34 research outputs found

    Increased Finger-Tapping Related Cerebellar Activation in Cervical Dystonia, Enhanced by Transcranial Stimulation: An Indicator of Compensation?

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    Background: Cervical dystonia is a movement disorder causing abnormal postures and movements of the head. While the exact pathophysiology of cervical dystonia has not yet been fully elucidated, a growing body of evidence points to the cerebellum as an important node.Methods: Here, we examined the impact of cerebellar interference by transcranial magnetic stimulation on finger-tapping related brain activation and neurophysiological measures of cortical excitability and inhibition in cervical dystonia and controls. Bilateral continuous theta-burst stimulation was used to modulate cerebellar cortical excitability in 16 patients and matched healthy controls. In a functional magnetic resonance imaging arm, data were acquired during simple finger tapping before and after cerebellar stimulation. In a neurophysiological arm, assessment comprised motor-evoked potentials amplitude and cortical silent period duration. Theta-burst stimulation over the dorsal premotor cortex and sham stimulation (neurophysiological arm only) served as control conditions.Results: At baseline, finger tapping was associated with increased activation in the ipsilateral cerebellum in patients compared to controls. Following cerebellar theta-burst stimulation, this pattern was even more pronounced, along with an additional movement-related activation in the contralateral somatosensory region and angular gyrus. Baseline motor-evoked potential amplitudes were higher and cortical silent period duration shorter in patients compared to controls. After cerebellar theta-burst stimulation, cortical silent period duration increased significantly in dystonia patients.Conclusion: We conclude that in cervical dystonia, finger movements—though clinically non-dystonic—are associated with increased activation of the lateral cerebellum, possibly pointing to general motor disorganization, which remains subclinical in most body regions. Enhancement of this activation together with an increase of silent period duration by cerebellar continuous theta-burst stimulation may indicate predominant disinhibitory effects on Purkinje cells, eventually resulting in an inhibition of cerebello-thalamocortical circuits

    Manifestations of early brain recovery associated with abstinence from alcoholism

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    Chronic alcohol abuse results in morphological, metabolic, and functional brain damage which may, to some extent, be reversible with early effects upon abstinence. Although morphometric, spectroscopic, and neuropsychological indicators of cerebral regeneration have been described previously, the overall amount and spatial preference of early brain recovery attained by abstinence and its associations with other indicators of regeneration are not well established. We investigated global and local brain volume changes in a longitudinal two-timepoint study with T1-weighted MRI at admission and after short-term (6-7 weeks) sobriety follow-up in 15 uncomplicated, recently detoxified alcoholics. Volumetric brain gain was related to metabolic and neuropsychological recovery. On admission and after short-term abstinence, structural image evaluation using normalization of atrophy (SIENA), its voxelwise statistical extension to multiple subjects, proton MR spectroscopy (1H-MRS), and neuropsychological tests were applied. Upon short-term sobriety, 1H-MRS levels of cerebellar choline and frontomesial N-acetylaspartate (NAA) were significantly augmented. Automatically detected global brain volume gain amounted to nearly two per cent on average and was spatially significant around the superior vermis, perimesencephalic, periventricular and frontal brain edges. It correlated positively with the percentages of cerebellar and frontomesial choline increase, as detected by 1H-MRS. Moreover, frontomesial NAA gains were associated with improved performance on the d2-test of attention. In 10 age- and gender-matched healthy control subjects, no significant brain volume or metabolite changes were observed. Although cerebral osmotic regulations may occur initially upon sobriety, significant increases of cerebellar choline and frontomesial NAA levels detected at stable brain water integrals and creatine concentrations, serum electrolytes and red blood cell indices in our patient sample suggest that early brain recovery through abstinence does not simply reflect rehydration. Instead, even the adult human brain and particularly its white matter seems to possess genuine capabilities for regrowth. Our findings emphasize metabolic as well as regionally distinct morphological capacities for partial brain recovery from toxic insults of chronic alcoholism and substantiate early measurable benefits of therapeutic sobriety. Further understanding of the precise mechanisms of this recovery may become a valuable model of brain regeneration with relevance for other disorder

    Profiles of cognitive impairment in chronic heart failure—A cluster analytic approach

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    BackgroundCognitive impairment is a major comorbidity in patients with chronic heart failure (HF) with a wide range of phenotypes. In this study, we aimed to identify and compare different clusters of cognitive deficits.MethodsThe prospective cohort study “Cognition.Matters-HF” recruited 147 chronic HF patients (aged 64.5 ± 10.8 years; 16.2% female) of any etiology. All patients underwent extensive neuropsychological testing. We performed a hierarchical cluster analysis of the cognitive domains, such as intensity of attention, visual/verbal memory, and executive function. Generated clusters were compared exploratively with respect to the results of cardiological, neurological, and neuroradiological examinations without correction for multiple testing.ResultsDendrogram and the scree plot suggested three distinct cognitive profiles: In the first cluster, 42 patients (28.6%) performed without any deficits in all domains. Exclusively, the intensity of attention deficits was seen in the second cluster, including 55 patients (37.4%). A third cluster with 50 patients (34.0%) was characterized by deficits in all cognitive domains. Age (p = 0.163) and typical clinical markers of chronic HF, such as ejection fraction (p = 0.222), 6-min walking test distance (p = 0.138), NT-proBNP (p = 0.364), and New York Heart Association class (p = 0.868) did not differ between clusters. However, we observed that women (p = 0.012) and patients with previous cardiac valve surgery (p = 0.005) prevailed in the “global deficits” cluster and the “no deficits” group had a lower prevalence of underlying arterial hypertension (p = 0.029). Total brain volume (p = 0.017) was smaller in the global deficit cluster, and serum levels of glial fibrillary acidic protein were increased (p = 0.048).ConclusionApart from cognitively healthy and globally impaired HF patients, we identified a group with deficits only in the intensity of attention. Women and patients with previous cardiac valve surgery are at risk for global cognitive impairment when suffering HF and could benefit from special multimodal treatment addressing the psychosocial condition

    Funktionelles und mikrostrukturelles MRT des menschlichen Gehirns detektiert ein zerebrales Netzwerk zur Verarbeitung des Alters von Gesichtern

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    Although age is one of the most salient and fundamental aspects of human faces, its processing in the brain has not yet been studied by any neuroimaging experiment. Automatic assessment of temporal changes across faces is a prerequisite to identifying persons over their life-span, and age per se is of biological and social relevance. Using a combination of evocative face morphs controlled for global optical flow and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we segregate two areas that process changes of facial age in both hemispheres. These areas extend beyond the previously established face-sensitive network and are centered on the posterior inferior temporal sulcus (pITS) and the posterior angular gyrus (pANG), an evolutionarily new formation of the human brain. Using probabilistic tractography and by calculating spatial cross-correlations as well as creating minimum intersection maps between activation and connectivity patterns we demonstrate a hitherto unrecognized link between structure and function in the human brain on the basis of cognitive age processing. According to our results, implicit age processing involves the inferior temporal sulci and is, at the same time, closely tied to quantity decoding by the presumed neural systems devoted to magnitudes in the human parietal lobes. The ventral portion of Wernicke’s largely forgotten perpendicular association fasciculus is shown not only to interconnect these two areas but to relate to their activations, i.e. to transmit age-relevant information. In particular, post-hoc age-rating competence is shown to be associated with high response levels in the left angular gyrus. Cortical activation patterns related to changes of facial age differ from those previously elicited by other fixed as well as changeable face aspects such as gender (used for comparison), ethnicity and identity as well as eye gaze or facial expressions. We argue that this may be due to the fact that individual changes of facial age occur ontogenetically, unlike the instant changes of gaze direction or expressive content in faces that can be “mirrored” and require constant cognitive monitoring to follow. Discussing the ample evidence for distinct representations of quantitative age as opposed to categorical gender varied over continuous androgyny levels, we suggest that particular face-sensitive regions interact with additional object-unselective quantification modules to obtain individual estimates of facial age.Obwohl das Alter eines der markantesten und grundlegendsten Aspekte menschlicher Gesichter darstellt, hat man die Verarbeitung im Gehirn noch nicht durch ein funktionell bildgebendes Verfahren untersucht und mit strukturellen Leitungsbahnen in Verbindung gebracht. Die automatische Bewertung der altersbedingten Veränderungen in Gesichtern ist eine Voraussetzung für die Identifizierung von Personen über ihre gesamte Lebenszeit, und das Lebensalter an sich ist von biologischer und sozialer Relevanz. In dieser Dissertation wird die funktionelle Kernspintomographie (fMRI) mit eindrucksvollen Gesichtsmorphs kombiniert, welche auf sichtbare Bewegung im gesamten Bild kontrolliert wurden. Hierdurch werden zwei Bereiche auf beiden Hemisphären isoliert, welche die Veränderungen des Alters von Gesichtern gemeinsam und automatisch verarbeiten. Diese Areale reichen über das zuvor etablierte gesichtssensible Netzwerk hinaus und zentrieren sich auf den hinteren inferio-temporalen Sulcus (pITS) und den hinteren angulären Gyrus (pANG), eine evolutionäre Neubildung des menschlichen Gehirns. Mit Hilfe der probabilistischen Traktographie diffusiongewichteter MRT-Daten und der Berechnung räumlicher Kreuzkorrelationen sowie der Erstellung von Minimum Intersection Maps zwischen Aktivierungs- und Konnektivitätsmustern wird ein bisher unerkannter Zusammenhang zwischen Struktur und Funktion des menschlichen Gehirns anhand der kognitiven Altersverarbeitung aufgezeigt. Unseren Ergebnissen zufolge wird der inferiore temporale Sulcus in die implizite Altersverarbeitung einbezogen und gleichzeitig eng mit der Mengendekodierung verknüpft, welche in den vermutlich Größenabschätzungen gewidmeten neuronalen Systemen im Scheitellappen des menschlichen Gehirns erfolgt. Es wird dargelegt, dass der ventrale Teil von Wernickes weitgehend vergessenem senkrecht verlaufendem Assoziationsbündels nicht nur diese beiden Bereiche miteinander verbindet, sondern auch mit ihren Aktivierungen in Beziehung steht, was die These stützt, dass altersrelevante Informationen tatsächlich über ihn übertragen werden. Bei der nachträglichen Alterseinschätzung der Gesichter zeigt sich, dass gutes Abschneiden der Versuchspersonen mit stärkeren Aktivierungen im linken angulären Gyrus einhergeht. Die kortikalen Aktivierungsmuster auf Änderungen des Gesichtsalters unterscheiden sich von jenen, die mit anderen wechselnden Gesichtsmerkmalen in Zusammenhang gebracht wurden, welche das Geschlecht (das zum Vergleich und zur Kontrolle herangezogen wurde), die Ethnizität und die personelle Identität sowie Blickrichtungen und Mimik betreffen. Es wird argumentiert, dass dies möglicherweise auf die Tatsache zurückzuführen ist, dass individuelle Änderungen des Gesichtsalters ontogenetisch auftreten, anders als beispielsweise die flüchtigen Wechsel von Blickrichtungen oder im Ausdruck in Gesichtern, welche vom Betrachter "gespiegelt" werden können und ständige Beobachtung erfordern, um kognitiv nachvollzogen werden zu können. Damit wird erstmals die eigene Art der Wahrnehmung und Verarbeitung des quantitativen Alters im direkten Gegensatz zu kategorischem Geschlecht belegt, welches über kontinuierliche Androgyniegrade variiert: Bestimmte gesichtssensible Regionen interagieren offenbar mit zusätzlichen nicht objekt-selektiven Quantifizierungsmodulen, um das Alter eines Gesichts individuell abzuschätzen

    Increased Arterial Diameters in the Posterior Cerebral Circulation in Men with Fabry Disease

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    A high load of white matter lesions and enlarged basilar arteries have been shown in selected patients with Fabry disease, a disorder associated with an increased stroke risk. We studied a large cohort of patients with Fabry disease to differentially investigate white matter lesion load and cerebral artery diameters. We retrospectively analyzed cranial magnetic resonance imaging scans of 87 consecutive Fabry patients, 20 patients with ischemic stroke, and 36 controls. We determined the white matter lesion load applying the Fazekas score on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery sequences and measured the diameters of cerebral arteries on 3D-reconstructions of the time-of-flight-MR-angiography scans. Data of different Fabry patient subgroups (males – females; normal – impaired renal function) were compared with data of patients with stroke and controls. A history of stroke or transient ischemic attacks was present in 4/30 males (13%) and 5/57 (9%) females with Fabry disease, all in the anterior circulation. Only one man with Fabry disease showed confluent cerebral white matter lesions in the Fazekas score assessment (1%). Male Fabry patients had a larger basilar artery (p3.2 mm distinguished between men with Fabry disease and controls (sensitivity: 87%, specificity: 86%, p<0.001), but not from stroke patients. Enlarged arterial diameters of the posterior circulation are present only in men with Fabry disease independent of disease severity

    Joves adolescents Romà Romaneses. Una mirada cap al futur

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    Treball Finals de Grau de Treball Social, Facultat de Pedagogia, Universitat de Barcelona, curs: 2013-2014, Tutora: Ariadna Munté PascualEl Projecte d’investigació que presento a continuació pretén identificar els elements inclusius de les joves i adolescents romà romaneses residents a Catalunya detectats pels professionals, tant en l’àmbit educatiu com en l’àmbit sanitari, concretament als sistemes de planificació familiar. La identificació dels elements inclusius pot esdevenir un factor clau a tenir en compte per part dels professionals que treballen amb aquest col·lectiu, ja que molts cops expressen la gran dificultat per aconseguir els objectius marcats en les seves intervencions, sobretot amb aquelles joves romà romaneses que provenen de nuclis rurals i molt tradicionals de Romania. Aquesta identificació té com a principal finalitat proporcionar als professionals nous coneixements i propostes d’èxit que els serveixin a l’hora de crear noves estratègies d’intervenció. Els resultats d’aquesta investigació tenen el propòsit de marcar un full de ruta adreçat sobretot a millorar la qualitat de les intervencions dirigides a incidir en el procés vital de d’aquestes joves adolescents, possibilitant així l’obtenció d’un nivell més elevat d’independència en el seu desenvolupament com a persones, que es tradueix directament en la capacitat de prendre decisions importants sobre la seva vida. Aquesta circumstancia està estretament relacionada amb els dos àmbits escollits per aquesta investigació, ja que són imprescindibles perquè aquest desenvolupament sigui possible. Crec important remarcar que aquestes noves adquisicions en el seu desenvolupament no solament són beneficioses a nivell individual, sinó que són la llavor del futur canvi en les noves generacions que esdevindran

    Early microvascular dysfunction in cerebral small vessel disease is not detectable on 3.0 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging: a longitudinal study in spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rats

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    Background Human cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) has distinct histopathologic and imaging findings in its advanced stages. In spontaneously hypertensive stroke-prone rats (SHRSP), a well-established animal model of CSVD, we recently demonstrated that cerebral microangiopathy is initiated by early microvascular dysfunction leading to the breakdown of the blood–brain barrier and an activated coagulatory state resulting in capillary and arteriolar erythrocyte accumulations (stases). In the present study, we investigated whether initial microvascular dysfunction and other stages of the pathologic CSVD cascade can be detected by serial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Findings Fourteen SHRSP and three control (Wistar) rats (aged 26–44 weeks) were investigated biweekly by 3.0 Tesla (3 T) MRI. After perfusion, brains were stained with hematoxylin–eosin and histology was correlated with MRI data. Three SHRSP developed terminal CSVD stages including cortical, hippocampal, and striatal infarcts and macrohemorrhages, which could be detected consistently by MRI. Corresponding histology showed small vessel thromboses and increased numbers of small perivascular bleeds in the infarcted areas. However, 3 T MRI failed to visualize intravascular erythrocyte accumulations, even in those brain regions with the highest densities of affected vessels and the largest vessels affected by stases, as well as failing to detect small perivascular bleeds. Conclusion Serial MRI at a field strength of 3 T failed to detect the initial microvascular dysfunction and subsequent small perivascular bleeds in SHRSP; only terminal stages of cerebral microangiopathy were reliably detected. Further investigations at higher magnetic field strengths (7 T) using blood- and flow-sensitive sequences are currently underway

    A Single Session of Anodal Cerebellar Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Does Not Induce Facilitation of Locomotor Consolidation in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis

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    Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) may cause variable functional impairment. The discrepancy between functional impairment and brain imaging findings in patients with MS (PwMS) might be attributed to differential adaptive and consolidation capacities. Modulating those abilities could contribute to a favorable clinical course of the disease. Objectives: We examined the effect of cerebellar transcranial direct current stimulation (c-tDCS) on locomotor adaptation and consolidation in PwMS using a split-belt treadmill (SBT) paradigm. Methods: 40 PwMS and 30 matched healthy controls performed a locomotor adaptation task on a SBT. First, we assessed locomotor adaptation in PwMS. In a second investigation, this training was followed by cerebellar anodal tDCS applied immediately after the task ipsilateral to the fast leg (T0). The SBT paradigm was repeated 24 h (T1) and 78 h (T2) post-stimulation to evaluate consolidation. Results: The gait dynamics and adaptation on the SBT were comparable between PwMS and controls. We found no effects of offline cerebellar anodal tDCS on locomotor adaptation and consolidation. Participants who received the active stimulation showed the same retention index than sham-stimulated subjects at T1 (p = 0.33) and T2 (p = 0.46). Conclusion: Locomotor adaptation is preserved in people with mild-to-moderate MS. However, cerebellar anodal tDCS applied immediately post-training does not further enhance this ability. Future studies should define the neurobiological substrates of maintained plasticity in PwMS and how these substrates can be manipulated to improve compensation. Systematic assessments of methodological variables for cerebellar tDCS are urgently needed to increase the consistency and replicability of the results across experiments in various settings

    Background MR gradient noise and non-auditory BOLD activations : a data-driven perspective

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    The effect of echoplanar imaging (EPI) acoustic background noise on blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) activations was investigated. Two EPI pulse sequences were compared: (i) conventional EPI with a pulsating sound component of typically 8-10 Hz, which is a potent physiological stimulus, and (ii) the more recently developed continuous-sound EPI, which is perceived as less distractive despite equivalent peak sound pressure levels. Sixteen healthy subjects performed an established demanding visual n-back working memory task. Using an exploratory data analysis technique (tensorial probabilistic independent component analysis; tensor-PICA), we studied the inter-session/within-subject response variability introduced by continuous-sound versus conventional EPI acoustic background noise in addition to temporal and spatial signal characteristics. The analysis revealed a task-related component associated with the established higher-level working memory and motor feedback response network, which exhibited a significant 19% increase in its average effect size for the continuous-sound as opposed to conventional EPI. Stimulus-related lower-level activations, such as primary visual areas, were not modified. EPI acoustic background noise influences much more than the auditory system per se. This analysis provides additional evidence for an enhancement of task-related, extra-auditory BOLD activations by continuous-sound EPI due to less distractive acoustic background gradient noise
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