160 research outputs found
Using a Bayesian approach to reconstruct graph statistics after edge sampling
Often, due to prohibitively large size or to limits to data collecting APIs,
it is not possible to work with a complete network dataset and sampling is
required. A type of sampling which is consistent with Twitter API restrictions
is uniform edge sampling. In this paper, we propose a methodology for the
recovery of two fundamental network properties from an edge-sampled network:
the degree distribution and the triangle count (we estimate the totals for the
network and the counts associated with each edge). We use a Bayesian approach
and show a range of methods for constructing a prior which does not require
assumptions about the original network. Our approach is tested on two synthetic
and three real datasets with diverse sizes, degree distributions, degree-degree
correlations and triangle count distributions.Comment: Extended version of the paper accepted in Complex Networks 202
Atrial Flutter in Infants
ObjectivesWe sought to characterize the clinical nature of atrial flutter (AFL) in a large cohort of infants.BackgroundThere are no large studies describing the natural history of AFL in infants. Previous studies vary in the therapy used and expected prognosis.MethodsWe reviewed the records of all children younger than 1 year of age who were diagnosed with AFL at our hospital during the past 25 years, excluding those with previous cardiac surgery.ResultsWe identified 50 infants with AFL. Most, 36 (72%), presented within the first 48 h of life. Congestive heart failure was evident in 10 infants, with 6 presenting at 1 day of age, and 4 presenting beyond 1 month of age. The remainder were asymptomatic. A large atrial septal defect was the only structural heart disease. Spontaneous conversion to sinus rhythm occurred in 13 (26%) infants. Sinus rhythm was restored in 20 of 23 (87%) attempts at direct current cardioversion and 7 of 22 (32%) attempts at transesophegeal pacing; 7 required antiarrhythmic therapy. An additional arrhythmia, all supraventricular, appeared in 11 (22%) infants. The recurrence of AFL developed in 6 infants; 5 of 6 of these incidents occurred within 24 h of the first episode. All patients with recurrence had an additional arrhythmia.ConclusionsInfants with AFL usually present within the first 2 days of life. No association was found with structural heart disease. Direct current cardioversion appears to be most effective at establishing sinus rhythm. Chronic AFL has the potential to cause cardiovascular compromise. Atrial flutter in the absence of other arrhythmias has a low risk of recurrence. Once in sinus rhythm, infants with AFL have an excellent prognosis and may not require chronic antiarrhythmic therapy
Hippocampal Functional Connectivity and Memory Performance After Exercise Intervention in Older Adults with Mild Cognitive Impairment
Background:
Exercise training (ET) has neuroprotective effects in the hippocampus, a key brain region for memory that is vulnerable to age-related dysfunction. Objective:
We investigated the effects of ET on functional connectivity (FC) of the hippocampus in older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and a cognitively normal (CN) control group. We also assessed whether the ET-induced changes in hippocampal FC (Δhippocampal-FC) are associated with changes in memory task performance (Δmemory performance). Methods:
32 older adults (77.0±7.6 years; 16 MCI and 16 CN) participated in the present study. Cardiorespiratory fitness tests, memory tasks (Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT) and Logical Memory Test (LM)), and resting-state fMRI were administered before and after a 12-week walking ET intervention. We utilized a seed-based correlation analysis using the bilateral anterior and posterior hippocampi as priori seed regions of interest. The associations of residualized ET-induced Δhippocampal-FC and Δmemory performance were assessed using linear regression. Results:
There were significant improvements in RAVLT Trial 1 and LM test performance after ET across participants. At baseline, MCI, compared to CN, demonstrated significantly lower posterior hippocampal FC. ET was associated with increased hippocampal FC across groups. Greater ET-related anterior and posterior hippocampal FC with right posterior cingulate were associated with improved LM recognition performance in MCI participants. Conclusion:
Our findings indicate that hippocampal FC is significantly increased following 12-weeks of ET in older adults and, moreover, suggest that increased hippocampal FC may reflect neural network plasticity associated with ET-related improvements in memory performance in individuals diagnosed with MCI
Exercise Training-Related Changes in Cortical Gray Matter Diffusivity and Cognitive Function in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Healthy Older Adults
Individuals with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) are at an elevated risk of dementia and exhibit deficits in cognition and cortical gray matter (GM) volume, thickness, and microstructure. Meanwhile, exercise training appears to preserve brain function and macrostructure may help delay or prevent the onset of dementia in individuals with MCI. Yet, our understanding of the neurophysiological effects of exercise training in individuals with MCI remains limited. Recent work suggests that the measures of gray matter microstructure using diffusion imaging may be sensitive to early cognitive and neurophysiological changes in the aging brain. Therefore, this study is aimed to determine the effects of exercise training in cognition and cortical gray matter microstructure in individuals with MCI vs. cognitively healthy older adults. Fifteen MCI participants and 17 cognitively intact controls (HC) volunteered for a 12-week supervised walking intervention. Following the intervention, MCI and HC saw improvements in cardiorespiratory fitness, performance on Trial 1 of the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT), a measure of verbal memory, and the Controlled Oral Word Association Test (COWAT), a measure of verbal fluency. After controlling for age, a voxel-wise analysis of cortical gray matter diffusivity showed individuals with MCI exhibited greater increases in mean diffusivity (MD) in the left insular cortex than HC. This increase in MD was positively associated with improvements in COWAT performance. Additionally, after controlling for age, the voxel-wise analysis indicated a main effect of Time with both groups experiencing an increase in left insular and left and right cerebellar MD. Increases in left insular diffusivity were similarly found to be positively associated with improvements in COWAT performance in both groups, while increases in cerebellar MD were related to gains in episodic memory performance. These findings suggest that exercise training may be related to improvements in neural circuits that govern verbal fluency performance in older adults through the microstructural remodeling of cortical gray matter. Furthermore, changes in left insular cortex microstructure may be particularly relevant to improvements in verbal fluency among individuals diagnosed with MCI
Moderators, Mediators, and Other Predictors of Risperidone Response in Children with Autistic Disorder and Irritability
Objective/Background:
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Research Units on Pediatric Psychopharmacology
(RUPP) Autism Network found an effect size of d = 1.2 in favor of risperidone on the main outcome measure
in an 8-week double-blind, placebo-controlled trial for irritabilityin autistic disorder. This paper explores
moderators and mediators of this effect.
Method:
Intention-to-treat (ITT) analyses were conducted with suspected moderators and mediators entered
into the regression equations. MacArthur Foundation Network subgroup guidelines were followed in the
evaluation of the results.
Results:
Only baseline severity moderated treatment response: Higher severity showed greater improvement
for risperidone but not for placebo. Weight gain mediated treatment response negatively: Those who gained
more weight improved less with risperidone and more with placebo. Compliance correlated with outcome for
risperidone but not placebo. Higher dose correlated with worse outcome for placebo, but not risperidone. Of
nonspecific predictors, parent education, family income, and low baseline prolactin positively predicted
outcome; anxiety, bipolar symptoms, oppositional-defiant symptoms, stereotypy, and hyperactivity
negatively predicted outcome. Risperidone moderated the effect of change in 5'-nucleotidase, a marker of
zinc status, for which decrease was associated with improvement only with risperidone, not with placebo.
Conclusion:
The benefit–risk ratio of risperidone is better with greater symptom severity. Risperidone can be
individually titrated to optimal dosage for excellent response in the majority of children. Weight gain is not
necessary for risperidone benefit and may even detract from it. Socioeconomic advantage, low prolactin, and
absence of co-morbid problems non-specifically predict better outcome. Mineral interactions with
risperidone deserve further study
Cognitive Effects of Risperidone in Children with Autism and Irritable Behavior
Objective:
The objective of this research was to explore the effects of risperidone on cognitive processes in
children with autism and irritable behavior.
Method:
Thirty-eight children, ages 5-17 years with autism and severe behavioral disturbance, were
randomly assigned to risperidone (0.5 to 3.5 mg/day) or placebo for 8 weeks. This sample of 38 was a subset
of 101 subjects who participated in the clinical trial; 63 were unable to perform the cognitive tasks. A
double-blind placebo-controlled parallel groups design was used. Dependent measures included tests of
sustained attention, verbal learning, hand-eye coordination, and spatial memory assessed before, during, and
after the 8-week treatment. Changes in performance were compared by repeated measures ANOVA.
Results:
Twenty-nine boys and 9 girls with autism and severe behavioral disturbance and a mental age ≥18
months completed the cognitive part of the study. No decline in performance occurred with risperidone.
Performance on a cancellation task (number of correct detections) and a verbal learning task (word
recognition) was better on risperidone than on placebo (without correction for multiplicity). Equivocal
improvement also occurred on a spatial memory task. There were no significant differences between
treatment conditions on the Purdue Pegboard (hand-eye coordination) task or the Analog Classroom Task
(timed math test).
Conclusion:
Risperidone given to children with autism at doses up to 3.5 mg for up to 8 weeks appears to have no
detrimental effect on cognitive performance
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Effects of Metformin on Spatial and Verbal Memory in Children with ASD and Overweight Associated with Atypical Antipsychotic Use
Abstract Objectives: Studies in humans and rodents suggest that metformin, a medicine typically used to treat type 2 diabetes, may have beneficial effects on memory. We sought to determine whether metformin improved spatial or verbal memory in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and overweight associated with atypical antipsychotic use. Methods: We studied the effects of metformin (Riomet®) concentrate on spatial and verbal memory in 51 youth with ASD, ages 6 through 17 years, who were taking atypical antipsychotic medications, had gained significant weight, and were enrolled in a trial of metformin for weight management. Phase 1 was a 16-week, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group comparison of metformin (500–850 mg given twice a day) versus placebo. During Phase 2, all participants took open-label metformin from week 17 through week 32. We assessed spatial and verbal memory using the Neuropsychological Assessment 2nd Edition (NEPSY–II) and a modified children's verbal learning task. Results: No measures differed between participants randomized to metformin versus placebo, at either 16 or 32 weeks, after adjustment for multiple comparisons. Sixteen-week change in memory for spatial location on the NEPSY–II was nominally better among participants randomized to placebo. However, patterns of treatment response across all measures revealed no systematic differences in performance, suggesting that metformin had no effect on spatial or verbal memory in these children. Conclusions: Although further study is needed to support these null effects, the overall impression is that metformin does not affect memory in overweight youth with ASD who were taking atypical antipsychotic medications
Association of Tinnitus and Electromagnetic Hypersensitivity: Hints for a Shared Pathophysiology?
BACKGROUND: Tinnitus is a frequent condition with high morbidity and impairment in quality of life. The pathophysiology is still incompletely understood. Electromagnetic fields are discussed to be involved in the multi-factorial pathogenesis of tinnitus, but data proofing this relationship are very limited. Potential health hazards of electromagnetic fields (EMF) have been under discussion for long. Especially, individuals claiming themselves to be electromagnetic hypersensitive suffer from a variety of unspecific symptoms, which they attribute to EMF-exposure. The aim of the study was to elucidate the relationship between EMF-exposure, electromagnetic hypersensitivity and tinnitus using a case-control design. METHODOLOGY: Tinnitus occurrence and tinnitus severity were assessed by questionnaires in 89 electromagnetic hypersensitive patients and 107 controls matched for age-, gender, living surroundings and workplace. Using a logistic regression approach, potential risk factors for the development of tinnitus were evaluated. FINDINGS: Tinnitus was significantly more frequent in the electromagnetic hypersensitive group (50.72% vs. 17.5%) whereas tinnitus duration and severity did not differ between groups. Electromagnetic hypersensitivity and tinnitus were independent risk factors for sleep disturbances. However, measures of individual EMF-exposure like e.g. cell phone use did not show any association with tinnitus. CONCLUSIONS: Our data indicate that tinnitus is associated with subjective electromagnetic hypersensitivity. An individual vulnerability probably due to an over activated cortical distress network seems to be responsible for, both, electromagnetic hypersensitivity and tinnitus. Hence, therapeutic efforts should focus on treatment strategies (e.g. cognitive behavioral therapy) aiming at normalizing this dysfunctional distress network
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