Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Neurology
Two Year Outcomes, Cognitive and Behavioral Markers of Decline in Healthy, Cognitively Normal Older Persons with Global Deterioration Scale Stage 2 (Subjective Cognitive Decline with Impairment)
Reisberg, Barry; Torossian, Carol; Shulman, Melanie B; Monteiro, Isabel; Boksay, Istvan; Golomb, James; Guillo Benarous, Francoise; Ulysse, Anaztasia; Oo, Thet; Vedvyas, Alok; Rao, Julia A; Marsh, Karyn; Kluger, Alan; Sangha, Jaspreet; Hassan, Mudasar; Alshalabi, Munther; Arain, Fauzia; Shaikh, Naveed; Buj, Maja; Kenowsky, Sunnie; Masurkar, Arjun V; Rabin, Laura; Noroozian, Maryam; Sánchez-Saudinós, Mar A Belén; Blesa, Rafael; Auer, Stefanie; Zhang, Yian; de Leon, Mony; Sadowski, Martin; Wisniewski, Thomas; Gauthier, Serge; Shao, Yongzhao
BACKGROUND:Little is known with respect to behavioral markers of subjective cognitive decline (SCD), a condition initially described in association with Global Deterioration Scale (GDS) stage 2. OBJECTIVE:Two-year interval behavioral markers were investigated herein. METHODS:Subjects from a published 7-year outcome study of GDS stage 2 subjects were selected. This study had demonstrated a hazard ratio of 4.5 for progression of GDS stage 2, in comparison with GDS stage 1 (no subjective or objective cognitive decline) subjects, after controlling for demographic and temporal variables. Because GDS 2 subjects have previously demonstrated impairment in comparison with healthy persons free of complaints, we herein suggest the terminology "SCD(I)" for these persons. 98 SCD(I) persons, 63 women and 35 men, mean baseline age, 67.12±8.75 years, with a mean educational background of 15.55±2.60 years, and mean baseline MMSE scores of 28.9±1.24 were followed for 2.13±0.30 years. RESULTS:Observed annual decline on the GDS was 6.701% per annum, very close to a 1986 published estimate. At follow up, the MMSE, and 7 of 8 psychometric tests did not decline significantly. Of 21 Hamilton Depression Scale items, 2 improved and the remainder were unchanged. Anxieties declined from multiple perspectives. The Brief Cognitive Rating Scale (BCRS) declined significantly (p < 0.001), with component declines in Remote memory (p < 0.01), and Functioning/self-care (p = 0.01). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:SCD(I) persons decline at an annual rate of approximately 6.7% /year from several recent studies. The BCRS assessments and the Digit Symbol Substitution Test can be sensitive measures for future studies of progression mitigation.
PMID: 30689585
ISSN: 1875-8908
CID: 3626022
Flipped Classrooms as a Learning Tool for Neurology Noon Conference Curriculum [Meeting Abstract]
Bauman, Kristie; Makepeace, Joshua; Zubkov, Sarah; Tsao, Ching; Jacobson, Mercedes
ISI:000475965902088
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 4028942
Research Needs
Chapter by: Devinsky, Orrin; Palusci, Vincent J; Shapiro-Mendoza, Carrie K; Ackerman, Michael J; Crandall, Laura Gould; White, Steven M; Burns, Kristin M
in: Unexplained Pediatric Deaths: Investigation, Certification, and Family Needs by Bundock, Elizabeth A; Corey, Tracey S; Andrew, Thomas A; Crandall, Laura Gould; Eason, Eric A; Gunther, Wendy M; Moon, Rachel Y; Palusci, Vincent J; Schmidt, Cynthia M; Sens, Mary Ann(eds)
Academic Forensic Pathology International
pp. -
ISBN:
CID: 5646122
Editors' note: IgLON5-mediated neurodegeneration is a differential diagnosis of CNS Whipple disease [Letter]
Lewis, Ariane; Galetta, Steven
ISI:000463953200025
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 4354042
Functional Connectivity with the Default Mode Network Predicts Efficacy of Cognitive Rehabilitation in People with Multiple Sclerosis [Meeting Abstract]
Bartnik, Alexander; Fuchs, Tom; Benedict, Ralph; Ziccardi, Stefano; Oship, Devon; Weinstock-Guttman, Bianca; Charvet, Leigh; Zivadinov, Robert; Dwyer, Michael
ISI:000475965905054
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 4029282
Editorial: How to Review Papers for A Neurosurgical Journal [Editorial]
Epstein, Nancy E
PMCID:6935948
PMID: 31893153
ISSN: 2229-5097
CID: 4252232
Aging Does Not Affect Beta Modulation during Reaching Movements
Ricci, Serena; Mehraram, Ramtin; Tatti, Elisa; Nelson, Aaron B; Bossini-Baroggi, Martina; Panday, Priya; Lin, Nancy; Ghilardi, M Felice
During movement, modulation of beta power occurs over the sensorimotor areas, with a decrease just before its start (event-related desynchronization, ERD) and a rebound after its end (event-related synchronization, ERS). We have recently found that the depth of ERD-to-ERS modulation increases during practice in a reaching task and the following day decreases to baseline levels. Importantly, the magnitude of the beta modulation increase during practice is highly correlated with the retention of motor skill tested the following day. Together with other evidence, this suggests that the increase of practice-related modulation depth may be the expression of sensorimotor cortex's plasticity. Here, we determine whether the practice-related increase of beta modulation depth is equally present in a group of younger and a group of older subjects during the performance of a 30-minute block of reaching movements. We focused our analyses on two regions of interest (ROIs): the left sensorimotor and the frontal region. Performance indices were significantly different in the two groups, with the movements of older subjects being slower and less accurate. Importantly, both groups presented a similar increase of the practice-related beta modulation depth in both ROIs in the course of the task. Peak latency analysis revealed a progressive delay of the ERS peak that correlated with the total movement time. Altogether, these findings support the notion that the depth of beta modulation in a reaching movement task does not depend on age and confirm previous findings that only ERS peak latency but not ERS magnitude is related to performance indices.
PMCID:6541950
PMID: 31223306
ISSN: 1687-5443
CID: 4174462
Infectious disorders. Part 2
Chapter by: Vilceus, A; Vilceus, N; Ettinger, Alan B
in: Synopsis of neurology, psychiatry and related systemic disorders by Ettinger, Alan B; Weisbrot, Deborah M; Gallimore, Casey [Eds]
Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2019
pp. ?-
ISBN: 9781107069565
CID: 5363472
"We had support from our brothers": a critical race counter-narrative inquiry into second-generation Black Caribbean male youth responses to discriminatory work pathways
Briggs, Anthony Q.
ISI:000484594200006
ISSN: 1363-9080
CID: 5353712
IT TAKES A TEAM TO CRASH SUCCESSFULLY: INTERPROFESSIONAL TEAM TRAINING IN CALS [Meeting Abstract]
Mitchell, Oscar; Anderson, Christopher; Sureau, Kimberly; Horowitz, James; Piper, Greta; Nunnally, Mark; Smith, Deane
ISI:000498593400143
ISSN: 0090-3493
CID: 4227672