Thomas Fydrich
Humboldt University of Berlin
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Featured researches published by Thomas Fydrich.
Pain | 1992
Herta Flor; Thomas Fydrich; Dennis C. Turk
&NA; Sixty‐five studies that evaluated the efficacy of multidisciplinary treatments for chronic back pain were included in a meta‐analysis. Within‐ and between‐group effect sizes revealed that multidisciplinary treatments for chronic pain are superior to no treatment, waiting list, as well as single‐discipline treatments such as medical treatment or physical therapy. Moreover, the effects appeared to be stable over time. The beneficial effects of multidisciplinary treatment were not limited to improvements in pain, mood and interference but also extended to behavioral variables such as return to work or use of the health care system. These results tend to support the efficacy of multidisciplinary pain treatment; however, these results must be interpreted cautiously as the quality of the study designs and study descriptions is marginal. Suggestions for improvement in research designs as well as appropriate reports of research completed are provided.
Behaviour Research and Therapy | 1998
Thomas Fydrich; Dianne L. Chambless; Kevin J. Perry; Friederike Buergener; Maria B. Beazley
The Social Performance Rating Scale (SPRS) is a modification of the rating system for behavioral assessment of social skills, originally developed by Trower, P., Bryant, B., & Argyle, M. (1978). Social skills and mental health. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press) and subsequently adapted by Turner and colleagues (e.g., Turner, S.M., Beidel, D.C., Dancu, C.V., & Keys, D.J. (1986). Psychopathology of social phobia and comparison to avoidant personality disorder. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 95, 389-394). Designed to yield ratings of social performance appropriate for use in a socially phobic population and based on videotaped role plays, the five SPRS ratings are gaze, vocal quality, speech length, discomfort, and conversation flow. The sum of these ratings provides an internally consistent total score. In an initial study of the psychometric properties of the SPRS, three groups were assessed: individuals with social phobia, another anxiety disorder, or no psychological disorder. Inter-rater reliability for individual items and the total score proved excellent, and positive evidence for convergent, divergent, and criterion-related validity was obtained.
Diagnostica | 1999
Thomas Fydrich; Michael Geyer; Aike Hessel; Gert Sommer; Elmar Brähler
Zusammenfassung. Der Fragebogen zur sozialen Unterstutzung (F-SozU) von Sommer & Fydrich (1989, 1991) ist sowohl in seiner Langform mit 54 Items als auch der Kurzform mit 22 Items ein vielfach eingesetztes Fragebogeninventar. In der vorliegenden Untersuchung wurde an einer reprasentativen Stichprobe von n = 2 179 Personen in Ost- und Westdeutschland die Langform des Fragebogens eingesetzt. Fur den Gesamtwert und die vier Hauptskalen (Emotionale Unterstutzung, Praktische Unterstutzung, Soziale Integration und Soziale Belastung) wurden gute bis sehr gute Kennwerte fur die innere Konsistenz (Cronbach alpha zwischen .81 und .93) ermittelt. Als Normierung werden Prozentrangtabellen fur die vier Hauptskalen, den Gesamtwert sowie die Kurzform des Fragebogens angegeben. Die an Skaleninterkorrelationen erkennbaren inhaltlichen Uberschneidungen der Skalen werden diskutiert.
European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 2009
Andrew T. Gloster; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Franziska Einsle; Michael Höfler; Thomas Lang; Sylvia Helbig-Lang; Thomas Fydrich; Lydia Fehm; Alfons O. Hamm; Jan Richter; Georg W. Alpers; Alexander L. Gerlach; Andreas Ströhle; Tilo Kircher; Jürgen Deckert; Peter Zwanzger; Volker Arolt
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is efficacious for panic disorder with agoraphobia (PD/A). Nevertheless, the active ingredients of treatment and the mechanisms through which CBT achieves its effects remain largely unknown. The mechanisms of action in CBT (MAC) study was established to investigate these questions in 369 patients diagnosed with PD/A. The MAC study utilized a multi-center, randomized controlled design, with two active treatment conditions in which the administration of exposure was varied, and a wait-list control group. The special feature of MAC is the way in which imbedded experimental, psychophysiological, and neurobiological paradigms were included to elucidate therapeutic and psychopathological processes. This paper describes the aims and goals of the MAC study and the methods utilized to achieve them. All aspects of the research design (e.g., assessments, treatment, experimental procedures) were implemented so as to facilitate the detection of active therapeutic components, and the mediators and moderators of therapeutic change. To this end, clinical, behavioral, physiological, experimental, and genetic data were collected and will be integrated.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2013
Sarah Schumacher; Clemens Kirschbaum; Thomas Fydrich; Andreas Ströhle
During recent years, a growing interest emerged in using salivary alpha-amylase (sAA) as a non-invasive, surrogate marker for sympathetic activity. Numerous studies applying stress protocols have demonstrated that sAA is highly sensitive to stress-related changes (in healthy subjects). Additionally, it was suggested that sAA might moreover serve as an index for pathological dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) in patients showing psychopathology. Since then, a small but growing literature investigated sAA in patients with mental disorders. This review aims to give an overview of preliminary findings in this field of research. The results of n=15 studies are described in detail and implications for further research are discussed. Although the number of studies and the samples examined were rather small, changes in sAA, reflecting adrenergic dysregulation, could be demonstrated in psychopathology, especially in anxiety-related disorders. This field of research is still in its early stages. However, the studies included in this review revealed first evidence that the employment of sAA, as an indicator of ANS dysregulation in mental disorders, is promising.
Biological Psychiatry | 2012
Jan Richter; Alfons O. Hamm; Christiane A. Pané-Farré; Alexander L. Gerlach; Andrew T. Gloster; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Thomas Lang; Georg W. Alpers; Sylvia Helbig-Lang; Jürgen Deckert; Thomas Fydrich; Lydia Fehm; Andreas Ströhle; Tilo Kircher; Volker Arolt
BACKGROUND The learning perspective of panic disorder distinguishes between acute panic and anxious apprehension as distinct emotional states. Following animal models, these clinical entities reflect different stages of defensive reactivity depending upon the imminence of interoceptive or exteroceptive threat cues. The current study tested this model by investigating the dynamics of defensive reactivity in a large group of patients with panic disorder and agoraphobia (PD/AG). METHODS Three hundred forty-five PD/AG patients participated in a standardized behavioral avoidance test (being entrapped in a small, dark chamber for 10 minutes). Defense reactivity was assessed measuring avoidance and escape behavior, self-reports of anxiety and panic symptoms, autonomic arousal (heart rate and skin conductance), and potentiation of the startle reflex before and during exposure of the behavioral avoidance test. RESULTS Panic disorder and agoraphobia patients differed substantially in their defensive reactivity. While 31.6% of the patients showed strong anxious apprehension during this task (as indexed by increased reports of anxiety, elevated physiological arousal, and startle potentiation), 20.9% of the patients escaped from the test chamber. Active escape was initiated at the peak of the autonomic surge accompanied by an inhibition of the startle response as predicted by the animal model. These physiological responses resembled the pattern observed during the 34 reported panic attacks. CONCLUSIONS We found evidence that defensive reactivity in PD/AG patients is dynamically organized ranging from anxious apprehension to panic with increasing proximity of interoceptive threat. These data support the learning perspective of panic disorder.
Anxiety Stress and Coping | 2009
Anke Weidmann; Ania Conradi; Kathrin Gröger; Lydia Fehm; Thomas Fydrich
Abstract To understand mental disorders, analogue paradigms provide an indispensable contribution. In posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the stressful film paradigm is a frequently used analogue approach: Films depicting traumatic events are shown to non-clinical participants in order to elicit stress responses analogue to responses to traumatic events in real life. Previous studies used a large variety of films, which is problematic with regard to the comparability of results. The main goal of this study was to identify a film clip that (a) consistently provokes stress reactions and (b) provokes reactions that are as similar as possible to traumatic stress. We randomly exposed 105 male and female participants to one of four stressful films, differing, e.g., in content and origin. Intrusive memories of the film, reported immediately after the film and during a diary phase of three days, as well as distress, heart rate, and several mood states were measured. A film clip depicting rape elicited the most consistent reactions that were characterized by a higher heart rate, more distress and more intrusive memories, compared to the other three clips. Intrusive memories across all films were especially related to an increase in heart rate and disgust in response to the film.
Psychotherapy Research | 2000
Dianne L. Chambless; Babette Renneberg; E.J. Gracely; A.J. Goldstein; Thomas Fydrich
The impact of concurrent Axis I and Axis II disorder diagnoses on the efficacy of psychotherapy in a clinical setting for panic disorder with agoraphobia was studied in a sample of 51 agoraphobic outpatients. Diagnoses were based on the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R. The effects of secondary major depression, dysthymia, generalized anxiety disorder, and avoidant personality disorder were examined via multiple regression analyses. Major depression was associated with less improvement on phobic behavior at 6-month follow-up, whereas dysthymia and avoidant personality disorder predicted less reduction in the frequency of panic attacks at posttest and follow-up, respectively. There was little evidence that generalized anxiety was associated with poorer outcome in this sample. Limitations to the internal validity of the study include uncontrolled use of medication and naturalistic treatment during the follow-up period.
Molecular Psychiatry | 2016
Heike Weber; Jan Richter; Benjamin Straube; Ulrike Lueken; Katharina Domschke; C. Schartner; Benedikt Klauke; Christian R. Baumann; Christiane A. Pané-Farré; Christian Jacob; Claus-Jürgen Scholz; Peter Zwanzger; Thomas Lang; Lydia Fehm; Andreas Jansen; Carsten Konrad; Thomas Fydrich; André Wittmann; Bettina Pfleiderer; Andreas Ströhle; Alexander L. Gerlach; Georg W. Alpers; Volker Arolt; Paul Pauli; Hans-Ulrich Wittchen; Lindsey Kent; Alfons O. Hamm; Tilo Kircher; Jürgen Deckert; Andreas Reif
Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) is a major regulator of the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis. Binding to its receptor CRHR1 triggers the downstream release of the stress response-regulating hormone cortisol. Biochemical, behavioral and genetic studies revealed CRHR1 as a possible candidate gene for mood and anxiety disorders. Here we aimed to evaluate CRHR1 as a risk factor for panic disorder (PD). Allelic variation of CRHR1 was captured by 9 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), which were genotyped in 531 matched case/control pairs. Four SNPs were found to be associated with PD, in at least one sub-sample. The minor allele of rs17689918 was found to significantly increase risk for PD in females after Bonferroni correction and furthermore decreased CRHR1 mRNA expression in human forebrains and amygdalae. When investigating neural correlates underlying this association in patients with PD using functional magnetic resonance imaging, risk allele carriers of rs17689918 showed aberrant differential conditioning predominantly in the bilateral prefrontal cortex and safety signal processing in the amygdalae, arguing for predominant generalization of fear and hence anxious apprehension. Additionally, the risk allele of rs17689918 led to less flight behavior during fear-provoking situations but rather increased anxious apprehension and went along with increased anxiety sensitivity. Thus reduced gene expression driven by CRHR1 risk allele leads to a phenotype characterized by fear sensitization and hence sustained fear. These results strengthen the role of CRHR1 in PD and clarify the mechanisms by which genetic variation in CRHR1 is linked to this disorder.
Biological Psychology | 2013
Michael Gaebler; Judith K. Daniels; Jan-Peter Lamke; Thomas Fydrich; Henrik Walter
The monitoring and regulation of ones own physiological reactions and cardioregulatory abnormalities are central to the aetiology and maintenance of social anxiety disorder (SAD). We therefore explored the neural correspondences of these heart rate alterations. 21 patients with SAD and 21 matched healthy controls (HCs) underwent 3T-fMRI scanning. Simultaneously, high-frequency heart rate variability (HF-HRV) was acquired during a short-term resting period and an implicit emotional face-matching task. Compared to HCs, patients with SAD reported increased self-focused attention while being less accurate in estimating their heartbeats. Physiologically, they showed less HF-HRV at rest and during task. Across groups, HF-HRV at rest correlated positively with activation in visual face-processing areas. The right caudate nucleus showed an interaction of group and cardioregulation: Activation in this region was positively correlated in patients with SAD but negatively in HCs. We conclude that cardioregulation is altered in SAD on the subjective, physiological, and brain level.