2024
Causal Pathways Between the Acute Experience of Violence During Pregnancy and Fetal Intrauterine Growth Restriction: A Cohort Study
Blumrich L, Silva L, Barreto V, Rohde L, Polanczyk G, Miguel E, Grisi S, Fleitlich-Bilyk B, Ferraro A. Causal Pathways Between the Acute Experience of Violence During Pregnancy and Fetal Intrauterine Growth Restriction: A Cohort Study. Journal Of Women's Health 2024, 33: 765-773. PMID: 38551182, DOI: 10.1089/jwh.2023.0645.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchIntrauterine growth restrictionAssociated with intrauterine growth restrictionGrowth restrictionProspective population-based birth cohortCausal pathwaysFetal intrauterine growth restrictionPopulation-based birth cohortExperiences of violenceNegative health consequencesAcute experimentsHealth consequences of violenceEmergency careGestational depressionGestational trimesterLow birthweightBirth cohortAlcohol consumptionCohort studyBlood pressurePregnancyConsequences of violencePath analysis modelMediation analysisCohortAdequate fit
2020
Population neuroscience: challenges and opportunities for psychiatric research in low- and middle-income countries
Cirillo A, Diniz E, Gadelha A, Asevedo E, Axelrud L, Miguel E, Rohde L, Bressan R, Pan P, de J. Mari J. Population neuroscience: challenges and opportunities for psychiatric research in low- and middle-income countries. Brazilian Journal Of Psychiatry 2020, 42: 442-448. PMID: 32267341, PMCID: PMC7430393, DOI: 10.1590/1516-4446-2019-0761.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMiddle-income countriesHigh-income countriesPopulation neuroscienceLongitudinal cohort studyCohort studyCohort designPsychiatric disordersElectronic searchMEDLINE databaseSystematic reviewBrain functioningCohortPsychiatric researchLMICsPsychiatry researchSearch criteriaKey studiesEMBASEEpidemiologyStudy
2019
Relative Age and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Data From Three Epidemiological Cohorts and a Meta-analysis
Caye A, Petresco S, de Barros A, Bressan R, Gadelha A, Gonçalves H, Manfro A, Matijasevich A, Menezes A, Miguel E, Munhoz T, Pan P, Salum G, Santos I, Kieling C, Rohde L. Relative Age and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Data From Three Epidemiological Cohorts and a Meta-analysis. Journal Of The American Academy Of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 2019, 59: 990-997. PMID: 31442562, DOI: 10.1016/j.jaac.2019.07.939.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsYounger ageADHD diagnosisMeta-AnalysisADHD symptomsPelotas cohortCommunity-based cohortPopulation-based cohortAttention-deficit/hyperactivity disorderHigh-risk studiesRelative young ageAttention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptomsWeb of ScienceHyperactivity disorder symptomsEpidemiology guidelinesEligible recordsRelative riskObservational studyHigh riskPsychiatric disordersEpidemiological cohortCohortSymptomsDiagnosisEffect estimatesHyperactivity disorder
2015
ORBITOFRONTAL THICKNESS AS A MEASURE FOR TREATMENT RESPONSE PREDICTION IN OBSESSIVE–COMPULSIVE DISORDER
Hoexter M, Diniz J, Lopes A, Batistuzzo M, Shavitt R, Dougherty D, Duran F, Bressan R, Busatto G, Miguel E, Sato J. ORBITOFRONTAL THICKNESS AS A MEASURE FOR TREATMENT RESPONSE PREDICTION IN OBSESSIVE–COMPULSIVE DISORDER. Depression And Anxiety 2015, 32: 900-908. PMID: 26032588, DOI: 10.1002/da.22380.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTreatment-naïve OCD patientsObsessive-compulsive disorderTreatment responseIndependent cohortOCD patientsOFC thicknessRefractory OCD patientsTreatment-naïve patientsOrbitofrontal cortex thicknessSecond independent cohortLogistic regression modelsBaseline thicknessClinical trialsTreatment outcomesInitial cohortClinical utilityOrbitofrontal thicknessIneffective treatmentPatientsCohortMedial OFCNeuroimaging techniquesMorphometric biomarkersBiomarkersCortex thickness
2014
An Inherited Small Microdeletion at 15q13.3 in a Patient with Early- Onset Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Cappi C, Hounie A, Mariani D, Diniz J, Silva A, Reis V, Busso A, Silva A, Fidalgo F, Rogatto S, Miguel E, Krepischi A, Brentani H. An Inherited Small Microdeletion at 15q13.3 in a Patient with Early- Onset Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. PLOS ONE 2014, 9: e110198. PMID: 25303678, PMCID: PMC4193873, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110198.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAge of OnsetCase-Control StudiesChildChild, PreschoolChromosome DeletionChromosomes, Human, Pair 15Comparative Genomic HybridizationDNA Copy Number VariationsFetal ProteinsForminsGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseGenome-Wide Association StudyHumansMaleMicrofilament ProteinsNuclear ProteinsObsessive-Compulsive DisorderConceptsObsessive-compulsive disorderOnset obsessive-compulsive disorderEarly-onset obsessive-compulsive disorderAttention deficit hyperactivity disorderArray-based comparative genomic hybridizationNeurodevelopmental psychiatric disordersDeficit hyperactivity disorderGlutamatergic involvementMale patientsGlutamatergic systemPsychiatric disordersHealthy individualsPatientsHyperactivity disorderGenetic riskComparative genomic hybridizationDisordersSmall microdeletionsChromosome 15q13.3Present studyGenomic hybridizationMicrodeletionCohort