Psychological models of mental disorders guide research into psychological and environmental factors that elicit and maintain mental disorders as well as interventions to reduce them. This paper addresses four areas. (1) Psychological models of mental disorders have become increasingly transdiagnostic, focusing on core cognitive endophenotypes of psychopathology from an integrative cognitive psychology perspective rather than offering explanations for unitary mental disorders. It is argued that psychological interventions for mental disorders will increasingly target specific cognitive dysfunctions rather than symptom-based mental disorders as a result. (2) Psychotherapy research still lacks a comprehensive conceptual framework that brings together the wide variety of findings, models and perspectives. Analysing the state-of-the-art in psychotherapy treatment research, "component analyses" aiming at an optimal identification of core ingredients and the mechanisms of change is highlighted as the core need towards improved efficacy and effectiveness of psychotherapy, and improved translation to routine care. (3) In order to provide more effective psychological interventions to children and adolescents, there is a need to develop new and/or improved psychotherapeutic interventions on the basis of developmental psychopathology research taking into account knowledge of mediators and moderators. Developmental neuroscience research might be instrumental to uncover associated aberrant brain processes in children and adolescents with mental health problems and to better examine mechanisms of their correction by means of psychotherapy and psychological interventions. (4) Psychotherapy research needs to broaden in terms of adoption of large-scale public health strategies and treatments that can be applied to more patients in a simpler and cost-effective way. Increased research on efficacy and moderators of Internet-based treatments and e-mental health tools (e.g. to support "real time" clinical decision-making to prevent treatment failure or relapse) might be one promising way forward.
Caspases play crucial roles in the inflammatory response and in the cell pathway leading to apoptosis. Caspase 1 (ICE), 2 (Nedd2), 3 (CPP32), 6 (Mch2) and 8 (Mch5, FLICE) expression was examined using immunohistochemistry in the brains of rats and gerbils following systemic administration of kainic acid (KA). The distribution of caspase expression was compared with the distribution of c-Fos expression, a transcription factor that is produced in response to the excitotoxic insult. Strong caspase 2 immunoreactivity was found in microglia up to 6 h following KA administration. Focal strong expression of caspases 1, 2, 3, 6 and 8 was observed in astrocytes and neurons, from 12 to 48 h after KA injection, in areas in which a number of neurons were committed to die. This distribution was in contrast with the generalised distribution of c-Fos expression following KA administration. Only a minority of neurons in the entorhinal cortex, amygdala and hilus, but a majority of neurons in selected thalamic nuclei, exhibited strong caspase expression in KA-treated rats. Similar findings, although minimised, were observed in KA-treated gerbils. Double-labelling caspase immunohistochemistry and in situ end-labelling of nuclear DNA fragmentation disclosed co-localisation of strong caspase expression and nuclear DNA breaks in a small percentage of neurons but no co-localisation in astrocytes. Western blots of entorhinal cortex and neocortex homogenates showed cleavage of certain caspase substrates in KA-treated rats. The intensity of the bands corresponding to lamin B and protein kinase C-delta was decreased in the entorhinal cortex following KA administration. Several bands appeared in the entorhinal cortex and neocortex paragraph signin Western blots processed for the demonstration of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), thus indicating that other proteases, in addition to caspases, cleaved PARP following KA administration. Taken together, these findings indicate that KA excitotoxicity triggers caspase expression which, although predominant in regions subjected to irreversible cell damage, has only a weak association with the presence of nuclear DNA breaks and neuron cell death. Although these results suggest caspase activation, further studies have to be performed to elucidate whether caspase activation plays a crucial role in KA excitotoxicity.
Psychology as a science offers an enormous diversity of theories, principles, and methodological approaches to understand mental health, abnormal functions and behaviours and mental disorders. A selected overview of the scope, current topics as well as strength and gaps in Psychological Science may help to depict the advances needed to inform future research agendas specifically on mental health and mental disorders. From an integrative psychological perspective, most maladaptive health behaviours and mental disorders can be conceptualized as the result of developmental dysfunctions of psychological functions and processes as well as neurobiological and genetic processes that interact with the environment. The paper presents and discusses an integrative translational model, linking basic and experimental research with clinical research as well as population-based prospective-longitudinal studies. This model provides a conceptual framework to identify how individual vulnerabilities interact with environment over time, and promote critical behaviours that might act as proximal risk factors for ill-health and mental disorders. Within the models framework, such improved knowledge is also expected to better delineate targeted preventive and therapeutic interventions that prevent further escalation in early stages before the full disorder and further complications thereof develop. In contrast to conventional "personalized medicine" that typically targets individual (genetic) variation of patients who already have developed a disease to improve medical treatment, the proposed framework model, linked to a concerted funding programme of the "Science of Behaviour Change", carries the promise of improved diagnosis, treatment and prevention of health-risk behaviour constellations as well as mental disorders.
Massive abnormalities of parvalbumin-immunoreactive cortical neurons were observed in the cerebral biopsy samples of 3 patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Immunoreactive cells had reduced and short, often fragmented, dendrites, and large numbers of dendritic varicosities were observed. Since parvalbumin-immunoreactive neurons are the most important inhibitory cells in the cerebral cortex, the damage to these neurons may account, in part, for the impaired cortical function, and may play a role in the appearance of myoclonus and electroencephalographic patterns in patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
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