480 results on '"B, Rosenberg"'
Search Results
2. Group vocational counseling in a rehabilitation center.
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ROSENBERG B
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- Humans, Counseling, Medicine, Rehabilitation, Rehabilitation Centers, Vocational Guidance
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- 1956
3. Perceptions of the determinants of health across income and urbanicity levels in eight countries
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Salma M. Abdalla, Ethan Assefa, Samuel B. Rosenberg, Mark Hernandez, Shaffi Fazaludeen Koya, and Sandro Galea
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background A clear understanding of public perceptions of the social determinants of health remains lacking. This paper aimed to describe the relationship between income and urbanicity levels and public views of the determinants of health in eight middle-and high-income countries that varied across multiple characteristics. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional online survey in Brazil, China, Germany, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Nigeria, and the United States. Respondents were asked to select what they considered to be most important for health out of a list of ten determinants. We stratified the results by income and urbanicity levels and tested significance of differences between groups using two-tailed χ2 tests. Multivariable logistic regression models tested associations between demographic factors and the likelihood of respondents selecting the genetics, healthcare, income and wealth, or social support determinants. Results Here we show 8753 respondents across eight countries. Rankings of determinants are similar across income groups, except for two determinants. Respondents in the highest income group rank genetics in higher proportions (32.4%, 95%CI: 29.0%,35.8%) compared to other income groups. Conversely, those in lowest income group rank social support more frequently (27.9%, 95%CI: 25.3%,30.7%) than other income groups. Those living in urban settings rank healthcare in higher proportions (61.2%, 95%CI: 59.0%,63.4%) compared to non-urban respondents; meanwhile, higher proportions (26.6%, 95%CI: 24.9%,28.3%) of non-urban respondents rank social support as important for health compared to urban respondents. Conclusion Demographic factors play a role in shaping public views of what affects health. Advancing public understanding about determinants of health requires tailoring public health messaging to account for socioeconomic position within a population.
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- 2024
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4. Expression and processing of mature human frataxin after gene therapy in mice
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Teerapat Rojsajjakul, Nithya Selvan, Bishnu De, Jonathan B. Rosenberg, Stephen M. Kaminsky, Dolan Sondhi, Peter Janki, Ronald G. Crystal, Clementina Mesaros, Richie Khanna, and Ian A. Blair
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Friedreich’s ataxia is a degenerative and progressive multisystem disorder caused by mutations in the highly conserved frataxin (FXN) gene that results in FXN protein deficiency and mitochondrial dysfunction. While gene therapy approaches are promising, consistent induction of therapeutic FXN protein expression that is sub-toxic has proven challenging, and numerous therapeutic approaches are being tested in animal models. FXN (hFXN in humans, mFXN in mice) is proteolytically modified in mitochondria to produce mature FXN. However, unlike endogenous hFXN, endogenous mFXN is further processed into N-terminally truncated, extra-mitochondrial mFXN forms of unknown function. This study assessed mature exogenous hFXN expression levels in the heart and liver of C57Bl/6 mice 7–10 months after intravenous administration of a recombinant adeno-associated virus encoding hFXN (AAVrh.10hFXN) and examined the potential for hFXN truncation in mice. AAVrh.10hFXN induced dose-dependent expression of hFXN in the heart and liver. Interestingly, hFXN was processed into truncated forms, but found at lower levels than mature hFXN. However, the truncations were at different positions than mFXN. AAVrh.10hFXN induced mature hFXN expression in mouse heart and liver at levels that approximated endogenous mFXN levels. These results suggest that AAVrh.10hFXN can likely induce expression of therapeutic levels of mature hFXN in mice.
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- 2024
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5. Intrathecal magnesium delivery for Mg++-insensitive NMDA receptor activity due to GRIN1 mutation
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Sara A. Lewis, Sheetal Shetty, Sean Gamble, Jennifer Heim, Ningning Zhao, Gideon Stitt, Matthew Pankratz, Tara Mangum, Iris Marku, Robert B. Rosenberg, Angus A. Wilfong, Michael C. Fahey, Sukhan Kim, Scott J. Myers, Brian Appavu, and Michael C. Kruer
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/Terms epileptic encephalopathy ,Cerebral palsy ,Dystonia ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,GRIN Disorders ,NMDA receptor ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Mutations in the NMDA receptor are known to disrupt glutamatergic signaling crucial for early neurodevelopment, often leading to severe global developmental delay/intellectual disability, epileptic encephalopathy, and cerebral palsy phenotypes. Both seizures and movement disorders can be highly treatment-refractory. Results We describe a targeted ABA n-of-1 treatment trial with intrathecal MgSO4, rationally designed based on the electrophysiologic properties of this gain of function mutation in the GRIN1 NMDA subunit. Conclusion Although the invasive nature of the trial necessitated a short-term, non-randomized, unblinded intervention, quantitative longitudinal neurophysiologic monitoring indicated benefit, providing class II evidence in support of intrathecal MgSO4 for select forms of GRIN disorders.
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- 2023
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6. A comprehensive analysis of gene expression changes in a high replicate and open-source dataset of differentiating hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes
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Tanya Grancharova, Kaytlyn A. Gerbin, Alexander B. Rosenberg, Charles M. Roco, Joy E. Arakaki, Colette M. DeLizo, Stephanie Q. Dinh, Rory M. Donovan-Maiye, Matthew Hirano, Angelique M. Nelson, Joyce Tang, Julie A. Theriot, Calysta Yan, Vilas Menon, Sean P. Palecek, Georg Seelig, and Ruwanthi N. Gunawardane
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract We performed a comprehensive analysis of the transcriptional changes occurring during human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) differentiation to cardiomyocytes. Using single cell RNA-seq, we sequenced > 20,000 single cells from 55 independent samples representing two differentiation protocols and multiple hiPSC lines. Samples included experimental replicates ranging from undifferentiated hiPSCs to mixed populations of cells at D90 post-differentiation. Differentiated cell populations clustered by time point, with differential expression analysis revealing markers of cardiomyocyte differentiation and maturation changing from D12 to D90. We next performed a complementary cluster-independent sparse regression analysis to identify and rank genes that best assigned cells to differentiation time points. The two highest ranked genes between D12 and D24 (MYH7 and MYH6) resulted in an accuracy of 0.84, and the three highest ranked genes between D24 and D90 (A2M, H19, IGF2) resulted in an accuracy of 0.94, revealing that low dimensional gene features can identify differentiation or maturation stages in differentiating cardiomyocytes. Expression levels of select genes were validated using RNA FISH. Finally, we interrogated differences in cardiac gene expression resulting from two differentiation protocols, experimental replicates, and three hiPSC lines in the WTC-11 background to identify sources of variation across these experimental variables.
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- 2021
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7. Desmin interacts with STIM1 and coordinates Ca2+ signaling in skeletal muscle
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Hengtao Zhang, Victoria Graham Bryson, Chaojian Wang, TianYu Li, Jaclyn P. Kerr, Rebecca Wilson, Deborah M. Muoio, Robert J. Bloch, Christopher Ward, and Paul B. Rosenberg
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Muscle biology ,Medicine - Abstract
Stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1), the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) transmembrane protein, activates store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) in skeletal muscle and, thereby, coordinates Ca2+ homeostasis, Ca2+-dependent gene expression, and contractility. STIM1 occupies space in the junctional SR membrane of the triads and the longitudinal SR at the Z-line. How STIM1 is organized and is retained in these specific subdomains of the SR is unclear. Here, we identified desmin, the major type III intermediate filament protein in muscle, as a binding partner for STIM1 based on a yeast 2-hybrid screen. Validation of the desmin-STIM1 interaction by immunoprecipitation and immunolocalization confirmed that the CC1-SOAR domains of STIM1 interact with desmin to enhance STIM1 oligomerization yet limit SOCE. Based on our studies of desmin-KO mice, we developed a model wherein desmin connected STIM1 at the Z-line in order to regulate the efficiency of Ca2+ refilling of the SR. Taken together, these studies showed that desmin-STIM1 assembles a cytoskeletal-SR connection that is important for Ca2+ signaling in skeletal muscle.
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- 2021
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8. Gender-based differences in letters of recommendation written for ophthalmology residency applicants
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Fei Lin, Soo Kyung Oh, Lynn K. Gordon, Stacy L. Pineles, Jamie B. Rosenberg, and Irena Tsui
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Ophthalmology ,Residency ,Gender ,Application ,Bias ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background To determine whether gender-based differences may be present in letters of recommendation written for ophthalmology residency applicants. Methods All applications submitted through SF Match to the UCLA Stein Eye Institute Residency Training Program from the 2017–2018 application cycle were analyzed using validated text analysis software (Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (Austin, TX)). The main outcome measures were differences in language use in letters of recommendation by gender of applicant. Results Of 440 applicants, 254 (58%) were male and 186 (42%) were female. The two gender groups had similar United States Medical Licensing Exam (USMLE) Step 1 scores, undergraduate grade point averages (uGPA’s), proportions of underrepresented minority (URM) applicants and Gold Humanism Honor Society members, numbers of academic and service activities listed, and gender distributions of their letter writers (all P values > 0.05). However, letters written for male applicants were determined to use more “authentic” words than those written for female applicants (mean difference, 0.800; 95% CI, 0.001–1.590; P = 0.047). Letters written for male applicants also contained more “leisure” words (mean difference, 0.056; 95% CI, 0.008–0.104; P = 0.023) and fewer “feel” words (mean difference, 0.033; 95% CI, 0.001–0.065; P = 0.041) and “biological processes” words (mean difference, 0.157; 95% CI, 0.017–0.297; P = 0.028). Conclusions There were gender differences detected in recommendation letters in ophthalmology consistent with prior studies from other fields. Awareness of these differences may improve residency selection processes.
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- 2019
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9. Cocaine vaccine dAd5GNE protects against moderate daily and high-dose 'binge' cocaine use.
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David F Havlicek, Jonathan B Rosenberg, Bishnu P De, Martin J Hicks, Dolan Sondhi, Stephen M Kaminsky, and Ronald G Crystal
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The cocaine vaccine dAd5GNE is comprised of a disrupted serotype 5 adenovirus gene therapy vector covalently conjugated to the cocaine analog GNE. The vaccine evokes a high titer of circulating anti-cocaine antibodies that prevent cocaine from reaching its cognate receptors in the central nervous system. Prior studies have demonstrated the efficacy of dAd5GNE in models of occasional, moderate cocaine use. However, previous studies have not sufficiently evaluated the efficacy of dAd5GNE in models of the repetitive and high-dose "binge" use patterns common in human addicts. In the present study, we evaluated the capacity of dAd5GNE vaccination to protect against "binge" cocaine use and circumstances where vaccinated addicts attempt to override the vaccine. We modeled repetitive daily cocaine use in vaccinated Balb/c mice and African green monkeys, and evaluated high-dose "binge" scenarios in Balb/c mice. In each model of daily use the dAd5GNE vaccine prevented cocaine from reaching the central nervous system. In the high-dose "binge" model, vaccination decreased cocaine-induced hyperactivity and reduced the number of cocaine-induced seizures. Based on this data and our prior data in rodents and nonhuman primates, we have initiated a clinical trial evaluating the dAd5GNE anti-cocaine vaccine as a potential therapy for cocaine addicts who wish to stop cocaine use. If dAd5GNE vaccination is safe and produces high anti-cocaine antibody titers in the clinic, we hypothesize that the vaccine will restrict the access of cocaine to the central nervous system and inhibit cocaine-induced "highs" even in the context of moderate daily and high-dose "binge" use that might otherwise cause a drug-induced overdose.
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- 2020
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10. Association of Depressive Symptoms With Postoperative Delirium and CSF Biomarkers for Alzheimer's Disease Among Hip Fracture Patients
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Nae Yuh Wang, Constantine G. Lyketsos, Esther S. Oh, Edward R. Marcantonio, Paul B. Rosenberg, Geoffrey Kahn, Carol K. Chan, Karin J. Neufeld, Henrik Zetterberg, Sharon K. Inouye, Frederick E. Sieber, Jeannie Marie S. Leoutsakos, and Kaj Blennow
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medicine.medical_specialty ,tau Proteins ,Disease ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Prodrome ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alzheimer Disease ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,Humans ,Medicine ,Dementia ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,Hip fracture ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,030214 geriatrics ,Depression ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Delirium ,medicine.disease ,Peptide Fragments ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Geriatric Depression Scale ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Objectives While there is growing evidence of an association between depressive symptoms and postoperative delirium, the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms remain unknown. The goal of this study was to explore the association between depression and postoperative delirium in hip fracture patients, and to examine Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology as a potential underlying mechanism linking depressive symptoms and delirium. Methods Patients 65 years old or older (N = 199) who were undergoing hip fracture repair and enrolled in the study “A Strategy to Reduce the Incidence of Postoperative Delirium in Elderly Patients” completed the 15-item Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-15) preoperatively. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was obtained during spinal anesthesia and assayed for amyloid-beta (Aβ) 40, 42, total tau (t-tau), and phosphorylated tau (p-tau)181. Results For every one point increase in GDS-15, there was a 13% increase in odds of postoperative delirium, adjusted for baseline cognition (MMSE), age, sex, race, education and CSF AD biomarkers (OR = 1.13, 95%CI = 1.02–1.25). Both CSF Aβ42/t-tau (β = −1.52, 95%CI = −2.1 to −0.05) and Aβ42/p-tau181 (β = −0.29, 95%CI = −0.48 to −0.09) were inversely associated with higher GDS-15 scores, where lower ratios indicate greater AD pathology. In an analysis to identify the strongest predictors of delirium out of 18 variables, GDS-15 had the highest classification accuracy for postoperative delirium and was a stronger predictor of delirium than both cognition and AD biomarkers. Conclusions In older adults undergoing hip fracture repair, depressive symptoms were associated with underlying AD pathology and postoperative delirium. Mild baseline depressive symptoms were the strongest predictor of postoperative delirium, and may represent a dementia prodrome.
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- 2021
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11. Defining Clinical Attunement: A Ubiquitous But Undertheorized Aspect of Palliative Care
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Daniel Shalev, Vicki A. Jackson, Leah B. Rosenberg, Keri O Brenner, and Juliet Jacobsen
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Coping (psychology) ,Palliative care ,Psychotherapist ,Process (engineering) ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,General Medicine ,Human development (humanity) ,Attunement ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Neoplasms ,Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing ,Humans ,Medicine ,business ,General Nursing - Abstract
Attunement, the process of understanding and responding to another's spoken and unspoken needs, is a fundamental concept of human development and the basis of meaningful relationships. To specialize the concept of attunement for palliative care, this article introduces clinical attunement. This term accounts for how palliative care clinicians must repeatedly balance patients' readiness to talk about the future with the cadence of the illness and need for medical decision making. Using the case of Gloria, an example patient living with cancer, this article discusses three skills to foster clinical attunement: asking, repairing disconnections, and offering containment. It is the fourth in a series exploring the psychological elements of palliative care.
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- 2021
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12. Cannabinoids for Agitation in Alzheimer's Disease
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David G. Harper, Marc E. Agronin, Ryan Vandrey, Paul B. Rosenberg, Rose May, Brent P. Forester, Regan E. Patrick, Halima Amjad, M. Haroon Burhanullah, and John D. Outen
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Cannabinoids ,business.industry ,Anxiety ,medicine.disease ,Amygdala ,Article ,Frontal Lobe ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Alzheimer Disease ,Cortex (anatomy) ,Posterior cingulate ,Monoaminergic ,Quality of Life ,medicine ,Humans ,Antidepressant ,Dementia ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Insula ,Neuroscience ,Psychomotor Agitation ,Anterior cingulate cortex - Abstract
Agitation is a common neuropsychiatric symptom of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) that greatly impacts quality of life and amplifies caregiver burden. Agitation in AD may be associated with volume loss in the anterior cingulate cortex, posterior cingulate cortex, insula, amygdala, and frontal cortex, as well as with degeneration of monoaminergic neurotransmission, disrupted circadian rhythms, and frailty. Current pharmacological options have troubling safety concerns and only modest efficacy. There is increasing interest in cannabinoids as promising agents due to pre-clinical and early clinical research that suggest cannabinoids can elicit anxiolytic, antidepressant, and/or anti-inflammatory effects. Cannabinoids may relieve agitation by regulating neurotransmitters, improving comorbidities and circadian rhythms, and increasing cerebral circulation. Here we discuss the possible contributory mechanisms for agitation in AD and the therapeutic relevance of cannabinoids, including CBD and THC.
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- 2021
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13. The Meaning of Together: Exploring Transference and Countertransference in Palliative Care Settings
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Juliet Jacobsen, Vicki A. Jackson, Daniel Shalev, Keri O Brenner, Sarah Byrne-Martelli, Margaret A Cramer, and Leah B. Rosenberg
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Coping (psychology) ,Palliative care ,Psychotherapist ,business.industry ,Emotions ,Palliative Care ,General Medicine ,Mental health ,Interpersonal relationship ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing ,Humans ,Transference, Psychology ,Medicine ,Meaning (existential) ,Countertransference ,business ,Transference ,Psychosocial ,General Nursing - Abstract
Establishing an empathic clinical relationship is a cornerstone of high-quality palliative care. More than simply approaching patients with a pleasant affect or "being nice," we propose that skilled clinicians routinely employ distinct psychological elements when creating effective bonds with seriously ill patients and their families. Palliative care involvement has been shown to improve a variety of outcomes for patients with serious cancer, and yet the components of this salutary effect are still becoming known in the literature. Many believe that a successful interpersonal relationship is the essential factor. In this article, we will apply the psychological constructs of transference and countertransference to the unique arena of palliative care communication. Although most palliative care clinicians are not mental health clinicians and have not received training or certification in psychotherapeutic techniques, there are elements from these frameworks that may be advantageously applied. We will draw on sources from psychology and psychiatry to explore the in-between spaces of clinical encounter. Using the case of Gloria, a patient living with cancer drawn from our clinical experience, we will offer adapted definitions and novel applications of these psychological concepts. Branching from the theory to everyday practice, we will then offer practical suggestions to guide the palliative care clinician in recognizing and managing strong countertransference reactions. This article is the third installment of a series on the psychological elements of palliative care.
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- 2021
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14. Foundations for Psychological Thinking in Palliative Care: Frame and Formulation
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Keri O Brenner, Juliet Jacobsen, Michelle D. Seaton, Daniel Shalev, Vicki A. Jackson, and Leah B. Rosenberg
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Medical education ,Palliative care ,Process (engineering) ,business.industry ,Communication ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Palliative Care ,Explanatory model ,Frame (networking) ,Psychological intervention ,Context (language use) ,General Medicine ,Psychodynamics ,Psychotherapy ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Feeling ,Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing ,Humans ,Medicine ,business ,General Nursing ,media_common - Abstract
This is the second article in the psychological elements of palliative care (PEPC) series. This series focuses on how key concepts from psychotherapy can be used in the context of palliative care to improve communication and fine tune palliative care interventions. In this article, we introduce two foundational concepts: frame and formulation. The frame is the context in which care is delivered; it includes concrete aspects of clinical care such as where it takes place, for how long, and with what frequency. It also includes the conceptual aspects of care, including the specific roles of the clinician and the patient, emergency contingencies, and the extent to which emotion is invited within the clinical encounter. Defining and discussing the frame with patients are especially important in palliative care because of the strong emotions that arise when talking about serious illness and because many patients may not be familiar with palliative care before they are in care. Formulation is the process by which we make judgment-neutral psychological hypotheses to understand the feelings and behaviors of our patients. It is an ongoing, dynamic process whereby as we learn more about our patients, we integrate that data to improve our explanatory model of who they are. This helps us tailor our interventions to meet their unique needs and respect their life experiences, aptitudes, and vulnerabilities. Both concepts are foundational PEPC; understanding them will prepare readers to continue to the next four articles in the series.
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- 2021
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15. Effect of Age on Clinical Trial Outcome in Participants with Probable Alzheimer’s Disease
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Anna D. Burke, Kristen E. Drake, Lisa Fosdick, Steven D. Targum, Gwenn S. Smith, Constantine G. Lyketsos, Marwan N. Sabbagh, Paul B. Rosenberg, Wael F. Asaad, Kelly D. Foote, Andres M. Lozano, and David A. Wolk
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Deep brain stimulation ,Deep Brain Stimulation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,subject selection ,Disease ,Affect (psychology) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Age ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Alzheimer Disease ,Rating scale ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,clinical trials ,education.field_of_study ,Intention-to-treat analysis ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Electrodes, Implanted ,Clinical trial ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Treatment Outcome ,030104 developmental biology ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Alzheimer’s disease ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Article - Abstract
Background: Age may affect treatment outcome in trials of mild probable Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Objective: We examined age as a moderator of outcome in an exploratory study of deep brain stimulation targeting the fornix (DBS-f) region in participants with AD. Methods: Forty-two participants were implanted with DBS electrodes and randomized to double-blind DBS-f stimulation (“on”) or sham DBS-f (“off”) for 12 months. Results: The intervention was safe and well tolerated. However, the selected clinical measures did not differentiate between the “on” and “off” groups in the intent to treat (ITT) population. There was a significant age by time interaction with the Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale; ADAS-cog-13 (p = 0.028). Six of the 12 enrolled participants
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- 2021
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16. Abnormal CSF amyloid-β42 and tau levels in hip fracture patients without dementia.
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Esther S Oh, Kaj Blennow, George E Bigelow, Sharon K Inouye, Edward R Marcantonio, Karin J Neufeld, Paul B Rosenberg, Juan C Troncoso, Nae-Yuh Wang, Henrik Zetterberg, Frederick E Sieber, and Constantine G Lyketsos
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:There is strong association of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology with gait disorder and falls in older adults without dementia. The goal of the study was to examine the prevalence and severity of AD pathology in older adults without dementia who fall and sustain hip fracture. METHODS:Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was obtained from 168 hip fracture patients. CSF Aβ42/40 ratio, p-tau, and t-tau measures were dichotomized into normal vs. abnormal, and categorized according to the A/T/N classification. RESULTS:Among the hip fracture patients, 88.6% of the cognitively normal (Clinical Dementia Rating-CDR 0; n = 70) and 98.8% with mild cognitive impairment (CDR 0.5; n = 81) fell in the abnormal biomarker categories by the A/T/N classification. CONCLUSIONS:A large proportion of older hip fracture patients have CSF evidence of AD pathology. Preoperative determination of AD biomarkers may play a crucial role in identifying persons without dementia who have underlying AD pathology in perioperative settings.
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- 2018
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17. Current Scope of Online Ophthalmology Education and Curriculum Impact Due to COVID-19
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JoAnn A. Giaconi, Patrick Lee, Lisa D. Kelly, Emily B. Graubart, Jamie B. Rosenberg, Anju Goyal, Prithvi S. Sankar, Pavlina S. Kemp, Rukhsana G. Mirza, and Daniel W. Knoch
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virtual education ,Response rate (survey) ,Telemedicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Modalities ,Point (typography) ,Scope (project management) ,education ,RE1-994 ,online education ,Ophthalmology ,covid-19 ,Pandemic ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Curriculum development ,medicine ,medical education ,Psychology ,Curriculum - Abstract
Objective Abrupt changes in ophthalmology education caused by the COVID-19 pandemic have resulted in novel online curriculum development. The aims of this study were to identify (1) the scope of online curricula implemented both prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic; (2) perception of educators on these online modalities; and (3) early lessons from online implementation that may guide future curricular planning. Methods Implementation of online curricula was evaluated by using a national online survey of Ophthalmology Directors of Medical Student Education (DMSE) via Qualtrics software. Participants Medical Student Educators of the Association of University Professors of Ophthalmology (AUPO) were surveyed. Results Fifty responses were collected, representing a 64.9% response rate. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, 44% of institutions had no online components in their courses, but 78.3% of institutions reported increasing online components in response to the pandemic. Required courses were significantly associated both with having implemented online components before the pandemic and implementing online-only versions of these courses in response to the pandemic. The three most popular modalities used for online teaching were lectures, interactive cases, and problem-based learning, with a median satisfaction of 4.0, 4.32, and 4.35, (out of five) respectively. The least popular modalities used were online teaching of physical exam skills and telemedicine, both with a median satisfaction of 2.5. Median overall educator satisfaction with online teaching was four (out of five). The most common weakness related to online teaching was the lack of effective physical exam skills training. Conclusion Our data demonstrate that most institutions successfully shifted their ophthalmology curriculum to a virtual and online version in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. DMSEs adapted quickly, transitioning in-person clinical courses, and extracurricular activities to online formats. Overall, educator satisfaction with online curricula was high. Integration of online curricula provides the opportunity to enrich institutional curriculums and overcome limitations imposed by decreasing curriculum time. This study reveals an early window into the utilization, strengths, and weaknesses of online ophthalmology education, which can serve as a guiding point to enhance ophthalmology curriculum development.
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- 2021
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18. Spatial and cell type transcriptional landscape of human cerebellar development
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William B. Dobyns, Georg Seelig, Lynne M. Overman, Forrest O. Gulden, Ian A. Glass, Andrew E. Timms, Ian G. Phelps, Matthew Hirano, Paula Alexandre, Alexander B. Rosenberg, Kathleen J. Millen, Gabriel Santpere, Dan Doherty, Steven Lisgo, Charles M. Roco, Mei Deng, Parthiv Haldipur, Zachary Thomson, Kimberly A. Aldinger, Belen Lorente-Galdos, Diana R. O’Day, and Nenad Sestan
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0301 basic medicine ,Cell type ,Cerebellum ,Neurogenesis ,Laser Capture Microdissection ,Biology ,Article ,Transcriptome ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fetus ,0302 clinical medicine ,Single-cell analysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Gene ,Laser capture microdissection ,General Neuroscience ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Single-Cell Analysis ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroanatomy - Abstract
The human neonatal cerebellum is one-fourth of its adult size yet contains the blueprint required to integrate environmental cues with developing motor, cognitive and emotional skills into adulthood. Although mature cerebellar neuroanatomy is well studied, understanding of its developmental origins is limited. In this study, we systematically mapped the molecular, cellular and spatial composition of human fetal cerebellum by combining laser capture microscopy and SPLiT-seq single-nucleus transcriptomics. We profiled functionally distinct regions and gene expression dynamics within cell types and across development. The resulting cell atlas demonstrates that the molecular organization of the cerebellar anlage recapitulates cytoarchitecturally distinct regions and developmentally transient cell types that are distinct from the mouse cerebellum. By mapping genes dominant for pediatric and adult neurological disorders onto our dataset, we identify relevant cell types underlying disease mechanisms. These data provide a resource for probing the cellular basis of human cerebellar development and disease.
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- 2021
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19. Agitation in Alzheimer's disease: Novel outcome measures reflecting the International Psychogeriatric Association (IPA) agitation criteria
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Bruno Vellas, David Miller, Paul B. Rosenberg, Adelaide de Mauleon, Constantine G. Lyketsos, Christelle Cantet, Maria Soto, Cedric O'Gorman, and Zahinoor Ismail
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Male ,Predictive validity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Delphi Technique ,Response to intervention ,Epidemiology ,Advisory Committees ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Alzheimer Disease ,Physicians ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale ,Humans ,Medicine ,Dementia ,030212 general & internal medicine ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Psychomotor Agitation ,Aged ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Minimal clinically important difference ,Reproducibility of Results ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Confidence interval ,respiratory tract diseases ,Clinical trial ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cohort ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction The 2017 European Union-North American Clinical Trials in Alzheimer's Disease Task Force recommended development of clinician-rated primary outcome measures for Alzheimer's disease (AD) agitation trials, incorporating International Psychogeriatric Association (IPA) criteria. Methods In a modified Delphi process, Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory (CMAI) and Neuropsychiatric Inventory-Clinician (NPI-C) items were mapped to IPA agitation domains generating novel instruments, CMAI-IPA and NPI-C-IPA. Validation in the Agitation and Aggression AD Cohort (A3C) assessed minimal clinically important differences (MCIDs), change sensitivity, and predictive validity. Results MCID was -17 (odds ratio [OR] = 14.9, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 6.8-32.6) for CMAI; -5 (OR = 9.3, 95% CI = 4.0-21.2) for CMAI-IPA; -3 (OR = 11.9, 95% CI = 4.1-34.8) for NPI-C-A+A; and -5 (OR = 7.8, 95% CI = 3.4-17.9) for NPI-C-IPA at 3 months. Areas under the curve suggested no scale better predicted global clinician ratings. Sensitivity to change for all measures was high. Conclusion Internal consistency and reliability analyses demonstrated better accuracy for the NPI-C-IPA than for the CMAI-IPA and can be used for agitation clinical trial inclusion, and for response to intervention.
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- 2021
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20. Blood–Brain Barrier Breakdown in Relationship to Alzheimer and Vascular Disease
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Sandeepa Sur, Peiying Liu, Abhay Moghekar, Sevil Yasar, Marilyn S. Albert, Yang Li, Jacqueline Darrow, Hanzhang Lu, Paul B. Rosenberg, Jay J. Pillai, Dengrong Jiang, Zixuan Lin, and Xirui Hou
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Serum albumin ,Serum Albumin, Human ,tau Proteins ,Blood–brain barrier ,Article ,Capillary Permeability ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Alzheimer Disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Vascular Diseases ,Aged ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,biology ,Vascular disease ,business.industry ,Albumin ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Peptide Fragments ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Neurology ,Permeability (electromagnetism) ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,biology.protein ,cardiovascular system ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Alzheimer's disease ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objective Blood-brain barrier (BBB) breakdown has been suggested to be an early biomarker in human cognitive impairment. However, the relationship between BBB breakdown and brain pathology, most commonly Alzheimer disease (AD) and vascular disease, is still poorly understood. The present study measured human BBB function in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) patients on 2 molecular scales, specifically BBB's permeability to water and albumin molecules. Methods Fifty-five elderly participants were enrolled, including 33 MCI patients and 22 controls. BBB permeability to water was measured with a new magnetic resonance imaging technique, water extraction with phase contrast arterial spin tagging. BBB permeability to albumin was determined using cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)/serum albumin ratio. Cognitive performance was assessed by domain-specific composite scores. AD pathology (including CSF Aβ and ptau) and vascular risk factors were examined. Results Compared to cognitively normal subjects, BBB in MCI patients manifested an increased permeability to small molecules such as water but was no more permeable to large molecules such as albumin. BBB permeability to water was found to be related to AD markers of CSF Aβ and ptau. On the other hand, BBB permeability to albumin was found to be related to vascular risk factors, especially hypercholesterolemia, but was not related to AD pathology. BBB permeability to small molecules, but not to large molecules, was found to be predictive of cognitive function. Interpretation These findings provide early evidence that BBB breakdown is related to both AD and vascular risks, but their effects can be differentiated by spatial scales. BBB permeability to small molecules has a greater impact on cognitive performance. ANN NEUROL 2021;90:227-238.
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- 2021
21. Life-Threatening Bleeding in Children: A Prospective Observational Study
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Adam M. Vogel, Sheila J. Hanson, Jeffrey S. Upperman, Thomas M. Rouse, Margaret K. Winkler, Athina Sikavitsas, Julie C. Leonard, Cassandra D. Josephson, Fabrizio Chiusolo, James F. Luther, Mark O McCollum, Barbara A. Gaines, Hilary A. Hewes, Julie C. Fitzgerald, Adrienne L. Davis, Marie E. Steiner, Susan M. Goobie, Marcy N Singleton, Robert A Finkelstein, Robert B Rosenberg, Hale Wills, Jennifer A. Muszynski, Philip C. Spinella, Alison B Nair, Stephen R. Wisniewski, Laurie H. Johnson, and Christine Allen
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Male ,Canada ,Emergency Medical Services ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Blood Component Transfusion ,Hemorrhage ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk of mortality ,medicine ,Humans ,Blood Transfusion ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Total blood ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Acute kidney injury ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Infant ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,medicine.disease ,Antifibrinolytic Agents ,United States ,Massive transfusion ,Italy ,030228 respiratory system ,Child, Preschool ,Etiology ,Female ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
Objectives The purpose of our study was to describe children with life-threatening bleeding. Design We conducted a prospective observational study of children with life-threatening bleeding events. Setting Twenty-four childrens hospitals in the United States, Canada, and Italy participated. Subjects Children 0-17 years old who received greater than 40 mL/kg total blood products over 6 hours or were transfused under massive transfusion protocol were included. Interventions Children were compared according bleeding etiology: trauma, operative, or medical. Measurements and main results Patient characteristics, therapies administered, and clinical outcomes were analyzed. Among 449 enrolled children, 55.0% were male, and the median age was 7.3 years. Bleeding etiology was 46.1% trauma, 34.1% operative, and 19.8% medical. Prior to the life-threatening bleeding event, most had age-adjusted hypotension (61.2%), and 25% were hypothermic. Children with medical bleeding had higher median Pediatric Risk of Mortality scores (18) compared with children with trauma (11) and operative bleeding (12). Median Glasgow Coma Scale scores were lower for children with trauma (3) compared with operative (14) or medical bleeding (10.5). Median time from bleeding onset to first transfusion was 8 minutes for RBCs, 34 minutes for plasma, and 42 minutes for platelets. Postevent acute respiratory distress syndrome (20.3%) and acute kidney injury (18.5%) were common. Twenty-eight-day mortality was 37.5% and higher among children with medical bleeding (65.2%) compared with trauma (36.1%) and operative (23.8%). There were 82 hemorrhage deaths; 65.8% occurred by 6 hours and 86.5% by 24 hours. Conclusions Patient characteristics and outcomes among children with life-threatening bleeding varied by cause of bleeding. Mortality was high, and death from hemorrhage in this population occurred rapidly.
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- 2021
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22. Older Patients With Acute Decompensated Heart Failure Who Live Alone: An Analysis From the REHAB-HF Trial
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David J. Whellan, Dalane W. Kitzman, Haider J. Warraich, Yair Lev, Robert J. Mentz, M. Benjamin Nelson, and Paul B. Rosenberg
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute decompensated heart failure ,Population ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Physical function ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Older patients ,Internal medicine ,Research Letter ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Social isolation ,education ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,Heart Failure ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,education.field_of_study ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Heart failure ,Acute Disease ,Quality of Life ,Independent Living ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background We assessed the prevalence and clinical characteristics of patients with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) who live alone and how they were different from patients who lived with someone else. Methods We analyzed patients in the REHAB-HF Trial. Patients were ≥60 years with preserved or reduced ejection fraction who were hospitalized with ADHF. Results Of 202 patients, 67 (33.2%) lived alone. Patients who lived alone had a mean age of 72.4±7.8 years, 64% (n=43) of whom were female, 52% (n=35) were non-white and had a mean 6.1±5.5 comorbidities. Patients living alone were largely similar in baseline characteristics, comorbid burden and prescribed medications to patients living with someone else. However, patients living alone were more likely to be female than patients living with someone else (63% [n=43] vs. 49% [n=66], p=0.04). Patients living alone had severe impairments in physical function and QoL. Cognitive dysfunction was present in 81% of those living alone. However, after adjusting for sex, no differences in physical function, depression, cognitive dysfunction or QoL were noted between patients who lived alone or those who lived with someone else. Conclusions In this diverse population of older ADHF patients, 33% lived alone (versus 26% in the general population). Those living alone were more often female, non-white, and had >6 comorbidities. Treatment strategies for older ADHF patients should consider the potential impact of social determinants.
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- 2022
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23. Mapping autonomic, mood and cognitive effects of hypothalamic region deep brain stimulation
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Gavin J B Elias, Constantine G. Lyketsos, Keshav Narang, Wissam Deeb, David A. Wolk, Walter Kucharczyk, Bryan Salvato, Marwan N. Sabbagh, David F. Tang-Wai, Stephen Salloway, Francisco A. Ponce, Kelly D. Foote, Martin Jakobs, Alexandre Boutet, M. Mallar Chakravarty, William S. Anderson, Jürgen Germann, Clemens Neudorfer, Michelle Paff, Leonardo Almeida, Zoltan Mari, Andreas Horn, Paul B. Rosenberg, Aaron Loh, Anna D. Burke, Andres M. Lozano, Michael S. Okun, and Gwenn S. Smith
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Male ,Tachycardia ,Deep brain stimulation ,Deep Brain Stimulation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hypothalamus ,Stimulation ,Autonomic Nervous System ,Body Temperature ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diencephalon ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,030304 developmental biology ,Brain Mapping ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Fornix ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,Neuromodulation (medicine) ,Electrodes, Implanted ,Affect ,Autonomic nervous system ,Phosphene ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Abstarct Because of its involvement in a wide variety of cardiovascular, metabolic and behavioural functions, the hypothalamus constitutes a potential target for neuromodulation in a number of treatment-refractory conditions. The precise neural substrates and circuitry subserving these responses, however, are poorly characterized to date. We sought to retrospectively explore the acute sequelae of hypothalamic region deep brain stimulation and characterize their neuroanatomical correlates. To this end we studied—at multiple international centres—58 patients (mean age: 68.5 ± 7.9 years, 26 females) suffering from mild Alzheimer’s disease who underwent stimulation of the fornix region between 2007 and 2019. We catalogued the diverse spectrum of acutely induced clinical responses during electrical stimulation and interrogated their neural substrates using volume of tissue activated modelling, voxel-wise mapping, and supervised machine learning techniques. In total 627 acute clinical responses to stimulation—including tachycardia, hypertension, flushing, sweating, warmth, coldness, nausea, phosphenes, and fear—were recorded and catalogued across patients using standard descriptive methods. The most common manifestations during hypothalamic region stimulation were tachycardia (30.9%) and warmth (24.6%) followed by flushing (9.1%) and hypertension (6.9%). Voxel-wise mapping identified distinct, locally separable clusters for all sequelae that could be mapped to specific hypothalamic and extrahypothalamic grey and white matter structures. K-nearest neighbour classification further validated the clinico-anatomical correlates emphasizing the functional importance of identified neural substrates with area under the receiving operating characteristic curves between 0.67 and 0.91. Overall, we were able to localize acute effects of hypothalamic region stimulation to distinct tracts and nuclei within the hypothalamus and the wider diencephalon providing clinico-anatomical insights that may help to guide future neuromodulation work.
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- 2021
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24. Trading Osteoplasty for Osteotomy in an Attempt to Achieve a Rapid Recovery Rhinoplasty
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David B. Rosenberg, Anna Frants, Benjamin C. Paul, and Dominick J. Gadaleta
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Orthodontics ,Osteoplasty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030230 surgery ,Osteotomy ,Nasal bone ,Rhinoplasty ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,business ,Closed rhinoplasty - Abstract
Nasal bone lateral osteotomies are a critical component of open and closed rhinoplasty. Lateral osteotomies represent the most traumatic component of rhinoplasty and contribute to significant edema and ecchymosis in the periorbital region. We believe that lateral osteotomies are often performed more frequently than necessary. The senior author of this article has significantly decreased the number of lateral osteotomies that he performs during rhinoplasty and instead advocates for the use of osteoplasty with a rasp when appropriate to narrow and shape the bony dorsum without forming a wide flat open-roof deformity. This study is a retrospective chart review of 239 patients who underwent rhinoplasty with the senior author. Almost half of the patients (44%) did not undergo osteotomies. The revision rate is less than 1% (2 patients). Avoidance of lateral osteotomies in carefully selected patients can offer a more appealing “rapid recovery rhino,” which is characterized by decreased edema, swelling, and faster recovery time with less limitations on postoperative restrictions.
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- 2021
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25. SOCE in the cardiomyocyte: the secret is in the chambers
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Victoria Bryson, Hengtao Zhang, Paul B. Rosenberg, and Chaojian Wang
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0301 basic medicine ,Cell type ,Store-operated calcium channels ,Physiology ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intracellular Calcium-Sensing Proteins ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Myocytes, Cardiac ,Calcium Signaling ,Stromal Interaction Molecule 1 ,Cardiac muscle ,Excitation Contraction Coupling ,Invited Review ,Excitation–contraction coupling ,STIM1 ,Store-operated calcium entry ,Human physiology ,Cardiovascular physiology ,Stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1) ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Signal transduction ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) is an ancient and ubiquitous Ca2+ signaling pathway that is present in virtually every cell type. Over the last two decades, many studies have implicated this non-voltage dependent Ca2+ entry pathway in cardiac physiology. The relevance of the SOCE pathway in cardiomyocytes is often questioned given the well-established role for excitation contraction coupling. In this review, we consider the evidence that STIM1 and SOCE contribute to Ca2+ dynamics in cardiomyocytes. We discuss the relevance of this pathway to cardiac growth in response to developmental and pathologic cues. We also address whether STIM1 contributes to Ca2+ store refilling that likely impacts cardiac pacemaking and arrhythmogenesis in cardiomyocytes.
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- 2021
26. Effects of Ramelteon on the Prevention of Postoperative Delirium in Older Patients Undergoing Orthopedic Surgery: The RECOVER Randomized Controlled Trial
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Jeannie Marie S. Leoutsakos, Neal S. Fedarko, Julius K. Oni, Frederick E. Sieber, Esther S. Oh, Narjes Akhlaghi, Paul B. Rosenberg, Robert S. Sterling, Alexandra Pletnikova, Karin J. Neufeld, and Harpal S. Khanuja
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Male ,Randomization ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ramelteon ,Receptors, Melatonin ,Knee replacement ,Placebo ,Article ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedic Procedures ,Adverse effect ,Melatonin receptor agonist ,Aged ,030214 geriatrics ,business.industry ,Delirium ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Indenes ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objectives Postoperative delirium, associated with negative consequences including longer hospital stays and worse cognitive and physical outcomes, is frequently accompanied by sleep-wake disturbance. Our objective was to evaluate the efficacy and short-term safety of ramelteon, a melatonin receptor agonist, for the prevention of postoperative delirium in older patients undergoing orthopedic surgery. Design A quadruple-masked randomized placebo-controlled trial (Clinical Trials.gov NCT02324153) conducted from March 2017 to June 2019. Setting Tertiary academic medical center. Participants Patients aged 65 years or older, undergoing elective primary or revision hip or knee replacement. Intervention Ramelteon (8 mg) or placebo Measurements Eighty participants were randomized to an oral gel cap of ramelteon or placebo for 3 consecutive nights starting the night before surgery. Trained research staff conducted delirium assessments for 3 consecutive days starting on postoperative day (POD) 0, after recovery from anesthesia, and on to POD2. A delirium diagnosis was based upon DSM-5 criteria determined by expert panel consensus. Results Of 80 participants, five withdrew consent (one placebo, four ramelteon) and four were excluded (four ramelteon) after randomization. Delirium incidence during the 2 days following surgery was 7% (5 of 71) with no difference between the ramelteon versus placebo: 9% (3 of 33) and 5% (2 of 38), respectively. The adjusted odds ratio for postoperative delirium as a function of assignment to the ramelteon treatment arm was 1.28 (95% confidence interval: 0.21–7.93; z-value 0.27; p-value = 0.79). Adverse events were similar between the two groups. Conclusion In older patients undergoing elective primary or revision hip or knee replacement, ramelteon was not efficacious in preventing postoperative delirium.
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- 2021
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27. Alzheimer's disease biomarkers as predictors of trajectories of depression and apathy in cognitively normal individuals, mild cognitive impairment,and Alzheimer's disease dementia
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Paul B. Rosenberg, Constantine G. Lyketsos, Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, Jeannie Marie S. Leoutsakos, Inez H.G.B. Ramakers, Leonie C.P. Banning, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, and RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
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SYMPTOMS ,neurocognitive disorders ,tau Proteins ,apathy ,Disease ,DIAGNOSIS ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,mild cognitive impairment ,Neuroimaging ,Alzheimer Disease ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Apathy ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers ,Cognitive impairment ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,business.industry ,Alzheimer's disease biomarkers ,ASSOCIATION ,Alzheimer's disease ,medicine.disease ,Neuropsychiatric inventory ,Peptide Fragments ,3. Good health ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,depression ,Disease Progression ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biomarkers ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objectives To examine trajectories of depression and apathy over a 5-year follow-up period in (prodromal) Alzheimer's disease (AD), and to relate these trajectories to AD biomarkers. Methods The trajectories of depression and apathy (measured with the Neuropsychiatric Inventory or its questionnaire) were separately modeled using growth mixture models for two cohorts (National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center, NACC, n = 22 760 and Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, ADNI, n = 1 733). The trajectories in ADNI were associated with baseline CSF AD biomarkers (A beta(42,)t-tau, and p-tau) using bias-corrected multinomial logistic regression. Results Multiple classes were identified, with the largest classes having no symptoms over time. Lower A beta(42)and higher tau (ie, more AD pathology) was associated with increased probability of depression and apathy over time, compared to classes without symptoms. Lower A beta(42)(but not tau) was associated with a steep increase of apathy, whereas higher tau (but not A beta(42)) was associated with a steep decrease of apathy. Discussion The trajectories of depression and apathy in individuals on the AD spectrum are associated with AD biomarkers.
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- 2021
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28. Brain structures and networks responsible for stimulation‐induced memory flashbacks during forniceal deep brain stimulation for Alzheimer's disease
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Marwan N. Sabbagh, Constantine G. Lyketsos, Gavin J B Elias, David A. Wolk, Alexandre Boutet, Kelly D. Foote, Andreas Horn, Clemens Neudorfer, Jürgen Germann, Keshav Narang, Paul B. Rosenberg, Gwenn S. Smith, Anna D. Burke, Aaron Loh, David F. Tang-Wai, Bryan Salvato, Leonardo Almeida, Andres M. Lozano, M. Mallar Chakravarty, Stephen Salloway, Wissam Deeb, and Michael S. Okun
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Connectomics ,Deep brain stimulation ,Epidemiology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Deep Brain Stimulation ,Fornix, Brain ,Stimulation ,Anterior commissure ,Disease ,fornix ,memory ,Machine Learning ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Alzheimer Disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Featured Articles ,Health Policy ,Fornix ,brain connectivity ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Featured Article ,Alzheimer's disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Stria terminalis ,030104 developmental biology ,nervous system ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction Fornix deep brain stimulation (fx‐DBS) is under investigation for treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD). We investigated the anatomic correlates of flashback phenomena that were reported previously during acute diencephalic stimulation. Methods Thirty‐nine patients with mild AD who took part in a prior fx‐DBS trial (NCT01608061) were studied. After localizing patients’ implanted electrodes and modeling the volume of tissue activated (VTA) by DBS during systematic stimulation testing, we performed (1) voxel‐wise VTA mapping to identify flashback‐associated zones; (2) machine learning–based prediction of flashback occurrence given VTA overlap with specific structures; (3) normative functional connectomics to define flashback‐associated brain‐wide networks. Results A distinct diencephalic region was associated with greater flashback likelihood. Fornix, bed nucleus of stria terminalis, and anterior commissure involvement predicted memory events with 72% accuracy. Flashback‐inducing stimulation exhibited greater functional connectivity to a network of memory‐evoking and autobiographical memory‐related sites. Discussion These results clarify the neuroanatomical substrates of stimulation‐evoked flashbacks.
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- 2021
29. Psychotropic Medication and Cognitive, Functional, and Neuropsychiatric Outcomes in Alzheimer's Disease (AD)
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Jeannie Marie S. Leoutsakos, Paul B. Rosenberg, Gail Beth Rattinger, Esther S. Oh, Elizabeth A. Stuart, and Constantine G. Lyketsos
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical Dementia Rating ,medicine.drug_class ,Serotonin reuptake inhibitor ,Atypical antipsychotic ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Article ,Benzodiazepines ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alzheimer Disease ,Internal medicine ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Longitudinal Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Gait ,Aged ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,030214 geriatrics ,business.industry ,Mental Status and Dementia Tests ,medicine.disease ,Antidepressive Agents ,United States ,Functional Status ,Propensity score matching ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,Antidepressant ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire ,Antipsychotic Agents - Abstract
Background/objectives There are growing concerns about the safety and efficacy of psychotropic medications in Alzheimer's disease (AD). We sought to examine associations between psychotropic medication exposure and longitudinal change in cognitive, functional, and neuropsychiatric outcomes in a large clinical AD cohort. Design Longitudinal observational study. Setting National Alzheimer's Disease Coordinating Center combining data from 39 Alzheimer's disease centers. Participants 8,034 participants with AD dementia. Measurements Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE), Clinical Dementia Rating Scale-Sum of Boxes (CDR-SB), and Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire (NPI-Q) Total. Probability of exposure to medication (the propensity score, PS) calculated via logistic regression. Medication classes included all antipsychotics (atypical vs conventional), antidepressants (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor [SSRI] vs non-SSRI), and benzodiazepines. Participants treated with a medication class were matched with participants not treated with that class with the closest-matched PS. The effect of medication treatment was assessed using linear mixed-effects models. Results Participants had a mean (SD) age of 75.5 (9.8) years, and mean (SD) scores of MMSE 21.3 (5.7), CDR-SB 5.5 (3.4), and NPI-Q Total 4.5 (4.4). Mean duration of follow-up was 2.9-3.3 years depending on medication class. Non-SSRI antidepressant use was associated with better CDR-SB (2-year difference in change-DIC: -0.38 [-0.61, -0.15], P = .001). Atypical antipsychotic use was associated with greater decline on MMSE (DIC: -0.91 [-1.54, -0.28] P = .005) and CDR-SB scores (DIC: 0.50 [0.14, 0.86], P = .006). Notably, no drug class was associated with better NPI-Q scores. Conclusions Use of atypical antipsychotics was associated with poorer cognition and function, and no drug class was associated with improvement in neuropsychiatric symptoms.
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- 2020
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30. Exploring Patients' Experience with Clinicians Who Recognize Their Unmet Palliative Needs: An Inpatient Study
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Cynthia Ann LaSala, Joseph A. Greer, Bethany-Rose Daubman, Robert K. Sommer, Leah B. Rosenberg, Denisa Gace, Jeffrey L. Greenwald, and Juliet Jacobsen
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Palliative care ,Anxiety ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030502 gerontology ,Intervention (counseling) ,Patient experience ,medicine ,Humans ,General Nursing ,Inpatients ,business.industry ,Communication ,Palliative Care ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,Hospital medicine ,Hospice Care ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Mood ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Cohort ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
Background: Given the national shortage of palliative care specialists relative to the need for their services, engaging nonspecialists is important to ensure patients with serious illness have an opportunity to share their goals and values with their providers. Hospital medicine clinicians are well positioned to conduct these conversations given they care for many medically complex patients. Yet, little is known about the patient experience of inpatient goals and values conversations led by hospitalist teams. Objective: To assess patients' experience and perception of the quality of goals and values conversations. Design/Setting/Participation: Single center, tertiary care, nonrandomized, two group cohort trial of patients hospitalized on general medical inpatient units staffed by hospital medicine clinicians previously trained to conduct serious illness conversations. Intervention: An automated screening tool was used to identify patients at increased risk for unmet palliative needs. The multidisciplinary team was informed of the screen's results on the intervention units but not on the control units. Intervention unit clinicians were asked to consider talking with patients about their goals and values. Results: One hundred thirty patients participated in the study. The intervention patients reported improved quality of communication and fewer anxiety and depression symptoms compared with the control patients. Hospice utilization in addition to emergency department visits and hospital readmissions did not differ between the two groups. Conclusion: This study suggests that informing the care team regarding their patients' potential unmet palliative care needs is associated with patients reporting improved experience of their care without adverse effects on their mood.
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- 2020
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31. Gender of Presenters at Ophthalmology Conferences Between 2015 and 2017
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Sejal Patel, Timothy Truong, Jamie B. Rosenberg, Irena Tsui, and Jee-Young Moon
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Demographics ,Sexism ,education ,Subspecialty ,Physicians, Women ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Humans ,Societies, Medical ,Retrospective Studies ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Ophthalmologists ,Retrospective cohort study ,Congresses as Topic ,Research Personnel ,Trend analysis ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Female ,Gender gap ,Psychology ,Student's t-test - Abstract
To analyze the proportion of women presenting at 9 major ophthalmology conferences over 3 years.Retrospective observational study.Conference brochures from 9 national ophthalmology conferences from 2015 to 2017 were analyzed. Genders of first author presenters of papers and non-papers (moderators, presenters at symposia, panel discussions, workshops/instructional courses) were recorded. Comparisons were made to the gender ratio of board-certified ophthalmologists. Student t test and Cochran-Armitage trend test was used for analysis, with significance at P.05.Of 14,214 speakers, 30.5% were female, statistically higher than the expected 25.4% (P.001). Paper presenters were 33.1% female (P.001) and non-paper presenters were 28.5% female (P.001). When stratified to general or subspecialty conference, general conferences had a higher proportion of women compared to the American Board of Ophthalmology (ABO) expected rates (P.001) for paper and non-paper presentations. The rates of female presenters increased over the 3 years only at the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (P = .009). Subgroup analysis showed that women presented 33.1% of papers but only 28.5% of non-paper presentations, which is lower than expected (P.001).Our results highlight positive trends: the overall proportions of female speakers exceed ABO estimates of female ophthalmologists. However, the gender gap remains at many subspecialty conferences, especially for non-papers, which are more likely to require invitations rather than being self-submitted. As demographics continue to change, further efforts are needed to assure equitable selection of conference presenters.
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- 2020
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32. The association of neuropsychiatric symptoms with regional brain volumes from patients in a tertiary multi-disciplinary memory clinic
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Milap A. Nowrangi, Jeannie Leoutsakos, Paul B. Rosenberg, John D. Outen, Haris I. Sair, Susumu Mori, Christopher Marano, Kenichi Oishi, and Constantine G. Lyketsos
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Point-of-Care Systems ,Apathy ,Neuroimaging ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Alzheimer Disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Anterior cingulate cortex ,Aged ,030214 geriatrics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Memory clinic ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Brain size ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Gerontology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire - Abstract
Background:To examine the interaction between structural brain volume measures derived from a clinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and occurrence of neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) in outpatient memory clinic patients.Methods:Clinical and neuroimaging data were collected from the medical records of outpatient memory clinic patients who were seen by neurologists, geriatric neuropsychiatrists, and geriatricians. MRI scan acquisition was carried out on a 3 T Siemens Verio scanner at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. Image analyses used an automated multi-label atlas fusion method with a geriatric atlas inventory to generate 193 anatomical regions from which volumes were measured. Regions of interest were generated a priori based on previous literature review of NPS in dementia. Regional volumes for agitation, apathy, and delusions were carried forward in a linear regression analysis.Results:Seventy-two patients had clinical and usable neuroimaging data that were analyzed and grouped by Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE). Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire (NPI-Q) agitation was inversely associated with rostral anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) bilaterally and left subcallosal ACC volumes in the moderate severity group. Delusions were positively associated with left ACC volumes in both severe and mild groups but inversely associated with the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) in the moderate subgroup.Conclusions:Agitation, apathy, and delusions are associated with volumes of a priori selected brain regions using clinical data and clinically acquired MRI scans. The ACC is an anatomic region common to these symptoms, particularly agitation and delusions, which closely mirror the findings of research-quality studies and suggest its importance as a behavioral hub.
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- 2020
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33. Pilot Trial of Dronabinol Adjunctive Treatment of Agitation in Alzheimer's Disease (THC-AD)
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Ricardo Castaneda, Marc E. Agronin, James M. Wilkins, Eleanor Ash, Leah Cohen, Haroon Burhanullah, John D. Outen, Halima Amjad, Maria Isesalaya, David G. Harper, Paul B. Rosenberg, Brent P. Forester, Ryan Vandrey, and Patricia Walsh
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Sundowning ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Emergency medicine ,Adjunctive treatment ,medicine ,Clinical Global Impression ,Delirium ,Caregiver stress ,Dementia ,Dronabinol ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Introduction Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most prevalent neurodegenerative disease of aging (70%). Neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) in AD are a major cause of burden to patients, caregivers, and society and are near-universal at some point in the AD course (97%). One of the most troubling NPS is agitation (Agit-AD), typified by a variety of problem behaviors including combativeness, yelling, pacing, lack of cooperation with care, insomnia, and restlessness. Neurobiological mechanisms that contribute to Agit-AD include brain atrophy, degradation of neurotransmission, neuroinflammation, disrupted circadian rhythms, comorbidities, and frailty. There is a great need for better interventions that target Agit-AD, which is a major source of disease progression, patient disability, financial burden, and caregiver stress. Dronabinol is synthetic tetrahydrocannabinol (THC, one of the predominant biochemical constituents of cannabis) and is FDA approved for anorexia and nausea. Cannabinoids may improve Agit-AD by providing protection against neuroinflammation and excitotoxicity, regulating neurotransmitters, improving comorbidities, stabilizing circadian rhythms, and increasing cerebral blood flow. This pilot trial could open the door to "re-purposing" dronabinol as a novel and safe treatment for Agit-AD with significant public health impact. Methods THC-AD is a three-week placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized clinical trial of dronabinol (10 mg QD) in 80 patients with severe Agit-AD. Capsules of dronabinol contain 2.5 mg per dose (5 mg daily) during Week 1, then increase to 5 mg per dose (10 mg daily) for Weeks 2 and 3. The half-life of dronabinol is ∼4 hours, so study medication is administered BID at 08:00 and 14:00 to maximize daytime coverage for agitation and to minimize sundowning. Inclusionary criteria include a diagnosis of AD, severe agitation as determined by the Neuropsychiatric Inventory-Clinician Rating Scale (NPI-C), and being 60-95 years old, while exclusionary criteria include serious or unstable medical illness, seizure disorder, delirium, current use of lithium, and inability to swallow a pill. Primary outcomes are a change in the Pittsburgh Agitation Scale and NPI-C Agitation/Aggression subscales. Secondary outcomes are measures of agitation, cognition, sleep, and global functioning as determined by the following assessments: the NPI-C, Cohen Mansfield Agitation Inventory, Clinical Global Impression of Change, Activities of Daily Living, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Severe Impairment Battery (8 item), and subjective and observer-rated drug effects. Safety outcomes include monitoring for adverse events (AEs), weekly health assessments, EKG changes, incident delirium (Confusion Assessment Method), and changes in laboratory values. DNA specimens are collected to explore cannabinoid receptor polymorphisms that may affect response to dronabinol. Serum samples are collected to examine the association of peripheral markers of inflammation with agitation and response to dronabinol. Concomitant medications are limited to currently used antipsychotics, antidepressants, and benzodiazepines, as well as anticonvulsant therapy when not used for seizure disorder. PRN rescue medications include total daily doses up to 0.75 mg of lorazepam and 100 mg of trazodone. Results We have enrolled 37 out of 80 participants (Table 1: mean age 78.2 years, 78.4% female, 83.8% Caucasian, mean education 13.2 years, 48.6% family history). Study participants are significantly cognitively impaired (Table 2: mean baseline MMSE of 7.1), agitated (mean NPI-C Agitation 14.8, mean NPI-C Aggression 6.4) and in reasonable overall health (Figure 1: General Medical Health Rating, 10.8% “excellent,” 48.6% "good" and 40.5% "fair”). Recorded AEs have been tolerable (Figure 2). Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we expanded our inpatient trial to include outpatient enrollments and implemented hybrid visits with telemedicine to limit in-person interactions. To bolster our recruitment, we are collaborating with additional clinical sites, increasing dementia bed capacity, and deploying recruitment strategies for outpatients, including referrals from providers and other research trials, social media ads, and virtual community outreach. Updated results will be presented at AAGP (estimated 6-10 additional participants). Conclusions Agitation is one of the most common behavioral manifestations of AD and is associated with greater caregiver burden and shorter time to institutionalization. Current treatments for Agit-AD have a plethora of safety limitations, and there is a particularly acute need for interventions for severe Agit-AD in advanced dementia. One important question for treatment development is whether Agit-AD represents a specific target for intervention or a nonspecific syndrome shared with many other diseases. This clinical trial may enable us to understand if targeting the cannabinoid system will be a safe and effective approach to treat this global health concern. Funding National Institute on Aging, R01AG050515
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- 2021
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34. The Hair Cell Analysis Toolbox: A machine learning-based whole cochlea analysis pipeline
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Christopher J. Buswinka, Richard T. Osgood, Rubina G. Simikyan, David B. Rosenberg, and Artur A. Indzhykulian
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business.industry ,Computer science ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Pipeline (software) ,Automation ,Toolbox ,Cochlear function ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Software ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Entire cochlea ,sense organs ,Hair cell ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,Cochlea - Abstract
Our sense of hearing is mediated by sensory hair cells, precisely arranged and highly specialized cells subdivided into two subtypes: outer hair cells (OHCs) which amplify sound-induced mechanical vibration, and inner hair cells (IHCs) which convert vibrations into electrical signals for interpretation by the brain. One row of IHCs and three rows of OHCs are arranged tonotopically; cells at a particular location respond best to a specific frequency which decreases from base to apex of the cochlea. Loss of hair cells at a specific place affects hearing performance at the corresponding tonotopic frequency. To better understand the underlying cause of hearing loss in patients (or experimental animals) a plot of hair cell survival along the cochlear frequency map, known as a cochleogram, can be generated post-mortem, involving manually counting thousands of cells. Currently, there are no widely applicable tools for fast, unsupervised, unbiased, and comprehensive image analysis of auditory hair cells that work well either with imaging datasets containing an entire cochlea or smaller sampled regions. Current microscopy tools allow for imaging of auditory hair cells along the full length of the cochlea, often yielding more data than feasible to manually analyze. Here, we present a machine learning-based hair cell analysis toolbox for the comprehensive analysis of whole cochleae (or smaller regions of interest). The Hair Cell Analysis Toolbox (HCAT) is a software that automates common image analysis tasks such as counting hair cells, classifying them by subtype (IHCs vs OHCs), determining their best frequency based on their location along the cochlea, and generating cochleograms. These automated tools remove a considerable barrier in cochlear image analysis, allowing for faster, unbiased, and more comprehensive data analysis practices. Furthermore, HCAT can serve as a template for deep-learning-based detection tasks in other types of biological tissue: with some training data, HCAT’s core codebase can be trained to develop a custom deep learning detection model for any object on an image.
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- 2021
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35. Study rationale and baseline data for pilot trial of dronabinol adjunctive treatment of agitation in Alzheimer's dementia (THC-AD)
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Milap A. Nowrangi, James M. Wilkins, Halima Amjad, Patricia Walsh, M. Haroon Burhanullah, Marc E. Agronin, Jeannie Marie S. Leoutsakos, Eleanor Ash, John D. Outen, Brent P. Forester, Ryan Vandrey, Paul B. Rosenberg, David G. Harper, and Leah Cohen
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Baseline data ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Adjunctive treatment ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Dementia ,Alzheimer s dementia ,Dronabinol ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Complication ,Gerontology - Abstract
Agitation is a common complication of Alzheimer’s dementia (Agit-AD) associated with substantial morbidity, high healthcare service utilization, and adverse emotional and physical impact on care partners. There are currently no FDA-approved pharmacological treatments for Agit-AD. We present the study design and baseline data for an ongoing multisite, three-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial of dronabinol (synthetic tetrahydrocannabinol [THC]), titrated to a dose of 10 mg daily, in 80 participants to examine the safety and efficacy of dronabinol as an adjunctive treatment for Agit-AD. Preliminary findings for 44 participants enrolled thus far show a predominately female, white sample with advanced cognitive impairment (Mini Mental Status Examination mean 7.8) and agitation (Neuropsychiatric Inventory-Clinician Agitation subscale mean 14.1). Adjustments to study design in light of the COVID-19 pandemic are described. Findings from this study will provide guidance for the clinical utility of dronabinol for Agit-AD. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02792257.
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- 2021
36. Is bigger better? Towards a mechanistic understanding of neuropsychiatric symptoms in Alzheimer's disease
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Milap A. Nowrangi and Paul B. Rosenberg
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,business.industry ,Alzheimer Disease ,Medicine ,Humans ,Disease ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,business ,Gerontology ,Neuroscience ,Article - Published
- 2021
37. Exploring the Psychological Aspects of Palliative Care: Lessons Learned from an Interdisciplinary Seminar of Experts
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Margaret A Cramer, Vicki A. Jackson, Maria Sirois, Elise Tarbi, Susan D. Block, Joseph A. Greer, David B. Doolittle, Linda L. Emanuel, Areej El-Jawahri, Alfred Margulies, Jennifer S. Temel, Alison J Applebaum, Juliet Jacobsen, Leah B. Rosenberg, Simone Rinaldi, Christine S. Ritchie, Gary Rodin, Jessica Logeman, and Keri O Brenner
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Coping (psychology) ,Social Work ,Palliative care ,Social work ,business.industry ,Palliative Care ,General Medicine ,Interdisciplinary Studies ,Psychodynamics ,Therapeutic relationship ,Distress ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Nursing ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing ,Medicine ,Humans ,Psychological aspects ,Spiritual care ,business ,General Nursing - Abstract
Palliative care has been shown to help patients live well with serious illness, but the specific psychological factors that contribute to this benefit remain investigational. Although support of patient coping has emerged as a likely factor, it is unclear how palliative care helps patients to cope with serious illness. The therapeutic relationship has been proposed as a key element in beneficial patient outcomes, possibly undergirding effective patient and family coping. Understanding the distress of our patients with psychological depth requires the input of varied clinicians and thinkers. The complex conceptual model we developed draws upon the contributions of medicine, nursing, psychology, spiritual care, and social work disciplines. To elucidate these issues, we convened an interdisciplinary seminar of content experts to explore the psychological components of palliative care practice. "Healing Beyond the Cure: Exploring the Psychodynamic Aspects of Palliative Care" was held in May 2019 at Harvard University's Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Over two days, the working group explored these essential elements of successful palliative care encounters through lecture and open discussion. This special report describes the key psychological aspects of palliative care that we believe underlie optimal adaptive coping in palliative care patients. We also outline key areas for further development in palliative care research, education, and clinical practice. The discussion held at this meeting became the basis for a planned series of articles on the psychological elements of palliative care that will be published in the Journal of Palliative Medicine on a monthly basis during the fall and winter of 2021-2022.
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- 2021
38. The State of Ophthalmology Medical Student Education in the United States: An Update
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Anju Goyal, Nathaniel R. Moxon, Jo Ann A. Giaconi, Rukhsana G. Mirza, Privthi S. Sankar, Emily B. Graubart, Evan L. Waxman, Daniel W. Knoch, Jamie B. Rosenberg, and Susan H. Forster
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Medical education ,Students, Medical ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Student education ,United States ,Article ,Ophthalmology ,State (polity) ,Education, Medical, Graduate ,Humans ,Medicine ,Curriculum ,business ,media_common - Published
- 2020
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39. Neuropsychiatric Symptoms as Risk Factors for Cognitive Decline in Clinically Normal Older Adults: The Cache County Study
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Paul B. Rosenberg, Joshua Matyi, Constantine G. Lyketsos, Milap A. Nowrangi, Matthew E. Peters, JoAnn T. Tschanz, Jeannie Marie S. Leoutsakos, and Muhammad Haroon Burhanullah
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Male ,Aging ,Population ,Behavioral Symptoms ,Disease ,Anxiety ,Neuropsychological Tests ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Alzheimer Disease ,Risk Factors ,Utah ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Longitudinal Studies ,Cognitive decline ,education ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,education.field_of_study ,030214 geriatrics ,Recall ,Depression ,business.industry ,Neuropsychology ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Cognitive test ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Introduction There has been considerable progress in identifying early cognitive and biomarker predictors of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) are common in AD and appear to predict progression after the onset of mild cognitive impairment or dementia. Objectives The objective of the study is to examine the relationship between NPS in clinically normal older adults and subsequent cognitive decline in a population-based sample. Methods The Cache County Study on Memory in Aging consists of a population-based sample of 5,092 older adults. We identified 470 clinically normal adults who were followed for an average period of 5.73 years. NPS were evaluated at the baseline clinical assessment using the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI). NPI domain scores were quantified as the product of frequency X severity in individual NPI domains, and then summed for the NPI-Total. Neuropsychological measures were collected at baseline and at each subsequent follow-up wave. Linear mixed-effects models assessed the association of NPI-Total, NPI-Depression, and NPI-Anxiety scores (obtained at baseline) on longitudinal change in neuropsychological performance, controlling for age, sex, and education. Results Baseline NPI-Total score was associated with a more rapid rate of decline in word list memory, praxis recall, and animal fluency. Baseline NPI-Depression was not associated with later decline on any of the cognitive tests, while baseline NPI-Anxiety was associated with decline in Symbol Digit Modality. Conclusion In conclusion, among clinically normal older adults derived from this population-based study, total burden of NPS was associated with longitudinal cognitive decline. These results add to the evidence that NPS are risk factors for or clinical indicators of preclinical dementia syndrome. Our study was an exploratory study and we did not control for multiple comparisons.
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- 2020
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40. Anti-Phospho-Tau Gene Therapy for Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy
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Katie M. Stiles, Philip L. Leopold, Vladlena Lee, Stephanie Giordano, Alvin Chen, Dolan Sondhi, Chester Bittencourt Sacramento, Ronald G. Crystal, Jonathan B. Rosenberg, Stephen M. Kaminsky, David F. Havlicek, and Eduard Pey
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Male ,Traumatic brain injury ,Genetic enhancement ,Genetic Vectors ,Tau protein ,Central nervous system ,Hippocampus ,Mice, Transgenic ,tau Proteins ,Inflammation ,Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,Neurons ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,business.industry ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Brain ,Disease Management ,Genetic Therapy ,Dependovirus ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Disease Models, Animal ,Chronic traumatic encephalopathy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Disease Susceptibility ,Tauopathy ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by repetitive trauma to the central nervous system (CNS) suffered by soldiers, contact sport athletes, and civilians following accident-related trauma. CTE is a CNS tauopathy, with trauma-induced inflammation leading to accumulation of hyperphosphorylated forms of the microtubule-binding protein Tau (pTau), resulting in neurofibrillary tangles and progressive loss of neurons. At present, there are no therapies to treat CTE. We hypothesized that direct CNS administration of an adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector coding for an anti-pTau antibody would generate sufficient levels of anti-pTau in the CNS to suppress pTau accumulation thus interrupting the pathogenic process. Using a serotype AAVrh.10 gene transfer vector coding for a monoclonal antibody directed against pTau, we demonstrate the feasibility of this strategy in a murine CTE model in which pTau accumulation was elicited by repeated traumatic brain injury (TBI) using a closed cortical impact procedure over 5 days. Direct delivery of AAVrh.10 expression vectors coding for either of the two different anti-pTau antibodies to the hippocampus of these TBI mice significantly reduced pTau levels across the CNS. Using doses that can be safely scaled to humans, the data demonstrate that CNS administration of AAVrh.10anti-pTau is effective, providing a new strategy to interrupt the CTE consequences of TBI.
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- 2020
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41. A FRAMEWORK FOR DEVELOPING PHARMACOTHERAPY FOR AGITATION IN ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE: RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE ISCTM* WORKING GROUP
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Thomas Shiovitz, H. Moebius, S. Lind, Paul B. Rosenberg, M. Carter, R. Khoury, S. Dubé, Cedric O’Gorman, G. Grossberg, F. DiCesare, A. Anderson, L. Ereshefsky, S. Khan, and N. Hefting
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Neurology ,Geriatrics gerontology ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Disease ,Antidepressive Agents ,Benzodiazepines ,Pharmacotherapy ,Drug Development ,Alzheimer Disease ,Family medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,business ,Biomarkers ,Psychomotor Agitation ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
Dementia is characterized by a significant decline in one of several cognitive domains such as memory, language and executive function, affecting independence and representing a significant deterioration from a previous level of functioning (1). Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) represents the most common form of dementia and contributes up to 70% of the almost 50 million dementia cases worldwide, a number that is projected to double in 20 years (2).
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- 2020
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42. Time course of neuropsychiatric symptoms and cognitive diagnosis in National Alzheimer's Coordinating Centers volunteers
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Elizabeth A. Wise, Jeannie Marie S. Leoutsakos, Constantine G. Lyketsos, and Paul B. Rosenberg
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Mild behavioral impairment ,Disease ,lcsh:Geriatrics ,Irritability ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Dementia ,Cognitive decline ,Medical diagnosis ,Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Cognitive disorder ,Mild cognitive impairment ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Neuropsychiatric symptoms ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,lcsh:RC952-954.6 ,Alzheimer's and related dementias ,Cognitive & Behavioral Assessment ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction Neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPSs) are nearly universal in cognitive disorders. The mild behavioral impairment construct postulates that NPS may be the first symptom of impending dementia. Methods Participants were cognitively normal volunteers followed up approximately annually at Alzheimer's Disease Centers, who were assessed on the Neuropsychiatric Inventory and had at least one follow-up visit during which they were diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia. Descriptive statistics were used to determine sequencing of NPS presence with cognitive diagnoses. Results Data were available for 1998 participants who progressed to MCI or dementia. Over 59% developed NPS before the diagnosis of any cognitive disorder. Depression and irritability were the most common NPSs to precede cognitive diagnoses (24 and 21%, respectively). Discussion NPSs precede a cognitive diagnosis in most people who develop cognitive decline, both MCI and dementia. These individuals are an important group to focus clinical and research efforts., Highlights: • A majority developed neuropsychiatric symptoms before diagnosis of cognitive disorder. • Depression and irritability were most common NPSs before diagnosis. • Apathy, agitation, hallucinations, and delusions were rare before cognitive decline.
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- 2019
43. A Case of Rare Inherited Restrictive Cardiomyopathy With Severe Biatrial Enlargement
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Marat Fudim, Adam D. DeVore, Navid A. Nafissi, Richa Agarwal, Paul B. Rosenberg, and Carmelo A. Milano
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medicine.medical_specialty ,AF, atrial fibrillation ,HCM, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy ,RCM, restrictive cardiomyopathy ,Cardiomyopathy ,Case Report ,HCM - Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy ,Clinical Case ,BVA, blood volume analysis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,genetic disorders ,restrictive ,LV, left ventricular ,AF - Atrial fibrillation ,business.industry ,Restrictive cardiomyopathy ,imaging ,medicine.disease ,RC666-701 ,Etiology ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,cardiac transplant ,cardiomyopathy - Abstract
We describe a case of inherited restrictive cardiomyopathy in a patient presenting with severe biatrial enlargement. We review the evaluation and management of restrictive cardiomyopathy with a focus on genetic etiologies. (Level of Difficulty: Intermediate.), Graphical abstract, We describe a case of inherited restrictive cardiomyopathy in a patient presenting with severe biatrial enlargement. We review the evaluation and…
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- 2019
44. Advances in the treatment of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis
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Ronald G. Crystal, Dolan Sondhi, Jonathan B. Rosenberg, Stephen M. Kaminsky, and Alvin Chen
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business.industry ,Health Policy ,Genetic enhancement ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Central nervous system ,Enzyme replacement therapy ,Stem-cell therapy ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Article ,Clinical trial ,Pharmacotherapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis ,business ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,Adeno-associated virus ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCL) represent a class of neurodegenerative disorders involving defective lysosomal processing enzymes or receptors, leading to lysosomal storage disorders, typically characterized by observation of cognitive and visual impairments, epileptic seizures, ataxia, and deterioration of motor skills. Recent success of a biologic (Brineura(®)) for the treatment of neurologic manifestations of the central nervous system (CNS) has led to renewed interest in therapeutics for NCL, with the goal of ablating or reversing the impact of these devastating disorders. Despite complex challenges associated with CNS therapy, many treatment modalities have been evaluated, including enzyme replacement therapy, gene therapy, stem cell therapy, and small molecule pharmacotherapy. Because the clinical endpoints for the evaluation of candidate therapies are complex and often reliant on subjective clinical scales, the development of quantitative biomarkers for NCLs has become an apparent necessity for the validation of potential treatments. We will discuss the latest findings in the search for relevant biomarkers for assessing disease progression. For this review, we will focus primarily on recent pre-clinical and clinical developments for treatments to halt or cure these NCL diseases. Continued development of current therapies and discovery of newer modalities will be essential for successful therapeutics for NCL. AREAS COVERED: The reader will be introduced to the NCL subtypes, natural histories, experimental animal models, and biomarkers for NCL progression; challenges and different therapeutic approaches, and the latest pre-clinical and clinical research for therapeutic development for the various NCLs. This review corresponds to the literatures covering the years from 1968 to mid-2019, but primarily addresses pre-clinical and clinical developments for the treatment of NCL disease in the last decade and as a follow-up to our 2013 review of the same topic in this journal. EXPERT OPINION: Much progress has been made in the treatment of neurologic diseases, such as the NCLs, including better animal models and improved therapeutics with better survival outcomes. Encouraging results are being reported at symposiums and in the literature, with multiple therapeutics reaching the clinical trial stage for the NCLs. The potential for a cure could be at hand after many years of trial and error in the preclinical studies. The clinical development of enzyme replacement therapy (Brineura(®) for CLN2), immunosuppression (CellCept(®) for CLN3), and gene therapy vectors (for CLN1, CLN2, CLN3, and CLN6) are providing encouragement to families that have a child afflicted with NCL. We believe that successful therapies in the future may involve the combination of two or more therapeutic modalities to provide therapeutic benefit especially as the patients grow older.
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- 2019
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45. Human–machine partnership with artificial intelligence for chest radiograph diagnosis
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Matthew P. Lungren, Rajan T. Gupta, Luyao Shen, Pranav Rajpurkar, David Baltaxe, Safwan Halabi, A. J. Mariano, Louis B. Rosenberg, Joseph G. Mammarappallil, Bhavik N. Patel, Gregg Willcox, Curtis P. Langlotz, Timothy J. Amrhein, Jayne Seekins, Edward C. Lo, Mimi Lyons, Evan J. Zucker, Jeremy Irvin, and Geoffrey M. Riley
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Computer science ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Health Informatics ,Diagnostic accuracy ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,medicine ,Human–machine system ,030212 general & internal medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Deep learning ,Collective intelligence ,Swarm behaviour ,Computer Science Applications ,Radiography ,General partnership ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Artificial intelligence ,Chest radiograph ,business - Abstract
Human-in-the-loop (HITL) AI may enable an ideal symbiosis of human experts and AI models, harnessing the advantages of both while at the same time overcoming their respective limitations. The purpose of this study was to investigate a novel collective intelligence technology designed to amplify the diagnostic accuracy of networked human groups by forming real-time systems modeled on biological swarms. Using small groups of radiologists, the swarm-based technology was applied to the diagnosis of pneumonia on chest radiographs and compared against human experts alone, as well as two state-of-the-art deep learning AI models. Our work demonstrates that both the swarm-based technology and deep-learning technology achieved superior diagnostic accuracy than the human experts alone. Our work further demonstrates that when used in combination, the swarm-based technology and deep-learning technology outperformed either method alone. The superior diagnostic accuracy of the combined HITL AI solution compared to radiologists and AI alone has broad implications for the surging clinical AI deployment and implementation strategies in future practice.
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- 2019
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46. Redefining the Etiologic Landscape of Cerebellar Malformations
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Kaylee Park, Georg Seelig, Robert J. Hopkin, Steven Lisgo, Joseph G. Gleeson, Yuri A. Zarate, Charles E. Schwartz, Stephen R. Braddock, Katherine Wusik, Zachary Thomson, Deborah A. Nickerson, Charles M. Roco, Susan Sell, Jordan Zeiger, Chi V. Cheng, Matthew Hirano, Julie R. Jones, Roger L. Ladda, Gisele E. Ishak, Amy Goldstein, David B. Everman, Dan Doherty, Sarah Collins, William B. Dobyns, Lynne M. Overmann, Ian A. Glass, Alexander B. Rosenberg, Megan T. Cho, Kathleen A. Leppig, Kimberly A. Aldinger, Brian H.Y. Chung, Andrew E. Timms, Kathleen J. Millen, Fatima Abidi, Michael J. Bamshad, Cynthia J. Curry, Fowzan S. Alkuraya, A. James Barkovich, James T. Bennett, Parthiv Haldipur, Leslie G. Biesecker, Ian D. Krantz, Ghayda M. Mirzaa, Dianne Gerrelli, Barbara McGillivray, and Sara S. Cathey
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Cerebellum ,PDGFRB ,Bioinformatics ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Intellectual disability ,Genetics ,Humans ,Medicine ,Exome ,Genetics (clinical) ,Exome sequencing ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Etiology ,Autism ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Cerebellar malformations are diverse congenital anomalies frequently associated with developmental disability. Although genetic and prenatal non-genetic causes have been described, no systematic analysis has been performed. Here, we present a large-exome sequencing study of Dandy-Walker malformation (DWM) and cerebellar hypoplasia (CBLH). We performed exome sequencing in 282 individuals from 100 families with DWM or CBLH, and we established a molecular diagnosis in 36 of 100 families, with a significantly higher yield for CBLH (51%) than for DWM (16%). The 41 variants impact 27 neurodevelopmental-disorder-associated genes, thus demonstrating that CBLH and DWM are often features of monogenic neurodevelopmental disorders. Though only seven monogenic causes (19%) were identified in more than one individual, neuroimaging review of 131 additional individuals confirmed cerebellar abnormalities in 23 of 27 genetic disorders (85%). Prenatal risk factors were frequently found among individuals without a genetic diagnosis (30 of 64 individuals [47%]). Single-cell RNA sequencing of prenatal human cerebellar tissue revealed gene enrichment in neuronal and vascular cell types; this suggests that defective vasculogenesis may disrupt cerebellar development. Further, de novo gain-of-function variants in PDGFRB, a tyrosine kinase receptor essential for vascular progenitor signaling, were associated with CBLH, and this discovery links genetic and non-genetic etiologies. Our results suggest that genetic defects impact specific cerebellar cell types and implicate abnormal vascular development as a mechanism for cerebellar malformations. We also confirmed a major contribution for non-genetic prenatal factors in individuals with cerebellar abnormalities, substantially influencing diagnostic evaluation and counseling regarding recurrence risk and prognosis.
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- 2019
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47. Measurement of resident fatigue using rapid number naming
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Alina Masters-Israilov, Moriah Rabin, Anand Jagannath, David Yang, Sujatha Ramachandran, Rosemarie L Conigliaro, Jamie B. Rosenberg, Yasmina Ahmed, Anne Durstenfeld, Ellise Delphin, Mark J. Milstein, Peter P. Vlismas, Michael E. Ding, Moonseong Heo, and Joyce N. Mbekeani
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Eye Movements ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,Eye Movement Measurements ,Fatigue ,business.industry ,Internship and Residency ,Test (assessment) ,Occupational Diseases ,Sleep deprivation ,Neurology ,Sleep Deprivation ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Sleep (system call) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neurocognitive ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Sleep deprivation has a negative effect on neurocognitive performance. The King-Devick test (KDT), which tests speed and accuracy of number-reading, requires integrity of saccades, visual processing, and cognition. This study investigated effects of sleep deprivation in on-call residents using KDT.A prospective cohort study was conducted among 80 residents. KDT was performed at the beginning and end of an overnight call shift for the residents in the experimental group. A control group was tested at the beginning of 2 consecutive day shifts. Estimates of hours of sleep, Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS)(1 = extremely alert, 9 = extremely sleepy), and time and accuracy of KDT were recorded.42 residents were tested before and after overnight call shifts and 38 served as controls. Change in test time differed between the groups, with the experimental group performing 0.54(SD = 4.0) seconds slower after their night on call and the control group performing 2.32(SD = 3.0) seconds faster on the second day, p 0.001. This difference was larger in surgical compared to medical residents.Sleep deprivation was inversely correlated with neurocognitive performance as measured by KDT, with more effect on surgical than medical residents. Further research could investigate whether this test could help determine fatigue level and ability to continue working after a long shift.
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- 2019
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48. Rehabilitation Intervention in Older Patients with Acute Heart Failure with Preserved versus Reduced Ejection Fraction
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Dalane W. Kitzman, Christopher M. O'Connor, Robert J. Mentz, Haiying Chen, Amy M. Pastva, Gordon R. Reeves, Bharathi Upadhya, Pamela W. Duncan, Alain G. Bertoni, M. Benjamin Nelson, Paul B. Rosenberg, Shelby D. Reed, and David J. Whellan
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Heart Failure ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ejection fraction ,Acute decompensated heart failure ,business.industry ,Stroke Volume ,medicine.disease ,Rate ratio ,Prognosis ,Article ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,Quality of life ,Internal medicine ,Heart failure ,Statistical significance ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction ,business ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged - Abstract
Objectives This study assessed for treatment interactions by ejection fraction (EF) subgroup (≥45% [heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF); vs Background The REHAB-HF trial showed that an early multidomain rehabilitation intervention improved physical function, frailty, quality-of-life, and depression in older patients hospitalized with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF). Methods Three-month outcomes were: Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB), 6-min walk distance (6MWD), and Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ). Six-month end points included all-cause rehospitalization and death and a global rank of death, all-cause rehospitalization, and SPPB. Prespecified significance level for interaction was P ≤ 0.1. Results Among 349 total participants, 185 (53%) had HFpEF and 164 (47%) had HFrEF. Compared with HFrEF, HFpEF participants were more often women (61% vs 43%) and had significantly worse baseline physical function, frailty, quality of life, and depression. Although interaction P values for 3-month outcomes were not significant, effect sizes were larger for HFpEF vs HFrEF: SPPB +1.9 (95% CI: 1.1-2.6) vs +1.1 (95% CI: 0.3-1.9); 6MWD +40 meters (95% CI: 9 meters-72 meters) vs +27 (95% CI: −6 meters to 59 meters); KCCQ +9 (2-16) vs +6 (−2 to 14). All-cause rehospitalization rate was nominally lower with intervention in HFpEF but not HFrEF [effect size 0.83 (95% CI: 0.64-1.09) vs 0.99 (95% CI: 0.74-1.33); interaction P = 0.40]. There were significantly greater treatment benefits in HFpEF vs HFrEF for all-cause death [interaction P = 0.08; intervention rate ratio 0.63 (95% CI: 0.25-1.61) vs 2.21 (95% CI: 0.78-6.25)], and the global rank end point (interaction P = 0.098) with benefit seen in HFpEF [probability index 0.59 (95% CI: 0.50-0.68)] but not HFrEF. Conclusions Among older patients hospitalized with ADHF, compared with HFrEF those with HFpEF had significantly worse impairments at baseline and may derive greater benefit from the intervention. (A Trial of Rehabilitation Therapy in Older Acute Heart Failure Patients [REHAB-HF]; NCT02196038 )
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- 2021
49. Who Knows? Two Babies, Two Pandemics, 100 Years Apart
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Leah B. Rosenberg
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2019-20 coronavirus outbreak ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,COVID-19 ,Infant ,General Medicine ,Virology ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Pandemic ,Medicine ,Humans ,business ,Pandemics ,General Nursing - Published
- 2021
50. Apathy as a Treatment Target in Alzheimer's Disease: Implications for Clinical Trials
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Lawrence Adler, Daniel R. Bateman, Paul B. Rosenberg, Gad A. Marshall, Istaart Nps Pia, Luis Agüera-Ortiz, Prasad R. Padala, Kostas Siarkos, Moyra E. Mortby, Yonas E. Geda, Krista L. Lanctôt, Christos Theleritis, Zahinoor Ismail, David L Sultzer, Henry Brodaty, Marc Cantillon, and Antonios Politis
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030214 geriatrics ,business.industry ,Apathy ,Neurocognitive Disorders ,Disease ,Clinical trial ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Treatment intervention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Treatment targets ,Alzheimer Disease ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neurocognitive ,Symptom measurement ,Biomarkers ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Apathy is one of the most prevalent, stable and persistent neuropsychiatric symptom across the neurocognitive disorders spectrum. Recent advances in understanding of phenomenology, neurobiology and intervention trials highlight apathy as an important target for clinical intervention. We conducted a comprehensive review and critical evaluation of recent advances to determine the evidence-based suggestions for future trial designs. This review focused on 4 key areas: 1) pre-dementia states; 2) assessment; 3) mechanisms/biomarkers and 4) treatment/intervention efficacy. Considerable progress has been made in understanding apathy as a treatment target and appreciating pharmacological and non-pharmacological apathy treatment interventions. Areas requiring greater investigation include: diagnostic procedures, symptom measurement, understanding the biological mechanisms/biomarkers of apathy, and a well-formed approach to the development of treatment strategies. A better understanding of the subdomains and biological mechanisms of apathy will advance apathy as a treatment target for clinical trials.
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- 2021
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