14 results on '"Geisseler, Olivia"'
Search Results
2. Successful weaning versus permanent cerebrospinal fluid diversion after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage: post hoc analysis of a Swiss multicenter study
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El-Garci, Ahmed, primary, Zindel-Geisseler, Olivia, additional, Dannecker, Noemi, additional, Rothacher, Yannick, additional, Schlosser, Ladina, additional, Zeitlberger, Anna, additional, Velz, Julia, additional, Sebök, Martina, additional, Eggenberger, Noemi, additional, May, Adrien, additional, Bijlenga, Philippe, additional, Guerra-Lopez, Ursula, additional, Maduri, Rodolfo, additional, Beaud, Valérie, additional, Starnoni, Daniele, additional, Chiappini, Alessio, additional, Rossi, Stefania, additional, Robert, Thomas, additional, Bonasia, Sara, additional, Goldberg, Johannes, additional, Fung, Christian, additional, Bervini, David, additional, Gutbrod, Klemens, additional, Maldaner, Nicolai, additional, Früh, Severin, additional, Schwind, Marc, additional, Bozinov, Oliver, additional, Neidert, Marian C., additional, Brugger, Peter, additional, Keller, Emanuela, additional, Germans, Menno R., additional, Regli, Luca, additional, Hostettler, Isabel C., additional, Stienen, Martin N., additional, _, _, additional, Krayenbühl, Niklaus, additional, Esposito, Giuseppe, additional, Moiraghi, Alessandro, additional, Rocca, Alda, additional, Seule, Martin A., additional, Weyerbrock, Astrid, additional, Hlavica, Martin, additional, and Mueller, Mandy, additional
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- 2023
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3. Asomatognosia: Structured Interview and Assessment of Visuomotor Imagery
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Saetta, Gianluca, Zindel-Geisseler, Olivia, Stauffacher, Franziska, Serra, Carlo, Vannuscorps, Gilles, and Brugger, Peter
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neuropsychological assessment ,right parietal lobe ,bodily self-consciousness ,Psychology ,asomatognosia ,visuomotor imagery ,Brief Research Report - Abstract
Asomatognosia designates the experience that one's body has faded from awareness. It is typically a somaesthetic experience but may target the visual modality ("asomatoscopy"). Frequently associated symptoms are the loss of ownership or agency over a limb. Here, we elaborate on the rigorous nosographic classification of asomatognosia and introduce a structured interview to capture both its core symptoms and associated signs of bodily estrangement. We additionally report the case of a pure left-sided hemiasomatognosia occurring after surgical removal of a meningioma in the right atrium. Despite the wide lesions of the right angular gyrus and of the temporo-parietal junction, the patient did not present visuospatial deficits or bodily awareness disorders other than hemiasomatognosia. The patient and 10 matched controls' motor imagery was formally assessed with a limb laterality task in which they had to decide whether hands and feet presented under different angles of rotation depicted a left or a right limb. Bayesian statistics showed that patient's reaction times were significantly impaired exclusively for the left foot and especially for mental rotations requiring somatomotor rather than visual limb representations. This was in accordance with a more enduring left-sided hemiasomatognosia for the lower limbs confined to the somesthetic modality. Our findings shed new light on motor imagery in asomatognosia and encourage the future use of the structured interview introduced here. In addition, the limb laterality task may capture phenomenological elements of a case by chronometric means. This allows a more standardized reporting of phenomenological detail and improves communication across different clinical facilities.
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- 2021
4. Screening tools for early neuropsychological impairment after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage
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Rautalin, Ilari M; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6283-0398, Sebök, Martina, Germans, Menno R, Korja, Miikka, Dannecker, Noemi, Zindel-Geisseler, Olivia, Brugger, Peter, Regli, Luca, Stienen, Martin N, Rautalin, Ilari M; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6283-0398, Sebök, Martina, Germans, Menno R, Korja, Miikka, Dannecker, Noemi, Zindel-Geisseler, Olivia, Brugger, Peter, Regli, Luca, and Stienen, Martin N
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although most aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) patients suffer from neuropsychological disabilities, outcome estimation is commonly based only on functional disability scales such as the modified Rankin Scale (mRS). Moreover, early neuropsychological screening tools are not used routinely. OBJECTIVE: To study whether two simple neuropsychological screening tools identify neuropsychological deficits (NPDs), among aSAH patients categorized with favorable outcome (mRS 0-2) at discharge. METHODS: We reviewed 170 consecutive aSAH patients that were registered in a prospective institutional database. We included all patients graded by the mRS at discharge, and who had additionally been evaluated by a neuropsychologist and/or occupational therapist using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and/or Rapid Evaluation of Cognitive Function (ERFC). The proportion of patients with scores indicative of NPDs in each test were reported, and spearman correlation tests calculated the coefficients between the both neuropsychological test results and the mRS. RESULTS: Of the 42 patients (24.7%) that were evaluated by at least one neuropsychological test, 34 (81.0%) were rated mRS 0-2 at discharge. Among these 34 patients, NPDs were identified in 14 (53.9%) according to the MoCA and 8 (66.7%) according to the ERFC. The mRS score was not correlated with the performance in the MoCA or ERFC. CONCLUSION: The two screening tools implemented here frequently identified NPDs among aSAH patients that were categorized with favorable outcome according to the mRS. Our results suggest that MoCA or ERFC could be used to screen early NPDs in favorable outcome patients, who in turn might benefit from early neuropsychological rehabilitation.
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- 2020
5. Influence of the Intensive Care Unit Environment on the Reliability of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment
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Stienen, Martin Nikolaus, primary, Geisseler, Olivia, additional, Velz, Julia, additional, Maldaner, Nicolai, additional, Sebök, Martina, additional, Dannecker, Noemi, additional, Rothacher, Yannick, additional, Schlosser, Ladina, additional, Smoll, Nicolas Roydon, additional, Keller, Emanuela, additional, Brugger, Peter, additional, and Regli, Luca, additional
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- 2019
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6. Neural correlates of cognitive impairment in patients with multiple sclerosis
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Geisseler, Olivia, University of Zurich, and Geisseler, Olivia
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DoktoratPsych Erstautor ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,UZHDISS UZH Dissertations ,150 Psychology - Published
- 2016
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7. Time to be “smart”—Opportunities Arising From Smartphone-Based Behavioral Analysis in Daily Patient Care
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Akeret, Kevin, primary, Vasella, Flavio, additional, Geisseler, Olivia, additional, Dannecker, Noemi, additional, Ghosh, Arko, additional, Brugger, Peter, additional, Regli, Luca, additional, and Stienen, Martin N., additional
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- 2018
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8. The SFCNS Young Clinical Neuroscientists Network Cultivating ties across clinical neuroscience disciplines
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Geisseler, Olivia A, primary, Bigi, Sandra, additional, Baumann, Philipp S, additional, Bölsterli, Bigna K, additional, El Rahal, Amir, additional, d’Honincthun, Peggy, additional, Hainc, Nicolin, additional, Hench, Jürgen, additional, Kurmann, Rebekka, additional, Piguet, Camille, additional, Reimann, Regina R, additional, Stienen, Martin N, additional, Tyndall, Anthony, additional, and Sokolov, Arseny A, additional
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- 2018
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9. Time to be “smart”—Opportunities Arising From Smartphone-Based Behavioral Analysis in Daily Patient Care
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Akeret, Kevin, Vasella, Flavio, Geisseler, Olivia, Dannecker, Noemi, Ghosh, Arko, Brugger, Peter, Regli, Luca, Stienen, Martin N, Akeret, Kevin, Vasella, Flavio, Geisseler, Olivia, Dannecker, Noemi, Ghosh, Arko, Brugger, Peter, Regli, Luca, and Stienen, Martin N
- Abstract
While pathologies of the central nervous system (CNS) are often associated with neuropsychological deficits, adequate quantification and monitoring of such deficits remains challenging. Due to their complex nature, comprehensive neuropsychological evaluations are needed, which are time-consuming, resource-intensive and do not adequately account for daily or hourly fluctuations of a patient's condition. Innovative approaches are required to improve the diagnostics and continuous monitoring of brain function, ideally in the form of a simple, objective, time-saving and inexpensive tool that overcomes the aforementioned weaknesses of conventional assessments. As smartphones are widely used and integrated in virtually every aspect of our lives, their potential regarding the acquisition of data representing an individual's behavior and health is enormous. Alterations in a patient's physical or mental health state may be recognized as behavioral deviation from the physiological range of the normal population, but also in comparison to the patient's individual baseline assessment. As smartphone-based assessment allows for continuous monitoring and therefore accounts for possible fluctuations or transiently occurring abnormalities in a patient's neurologic state, it may serve as a surveillance tool in the acute setting for early recognition of complications, or in the long-term outpatient setting to quantify rehabilitation or disease progress. This may be particularly interesting for regions of the world where healthcare resources for comprehensive clinical/neuropsychological examinations are insufficient or distances to healthcare providers are long. Here, we highlight the potential of smartphone-based behavioral monitoring in healthcare. Clinical Trial Registration: www.clinicaltrials.gov, identifier NCT03516162.
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- 2018
10. The SFCNS Young Clinical Neuroscientists Network Cultivating ties across clinical neuroscience disciplines
- Author
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Geisseler, Olivia A, Bigi, Sandra, Baumann, Philipp S, Bölsterli, Bigna K, El Rahal, Amir, d'Honincthun, Peggy, Hainc, Nicolin, Hench, Jürgen, Kurmann, Rebekka, Piguet, Camille, Reimann, Regina R, Stienen, Martin N, Tyndall, Anthony, Sokolov, Arseny A, Geisseler, Olivia A, Bigi, Sandra, Baumann, Philipp S, Bölsterli, Bigna K, El Rahal, Amir, d'Honincthun, Peggy, Hainc, Nicolin, Hench, Jürgen, Kurmann, Rebekka, Piguet, Camille, Reimann, Regina R, Stienen, Martin N, Tyndall, Anthony, and Sokolov, Arseny A
- Abstract
Interdisciplinary cooperation and interaction have grown extremely important and will soon become indispensable in clinical neuroscience. The constantly increasing degree of specialization may further compartmentalize the different clinical neuroscience disciplines, potentially altering a unified identity in the field. In 2016, the Swiss Federation of Clinical Neuro-Societies (SFCNS) encouraged the creation of the Young Clinical Neuroscientists (YouCliN) Network bringing together juniors from all specialties united in the SFCNS – that is, biological psychiatry, neurology, neuropathology, neuropediatrics, neuropsychology, neuroradiology and neurosurgery. The main YouCliN mission is to cultivate an interdisciplinary spirit among clinical neuroscience trainees – in order for them to be prepared to face future challenges in a shoulder-to-shoulder manner. Moreover, the YouCliN represents junior interests in current issues of Swiss clinical neuroscience and contributes to shaping interdisciplinary training and courses. Transversality, better integration between fundamental and clinical neuroscience as well as between psychiatry and clinical neuroscience, and equal gender opportunities are further important topics and fields of action. In this article, the YouCliN Steering Committee presents the Network, the disciplines’ specific concerns and hopes, and positions itself with respect to future challenges for clinical neuroscience.
- Published
- 2018
11. Random number generation deficits in patients with multiple sclerosis: Characteristics and neural correlates
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Geisseler, Olivia, Pflugshaupt, Tobias, Buchmann, Andreas, Bezzola, Ladina, Reuter, Katja, Schuknecht, Bernhard, Weller, David, Linnebank, Michael, Brugger, Peter, Geisseler, Olivia, Pflugshaupt, Tobias, Buchmann, Andreas, Bezzola, Ladina, Reuter, Katja, Schuknecht, Bernhard, Weller, David, Linnebank, Michael, and Brugger, Peter
- Abstract
Human subjects typically deviate systematically from randomness when attempting to produce a sequence of random numbers. Despite an increasing number of behavioral and functional neuroimaging studies on random number generation (RNG), its structural correlates have never been investigated. We set out to fill this gap in 44 patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), a disease whose impact on RNG has never been studied. The RNG task required the paced (1 Hz) generation of the numbers from 1 to 6 in a sequence as random as possible. The same task was administered in 39 matched healthy controls. To assess neuroanatomical correlates such as cortical thickness, lesion load and third ventricle width, all subjects underwent high-resolution structural MRI. Compared to controls, MS patients exhibited an enhanced tendency to arrange consecutive numbers in an ascending order (“forward counting”). Furthermore, patients showed a higher susceptibility to rule breaks (producing out-of-category digits like 7) and to skip beats of the metronome. Clinico-anatomical correlation analyses revealed two main findings: First, increased counting in MS patients was associated with higher cortical lesion load. Second, increased number of skipped beats was related to widespread cortical thinning. In conclusion, our test results illustrate a loss of behavioral complexity in the course of MS, while the imaging results suggest an association between this loss and cortical pathology.
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- 2016
12. The relevance of cortical lesions in patients with multiple sclerosis
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Geisseler, Olivia, primary, Pflugshaupt, Tobias, additional, Bezzola, Ladina, additional, Reuter, Katja, additional, Weller, David, additional, Schuknecht, Bernhard, additional, Brugger, Peter, additional, and Linnebank, Michael, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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13. Random number generation deficits in patients with multiple sclerosis: Characteristics and neural correlates
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Andreas Buchmann, Bernhard Schuknecht, Katja Reuter, Tobias Pflugshaupt, Ladina Bezzola, Olivia Geisseler, Peter Brugger, David Weller, Michael Linnebank, University of Zurich, and Geisseler, Olivia
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2805 Cognitive Neuroscience ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,UFSP13-4 Dynamics of Healthy Aging ,Metronome ,Audiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,law.invention ,Correlation ,3206 Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Atrophy ,Cognition ,Functional neuroimaging ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Cerebral Cortex ,Neural correlates of consciousness ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,3205 Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Multiple sclerosis ,05 social sciences ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,10040 Clinic for Neurology ,DoktoratPsych Erstautor ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral cortex ,10036 Medical Clinic ,Female ,Psychology ,150 Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Human subjects typically deviate systematically from randomness when attempting to produce a sequence of random numbers. Despite an increasing number of behavioral and functional neuroimaging studies on random number generation (RNG), its structural correlates have never been investigated. We set out to fill this gap in 44 patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), a disease whose impact on RNG has never been studied. The RNG task required the paced (1 Hz) generation of the numbers from 1 to 6 in a sequence as random as possible. The same task was administered in 39 matched healthy controls. To assess neuroanatomical correlates such as cortical thickness, lesion load and third ventricle width, all subjects underwent high-resolution structural MRI. Compared to controls, MS patients exhibited an enhanced tendency to arrange consecutive numbers in an ascending order (“forward counting”). Furthermore, patients showed a higher susceptibility to rule breaks (producing out-of-category digits like 7) and to skip beats of the metronome. Clinico-anatomical correlation analyses revealed two main findings: First, increased counting in MS patients was associated with higher cortical lesion load. Second, increased number of skipped beats was related to widespread cortical thinning. In conclusion, our test results illustrate a loss of behavioral complexity in the course of MS, while the imaging results suggest an association between this loss and cortical pathology.
- Published
- 2016
14. Cortical thinning in the anterior cingulate cortex predicts multiple sclerosis patients' fluency performance in a lateralised manner
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Bernhard Schuknecht, Olivia Geisseler, Katja Reuter, Tobias Pflugshaupt, David Weller, Ladina Bezzola, Peter Brugger, Michael Linnebank, University of Zurich, and Geisseler, Olivia
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Male ,Neuropsychological Tests ,VLSM, voxel-lesion symptom mapping ,Functional Laterality ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,0302 clinical medicine ,Verbal fluency test ,MPRAGE, magnetization prepared rapid gradient-echo imaging ,Cerebral Cortex ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Cognitive flexibility ,Regular Article ,Cognition ,Executive functions ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Memory, Short-Term ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,2728 Neurology (clinical) ,Neurology ,FLAIR, fluid attenuated inversion recovery ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Female ,Psychology ,Adult ,2805 Cognitive Neuroscience ,FDR, false discovery rate ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,UFSP13-4 Dynamics of Healthy Aging ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Gyrus Cinguli ,Speech Disorders ,050105 experimental psychology ,EDSS, Expanded Disability Status Scale ,MS, multiple sclerosis ,Multiple sclerosis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fluency ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,Executive function ,medicine ,Humans ,2741 Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Anterior cingulate cortex ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,TVW, third ventricle width ,Working memory ,Cortical thinning ,10040 Clinic for Neurology ,DoktoratPsych Erstautor ,2808 Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Atrophy ,150 Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Executive dysfunction - Abstract
Cognitive impairment is as an important feature of Multiple Sclerosis (MS), and might be even more relevant to patients than mobility restrictions. Compared to the multitude of studies investigating memory deficits or basic cognitive slowing, executive dysfunction is a rarely studied cognitive domain in MS, and its neural correlates remain largely unexplored. Even rarer are topological studies on specific cognitive functions in MS. Here we used several structural MRI parameters – including cortical thinning and T2 lesion load – to investigate neural correlates of executive dysfunction, both on a global and a regional level by means of voxel- and vertex-wise analyses. Forty-eight patients with relapsing-remitting MS and 48 healthy controls participated in the study. Five executive functions were assessed, i.e. verbal and figural fluency, working memory, interference control and set shifting. Patients scored lower than controls in verbal and figural fluency only, and displayed widespread cortical thinning. On a global level, cortical thickness independently predicted verbal fluency performance, when controlling for lesion volume and central brain atrophy estimates. On a regional level, cortical thinning in the anterior cingulate region correlated with deficits in verbal and figural fluency and did so in a lateralised manner: Left-sided thinning was related to reduced verbal – but not figural – fluency, whereas the opposite pattern was observed for right-sided thinning. We conclude that executive dysfunction in MS patients can specifically affect verbal and figural fluency. The observed lateralised clinico-anatomical correlation has previously been described in brain-damaged patients with large focal lesions only, for example after stroke. Based on focal grey matter atrophy, we here show for the first time comparable lateralised findings in a white matter disease with widespread pathology., Highlights • Executive dysfunction in Multiple Sclerosis (MS) can specifically affect fluency. • Fluency deficits in MS correlate with thinning of the anterior cingulate cortex. • This correlation seems lateralised and modality-specific.
- Published
- 2016
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