23 results on '"Berrocoso S"'
Search Results
2. International meeting on Wolf‐Hirschhorn syndrome: Update on the nosology and new insights on the pathogenic mechanisms for seizures and growth delay
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Nevado, J., K. S., Ho, Zollino, Marcella, Blanco, R., Cobaleda, C., Golzio, C., Beaudry-Bellefeuille, I., Berrocoso, S., Limeres, J., Barruz, P., Serrano-Martin, C., Cafiero, C., Malaga, I., Marangi, Giuseppe, Campos-Sanchez, E., Moriyon-Iglesias, T., Marquez, S., Markham, L., Twede, H., Lortz, A., Olson, L., Sheng, X., Weng, C., Wassman, E. R., Newcomb, T., Carey, J. C., Battaglia, A., Lopez-Granados, E., Douglas, D., and Lapunzina, P.
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0301 basic medicine ,Nosology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,hepatoadenomas ,030105 genetics & heredity ,4p ,Settore MED/03 - GENETICA MEDICA ,medicine.disease ,University hospital ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,antiepileptic drugs ,seizures ,WHS ,Family medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Psychology ,Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome ,Genetics (clinical) ,Panel discussion ,Theme (narrative) - Abstract
"An International Meeting on Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome (WHS)" was held at The University Hospital La Paz in Madrid, Spain (October 13-14, 2017). One hundred and twenty-five people, including physicians, scientists and affected families, attended the meeting. Parent and patient advocates from the Spanish Association of WHS opened the meeting with a panel discussion to set the stage regarding their hopes and expectations for therapeutic advances. In keeping with the theme on therapeutic development, the sessions followed a progression from description of the phenotype and definition of therapeutic endpoints, to definition of genomic changes. These proceedings will review the major points of discussion.
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- 2019
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3. Ketogenic diet and cognition in neurological diseases: a systematic review
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Pavón, S, primary, Lázaro, E, additional, Martínez, O, additional, Amayra, I, additional, López-Paz, J F, additional, Caballero, P, additional, Al-Rashaida, M, additional, Luna, P M, additional, García, M, additional, Pérez, M, additional, Berrocoso, S, additional, Rodríguez, A A, additional, and Pérez-Núñez, P, additional
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- 2020
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4. International meeting on Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome: Update on the nosology and new insights on the pathogenic mechanisms for seizures and growth delay
- Author
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Nevado, J., Ho, K. S., Zollino, Marcella, Blanco, R., Cobaleda, C., Golzio, C., Beaudry-Bellefeuille, I., Berrocoso, S., Limeres, J., Barruz, P., Serrano-Martin, C., Cafiero, C., Malaga, I., Marangi, Giuseppe, Campos-Sanchez, E., Moriyon-Iglesias, T., Marquez, S., Markham, L., Twede, H., Lortz, A., Olson, L., Sheng, X., Weng, C., Wassman, E. R., Newcomb, T., Carey, J. C., Battaglia, A., Lopez-Granados, E., Douglas, D., Lapunzina, P., Zollino M. (ORCID:0000-0003-4871-9519), Marangi G. (ORCID:0000-0002-6898-8882), Nevado, J., Ho, K. S., Zollino, Marcella, Blanco, R., Cobaleda, C., Golzio, C., Beaudry-Bellefeuille, I., Berrocoso, S., Limeres, J., Barruz, P., Serrano-Martin, C., Cafiero, C., Malaga, I., Marangi, Giuseppe, Campos-Sanchez, E., Moriyon-Iglesias, T., Marquez, S., Markham, L., Twede, H., Lortz, A., Olson, L., Sheng, X., Weng, C., Wassman, E. R., Newcomb, T., Carey, J. C., Battaglia, A., Lopez-Granados, E., Douglas, D., Lapunzina, P., Zollino M. (ORCID:0000-0003-4871-9519), and Marangi G. (ORCID:0000-0002-6898-8882)
- Abstract
“An International Meeting on Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome (WHS)” was held at The University Hospital La Paz in Madrid, Spain (October 13–14, 2017). One hundred and twenty-five people, including physicians, scientists and affected families, attended the meeting. Parent and patient advocates from the Spanish Association of WHS opened the meeting with a panel discussion to set the stage regarding their hopes and expectations for therapeutic advances. In keeping with the theme on therapeutic development, the sessions followed a progression from description of the phenotype and definition of therapeutic endpoints, to definition of genomic changes. These proceedings will review the major points of discussion.
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- 2020
5. Ketogenic diet and cognition in neurological diseases: a systematic review.
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Pavón, S, Lázaro, E, Martínez, O, Amayra, I, López-Paz, J F, Caballero, P, Al-Rashaida, M, Luna, P M, García, M, Pérez, M, Berrocoso, S, Rodríguez, A A, and Pérez-Núñez, P
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KETOGENIC diet ,ONLINE information services ,NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EPILEPSY ,COGNITION ,PARKINSON'S disease ,MEDLINE ,GLUCOSE transporter 1 deficiency syndrome - Abstract
Context In recent years, the ketogenic diet has gained special relevance as a possible therapeutic alternative to some neurological and chronic diseases. Objective The aim of this systematic review was to answer the following question: Does a ketogenic diet improve cognitive skills in patients with Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, refractory epilepsy, and type 1 glucose deficiency syndrome? To define the research question, the PICOS criteria were used, following the guidelines of the PRISMA method. Data sources Medline/PubMed, Elsevier Science Direct, Dialnet, EBSCOhost, Mediagraphic, Sage Journals, ProQuest, and Wiley Online Library databases were used. Data extraction After applying inclusion and exclusion criteria in accordance with the PRISMA method, a total of 63 entries published between 2004 and 2019 were used. Data analysis The records extracted were analyzed from a qualitative approach, so no statistical analysis was carried out. Conclusion Although scientific literature on the subject is scarce and there has tended to be a lack of scientific rigor, the studies reviewed confirmed the effectiveness of this diet in improving the cognitive symptomatology of the aforementioned diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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6. Accuracy and reaction time in recognition of facial emotions in people with multiple sclerosis,Precisión y tiempo de reacción en el reconocimiento de emociones faciales en personas con esclerosis múltiple
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Pamela Parada Fernández, Oliva-Macias, M., Amayra, I., Lopez-Paz, J. F., Lazaro, E., Martinez, O., Jometon, A., Berrocoso, S., Salazar, H. G., and Perez, M.
7. Anxiety, depression and self-efficacy in patients with myasthenia gravis
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Parada, P., Oliva, M., Esther Lázaro, Amayra, I., Paz, J. F. L., Martínez, O., Jometón, A., Berrocoso, S., Iglesias, A., Pérez, M., and Bárcena, J. E.
8. Health networking on cancer in the European Union: a 'green paper' by the EU Joint Action on Networks of Expertise (JANE).
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Casali PG, Antoine-Poirel H, Berrocoso S, Blay JY, Dubois T, Ferrari A, Fullaondo A, Hovig E, Jagodzińska-Mucha P, Ługowska I, Kaasa S, Nicoară D, Pletsa V, Provenzano S, Santoro M, Šekerija M, Van Hoof W, Vyas M, and Trama A
- Abstract
Health networking is in principle a formidable instrument to address many challenges posed by cancer, one of the two most common and most lethal non-communicable chronic diseases. The European Union (EU)'s Beating Cancer Plan foresaw the addition of new health networks to the four already existing European Reference Networks on rare cancers: the Network of Comprehensive Cancer Centres and several networks of expertise (NoEs), which will be shortly deployed on items as complex and poor-prognosis cancers, palliative care, survivorship, personalised primary and secondary prevention, omic technologies, hi-tech medical resources, and cancers in adolescents and young adults. The community of experts of the EU Joint Action, due to build such NoEs, has drafted this 'green paper', incorporating 13 open questions, in an effort to foster discussion on some open questions about health networking on cancer in the EU. These affect highly diverse issues such as the following: how gaps in research into the instrument of health networking may be filled; which items lend themselves more to health networking in the EU; what degree of cooperation and harmonisation should be required of EU member states to best exploit health networking and give rise to European networks of national/regional networks; how the idea of subsidiarity may be best interpreted to support health networking in the context of EU treaties, which basically do not include health; how health networks should be funded and with what degree of cooperation between the EU and national levels; whether EU health networks should be shaped as legal entities or could give rise to secondary legal entities, also with a view to fundraising; how health networks should be best shaped to advance cancer research and how the EU regulatory system should be updated to exploit such impulse to health networks, in view of the EU General Data Protection Regulation and the new EU Health Data Space; how artificial intelligence can be exploited today within health networks and to what extent it will be able to overcome challenges such as the current lack of interoperability of electronic health records and the language barrier across the EU; and how health networks should involve patients and their groups, with regard to their formal role within EU health networks as well as their ability to have a say in items such as production of clinical practice guidelines, the design of investigator-driven clinical trials, EU regulatory decisions on medicines and devices, health service data governance, and identification of unmet needs., (Copyright © 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2025
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9. Signal-detection analysis of the WMS faces subtest: Results in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients.
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Pérez M, Amayra I, Martínez O, Lázaro E, López-Paz JF, García M, Berrocoso S, Al-Rashaida M, Rodríguez Bermejo AA, Luna PM, and Varona Franco L
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- Humans, Neuropsychological Tests, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis complications, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Frontotemporal Dementia complications, Frontotemporal Dementia diagnosis
- Abstract
About 30% of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) suffer from cognitive impairment and 10-15% suffer from frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Due to the patients' reduced motor function, a neuropsychological assessment with a low motor demand can be an advantage when evaluating patients, aiding its application. The present work has studied the usefulness of the Faces subtest of the Wechsler Memory Scale in 42 patients with ALS and 42 healthy volunteers applying Holdnack's Two-High Threshold model. The ALS group performed significantly worse in immediate and delayed discriminability. With respect to the presence of cognitive impairment, it seemed to be independent of the indexes proposed by Holdnack and Delis. On the other hand, motor problems were associated with delayed recognition while behavior alterations were linked to problems with delayed discriminability. ALS patients do not express differences in the bias index, in line with other types of previously studied pathologies.
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- 2021
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10. Diseases Costs and Impact of the Caring Role on Informal Carers of Children with Neuromuscular Disease.
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Rodríguez AA, Martínez Ó, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Al-Rashaida M, Lázaro E, Caballero P, Pérez M, Berrocoso S, García M, Luna PM, Pérez-Núñez P, and Passi N
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- Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires, Caregivers, Neuromuscular Diseases
- Abstract
This study aims to evaluate the costs of informal care for children with neuromuscular disease and evaluate how physical and psychological health is associated with socio-demographic variables. A cross sectional design was used with a convenience sample of 110 carers that participated in this study. Participants were recruited from Spanish hospitals and rare diseases organizations. Economic costs and sociodemographic aspects were assessed using the economic costs questionnaire and the sociodemographic questionnaire. Physical and psychological health was evaluated using the CarerQol-7D, PHQ-15, Barthel Index, Zarit Overload Scale and Satisfaction with Life Scale. Carers of children with neuromuscular disease spent a large percentage of their annual income in physical therapy, psychological care and speech therapy. Informal costs differed according to the degree of dependency of the child. These were higher in those caregivers whose child under their care presented low functional independence. The loss of work productivity was related to marital status, use of professional services and the child's dependency. Finally, carers who were female, single or separated and without a job showed worse physical and psychological health. The results highlighted that carers have to face a number of high costs because of the non-existence of social protection and due to the child's diagnosis.
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- 2021
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11. Effects of Teleassistance on the Quality of Life of People With Rare Neuromuscular Diseases According to Their Degree of Disability.
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Martínez O, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Lázaro E, Caballero P, García I, Rodríguez AA, García M, Luna PM, Pérez-Núñez P, Barrera J, Passi N, Berrocoso S, Pérez M, and Al-Rashaida M
- Abstract
Rare neuromuscular diseases (RNMDs) are a group of pathologies characterized by a progressive loss of muscular strength, atrophy, fatigue, and other muscle-related symptoms, which affect quality of life (QoL) levels. The low prevalence, high geographical dispersion and disability of these individuals involve difficulties in accessing health and social care services. Teleassistance is presented as a useful tool to perform psychosocial interventions in these situations. The main aim of this research is to assess the effects of a teleassistance psychosocial program on the QoL levels of people with RNMDs who have different levels of disability. A sample of 73 participants was divided into an experimental group ( n = 40), which participated in the intervention, and a control wait list group ( n = 33). QoL was evaluated through the SIP and the SF-36, and disability through the WHO-DAS II. The participants with a moderate to severe level of disability were those who most benefited from the intervention. The results also revealed that the psychosocial teleassistance program was suitable to improve physical and psychosocial aspects of people suffering from a rare neuromuscular disease with a moderate level of disability, but just psychosocial aspects in those with a severe level of disability., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Martínez, Amayra, López-Paz, Lázaro, Caballero, García, Rodríguez, García, Luna, Pérez-Núñez, Barrera, Passi, Berrocoso, Pérez and Al-Rashaida.)
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- 2021
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12. Coping with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome: quality of life and psychosocial features of family carers.
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Berrocoso S, Amayra I, Lázaro E, Martínez O, López-Paz JF, García M, Pérez M, Al-Rashaida M, Rodríguez AA, Luna PM, Pérez-Núñez P, Blanco R, and Nevado J
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Caregivers, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 4, Humans, Phenotype, Quality of Life, Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome
- Abstract
Background: Wolf-Hirschhorn Syndrome (WHS) is a rare, congenital disease characterized by a distinctive facial phenotype, seizures, intellectual disability and developmental delay, and pre and postnatal growth requiring lifelong care. The psychosocial status of the family caregivers of children diagnosed with WHS is unknown. This study aims to characterize the sociodemographic and psychosocial profile of WHS caregivers and analyze how these variables impact their quality of life (QoL) and well-being., Results: The sociodemographic and clinical profile of 22 Spanish caregivers of children with WHS and the characteristics of those affected have been described. Significant relationships were found between sociodemographic and psychosocial characteristics among caregivers. The impact on the parents' QoL and negative relationship with the symptomatology were assessed. The use of engagement strategies such as problem focused coping was associated with improved psychological QoL and social support., Conclusions: WHS caregivers share similarities in their profile and needs with caregivers of children with other rare diseases. Pychosocial support groups involving parents caring for children with the same disease could improve caregivers' well-being and QoL by strengthening their social support network and using positive coping styles.
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- 2020
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13. Social Cognition in Chiari Malformation Type I: a Preliminary Characterization.
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García M, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Martínez O, Lázaro E, Pérez M, Berrocoso S, Al-Rashaida M, and Infante J
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Arnold-Chiari Malformation diagnosis, Arnold-Chiari Malformation psychology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Social Cognition
- Abstract
Chiari malformation type I (CM-I) is a neurological disorder in which cerebellar tonsils are herniated through the foramen magnum into the spinal canal. A wide spectrum of cognitive deficits underlying this pathology has been reported, but the literature about social cognition is insufficient. Clinical research has pointed out the cerebellar role in Theory of Mind (ToM), indicating that there are several disorders with cerebellar pathology that reveal a poorer performance in social cognition tasks. The main purpose of this study is to compare the performance on ToM tasks between CM-I patients and healthy controls. The protocol includes Faux Pas test, Happé's Strange Stories test, Ice-Cream Van task, the FEEL test, and the Word Accentuation Test. In order to eliminate the possible influence of covariables, physical pain and anxious-depressive symptomatology have been controlled for. According to the results, CM-I patients performed worse than matched healthy controls on ToM tasks, except for facial emotion recognition. These differences remained even after controlling for the neuropsychiatric variables and physical pain. Thus, it can be suggested that patients with CM-I are impaired in their social skills related to their performance on ToM tasks. These findings can be considered to be a preliminary approach to the specific study of social cognition in relation to CM-I since it is similar to other cerebellar pathologies and to previous literature on the cerebellum's role in social cognition.
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- 2020
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14. Intrusion errors during verbal fluency task in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
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Perez M, Amayra I, Lazaro E, García M, Martínez O, Caballero P, Berrocoso S, López-Paz JF, Al-Rashaida M, Rodríguez AA, Luna P, and Varona L
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- Case-Control Studies, Child, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Spain epidemiology, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis physiopathology, Cognition Disorders epidemiology, Language Disorders epidemiology, Motor Disorders epidemiology, Semantics, Verbal Behavior
- Abstract
Background: Numerous studies have noted the presence of a dysexecutive component of the ALS-FTD. The most widely replicated result refers to the significantly reduced verbal fluency of ALS patients when compared to healthy people. As ALS patients have motor alterations that interfere with production, qualitative studies have the advantage of being independent of the degree of motor disability and revealing patients' cognitive state. This study examined the production differences between 42 ALS patients who presented with different degrees of dementia and motor impairment and 42 healthy people. Production processes were studied by extending the administration time of a letter fluency task to 2 minutes for the phonemic verbal fluency (PVF) and semantic verbal fluency (SVF) categories. This ensured that the qualitative aspects of verbal fluency were addressed, paying special attention to the new perseverations and intrusions, as well as any clinical correlates that may exist., Results: The ALS patients produced a significantly lower number of responses in PVF (p = .017) and SVF (p = .008). The rest of the indicators for frontal lobe alteration also suggested the existence of a dysfunction. The most remarkable results were the number of intrusions on the PVF task, which was much higher in the ALS group (p = .002). However, the number of perseverations did not differ significantly., Conclusions: This study highlights the value of intrusions in addressing cognitive deterioration in ALS patients. This deterioration seems to be independent of the degree of motor impairment and of behavioural alterations. Therefore, the value of the intromissions on the verbal fluency task was highlighted as an indicator of a new cognitive alteration, which can be easily evaluated, even retrospectively., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2020
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15. Using a Virtual Serious Game (Deusto-e-motion1.0) to Assess the Theory of Mind in Primary School Children: Observational Descriptive Study.
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Lázaro E, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Martínez O, Pérez Alvarez M, Berrocoso S, Al-Rashaida M, García M, Luna P, Pérez-Núñez P, Rodriguez AA, Fernández P, Parada Fernández P, and Oliva-Macías M
- Abstract
Background: Given the interactive media characteristics and intrinsically motivating appeal, virtual serious games are often praised for their potential for assessment and treatment., Objective: This study aims to validate and develop normative data for a virtual serious game (Deusto-e-motion1.0) for the evaluation of emotional facial expression recognition and social skills, both of which are components of the theory of mind., Methods: A total of 1236 children took part in the study. The children were classified by age (8-12 years old), gender (males=639, females=597), and educational level (between the third and sixth years of Primary Education). A total of 10 schools from the Basque Country and 20 trained evaluators participated in this study., Results: Differences were found in Deusto-e-motion1.0 scores between groups of children depending on age and gender. Moreover, there was a moderately significant correlation between the emotional recognition scores of Deusto-e-motion1.0 and those of the Feel facial recognition test., Conclusions: Deusto-e-motion1.0 shows concurrent validity with instruments that assess emotional recognition. Results support the adequacy of Deusto-e-motion1.0 in assessing components of the theory of mind in children., (©Esther Lázaro, Imanol Amayra, Juan Francisco López-Paz, Oscar Martínez, Manuel Pérez Alvarez, Sarah Berrocoso, Mohammad Al-Rashaida, Maitane García, Paula Luna, Paula Pérez-Núñez, Alicia Aurora Rodriguez, Paula Fernández, Pamela Parada Fernández, Mireia Oliva-Macías. Originally published in JMIR Serious Games (http://games.jmir.org), 02.04.2020.)
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- 2020
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16. Analysis of Visuospatial Abilities in Chiari Malformation Type I.
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García M, Lázaro E, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Martínez O, Pérez M, Berrocoso S, Al-Rashaida M, and Infante J
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Photic Stimulation methods, Spatial Navigation physiology, Arnold-Chiari Malformation diagnostic imaging, Arnold-Chiari Malformation psychology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Space Perception physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
The involvement of the cerebellum in visuospatial abilities has been evidenced in numerous studies, based on the cerebellar-cortical circuitry. This domain has been evaluated in several patients with cerebellar disorders, but the assessment of visuospatial processing in Chiari malformation type I (CM-I) is scarce. The aim of this study is to analyze the visuospatial performance between CM-I adult patients and healthy controls. Participants have been tested using Block Design and Visual Puzzles subtests of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS), the Benton Judgment of Line Orientation test, and the Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure test. The anxious-depressive symptomatology, the physical pain, and the premorbid intelligence have been controlled for, as well. The CM-I patients showed a significantly lower performance; however, after analyzing and controlling for the effect of clinical variables and psychopathological symptomatology, the main effect was maintained for visual puzzles and line orientation tasks. The findings suggest that CM-I patients show a poorer performance in tasks that require an exercise of perceptual reasoning without motor demand, accompanied by visualization and mental imagery of the stimuli. This study contributes towards the reinforcement of the evidence on the cognitive alterations associated to CM-I.
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- 2020
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17. An instrument to measure perceptions of people with disabilities regarding the application of international vocational rehabilitation standards.
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Al-Rashaida M, López-Paz JF, Amayra I, Martínez O, Lázaro E, Berrocoso S, García M, Pérez M, Rodríguez AA, Luna PM, Pérez-Núñez P, and Fernández P
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- Adult, Aged, Europe, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Vocational Guidance, Young Adult, Attitude to Health, Disability Evaluation, Persons with Disabilities psychology, Persons with Disabilities rehabilitation, Internationality, Rehabilitation, Vocational standards
- Abstract
This study aimed to create a valid and reliable instrument to measure people with disabilities' perceptions regarding the extent of application of international standards issued by the Council of Europe, International Labour Organization, and the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health in vocational rehabilitation centers in the Basque country, Spain. The instrument items were selected from international recommendations and conventions issued by the International Labour Organization, Council of Europe, International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, and a vocational rehabilitation literature review. The instrument was translated from English to Spanish, and the content validity index of an expert panel survey was used to assess content validity. For the Spanish version of the instrument, internal consistency reliability, confirmatory factor analysis and factor analysis were examined with 186 people with disabilities in 10 vocational rehabilitation centers in the Basque country. The coefficient alpha estimate was 0.945, indicating excellent internal consistency. Three factors were identified: job-related services, aims of vocational rehabilitation center, and vocational rehabilitation guidance. The instrument appears to have good validity and reliability but requires further validation. Support is provided for its use in both English and Spanish. Implications for vocational rehabilitation practice and suggestions for future research are provided.
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- 2019
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18. Instrument for Assessing the Ability to Identify Emotional Facial Expressions in Healthy Children and in Children With ADHD: The FEEL Test.
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Lázaro E, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Martínez O, Pérez M, Berrocoso S, García M, Jometón A, Al-Rashaida M, Oliva M, Parada P, and Hoffmann H
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- Adolescent, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity psychology, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Reaction Time, Reproducibility of Results, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity diagnosis, Emotions, Expressed Emotion, Facial Expression, Surveys and Questionnaires standards
- Abstract
Objective: This study presents the validation of a computerized assessment tool that studies the ability to recognize emotional facial expressions in children between 8 and 11 years of age: the Facially Expressed Emotion Labeling Test (FEEL Test)., Method: The two tests composing the protocol were applied using a laptop in the following order: the FEEL Test followed by the Deusto-e-Motion 1.0 Test.The sample consisted of a total of 1,189 schoolchildren aged between 8 and 11 years, 594 boys and 594 girls. A clinical sample of 47 children with ADHD also took part in this study., Results: The Cronbach's α coefficient for the total scale was .82, showing high levels of reliability. The difficulty index of the items ranged between .4 and .7. The statistical analyses showed a high rate of discrimination between those who obtained low scores compared with those who obtained high scores. The test results reflected differences according to age and gender of participants in many of the variables associated with both response accuracy and response speed. Regarding its predictive validity, the test is able to find statistically significant differences in the total test score among a group of children diagnosed with ADHD and a matched control group., Conclusion: This article presents the validation of an instrument that assesses the ability to recognize facial expressions in children between 8 and 11 years old and can discriminate and detect differences in gender, age, and possible deficits in social skills within the ADHD.
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- 2019
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19. Comparison between decompressed and non-decompressed Chiari Malformation type I patients: A neuropsychological study.
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García M, Amayra I, Lázaro E, López-Paz JF, Martínez O, Pérez M, Berrocoso S, and Al-Rashaida M
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Educational Status, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Treatment Outcome, Arnold-Chiari Malformation psychology, Arnold-Chiari Malformation surgery, Decompression, Surgical, Mental Processes
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies have suggested an association of Chiari Malformation type I (CM-I) and cognitive deficits. CM-I is a neurological disorder characterized by a descent of cerebellar tonsils into the foramen magnum, resulting in overcrowding of the upper cervical spine region. Posterior fossa decompression (PFD) is the surgical treatment of choice, however, the literature on the consequences for patients is mainly reduced to the assessment of physical symptoms., Methods: Data from a neuropsychological assessment of 76 patients with CM-I, both with PFD (n = 37) and without PFD (n = 39) surgery, and 76 healthy controls, matched by gender, age and years of education are reported., Results: CM-I patients show a generally lower cognitive performance in executive function, verbal fluency, spatial cognition, language (naming), verbal memory, processing speed, emotional facial recognition and theory of mind, compared to control group. The results are maintained even after statistically controlling for the influence of perceived physical pain and the presence of anxious-depressive symptomatology. Data also illustrate a similar cognitive profile between both groups with CM-I., Conclusion: These findings provide evidence of a deficient cognitive profile associated with CM-I, regardless of the PFD surgery. According to these results, both physical and cognitive consequences must be considered in the treatment of CM-I., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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20. Chiari Type I Malformation Associated With Verbal Fluency Impairment.
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Lázaro E, García M, Ibarrola A, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Martínez O, Pérez M, Berrocoso S, Al-Rashaida M, Rodríguez AA, Fernández P, and Luna PM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Anxiety etiology, Case-Control Studies, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Depression etiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Vocabulary, Young Adult, Arnold-Chiari Malformation complications, Language Disorders etiology
- Abstract
Purpose: Chiari malformation (CM) Type I is a rare disorder that implies an anomaly in the craniocervical junction, where one or both cerebellar tonsils are displaced below the foramen magnum into the cervical spinal channel. Research carried out regarding cognitive symptoms such as verbal fluency is scarce. The aim of this study was to investigate whether verbal fluency is impaired in a CM clinical group compared to a group of healthy control individuals while controlling for depression and anxiety symptomatology., Method: For this purpose, 101 individuals were enrolled to take part in the study (51 CM, 50 healthy controls). The Controlled Oral Word Association Test (Benton, de Hamsher, & Sivan, 1983) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (Zigmond & Snaith, 1983) were administered., Results: Results showed significantly lower scores for the CM group in verbal fluency compared to the control group (p < .005). After performing an analysis of covariance to eliminate depression and anxiety symptomatology tendencies, it was observed that verbal fluency could not be predicted by this variable (p > .005)., Conclusions: From the results of this study, it can be concluded that people suffering from CM exhibit less verbal fluency than healthy control individuals and that this difference is not caused by depression or anxiety.
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- 2018
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21. Cognitive Functioning in Chiari Malformation Type I Without Posterior Fossa Surgery.
- Author
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García M, Lázaro E, López-Paz JF, Martínez O, Pérez M, Berrocoso S, Al-Rashaida M, and Amayra I
- Subjects
- Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Arnold-Chiari Malformation psychology, Mental Processes
- Abstract
Chiari Malformation type I (CM-I) is a neurological disorder characterized by a displacement of the cerebellar tonsils through the foramen magnum into the spinal canal. Most research has focused on physical symptomatology but few studies include neuropsychological examinations. Moreover, although current research highlights the involvement of the cerebellum on higher cognitive functions, little is known about cognitive consequences associated with CM-I. The aim of this study is to analyze cognitive functioning between 39 CM-I patients and 39 healthy controls, matched by gender, age and years of education. Participants have been examined on a large battery of neuropsychological tests, including executive functioning, verbal fluency, spatial cognition, language, verbal memory, processing speed, facial recognition and theory of mind. Results show a poorer performance of the clinical group compared to the control group, even after controlling the effect of physical pain and anxious-depressive symptomatology. The findings suggest the presence of a generalized cognitive deficit associated with CM-I, which makes it necessary to focus attention not only on physical consequences, but also on cognitive ones.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Accuracy and reaction time in recognition of facial emotions in people with multiple sclerosis.
- Author
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Parada-Fernández P, Oliva-Macías M, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Lázaro E, Martínez Ó, Jometón A, Berrocoso S, García de Salazar H, and Pérez M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Anxiety etiology, Anxiety physiopathology, Attention physiology, Case-Control Studies, Cognition Disorders etiology, Cognition Disorders physiopathology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression etiology, Depression physiopathology, Eye, Female, Humans, Male, Memory physiology, Mental Recall physiology, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis complications, Multiple Sclerosis psychology, Neuropsychological Tests, Socioeconomic Factors, Emotions, Facial Expression, Multiple Sclerosis physiopathology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Reaction Time
- Abstract
Introduction: Facial emotional expression constitutes a basic guide in the social interaction and, thus, the alterations in its expression or recognition imply an important limitation for the communication. On the other hand, cognitive impairment and the presence of depressive symptoms, which are commonly found in patients with multiple sclerosis, it is unknown how they influence cognitive function and depression on emotional recognition., Aims: To consider the evaluation of time reaction and response accuracy of facial expression recognition in people affected by multiple sclerosis, and to assess the possible variables that may be modulating the emotion recognition, such as depression and cognitive functions., Subjects and Methods: The study has a cross-sectional non-experimental design with a single measurement. The sample is compound by 85 participants, 45 diagnosed as multiple sclerosis and 40 control subjects., Results: Multiple sclerosis subjects reveal significant differences in both reaction time and response accuracy in neuropsychological tests in comparison to the control group. Explanatory models were identified in the emotional recognition., Conclusion: Multiple sclerosis subjects face difficulties at recognising facial emotions; and differences at attention memory, processing speed and depressive symptomatology were observed in regard to the control group.
- Published
- 2015
23. Effectiveness of teleassistance at improving quality of life in people with neuromuscular diseases.
- Author
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Martínez O, Jometón A, Pérez M, Lázaro E, Amayra I, López-Paz JF, Oliva M, Parada P, Berrocoso S, Iglesias A, Caballero P, De Nicolás Y Martínez L, and Bárcena JE
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Neuromuscular Diseases psychology, Treatment Outcome, Videoconferencing, Young Adult, Neuromuscular Diseases rehabilitation, Quality of Life psychology, Telerehabilitation methods
- Abstract
Rare neuromuscular diseases (NDs) are a group of inherited or acquired neurological pathologies affecting the muscles and the nervous system. Their low prevalence and high geographical dispersion can cause isolation and difficulties in social interaction between affected equals. New technologies, such as videoconferencing, offer a complementary option for improving the health of this population. The purpose of this study was to assess the effectiveness of a teleassistance program at improving health-related quality of life (HRQoL) through social interaction in adults with NDs. The sample consisted of 45 participants affected by rare NDs. Twenty-four participants were assigned to the experimental group (EG), which participated in the videoconferencing sessions, and 21 to the control group. Three questionnaires were administered: WHO-DAS II, Sickness Impact Profile, and SF-36 Health Survey. Effectiveness was assessed by a pre-post design. An online psychosocial program was applied over three-month period. Data revealed an improvement of the EG in psychosocial variables, e.g. "Getting along with people" (z = -2.289, r = -.47, p ≤ .05) or "Psychosocial Domain" (z = -2.404, r = -.49, p ≤ .05), and in physical variables, e.g. "Life activities" (z = -2.844, r = -.58, p ≤ .05). Social interaction appeared as a relevant factor at improving HRQoL levels. High levels of satisfaction about the teleassistance program were reported.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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