Principal Research seeks to increase the number and availability of evidence-based interventions applicable to elderly persons at high risk for depression and its complications, to those with difficult to treat mood disorders seen within the specialty mental health sector, and to those seen in the primary care sector, in rehabilitation centers, and in nursing home and other long term care settings. Intervention studies will address the following themes: (1) preventing depression and suicide in elderly persons at high risk; and improving, preventing, or delaying cognitive and functional impairments in elderly with depression; (2) improving treatment for difficult to treat mood disorders in later life (e.g., bipolar disorders, psychotic depression, and unipolar major depression responding only partially to first line treatment); and (3) identifying and removing barriers to effective depression treatment in community clinical settings. Cutting across these themes is the Center objective (4) of using infrastructure support to enhance research-training opportunities in mental health and aging and in community-based participatory research. These themes capture our movement from efficacy to effectiveness research, to services, dissemination, and practice research, as mandated in the NIMH Council report, Bridqin.q Science and Service. To this end the bidirectional linkages between the Principal Research Core and the Research Network Development Core are of critical scientific importance.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30MH071944-04
Application #
7633355
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2008-06-01
Budget End
2009-05-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$65,244
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pittsburgh
Department
Type
DUNS #
004514360
City
Pittsburgh
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
15213
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Karim, Helmet; Tudorascu, Dana Larisa; Aizenstein, Howard et al. (2016) Emotion Reactivity and Cerebrovascular Burden in Late-Life GAD: A Neuroimaging Study. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 24:1040-1050
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Andreescu, Carmen; Sheu, Lei K; Tudorascu, Dana et al. (2015) Emotion reactivity and regulation in late-life generalized anxiety disorder: functional connectivity at baseline and post-treatment. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 23:200-14
Andreescu, Carmen; Mennin, Douglas; Tudorascu, Dana et al. (2015) The many faces of anxiety-neurobiological correlates of anxiety phenotypes. Psychiatry Res 234:96-105
Patel, Meenal J; Andreescu, Carmen; Price, Julie C et al. (2015) Machine learning approaches for integrating clinical and imaging features in late-life depression classification and response prediction. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 30:1056-67
Andreescu, Carmen; Sheu, Lei K; Tudorascu, Dana et al. (2014) The ages of anxiety--differences across the lifespan in the default mode network functional connectivity in generalized anxiety disorder. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 29:704-12
Rej, Soham; Butters, Meryl A; Aizenstein, Howard J et al. (2014) Neuroimaging and neurocognitive abnormalities associated with bipolar disorder in old age. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 29:421-7

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