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Dive into the research topics where Rottraut Ille is active.

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Featured researches published by Rottraut Ille.


Atherosclerosis | 2012

Trunk weighted obesity, cholesterol levels and low grade inflammation are main determinants for enhanced thrombin generation

Florian Prüller; Reinhard B. Raggam; Verena Posch; Gunter Almer; Martie Truschnig-Wilders; Renate Horejsi; Reinhard Möller; Daniel Weghuber; Rottraut Ille; Wolfgang J. Schnedl; Harald Mangge

OBJECTIVE Endogenous thrombin generation (ETP) may be critically involved in obesity associated thromboembolism. METHODS Three hundred and one participants of the STyrian Juvenile OBesity (STYJOBS)/Early DEteCTion of Atherosclerosis (EDECTA) study cohort (age, 16-58years) were analysed. ETP was measured by the new CE-IVD marked Siemens-Innovance(®) ETP test on a BCS-XP analyser, and correlated to clinical findings and extended lipometry-based anthropometric data, biomarkers, and coagulation parameters. RESULTS In the overweight/obese study group, ETP and fibrinogen levels were significantly higher compared to controls (p<0.001). In a multiple stepwise regression including all subjects, subcutaneous adipose tissue thickness of upper back, cholesterol and ultrasensitive C-reactive protein were the best predictors for ETP. CONCLUSION Trunk weighted obesity together with low grade inflammation and hypercholesterolemia enhance thrombin generation.


Clinica Chimica Acta | 2011

High density lipoprotein cholesterol level is a robust predictor of lipid peroxidation irrespective of gender, age, obesity, and inflammatory or metabolic biomarkers

Sieglinde Zelzer; Nina Fuchs; Gunter Almer; Reinhard B. Raggam; Florian Prüller; Martie Truschnig-Wilders; Wolfgang J. Schnedl; Renate Horejsi; Reinhard Möller; Daniel Weghuber; Rottraut Ille; Harald Mangge

BACKGROUND Obesity related dyslipidemia, chronic inflammation and oxidative stress were associated with atherosclerotic sequels. We analysed oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL) plasma levels of 797 participants of the STyrian Juvenile OBesity (STYJOBS) / Early DEteCTion of Atherosclerosis (EDECTA) Study cohort aged from 5 to 50 years. The rationale of STYJOBS/EDECTA is to investigate the preclinical phase of obesity by a well defined cohort of young and middle aged overweight/obese and normal weight subjects. METHODS AND RESULTS Plasma oxLDL was analysed by ELISA (Mercodia, Sweden). In the overweight/obese (OW/OB) study group, oxLDL levels were significantly increased compared to normal weighted controls (p<0.001). Probands with metabolic syndrome (MS) had significantly higher oxLDL levels than probands without MS; between overweight and obese participants, and between females and males, no significant difference was seen. In a multiple stepwise regression analysis including all study subjects, age, gender, anthropometric data, presence of metabolic syndrome, systolic, diastolic blood pressure, carotis communis intima media thickness, lipids, adipokines, metabolic, and inflammatory biomarkers, decreased high-density lipoprotein (HDL-cholesterol) and increased total cholesterol were the best predictors for increased oxLDL levels. CONCLUSION Decreased HDL-cholesterol is an important determinant of lipid peroxidation irrespective of obesity, age, gender, SAT distribution, and inflammatory/metabolic biomarkers.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2013

Altered state and trait disgust in borderline personality disorder.

Anne Schienle; Alexandra Haas-Krammer; Helmut Schöggl; Hans-Peter Kapfhammer; Rottraut Ille

Abstract Clinical experience suggests that the emotion disgust plays an important role in borderline personality disorder (BPD). We investigated 30 female patients with BPD and 30 healthy women who answered different measures of trait disgust, specifically disgust proneness, disgust sensitivity, and self-disgust. Moreover, all participants rated affective facial expressions as well as affective scenes according to perceived or elicited basic emotions. The patients with BPD reported elevated trait disgust, especially for the area of self-disgust. They also rated facial expressions of disgust as more intense than did the healthy women but only when the person who displayed this emotion was male. This sex-specific disgust bias was independent of depression and experienced sexual/physical abuse in the clinical group. Altogether, the patients with BPD showed a broad spectrum of altered disgust processes, which was positively correlated with disorder severity. Consequently, the assessment of disgust reactivity should be introduced as a diagnostic tool for this disorder.


Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2014

Disgust regulation via placebo: an fMRI study

Anne Schienle; Sonja Übel; Florian Schöngaßner; Rottraut Ille; Wilfried Scharmüller

The present fMRI study investigated whether placebo treatment can change disgust feelings. Disgust-prone women underwent a retest design where they were presented with disgusting, fear-eliciting and neutral pictures once with and once without a placebo (inert pill presented with the suggestion that it can reduce disgust symptoms). The placebo provoked a strong decrease of experienced disgust, which was accompanied by reduced insula activation. Exploratory psychophysiological interaction analyses revealed decreased connectivity in a network consisting of the insula, the amygdala, the anterior cingulate cortex and the orbitofrontal cortex. Moreover, the placebo increased amygdala-DMPFC coactivation. Our findings suggest that placebo use can modulate a specific affective state and might be an option as a first therapy step for clinical samples characterized by excessive and difficult-to-control disgust feelings.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2013

Clinical effects of electroconvulsive therapy in severe depression and concomitant changes in cerebral glucose metabolism—An exploratory study

Eva Z. Reininghaus; Bernd Reininghaus; Rottraut Ille; Werner Fitz; Rosa-Maria Lassnig; Christoph Ebner; Painold Annamaria; Peter Hofmann; Hans-Peter Kapfhammer; Aigner Reingard; Franz Fazekas; Stefan Ropele; Christian Enzinger

OBJECTIVE Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is an effective mode of treatment--especially for severe depression and for depression refractory to pharmacotherapy, nevertheless the mode of action of ECT is far from being fully understood. This study assessed the effects of a series of ECT in depressive subjects on cerebral glucose metabolism measured by FDG-PET scans pre- and post-therapy in thus far the largest group of 12 patients. METHODS Our analysis included careful repeated evaluation of clinical changes in mood and behaviour by standardised questionnaires, which allowed testing for a potential correlation between clinical and cerebral metabolic changes. PET scanning was done within a predefined time window and we used predefined ROIs with counts normalized to the pons activity. RESULTS We observed few changes in cerebral glucose metabolism over time. There was a marginal increase in the left temporal and a trend for a decrease in left frontobasal areas subsequent to treatment in our sample. FDG uptake patterns remained remarkably stable in all the other predefined ROIs pre- and post-treatment. There were no significant correlations between changes in relative metabolic rates and changes in depression scores and parameters derived from neurocognitive testing. CONCLUSIONS Our study thus cannot support the view that FDG-PET can assess the functional brain changes that are likely to occur subsequent to ECT in such a scenario, but this may be related to limited sensitivity given the sample size. Future studies thus might wish to challenge this notion in larger patient samples to clarify this issue.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Facial Emotion Recognition in Parkinson's Disease: An fMRI Investigation

Albert Wabnegger; Rottraut Ille; Petra Schwingenschuh; Petra Katschnig-Winter; Mariella Kögl-Wallner; Karoline Wenzel; Anne Schienle

Background Findings of behavioral studies on facial emotion recognition in Parkinson’s disease (PD) are very heterogeneous. Therefore, the present investigation additionally used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in order to compare brain activation during emotion perception between PD patients and healthy controls. Methods and Findings We included 17 nonmedicated, nondemented PD patients suffering from mild to moderate symptoms and 22 healthy controls. The participants were shown pictures of facial expressions depicting disgust, fear, sadness, and anger and they answered scales for the assessment of affective traits. The patients did not report lowered intensities for the displayed target emotions, and showed a comparable rating accuracy as the control participants. The questionnaire scores did not differ between patients and controls. The fMRI data showed similar activation in both groups except for a generally stronger recruitment of somatosensory regions in the patients. Conclusions Since somatosensory cortices are involved in the simulation of an observed emotion, which constitutes an important mechanism for emotion recognition, future studies should focus on activation changes within this region during the course of disease.


The Cerebellum | 2013

Cerebellar Contribution to Anger Recognition Deficits in Huntington’s Disease

Wilfried Scharmüller; Rottraut Ille; Anne Schienle

Although there is increasing evidence that cerebellar loss of grey matter volume (GMV) is associated with affective deficits, this has not been tested for patients suffering from Huntington’s disease (HD), who show a pronounced impairment in the recognition of anger. We assessed GMV in 18 symptomatic HD patients and 18 healthy controls using voxel-based morphometry. The GMV of cerebellar subregions was correlated with participants’ intensity and accuracy ratings for facial expressions of basic emotions from the Karolinska Directed Emotional Faces (Lundqvist et al. 1998). The patients gave lower and less accurate anger ratings for angry faces than controls. This anger recognition deficit was correlated with atrophy of selected hemispheric and vermal regions of the cerebellum. Furthermore, cerebellar volume reductions of the HD patients were associated with longer disease duration and greater functional impairment. The data imply that anger recognition deficits could potentially serve as indicators of disease onset and progression in HD. Furthermore, the patients might profit from specific affect trainings.


Nordic Journal of Psychiatry | 2016

Psychological factors associated with acute and chronic central serous chorioretinopathy.

Theresa Lahousen; Annamaria Painold; Wolfgang Luxenberger; Anne Schienle; Hans-Peter Kapfhammer; Rottraut Ille

Background: Central serous chorioretinopathy (CSC) has been associated with several psychological factors. But previous psychological data are limited and mainly restricted to male patients and small sample size. In this study we investigated psychosomatic complaints, personality factors, life events, and stress coping in acute and chronic recurrent CSC patients. Methods: Ninety-five patients (71 men, 24 women) with either acute or chronic CSC were evaluated regarding critical life events before diagnosis, psychosomatic complaints, personality traits and coping style. The characteristics of CSC patients were compared with a control group comprising 75 patients (46 men, 29 women) suffering from acute or chronic ophthalmic disorders other than CSC. Results: Compared with patients of the control group, CSC patients reported more psychosomatic problems, unfavourable stress coping strategies and critical life events as well as elevated tension, aggression, strain, emotional instability and achievement orientation. Except for aggression the observed characteristics were more pronounced in acute than in chronic CSC patients. Conclusions: The appearance of CSC may be associated with an accumulation of stressful life events with an unfavourable coping style and distinctive personality factors. Acute CSC is related to more unfavourable stress coping and more physical complaints compared to its chronic course. Elevated aggression may imply one potential risk factor for CSC manifestation and also may have an adverse effect with its chronification.


Verhaltenstherapie | 2014

Diagnostik von Selbstekel im Rahmen der Depression

Anne Schienle; Rottraut Ille; Markus Sommer; Martin Arendasy

Hintergrund: Selbstekel beschreibt die Abscheu, die gegen spezifische Aspekte der eigenen Person gerichtet ist und könnte deshalb eine wichtige Rolle für depressive Störungen spielen. Ziel einer ersten Studie war die Entwicklung eines Messinstruments, das sowohl in psychisch gesunden als auch klinischen Populationen eingesetzt werden kann. Methodik: Eine erste Version des Fragebogens zur Erfassung des Selbstekels (FESE) wurde von 895 Probanden im Alter zwischen 15 und 71 Jahren bearbeitet. Ergebnisse: Die Hauptachsenanalyse mit schiefwinkliger Rotation ergab für die Daten der ersten Teilstichprobe (n = 302) 2 inhaltlich relevante Faktoren: «personenbezogener Ekel» (9 Items, Abwertung des eigenen äußeren Erscheinungsbildes und der Persönlichkeit) und «verhaltensbezogener Ekel» (5 Items, Abwertung des eigenen Verhaltens). Diese Lösung konnte durch eine konfirmatorische Faktoranalyse über die zweite Teilstichprobe (n = 593) bestätigt werden. In einer zweiten Studie erzielten depressive Patienten in stationärer Therapie höhere FESE-Werte als gesunde Kontrollprobanden. Schlussfolgerungen: Der FESE ist ein reliabler, valider und ökonomischer Fragebogen zur Erfassung des Selbstekels, dessen klinische Relevanz für Patienten mit einer Depression aufgezeigt werden konnte. Die Untersuchung weiterer klinischer Störungen mittels dieses Instruments erscheint vielversprechend.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2016

Intact emotion recognition and experience but dysfunctional emotion regulation in idiopathic Parkinson's disease

Rottraut Ille; Albert Wabnegger; Petra Schwingenschuh; Petra Katschnig-Winter; Mariella Kögl-Wallner; Karoline Wenzel; Anne Schienle

BACKGROUND A specific non-motor impairment in Parkinsons disease (PD) concerns difficulties to accurately identify facial emotions. Findings are numerous but very inconsistent, ranging from general discrimination deficits to problems for specific emotions up to no impairment at all. By contrast, only a few studies exist about emotion experience, altered affective traits and states in PD. OBJECTIVE To investigate the decoding capacity for affective facial expressions, affective experience of emotion-eliciting images and affective personality traits in PD. METHODS The study sample included 25 patients with mild to moderate symptom intensity and 25 healthy controls (HC) of both sexes. The participants were shown pictures of facial expressions depicting disgust, fear, and anger as well as disgusting and fear-relevant scenes. Additionally, they answered self-report scales for the assessment of affective traits. RESULTS PD patients had more problems in controlling anger and disgust feelings than HC. Higher disgust sensitivity in PD was associated with lower functioning in everyday life and lower capacity to recognize angry faces. Furthermore, patients reported less disgust towards poor hygiene and spoiled food and they stated elevated anxiety. However, the clinical group displayed intact facial emotion decoding and emotion experience. Everyday life functionality was lowered in PD and decreased with stronger motor impairment. Furthermore, disease duration was negatively associated to correct classification of angry faces. CONCLUSIONS Our data indicate that problems with emotion regulation may appear already in earlier disease stages of PD. By contrast, PD patients showed appropriate emotion recognition and experience. However, data also point to a deterioration of emotion recognition capacity with the course of the disease. Compensatory mechanisms in PD patients with less advanced disease are discussed.

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Theresa Lahousen

Medical University of Graz

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Axel Wolf

Medical University of Graz

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