2006
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-006-0542-9
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fMRI predictors of treatment outcome in pediatric anxiety disorders

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Cited by 148 publications
(122 citation statements)
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“…Also, participants with deficits in incidental emotion regulation benefited more overall, regardless of group, in terms of skin conductance during recovery. The findings for heart rate during anticipation and recovery and for skin conductance during recovery support the compensation hypothesis, which suggests that those with deficits will benefit more from an intervention that compensates that deficit, and are consistent with previous research showing that physiological activation (Davies et al, 2015;McClure et al, 2007) and emotional reactivity during a behavioral task (Niles et al, 2013) predict greater improvement following treatment. These findings are of particular interest because participants with more difficulty regulating emotion show decreased connectivity between areas of the PFC and the amygdala (Banks, Eddy, Angstadt, Nathan, & Phan, 2007).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…Also, participants with deficits in incidental emotion regulation benefited more overall, regardless of group, in terms of skin conductance during recovery. The findings for heart rate during anticipation and recovery and for skin conductance during recovery support the compensation hypothesis, which suggests that those with deficits will benefit more from an intervention that compensates that deficit, and are consistent with previous research showing that physiological activation (Davies et al, 2015;McClure et al, 2007) and emotional reactivity during a behavioral task (Niles et al, 2013) predict greater improvement following treatment. These findings are of particular interest because participants with more difficulty regulating emotion show decreased connectivity between areas of the PFC and the amygdala (Banks, Eddy, Angstadt, Nathan, & Phan, 2007).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Recent studies on depression and suicidality treatment have found support for both capitalization (Cheavens, Strunk, Lazarus, & Goldstein, 2012) and compensation (Wingate, Van Orden, JoinerJr., Williams, & David, 2005). Studies examining amygdala activation (McClure et al, 2007), emotional reactivity to evocative images (Niles, Mesri, Burklund, Lieberman, & Craske, 2013), and heart rate variability (Davies, Niles, Pittig, Arch, & Craske, 2015) as predictors of treatment outcome for anxiety patients, support a compensation model, with superior outcomes for patients with greater reactivity at baseline. We aimed to evaluate whether affect labeling would most benefit those with a deficit or with a strength in affect labeling at baseline.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consistent with this, activation in the amydala, involved in signaling the presence of threat, has been shown to predict response to treatment in anxiety (McClure et al, 2007a;Whalen et al, 2008); however, results have been inconsistent. Less amygdala reactivity in adults with GAD predicted better response to venlafaxine (Whalen et al, 2008), yet greater amygdala activation predicted better response to CBT or fluoxetine in anxious youth (McClure et al, 2007a), and other studies have failed to find amygdala effects (Doehrmann et al, 2013;Klumpp et al, 2013;Nitschke et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…Consistent with this, activation in the amydala, involved in signaling the presence of threat, has been shown to predict response to treatment in anxiety (McClure et al, 2007a;Whalen et al, 2008); however, results have been inconsistent. Less amygdala reactivity in adults with GAD predicted better response to venlafaxine (Whalen et al, 2008), yet greater amygdala activation predicted better response to CBT or fluoxetine in anxious youth (McClure et al, 2007a), and other studies have failed to find amygdala effects (Doehrmann et al, 2013;Klumpp et al, 2013;Nitschke et al, 2009). Other work has indicated that greater activation to threatening faces in visual processing regions (ie, occipital and temporal gyri) involved in detecting and appraising emotional cues predicted better response to CBT among adults with social anxiety disorder (Doehrmann et al, 2013;Klumpp et al, 2013), possibly indicating greater initial threat reactivity which can be modified by treatment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 71%
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