Margaret Knutelska’s research while affiliated with Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and other places

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Publications (24)


Depersonalization Disorder: Directed Forgetting as a Function of Emotionality
  • Article

October 2022

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67 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

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Margaret Knutelska

There exists some evidence for a link between dissociation and emotionally avoidant information processing, yet studies to date have been contradictory. Our goal was to investigate emotionally avoidant processing in Depersonalization Disorder (DDD) using a directed forgetting (DF) paradigm. Thirty-two participants with DSM-IV DDD and 40 healthy controls performed an item-method DF task using positive, negative, and neutral words. Participants were also administered the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES) and the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ). The DDD group demonstrated significantly lower directed forgetting for negative, but not positive or neutral, words compared to controls. In the combined sample, DES total, depersonalization/derealization, and amnesia scores significantly inversely predicted explicit cued recall for to-be-forgotten negative words (higher dissociation, lower forgetting), while the CTQ was not predictive. The findings do not support emotionally avoidant processing in this paradigm; rather, DDD may be characterized by a diminished capacity to actively control attention and direct it away from emotionally disturbing material when instructed to do so.


The Multidimensional Inventory of Dissociation (MID) in Depersonalization Disorder: General Findings with a Clinical Emphasis on Memory and Identity Disturbances

September 2022

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103 Reads

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1 Citation

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

The Multidimensional Inventory of Dissociation (MID) was administered to 23 participants diagnosed with DSM-IV-TR Depersonalization Disorder (DDD) by structured interview. The MID has not been previously examined in DDD and does not generate a diagnostic formula for the disorder. Mean MID score for the sample was modestly elevated at 18.54, and was significantly correlated with Dissociative Experiences Scale, Cambridge Depersonalization Scale, and Childhood Trauma Questionnaire scores. Criterion A (General Dissociation) Depersonalization and Depersonalization scale scores were markedly elevated (41.70 and 40.98 respectively), followed by moderate elevations in the Identity Confusion (36.01), Trance (25.44), and Memory Problems (23.30) scales. Criterion B (Intrusions from partly dissociated self-states) mean score was modestly elevated (19.13) and declined to 13.67 once items overlapping with the Depersonalization and Identity Confusion scales were excluded. Criterion C (fully dissociated manifestations of other self-states) mean score was minimally elevated (6.57). Of the 168 pathological dissociation items, 55 were clinically elevated in DDD. Closer examination of the Intrusions and Amnesia items that were modestly elevated in DDD revealed that these items did not reflect the presence of alters, but rather represented known depersonalization-related phenomena. We propose a preliminary formula, based on cutoff scores for Criterion A Depersonalization and/or Derealization, Criterion B, and Criterion C (≥20, ≤28, ≤11) for the sensitive diagnosis of DDD (82.6% of participants), which would require future investigation for replication and determination of specificity vis-à-vis the other dissociative disorders.


Attention and Memory in Depersonalization-Spectrum Dissociative Disorders: Impact of Selective-Divided Attentional Condition, Stimulus Emotionality, and Stress

May 2022

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111 Reads

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10 Citations

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

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Margaret Knutelska

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Frank W. Putnam

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[...]

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We investigated cognition in depersonalization-spectrum dissociative disorders without comorbid posttraumatic stress disorder to explore evidence for emotionally avoidant information processing. Forty-eight participants with DSM-IV dissociative disorder (DD) (Depersonalization Disorder - 37, Dissociative Disorder NOS -11), 36 participants with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and 56 healthy controls (HC) were administered the Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale-III (WAIS); the Weschler Memory Scale-III (WMS); and three Stroop tasks: the Standard Stroop, a selective-attention Emotional Stroop using neutral, dissociation, and trauma-related word categories, and a divided-attention Emotional Stroop using comparable words. Participants were also administered a paired-associates explicit and implicit memory test using emotionally neutral and negative words, before and after the Trier Social Stress Test. The DD and HC groups had comparable general intelligence and memory scores, though dissociation severity was inversely related to verbal comprehension and working memory. In the selective-attention condition, DD participants showed greater incidental recall across word categories with comparable interference. However in the divided-attention condition, DD participants significantly favored lesser attentional interference at the expense of remembering words. Across attentional conditions, DD participants had better recall for disorder-related than neutral words. Pre-stress, the DD group demonstrated better explicit memory for neutral versus negative words with reversal after stress, whereas the HC group demonstrated the opposite pattern; implicit memory did not differ. Cognition in the PTSD control group was generally dissimilar to the DD group. The findings in toto provide substantial evidence for emotionally avoidant information processing in DD, vulnerable to the impact of stress, at the level of both attention and memory.


The Role of Fearful Attachment in Depersonalization Disorder

March 2022

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102 Reads

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5 Citations

European Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

This study's goal was to systematically investigate attachment styles in Depersonalization Disorder (DDD), and their relationship to dissociation severity and childhood trauma history. Forty-two participants with DSM-IV DDD and 53 healthy controls (HC) without lifetime Axis I and II disorders were administered the Relationships Questionnaire and the Relationship Scales Questionnaire, based on Bartholomew's anxiety-avoidance orthogonal model of secure, dismissive, preoccupied, and fearful attachment; the Dissociative Experiences Scale; and the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. DDD was characterized by a significantly higher prevalence of insecure attachment (66.7%) compared to controls (34.0%), largely accounted for by fearful attachment (45.2% of all DDD participants). In the DDD group, of the four attachment styles only fearful was predictive of both normative and pathological dissociation, accounting for 17% - 18% of the variance. Childhood trauma made a significant hierarchical contribution to the prediction of dissociation beyond fearful attachment, and the effect of fearful attachment on dissociation was indirectly mediated by childhood trauma. In the control group, dissociation was predicted by fearful attachment but was not associated with childhood trauma. Implications of the findings are discussed, highlighting the potentially important role of trauma-based relational fear in this dissociative disorder.


Alexithymia, Absorption, and Cognitive Failures in Depersonalization Disorder A Comparison to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Healthy Volunteers

August 2009

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213 Reads

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53 Citations

The Journal of nervous and mental disease

Alexithymia, absorption, and cognitive failures are traits that have been implicated in dissociative psychopathology. Forty-six participants with depersonalization disorder (DPD), 21 with posttraumatic stress disorder, and 35 healthy controls completed measures of dissociation, alexithymia, absorption, cognitive failures, and childhood trauma. The DPD and posttraumatic stress disorder groups had significantly and comparably elevated absorption and cognitive failures scores. Only the DPD group had significantly elevated alexithymia scores, specifically in "difficulty identifying feelings." Regression analyses revealed that "alexithymia-difficulty identifying feelings" was predictive of both DPD diagnosis and depersonalization scores. In contrast, amnesia scores were predicted by childhood trauma and absorption. In conclusion, the link between depersonalization and alexithymia appeared to be specific rather than broadly related to early trauma or to trauma-spectrum psychopathology.


Dissociation versus posttraumatic stress: Cortisol and physiological correlates in adults highly exposed to the World Trade Center attack on 9/11

November 2008

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90 Reads

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41 Citations

Psychiatry Research

Nine months on average after the World Trade Center (WTC) attack, 21 highly exposed adults and 10 healthy controls without major exposure did not differ in cortisol and physiologic measures. Dissociation and posttraumatic stress symptoms were quantified in the exposed group. Dissociation was associated with greater peritraumatic dissociation and, marginally, childhood trauma, lower plasma cortisol levels at 08.00h, and blunted heart rate reactivity to psychosocial stress. Posttraumatic stress was associated with exposure, peritraumatic distress, and early posttraumatic stress, and marginally associated with peritraumatic dissociation; it was not associated with cortisol or physiologic measures. Urinary cortisol differed significantly in its relationship to dissociation versus posttraumatic stress. This small study emphasizes the importance of dissecting the neurobiology of posttraumatic stress versus dissociative traumatic responses.


Somatoform Dissociation in Depersonalization Disorder

February 2008

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63 Reads

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53 Citations

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

Along with psychoform dissociation, somatoform dissociation has been put forth as a core aspect of dissociative states, possibly as reliable as psychoform dissociation in the screening for dissociative disorders. The goal of this study was to investigate the prominence and correlates of somatoform dissociation in one of the major Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text rev.) dissociative disorders, depersonalization disorder (DPD). A total of 54 adults with DPD and 47 healthy control participants free of lifetime Axis I and II disorders were administered the 20-item Somatoform Dissociation Questionnaire (SDQ) as well as the Dissociative Experiences Scale, the Cambridge Depersonalization Scale, and the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire-Short Form. Somatoform dissociation scores were statistically significantly, but clinically only modestly, elevated in the DPD as compared to the healthy control group. SDQ items significantly elevated in the DPD group were mostly perceptual in nature. Depersonalization scores were significantly correlated with somatoform dissociation in the DPD group, whereas absorption and amnesia scores were not. With respect to childhood interpersonal trauma, although emotional abuse was significantly associated with depersonalization severity, none of the 5 categories of trauma were significantly associated with somatoform dissociation in the DPD group. In conclusion, somatoform dissociation is modest in DPD, and the SDQ is a weak instrument for the screening of dissociation in this disorder, detecting only one third of the sample when using the traditional SDQ cutoff score of 30.


Cognitive Functioning in Depersonalization Disorder

January 2008

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1,644 Reads

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88 Citations

The Journal of nervous and mental disease

Depersonalization disorder (DPD) is a dissociative disorder characterized by a subjective sense of unreality and detachment, and has been associated with deficits in perception and short-term memory. In this study, 21 DPD and 17 healthy comparison participants free of psychiatric disorders were administered a comprehensive neuropsychologic battery. The groups did not differ in full-scale, verbal, and performance IQ (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale), in working memory (Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test), or in selective attention (Digit Span with Distracters). The DPD group performed significantly worse on immediate visual and verbal recall (Wechsler Memory Scale, Revised), but not on delayed recall. Dissociation severity was significantly correlated with processing slowness and distractibility. We conclude that DPD is associated with cognitive disruptions in early perceptual and attentional processes.


Factors associated with resilience in healthy adults

September 2007

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573 Reads

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165 Citations

Psychoneuroendocrinology

Mature defenses comprise one well-validated indicator of resilience. We investigated the relationships of resilience to trauma, attachment, temperament, cortisol, and cognitive performance in adult healthy volunteers. Participants were administered the Defense Style Questionnaire; the Relationship Questionnaire; the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, and the Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire. Cortisol determinations included 24-h urinary, mean hourly plasma, response to low-dose dexamethasone suppression, and reactivity to the Trier social stress test (TSST). Mathematical performance during the TSST was quantified. Twenty-five women and 29 men participated. Resilience was significantly negatively correlated with childhood interpersonal trauma and with harm avoidance. Resilience was significantly positively correlated with urinary cortisol, secure attachment, reward dependence, and superior performance. In a linear regression analysis, the strongest predictor of resilience was childhood trauma, followed by math performance under stress and harm avoidance. We conclude that in young adults without manifest psychiatric disorder, resilience was associated with developmental, biological, and cognitive measures which merit further investigation.


Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Function in Dissociative Disorders, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, and Healthy Volunteers

May 2007

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237 Reads

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166 Citations

Biological Psychiatry

This study investigated basal and stress-induced hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis alterations in dissociative disorders (DDs). Forty-six subjects with DD without lifetime post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 35 subjects with PTSD, and 58 healthy comparison (HC) subjects, free of current major depression, were studied as inpatients. After a 24-hour urine collection and hourly blood sampling for ambient cortisol determination, a low-dose dexamethasone suppression test was administered, followed by the Trier Social Stress Test. The DD group had significantly elevated urinary cortisol compared with the HC group, which was more pronounced in the absence of lifetime major depression, whereas the PTSD and HC groups did not differ. The DD group demonstrated significantly greater resistance to, and faster escape from, dexamethasone suppression compared with the HC group, whereas the PTSD and HC groups did not differ. The three groups did not differ in cortisol stress reactivity, but both psychiatric groups demonstrated a significant inverse correlation between dissociation severity and cortisol reactivity, after controlling for all other symptomatology. The PTSD subgroup with comorbid DD tended to have blunted stress reactivity compared with the HC group. The study demonstrates a distinct pattern of HPA-axis dysregulation in DDs, emphasizing the importance of further study of stress-response systems in dissociative psychopathology.


Citations (21)


... Such characteristics fundamentally challenge our understanding of human consciousness. DPRD significantly affects cognitive and emotional functioning [4][5][6], thereby heavily burdening affected individuals. The elusive pathogenesis of DPRD has hindered the development of effective treatments, underscoring the urgent need for comprehensive investigations into its neural mechanisms. ...

Reference:

Dysfunctional large-scale brain networks in drug-naïve depersonalization-derealization disorder patients
Attention and Memory in Depersonalization-Spectrum Dissociative Disorders: Impact of Selective-Divided Attentional Condition, Stimulus Emotionality, and Stress
  • Citing Article
  • May 2022

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

... Additionally, different types of dissociation (e.g. depersonalisation vs. derealisation) may have different underlying mechanisms (Brown, 2006) and strengths of association across attachment styles (Simeon & Knutelska, 2022) and UPEs (Dorahy & Palmer, 2016;Longden et al., 2012). Future studies may extend on our findings by examining the associations between state attachment and dissociative subtypes within the pathway from trauma to UPEs. ...

The Role of Fearful Attachment in Depersonalization Disorder
  • Citing Article
  • March 2022

European Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

... Concerning the high comorbidity of the DPD patients, our sample was comparable with samples from other experimental or clinical studies [14,33,63,64]. Depersonalization severity was unrelated to severity of depression or anxiety, while depression and anxiety were highly correlated. ...

Double-blind comparison of fluoxetine and placebo in the treatment of depersonalization disorder
  • Citing Article
  • April 2002

Biological Psychiatry

... Overlap between dissociation and psychotic symptoms has been observed in clinical and nonclinical populations (14). For example, positive symptoms of schizophrenia have been seen in patients with dissociative identity disorder (21)(22)(23)(24), and dissociative symptoms have been reported by schizophrenic patients (25)(26)(27). Also, a number of studies (28)(29)(30)(31)(32) have shown that there is a significant relationship between scores of undergraduate students on the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES) (33), which is the most common psychometric instrument for measuring dissociation, and different types of scales for schizotypy such as the Perceptual Aberration Scale (34), the Magical Ideation Scale (35), the Schizotypal Personality Scale (STA) (36), and Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire-Brief (SPQ-B) (37). ...

Dissection of Schizotypy and Dissociation in Depersonalization Disorder
  • Citing Article
  • November 2004

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

... Dissociative symptoms are thought to be a reaction to events perceived as lifethreatening (Sierra and Berrios 1998). There is an especially strong correlation between early interpersonal trauma and dissociative disorders (Simeon et al. 2001). In a research study by Brunner et al. (2000), a group of 198 young individuals receiving psychiatric care, aged between 11 and 19, underwent assessment using the Adolescent Dissociative Experience Scale. ...

Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal Axis Dysregulation in Depersonalization Disorder
  • Citing Article
  • December 2001

Neuropsychopharmacology: official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology

... The Tellegen Absorption Scale (TAS; Tellegen and Atkinson, 1974) was also excluded because it was not conceptualised originally as a measure of dissociation (Terhune and Jamieson, 2021). Although 'absorption' can be a marker of dissociative pathology, its definition in the case of the TAS is different to measures of dissociation (i.e., the DES), with the two scales examining different constructs (Simeon et al., 2009;Soffer-Dudek et al., 2015). The Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES) had the highest number of translated and validated studies (n = 52). ...

Alexithymia, Absorption, and Cognitive Failures in Depersonalization Disorder A Comparison to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Healthy Volunteers
  • Citing Article
  • August 2009

The Journal of nervous and mental disease

... The Swedish translation of the scale [32] has been used in two studies in Sweden and was found to have satisfactory psychometric properties [33,34]. The cutoff between clinical and non-clinical groups has been set to 1.5 [34,35] Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire, version 6.0 (EDE-Q) was administered to assess the extent of eating disorder. The EDE-Q v.6.0 is a self-report questionnaire [36] derived from the Eating disorder examination [37] that uses a 7-point Likert type scale assessing the frequencies of eating problems over the past 28 days from no days ¼ 0 to everyday ¼ 6. ...

Somatoform Dissociation in Depersonalization Disorder
  • Citing Article
  • February 2008

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

... active defensive behavior) are not possible. Indirect support for this model is seen in studies which have proven that trait dissociation is negatively correlated with heart rate during experimentally-induced social stress (Powers et al., 2021;Simeon et al., 2008). ...

Dissociation versus posttraumatic stress: Cortisol and physiological correlates in adults highly exposed to the World Trade Center attack on 9/11
  • Citing Article
  • November 2008

Psychiatry Research

... Moreover, research has revealed that emotional abuse is a predictor of depersonalization disorder and "may play an important role in the genesis of depersonalization symptoms" (Simeon et al., 2001;p. 1032). ...

The Role of Childhood Interpersonal Trauma in Depersonalization Disorder
  • Citing Article
  • Full-text available
  • August 2001

American Journal of Psychiatry

... Despite the adverse outcomes linked to dissociation, the research on the risk factors implicated in dissociative symptoms has largely been theoretical (Ganslev et al. 2020;Simeon et al. 2002) and characterised by controversy and professional debate (Lynn et al. 2019). The trauma model proposes that dissociation is caused by trauma, framing dissociation as a coping mechanism to manage the emotional and physical pain of the traumatic or distressing experience(s) (Gershuny and Thayer 1999;Lynn et al. 2019). ...

Personality Factors Associated With Dissociation: Temperament, Defenses, and Cognitive Schemata

American Journal of Psychiatry