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Dive into the research topics where Sarah Cristofaro is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah Cristofaro.


Schizophrenia Research | 2013

Demographic, socio-environmental, and substance-related predictors of duration of untreated psychosis (DUP)

Beth Broussard; Mary E. Kelley; Claire Ramsay Wan; Sarah Cristofaro; Anthony Crisafio; Patrick Haggard; Neely Anne Laurenzo Myers; Thomas A. Reed; Michael T. Compton

OBJECTIVE Longer duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) is associated with poorer early-course and long-term outcomes, and is a target of early detection and intervention efforts. Given the paucity of research on childhood and adolescent stressors (e.g., maltreatment and neighborhood disorder) as potential predictors of DUP, limited research on premorbid substance use as a determinant of DUP, and inconclusive findings on the association between DUP and neurocognition, we conducted three sets of analyses to address these issues. Mode of onset of psychosis was also considered, given its established role as an illness-level correlate of DUP. METHODS We rigorously assessed DUP and other pertinent variables in 180 predominantly African American, low-income, and socially disadvantaged first-episode psychosis patients hospitalized in five psychiatric units. RESULTS Mode of onset of psychosis, prior incarceration, and the level of childhood/adolescent maltreatment were all significant independent predictors of DUP. Regarding premorbid substance use, having ever used cannabis and the amount of premorbid alcohol use were significantly associated with DUP. None of the seven neurocognitive domains assessed were even modestly, or clinically meaningfully, associated with DUP. CONCLUSIONS These and other findings on DUP may be informative for early detection and intervention services. For example, such services might benefit from special outreach to criminal justice settings and disadvantaged neighborhoods, and to young people likely to have a history of childhood/adolescent maltreatment and gradually developing psychotic symptoms.


Schizophrenia Research | 2016

Marijuana use in the immediate 5-year premorbid period is associated with increased risk of onset of schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders

Mary E. Kelley; Claire Ramsay Wan; Beth Broussard; Anthony Crisafio; Sarah Cristofaro; Stephanie Johnson; Thomas A. Reed; Patrick Amar; Nadine J. Kaslow; Elaine F. Walker; Michael T. Compton

OBJECTIVES Several studies suggest that adolescent marijuana use predicts earlier age at onset of schizophrenia, which is a crucial prognostic indicator. Yet, many investigations have not adequately established a clear temporal relationship between the use and onset. METHODS We enrolled 247 first-episode psychosis patients from six psychiatric units and collected data on lifetime marijuana/alcohol/tobacco use, and ages at onset of prodrome and psychosis in 210 of these patients. Cox regression (survival analysis) was employed to quantify hazard ratios (HRs) for effects of diverse premorbid use variables on psychosis onset. RESULTS Escalation of premorbid use in the 5years prior to onset was highly predictive of an increased risk for onset (e.g., increasing from no use to daily use, HR=3.6, p<0.0005). Through the analysis of time-specific measures, we determined that daily use approximately doubled the rate of onset (HR=2.2, p<0.0005), even after controlling for simultaneous alcohol/tobacco use. Building on previous studies, we were able to determine that cumulative marijuana exposure was associated with an increased rate of onset of psychosis (p=0.007), independent of gender and family history, and this is possibly the reason for age at initiation of marijuana use also being associated with rate of onset in this cohort. CONCLUSIONS These data provide evidence of a clear temporal relationship between escalations in use in the five years pre-onset and an increased rate of onset, demonstrate that the strength of the association is similar pre- and post-onset of prodromal symptoms, and determine that early adult use may be just as important as adolescent use in these associations.


Schizophrenia Research | 2012

Phonetic measures of reduced tongue movement correlate with negative symptom severity in hospitalized patients with first-episode schizophrenia-spectrum disorders

Michael A. Covington; S.L. Anya Lunden; Sarah Cristofaro; Claire Ramsay Wan; C. Thomas Bailey; Beth Broussard; Robert Fogarty; Stephanie Johnson; Shayi Zhang; Michael T. Compton

BACKGROUND Aprosody, or flattened speech intonation, is a recognized negative symptom of schizophrenia, though it has rarely been studied from a linguistic/phonological perspective. To bring the latest advances in computational linguistics to the phenomenology of schizophrenia and related psychotic disorders, a clinical first-episode psychosis research team joined with a phonetics/computational linguistics team to conduct a preliminary, proof-of-concept study. METHODS Video recordings from a semi-structured clinical research interview were available from 47 first-episode psychosis patients. Audio tracks of the video recordings were extracted, and after review of quality, 25 recordings were available for phonetic analysis. These files were de-noised and a trained phonologist extracted a 1-minute sample of each patients speech. WaveSurfer 1.8.5 was used to create, from each speech sample, a file of formant values (F0, F1, F2, where F0 is the fundamental frequency and F1 and F2 are resonance bands indicating the moment-by-moment shape of the oral cavity). Variability in these phonetic indices was correlated with severity of Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale negative symptom scores using Pearson correlations. RESULTS A measure of variability of tongue front-to-back position-the standard deviation of F2-was statistically significantly correlated with the severity of negative symptoms (r=-0.446, p=0.03). CONCLUSION This study demonstrates a statistically significant and meaningful correlation between negative symptom severity and phonetically measured reductions in tongue movements during speech in a sample of first-episode patients just initiating treatment. Further studies of negative symptoms, applying computational linguistics methods, are warranted.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2013

Measuring trauma and stressful events in childhood and adolescence among patients with first-episode psychosis: Initial factor structure, reliability, and validity of the Trauma Experiences Checklist

Sarah Cristofaro; Sean D. Cleary; Claire Ramsay Wan; Beth Broussard; Colby Chapman; Patrick Haggard; Sara Jananeh; Neely Anne Laurenzo Myers; Michael T. Compton

Past trauma and stressful events, especially in childhood and adolescence, are common among individuals with serious mental illnesses like schizophrenia. Traumatic experiences are thought to be a socio-environmental risk factor not only for poorer outcomes, but also potentially for the onset of these disorders. Because improved measurement tools are needed, we developed and studied, among 205 first-episode psychosis patients, the factor structure, internal consistency reliability, and initial validity of the Trauma Experiences Checklist (TEC), our measure of trauma and stressful events during childhood/adolescence. We assessed validity of subscales using correlations with Childhood Trauma Questionnaire-Short Form, Parental Harsh Discipline, Violence Exposure, and TEC-Informant Version scores. Exploratory factor analysis resulted in two internally consistent subscales (Cronbachs α=0.79 and 0.80, respectively), interpersonal abuse and family stress, and violence, death, and legal involvement. Scores from the former subscale were substantially associated with CTQ-SF physical, emotional, and sexual abuse (r=0.42-0.57, all p<0.001) and Violence Exposure (r=0.49, p<0.001). On the other hand, violence, death, and legal involvement scores were most highly correlated with Violence Exposure (r=0.49, p<0.001), and not with most CTQ-SF subscales. The TEC is a potentially useful tool in assessing diverse traumatic life events across various social contexts during childhood and adolescence.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2013

An examination of associations between the inability to taste phenylthiocarbamide (PTC) and clinical characteristics and trait markers in first-episode, nonaffective psychotic disorders.

Michael T. Compton; Dawn Flosnik Ionescu; Beth Broussard; Sarah Cristofaro; Stephanie Johnson; Patrick Haggard; Amy A. Potts; Claire Ramsay Wan; Elaine F. Walker

Research findings are mixed as to whether or not the inability to taste phenylthiocarbamide (PTC) might represent an endophenotypic trait marker for schizophrenia. We hypothesized associations between PTC-tasting status and select clinical characteristics and trait markers in patients with psychotic disorders that, if present, would provide support for the inability to taste PTC as a trait marker. In a first-episode psychosis sample (n=93), we measured PTC tasting, family history of psychosis, age at onset of prodrome and psychosis, severity of positive and negative symptoms, global impairment in functioning, neurological soft signs, and four neurocognitive domains (verbal learning/memory, visual learning/memory, verbal working memory, and spatial working memory). Associations between PTC-non-tasting and clinical/neurocognitive variables were examined with χ(2) tests and independent samples t tests. Among participants, 67.7% tasted PTC in comparison to a strip of control paper, and 25.8% were non-tasters. Tasters and non-tasters did not show statistically significant differences with respect to family history, age at onset, severity of symptoms, neurological soft signs, or the four neurocognitive domains. In conjunction with other findings, it is unlikely that PTC-non-tasting is a trait marker of schizophrenia, though a conclusive study is warranted.


Endoscopy | 2017

Lymph node metastasis in early gastric adenocarcinoma in the United States of America

Sridevi K. Pokala; Chao Zhang; Zhengjia Chen; Anthony Gamboa; Sarah Cristofaro; Steven Keilin; Qiang Cai; Field F. Willingham

BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIMS Localized approaches are being increasingly used in the management of early gastric adenocarcinoma; however, there are limited data on lymph node metastasis in the US population. This study examined the incidence and predictors of lymph node involvement for early-stage gastric adenocarcinomas in the USA. PATIENTS AND METHODS Data were abstracted from the national SEER database from 2004 to 2013. Exclusion criteria included: cases with unknown tumor characteristics, unknown patient characteristics, metastatic disease, neoadjuvant radiation, and lack of surgical resection or lymph node evaluation. Univariate and multivariable analyses were conducted to assess the relationship of tumor stage, grade, and size, and patient sex, race, and age with nodal involvement. RESULTS 43 769 cases of gastric adenocarcinoma were initially abstracted. After exclusions, 1577 patients remained for analysis. Multivariable analysis revealed that tumor stage (P < 0.001), grade (P = 0.008), and size (P < 0.001) were independent predictors of nodal metastasis. For low grade T1a tumors, nodal metastasis was present in 1.7 %, 1.7 %, 4.5 %, 4.1 %, and 20 % of tumors 0 - 1 cm, 1 - 2 cm, 2 - 3 cm, 3 - 4 cm, and ≥ 4 cm in size, respectively (P < 0.001), and in 8.4 %, 18.0 %, 19.5 %, 22.0 %, and 35.8 % of T1b tumors, respectively (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Low grade T1a tumors < 4 cm in size have low rates of nodal metastasis in the US population and may warrant consideration for local resection. Larger, higher grade T1b tumors have high rates of nodal metastasis in the US population and lymph node dissection may be indicated for patients who are surgical candidates.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2016

Endoscopic treatment of Zenker's diverticulum: a simplified needle-knife technique

Lianyong Li; Sarah Cristofaro; Changmin Qu; Shuwen Liang; Qiang Cai

Flexible endoscopic diverticulostomy (septotomy) with the assistance of a guidewire, a nasogastric tube, a plastic overtube, or a diverticuloscope seems to be a safe and effective treatment of symptomatic Zenker’s diverticulum (ZD) in the esophagus. The purpose of the assistance is to make the operative field clearer. However, those assisted devices can cause trauma in the diverticulum and unnecessarily increase operation time. This video demonstrates that a simplified needle-knife technique can be easily and safely performed without the aforementioned assistance devices. A 62-year-old man with ZD underwent endoscopic septotomy for dysphagia and weight loss. To protect the airway, he was intubated. A ZD was found in the proximal esophagus, 17 cm from the entry site (Fig. 1A). Using a high-resolution Olympus gastroscope


Endoscopic ultrasound | 2018

EUS-guided drainage of pancreatic fluid collection with a Hot AXIOS stent in a patient with pancreatitis following distal pancreatectomy (with video)

Qiang Cai; Lianyong Li; Sarah Cristofaro; Changmin Qu; Shuwen Liang; Xiaoyu Li

The Hot AXIOS lumen-apposing stent (Xlumena Inc., Mountain View, CA, USA) is a novel double-flanged or “barbell‐shaped,” covered, self‐expanding metal stent that can be an efficient tool for the drainage of pancreatic f luid collection (PFC), which is mostly caused by gallstone disease, or alcoholic, idiopathic, or chronic pancreatitis.[1-5] Herein, we present a case of successful PFC drainage in a patient with pancreatitis following distal pancreatectomy [Video 1].


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2017

Endoscopic Submucosal Resection: A Novel Technique for Resection of a Small Gastric Stromal Tumor from the Muscularis Propria

Lianyong Li; Sarah Cristofaro; Xiaojiang Zhou; Lin Xu; Changmin Qu; Shuwen Liang; Qiang Cai

Endoscopic Submucosal Resection: A Novel Technique for Resection of a Small Gastric Stromal Tumor from the Muscularis Propria


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2011

Life and treatment goals of individuals hospitalized for first-episode nonaffective psychosis

Claire E. Ramsay; Beth Broussard; Sandra M. Goulding; Sarah Cristofaro; Dustin Hall; Nadine J. Kaslow; Eoin Killackey; David L. Penn; Michael T. Compton

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Anthony Crisafio

George Washington University

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Patrick Haggard

University College London

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