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Letter

Incorporating and integrating cognitive event-related potentials in the management of psychiatric disorders

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Pages 83-84 | Published online: 10 Jan 2014

Dear editor

Dr Salvatore Campanella has recently advocated the urgent need to incorporate cognitive event-related potentials (ERPs) for a proper diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of psychiatric disorders, on the basis of four working hypotheses, which are theoretically solid and experimentally supported.Citation1

Psycho-pathological diseases are characterized by a cognitive impairment (first argument) and the task of ERP methodology is to investigate these very cognitive alterations (second argument), in a more effective, fast, reliable and comprehensive way than the traditional administration of neuropsychological tests and questionnaires, which are rather time-consuming and difficult to implement in everyday clinical practice. Furthermore, ERP is able to discriminate among similar behaviors (third argument), thus having potential benefits and clinically relevant implications, as it would enable an ERP-based neuropsychological and cognitive treatment (a “directed cognitive retraining procedure”) (fourth argument). Moreover, this treatment would be targeted and personalized, since specifically designed and focused on the cognitive deficit of the patient, and ERP would logically and coherently link the three moments of clinical practice: diagnosis, treatment and prognosis. ERP, indeed, does not only provide the approach and the target of the clinical intervention, but makes also possible to monitor its effects.Citation2

Interest in ERP, however, is not recent, even though it has been quite erratic throughout the decades, and examples of ERP-like paradigms can be found in Bleuler’s clinical observations of schizophrenic patients.Citation3 Scholars have progressively enriched the ERP paradigm with phenomenological, clinical, and psychological observations, and some researchers have speculated that ERPs could have a genetic and/or environmental basis and thus could be inherited, meeting with the requirements of the Gottesman and Gould principlesCitation4 for defining a trait as an endophenotype. ERPs have been proven to be reproducible, with good-to-excellent psychometric properties and are promising biomarkers.Citation5 The technical and technological advancements in the field of electroencephalography (EEG) (the transition from scalp EEG to source EEG and quantitative EEG, and the introduction of portable and wearable sensors for real-time monitoring) coupled with powerful computational processing approachesCitation5,Citation6 have further revolutionized the usefulness and the applications of ERPs, making more feasible the transition from bench to patient bedside.

Moreover, ERP can be integrated with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), positron emission tomography (PET) and other sophisticated and advanced imaging devices, thus acquiring more clinical significance and relevance.Citation7

In conclusion, psychiatric disorders are complex diseasesCitation8 and complex problems call for complex solutions: an integrated, multidisciplinary team, including all the professional figures who deal with all the different aspects of brain-related disorders – from the psychiatrist to the social worker and occupational therapist; from the psychologist to the neurologist – could cope with the challenges that arise from the necessity to integrate and coordinate the different methods and approaches. This, of course, should be reflected also in designing the university syllabus and residential curricula, putting emphasis on the different souls of the psychiatry (the biological and the psychological strains) and its intrinsic multidisciplinary nature.

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this communication.

References

  • CampanellaSWhy it is time to develop the use of cognitive event-related potentials in the treatment of psychiatric diseasesNeuropsychiatr Dis Treat201391835184524348040
  • ZaunmüllerLLutzWStraumanTJAffective impact and electrocortical correlates of a psychotherapeutic microintervention: an ERP study of cognitive restructuringPsychother Res20131128 [Epub ahead of print]
  • Micoulaud FranchiJAVion DuryJCermolacceMNeurophysiological endophenotypes and schizophrenic disorder: emergence and evolution of a clinical conceptEncephale201238Suppl 3S103S109 French23279983
  • GottesmanIIGouldTDThe endophenotype concept in psychiatry: etymology and strategic intentionsAm J Psychiatry2003160463664512668349
  • McLoughlinGMakeigSTsuangMTIn search of biomarkers in psychiatry: EEG-based measures of brain functionAm J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet20131125 [Epub ahead of print]
  • GordonECooperNRennieCHermensDWilliamsLMIntegrative neuroscience: the role of a standardized databaseClin EEG Neurosci2005362647515999901
  • CampanellaSBourguignonMPeigneuxPBOLD response to deviant face detection informed by P300 event-related potential parameters: a simultaneous ERP-fMRI studyNeuroimage2013719210323313569
  • BragazziNLRethinking psychiatry with OMICS science in the age of personalized P5 medicine: ready for psychiatome?Philos Ethics Humanit Med201381423849623