17 research outputs found
The effect of duration of illness and antipsychotics on subcortical volumes in schizophrenia: Analysis of 778 subjects
BackgroundThe effect of duration of illness and antipsychotic medication on the volumes of subcortical structures in schizophrenia is inconsistent among previous reports. We implemented a large sample analysis utilizing clinical data from 11 institutions in a previous meta-analysis.MethodsImaging and clinical data of 778 schizophrenia subjects were taken from a prospective meta-analysis conducted by the COCORO consortium in Japan. The effect of duration of illness and daily dose and type of antipsychotics were assessed using the linear mixed effect model where the volumes of subcortical structures computed by FreeSurfer were used as a dependent variable and age, sex, duration of illness, daily dose of antipsychotics and intracranial volume were used as independent variables, and the type of protocol was incorporated as a random effect for intercept. The statistical significance of fixed-effect of dependent variable was assessed.ResultsDaily dose of antipsychotics was positively associated with left globus pallidus volume and negatively associated with right hippocampus. It was also positively associated with laterality index of globus pallidus. Duration of illness was positively associated with bilateral globus pallidus volumes. Type of antipsychotics did not have any effect on the subcortical volumes.DiscussionA large sample size, uniform data collection methodology and robust statistical analysis are strengths of the current study. This result suggests that we need special attention to discuss about relationship between subcortical regional brain volumes and pathophysiology of schizophrenia because regional brain volumes may be affected by antipsychotic medication
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White matter microstructural alterations across four major psychiatric disorders : mega-analysis study in 2937 individuals
Identifying both the commonalities and differences in brain structures among psychiatric disorders is important for understanding the pathophysiology. Recently, the ENIGMA-Schizophrenia DTI Working Group performed a large-scale meta-analysis and reported widespread white matter microstructural alterations in schizophrenia; however, no similar cross-disorder study has been carried out to date. Here, we conducted mega-analyses comparing white matter microstructural differences between healthy comparison subjects (HCS; N = 1506) and patients with schizophrenia (N = 696), bipolar disorder (N = 211), autism spectrum disorder (N = 126), or major depressive disorder (N = 398; total N = 2937 from 12 sites). In comparison with HCS, we found that schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and autism spectrum disorder share similar white matter microstructural differences in the body of the corpus callosum; schizophrenia and bipolar disorder featured comparable changes in the limbic system, such as the fornix and cingulum. By comparison, alterations in tracts connecting neocortical areas, such as the uncinate fasciculus, were observed only in schizophrenia. No significant difference was found in major depressive disorder. In a direct comparison between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, there were no significant differences. Significant differences between schizophrenia/bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder were found in the limbic system, which were similar to the differences in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder relative to HCS. While schizophrenia and bipolar disorder may have similar pathological characteristics, the biological characteristics of major depressive disorder may be close to those of HCS. Our findings provide insights into nosology and encourage further investigations of shared and unique pathophysiology of psychiatric disorders
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The Role of Socially Responsible Investment in Global Environmental Governance: A Critical Discourse Analysis
1. Purpose:The role of SRI as a private regime is under-studied, and the significance of its structural and discursive effect on global environmental governance is under-theorized. This dissertation aims to theorize the practical and political impact of socially responsible investment (SRI) in global environmental governance. The research assumes that SRI is becoming a powerful transnational institution that influences corporate activities and public discourse on sustainability while creating social and ecological value and knowledge within the conventional financial paradigm. The research hypothesizes that SRI would not only directly impact corporate and environmental practice and behavior (i.e., practical influence) but also implicitly define and disseminate how global financial markets measure ecological and social value and possibly construct an informal regime that shapes the norms and standards of sustainability (i.e., political/discursive influence). 2. Methods:The research engages in process tracing to unpack a complex interaction in the causal mechanism of the regime impact. The study frames SRI as an emerging private regime in global environmental governance (GEG). It defines the regime’s ‘site’ (area of governance) and ‘mode’ (enforcement mechanism) to analyze how SRI institution functions to regulate globalized environmental problems and how they evolved over the past decades. Critical discourse analysis is used to evaluate the emerging sustainability value among the standard setters and practitioners and to present the causal linkage between the change in the financial market landscape and sustainability value. The analysis utilizes primary sources (e.g., company reports, industrial journals, marketing materials, accounting documents, journalistic articles) and academic papers in the field of business and finance (e.g., business ethics and sustainable finance) to evaluate how norms and values are constructed and reflected in the regime practices.3. Findings:The research finds that the rise of the fiduciary institution in the 1990s (fiduciary capitalism) and the associated norm and rules on fiduciaries shaped the ‘site’ of the modern SRI. Along with site change, the regime mode (the norm, value, and practice) shifted its focus from the ecological and moral value to the financial outcome, reflecting the interest of fiduciary institutions. It creates incoherency between the sustainability rhetoric and enforcement practice within the regime, which produces systemic constraints in the enforcement mechanism and ultimately impacts the regime’s net results.4. Implications/Contributions:The research contributes a case study to understand why market mechanisms have been far less successful than their proponents argue yet persist as influential governance institutions. Using the case of SRI, this research provides a theory to explain the systemic constraints in the current dominant GEG paradigm. It also offers a redefinition of “responsibility” as in “socially responsible investment” to prevent the terms from becoming an empty source of justification
Lipid and Energy Metabolism of the Gut Microbiota Is Associated with the Response to Probiotic Bifidobacterium breve Strain for Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms in Schizophrenia
A recent meta-analysis found that probiotics have moderate-to-large beneficial effects on depressive symptoms in patients with psychiatric disorders. However, it remains unclear how the baseline gut microbiota before probiotic administration influences the host's response to probiotics. Therefore, we aimed to determine whether the predicted functional profile of the gut microbiota influences the effectiveness of probiotic treatment in patients with schizophrenia. A total of 29 patients with schizophrenia consumed Bifidobacterium breve A-1 (synonym B. breve MCC1274) for 4 weeks. We considered patients who showed a 25% or more reduction in the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale total score at 4 weeks from baseline to be "responders " and those who did not to be "non-responders ". We predicted the gut microbial functional genes based on 16S rRNA gene sequences and applied the linear discriminant analysis effect size method to determine the gut microbial functional genes most likely to explain the differences between responders and non-responders at baseline. The results showed that lipid and energy metabolism was elevated at baseline in responders (n = 12) compared to non-responders (n = 17). These findings highlight the importance of assessing the gut microbial functional genes at baseline before probiotic therapy initiation in patients with psychiatric disorders.</p
The effect of duration of illness and antipsychotics on subcortical volumes in schizophrenia : Analysis of 778 subjects
Background: The effect of duration of illness and antipsychotic medication on the volumes of subcortical structures in schizophrenia is inconsistent among previous reports. We implemented a large sample analysis utilizing clinical data from 11 institutions in a previous meta-analysis. Methods: Imaging and clinical data of 778 schizophrenia subjects were taken from a prospective meta-analysis conducted by the COCORO consortium in Japan. The effect of duration of illness and daily dose and type of antipsychotics were assessed using the linear mixed effect model where the volumes of subcortical structures computed by FreeSurfer were used as a dependent variable and age, sex, duration of illness, daily dose of antipsychotics and intracranial volume were used as independent variables, and the type of protocol was incorporated as a random effect for intercept. The statistical significance of fixed-effect of dependent variable was assessed. Results: Daily dose of antipsychotics was positively associated with left globus pallidus volume and negatively associated with right hippocampus. It was also positively associated with laterality index of globus pallidus. Duration of illness was positively associated with bilateral globus pallidus volumes. Type of antipsychotics did not have any effect on the subcortical volumes. Discussion: A large sample size, uniform data collection methodology and robust statistical analysis are strengths of the current study. This result suggests that we need special attention to discuss about relationship between subcortical regional brain volumes and pathophysiology of schizophrenia because regional brain volumes may be affected by antipsychotic medication