U
Ursula F. Bailer
Researcher at University of California, San Diego
Publications - 78
Citations - 5084
Ursula F. Bailer is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bulimia nervosa & Anorexia nervosa (differential diagnoses). The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 75 publications receiving 4625 citations. Previous affiliations of Ursula F. Bailer include University of Pittsburgh & Medical University of Vienna.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical factors associated with treatment resistance in major depressive disorder: results from a European multicenter study.
Daniel Souery,Pierre Oswald,Isabelle Massat,Ursula F. Bailer,Joseph Bollen,Koen Demyttenaere,Siegfried Kasper,Yves Lecrubier,Stuart Montgomery,Alessandro Serretti,Joseph Zohar,Julien Mendlewicz +11 more
TL;DR: The findings provide a set of 11 relevant clinical variables associated with treatment resistance in major depressive disorder that can be explored at the clinical level and show that comorbid anxiety disorder is the most powerful clinical factor associated with TRD.
Journal ArticleDOI
Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels: the neurobiology of anorexia nervosa
Walter H. Kaye,Christina E. Wierenga,Ursula F. Bailer,Ursula F. Bailer,Alan N. Simmons,Alan N. Simmons,Amanda Bischoff-Grethe +6 more
TL;DR: Brain imaging studies suggest that altered eating is a consequence of dysregulated reward and/or awareness of homeostatic needs, perhaps related to enhanced executive ability to inhibit incentive motivational drives.
Journal ArticleDOI
Increased dopamine D2/D3 receptor binding after recovery from anorexia nervosa measured by positron emission tomography and [11c]raclopride.
Guido K.W. Frank,Ursula F. Bailer,Shannan Henry,Wayne C. Drevets,Carolyn C. Meltzer,Julie C. Price,Chester A. Mathis,Angela Wagner,Jessica A. Hoge,Scott K. Ziolko,Nicole C. Barbarich-Marsteller,Lisa A. Weissfeld,Walter H. Kaye +12 more
TL;DR: Data lend support for the possibility that decreased intrasynaptic DA concentration or increased D2/D3 receptor density or affinity is associated with AN and might contribute to the characteristic harm avoidance or increased physical activity found in AN.
Journal ArticleDOI
Altered Reward Processing in Women Recovered From Anorexia Nervosa
Angela Wagner,Howard J. Aizenstein,Vijay K. Venkatraman,Julie L. Fudge,J. Christopher May,Laura Mazurkewicz,Guido K.W. Frank,Ursula F. Bailer,Lorie Fischer,Van Nguyen,Cameron S. Carter,Karen Putnam,Walter H. Kaye +12 more
TL;DR: Individuals who have recovered from anorexia nervosa may have difficulties in differentiating positive and negative feedback and the exaggerated activation of the caudate, a region involved in linking action to outcome, may constitute an attempt at "strategic" means of responding to reward stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI
Altered Insula Response to Taste Stimuli in Individuals Recovered from Restricting-Type Anorexia Nervosa
Angela Wagner,Angela Wagner,Howard J. Aizenstein,Laura Mazurkewicz,Julie L. Fudge,Guido K.W. Frank,Guido K.W. Frank,Karen Putnam,Ursula F. Bailer,Ursula F. Bailer,Lorie Fischer,Walter H. Kaye +11 more
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that individuals with AN process taste stimuli differently than controls, based on differences in neural activation patterns, which is first evidence that altered taste processing may occur in AN.