8 results on '"Acuff H"'
Search Results
2. Diffusion imaging markers of bipolar versus general psychopathology risk in youth at-risk
- Author
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Imago ISI, Brain, Versace, A., Ladouceur, C. D., Graur, S., Acuff, H. E., Bonar, L. K., Monk, K., McCaffrey, A., Yendiki, A., Leemans, A., Travis, M. J., Diwadkar, V. A., Holland, S. K., Sunshine, J. L., Kowatch, R. A., Horwitz, S. M., Frazier, T. W., Arnold, L. E., Fristad, M. A., Youngstrom, E. A., Findling, R. L., Goldstein, B. I., Goldstein, T., Axelson, D., Birmaher, B., Phillips, M. L., Imago ISI, Brain, Versace, A., Ladouceur, C. D., Graur, S., Acuff, H. E., Bonar, L. K., Monk, K., McCaffrey, A., Yendiki, A., Leemans, A., Travis, M. J., Diwadkar, V. A., Holland, S. K., Sunshine, J. L., Kowatch, R. A., Horwitz, S. M., Frazier, T. W., Arnold, L. E., Fristad, M. A., Youngstrom, E. A., Findling, R. L., Goldstein, B. I., Goldstein, T., Axelson, D., Birmaher, B., and Phillips, M. L.
- Published
- 2018
3. Diffusion imaging markers of bipolar versus general psychopathology risk in youth at-risk.
- Author
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Versace A, Ladouceur CD, Graur S, Acuff HE, Bonar LK, Monk K, McCaffrey A, Yendiki A, Leemans A, Travis MJ, Diwadkar VA, Holland SK, Sunshine JL, Kowatch RA, Horwitz SM, Frazier TW, Arnold LE, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, Goldstein BI, Goldstein T, Axelson D, Birmaher B, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Bipolar Disorder genetics, Child, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Female, Humans, Male, Psychopathology, Risk Factors, Bipolar Disorder diagnostic imaging, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Child of Impaired Parents psychology, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging trends
- Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) is highly heritable. Thus, studies in first-degree relatives of individuals with BD could lead to the discovery of objective risk markers of BD. Abnormalities in white matter structure reported in at-risk individuals could play an important role in the pathophysiology of BD. Due to the lack of studies with other at-risk offspring, however, it remains unclear whether such abnormalities reflect BD-specific or generic risk markers for future psychopathology. Using a tract-profile approach, we examined 18 major white matter tracts in 38 offspring of BD parents, 36 offspring of comparison parents with non-BD psychopathology (depression, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder), and 41 offspring of healthy parents. Both at-risk groups showed significantly lower fractional anisotropy (FA) in left-sided tracts (cingulum, inferior longitudinal fasciculus, forceps minor), and significantly greater FA in right-sided tracts (uncinate fasciculus and inferior longitudinal fasciculus), relative to offspring of healthy parents (P < 0.05). These abnormalities were present in both healthy and affected youth in at-risk groups. Only offspring (particularly healthy offspring) of BD parents showed lower FA in the right superior longitudinal fasciculus relative to healthy offspring of healthy parents (P < 0.05). We show, for the first time, important similarities, and some differences, in white matter structure between offspring of BD and offspring of non-BD parents. Findings suggest that lower left-sided and higher right-sided FA in tracts important for emotional regulation may represent markers of risk for general, rather than BD-specific, psychopathology. Lower FA in the right superior longitudinal fasciculus may protect against development of BD in offspring of BD parents.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. White matter structure in youth with behavioral and emotional dysregulation disorders: a probabilistic tractographic study.
- Author
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Versace A, Acuff H, Bertocci MA, Bebko G, Almeida JR, Perlman SB, Leemans A, Schirda C, Aslam H, Dwojak A, Bonar L, Travis M, Gill MK, Demeter C, Diwadkar VA, Sunshine JL, Holland SK, Kowatch RA, Birmaher B, Axelson D, Horwitz SM, Frazier TW, Arnold LE, Fristad MA, Youngstrom EA, Findling RL, and Phillips ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Affective Symptoms complications, Anisotropy, Behavioral Symptoms complications, Case-Control Studies, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Female, Humans, Male, Affective Symptoms pathology, Behavioral Symptoms pathology, Brain pathology, Gyrus Cinguli pathology, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Importance: Psychiatric disorders in youth characterized by behavioral and emotional dysregulation are often comorbid and difficult to distinguish. An alternative approach to conceptualizing these disorders is to move toward a diagnostic system based on underlying pathophysiologic processes that may cut across conventionally defined diagnoses. Neuroimaging techniques have potentials for the identification of these processes., Objective: To determine whether diffusion imaging, a neuroimaging technique examining white matter (WM) structure, can identify neural correlates of emotional dysregulation in a sample of youth with different psychiatric disorders characterized by behavioral and emotional dysregulation., Design, Setting, and Participants: Using global probabilistic tractography, we examined relationships between WM structure in key tracts in emotional regulation circuitry (ie, cingulum, uncinate fasciculus, and forceps minor) and (1) broader diagnostic categories of behavioral and emotional dysregulation disorders (DDs) and (2) symptom dimensions cutting across conventional diagnoses in 120 youth with behavioral and/or emotional DDs, a referred sample of the Longitudinal Assessment of Manic Symptoms (LAM) study. Thirty age- and sex-matched typically developing youth (control participants) were included. Multivariate multiple regression models were used. The study was conducted from July 1, 2010, to February 28, 2014., Main Outcomes and Measures: Fractional anisotropy as well as axial and radial diffusivity were estimated and imported into a well-established statistical package. We hypothesized that (1) youth with emotional DDs and those with both behavioral and emotional DDs would show significantly lower fractional anisotropy compared with youth with behavioral DDs in these WM tracts and (2) that there would be significant inverse relationships between dimensional measures of affective symptom severity and fractional anisotropy in these tracts across all participants., Results: Multivariate multiple regression analyses revealed decreased fractional anisotropy and decreased axial diffusivity within the uncinate fasciculus in youth with emotional DDs vs those with behavioral DDs, those with both DDs, and the controls (F6,160 = 2.4; P = .032; all pairwise comparisons, P < .002). In the same model, greater severity of manic symptoms was positively associated with higher fractional anisotropy across all affected youth (F3,85 = 2.8; P = .044)., Conclusions and Relevance: These findings suggest that abnormal uncinate fasciculus and cingulum WM structure may underlie emotional, but not behavioral, dysregulation in pediatric psychiatric disorders and that a different neural mechanism may exist for comorbid emotional and behavioral DDs.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Increased plasma MMP9 in integrin alpha1-null mice enhances lung metastasis of colon carcinoma cells.
- Author
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Chen X, Su Y, Fingleton B, Acuff H, Matrisian LM, Zent R, and Pozzi A
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- Angiogenesis Inhibitors pharmacology, Animals, Cell Movement, Cell Proliferation, Female, Integrin alpha1 genetics, Matrix Metalloproteinase 9, Matrix Metalloproteinases blood, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Mutant Strains, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Neoplasm Transplantation, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Colonic Neoplasms pathology, Integrin alpha1 physiology, Lung Neoplasms secondary, Matrix Metalloproteinases physiology, Neovascularization, Pathologic
- Abstract
Inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) were developed as anticancer agents based on the observation that MMPs facilitate local tumor spread and metastasis by promoting matrix degradation and cell migration. Unfortunately, these inhibitors were unsuccessful in the clinical treatment of several cancers, including lung cancer. A possible reason contributing to their failure is that MMP activity is critical for the generation of inhibitors of tumor angiogenesis, including angiostatin. Thus, MMPs might play opposing roles in tumor vascularization and invasion. To determine which effect of elevated MMP levels dominates in the progression of metastatic cancer, experimental lung metastasis assays were performed in integrin alpha1-null mice, a genetic model for increased plasma levels of MMP9 and MMP9-generated angiostatin (Pozzi et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2000;97:2202-7). We show that while the number of lung colonies in integrin alpha1-null mice was significantly increased compared to their wild-type counterparts, tumor volume was markedly reduced. In vivo treatment with the MMP inhibitor doxycycline resulted in a significant decrease in the number of lung colonies in both genotypes, but the tumors that formed were bigger and more vascularized. Increased tumor vascularization paralleled decreased plasma levels of MMP9 and consequent decreased angiostatin synthesis. These results demonstrate that while inhibition of MMPs prevents and/or reduces tumor invasion and lung metastasis, it has the paradoxical effect of increasing the size and vascularization of metastatic tumors due to decreased generation of inhibitors of endothelial cell proliferation. The continued growth of these large well-vascularized tumors may explain the poor efficacy of MMP inhibitors in lung cancer clinical trials., ((c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. An orthotopic model of lung cancer to analyze primary and metastatic NSCLC growth in integrin alpha1-null mice.
- Author
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Chen X, Su Y, Fingleton B, Acuff H, Matrisian LM, Zent R, and Pozzi A
- Subjects
- Animals, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung veterinary, Disease Progression, Humans, Lung Neoplasms veterinary, Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 genetics, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Mice, Nude, Neoplasm Metastasis physiopathology, Neoplasms, Experimental, Neovascularization, Pathologic, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung genetics, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung physiopathology, Integrin alpha1 genetics, Lung Neoplasms genetics, Lung Neoplasms physiopathology, Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 physiology, Models, Theoretical
- Abstract
The role of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)9 in lung cancer progression is controversial. MMP9 promotes local tumor progression and distant metastasis in mouse models by enhancing extracellular matrix degradation, releasing VEGF from extracellular matrix and promoting vascular pericyte recruitment. Furthermore, increased plasma MMP9 expression levels in human subjects with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) inversely correlates with survival. In contrast, MMP9 can benefit the host by generating inhibitors of endothelial cell proliferation such as angiostatin and NC1 domains of collagen IV. To better understand the role of host MMP9 on the primary growth and metastatic potential of NSCLC, we performed an orthotopic model of NSLC in integrin alpha1-null mice (a genetic model for increased MMP9). In these mice we observed decreased number, size and vascularization of primary NSCLC tumors when compared to wild type controls. In addition, decreased number and size of NSCLC-derived metastases were evident in the alpha1-null mice. Furthermore, pharmacological inhibition of MMPs in the alpha1-null mice at the time of tumor cell injection resulted in an increase in the number of both primary and metastatic lung cancer as compared to untreated mice, suggesting that primary growth and metastases of NSCLC are worsened by the early inhibition of MMPs. In conclusion, although MMP9 may potentially promote tumor growth and metastasis, production of MMP-dependent anti-angiogenic factors seems to override these effects and protects the host from NSCL growth and progression.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Employee selection simplified.
- Author
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Acuff HA
- Subjects
- Interviews as Topic, Job Application, Personnel Management methods, Personnel Selection methods
- Published
- 1982
8. Quality control in employee selection.
- Author
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Acuff HA
- Subjects
- Quality Control, Personnel Management standards, Personnel Selection standards
- Published
- 1981
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