2024
The trajectory of anxiety symptoms during the transition from childhood to young adulthood is predicted by IQ and sex, but not polygenic risk scores
Salto A, Salum G, Hoffmann M, Santoro M, Zugman A, Pan P, Belangero S, Ito L, Doretto V, Croci M, Brañas M, de Giusti C, Da Silva‐Jr F, Ribeiro S, Miguel E, Leckman J. The trajectory of anxiety symptoms during the transition from childhood to young adulthood is predicted by IQ and sex, but not polygenic risk scores. JCPP Advances 2024 DOI: 10.1002/jcv2.12268.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAnxiety symptomsIntelligence quotientTrajectory class membershipPolygenic risk scoresTrajectory classesLate adolescenceCourse of anxiety symptomsScreen for Child Anxiety Related DisordersTrajectories of anxiety symptomsBrazilian High-Risk CohortYoung adulthoodEffect of intelligence quotientAnxiety related disordersHigh-decreasing classClass membershipLongitudinal studyConfirmatory factor analysisGrowth mixture modelingIncidence of anxiety symptomsInternalizing symptomatologyLow-increasing classHigher IQCognitive abilitiesAnxiety riskFactor analysis
2023
The association between duration of breastfeeding and the trajectory of brain development from childhood to young adulthood: an 8-year longitudinal study
Grevet L, Teixeira D, Pan P, Jackowski A, Zugman A, Miguel E, Rohde L, Salum G. The association between duration of breastfeeding and the trajectory of brain development from childhood to young adulthood: an 8-year longitudinal study. European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 2023, 33: 1863-1873. PMID: 37650992, DOI: 10.1007/s00787-023-02283-9.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchOverall cortical thicknessDuration of breastfeedingTotal intracranial volumeCortical thicknessBrain developmentIntracranial volumeLong-term health benefitsHealth benefitsHigh-risk cohortTotal brain volumeGlobal cortical thicknessStructural brain developmentMental health benefitsMultiple confoundersCortical areasMRI scansBrain areasBrain volumeBreastfeedingMRI T1Time pointsBrain measuresEarly adulthoodYoung adulthoodLongitudinal studyLongitudinal invariance of psychotic experiences in children and adolescents: What do the data tell us?
Barbosa M, Machado V, Ziebold C, Moriyama T, Bressan R, Pan P, Rohde L, Miguel E, Fonseca L, Van Os J, Gadelha A. Longitudinal invariance of psychotic experiences in children and adolescents: What do the data tell us? Schizophrenia Research 2023, 255: 33-40. PMID: 36958268, DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2023.03.003.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPsychotic experiencesTime pointsHigh-risk cohortPrevious systematic reviewDifferent age groupsDifferent time pointsBaseline evaluationLifetime psychotic experiencesPositive symptomsSystematic reviewAge groupsPerceptual abnormalitiesLongitudinal studyBrazilian High-Risk CohortPsychosis pronenessGood model fit indicesThree-factor solutionChildren
2021
Neuroimaging Studies of Nonsuicidal Self-Injury in Youth: A Systematic Review
Brañas M, Croci M, Salto A, Doretto V, Martinho E, Macedo M, Miguel E, Roever L, Pan P. Neuroimaging Studies of Nonsuicidal Self-Injury in Youth: A Systematic Review. Life 2021, 11: 729. PMID: 34440473, PMCID: PMC8399885, DOI: 10.3390/life11080729.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchNonsuicidal Self-InjuryTask-based fMRIFunctional neuroimaging techniquesNeural underpinningsEmotional processingNSSI behaviorsFuture longitudinal studiesSelf-InjuryNeuroimaging techniquesNSSIDevelopmental aspectsLongitudinal studyControl processStructural MRINeural pathwaysAPA PsycInfoSystematic reviewYouth populationSuicide preventionYouthSuicide attemptsJoanna Briggs InstitutePotential circuitPRISMA statement guidelinesGoogle Scholar databases
2018
Obsessive-compulsive symptoms in children with first degree relatives diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder
Chacon P, Bernardes E, Faggian L, Batistuzzo M, Moriyama T, Miguel E, Polanczyk G. Obsessive-compulsive symptoms in children with first degree relatives diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Brazilian Journal Of Psychiatry 2018, 40: 388-393. PMID: 29898190, PMCID: PMC6899383, DOI: 10.1590/1516-4446-2017-2321.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPresence of OCSObsessive-compulsive disorderFirst-degree relativesObsessive-compulsive symptomsSocioeconomic statusImportant risk factorLow socioeconomic statusFuture longitudinal studiesClinical correlatesAssessed childrenRisk factorsDegree relativesFamily historySymptomsContamination/Longitudinal studyOCD diagnosisDisordersChildrenHigh rateFamily membersChildhoodCorrelatesStatus