Int J Neuropsychopharmacol
June 2001
Following a 0.9 mg/kg methylphenidate loading dose, serial plasma level determinations, self-scored mood ratings, and measures of motor persistence were gathered on eight previously unmedicated boys with attention deficit disorder with hyperactivity (ADHD) during a 9-h period. The measures were repeated using the same loading dose after 6 months of maintenance treatment with methylphenidate (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Psychiatry
February 1996
This study investigates cortisol and ACTH (corticotropin) responses to an infusion of human CRH (corticotropin-releasing hormone) in prepubertal children with major depressive disorder (MDD). Following a period of 24 hours of adaptation to the laboratory environment with an intravenous catheter in place, 34 children with MDD and 22 healthy controls received 1 microgram/kg of human CRH at 5:00 PM. Blood samples for cortisol and ACTH were measured at baseline and post-CRH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry
December 1995
Objective: To examine whether depression aggregates in the families of depressed adolescents and to determine whether clinical features and/or comorbid syndromes in the depressed adolescents change the risk of psychopathology in relatives.
Method: Lifetime prevalence rates of psychopathology in the first-degree (n = 228) and second-degree (n = 736) relatives of 76 adolescents with major depressive disorder (MDD) and the first-degree (n = 107) and second-degree (n = 323) relatives of 34 normal control adolescents were assessed by the Family History-Research Diagnostic Criteria (FH-RDC) method using the parent/guardian as the family informant.
Results: Compared with the first-degree relatives of normal controls, the relatives of depressed adolescents had significantly higher lifetime rates of MDD (25% versus 13%) and "any" of the FH-RDC psychiatric disorders (53% versus 36%).
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry
October 1994
Objective: Blunted stimulation of growth hormone (GH) secretion after pharmacological stimuli has been linked to depressive and anxiety disorders throughout the life span. This study sought to better characterize this dysregulation in prepubertal depression.
Method: GH regulation was compared in 38 medically healthy prepubertal children with current major depressive disorder and 19 control children who were medically and psychiatrically healthy.
Plasma prolactin concentrations were measured at 20-min intervals over a 24-hr period in 49 adolescents with major depressive disorder (MDD) and 39 normal control adolescents. Neither the pattern nor the amount of prolactin secretion was significantly different between these two groups. There were significant gender differences, with girls secreting more prolactin than boys, but no significant gender-by-diagnosis interactions were found.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF