2021
Schizophrenia and the Environment: Within-Person Analyses May be Required to Yield Evidence of Unconfounded and Causal Association—The Example of Cannabis and Psychosis
van Os J, Pries L, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Bak M, Wittchen H, Rutten B, Guloksuz S. Schizophrenia and the Environment: Within-Person Analyses May be Required to Yield Evidence of Unconfounded and Causal Association—The Example of Cannabis and Psychosis. Schizophrenia Bulletin 2021, 47: 594-603. PMID: 33693921, PMCID: PMC8084443, DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbab019.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsFixed-effects modelCannabis usePsychotic experiencesGeneral population cohortRandom-effects modelMental health outcomesRisk factorsTime-varying confoundersProspective associationsPopulation cohortHealth outcomesOwn controlCausal associationPsychosisCannabisLongitudinal studyAssociationBetween-person levelConfoundersCohortIncidenceSchizophrenia
2020
Association of Recent Stressful Life Events With Mental and Physical Health in the Context of Genomic and Exposomic Liability for Schizophrenia
Pries L, van Os J, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Bak M, Lin B, van Eijk K, Kenis G, Richards A, O’Donovan M, Luykx J, Rutten B, Guloksuz S. Association of Recent Stressful Life Events With Mental and Physical Health in the Context of Genomic and Exposomic Liability for Schizophrenia. JAMA Psychiatry 2020, 77: 1296-1304. PMID: 32805017, PMCID: PMC7711318, DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2020.2304.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsRecent stressful life eventsStressful life eventsAssociations of SLEsPoor physical healthMental health outcomesHealth outcomesPhysical healthGeneral populationPopulation-based prospective cohort studyPRS-SCZNetherlands Mental Health SurveyES-SCZMental healthProspective cohort studyIncidence Study-2Modifiable environmental factorsAdulthood stressful life eventsMental Health SurveyDutch general populationPoor mental healthPopulation-based health outcomesLife eventsCohort studyMean ageHealth SurveyPolygenic liability for schizophrenia and childhood adversity influences daily‐life emotion dysregulation and psychosis proneness
Pries L, Klingenberg B, Menne‐Lothmann C, Decoster J, van Winkel R, Collip D, Delespaul P, De Hert M, Derom C, Thiery E, Jacobs N, Wichers M, Cinar O, Lin B, Luykx J, Rutten B, van Os J, Guloksuz S. Polygenic liability for schizophrenia and childhood adversity influences daily‐life emotion dysregulation and psychosis proneness. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 2020, 141: 465-475. PMID: 32027017, PMCID: PMC7318228, DOI: 10.1111/acps.13158.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDaily life stressorsChildhood adversityEmotion dysregulationPositive affectPsychosis pronenessMomentary mental statesEcological momentary assessmentChildhood Trauma QuestionnaireGene-environment correlationNegative affectMental statesMomentary assessmentPsychosis expressionTrauma QuestionnaireAdversityAffectYoung adultsStressorsNovel evidencePolygenic liabilityInteraction effectsPronenessSchizophreniaHigh PRSState domain
2014
Clinical Features of Night Eating Syndrome among Depressed Patients
Kucukgoncu S, Tek C, Bestepe E, Musket C, Guloksuz S. Clinical Features of Night Eating Syndrome among Depressed Patients. European Eating Disorders Review 2014, 22: 102-108. PMID: 24436087, DOI: 10.1002/erv.2280.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAdultAnxiety DisordersBody Mass IndexCircadian RhythmDepressionFeeding and Eating DisordersFeeding BehaviorFemaleHumansInterviews as TopicMaleMiddle AgedObesityPersonality InventoryPrevalencePsychiatric Status Rating ScalesQuality of LifeRegression AnalysisSocioeconomic FactorsStress, PsychologicalSurveys and QuestionnairesSyndromeYoung AdultConceptsPittsburgh Sleep Quality IndexBeck Depression InventoryBeck Anxiety InventoryClinical featuresDepressed patientsDepression InventoryNon-NE patientsNight eating syndromeSleep Quality IndexSample of patientsAnxiety InventorySeverity of anxietyNight Eating QuestionnaireSocio-demographic formSmoking statusDaytime dysfunctionSleep qualityDepressed outpatientsPatientsSyndromeEating QuestionnaireStudy sampleBMISignificant differencesDepression