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Featured researches published by Sarah Roddy.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2012

Clinicopathological significance of psychotic experiences in non-psychotic young people: evidence from four population-based studies

Ian Kelleher; Helen Keeley; Paul Corcoran; Fionnuala Lynch; Carol Fitzpatrick; Nina Devlin; Charlene Molloy; Sarah Roddy; Mary Clarke; Michelle Harley; Louise Arseneault; Camilla Wasserman; Vladimir Carli; Christina W. Hoven; Danuta Wasserman; Mary Cannon

BACKGROUND Epidemiological research has shown that hallucinations and delusions, the classic symptoms of psychosis, are far more prevalent in the population than actual psychotic disorder. These symptoms are especially prevalent in childhood and adolescence. Longitudinal research has demonstrated that psychotic symptoms in adolescence increase the risk of psychotic disorder in adulthood. There has been a lack of research, however, on the immediate clinicopathological significance of psychotic symptoms in adolescence. AIMS To investigate the relationship between psychotic symptoms and non-psychotic psychopathology in community samples of adolescents in terms of prevalence, co-occurring disorders, comorbid (multiple) psychopathology and variation across early v. middle adolescence. METHOD Data from four population studies were used: two early adolescence studies (ages 11-13 years) and two mid-adolescence studies (ages 13-16 years). Studies 1 and 2 involved school-based surveys of 2243 children aged 11-16 years for psychotic symptoms and for emotional and behavioural symptoms of psychopathology. Studies 3 and 4 involved in-depth diagnostic interview assessments of psychotic symptoms and lifetime psychiatric disorders in community samples of 423 children aged 11-15 years. RESULTS Younger adolescents had a higher prevalence (21-23%) of psychotic symptoms than older adolescents (7%). In both age groups the majority of adolescents who reported psychotic symptoms had at least one diagnosable non-psychotic psychiatric disorder, although associations with psychopathology increased with age: nearly 80% of the mid-adolescence sample who reported psychotic symptoms had at least one diagnosis, compared with 57% of the early adolescence sample. Adolescents who reported psychotic symptoms were at particularly high risk of having multiple co-occurring diagnoses. CONCLUSIONS Psychotic symptoms are important risk markers for a wide range of non-psychotic psychopathological disorders, in particular for severe psychopathology characterised by multiple co-occurring diagnoses. These symptoms should be carefully assessed in all patients.


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2012

Identification and Characterization of Prodromal Risk Syndromes in Young Adolescents in the Community: A Population-Based Clinical Interview Study

Ian Kelleher; Aileen Murtagh; Charlene Molloy; Sarah Roddy; Mary Clarke; Michelle Harley; Mary Cannon

While a great deal of research has been conducted on prodromal risk syndromes in relation to help-seeking individuals who present to the clinic, there is a lack of research on prodromal risk syndromes in the general population. The current study aimed first to establish whether prodromal risk syndromes could be detected in non-help-seeking community-based adolescents and secondly to characterize this group in terms of Axis-1 psychopathology and general functioning. We conducted in-depth clinical interviews with a population sample of 212 school-going adolescents in order to assess for prodromal risk syndromes, Axis-1 psychopathology, and global (social/occupational) functioning. Between 0.9% and 8% of the community sample met criteria for a risk syndrome, depending on varying disability criteria. The risk syndrome group had a higher prevalence of co-occurring nonpsychotic Axis-1 psychiatric disorders (OR = 4.77, 95% CI = 1.81-12.52; P < .01) and poorer global functioning (F = 24.5, df = 1, P < .0001) compared with controls. Individuals in the community who fulfill criteria for prodromal risk syndromes demonstrate strong similarities with clinically presenting risk syndrome patients not just in terms of psychotic symptom criteria but also in terms of co-occurring psychopathology and global functioning.


Body Image | 2011

Psychometric properties of the Revised Male Body Attitudes Scale among Irish men.

Travis A. Ryan; Todd G. Morrison; Sarah Roddy; Jessica M. McCutcheon

The psychometric properties of a revised version of the Male Body Attitudes Scale (Tylka, Bergeron, & Schwartz, 2005) were investigated using two independent online samples of Irish men (ns=241 and 253, respectively). Exploratory factor analyses suggested that a 15-item, 3-factor solution representing mens attitudes toward their body fat, muscularity, and height best described the data. The internal consistency and construct validity of scores on the Revised Male Body Attitudes Scale suggest that this measure holds promise as an indicant of mens attitudes toward their physical appearance. Limitations and strengths associated with the current research are discussed and directions for future research are outlined.


Psychological Medicine | 2012

Facial emotion recognition in adolescents with psychotic-like experiences: a school-based sample from the general population.

Sarah Roddy; Lauren Tiedt; Ian Kelleher; Mary Clarke; Jennifer Murphy; Caroline Rawdon; Richard A.P. Roche; Monica E. Calkins; Jan Richard; Christian G. Kohler; Mary Cannon

BACKGROUND Psychotic symptoms, also termed psychotic-like experiences (PLEs) in the absence of psychotic disorder, are common in adolescents and are associated with increased risk of schizophrenia-spectrum illness in adulthood. At the same time, schizophrenia is associated with deficits in social cognition, with deficits particularly documented in facial emotion recognition (FER). However, little is known about the relationship between PLEs and FER abilities, with only one previous prospective study examining the association between these abilities in childhood and reported PLEs in adolescence. The current study was a cross-sectional investigation of the association between PLEs and FER in a sample of Irish adolescents. METHOD The Adolescent Psychotic-Like Symptom Screener (APSS), a self-report measure of PLEs, and the Penn Emotion Recognition-40 Test (Penn ER-40), a measure of facial emotion recognition, were completed by 793 children aged 10-13 years. RESULTS Children who reported PLEs performed significantly more poorly on FER (β=-0.03, p=0.035). Recognition of sad faces was the major driver of effects, with children performing particularly poorly when identifying this expression (β=-0.08, p=0.032). CONCLUSIONS The current findings show that PLEs are associated with poorer FER. Further work is needed to elucidate causal relationships with implications for the design of future interventions for those at risk of developing psychosis.


JAMA Psychiatry | 2015

White matter differences among adolescents reporting psychotic experiences : A population-based diffusion magnetic resonance imaging study

Erik O'Hanlon; Alexander Leemans; Ian Kelleher; Mary Clarke; Sarah Roddy; Helen Coughlan; Michelle Harley; Francesco Amico; Matthew J Hoscheit; Lauren Tiedt; Javeria Tabish; Anna McGettigan; Thomas Frodl; Mary Cannon

IMPORTANCE Abnormal brain connectivity is thought to have a key role in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. White matter (WM) abnormalities have been reported in patients with schizophrenia and patients with prodromal syndromes. To our knowledge, no studies have yet reported on WM differences among adolescents who report psychotic experiences, a known vulnerability group for later severe psychopathology, including psychotic illness. OBJECTIVE To study WM differences using diffusion-weighted imaging (whole-brain and tractography analyses) in adolescents who report psychotic experiences. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A population-based case-control study of 28 adolescents 13 to 16 years old who reported psychotic experiences and a matched sample of 28 adolescents who did not report psychotic experiences drawn from a sample of 212 young people recruited from primary schools in North Dublin and Kildare, Ireland. The study dates were 2008 to 2011. INTERVENTIONS High-angular resolution diffusion-weighted imaging data were used to conduct whole-brain WM analysis using tract-based spatial statistics. Based on this exploratory analysis, a tractography-based approach with constrained spherical deconvolution was performed. RESULTS Compared with control group participants, adolescents who reported psychotic experiences showed WM differences bilaterally in striatal regions in proximity to the putamen (increased fractional anisotropy, P = .01, false discovery rate corrected), and tractography identified significant WM differences bilaterally in the uncinate fasciculus (increased fractional anisotropy in the right [P = .001] and axial diffusivity in the left [P = .01] uncinate fasciculus, respectively). Similar patterns of WM differences between groups survived adjustment for other psychopathology, indicating some specificity for psychotic experiences. Exploratory along-tract analyses showed WM differences between groups in the frontal projections of the right inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus (reduced radial diffusivity in approximately 32% of the tract segment [P ≤ .0001] and increased fractional anisotropy in approximately 16% of the tract segment [P ≤ .0009]). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In a population-based study of adolescents reporting psychotic experiences, we found a number of WM differences in the region of the putamen located between the inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus and the uncinate fasciculus and in the left parietal regions that include the fiber bundle of the superior longitudinal fasciculus. These findings suggest that subtle structural changes to WM microstructure are not merely a consequence of disorder but may index vulnerability to psychosis even at a very early age.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 2012

Psychotic symptoms in adolescence index risk for suicidal behavior: findings from 2 population-based case-control clinical interview studies.

Ian Kelleher; Fionnuala Lynch; Michelle Harley; Charlene Molloy; Sarah Roddy; Carol Fitzpatrick; Mary Cannon


Archive | 2011

Obstetric Complications and Schizophrenia

Mary Clarke; Sarah Roddy; Mary Cannon


Schizophrenia Research | 2012

PSYCHOTIC SYMPTOMS IN ADOLESCENCE INDEX RISK FOR SELF HARM AND SUICIDAL BEHAVIOUR: FINDINGS FROM TWO POPULATION-BASED CASE-CONTROL CLINICAL INTERVIEW STUDIES

Mary Cannon; Ian Kelleher; Fionnuala Lynch; Michelle Harley; Charlene Molloy; Sarah Roddy; Carol Fitzpatrick


Schizophrenia Research | 2012

Poster #57 FIBRE TRACTOGRAPHY REVEALS EARLY WHITE MATTER CHANGES IN ADOLESCENTS REPORTING SUBCLINICAL PSYCHOTIC SYMPTOMS: A PILOT INVESTIGATION

Erik O'Hanlon; Sarah Roddy; Lauren Tiedt; Matthew Hosheit; Javeria Tabisch; Ian Kelleher; Thomas Frodl; Mary Cannon


Child and Adolescent Mental Health | 2012

Childhood and Migration in Europe: Portraits of Mobility, Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Ireland

Sarah Roddy

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Mary Cannon

University of Cambridge

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Ian Kelleher

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Mary Clarke

Mental Health Services

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Michelle Harley

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Charlene Molloy

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Fionnuala Lynch

Mater Misericordiae University Hospital

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Lauren Tiedt

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Erik O'Hanlon

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Thomas Frodl

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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