20 results on '"Kallionpää, Roosa E."'
Search Results
2. Cargo-specific recruitment in clathrin- and dynamin-independent endocytosis
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Moreno-Layseca, Paulina, Jäntti, Niklas Z., Godbole, Rashmi, Sommer, Christian, Jacquemet, Guillaume, Al-Akhrass, Hussein, Conway, James R. W., Kronqvist, Pauliina, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Oliveira-Ferrer, Leticia, Cervero, Pasquale, Linder, Stefan, Aepfelbacher, Martin, Zauber, Henrik, Rae, James, Parton, Robert G., Disanza, Andrea, Scita, Giorgio, Mayor, Satyajit, Selbach, Matthias, Veltel, Stefan, and Ivaska, Johanna
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- 2021
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3. Cancer‐associated fibroblast activation predicts progression, metastasis, and prognosis of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma.
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Knuutila, Jaakko S., Riihilä, Pilvi, Nissinen, Liisa, Heiskanen, Lauri, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Pellinen, Teijo, and Kähäri, Veli‐Matti
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SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,SKIN cancer ,PROGNOSIS ,PLATELET-derived growth factor ,METASTASIS ,FIBROBLASTS - Abstract
Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (cSCC) is the most common metastatic skin cancer and the metastatic disease is associated with poor prognosis. Cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAFs) promote progression of cancer, but their role in cSCC is largely unknown. We examined the potential of CAF markers in the assessment of metastasis risk and prognosis of primary cSCC. We utilized multiplexed fluorescence immunohistochemistry for profiling CAF landscape in metastatic and non‐metastatic primary human cSCCs, in metastases, and in premalignant epidermal lesions. Quantitative high‐resolution image analysis was performed with two separate panels of antibodies for CAF markers and results were correlated with clinical and histopathological parameters including disease‐specific mortality. Increased stromal expression of fibroblast activation protein (FAP), α‐smooth muscle actin, and secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine (SPARC) were associated with progression to invasive cSCC. Elevation of FAP and platelet‐derived growth factor receptor‐β (PDGFRβ) expression was associated with metastasis risk of primary cSCCs. High expression of PDGFRβ and periostin correlated with poor prognosis. Multimarker combination defined CAF subset, PDGFRα−/PDGFRβ+/FAP+, was associated with invasion and metastasis, and independently predicted poor disease‐specific survival. These results identify high PDGFRβ expression alone and multimarker combination PDGFRα−/PDGFRβ+/FAP+ by CAFs as potential biomarkers for risk of metastasis and poor prognosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Effects of dexmedetomidine, propofol, sevoflurane and S-ketamine on the human metabolome: A randomised trial using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
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Nummela, Aleksi J., Laaksonen, Lauri T., Laitio, Timo T., Kallionpää, Roosa E., Långsjö, Jaakko W., Scheinin, Joonas M., Vahlberg, Tero J., Koskela, Harri T., Aittomäki, Viljami, Valli, Katja J., Revonsuo, Antti, Niemi, Mikko, Perola, Markus, and Scheinin, Harry
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- 2022
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5. Effects of dexmedetomidine, propofol, sevoflurane and S-ketamine on the human metabolome: A randomised trial using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
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Nummela, Aleksi J., Laaksonen, Lauri T., Laitio, Timo T., Kallionpää, Roosa E., Långsjö, Jaakko W., Scheinin, Joonas M., Vahlberg, Tero J., Koskela, Harri T., Aittomäki, Viljami, Valli, Katja J., Revonsuo, Antti, Niemi, Mikko, Perola, Markus, and Scheinin, Harry
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- 2021
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6. Publisher Correction: Cargo-specific recruitment in clathrin- and dynamin-independent endocytosis
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Moreno-Layseca, Paulina, Jäntti, Niklas Z., Godbole, Rashmi, Sommer, Christian, Jacquemet, Guillaume, Al-Akhrass, Hussein, Conway, James R. W., Kronqvist, Pauliina, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Oliveira-Ferrer, Leticia, Cervero, Pasquale, Linder, Stefan, Aepfelbacher, Martin, Zauber, Henrik, Rae, James, Parton, Robert G., Disanza, Andrea, Scita, Giorgio, Mayor, Satyajit, Selbach, Matthias, Veltel, Stefan, and Ivaska, Johanna
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- 2022
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7. Differentiating Drug-related and State-related Effects of Dexmedetomidine and Propofol on the Electroencephalogram
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Scheinin, Annalotta, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Li, Duan, Kallioinen, Minna, Kaisti, Kaike, Långsjö, Jaakko, Maksimow, Anu, Vahlberg, Tero, Valli, Katja, Mashour, George A., Revonsuo, Antti, and Scheinin, Harry
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- 2018
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8. Decreased Thalamic Activity Is a Correlate for Disconnectedness during Anesthesia with Propofol, Dexmedetomidine and Sevoflurane But Not S-Ketamine.
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Kantonen, Oskari, Laaksonen, Lauri, Alkire, Michael, Scheinin, Annalotta, Långsjö, Jaakko, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Kaisti, Kaike, Radek, Linda, Johansson, Jarkko, Laitio, Timo, Maksimow, Anu, Scheinin, Joonas, Nyman, Mikko, Scheinin, Mika, Solin, Olof, Vahlberg, Tero, Revonsuo, Antti, Valli, Katja, and Scheinin, Harry
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POSITRON emission tomography ,DEXMEDETOMIDINE ,PROPOFOL ,SEVOFLURANE ,ANESTHESIA - Abstract
Establishing the neural mechanisms responsible for the altered global states of consciousness during anesthesia and dissociating these from other drug-related effects remains a challenge in consciousness research. We investigated differences in brain activity between connectedness and disconnectedness by administering various anesthetics at concentrations designed to render 50% of the subjects unresponsive. One hundred and sixty healthy male subjects were randomized to receive either propofol (1.7 lg/ml; n = 40), dexmedetomidine (1.5 ng/ml; n = 40), sevoflurane (0.9% end-tidal; n = 40), S-ketamine (0.75 lg/ml; n = 20), or saline placebo (n = 20) for 60min using target-controlled infusions or vaporizer with end-tidal monitoring. Disconnectedness was defined as unresponsiveness to verbal commands probed at 2.5-min intervals and unawareness of external events in a postanesthesia interview. High-resolution positron emission tomography (PET) was used to quantify regional cerebral metabolic rates of glucose (CMRglu) utilization. Contrasting scans where the subjects were classified as connected and responsive versus disconnected and unresponsive revealed that for all anesthetics, except S-ketamine, the level of thalamic activity differed between these states. A conjunction analysis across the propofol, dexmedetomidine and sevoflurane groups confirmed the thalamus as the primary structure where reduced metabolic activity was related to disconnectedness. Widespread cortical metabolic suppression was observed when these subjects, classified as either connected or disconnected, were compared with the placebo group, suggesting that these findings may represent necessary but alone insufficient mechanisms for the change in the state of consciousness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Increased incidence of melanoma in children and adolescents in Finland in 1990–2014: nationwide re-evaluation of histopathological characteristics.
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Rousi, Emma K., Kallionpää, Roope A., Kallionpää, Roosa E., Juteau, Susanna M., Talve, Lauri A. I., Hernberg, Micaela M., Vihinen, Pia P., Kähäri, Veli-Matti, and Koskivuo, Ilkka O.
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MELANOMA ,TEENAGERS ,HISTOPATHOLOGY ,MEDICAL registries - Abstract
Changes in the incidence of melanoma in children and adolescents have been reported in Europe and in the USA in the recent decades. The aim of this study was to examine the incidence of paediatric and adolescent melanomas in Finland in 1990-2014, and the associated clinical and histopathological characteristics to reveal temporal trends, such as changes in diagnostic sensitivity of Spitzoid melanomas. Information on 122 patients diagnosed with cutaneous melanoma at 0-19 years of age in Finland in 1990-2014 were retrieved from the Finnish Cancer Registry. 73 primary melanoma archival samples were re-evaluated by two dermatopathologists to allow comparability over time. A 5.6% annual increase was observed in the incidence of melanoma among children and adolescents during the study period. Fifty-six tumours were confirmed as malignant melanomas in the re-evaluation. After correction for tumour misclassification in the Cancer Registry, the age-adjusted annual incidence was estimated to have increased from 1.4/1 000 000 in 1990-1994 to 5.8/1 000 000 in 2010-2014. The change in incidence was most prominent among adolescents and in Spitzoid melanoma subtype. Melanomas diagnosed 1990-2002 and 2003-2014 did not differ in terms of their clinicopathological characteristics or prognosis (hazard ratio for melanoma-related death 1.53, 95% CI 0.30 to 7.88). Spitzoid melanomas were diagnosed at a younger age, were of higher stage and had higher Clark level than other melanomas, yet the hazard ratio for death was 0.52 (95% CI 0.10 to 2.58) for Spitzoid versus other melanomas. The incidence of cutaneous melanoma has clearly increased among the young in Finland, especially among adolescents. No evidence for overdiagnosis of Spitzoid melanomas as the underlying cause of the increased incidence was observed. A nationwide retrospective re-evaluation of the cutaneous melanomas recorded in the Finnish Cancer Registry among patients aged 0–19 years in Finland in 1990–2014 revealed an approximately 4-fold increase in the incidence. The increase in the incidence was most prominent among adolescents and in the Spitzoid melanoma subtype. Our results contrast those reported in other countries, where the incidence of melanoma among adolescents has declined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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10. An assessment of prevalence of Type 1 CFI rare variants in European AMD, and why lack of broader genetic data hinders development of new treatments and healthcare access.
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Jones, Amy V., Curtiss, Darin, Harris, Claire, Southerington, Tom, Hautalahti, Marco, Wihuri, Pauli, Mäkelä, Johanna, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Makkonen, Enni, Knopp, Theresa, Mannermaa, Arto, Mäkinen, Erna, Moilanen, Anne-Mari, Tezel, Tongalp H., and Waheed, Nadia K.
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MACULAR degeneration ,GENETIC variation ,NATURAL history ,STATISTICAL association ,GENE frequency - Abstract
Purpose: Advanced age-related macular degeneration (AAMD) risk is associated with rare complement Factor I (FI) genetic variants associated with low FI protein levels (termed 'Type 1'), but it is unclear how variant prevalences differ between AMD patients from different ethnicities. Methods: Collective prevalence of Type 1 CFI rare variant genotypes were examined in four European AAMD datasets. Collective minor allele frequencies (MAFs) were sourced from the natural history study SCOPE, the UK Biobank, the International AMD Genomics Consortium (IAMDGC), and the Finnish Biobank Cooperative (FINBB), and compared to paired control MAFs or background population prevalence rates from the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD). Due to a lack of available genetic data in non-European AAMD, power calculations were undertaken to estimate the AAMD population sizes required to identify statistically significant association between Type 1 CFI rare variants and disease risk in different ethnicities, using gnomAD populations as controls. Results: Type 1 CFI rare variants were enriched in all European AAMD cohorts, with odds ratios (ORs) ranging between 3.1 and 7.8, and a greater enrichment was observed in dry AMD from FINBB (OR 8.9, 95% CI 1.49–53.31). The lack of available non-European AAMD datasets prevented us exploring this relationship more globally, however a statistical association may be detectable by future sequencing studies that sample approximately 2,000 AAMD individuals from Ashkenazi Jewish and Latino/Admixed American ethnicities. Conclusions: The relationship between Type 1 CFI rare variants increasing odds of AAMD are well established in Europeans, however the lack of broader genetic data in AAMD has adverse implications for clinical development and future commercialisation strategies of targeted FI therapies in AAMD. These findings emphasise the importance of generating more diverse genetic data in AAMD to improve equity of access to new treatments and address the bias in health care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Foundations of Human Consciousness: Imaging the Twilight Zone.
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Scheinin, Annalotta, Kantonen, Oskari, Alkire, Michael, Långsjö, Jaakko, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Kaisti, Kaike, Radek, Linda, Johansson, Jarkko, Sandman, Nils, Nyman, Mikko, Scheinin, Mika, Vahlberg, Tero, Revonsuo, Antti, Valli, Katja, and Scheinin, Harry
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NON-REM sleep ,CONSCIOUSNESS ,POSITRON emission tomography - Abstract
What happens in the brain when conscious awareness of the surrounding world fades? We manipulated consciousness in two experiments in a group of healthy males and measured brain activity with positron emission tomography. Measurements were made during wakefulness, escalating and constant levels of two anesthetic agents (experiment 1, n = 39), and during sleep-deprived wakefulness and non-rapid eye movement sleep (experiment 2, n = 37). In experiment 1, the subjects were randomized to receive either propofol or dexmedetomidine until unresponsiveness. In both experiments, forced awakenings were applied to achieve rapid recovery from an unresponsive to a responsive state, followed by immediate and detailed interviews of subjective experiences during the preceding unresponsive condition. Unresponsiveness rarely denoted unconsciousness, as the majority of the subjects had internally generated experiences. Unresponsive anesthetic states and verified sleep stages, where a subsequent report of mental content included no signs of awareness of the surrounding world, indicated a disconnected state. Functional brain imaging comparing responsive and connected versus unresponsive and disconnected states of consciousness during constant anesthetic exposure revealed that activity of the thalamus, cingulate cortices, and angular gyri are fundamental for human consciousness. These brain structures were affected independent from the pharmacologic agent, drug concentration, and direction of change in the state of consciousness. Analogous findings were obtained when consciousness was regulated by physiological sleep. State-specific findings were distinct and separable from the overall effects of the interventions, which included widespread depression of brain activity across cortical areas. These findings identify a central core brain network critical for human consciousness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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12. Alpha band frontal connectivity is a state-specific electroencephalographic correlate of unresponsiveness during exposure to dexmedetomidine and propofol.
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Kallionpää, Roosa E., Valli, Katja, Scheinin, Annalotta, Långsjö, Jaakko, Maksimow, Anu, Vahlberg, Tero, Revonsuo, Antti, Scheinin, Harry, Mashour, George A., and Li, Duan
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FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *PROPOFOL , *LOSS of consciousness , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *FRONTAL lobe , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *IMIDAZOLES , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology , *PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Background: Coherent alpha electroencephalogram (EEG) rhythms in the frontal cortex have been correlated with the hypnotic effects of propofol and dexmedetomidine, but less is known about frontal connectivity as a state-specific correlate of unresponsiveness as compared with long-range connectivity. We aimed to distinguish dose- and state-dependent effects of dexmedetomidine and propofol on EEG connectivity.Methods: Forty-seven healthy males received either dexmedetomidine (n=23) or propofol (n=24) as target-controlled infusion with stepwise increments until loss of responsiveness (LOR). We attempted to arouse participants during constant dosing (return of responsiveness [ROR]), and the target concentration was then increased 50% to achieve presumed loss of consciousness. We collected 64-channel EEG data and prefrontal-frontal and anterior-posterior functional connectivity in the alpha band (8-14 Hz) was measured using coherence and weighted phase lag index (wPLI). Directed connectivity was measured with directed phase lag index (dPLI).Results: Prefrontal-frontal EEG-based connectivity discriminated the states at the different drug concentrations. At ROR, prefrontal-frontal connectivity reversed to the level observed before LOR, indicating that connectivity changes were related to unresponsiveness rather than drug concentration. Unresponsiveness was associated with emergence of frontal-to-prefrontal dominance (dPLI: -0.13 to -0.40) in contrast to baseline (dPLI: 0.01-0.02). Coherence, wPLI, and dPLI had similar capability to discriminate the states that differed in terms of responsiveness and drug concentration. In contrast, anterior-posterior connectivity in the alpha band did not differentiate LOR and ROR.Conclusions: Local prefrontal-frontal EEG-based connectivity reflects unresponsiveness induced by propofol or dexmedetomidine, suggesting its utility in monitoring the anaesthetised state with these agents.Clinical Trial Registration: NCT01889004. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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13. Single-subject analysis of N400 event-related potential component with five different methods.
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Kallionpää, Roosa E., Pesonen, Henri, Scheinin, Annalotta, Sandman, Nils, Laitio, Ruut, Scheinin, Harry, Revonsuo, Antti, and Valli, Katja
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INSPECTION & review , *ANALYSIS of variance , *WAVELET transforms , *STATISTICS - Abstract
There are several different approaches to analyze event-related potentials (ERPs) at single-subject level, and the aim of the current study is to provide information for choosing a method based on its ability to detect ERP effects and factors influencing the results. We used data from 79 healthy participants with EEG referenced to mastoid average and investigated the detection rate of auditory N400 effect in single-subject analysis using five methods: visual inspection of participant-wise averaged ERPs, analysis of variance (ANOVA) for amplitude averages in a time window, cluster-based non-parametric testing, a novel Bayesian approach and Studentized continuous wavelet transform (t-CWT). Visual inspection by three independent raters yielded N400 effect detection in 85% of the participants in at least one paradigm (active responding or passive listening), whereas ANOVA identified the effect in 68%, the cluster-method in 59%, the Bayesian method in 89%, and different versions of t-CWT in 22–59% of the participants. Thus, the Bayesian method was the most liberal and also showed the greatest concordance between the experimental paradigms (active/passive). ANOVA detected significant effect only in cases with converging evidence from other methods. The t-CWT and cluster-based method were the most conservative methods. As we show in the current study, different analysis methods provide results that do not completely overlap. The method of choice for determining the presence of an ERP component at single-subject level thus remains unresolved. Relying on a single statistical method may not be sufficient for drawing conclusions on single-subject ERPs. • There is no standard analysis method for event-related potentials in single subjects. • The detection rates of five analysis methods for auditory N400 effect were studied. • Different methods resulted in N400 effect detection in 22–89% of the participants. • The Bayesian method was the most liberal and t-CWT the most conservative method. • Using only one method may not be sufficient for conclusions on single-subject ERPs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. Subjective experiences are similar during anaesthetic-induced unresponsiveness and non-rapid eye movement sleep.
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Radek, Linda, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Scheinin, Annalotta, Långsjö, Jaakko, Kaisti, Kaike, Kantonen, Oskari, Korhonen, Jarno, Vahlberg, Tero, Revonsuo, Antti, Scheinin, Harry, and Valli, Katja
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NON-REM sleep - Published
- 2023
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15. Subjective experiences during dexmedetomidine- or propofol-induced unresponsiveness and non-rapid eye movement sleep in healthy male subjects.
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Valli, Katja, Radek, Linda, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Scheinin, Annalotta, Långsjö, Jaakko, Kaisti, Kaike, Kantonen, Oskari, Korhonen, Jarno, Vahlberg, Tero, Revonsuo, Antti, and Scheinin, Harry
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NON-REM sleep , *NEURAL pathways - Abstract
Anaesthetic-induced unresponsiveness and non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep share common neural pathways and neurophysiological features. We hypothesised that these states bear resemblance also at the experiential level. We compared, in a within-subject design, the prevalence and content of experiences in reports obtained after anaesthetic-induced unresponsiveness and NREM sleep. Healthy males (N =39) received dexmedetomidine (n =20) or propofol (n =19) in stepwise doses to induce unresponsiveness. Those rousable were interviewed and left unstimulated, and the procedure was repeated. Finally, the anaesthetic dose was increased 50%, and the participants were interviewed after recovery. The same participants (N =37) were also later interviewed after NREM sleep awakenings. Most subjects were rousable, with no difference between anaesthetic agents (P =0.480). Lower drug plasma concentrations were associated with being rousable for both dexmedetomidine (P =0.007) and propofol (P =0.002) but not with recall of experiences in either drug group (dexmedetomidine: P =0.543; propofol: P =0.460). Of the 76 and 73 interviews performed after anaesthetic-induced unresponsiveness and NREM sleep, 69.7% and 64.4% included experiences, respectively. Recall did not differ between anaesthetic-induced unresponsiveness and NREM sleep (P =0.581), or between dexmedetomidine and propofol in any of the three awakening rounds (P >0.05). Disconnected dream-like experiences (62.3% vs 51.1%; P =0.418) and memory incorporation of the research setting (88.7% vs 78.7%; P =0.204) were equally often present in anaesthesia and sleep interviews, respectively, whereas awareness, signifying connected consciousness, was rarely reported in either state. Anaesthetic-induced unresponsiveness and NREM sleep are characterised by disconnected conscious experiences with corresponding recall frequencies and content. Clinical trial registration. This study was part of a larger study registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01889004). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Thalamic activity is a neural correlate of connected consciousness.
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Kantonen, Oskari, Laaksonen, Lauri, Alkire, Michael, Scheinin, Annalotta, Långsjö, Jaakko, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Kaisti, Kaike, Radek, Linda, Johansson, Jarkko, Laitio, Timo, Maksimow, Anu, Scheinin, Joonas, Nyman, Mikko, Scheinin, Mika, Solin, Olof, Vahlberg, Tero, Revonsuo, Antti, Valli, Katja, and Scheinin, Harry
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CONSCIOUSNESS - Published
- 2023
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17. On no man's land: Subjective experiences during unresponsive and responsive sedative states induced by four different anesthetic agents.
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Radek, Linda, Koskinen, Lauri, Sandman, Nils, Laaksonen, Lauri, Kallionpää, Roosa E., Scheinin, Annalotta, Rajala, Ville, Maksimow, Anu, Laitio, Timo, Revonsuo, Antti, Scheinin, Harry, and Valli, Katja
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ANESTHETICS , *ADMINISTRATION of anesthetics , *SEDATIVES , *KETAMINE abuse , *DEXMEDETOMIDINE , *PROPOFOL - Abstract
• Experiences recalled after responsive and unresponsive sedation were assessed. • Equipotent doses of dexmedetomidine, propofol, sevoflurane, and S-ketamine were used. • 46.9% of arousable participants reported disconnected experiences after sedation. • Responsiveness did not affect the prevalence or content of reported experiences. • Unresponsiveness during anesthetic administration does not denote unconsciousness. To understand how anesthetics with different molecular mechanisms affect consciousness, we explored subjective experiences recalled after responsive and unresponsive sedation induced with equisedative doses of dexmedetomidine, propofol, sevoflurane, and S-ketamine in healthy male participants (N = 140). The anesthetics were administered in experimental setting using target-controlled infusion or vapouriser for one hour. Interviews conducted after anesthetic administration revealed that 46.9% (n = 46) of arousable participants (n = 98) reported experiences, most frequently dreaming or memory incorporation of the setting. Participants receiving dexmedetomidine reported experiences most often while S-ketamine induced the most multimodal experiences. Responsiveness at the end of anesthetic administration did not affect the prevalence or content of reported experiences. These results demonstrate that subjective experiences during responsive and unresponsive sedation are common and anesthetic agents with different molecular mechanisms of action may have different effects on the prevalence and complexity of the experiences, albeit in the present sample the differences between drugs were minute. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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18. The relationship of bispectral index values to conscious state: an analysis of two volunteer cohort studies.
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Wehrman JJ, Schuller PJ, Casey CP, Scheinin A, Kallionpää RE, Valli K, Revonsuo A, Kantonen O, Tanabe S, Filbey W, Pearce RA, Sleigh JW, Scheinin H, and Sanders RD
- Abstract
Background: The ability of current depth-of-anaesthesia monitors to differentiate subtle changes in the conscious state has not been well characterised. We examine the variability in bispectral index (BIS) scores associated with disconnected conscious and unconscious states as confirmed by a novel serial awakening paradigm., Methods: Seventy adult participants, given propofol or dexmedetomidine, had a cumulative 1381 electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings across two centres. Participants were awakened periodically, and their recent conscious experience interrogated by structured questioning. BIS were reconstructed from EEG using openibis, and the distribution of BIS scores were compared using linear mixed effects modelling. The predictive capacity of BIS across states of consciousness was also examined., Results: Reconstructed BIS scores correlated significantly with blood concentrations of propofol and dexmedetomidine (all P<0.001). However, while the average BIS was different between baseline wakefulness (mean BIS=95.1 [standard deviation=3.5]); connected consciousness with drug present (84.0 [10.9]); disconnected consciousness (70.0 [16.9]); and unconsciousness (68.1 [16.1]), the interquartile range of these states (3.6, 15.1, 23.3 and 26.8, respectively) indicated high degrees of overlap and individual variability. Connected consciousness could be differentiated from either disconnected consciousness or unconsciousness with 86% accuracy (i.e. 14% error rate), and disconnected consciousness differentiated from unconsciousness with 74% accuracy., Conclusions: These results agree with previous studies that BIS scores fail to reliably differentiate between states of consciousness, exacerbated by segregating connected, disconnected, and unconscious states. To develop a method that reliably identifies the conscious state of an individual (not an average), work is needed to establish the causal mechanisms of disconnection and unconsciousness., Competing Interests: Declaration of interest The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 British Journal of Anaesthesia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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19. Neurotrophic tyrosine receptor kinase gene fusions in adult and pediatric patients with solid tumors: a clinicogenomic biobank and record linkage study of expression frequency and patient characteristics from Finland.
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Zhang W, Schmitz AA, Kallionpää RE, Perälä M, Pitkänen N, Tukiainen M, Alanne E, Jöhrens K, Schulze-Rath R, Farahmand B, and Zong J
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- Humans, Finland epidemiology, Male, Child, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Young Adult, Aged, Biological Specimen Banks, Colorectal Neoplasms genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms pathology, Gene Fusion, Sarcoma genetics, Sarcoma pathology, Salivary Gland Neoplasms genetics, Salivary Gland Neoplasms pathology, Receptor, trkB genetics, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung genetics, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung pathology, Infant, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion genetics, Neoplasms genetics, Neoplasms pathology, Lung Neoplasms genetics, Lung Neoplasms pathology, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Membrane Glycoproteins, Receptor, trkA genetics, Receptor, trkC genetics
- Abstract
Background: Neurotrophic tyrosine receptor kinase (NTRK) gene fusions are oncogenic drivers. Using the Auria Biobank in Finland, we aimed to identify and characterize patients with these gene fusions, and describe their clinical and tumor characteristics, treatments received, and outcomes., Material and Methods: We evaluated pediatrics with any solid tumor type and adults with colorectal cancer (CRC), non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), sarcoma, or salivary gland cancer. We determined tropomyosin receptor kinase (TRK) protein expression by pan-TRK immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining of tumor samples from the Auria Biobank, scored by a certified pathologist. NTRK gene fusion was confirmed by next generation sequencing (NGS). All 2,059 patients were followed-up starting 1 year before their cancer diagnosis., Results: Frequency of NTRK gene fusion tumors was 3.1% (4/127) in pediatrics, 0.7% (8/1,151) for CRC, 0.3% (1/288) for NSCLC, 0.9% (1/114) for salivary gland cancer, and 0% (0/379) for sarcoma. Among pediatrics there was one case each of fibrosarcoma (TPM3::NTRK1), Ewing's sarcoma (LPPR1::NTRK2), primitive neuroectodermal tumor (DAB2IP::NTRK2), and papillary thyroid carcinoma (RAD51B::NTRK3). Among CRC patients, six harbored tumors with NTRK1 fusions (three fused with TPM3), one harbored a NTRK3::GABRG1 fusion, and the other a NTRK2::FXN/LPPR1 fusion. Microsatellite instability was higher in CRC patients with NTRK gene fusion tumors versus wild-type tumors (50.0% vs. 4.4%). Other detected fusions were SGCZ::NTRK3 (NSCLC) and ETV6::NTRK3 (salivary gland cancer). Four patients (three CRC, one NSCLC) received chemotherapy; one patient (with CRC) received radiotherapy., Conclusion: NTRK gene fusions are rare in adult CRC, NSCLC, salivary tumors, sarcoma, and pediatric solid tumors.
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- 2024
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20. Neurotrophic-tyrosine receptor kinase gene fusion in papillary thyroid cancer: A clinicogenomic biobank and record linkage study from Finland.
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Zhang W, Schmitz AA, Kallionpää RE, Perälä M, Pitkänen N, Tukiainen M, Alanne E, Jöhrens K, Schulze-Rath R, Farahmand B, and Zong J
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- Humans, Adult, Thyroid Cancer, Papillary genetics, Finland, Iodine Radioisotopes, Gene Fusion, Biological Specimen Banks, Thyroid Neoplasms genetics, Receptors, Amino Acid
- Abstract
Selective tropomyosin receptor kinase (TRK) inhibitors are approved targeted therapies for patients with solid tumors harboring a neurotrophic tyrosine receptor kinase ( NTRK ) gene fusion. Country-specific estimates of NTRK gene fusion frequency, and knowledge on the characteristics of affected patients, are limited. We identified patients with histologically-confirmed papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) from Finland's Auria Biobank. TRK protein expression was determined by pan-TRK immunohistochemistry. Immuno-stained tumor samples were scored by a certified pathologist. Gene fusions and other co-occurring gene alterations were identified by next generation sequencing. Patient characteristics and vital status were determined from linked hospital electronic health records (EHRs). Patients were followed from 1 year before PTC diagnosis until death. 6/389 (1.5%) PTC patients had an NTRK gene fusion (all NTRK3 ); mean age 43.8 years (and none had comorbidities) at PTC diagnosis. Gene fusion partners were EML4 ( n = 3), ETV6 ( n = 2), and RBPMS ( n = 1). Of 3/6 patients with complete EHRs, all received radioactive iodine ablation only and were alive at end of follow-up (median observation, 9.12 years). In conclusion, NTRK gene fusion is infrequent in patients with PTC. Linkage of biobank samples to EHRs is feasible in describing the characteristics and outcomes of patients with PTC and potentially other cancer types.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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