Searched for: person:wisnit01
Age-Related Tortuosity of Carotid and Vertebral Arteries: Quantitative Evaluation With MR Angiography
Sun, Zhe; Jiang, Dengrong; Liu, Peiying; Muccio, Marco; Li, Chenyang; Cao, Yan; Wisniewski, Thomas M; Lu, Hanzhang; Ge, Yulin
Background and Purpose/UNASSIGNED:The vascular tortuosity (VT) of the internal carotid artery (ICA), and vertebral artery (VA) can impact blood flow and neuronal function. However, few studies involved quantitative investigation of VT based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The main purpose of our study was to evaluate the age and gender effects on ICA and VA regarding the tortuosity and flow changes by applying automatic vessel segmentation, centerline tracking, and phase mapping on MR angiography. Methods/UNASSIGNED:A total of 247 subjects (86 males and 161 females) without neurological diseases participated in this study. All subjects obtained T1-weighted MRI, 3D time-of-flight MR angiography, and 2D phase-contrast (PC) MRI scans. To generate quantitative tortuosity metrics from TOF images, the vessel segmentation and centerline tracking were implemented based on Otsu thresholding and fast marching algorithms, respectively. Blood flow and velocity were measured using PC MRI. Among the 247 subjects, 144 subjects (≤ 60 years, 49 males/95 females) were categorized as the young group; 103 subjects (>60 years, 37 males/66 females) were categorized as the old group. Results/UNASSIGNED:< 0.001). The age was observed to be positively correlated with the VT metrics. Compared to the males, the females demonstrated higher geometric indices within VAs as well as faster age-related vascular profile changes. After adjusting age and gender as covariates, maximum blood velocity is negatively correlated with geometric measurements. No association was observed between blood flux and geometric measures. Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:Vascular auto-segmentation, centerline tracking, and phase mapping provide promising quantitative assessments of tortuosity and its effects on blood flow. The neck arteries demonstrate quantifiable and significant age-related morphological and hemodynamic alterations. Moreover, females showed more distinct vascular changes with age. Our work is built upon a comprehensive quantitative investigation of a large cohort of populations covering adult lifespan using MRI, the results can serve as reference ranges of each decade in the general population.
PMCID:9099009
PMID: 35572919
ISSN: 1664-2295
CID: 5284162
Post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 symptom phenotypes and therapeutic strategies: A prospective, observational study
Frontera, Jennifer A; Thorpe, Lorna E; Simon, Naomi M; de Havenon, Adam; Yaghi, Shadi; Sabadia, Sakinah B; Yang, Dixon; Lewis, Ariane; Melmed, Kara; Balcer, Laura J; Wisniewski, Thomas; Galetta, Steven L
BACKGROUND:Post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC) includes a heterogeneous group of patients with variable symptomatology, who may respond to different therapeutic interventions. Identifying phenotypes of PASC and therapeutic strategies for different subgroups would be a major step forward in management. METHODS:In a prospective cohort study of patients hospitalized with COVID-19, 12-month symptoms and quantitative outcome metrics were collected. Unsupervised hierarchical cluster analyses were performed to identify patients with: (1) similar symptoms lasting ≥4 weeks after acute SARS-CoV-2 infection, and (2) similar therapeutic interventions. Logistic regression analyses were used to evaluate the association of these symptom and therapy clusters with quantitative 12-month outcome metrics (modified Rankin Scale, Barthel Index, NIH NeuroQoL). RESULTS:Among 242 patients, 122 (50%) reported ≥1 PASC symptom (median 3, IQR 1-5) lasting a median of 12-months (range 1-15) post-COVID diagnosis. Cluster analysis generated three symptom groups: Cluster1 had few symptoms (most commonly headache); Cluster2 had many symptoms including high levels of anxiety and depression; and Cluster3 primarily included shortness of breath, headache and cognitive symptoms. Cluster1 received few therapeutic interventions (OR 2.6, 95% CI 1.1-5.9), Cluster2 received several interventions, including antidepressants, anti-anxiety medications and psychological therapy (OR 15.7, 95% CI 4.1-59.7) and Cluster3 primarily received physical and occupational therapy (OR 3.1, 95%CI 1.3-7.1). The most severely affected patients (Symptom Cluster 2) had higher rates of disability (worse modified Rankin scores), worse NeuroQoL measures of anxiety, depression, fatigue and sleep disorder, and a higher number of stressors (all P<0.05). 100% of those who received a treatment strategy that included psychiatric therapies reported symptom improvement, compared to 97% who received primarily physical/occupational therapy, and 83% who received few interventions (P = 0.042). CONCLUSIONS:We identified three clinically relevant PASC symptom-based phenotypes, which received different therapeutic interventions with varying response rates. These data may be helpful in tailoring individual treatment programs.
PMCID:9521913
PMID: 36174032
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 5334482
Raphe and ventrolateral medulla proteomics in epilepsy and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
Leitner, Dominique F; Kanshin, Evgeny; Askenazi, Manor; Faustin, Arline; Friedman, Daniel; Devore, Sasha; Ueberheide, Beatrix; Wisniewski, Thomas; Devinsky, Orrin
Brainstem nuclei dysfunction is implicated in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy. In animal models, deficient serotonergic activity is associated with seizure-induced respiratory arrest. In humans, glia are decreased in the ventrolateral medullary pre-Botzinger complex that modulate respiratory rhythm, as well as in the medial medullary raphe that modulate respiration and arousal. Finally, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy cases have decreased midbrain volume. To understand the potential role of brainstem nuclei in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, we evaluated molecular signalling pathways using localized proteomics in microdissected midbrain dorsal raphe and medial medullary raphe serotonergic nuclei, as well as the ventrolateral medulla in brain tissue from epilepsy patients who died of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy and other causes in diverse epilepsy syndromes and non-epilepsy control cases (n = 15-16 cases per group/region). Compared with the dorsal raphe of non-epilepsy controls, we identified 89 proteins in non-sudden unexpected death in epilepsy and 219 proteins in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy that were differentially expressed. These proteins were associated with inhibition of EIF2 signalling (P-value of overlap = 1.29 × 10-8, z = -2.00) in non-sudden unexpected death in epilepsy. In sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, there were 10 activated pathways (top pathway: gluconeogenesis I, P-value of overlap = 3.02 × 10-6, z = 2.24) and 1 inhibited pathway (fatty acid beta-oxidation, P-value of overlap = 2.69 × 10-4, z = -2.00). Comparing sudden unexpected death in epilepsy and non-sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 10 proteins were differentially expressed, but there were no associated signalling pathways. In both medullary regions, few proteins showed significant differences in pairwise comparisons. We identified altered proteins in the raphe and ventrolateral medulla of epilepsy patients, including some differentially expressed in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy cases. Altered signalling pathways in the dorsal raphe of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy indicate a shift in cellular energy production and activation of G-protein signalling, inflammatory response, stress response and neuronal migration/outgrowth. Future studies should assess the brain proteome in relation to additional clinical variables (e.g. recent tonic-clonic seizures) and in more of the reciprocally connected cortical and subcortical regions to better understand the pathophysiology of epilepsy and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy.
PMCID:9344977
PMID: 35928051
ISSN: 2632-1297
CID: 5288272
The lymphatic system in neurological disease and Alzheimer's disease. A brief Editorial [Editorial]
Pappolla, M A; Carare, R O; Poeggeler, B; Wisniewski, T; Sambamurti, K
PMID: 36306458
ISSN: 1875-5828
CID: 5359692
Reduced white matter venous density on MRI is associated with neurodegeneration and cognitive impairment in the elderly
Li, Chenyang; Rusinek, Henry; Chen, Jingyun; Bokacheva, Louisa; Vedvyas, Alok; Masurkar, Arjun V; Haacke, E Mark; Wisniewski, Thomas; Ge, Yulin
High-resolution susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI) provides unique contrast to small venous vasculature. The conspicuity of these mesoscopic veins, such as deep medullary veins in white matter, is subject to change from SWI venography when venous oxygenation in these veins is altered due to oxygenated blood susceptibility changes. The changes of visualization in small veins shows potential to depict regional changes of oxygen utilization and/or vascular density changes in the aging brain. The goal of this study was to use WM venous density to quantify small vein visibility in WM and investigate its relationship with neurodegenerative features, white matter hyperintensities (WMHs), and cognitive/functional status in elderly subjects (N = 137). WM venous density was significantly associated with neurodegeneration characterized by brain atrophy (β = 0.046± 0.01, p < 0.001), but no significant association was found between WM venous density and WMHs lesion load (p = 0.3963). Further analysis of clinical features revealed a negative trend of WM venous density with the sum-of-boxes of Clinical Dementia Rating and a significant association with category fluency (1-min animal naming). These results suggest that WM venous density on SWI can be used as a sensitive marker to characterize cerebral oxygen metabolism and different stages of cognitive and functional status in neurodegenerative diseases.
PMCID:9475309
PMID: 36118685
ISSN: 1663-4365
CID: 5335222
Amelioration of tau related pathology with a novel anti-prion protein monoclonal antibody in an AD mouse model
Boutajangout, Allal; Zhang, Wei; Abdali, Wed; Kim, Justin Sung Tae; Prelli, Frances; Wisniewski, Thomas
ORIGINAL:0015802
ISSN: 1552-5279
CID: 5297202
Plasma biomarkers of neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation in hospitalized COVID-19 patients with and without new neurological symptom
Boutajangout, Allal; Frontera, Jennifer; Debure, Ludovic; Vedvyas, Alok; Faustin, Arline; Wisniewski, Thomas
ORIGINAL:0015801
ISSN: 1552-5279
CID: 5297192
Medication utilization among vascular dementia population
Razavian, Narges; Dodson, John; Masurkar, Arjun V; Wisniewski, Thomas; Horwitz, Leora; Aphinyanaphongs, Yindalon
BACKGROUND:It is estimated that up to 40% of Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias cases can be prevented or delayed by addressing modifiable factors including those that influence vascular risk (hypertension, obesity, smoking, physical activity, diabetes). Prevention may be particularly important in the vascular dementia subtypes. Despite the supporting evidence, the rates of medical therapy to reduce vascular risk are not well described. METHOD/METHODS:We assessed the utilization of statins, aspirin, and blood pressure (BP) medications in adults age ≥65 years cared for at NYU Langone Health, as recorded in the electronic health record. We included two cohorts: cohort 1 included patients who were diagnosed with vascular dementia (VaD) at NYU Langone Barlow Center for Memory Evaluation between January 1, 2015 and June 24, 2019. Cohort 2 extended the inclusion to seniors with VD diagnosis by any NYU Langone physician. Definitions for vascular dementia, the covariates assessed, and medications that we included in each category are shown in Tables 1-3. RESULT/RESULTS:We included 419 and 3745 patients in cohort 1 and cohort 2, respectively. Table 4 shows the characteristics and medication adherence in cohorts 1 and 2. In cohort 1, the prescription rates for statins, aspirin, and BP medications were 66%, 66%, 70%. In cohort 2, the rates for statin, aspirin, and BP medications were 56%, 46%, and 65%, respectively. The differences between prescription rates in cohort 1 and 2 for the three medication groups were statistically significant (p<0.05). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Our analysis of the utilization of cardiovascular medications among patients with vascular dementia illuminates potential gaps both among patients who receive care at specialty clinics, as well as the overall population with vascular dementia. The rates of medication utilization are higher for patients under the care of cognitive neurologists. Electronic health records can help identify large cohorts of patients who may benefit from improved access to preventative measures including cardiovascular medications.
PMID: 34971267
ISSN: 1552-5279
CID: 5108332
Toxic Metabolic Encephalopathy in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19
Frontera, Jennifer A; Melmed, Kara; Fang, Taolin; Granger, Andre; Lin, Jessica; Yaghi, Shadi; Zhou, Ting; Lewis, Ariane; Kurz, Sebastian; Kahn, D Ethan; de Havenon, Adam; Huang, Joshua; Czeisler, Barry M; Lord, Aaron; Meropol, Sharon B; Troxel, Andrea B; Wisniewski, Thomas; Balcer, Laura; Galetta, Steven
BACKGROUND:Toxic metabolic encephalopathy (TME) has been reported in 7-31% of hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); however, some reports include sedation-related delirium and few data exist on the etiology of TME. We aimed to identify the prevalence, etiologies, and mortality rates associated with TME in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)-positive patients. METHODS:We conducted a retrospective, multicenter, observational cohort study among patients with reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection hospitalized at four New York City hospitals in the same health network between March 1, 2020, and May 20, 2020. TME was diagnosed in patients with altered mental status off sedation or after an adequate sedation washout. Patients with structural brain disease, seizures, or primary neurological diagnoses were excluded. The coprimary outcomes were the prevalence of TME stratified by etiology and in-hospital mortality (excluding comfort care only patients) assessed by using a multivariable time-dependent Cox proportional hazards models with adjustment for age, race, sex, intubation, intensive care unit requirement, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores, hospital location, and date of admission. RESULTS:Among 4491 patients with COVID-19, 559 (12%) were diagnosed with TME, of whom 435 of 559 (78%) developed encephalopathy immediately prior to hospital admission. The most common etiologies were septic encephalopathy (n = 247 of 559 [62%]), hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) (n = 331 of 559 [59%]), and uremia (n = 156 of 559 [28%]). Multiple etiologies were present in 435 (78%) patients. Compared with those without TME (n = 3932), patients with TME were older (76 vs. 62 years), had dementia (27% vs. 3%) or psychiatric history (20% vs. 10%), were more often intubated (37% vs. 20%), had a longer hospital length of stay (7.9 vs. 6.0 days), and were less often discharged home (25% vs. 66% [all P < 0.001]). Excluding comfort care patients (n = 267 of 4491 [6%]) and after adjustment for confounders, TME remained associated with increased risk of in-hospital death (n = 128 of 425 [30%] patients with TME died, compared with n = 600 of 3799 [16%] patients without TME; adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 1.24, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.02-1.52, P = 0.031), and TME due to hypoxemia conferred the highest risk (n = 97 of 233 [42%] patients with HIE died, compared with n = 631 of 3991 [16%] patients without HIE; aHR 1.56, 95% CI 1.21-2.00, P = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS:TME occurred in one in eight hospitalized patients with COVID-19, was typically multifactorial, and was most often due to hypoxemia, sepsis, and uremia. After we adjustment for confounding factors, TME was associated with a 24% increased risk of in-hospital mortality.
PMCID:7962078
PMID: 33725290
ISSN: 1556-0961
CID: 4817682
Distinct conformers of amyloid beta accumulate in the neocortex of patients with rapidly progressive Alzheimer's disease
Liu, He; Kim, Chae; Haldiman, Tracy; Sigurdson, Christina J; Nyström, Sofie; Nilsson, K Peter R; Cohen, Mark L; Wisniewski, Thomas; Hammarström, Per; Safar, Jiri G
Amyloid beta (Aβ) deposition in the neocortex is a major hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the extent of deposition does not readily explain phenotypic diversity and rate of disease progression. The prion strain-like model of disease heterogeneity suggests the existence of different conformers of Aβ. We explored this paradigm using conformation-dependent immunoassay (CDI) for Aβ and conformation-sensitive luminescent conjugated oligothiophenes (LCOs) in AD cases with variable progression rates. Mapping the Aβ conformations in the frontal, occipital, and temporal regions in 20 AD patients with CDI revealed extensive interindividual and anatomical diversity in the structural organization of Aβ with the most significant differences in the temporal cortex of rapidly progressive AD. The fluorescence emission spectra collected in situ from Aβ plaques in the same regions demonstrated considerable diversity of spectral characteristics of two LCOs-quatroformylthiophene acetic acid and heptaformylthiophene acetic acid. Heptaformylthiophene acetic acid detected a wider range of Aβ deposits, and both LCOs revealed distinct spectral attributes of diffuse and cored plaques in the temporal cortex of rapidly and slowly progressive AD and less frequent and discernible differences in the frontal and occipital cortex. These and CDI findings indicate a major conformational diversity of Aβ accumulating in the neocortex, with the most notable differences in temporal cortex of cases with shorter disease duration, and implicate distinct Aβ conformers (strains) in the rapid progression of AD.
PMCID:8531671
PMID: 34599965
ISSN: 1083-351x
CID: 5061732