. 27%, P=0.027). An increase in Hamilton-D score at 6 months correlated with a decrease in total (r=-0.48, P=0.014), high-frequency (r=-0.49, P=0.007), and low-frequency HRV (r=-0.46, P=0.014). LIMITATIONS Patients belonged to a single institution and there was a small proportion of men. CONCLUSIONS Progression of mood symptoms 6 months after an acute coronary event is associated with an impairment of autonomic control of the heart in elderly individuals.


World Journal of Biological Psychiatry | 2008

Nonlinear analysis of heart rate variability in patients with eating disorders

Daniel E. Vigo; Mariana N. Castro; Andrea Dorpinghaus; Hylke Weidema; Daniel P. Cardinali; Leonardo Nicola Siri; Bernardo Rovira; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Martin Nogues; Ramón Leiguarda; Salvador M. Guinjoan

Patients with anorexia nervosa or bulimia nervosa often have signs of autonomic dysfunction potentially deleterious to the heart. The aim of this study was to ascertain the nonlinear properties of heart rate variability in patients with eating disorders. A group of 33 women with eating disorders (14 anorexia, 19 bulimia) and 19 healthy controls were included in the study. Conventional time- and frequency-domain heart rate variability measurements, along with nonlinear heart rate variability measurements including the short-term fractal scaling exponent α and approximate entropy (ApEn) were calculated. Anorexia nervosa patients exhibited decreased values of α, while bulimia nervosa patients had decreased values of ApEn. Low-frequency heart rate variability was decreased in patients with anorexia. In conclusion, these results are compatible with the view that a more severe alteration of cardiac autonomic function is present in anorexia than in bulimia.


World Journal of Biological Psychiatry | 2009

Mood, Th-1/Th-2 cytokine profile, and autonomic activity in older adults with acute/decompensated heart failure: preliminary observations.

Salvador M. Guinjoan; Daniel E. Vigo; Mariana N. Castro; Nancy Tateosian; Eduardo Chuluyan; Elsa Y. Costanzo; Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Hugo Grancelli; Ramón Leiguarda; Daniel P. Cardinali

In order to assess the relationships among mood, peripheral autonomic output and circulating immunoinflammatory mediators in older individuals with decompensated heart failure (CHF), 20 consecutive patients (78±7 years, 35% women) admitted to the coronary care unit with a clinical diagnosis of acute/decompensated CHF of coronary origin were examined. Mood was evaluated by the 21-item Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D). Four patients met the criteria for major depression. Heart rate variability (HRV) analysis and the levels of tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α, interferon (IFN)-γ, interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, IL-6 and IL-10 were measured within 24–72 h of admission. A significant positive relationship between score in HAM-D and serum IL-6 levels was detected with a similar trend as far as IL-2 levels. Circulating IL-2 levels were strongly associated with the HRV L/H quotient, an index of increased sympathetic and/or decreased parasympathetic thoracic activity. A negative correlation between vagal activity (as assessed by HRV) and IL-4 occurred. Neither TNF-α nor IL-10 were detectable in this group of elderly patients. The results add to the concept that mood and autonomic unbalance are associated with increased systemic inflammation in old patients with decompensated CHF, a potential mechanism for mood-related worsened prognosis of heart failure at an advanced age.


International Review of Psychiatry | 2010

Addressing psychiatric education in Latin America: Challenges and opportunities

Rodolfo D. Fahrer; Miguel Roberto Jorge; Pedro Ruiz

This article is about the psychiatric educational components in the field of psychiatry. Currently the training and educational objectives focus on five major areas: undergraduate education (medical students); graduate education (psychiatric residents); psychiatric education for primary care physicians, as well as physicians in other medical specializations (psychosomatic training); public health and public education at large, and patient and family education, and the promotion of ‘mental health’ at a community level. Given the strong globalization process observed in all regions of the world in the past two or three decades, it is very important for Latin America to constantly review and update its psychiatric and behavioural sciences curriculum across all medical institutions and universities of the continent. New methods of teaching and novel approaches to education in the field of psychiatry are currently based on models that are also in use in other parts of the world, especially in the USA. Boards of certification for psychiatrists are being implemented all over the continent. Sound certification guarantees that the professional has followed and passed an educational training plan to make him/her qualified to start practising the profession. The future of psychiatric training will be closely bound to the future of the practice of psychiatry, and will have to get ahead of the challenges the specialism will face during the next decades.


Archive | 1999

Managed Care and Quality Assurance Methods in Mental Health in Latin America

Rodolfo D. Fahrer

The 1990s have been labeled the “decade of the brain”.1 Medical science finally has the necessary tools to identify causes and to develop effective treatments to handle challenging and refractory disorders. However, it is necessary to have people with adequate training to do the job. It is essential to train professionals to work competently in any health system, be it public or private. Managed-care systems take decisions based on cost-benefit reasons. In the United States, professionals under certain health systems are compelled to treat patients in psychotherapy with a determined number of days and sessions. This is a restrictive attitude. Training and competency should be of the highest possible quality, even in countries subject to this kind of regulation.

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Ramón Leiguarda

Boston Children's Hospital

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Daniel P. Cardinali

Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina

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Elsa Y. Costanzo

University of Buenos Aires

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Daniel E. Vigo

Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina

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Mariana N. Castro

University of Buenos Aires

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Martin Nogues

University of Buenos Aires

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Mirta Villarreal

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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