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1.
JAACAP Open ; 2(1): 45-54, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38699439

ABSTRACT

Objective: Irritability, the tendency to react with anger, and the experience of negative life events (NLE) have independently been associated with the emergence of anxiety and depression. Here, we investigate how irritability and cumulative effects of NLE interactively predict the course of anxiety and depression in the context of common psychiatric disorders. Method: 432 youth with no psychiatric diagnosis, or a diagnosis of an anxiety disorder, Attention-Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), or Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (DMDD), participated in this study. At baseline, we assessed NLE, parent and youth reports of irritability and anxiety, and youth reports of depression. Symptoms were annually reassessed for up to four years. Results: In youth without psychiatric diagnoses but with elevated baseline irritability, the presence of NLE predicted decreasing anxiety, while the absence of NLE predicted increasing anxiety. In youth with an anxiety disorder, elevated baseline irritability predicted decreasing anxiety independent of NLE, while a large cumulative effect of NLE predicted increasing depression. NLE predicted persisting mild anxiety in ADHD and persisting mild depressive symptoms in DMDD. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that, particularly in non-referred samples, NLE might moderate the relationship between irritability and future anxiety such that irritability/ anger in the context of NLE can positively affect the course of anxiety. Future work replicating this finding while repeatedly measuring NLE and rigorously controlling for potentially confounding effects of treatment, is warranted.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38452811

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Irritability, inattention, and hyperactivity, which are common presentations of childhood psychopathology, have been associated with perturbed white matter microstructure. However, similar tracts have been implicated across these phenotypes; such non-specificity could be rooted in their high co-occurrence. To address this problem, we use a bifactor approach parsing unique and shared components of irritability, inattention, and hyperactivity, which we then relate to white matter microstructure. METHOD: We developed a bifactor model based on the Conners Comprehensive Behavioral Rating Scale in a sample of youth with no psychiatric diagnosis or a primary diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder or disruptive mood dysregulation disorder (n = 521). We applied the model to an independent yet sociodemographically and clinically comparable sample (n = 152), in which we tested associations between latent variables and fractional anisotropy (FA). RESULTS: The bifactor model fit well (comparative fit index = 0.99; root mean square error of approximation = 0.07). The shared factor was positively associated with an independent measure of impulsivity (ρS = 0.88, pFDR < .001) and negatively related to whole-brain FA (r = -0.20), as well as FA of the corticospinal tract (all pFWE < .05). FA increased with age and deviation from this curve, indicating that altered white matter maturation was associated with the hyperactivity-specific factor (r = -0.16, pFWE < .05). Inattention-specific and irritability-specific factors were not linked to FA. CONCLUSION: Perturbed white matter microstructure may represent a shared neurobiological mechanism of irritability, inattention, and hyperactivity related to heightened impulsivity. Furthermore, hyperactivity might be uniquely associated with a delay in white matter maturation.

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