Chloe O’Connell
Stanford University
14 Papers
4 Citations
Chloe O’Connell is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Arthrodesis. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 13 publications. Previous affiliations of Chloe O’Connell include Brown University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Preoperative depression, lumbar fusion, and opioid use: an assessment of postoperative prescription, quality, and economic outcomes.
Chloe O’Connell,Tej D. Azad,Vaishali Mittal,Daniel Vail,Eli Johnson,Atman Desai,Eric C. Sun,John K. Ratliff,Anand Veeravagu +8 more
TL;DR: Evidence is provided for the link between a preoperative diagnosis of depression and adverse outcomes, particularly increased opioid use, following lumbar fusion and for the association between depression and 1- and 2-year costs.
Antidepressant Outcomes Predicted by Genetic Variation in Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone Binding Protein.
Chloe O’Connell,Andrea N. Goldstein-Piekarski,Charles B. Nemeroff,Alan F. Schatzberg,Charles DeBattista,Tania Carrillo-Roa,Elisabeth B. Binder,Boadie W. Dunlop,W. Edward Craighead,Helen S. Mayberg,Leanne M. Williams +10 more
TL;DR: Findings suggest that a specific CRHBP SNP, rs28365143, may have a role in predicting which patients will improve with antidepressants and which type of antidepressant may be most effective.
43
Ion channels and schizophrenia: a gene set-based analytic approach to GWAS data for biological hypothesis testing.
TL;DR: While extensive pMIN findings may reflect gene size bias, the extent and significance of PROP and TPM findings suggest that common variation at ion channel genes may capture some of the heritability of schizophrenia.
43
Stop Signal Reaction Time Deficits in a Lifetime Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Sample.
Nicole C R McLaughlin,Jason Kirschner,Hallee C Foster,Chloe O’Connell,Steven A. Rasmussen,Benjamin D. Greenberg +5 more
TL;DR: Results support prior studies showing impaired response inhibition in OCD, and extend the findings to a sample of patients with lifetime OCD who were not all currently above threshold for diagnosis, indicating that response inhibition deficits may be a biomarker of OCD, regardless of current severity levels.
37
Retrospective Review of the Safety and Efficacy of Virtual Reality in a Pediatric Hospital.
Thomas J Caruso,Chloe O’Connell,Jimmy J. Qian,Tiffany H Kung,Ellen Wang,Susan Kinnebrew,Molly Pearson,Madison N Kist,Maria Menendez,Samuel Rodriguez +9 more
- 10 Apr 2020
TL;DR: Virtual reality is safe in pediatric patients with appropriate hardware, software, and patient selection and appears to be associated with improvements in cooperation.