
Linda Carpenter
· Distinguished Professor Emerita of Psychiatry and Human BehaviorVerifiedBrown University · Psychiatry and Human Behavior
Active 1939–2024
Research topics
- Psychology
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Psychiatry
- Genetics
- Neuroscience
- Biology
- Physical medicine and rehabilitation
Selected publications
Clinical Neurophysiology · 2020 · 1454 citations
- Medicine
- Physical medicine and rehabilitation
- Psychology
This article is based on a consensus conference, promoted and supported by the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology (IFCN), which took place in Siena (Italy) in October 2018. The meeting intended to update the ten-year-old safety guidelines for the application of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in research and clinical settings (Rossi et al., 2009). Therefore, only emerging and new issues are covered in detail, leaving still valid the 2009 recommendations regarding the description of conventional or patterned TMS protocols, the screening of subjects/patients, the need of neurophysiological monitoring for new protocols, the utilization of reference thresholds of stimulation, the managing of seizures and the list of minor side effects. New issues discussed in detail from the meeting up to April 2020 are safety issues of recently developed stimulation devices and pulse configurations; duties and responsibility of device makers; novel scenarios of TMS applications such as in the neuroimaging context or imaging-guided and robot-guided TMS; TMS interleaved with transcranial electrical stimulation; safety during paired associative stimulation interventions; and risks of using TMS to induce therapeutic seizures (magnetic seizure therapy). An update on the possible induction of seizures, theoretically the most serious risk of TMS, is provided. It has become apparent that such a risk is low, even in patients taking drugs acting on the central nervous system, at least with the use of traditional stimulation parameters and focal coils for which large data sets are available. Finally, new operational guidelines are provided for safety in planning future trials based on traditional and patterned TMS protocols, as well as a summary of the minimal training requirements for operators, and a note on ethics of neuroenhancement.
American Journal of Psychiatry · 2020 · 32 citations
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Psychology
OBJECTIVE: Low-dose testosterone has been shown to improve depression symptom severity, fatigue, and sexual function in small studies in women not formally diagnosed with major depressive disorder. The authors sought to determine whether adjunctive low-dose transdermal testosterone improves depression symptom severity, fatigue, and sexual function in women with antidepressant-resistant major depression. A functional MRI (fMRI) substudy examined effects on activity in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), a brain region important in mood regulation. METHODS: The authors conducted an 8-week randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial of adjunctive testosterone cream in 101 women, ages 21-70, with antidepressant-resistant major depression. The primary outcome measure was depression symptom severity as assessed by the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS). Secondary endpoints included fatigue, sexual function, and safety measures. The primary outcome of the fMRI substudy (N=20) was change in ACC activity. RESULTS: The participants' mean age was 47 years (SD=14) and their mean baseline MADRS score was 26.6 (SD=5.9). Eighty-seven (86%) participants completed 8 weeks of treatment. MADRS scores decreased in both study arms from baseline to week 8 (testosterone arm: from 26.8 [SD=6.3] to 15.3 [SD=9.6]; placebo arm: from 26.3 [SD=5.4] to 14.4 [SD=9.3]), with no significant difference between groups. Improvement in fatigue and sexual function did not differ between groups, nor did side effects. fMRI results showed a relationship between ACC activation and androgen levels before treatment but no difference in ACC activation with testosterone compared with placebo. CONCLUSIONS: Adjunctive transdermal testosterone, although well tolerated, was not more effective than placebo in improving symptoms of depression, fatigue, or sexual dysfunction. Imaging in a subset of participants demonstrated that testosterone did not result in greater activation of the ACC.
Psychoneuroendocrinology · 2020 · 34 citations
- Psychology
- Internal medicine
- Biology
Recent grants
2/2 Collaborative Study: Testosterone Augmentation in Women
NIH · $633k · 2013–2016
NIH · $3.9M · 2015
Neuroimaging and Neuromodulation Core
NIH · $22.5M · 2019–2026
Frequent coauthors
- 617 shared
Lawrence H. Price
- 564 shared
Noah S. Philip
Brown University
- 551 shared
Audrey R. Tyrka
Brown University
- 243 shared
Alik S. Widge
University of Minnesota
- 231 shared
Charles B. Nemeroff
The University of Texas at Austin
- 207 shared
Benjamin D. Greenberg
Providence VA Medical Center
- 178 shared
Eric Tirrell
Butler Hospital
- 167 shared
Andrew M. Fukuda
Butler Hospital
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