This afternoon's #RCPsychIC keynote is by Professor Huda Zoghbi, Professor of Pediatrics, Molecular and Human Genetics, Neurology, and Neuroscience at Baylor College of Medicine (@bcmhouston).
Professor Zoghbi is also an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (@HHMINEWS), and the founding Director of the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children’s Hospital. #RCPsychIC
The talk title of Professor Zoghbi's #RCPsychIC keynote is 'Insight into neuropsychiatric disorders from the study of Rett Syndrome'.
HZ: Also see hypomorphic mutations which have a phenotype of milder cognitive issues compared to 'Classic Rett'. Mild coding mutations are more penetrant in males.
HZ: High or low levels of MeCP2 have extreme phenotypes. Triplications of gene are fatal. #RCPsychIC
HZ: Used a sequencing approach called 'ATAC-seq' to reveal candidate regulatory elements of the MeCP2 gene. Many such elements are in the non-coding introns of the gene.
HZ: Deletion of some of these elements led to changes in levels of MECP2 protein. Can increase or decrease expression based on which element is deleted.
HZ: Hypothesis that physical training could help improve Rett phenotypes. In mice investigated frequency and timing of early training (using rotarod performance).
Early training helps. #RCPsychIC
HZ: Training before onset of symptoms helped memory acquisition. #RCPsychIC
HZ: Repetitive training improves neuronal morphology of some neurons. This has clinical implications for humans.
Next up at #RCPsychIC is session S40 on ‘The placebo effect: insights for translational research and clinical practice’.
This will be chaired by Professor Samuele Cortese (@CorteseSamuele).
The first speaker in this session is Dr Nathan Huneke (@NathanHuneke) who will be talking about ‘Current knowledge of the placebo effect in anxiety disorders and future directions’
Nathan begins by highlighting 50 years of drug trials for anxiety disorders.
Very few have been successful because we don’t understand the neurobiology and there has been poor validity of pre-clinical trials.
First up in this session is Dr Rajeev Krishnadas (@WalkKD) from University of Glasgo. He was a guest editor for the BJPsych Special Issue and is talking about five points to consider when reading a translational machine learning paper.
Join us now in the auditorium of Virtual Congress to see one of our last talks of the day: "How to work with homeless people" #RCPsychIC
The agenda on today's talk is "Making services work for homeless people" with Dr Philip Timms @philip_timms a Consultant psychiatrist at the National Psychosis Service #RCPsychIC
After that, we have "Trauma-focussed practice with homeless people" with Dr Peter Cockersell @petercockersell the Chief Executive at Community Housing and Therapy #RCPsychIC
Our final session of #RCPsychC virtual Congress we are talking about Religious Delusions and Hallucinations: Significance, meaning, and narrative with Dr Alison J Gray @revdraligray, Professor Christopher C.H. Cook @cchcook and Dr Angela Woods @literarti
In one of our final split session talks of #RCPsychIC 2021, we'll be hearing from @RachelUTG, @PsychMarwaha and @sameerjauhar, chaired by Professor Allan Young: Care of Adult Mental Ill-Health: Getting it right from the start.
So -we're nearly at the end of our first virtual #RCPsychIC - but there's one more set of split sessions to go! On this thread you can follow the 57th split session of this amazing event, which is about Dual Diagnosis from the public, clinical + academic perspective.
Our first speaker is Caroline Turiff, who has been diagnosed with a range of conditions inc OCD and PTSD, and is an award winning investigative broadcast journalist. #RCPsychIC
I've read 70% of people with drug dependency who have a dual diagnosis so it is the norm for them, she says. #RCPsychIC