2024
Perinatal and neonatal factors and mental disorders in children and adolescents: looking for the contributions of the early environment to common and dissociable aspects of psychopathology
Leusin F, Damiano R, Mendes L, Hoffmann M, Manfro A, Pan P, Gadelha A, de Jesus Mari J, Manfro G, Miguel E, Rohde L, Bressan R, Salum G. Perinatal and neonatal factors and mental disorders in children and adolescents: looking for the contributions of the early environment to common and dissociable aspects of psychopathology. European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 2024, 1-11. PMID: 38519607, DOI: 10.1007/s00787-024-02402-0.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMental disordersPsychiatric disordersCo-occurrence of mental disordersPresence of mental disordersDomains of psychopathologyYears of age childrenModel psychiatric disordersPsychiatric disorder diagnosisOverall psychopathologyBifactor modelDisorder diagnosisPsychopathologyBehavioral assessmentP-factorEarly environmentLow level of maternal educationLevel of maternal educationLow socioeconomic statusDisordersNeonatal factorsPrimary caregiversAge childrenAssociated with male sexSocioeconomic statusMaternal education
2020
Testing the Stability and Validity of an Executive Dysfunction Classification Using Task-Based Assessment in Children and Adolescents
Manfro A, Pine D, Polanczyk G, Santoro M, Smoller J, Koenen K, Mari J, Pan P, Zugman A, Schäfer J, Belangero S, Gosmann N, Simioni A, Hoexter M, Miguel E, Gadelha A, Rohde L, Salum G. Testing the Stability and Validity of an Executive Dysfunction Classification Using Task-Based Assessment in Children and Adolescents. Journal Of The American Academy Of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 2020, 60: 1501-1512. PMID: 33346031, PMCID: PMC10259767, DOI: 10.1016/j.jaac.2020.11.016.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPolygenic risk scoresPsychiatric diagnosisExecutive functionHigher schizophrenia polygenic risk scoresExecutive dysfunctionHigh Risk Cohort StudySmaller intracranial volumeHigher attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorderAttention-deficit/hyperactivity disorderSchizophrenia polygenic risk scoresCortical surface areaDichotomized ageCohort studyFunctional impairmentRisk scoreDomains of psychopathologyBrain regionsIntracranial volumeRelevant outcomesBrain structuresHyperactivity disorderCognitive tasksLatent class analysisLower chanceDiagnosis
2016
Socioeconomic Disadvantage Moderates the Association between Peripheral Biomarkers and Childhood Psychopathology
Mansur R, Cunha G, Asevedo E, Zugman A, Zeni-Graiff M, Rios A, Sethi S, Maurya P, Levandowski M, Gadelha A, Pan P, Stertz L, Belangero S, Anna M, Teixeira A, Mari J, Rohde L, Miguel E, McIntyre R, Grassi-Oliveira R, Bressan R, Brietzke E. Socioeconomic Disadvantage Moderates the Association between Peripheral Biomarkers and Childhood Psychopathology. PLOS ONE 2016, 11: e0160455. PMID: 27489945, PMCID: PMC4973983, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160455.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBrain-derived neurotrophic factorThiobarbituric acid reactive substancesMental health problemsInterleukin-6Serum levelsHealth problemsSocioeconomic disadvantagePeripheral biomarkersSerum biomarkersOxidative stress markersAcid reactive substancesCross-sectional designChild Behavior Checklist DSMNeurotrophic factorHigher socioeconomic disadvantageSocio-demographic characteristicsBiomarker levelsNeurotrophic proteinsDomains of psychopathologyStress markersSpecific SubscaleCumulative risk modelBiomarkersMultiple biological systemsPathological neurodevelopment