This dissertation focuses on identifying neural mechanisms underlying social evaluations and self-views from a parent-adolescent perspective among adolescents with and without depression, and their... Show moreThis dissertation focuses on identifying neural mechanisms underlying social evaluations and self-views from a parent-adolescent perspective among adolescents with and without depression, and their parents. As part of RE-PAIR, affective and neural responses to praise and criticism about the adolescent child, and neural responses to reliving positive autobiographical memories were assessed, using ecologically valid fMRI-tasks. Particularly criticism seems to be highly salient to parents and adolescents, activating the salience network and decreasing mood. Both praise and reliving positive autobiographical memories activate areas important for self-referential processing in adolescents, which might reflect the ‘positive self’. Aberrant self-related processing when reliving autobiographical memories and increased sensitivity to parental criticism might be key underlying neural mechanisms in adolescent depression. By feeling more negatively, having more negative self-views, interpreting the environment as more negatively, memorizing past experiences in a more negative way, and focusing on negative events more often, adolescents with depression seem to have multiple negativity biases. These negativity biases are likely to negatively impact social relationships, potentially further reinforcing negative feelings and a negative self. Interventions exploring and strengthening the positive self, in particular the positive self aligning with the current self, might be useful for treating, or even preventing adolescent depression. Show less
The overarching goal of this dissertation was to investigate parenting processes in relation to affective well-being in families in the daily flow of life from different perspectives (i.e.,... Show moreThe overarching goal of this dissertation was to investigate parenting processes in relation to affective well-being in families in the daily flow of life from different perspectives (i.e., adolescent, mother, father), on different levels (i.e., objective, momentary, and daily), and in a clinical sample (families with an adolescent with a depression) in addition to community samples. Our findings underline the importance of daily parental warmth and criticism of mothers and fathers for adolescents’ well-being. In addition, we showed that adolescents, parents, and their perceptions of parenting influence each other and that becoming more attuned to each other’s intention and needs is essential. Importantly, we consistently demonstrated that not only the extent and direction of the dynamic processes between parenting and affect in daily life differs between, but also within persons and families. This stresses the need for research focusing on individual processes and combining quantitative with qualitative measures. The use of more idiographic approaches would not only enable gaining more insight into these differences between individuals, but also contribute to identifying parenting practices that work for almost all adolescents. This would facilitate the development of interventions combining universal parenting principles with suggestions for tailoring it to individual- or family-specific situations. Show less
This thesis aimed to lay the foundation for a new set of Dutch mental health instruments to measure depression and anxiety in an efficient, reliable, valid, and responsive manner. More specifically... Show moreThis thesis aimed to lay the foundation for a new set of Dutch mental health instruments to measure depression and anxiety in an efficient, reliable, valid, and responsive manner. More specifically, the Dutch-Flemish PROMIS adult v1.0 item banks for Depression and Anxiety were psychometrically evaluated for computerized adaptive test (CAT) administration in the Dutch clinical and general population. CAT is a modern methodology that can be used to develop instruments that measure both efficiently and reliably as only the most appropriate questions are administered, and assessment terminates as soon as sufficient reliability is achieved. For the PROMIS CAT instruments, this was demonstrated in the thesis: measuring depression and anxiety in Dutch persons was highly efficient and reliable. Moreover, the CAT instruments were shown to measure depression and anxiety sufficiently responsive and valid as well. This even includes longitudinal validity, which has barely been studied for other Dutch mental health instruments. Overall, it was concluded that the new instruments are an improvement over available instruments. Therefore, using the PROMIS CAT instruments in clinical practice may lead to more efficient and reliable measurement that supports professionals and patients in evaluating patients' treatment. Show less
This dissertation describes the findings of six studies on mental health problems in the family context, specifically focusing on the associations with the parent-child relationship, parenting... Show moreThis dissertation describes the findings of six studies on mental health problems in the family context, specifically focusing on the associations with the parent-child relationship, parenting behaviors and experiences of childhood maltreatment. The aim is to better understand the risk factors, development and transmission of common psychological problems in order to contribute to prevention and treatment strategies for common psychological problems such as anxiety and depression.Overall, the findings underline the importance of the family context in the development and levels of mental health problems. In addition to the impact of one's own negative parenting experiences, including lack of warmth and experiences of emotional or physical abuse, negative parenting experiences of one's siblings are also associated with elevated anxiety and depressive symptom levels.We also found that externalizing problems of fathers and children have a negative impact on the parent-child interactions. In addition, we found that children with behavioral problems during early adolescence experience harsher parental discipline, even three years later.In the current treatment guidelines for common mental disorders, most therapies focus on the individual. An (additional) systemic approach and considering past and present family relationships in therapy, can be of additional value. For example, supporting families with interventions to improve the parent-child relationship can be helpful in the short and long term. Moreover, (early) treatment of psychological and behavioral problems of the parent or child might be beneficial for all family members. Show less
This PhD project revealed that the female hormonal status – including OC use – and stress vulnerability – as defined by the MR-haplotype – have practical implications in experimental psychological... Show moreThis PhD project revealed that the female hormonal status – including OC use – and stress vulnerability – as defined by the MR-haplotype – have practical implications in experimental psychological research. Furthermore, incorporation of these variables in models of emotional information processing may be of help in understanding and treating mood disorders in women. Namely, even small biases may affect information processing and may contribute to the resilience or proneness to mood-disorders.Our research was among the first to show that the genetic makeup of healthy women may play a role in the influence of the female hormonal status on emotional information processing. Healthy female MR-haplotype 1/3 carriers may be more prone to distress, and may also be more sensitive to (pharmacological) changes which may counteract or sustain their vulnerability. Consistently, we observed subtle markers of depressogenic side-effects of OC only in MR-haplotype 1/3 carriers. Our findings regarding the MR-haplotypes 2 carriers are generally in line with earlier observations. We observed that MR-haplotype 2 carriers – especially homozygotes – are the less susceptible, more optimistic and more rational individuals, also in ‘unstressed’ conditions. However, stress-related psychopathology is very heterogeneous by nature and proteins from multiple genes are likely to interact in the stress-susceptibility phenotype. Last but not least, we should not ignore that the increased vulnerability of women to mood disorders is the result of a plethora of biological, psychological and sociological factors.OC-users had lower affect variability and reduced sensitivity to interpersonal emotional cues. This may be experienced as either a stabilizing or a blunting effect of OC, perhaps depending on the individual’s appraisal. The lower depression scores of OC-users in our longitudinal study suggests a protective effect of monophasic OC on symptoms of reproductive depression. Future studies should investigate (former) OC-users in larger cohorts including novel users, satisfied users and ‘brand-switchers’ in order to control for the survivor effect. Show less
Struijs, S.Y.; Jong, P.J. de; Jeronimus, B.F.; Does, A.J.W. van der; Riese, H.; Spinhoven, P. 2021
BackgroundResearch in depression has progressed rapidly over the past four decades. Yet depression rates are not subsiding and treatment success is not improving. We examine the extent to which the... Show moreBackgroundResearch in depression has progressed rapidly over the past four decades. Yet depression rates are not subsiding and treatment success is not improving. We examine the extent to which the gap between science and practice is associated with the level of integration in how depression is considered in research and stakeholder-relevant documents.MethodsWe used a network-science perspective to analyze similar uses of depression relevant terms in the Google News corpus (approximately 1 billion words) and the Web of Science database (120 000 documents).ResultsThese analyses yielded consistent pictures of insular modules associated with: (1) patient/providers, (2) academics, and (3) industry. Within academia insular modules associated with psychology, general medical, and psychiatry/neuroscience/biology were also detected.ConclusionsThese analyses suggest that the domain of depression is fragmented, and that advancements of relevance to one stakeholder group (academics, industry, or patients) may not translate to the others. We consider potential causes and associated responses to this fragmentation that could help to unify and advance translation from research on depression to the clinic, largely involving harmonizing employed language, bridging conceptual domains, and increasing communication across stakeholder groups. Show less
Ter Avest, M.J.; Dusseldorp, E.; Huijbers, M.J.; Van Aalderen, J.R.; Cladder-Micus, M.B.; Spinhoven, P.; ... ; Speckens, A.E.M. 2019
This dissertation contains the results of an RCT into the effectiveness of an online self-help intervention for people living with HIV (PLWH) and depressive symptoms. Many PLWH suffer from... Show moreThis dissertation contains the results of an RCT into the effectiveness of an online self-help intervention for people living with HIV (PLWH) and depressive symptoms. Many PLWH suffer from depressive symptoms. Online interventions to treat depression may have benefits, such as less perceived stigma, a large reach and high accessibility. The online self-help intervention that we investigated is based on cognitive behavioral therapy and contains 4 components: stimulating activities, relaxation exercises, changing negative thoughts and goal attainment. Two meta-analyses were conducted and the results point to the effectiveness of psychosocial interventions for PLWH to improve depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, quality of life, psychological well-being, and medication adherence. The most important result of the RCT was that the intervention together with telephone coaching is effective in reducing depressive symptoms, compared to an attention-only control group. It was also found that the intervention may be effective for all PLWH, regardless of certain baseline characteristics. Furthermore, behavioral activation and goal reengagement were found to be mediators of the intervention effect. Also, the intervention is likely to be cost-effective compared to attention only. As eHealth interventions have benefits compared to face-to-face interventions, they should be more widely implemented in the mental healthcare for PLWH. Show less
The forced swim test (FST) for rodents does not model despair or helplessness. It also is not a read-out for depression, anxiety, psychomotor retardation or autism, because these are... Show moreThe forced swim test (FST) for rodents does not model despair or helplessness. It also is not a read-out for depression, anxiety, psychomotor retardation or autism, because these are anthropomorphic interpretations of the rodent’s acquired immobility. Rather, the transition from swimming to immobility allows to examine the mechanistic underpinning of coping with inescapable stressors. However, in a recent detailed analysis of the FST application over the past 40 years, we noted a dramatic surge in the use of this test to phenotype animals as ‘depressed’. As a follow up to that report, we now present an analysis of the use of the FST over the past three years. This literature analysis shows that the popularity of the FST is still increasing and that the majority of researchers qualifies the rodent’s floating response as depressive-like behavior. However, over the past few years we also note a trend to interpret immobility rather as the expression of a coping strategy. In view of this result, we have sent a poll to the relevant authors to learn how consistent they are in naming FST behavior. Remarkably, we find a dramatic inverse correlation between their first qualification of acquired immobility as depressive-like behavior towards their current interpretation as coping strategy. In this contribution we have embedded our literature analysis and poll results in an update on the management of coping with inescapable stressors by processing in prefrontal cortical circuitry and glucocorticoid feedback. Show less
It is not clear if treatments for depression targeting repetitive negative thinking (RNT: rumination, worry and content-independent perseverative thinking) have a specific effect on RNT resulting... Show moreIt is not clear if treatments for depression targeting repetitive negative thinking (RNT: rumination, worry and content-independent perseverative thinking) have a specific effect on RNT resulting in better outcomes than treatments that do not specifically target rumination. We conducted a systematic search of PsycINFO, PubMed, Embase and the Cochrane library for randomized trials in adolescents, adults and older adults comparing CBT treatments for (previous) depression with control groups or with other treatments and reporting outcomes on RNT. Inclusion criteria were met by 36 studies with a total of 3307 participants. At post-test we found a medium-sized effect of any treatment compared to control groups on RNT (g = 0.48; 95% CI: 0.37–0.59). Rumination-focused CBT: g = 0.76, <0.01; Cognitive Control Training: g = 0.62, p < .01; CBT: g = 0.57, p < .01; Concreteness training: g = 0.53, p < .05; and Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy: g = 0.42, p < .05 had medium sized and significantly larger effect sizes than other types of treatment (i.e., anti-depressant medication, light therapy, engagement counseling, life review, expressive writing, yoga) (g = 0.14) compared to control groups. Effects on RNT at post-test were strongly associated with the effects on depression severity and this association was only significant in RNT-focused CBT. Our results suggest that in particular RNT-focused CBT may have a more pronounced effect on RNT than other types of interventions. Further mediation and mechanistic studies to test the predictive value of reductions in RNT following RNT-focused CBT for subsequent depression outcomes are called for. Show less
The aim of the study was to find relevant coping factors for the development of psychological interventions for people with chronic fatigue syndrome who suffer from depressive symptoms. A total of... Show moreThe aim of the study was to find relevant coping factors for the development of psychological interventions for people with chronic fatigue syndrome who suffer from depressive symptoms. A total of 30 adults with chronic fatigue syndrome filled in the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire, the COPE and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. The findings suggested that cognitive coping strategies have a stronger influence than behavioral coping strategies on depressive symptoms. Especially, the cognitive coping strategies refocusing positive, positive reappraisal and catastrophizing were of importance. These findings suggest that these coping strategies should be part of psychological programs for people with chronic fatigue syndrome. Show less
The overriding aim of my thesis was to study the relationship between blood pressure (BP) and cognitive and psychological functioning in older persons. Observational studies indicate that lower BP... Show moreThe overriding aim of my thesis was to study the relationship between blood pressure (BP) and cognitive and psychological functioning in older persons. Observational studies indicate that lower BP increases risk for cognitive decline in older persons. Older persons are at risk for impaired cerebral autoregulation, and lowering their BP may compromise cerebral blood flow and cognitive function. Contradictory to our hypothesis, the Discontinuation of Antihypertensive Treatment in Elderly people (DANTE) Study Leiden, a community-based randomized clinical trial in older persons (aged ≥75 years) with mild cognitive deficits, did not show that discontinuation of antihypertensive treatment improves cognitive functioning. The lack of the effect of this trial may be due to the unintentional inclusion of persons with a relatively intact cerebral autoregulation. Furthermore, we demonstrated that older persons with mild cognitive deficits and with orthostatic hypotension, who discontinued all their antihypertensive medication had an increased probability of being free from orthostatic hypotension 4 months later, compared to persons who continued their medication. Finally, in the DANTE MRI sub study, the relationship between BP and both conventional features of small vessel disease (SVD) and microstructural damage was explored, as well as the relation between microstructural damage and cognitive and psychological dysfunction. Show less
One of the main findings of the current thesis is the fact that psychosocial factors such as life events and low social support are not primarily predictors of subsequent mood symptoms, but also... Show moreOne of the main findings of the current thesis is the fact that psychosocial factors such as life events and low social support are not primarily predictors of subsequent mood symptoms, but also seem to occur as a result of mood symptoms . Over the last decades longitudinal studies have proven their great value for research in BD. These studies provided ample knowledge about the bipolar disease course and its associated factors. The current study contributed to this knowledge by adding different research approaches to analyse and interpret these complex longitudinal associations. These results implicate that it is difficult, and maybe not even very useful, to determine cause and effect when studying the ongoing interaction between the course of bipolar disorder and psychosocial factors. Consequently, models in which strict monocausal directions of causality are abandoned might lead to a closer approximation of the reality of the disorder and its complex interactions with the environment. The network approach may turn out to be a suitable statistical method to analyse and understand such complex associations. Show less
Spinhoven, P.; Penninx, B.W.; Krempeniou, A.; Van Hemert, A.M.; Elzinga, B. 2015
This thesis aimed to investigate the neurobiological mechanisms of adolescent onset depression and anxiety disorders. A longitudinal fMRI study design was used that included both task related brain... Show moreThis thesis aimed to investigate the neurobiological mechanisms of adolescent onset depression and anxiety disorders. A longitudinal fMRI study design was used that included both task related brain activation and resting state functional connectivity. All participants were scanned three times in a six-month period. In between scan sessions the adolescents from the clinical group received treatment as usual. Adolescents from the control group were scanned within the same time interval but did not receive treatment. During a scan session several MRI parameters were collected including task based fMRI (emotional face processing task) and resting state fMRI. We also administered several questionnaires about derpession and anxiety symptomatology. It was demonstrated that adolescents with depressive and anxiety disorders show differentiating patterns of amygdala reactivity and connectivity compared to a healthy control group. Furthermore, using a dimensional approach and taking individual differences in self-reported depression and anxiety symptoms into account highlighted the role of self-reported anxiety symptoms in amygdala reactivity during emotional faces processing. These findings indicate that the amygdala indeed is an important region involved in emotional face processing and that focusing on this region can provide further insights in the development and persistence of depressive and anxiety disorders in adolescents. Show less
Broekhof, R.; Rius-Ottenheim, N.; Spinhoven, P.; Van der Mast, R.C.; Penninx, B.W.J.H.; Zitman, F.G.; Giltay, E.J. 2015