294 research outputs found

    Neurophysiological alterations during phoneme and word processing in the acute stage of aphasia

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    Only a few studies have investigated neurophysiological substrates of phonological impairment in patients with aphasia (PWA) in the acute stage after stroke (Ilvonen et al., 2003; Nolfe et al., 2006). Behavioral evaluation is often problematic or even impossible in PWA in the acute stage, as some patients cannot be instructed due to severely impaired comprehension, reduced consciousness or confusion. Event-related potentials (ERPS) can circumvent such problems as they have already demonstrated their sensitivity and usefulness in measuring certain language processes in both a healthy and clinical population. The objective of the present study is to investigate neurophysiological substrates of phoneme and word processing in PWA with phonological disorders (PWA-PD) in the acute stage after stroke. Ten PWA-PD (5 men, 5 women; mean age 69.4 years +/- 3.46) are included and compared to 44 healthy control participants (HC) (20 men, 24 women; mean age 44.46 years +/- 13.76). All patients suffer from a first-ever stroke in the left hemisphere, are right-handed, have Dutch as native language and present with acute phonological disorders as established with the Psycholinguistic Assessment of Language Processing in Aphasia (Bastiaanse et al., 1995). PWA-PD admitted with a recurrent stroke, left handedness, indications for comorbid cognitive disorders and severe hearing deficits are excluded. Phoneme discrimination is studied in a pre-attentive (MMN) and attentive (P300) oddball task with respect to the phonemic contrasts place of articulation (PoA), voicing and manner of articulation (MoA) to explore whether a qualitative pattern of impaired phonemic contrast sensitivity can be determined. Word recognition is studied in a pre-attentive oddball task, which consists of differentiating real words from pseudowords. The electroencephalogram (EEG) is recorded through 23 Ag/AgCl-electrodes using a linked ears reference and an electrode placed on the forehead as ground. Further EEG analysis includes additional filtering, independent component analysis, segmentation, baseline correction and artifact rejection. Statistical analysis is performed on amplitudes and latencies specifically taking into account the large heterogeneity among PWA-PD. During phoneme discrimination, PWA-PD only show MMN amplitude reductions with voicing as phonemic contrast in the pre-attentive condition, whereas all three phonemic contrasts reveal smaller P300 amplitudes compared to HC in the attentive condition. PWA-PD show a larger response to PoA compared to MoA and voicing in the pre-attentive condition, whereas in the attentive condition only the difference between PoA and voicing remains. During word recognition, PWA-PD and HC display larger responses to pseudowords compared to real words from 100 ms onwards, continuing in the P200 and N400 time windows, despite the fact that responses to pseudowords show longer latencies in PWA-PD. In summary, this demonstrates a distinct pattern of impaired phonemic contrast sensitivity in PWA-PD, with PoA being the most resistant, voicing the most vulnerable and a substantial effect of attention. Moreover, PWA-PD suffer from a delay in lexical access due to a less efficient information transfer, which did not impair the response to pseudowords. For possible clinical implementation of ERPs, pre-attentive tasks seem to be more suitable than attentive tasks in the acute stage of aphasia

    Intranodal administration of mRNA encoding nucleoprotein provides cross-strain immunity against influenza in mice

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    Background: Current human influenza vaccines lack the adaptability to match the mutational rate of the virus and therefore require annual revisions. Because of extensive manufacturing times and the possibility that antigenic alterations occur during viral vaccine strain production, an inherent risk exists for antigenic mismatch between the new influenza vaccine and circulating viruses. Targeting more conserved antigens such as nucleoprotein (NP) could provide a more sustainable vaccination strategy by inducing long term and heterosubtypic protection against influenza. We previously demonstrated that intranodal mRNA injection can induce potent antigen-specific T-cell responses. In this study, we investigated whether intranodal administration of mRNA encoding NP can induce T-cell responses capable of protecting against a heterologous influenza virus challenge. Methods: BALB/c mice were immunized in the inguinal lymph nodes with different vaccination regimens of mRNA encoding NP. Immune responses were compared with NP DNA vaccination via IFN-gamma ELISPOT and in vivo cytotoxicity. For survival experiments, mice were prime-boost vaccinated with 17 mu g NP mRNA and infected with 1LD50 of H1N1 influenza virus 8weeks after boost. Weight was monitored and viral titers, cytokines and immune cell populations in the bronchoalveolar lavage, and IFN-gamma responses in the spleen were analyzed. Results: Our results demonstrate that NP mRNA induces superior systemic T-cell responses against NP compared to classical DNA vaccination. These responses were sustained for several weeks even at low vaccine doses. Upon challenge infection, vaccination with NP mRNA resulted in reduced lung viral titers and improved recovery from infection. Finally, we show that vaccination with NP mRNA affects the immune response in infected lungs by lowering immune cell infiltration while increasing the fraction of T cells, monocytes and MHC II+ alveolar macrophages within immune infiltrates. This change was associated with altered levels of both pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines. Conclusions: These findings suggest that intranodal vaccination with NP mRNA induces cross-strain immunity against influenza, but also highlight a paradox of influenza immunity, whereby robust immune responses can provide protection, but can also transiently exacerbate symptoms during infection
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