2.5 CE Credits: JINS Special Issue: INS 50th Anniversary - Neuropsychiatric Disorders (JINS 23:9-10, 2017): CE Bundle 3

apa-logo_white_screenThe International Neuropsychological Society is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. The International Neuropsychological Society maintains responsibility for this program and its content.
Educational Objectives
  1. Describe how alcohol use disorders affect brain structure and function, as well as the changes that take place after sobriety.
  2. Describe epidemiology of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders and the validity of their diagnosis
  3. Discuss value and applications of brain-based biomarkers for the treatment of depression.
  4. Discuss the conceptualization and features of schizophrenia from a neurobehavioral perspective.
  5. Describe the neurocognitive consequences of cannabis use and the impact of varied research methods on results

Course Information
Target Audience:Intermediate
Availability:Date Available: 2018-03-19
You may obtain CE for this JINS package at any time.
Offered for CEYes
CostMembers $25
Non-Members $37.50
Refund PolicyThis JINS package is not eligible for refunds
CE Credits2.5

Introduction

The International Neuropsychological Society is celebrating its 50th anniversary (1967-2017). Over the course of these 50 years, members of the society have made great strides in advancing our knowledge of the workings of the human brain both in health and in disease. For the past 2 decades, many of these advances have appeared in the society’s flagship scientific outlet, the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society. To commemorate the INS 50th anniversary, the two previous JINS editors, Igor Grant and Kathleen Haaland, joined the current editor, Stephen Rao, in organizing this special double issue of JINS. We have invited some of our leading senior investigators, most of whom have served in leadership positions in the INS, to write reviews in their areas of expertise. These reviews are designed to highlight scientific discoveries that have contributed to progress in the field of neuropsychology over the past 50 years. The authors were instructed to selectively discuss landmark discoveries that have had a lasting impact in advancing scientific knowledge rather than to provide comprehensive literature reviews. In addition, the authors were asked to provide their predictions regarding scientific directions of their field over the coming decade.

The papers reflect in a remarkable way the evolution of neuropsychology over the past 5 decades. There is a movement from viewing neurocognitive change from a static anatomic perspective to one that embraces the notion of functional connectivity within neural circuits, and considers how imbalances in circuitry crosstalk may be reflected in the kinds of processes that we neuropsychologists study, for example, executive function, components of memory and attention, and so forth. The field of neuropsychology now interacts with technological advances in structural and functional brain imaging, electrophysiological methods, fluid biomarkers (e.g., cerebral spinal fluid), and genetics, to name a few. The increased emphasis on observational longitudinal designs has provided a more comprehensive understanding of the evolution of neuropsychological disorders. Finally, while neuropsychology has traditionally focused on assessment, each of these reviews also highlight advances made in the treatment of neuropsychological disorders.

We have organized this special issue into four sections: Brain Systems and Assessment, Neurological Disorders, Neuropsychiatric Disorders, and Pediatric Disorders. In the following sections of this introduction, we highlight some of the key take-home messages from these scholarly reviews. It is important to note that all of these invited reviews were peer reviewed and required multiple revisions before acceptance. Another caveat is that we do not pretend to have covered the entire scope of the scientific underpinnings of neuropsychology and we are sure that we have omitted several key research areas in our diverse field. Likewise, we recognize that only a small percentage of our thought leaders in neuropsychology were able to be invited to contribute to this special issue.

Brain Systems And Assessment

In this section, Corballis emphasizes that hemispheric asymmetry exists in great apes as well as humans (although to a lesser extent in the former), is characterized by significant individual variability and complex genetic influences, and encompasses a broader range of functions and associated neural networks than initially thought before more recent neuroimaging studies.

McDonald emphasizes significant developments in our understanding of emotion, including delineation of the neuroanatomical substrates for different aspects of emotion, the influence of emotion on cognitive processes, and the clinical implications of emotion, which necessitate the need to directly examine emotion clinically using newly developed normative procedures.

Verfaellie and Keane discuss a shift toward a more nuanced understanding of the medial temporal lobes (MTL) in human memory and amnesia over the past 30 years. On the one hand, this body of evidence has highlighted that not all types of memory are impaired in patients with MTL lesions. On the other hand, this research has made apparent that the role of the MTL extends beyond the domain of long-term memory, to include working memory, perception, and future thinking.

Dronkers and Baldo emphasize that the study of language has had a major impact on our understanding of brain-behavior relationships. This paper highlights well-known historical case studies with updates using structural MRI and functional imaging in group studies which show that language, like other complex cognitive processes, is dependent upon neural systems rather than single cortical loci.

Stuss and Burgess review how our knowledge of prefrontal functions in the context of neuropsychological assessment has been transformed over the past 50 years with key themes, including development of theoretical frameworks that address the role of prefrontal systems in the organization of human cognition, the importance of naturalistic tests, the emerging integration of functional imaging into clinical practice, and how we might develop new ways to measure executive function to fill existing gaps.

Haaland, Dum, Mutha, Strick, and Troster, a multidisciplinary group of experts in movement and movement disorders, summarize the influence of animal and human studies in showing that the corticospinal tract includes projections from multiple premotor regions as well as the motor cortex, that cognition strongly impacts even what appear to be simple motor skills, and that differential connectivity among cortical, cerebellar, and striatal regions influences normal movement and impairment with movement disorders and cortical lesions.

Casaletto and Heaton identify historical pioneers and their approaches to neuropsychological assessment as well as factors that have influenced neuropsychological interpretation (e.g., normative standards, cultural considerations, quantifying longitudinal change). They also emphasize the importance of enhancing ecological validity and ways that technological advances have impacted assessment.

Neurological Disorders

Hermann, Loring, and Wilson discuss five major paradigm shifts that have occurred within the neuropsychology of epilepsy, including departure from syndrome-specific pathophysiology, bidirectional comorbidities, quality of life, surgical outcomes, and iatrogenic treatment effects. Unlike most other disorders evaluated by neuropsychologists, surgical interventions have played an important role. This review focuses on the neuropsychological consequences of different surgical interventions and the re-emergence of electroencephalography as an important research tool for probing cognitive dysfunction.

Yeates, Levin, and Ponsford highlight progress made through studies of traumatic brain injury in adults and children. The study focuses on contributions of advances in neuroimaging in characterizing the pathophysiology of traumatic brain injury, the impact of non-injury factors on outcomes (pre-morbid factors), and medical and non-medical interventions to improve outcomes.

Bondi, Edmonds, and Salmon survey historical advances in Alzheimer’s disease, beginning with studies profiling the neuropsychological deficits associated with AD and its differentiation from other dementias, identification of specific cognitive mechanisms affected by neuropathological substrates, the shift in focus to the study of prodromal stages of neurodegenerative disease (mild cognitive impairment), and the rise of imaging and other biomarkers to characterize preclinical disease before the development of significant cognitive decline.

Benedict, DeLuca, Enzinger, Geurts, Krupp, and Rao highlight advances made in the areas of neuropathology, neuroimaging, diagnosis, and treatment that pertain to the neuropsychological aspects of multiple sclerosis (MS). This review focuses on the discovery that MS produces pathological lesions of gray matter that have consequences for cognitive functions, the use of multimodal imaging that integrates structural and functional imaging methods to better understand cognitive test performance and functional reserve, screening and comprehensive assessment of cognitive disorders including pediatric MS, and outcome studies in cognitive rehabilitation.

Neuropsychiatric Disorders

Sullivan shows us how early careful observations of neuropsychological patterns in alcoholism led to modern neuroimaging confirmations and deepening understanding not only of the structural neuroanatomy underlying alcoholism, but also to new appreciation of functional connectivity disruptions. Ongoing studies now hope to relate such functional connectivity changes not only to specific cognitive profiles but also to related deficits in self-regulation, impulse control, and reward processing that are linked to such neurocognitive deficits.

Saloner and Cysique summarize the progress from earliest reports of neurocognitive changes, first reported in 1987, to the delineation of the specific syndromes of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND). The authors demonstrate that neuropsychology has led the way in appreciating that the brain continues to be affected by the HIV process despite good control of virus by modern antiretroviral treatments; and they note that the consequences of these persisting mild cognitive disorders include disturbance in quality of life and everyday functioning in those affected by HIV.

Waters and Mayberg present depression as a failure in the coordination of distributed frontal networks, and discuss how differential functional brain responses to different therapies, for example, pharamacotherapy versus cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), provide for a better understanding of the component elements of depression. They suggest that increases in adaptive functionality of dorsal frontal networks controlling attention and executive function may be specifically targeted by CBT, whereas antidepressant drugs may reduce the hyper-reactivity of ventral corticolimbic structures.

Seidman and Mirsky note that the view of schizophrenia has shifted from one of “functional psychosis” (i.e., with no known brain substrate) to that of a neurodevelopmental disorder. Neuropsychological deficits, once viewed as the result of psychosis, are now thought to be a prodrome of the disorder, since they are found many years before the onset of symptoms and occur in biological relatives who never develop psychosis. They note a steady increase in convergence of neuropsychological, structural, and functional brain mapping toward understanding of the neurodevelopmental events that lead to these symptoms, such as perinatal insults, abnormal neural network organization, faulty pruning, and genetic alterations.

Gonzalez, Pacheco-Colón, Duperrouzel, and Hawes address progress in the field of cannabis use, which was just being born 50 years ago when the INS was founded. The earliest reports were a few experimental cognitive studies and case reports. Now, there is a vast neuropsychological literature and, as with studies on alcoholism and depression, an increased emphasis on structural-functional brain correlates and their relation to neurodevelopmental outcomes. While they note that evidence for persisting adverse effects of moderate marijuana use by adults is inconclusive, there is increasing concern that marijuana may not be so benign in children, adolescents, and extremely heavy cannabis users.

Pediatric Disorders

Fein and Helt indicate that the pace of research in autism has accelerated moving from an initial focus on behavior and cognition to advances associated with the incorporation of imaging and genetics. Despite these recent advances, a coherent picture of the syndrome at either a phenotypic or biological level has not emerged. They provide a roadmap for future progress, in which studies include individuals defined by social impairment without regard to repetitive behaviors to form narrowly defined subtypes, focus on characteristics that are less influenced by environmental factors, study children as early as possible thereby minimizing environmental influence, emphasize the longitudinal course, examine the relationship between specific subtypes and environmental risk factors, distinguish between what participants can do and what they typically do, and aggregate large data sets across sites.

Mahone and Denckla review the key literature pertaining to the neuropsychology of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) over the past 35 years. These include the evolution of the diagnosis, influential theories, landmark treatment studies, and advances in brain mapping techniques, including anatomic, task activation and resting state fMRI, and diffusion tensor imaging. Challenges associated with studying and treating a heterogeneous neurodevelopmental disorder such as ADHD are described, along with an emphasis on associated disorders and conditions and special populations.

Fletcher and Grigorenko make the case that experimental trials of interventions focused on improving academic skills and addressing comorbid conditions are most effective for diagnosing and treating learning disabilities with a particular focus on reading disability. They conclude that neuropsychological assessment needs to move away from a focus on delineation of cognitive skills toward performance-based assessments of academic achievement and comorbid conditions, along with intervention responses that lead directly to evidence-based treatment plans. Finally, they emphasize that the path to further understanding learning disabilities will be strongly influenced by interdisciplinary research that includes the neuropsychologist and links data from cognitive neuroscience with assessment and treatment of these disorders.

Upon reflection of the articles contained within this special issue, we believe members of the INS will be proud of the many scientific accomplishments that have occurred over the past 50 years of our society’s existence. We are also assured that the future will see even greater scientific innovation in the field of neuropsychology. We think you will agree.

On a closing sad note, Larry Seidman, an Associate Editor of JINS and a co-author of the review on schizophrenia in this special issue, died unexpectedly in September 2017. We will miss this valued friend and colleague, who has made such important discoveries in the neuropsychology of mental health research.


Individual Titles, Authors, and Articles:

Contributions to Understanding the Neuropsychology of Alcoholism: An INS Legacy
Author(s)
  • Edith V. Sullivan | Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California

Correspondence
E-mail address | edie@stanford.edu

Disclosures
The author has no conflicts of interest with respect to the contents of this manuscript.

Abstract

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) has been a major cause of family, social, and personal strife for centuries, with current prevalence estimates of 14% for 12-month and 29% lifetimeAUD. Neuropsychological testing of selective cognitive, sensory, and motor functions complemented with in vivo brain imaging has enabledtracking the consequences of AUD, which follows a dynamic course of development, maintenance, and recovery or relapse. Controlled studies of alcoholism reviewed hereinprovide evidence for disruption of selective functions involving executive, visuospatial, mnemonic, emotional, and attentional processes, response inhibition, prosody,and postural stability and brain systems supporting these functions. On a hopeful front, longitudinal study provides convincing evidence for improvement in brain structureand function following sustained sobriety. These discoveries have a strong legacy in the International Neuropsychological Society (INS), starting from its early dayswhen assumptions regarding which brain regions were disrupted relied solely on patterns of functional sparing and impairment deduced from testing. This review is basedon the symposium presentation delivered at the 2017 annual North American meeting of the INS in celebration of the 50th anniversary since its institution in 1967.In the spirit of the meeting’s theme, “Binding the Past and Present,” the lecture and this review recognized the past by focusing on early, rigorous neuropsychologicalstudies of alcoholism and their influence on research currently conducted using imaging methods enabling hypothesis testing of brain substrates of observed functionaldeficits. (JINS, 2017, 23, 843–859)

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HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Disorders: A Global Perspective
Author(s)
  • Rowan Saloner | The HIV Neurobehavioral Research Program (HNRP), Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California, Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, San Diego State University/University of California, San Diego, San Diego, California
  • Lucette A. Cysique | School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Neuroscience Research Australia, Barker Street, Randwick, NSW, Neuroscience Program and Peter Duncan Neurosciences Unit St. Vincent’s Hospital Centre for Applied Medical Research Centre, and departments of Neurology and HIV St. Vincent’s Hospital Sydney, NSW

Correspondence
E-mail address | lcysique@unsw.edu.au

Disclosures
L.A.C. received honoraria from Abbvie Ltd, CogState Ltd, ViiV healthcare, partial salary support in 2012 from Mercks Sharp Dome and CogState Ltd. L.A.C. is funded by a National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Career Development Fellowship #APP1045400 and has unrelated research support from Abbvie Ltd, ViiV healthcare, the Australian National Association of People Living with HIV/AIDS (NAPWA) and Gilead Sciences. CogState did not pay her for the current review or any other commercial entity. R.S. is supported by an Institutional Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (NRSA) T32 grant funded by the NIAAA within the National Institutes of Health (Award T32 AA013525).

Abstract

The present review on HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) provides a worldwide overview of studies that have investigated the rate and neuropsychological (NP)profile of HAND research since the inception of the 2007 HAND diagnostic nomenclature. In the first part, the review highlights some of the current controversies aroundHAND prevalence rates. In the second part, the review critically assesses some solutions to move the field forward. In the third part, we present the cross-sectionalNP profile in non-Western HIV+ cohorts and in relation to Western cohorts’ findings. The adopted global perspective highlights the successful expansion of NP studiesin HIV infection to culturally diverse low- to medium-income countries with high HIV burden. These studies have produced interestingly similar rates of HAND whetherpatients were naïve or treated and/or virally suppressed compared to the rich income countries where the NP research in NeuroHIV has originated. The perspective alsodemonstrates that globally, the group which is the most representative of the HIV epidemic, and thus at risk for HAND are persons with chronic HIV infection and survivorsof past immunosuppression, while in relative terms, those who have been treated early with long-term viral suppression represent a minority. In the last part, we presenta review of the naturalistic longitudinal NP global studies in HIV+cohorts, discuss the role of longitudinal design in solving issues around the question of asymptomaticneurocognitive impairment, and the question of biomarker discovery. Finally, we conclude by calling for greater methods and data harmonization at a global level. (JINS, 2017, 23, 860–869)

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Brain-Based Biomarkers for the Treatment of Depression: Evolution of an Idea
Author(s)
  • Allison C. Waters | Emory University School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
  • Helen S. Mayberg | Emory University School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Correspondence
E-mail address | alliwaters@emory.edu

Disclosures
Dr. Mayberg has a consulting agreement with St Jude Medical, Inc., which has licensed her intellectual property to develop SCC DBS for the treatment of severe depression. Dr. Waters has no financial disclosures.

Abstract

An ambition of depression biomarker research is to augment psychometric and cognitive assessment of clinically relevant phenomena with neural measures. Although such applicationshave been slow to arrive, we observe a steady evolution of the idea and anticipate emerging technologies with some optimism. To highlight critical themes and innovationsin depression biomarker research, we take as our point of reference a specific research narrative. We begin with an early model of frontal-limbic dysfunction, whichrepresents a conceptual shift from localized pathology to understanding symptoms as an emergent property of distributed networks. Over the decades, this model accommodatesperspectives from neurology, psychiatry, clinical, and cognitive neuroscience, and preserves past insight as more complex methods become available. We also track theexpanding mission of brain biomarker research: from the development of diagnostic tools to treatment selection algorithms, measures of neurocognitive functioning andnovel targets for neuromodulation. To conclude, we draw from this particular research narrative future directions for biomarker research. We emphasize integrationof measurement modalities to describe dynamic change in domain-general networks, and we speculate that a brain-based framework for psychiatric problems may dissolveclassical diagnostic and disciplinary boundaries. (JINS, 2017, 23, 870–880)

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Evolving Notions of Schizophrenia as a Developmental Neurocognitive Disorder
Author(s)
  • Larry J. Seidman | Harvard Medical School, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts Mental Health Center Division of Public Psychiatry, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, Harvard Medical School, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts
  • Allan F. Mirsky | Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland

Correspondence
E-mail address | jnova2@bidmc.harvard.edu

Disclosures
None

Abstract

We review the changing conceptions of schizophrenia over the past 50 years as it became understood as a disorder of brain function and structure in which neurocognitivedysfunction was identified at different illness phases. The centrality of neurocognition has been recognized, especially because neurocognitive deficits are stronglyrelated to social and role functioning in the illness, and as a result neurocognitive measures are used routinely in clinical assessment of individuals with schizophrenia.From the original definitions of the syndrome of schizophrenia in the early 20th century, impaired cognition, especially attention, was considered to be important.Neurocognitive impairments are found in the vast majority of individuals with schizophrenia, and they vary from mild, relatively restricted deficits, to dementia-likesyndromes, as early as the first psychotic episode. Neurocognitive deficits are found in the premorbid phase in a substantial minority of pre-teenage youth who laterdevelop schizophrenia, and they apparently worsen by the prodromal, high-risk phase in a majority of those who develop the illness. While there is limited evidencefor reversibility of impairments from pharmacological interventions in schizophrenia, promising results have emerged from cognitive remediation studies. Thus, we expectcognitive interventions to play a larger role in schizophrenia in the coming years. Moreover, because youth at risk for schizophrenia can be identified by an emergenthigh-risk syndrome, earlier interventions might be applied in a pre-emptive way to reduce disability and improve adaptation. The notion of schizophrenia as a developmentalneurocognitive disorder with stages opens up a window of possibilities for earlier interventions. (JINS, 2017, 23,881–892)

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Does Cannabis Use Cause Declines in Neuropsychological Functioning? A Review of Longitudinal Studies
Author(s)
  • Raul Gonzalez | Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, Florida
  • Ileana Pacheco-Colón | Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, Florida
  • Jacqueline C. Duperrouzel | Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, Florida
  • Samuel W. Hawes | Department of Psychology, Florida International University, Miami, Florida

Correspondence
E-mail address | raul.gonzalezjr@fiu.edu

Disclosures
This manuscript was made possible in part through funding from the National Institutes of Health (U01 DA041156; R01 DA031176; R01 DA033156 to R. Gonzalez). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

Abstract

Cannabis use has been linked to impairments in neuropsychological functioning across a large and continually expanding body of research. Yet insight into underlying causalrelations remains limited due to the historically cross-sectional nature of studies in this area. Recently, however, studies have begun to use more informative designstrategies to delineate these associations. The aim of this article is to provide a critical evaluation and review of research that uses longitudinal designs to examinethe link between cannabis use and neuropsychological functioning. In summarizing the primary findings across these studies, this review suggests that cannabis useleads to neuropsychological decline. However, across most studies, these associations were modest, were present only for the group with the heaviest cannabis use,and were often attenuated (or no longer significant) after controlling for potential confounding variables. Future studies with neuropsychological data before andafter initiation of cannabis use, along with careful measurement and control of “shared risk factors” between cannabis use and poorer neuropsychological outcomes,are needed to better understand who, and under what conditions, is most vulnerable to cannabis-associated neuropsychological decline. (JINS,2017, 23, 893–902)

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