73 results on '"Blautzik J"'
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2. Aktuelle bildgebende Diagnostik der Wirbelsäulenerkrankungen
- Author
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Baumert, B., Blautzik, J., Körner, M., Reiser, M., and Linsenmaier, U.
- Abstract
Zusammenfassung: Die radiologische Bildgebung stellt einen unerlässlichen Bestandteil in der Diagnostik von Wirbelsäulenerkrankungen dar. Als Basisdiagnostik steht initial unverändert die konventionelle Röntgenaufnahme (CR) im Vordergrund, mit der bereits in vielen Fällen eine richtungweisende Diagnose ermöglicht wird. Weiterführende Modalitäten wie die Computertomographie (CT) oder die Magnetresonanztomographie (MRT) ermöglichen eine differenziertere Abklärung. Durch die schnelle Innovation und breite Verfügbarkeit hat die Multidetektor-CT (MDCT) in den letzten Jahren eine wichtige Stellung in der Akutdiagnostik traumatischer Wirbelsäulenverletzungen eingenommen und die CR als diagnostisches Mittel der Wahl abgelöst. Nuklearmedizinische Verfahren wie die Knochenszintigraphie oder die Positronenemissionstomographie (PET) dienen als Screeningverfahren und ergänzen die morphologischen bildgebenden Verfahren der Radiologie. Die vorliegende Arbeit liefert eine synoptische Übersicht über die aktuell verfügbaren radiologischen und nuklearmedizinischen Verfahren sowie deren Indikation und Stellenwert bei der Bildgebung von Wirbelsäulenerkrankungen.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Cognitive subtypes in recent onset psychosis: distinct neurobiological fingerprints?
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Wenzel, J, Haas, SS, Dwyer, DB, Ruef, A, Oeztuerk, OF, Antonucci, LA, von Saldern, S, Bonivento, C, Garzitto, M, Ferro, A, Paolini, M, Blautzik, J, Borgwardt, S, Brambilla, P, Meisenzahl, E, Salokangas, RKR, Upthegrove, R, Wood, SJ, Kambeitz, J, Koutsouleris, N, Kambeitz-Ilankovic, L, Wenzel, J, Haas, SS, Dwyer, DB, Ruef, A, Oeztuerk, OF, Antonucci, LA, von Saldern, S, Bonivento, C, Garzitto, M, Ferro, A, Paolini, M, Blautzik, J, Borgwardt, S, Brambilla, P, Meisenzahl, E, Salokangas, RKR, Upthegrove, R, Wood, SJ, Kambeitz, J, Koutsouleris, N, and Kambeitz-Ilankovic, L
- Abstract
In schizophrenia, neurocognitive subtypes can be distinguished based on cognitive performance and they are associated with neuroanatomical alterations. We investigated the existence of cognitive subtypes in shortly medicated recent onset psychosis patients, their underlying gray matter volume patterns and clinical characteristics. We used a K-means algorithm to cluster 108 psychosis patients from the multi-site EU PRONIA (Prognostic tools for early psychosis management) study based on cognitive performance and validated the solution independently (N = 53). Cognitive subgroups and healthy controls (HC; n = 195) were classified based on gray matter volume (GMV) using Support Vector Machine classification. A cognitively spared (N = 67) and impaired (N = 41) subgroup were revealed and partially independently validated (Nspared = 40, Nimpaired = 13). Impaired patients showed significantly increased negative symptomatology (pfdr = 0.003), reduced cognitive performance (pfdr < 0.001) and general functioning (pfdr < 0.035) in comparison to spared patients. Neurocognitive deficits of the impaired subgroup persist in both discovery and validation sample across several domains, including verbal memory and processing speed. A GMV pattern (balanced accuracy = 60.1%, p = 0.01) separating impaired patients from HC revealed increases and decreases across several fronto-temporal-parietal brain areas, including basal ganglia and cerebellum. Cognitive and functional disturbances alongside brain morphological changes in the impaired subgroup are consistent with a neurodevelopmental origin of psychosis. Our findings emphasize the relevance of tailored intervention early in the course of psychosis for patients suffering from the likely stronger neurodevelopmental character of the disease.
- Published
- 2021
4. Aktuelle bildgebende Diagnostik der Wirbelsäulenerkrankungen
- Author
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Baumert, B., Blautzik, J., Körner, M., Reiser, M., and Linsenmaier, U.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Cognitive subtypes in recent onset psychosis: distinct neurobiological fingerprints?
- Author
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Wenzel, J., Haas, S. S., Dwyer, D. B., Ruef, A., Oeztuerk, O. F., Antonucci, L. A., von Saldern, S., Bonivento, C., Garzitto, M., Ferro, A., Paolini, M., Blautzik, J., Borgwardt, S., Brambilla, P., Meisenzahl, E., Salokangas, R. K. R., Upthegrove, R., Wood, S. J., Kambeitz, J., Koutsouleris, N., Kambeitz-Ilankovic, L., Sen Dong, M., Erkens, A., Gussmann, E., Haas, S., Hasan, A., Hoff, C., Khanyaree, I., Melo, A., Muckenhuber-Sternbauer, S., Kohler, J., Popovic, D., Penzel, N., Rangnick, A., Sanfelici, R., Spangemacher, M., Tupac, A., Urquijo, M. F., Weiske, J., Wosgien, A., Ruhrmann, S., Rosen, M., Betz, L., Haidl, T., Blume, K., Seves, M., Kaiser, N., Pilgram, T., Lichtenstein, T., Woopen, C., Andreou, C., Egloff, L., Harrisberger, F., Lenz, C., Leanza, L., Mackintosh, A., Smieskova, R., Studerus, E., Walter, A., Widmayer, S., Chisholm, K., Day, C., Griffiths, S. L., Iqbal, M., Lalousis, P., Pelton, M., Mallikarjun, P., Stainton, A., Lin, A., Denissoff, A., Ellila, A., Tiina From, R. N., Heinimaa, M., Ilonen, T., Jalo, P., Heikki Laurikainen, R. N., Lehtinen, M., Antti Luutonen, R. N., Makela, A., Paju, J., Pesonen, H., Armio (Saila), R. -L., Sormunen, E., Toivonen, A., Turtonen, O., Solana, A. B., Abraham, M., Hehn, N., Schirmer, T., Altamura, C., Belleri, M., Bottinelli, F., Re, M., Monzani, E., Percudani, M., Sberna, M., D'Agostino, A., Del Fabro, L., Menni, V. S. B., Perna, G., Nobile, M., Alciati, A., Balestrieri, M., Cabras, G., Fabbro, F., Piccin, S., Bertolino, A., Blasi, G., Pergola, G., Caforio, G., Faio, L., Quarto, T., Gelao, B., Romano, R., Andriola, I., Falsetti, A., Barone, M., Passatiore, R., Sangiuliano, M., Lencer, R., Surman, M., Bienek, O., Romer, G., Dannlowski, U., Schultze-Lutter, F., Schmidt-Kraepelin, C., Neufang, S., Korda, A., and Rohner, H.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychosis ,Audiology ,Article ,Cognition ,Social cognition ,medicine ,Humans ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Gray Matter ,Pharmacology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Brain ,Diagnostic markers ,Cognitive neuroscience ,Neuropsychological test ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Verbal memory ,business ,Neurocognitive - Abstract
In schizophrenia, neurocognitive subtypes can be distinguished based on cognitive performance and they are associated with neuroanatomical alterations. We investigated the existence of cognitive subtypes in shortly medicated recent onset psychosis patients, their underlying gray matter volume patterns and clinical characteristics. We used a K-means algorithm to cluster 108 psychosis patients from the multi-site EU PRONIA (Prognostic tools for early psychosis management) study based on cognitive performance and validated the solution independently (N = 53). Cognitive subgroups and healthy controls (HC; n = 195) were classified based on gray matter volume (GMV) using Support Vector Machine classification. A cognitively spared (N = 67) and impaired (N = 41) subgroup were revealed and partially independently validated (Nspared = 40, Nimpaired = 13). Impaired patients showed significantly increased negative symptomatology (pfdr = 0.003), reduced cognitive performance (pfdr pfdr p = 0.01) separating impaired patients from HC revealed increases and decreases across several fronto-temporal-parietal brain areas, including basal ganglia and cerebellum. Cognitive and functional disturbances alongside brain morphological changes in the impaired subgroup are consistent with a neurodevelopmental origin of psychosis. Our findings emphasize the relevance of tailored intervention early in the course of psychosis for patients suffering from the likely stronger neurodevelopmental character of the disease.
- Published
- 2020
6. Variations in radioiodine ablation: decision-making after total thyroidectomy
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Maas, O, Forrer, F, Maas, M, Panje, C M, Blautzik, J, Brühlmeier, M, Engel-Bicik, I, Giovanella, L, Haldemann, A, Kamel, M E, Kneifel, S, Rottenburger, C, Schaefer, N, Walter, M A, Weidner, S, Putora, P M, University of Zurich, and Maas, O
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2741 Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging ,610 Medicine & health ,10181 Clinic for Nuclear Medicine - Abstract
BACKGROUND The role of radioiodine treatment following total thyroidectomy for differentiated thyroid cancer is changing. The last major revision of the American Thyroid Association (ATA) Management Guidelines for Patients with Thyroid Nodules and Differentiated Thyroid Cancer in 2015 changed treatment recommendations dramatically in comparison with the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM) 2008 guidelines. We hypothesised that there is marked variability between the different treatment regimens used today. METHODS We analysed decision-making in all Swiss hospitals offering radioiodine treatment to map current practice within the community and identify consensus and discrepancies. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: We demonstrated that for low-risk DTC patients after thyroidectomy, some institutions offered only follow-up, while RIT with significant activities is recommended in others. For intermediate- and high-risk patients, radioiodine treatment is generally recommended. Dosing and treatment preparation (recombinant human thyroid stimulation hormone (rhTSH) vs. thyroid hormone withdrawal (THW)) vary significantly among centres.
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- 2020
7. Cortical networks engaged in working memory in mild cognitive impaired patients and healthy controls identified by independent component analysis
- Author
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Blautzik, J., Meindl, T., Hoehler, S., Bokde, A., Teipel, S., and Reiser, M.
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- 2009
- Full Text
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8. Variations in radioiodine ablation: decision-making after total thyroidectomy
- Author
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Maas, O., primary, Forrer, F., additional, Maas, M., additional, Panje, C. M., additional, Blautzik, J., additional, Brühlmeier, M., additional, Engel-Bicik, I., additional, Giovanella, L., additional, Haldemann, A., additional, Kamel, M. E., additional, Kneifel, S., additional, Rottenburger, C., additional, Schaefer, N., additional, Walter, M. A., additional, Weidner, S., additional, and Putora, P. M., additional
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- 2019
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9. Fractional anisotropy changes in Alzheimer's disease depend on the underlying fiber tract architecture: a multiparametric DTI study using joint independent component analysis
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Teipel SJ, Grothe MJ, Filippi M, Fellgiebel A, Dyrba M, Frisoni GB, Meindl T, Bokde ALW, Hampel H, Klöppel S, Hauenstein K, the EDSD study group, Agosta F, Barkhof F, Blautzik J, Bokde AL, Ewers M, Fischer F, Frolich L, Hausner L, Hentschel F, Hull M, Jessen F, Kljajevic V, Kloppel S, O'Dwyer L, Pievani M, Pouwels PJ, Teipel, Sj, Grothe, Mj, Filippi, M, Fellgiebel, A, Dyrba, M, Frisoni, Gb, Meindl, T, Bokde, Alw, Hampel, H, Klöppel, S, Hauenstein, K, the EDSD study, Group, Agosta, F, Barkhof, F, Blautzik, J, Bokde, Al, Ewers, M, Fischer, F, Frolich, L, Hausner, L, Hentschel, F, Hull, M, Jessen, F, Kljajevic, V, Kloppel, S, O'Dwyer, L, Pievani, M, and Pouwels, Pj
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Male ,White Matter/pathology ,pathology [Cognitive Dysfunction] ,pathology [Pyramidal Tracts] ,Alzheimer Disease/diagnosis/pathology ,Pyramidal Tracts ,Nerve Fibers, Myelinated ,methods [Diffusion Tensor Imaging] ,pathology [Alzheimer Disease] ,ddc:616.89 ,pathology [Brain] ,methods [Image Processing, Computer-Assisted] ,pathology [White Matter] ,methods [Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging] ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Anisotropy ,Nerve Degeneration/pathology ,pathology [Axons] ,General Neuroscience ,diagnosis [Alzheimer Disease] ,pathology [Nerve Degeneration] ,Brain ,General Medicine ,White Matter ,Pyramidal Tracts/pathology ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods ,Europe ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Psychology ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods ,Fiber tract ,White matter ,Alzheimer Disease ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging/methods ,Fractional anisotropy ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Brain/pathology ,ddc:610 ,Aged ,Nerve Fibers, Myelinated/pathology ,pathology [Nerve Fibers, Myelinated] ,Mild Cognitive Impairment/diagnosis/pathology ,medicine.disease ,Independent component analysis ,Axons ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Axons/pathology ,Early Diagnosis ,diagnosis [Cognitive Dysfunction] ,Corticospinal tract ,Nerve Degeneration ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Neuroscience ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) allows the simultaneous measurement of several diffusion indices that provide complementary information on the substrate of white matter alterations in neurodegenerative diseases. These indices include fractional anisotropy (FA) as measure of fiber tract integrity, and the mode of anisotropy (Mode) reflecting differences in the shape of the diffusion tensor. We used a multivariate approach based on joint independent component analysis of FA and Mode in a large sample of 138 subjects with Alzheimer's disease (AD) dementia, 37 subjects with cerebrospinal fluid biomarker positive mild cognitive impairment (MCI-AD), and 153 healthy elderly controls from the European DTI Study on Dementia to comprehensively study alterations of microstructural white matter integrity in AD dementia and predementia AD. We found a parallel decrease of FA and Mode in intracortically projecting fiber tracts, and a parallel increase of FA and Mode in the corticospinal tract in AD patients compared to controls. Subjects with MCI-AD showed a similar, but spatially more restricted pattern of diffusion changes. Our findings suggest an early axonal degeneration in intracortical projecting fiber tracts in dementia and predementia stages of AD. An increase of Mode, parallel to an increase of FA, in the corticospinal tract suggests a more linear shape of diffusion due to loss of crossing fibers along relatively preserved cortico-petal and cortico-fugal fiber tracts in AD. Supporting this interpretation, we found three populations of fiber tracts, namely cortico-petal and cortico-fugal, commissural, and intrahemispherically projecting fiber tracts, in the peak area of parallel FA and Mode increase.
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- 2014
10. The ε4 genotype of apolipoprotein E and white matter integrity in Alzheimer's disease
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Kljajevic, V, Meyer, P, Holzmann, C, Dyrba, M, Kasper, E, Bokde, Al, Fellgiebel, A, Meindl, T, Hampel, H, Teipel, S, EDSD study group, Agosta, F, Barkhof, F, Blautzik, J, Ewers, M, Filippi, M, Fischer, F, Frisoni, Gb, Frolich, L, Hauenstein, K, Hausner, L, Hentschel, F, Hull, M, Jessen, F, Kloppel, S, O'Dwyer, L, Pievani, M, Pouwels, Pj, Teipel, Sj, Kljajevic, V, Meyer, P, Holzmann, C, Dyrba, M, Kasper, E, Bokde, Al, Fellgiebel, A, Meindl, T, Hampel, H, Teipel, S, EDSD study, Group, Agosta, F, Barkhof, F, Blautzik, J, Ewers, M, Filippi, M, Fischer, F, Frisoni, Gb, Frolich, L, Hauenstein, K, Hausner, L, Hentschel, F, Hull, M, Jessen, F, Kloppel, S, O'Dwyer, L, Pievani, M, Pouwels, Pj, and Teipel, Sj
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Apolipoprotein E ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heterozygote ,Genotype ,Epidemiology ,Apolipoprotein E4 ,genetics [Alzheimer Disease] ,Disease ,White matter ,Age and gender ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,pathology [Alzheimer Disease] ,Developmental Neuroscience ,pathology [Brain] ,Alzheimer Disease ,Internal medicine ,pathology [White Matter] ,Fractional anisotropy ,medicine ,Humans ,ddc:610 ,Allele ,genetics [Apolipoprotein E4] ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Health Policy ,Brain ,Middle Aged ,White Matter ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Anisotropy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
In this multicenter study, we investigated a possible association between the APOE ε4 allele and white matter (WM) integrity in Alzheimer's disease (AD) using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI).We analyzed fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) as indices of WM integrity in 70 AD patients (35 APOE ε4 carriers, 35 noncarriers) and 56 healthy control (HC) subjects (28 APOE ε4 carriers, 28 noncarriers). APOE ε4 carriers and noncarriers were matched for age and gender within each diagnostic group.We found significant effects of diagnosis (Pcorrected.05 [FWE]; i.e., smaller FA values and larger MD values in AD patients compared with HCs) and significant effects (P.001) of APOE ε4 carrier status on MD in HCs but not in AD subjects.The results indicate that APOE ε4 has a moderate effect on WM integrity in HCs, but no effect on WM integrity in manifest AD.
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- 2014
11. Real-time fMRI neurofeedback: application in patients with substance use disorder
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Karch, S, primary, Keeser, D, additional, Paolini, M, additional, Hümmer, S, additional, Konrad, J, additional, Haller, D, additional, Kirsch, V, additional, Koller, G, additional, Kupka, M, additional, Blautzik, J, additional, and Pogarell, O, additional
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- 2015
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12. EPA-1749 – Transcranial direct current stimulation (TDCS) improves negative symptoms in schizophrenia: a double-blind, randomized, clinical trial
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Palm, U., primary, Keeser, D., additional, Kaymakanova, F., additional, Unger, I., additional, Kupka, M.J., additional, Blautzik, J., additional, Hasan, A., additional, Sarubin, N., additional, Ertl-Wagner, B., additional, and Padberg, F., additional
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- 2014
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13. EPA-1578 - Modifications of human brain activity due to transcranial direct current stimulation (tdcs) in patients with nicotine dependence
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Reichenbach, N., primary, Karch, S., additional, Klemme, J., additional, Keeser, D., additional, Ludwig, H., additional, Zeren, A., additional, Paolini, M., additional, Blautzik, J., additional, Pogarell, O., additional, Padberg, F., additional, and Rüther, T., additional
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- 2014
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14. EPA-1677 – The interaction of functional mri connectivity and resting state eeg in the course of the day
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Keeser, D., primary, Kirsch, V., additional, Blautzik, J., additional, Karch, S., additional, Kupka, M., additional, Rauchmann, B., additional, Paolini, M., additional, Ertl-Wagner, B., additional, and Pogarell, O., additional
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- 2014
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15. EPA-1638 – Neurofeedback using real-time fmri in patients with alcohol use disorder
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Hümmer, S., primary, Karch, S., additional, Keeser, D., additional, Paolini, M., additional, Kirsch, V., additional, Koller, G., additional, Rauchmann, B., additional, Kupka, M., additional, Blautzik, J., additional, and Pogarell, O., additional
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- 2014
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16. P 199. Prefrontal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) changes negative symptoms and functional connectivity MRI (fcMRI) in a single case of treatment-resistant schizophrenia
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Keeser, D., primary, Kupka, M., additional, Palm, U., additional, Blautzik, J., additional, Pogarell, O., additional, Ertl-Wagner, B., additional, Reichard, H., additional, Müller, N., additional, Falkai, P., additional, and Padberg, F., additional
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- 2013
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17. Modifications of human brain activity due to transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in patients with nicotine dependence
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Reichenbach, A, primary, Karch, S, additional, Keeser, D, additional, Ludwig, H, additional, Zeren, A, additional, Paolini, M, additional, Blautzik, J, additional, Pogarell, O, additional, Padberg, F, additional, and Rüther, T, additional
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- 2013
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18. Neurofeedback using real-time fMRI in patients with alcohol use disorder
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Hümmer, S, primary, Karch, S, additional, Keeser, D, additional, Paolini, M, additional, Kirsch, V, additional, Koller, G, additional, Rauchmann, B, additional, Kupka, M, additional, Blautzik, J, additional, and Pogarell, O, additional
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- 2013
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19. THE THROMBOMODULIN PROTEIN C SYSTEM PROTECTS AGAINST DIABETIC NEUROPATHY VIA TWO INDEPENDENT MECHANISMS
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Isermann, B., primary, Blautzik, J., additional, Vinnikov, I., additional, Herzog, S., additional, Weiler, H., additional, Bierhaus, A., additional, and Nawroth, P.P., additional
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- 2007
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20. Das endotheliale Thrombomodulin Protein C System schützt vor der diabetischen Neuropathie durch zwei unabhängige Mechanismen
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Isermann, B, primary, Blautzik, J, additional, Vinnikov, I, additional, Herzog, S, additional, Weiler, H, additional, Linn, T, additional, Bierhaus, A, additional, and Nawroth, PP, additional
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- 2007
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21. The European DTI Study on Dementia - A multicenter DTI and MRI study on Alzheimer's disease and Mild Cognitive Impairment
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Petra J. W. Pouwels, Johannes Schröder, Federica Agosta, Harald Hampel, Michela Pievani, Giovanni B. Frisoni, Stefan J. Teipel, Massimo Filippi, Karlheinz Hauenstein, Andreas Fellgiebel, Janusch Blautzik, Michel J. Grothe, Frederik Barkhof, Peter J. Nestor, Lutz Frölich, Arun L.W. Bokde, Martin Dyrba, David Prvulovic, Katharina Brueggen, Eva M. Meisenzahl, Stefan Klöppel, Florian U. Fischer, Lucrezia Hausner, Radiology and nuclear medicine, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Brain Imaging, Physics and medical technology, Brueggen, K, Grothe, Mj, Dyrba, M, Fellgiebel, A, Fischer, F, Filippi, Massimo, Agosta, F, Nestor, P, Meisenzahl, E, Blautzik, J, Frölich, L, Hausner, L, Bokde, Al, Frisoni, G, Pievani, M, Klöppel, S, Prvulovic, D, Barkhof, F, Pouwels, Pj, Schröder, J, Hampel, H, Hauenstein, K, and Teipel, S.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Databases, Factual ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Alzheimer Disease/diagnostic imaging ,Cognitive Dysfunction/diagnostic imaging ,diagnostic imaging [Cognitive Dysfunction] ,Disease ,Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,ddc:616.89 ,Databases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Neuroimaging ,Alzheimer Disease ,mental disorders ,80 and over ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,ddc:610 ,Medical diagnosis ,Psychiatry ,Factual ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Information Dissemination ,Neuropsychology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Neurology ,Female ,Alzheimer's disease ,Psychology ,diagnostic imaging [Alzheimer Disease] ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
The European DTI Study on Dementia (EDSD) is a multicenter framework created to study the diagnostic accuracy and inter-site variability of DTI-derived markers in patients with manifest and prodromal Alzheimer's disease (AD). The dynamically growing database presently includes 493 DTI, 512 T1-weighted MRI, and 300 FLAIR scans from patients with AD dementia, patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and matched Healthy Controls, acquired on 13 different scanner platforms. The imaging data is publicly available, along with the subjects' demographic and clinical characterization. Detailed neuropsychological information, cerebrospinal fluid information on biomarkers and clinical follow-up diagnoses are included for a subset of subjects. This paper describes the rationale and structure of the EDSD, summarizes the available data, and explains how to gain access to the database. The EDSD is a useful database for researchers seeking to investigate the contribution of DTI to dementia diagnostics.
- Published
- 2015
22. Two Sides of the Same Coin in Female Borderline Personality Disorder: Self-Reported Guilt and Shame and Their Neurofunctional Correlates.
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Parpart H, Blass J, Meindl T, Blautzik J, Michl P, Beblo T, Engel R, Reiser M, Falkai P, Moeller HJ, Driessen M, and Hennig-Fast K
- Abstract
Objective: Patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) report to be especially prone to social emotions like shame and guilt. At the same time, these emotions seem to play an important role in BPD pathology. The present study aimed to deepen the knowledge about the processes behind shame and guilt in patients with BPD., Methods: Twenty patients with BPD and twenty healthy controls (HCs) took part in an experiment that induced shame and guilt by imagining scenarios during scanning using functional brain imaging. Participants also filled out self-report questionnaires and took part in diagnostic interviews., Results: BPD patients reported more proneness to guilt but not to shame than the HCs. There was no difference in the self-reported intensity rating of experimentally induced emotions between the groups. Between-group contrast of neural signals in the shame condition revealed a stronger activation of cingulate and fusiform gyrus for the BPD patients compared to the controls, and a more pronounced activation in the lingual gyrus and cuneus for the HCs. In the guilt condition, activation in the caudate nucleus, the fusiform gyrus, and the posterior cingulate cortex was stronger in BPD patients, while HC showed stronger activations in cuneus, lingual gyrus, and fronto-temporal regions., Conclusions: Differences in the neuro-functional processes between BPD patients and HC were found, even though the two groups did not differ in their self-report of subjective proneness to guilt and emotional intensity of shame and guilt during the experiment. While the HCs may be engaged more by the emotional scenarios themselves, the BPD patients may be more occupied with cognitive regulatory and self-referential processing.
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- 2024
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23. The Interplay of Oxytocin and Attachment in Schizophrenic Patients: An fMRI Study.
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Hennig-Fast K, Meissner D, Steuwe C, Dehning S, Blautzik J, Eilert DW, Zill P, Müller N, Meindl T, Reiser M, Möller HJ, Falkai P, Driessen M, and Buchheim A
- Abstract
Background: Attachment theory offers an important framework for understanding interpersonal interaction experiences. In the present study, we examined the neural correlates of attachment patterns and oxytocin in schizophrenic patients (SZP) compared to healthy controls (HC) using fMRI. We assumed that male SZP shows a higher proportion of insecure attachment and an altered level of oxytocin compared to HC. On a neural level, we hypothesized that SZP shows increased neural activation in memory and self-related brain regions during the activation of the attachment system compared to HC., Methods: We used an event-related design for the fMRI study based on stimuli that were derived from the Adult Attachment Projective Picture System to examine attachment representations and their neural and hormonal correlates in 20 male schizophrenic patients compared to 20 male healthy controls., Results: A higher proportion of insecure attachment in schizophrenic patients compared to HC could be confirmed. In line with our hypothesis, Oxytocin (OXT) levels in SZP were significantly lower than in HC. We found increasing brain activations in SZP when confronted with personal relevant sentences before attachment relevant pictures in the precuneus, TPJ, insula, and frontal areas compared to HC. Moreover, we found positive correlations between OXT and bilateral dlPFC, precuneus, and left ACC in SZP only., Conclusion: Despite the small sample sizes, the patients' response might be considered as a mode of dysregulation when confronted with this kind of personalized attachment-related material. In the patient group, we found positive correlations between OXT and three brain areas (bilateral dlPFC, precuneus, left ACC) and may conclude that OXT might modulate within this neural network in SZP.
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- 2023
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24. Correlations Between the DMN and the Smoking Cessation Outcome of a Real-Time fMRI Neurofeedback Supported Exploratory Therapy Approach: Descriptive Statistics on Tobacco-Dependent Patients.
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Paolini M, Keeser D, Rauchmann BS, Gschwendtner S, Jeanty H, Reckenfelderbäumer A, Yaseen O, Reidler P, Rabenstein A, Engelbregt HJ, Maywald M, Blautzik J, Ertl-Wagner B, Pogarell O, Rüther T, and Karch S
- Subjects
- Brain, Brain Mapping methods, Electroencephalography, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Recurrence, Nicotiana, Neurofeedback methods, Smoking Cessation
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to explore the potential of default mode network (DMN) functional connectivity for predicting the success of smoking cessation in patients with tobacco dependence in the context of a real-time function al MRI (RT-fMRI) neurofeedback (NF) supported therapy.Fifty-four tobacco-dependent patients underwent three RT-fMRI-NF sessions including resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) runs over a period of 4 weeks during professionally assisted smoking cessation. Patients were randomized into two groups that performed either active NF of an addiction-related brain region or sham NF. After preprocessing, the RSFC baseline data were statistically evaluated using seed-based ROI (SBA) approaches taking into account the smoking status of patients after 3 months (abstinence/relapse).The results of the real study group showed a widespread functional connectivity in the relapse subgroup (n = 10) exceeding the DMN template and mainly low correlations and anticorrelations in the within-seed analysis. In contrast, the connectivity pattern of the abstinence subgroup (n = 8) primarily contained the core DMN in the seed-to-whole-brain analysis and a left lateralized correlation pattern in the within-seed analysis. Calculated Multi-Subject Dictionary Learning (MSDL) matrices showed anticorrelations between DMN regions and salience regions in the abstinence group. Concerning the sham group, results of the relapse subgroup (n = 4) and the abstinence subgroup (n = 6) showed similar trends only in the within-seed analysis.In the setting of a RT-fMRI-NF-assisted therapy, a widespread intrinsic DMN connectivity and a low negative coupling between the DMN and the salience network (SN) in patients with tobacco dependency during early withdrawal may be useful as an early indicator of later therapy nonresponse.
- Published
- 2022
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25. Direct communication between radiologists and patients improves the quality of imaging reports.
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Gutzeit A, Sartoretti E, Reisinger C, Blautzik J, Sartoretti-Schefer S, Kos S, Fischmann A, Donners R, Harder D, Meissnitzer M, Hergan K, Largiadèr S, Forstner R, Froehlich JM, Reischauer C, Matoori S, Koh DM, and Sartoretti T
- Subjects
- Communication, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Radiography, Radiologists, Radiology
- Abstract
Objectives: We investigate in what percentage of cases and to what extent radiological reports change when radiologists directly communicate with patients after imaging examinations., Methods: One hundred twenty-two consecutive outpatients undergoing MRI examinations at a single center were prospectively included. Radiological reports of the patients were drafted by two radiologists in consensus using only the clinical information that was made available by the referring physicians. Thereafter, one radiologist talked directly with the patient and recorded the duration of the conversation. Afterwards, the additional information from the patient was used to reevaluate the imaging studies in consensus. The radiologists determined whether the radiological report changed based on additional information and, if yes, to what extent. The degree of change was graded on a 4-point Likert scale (1, non-relevant findings, to 4, highly relevant findings)., Results: Following direct communication (duration 170.9 ± 53.9 s), the radiological reports of 52 patients (42.6%) were changed. Of the 52 patients, the degree of change was classified as grade 1 for 8 patients (15.4 %), grade 2 for 27 patients (51.9%), grade 3 for 13 patients (25%), and grade 4 for 4 patients (7.7%). The reasons leading to changes were missing clinical information in 50 cases (96.2%) and the lack of additional external imaging in 2 cases (3.8%)., Conclusions: Radiologists should be aware that a lack of accurate information from the clinician can lead to incorrect radiological reports or diagnosis. Radiologists should communicate directly with patients, especially when the provided information is unclear, as it may significantly alter the radiological report., Key Points: • Direct communication between radiologists and patients for an average of 170's resulted in a change in the radiological reports of 52 patients (42.6%). • Of the 42.6% of cases where the reports were changed, the alterations were highly relevant (grades 3 and 4) in 32.7%, indicating major changes with significant impact towards patient management., (© 2021. European Society of Radiology.)
- Published
- 2021
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26. Cognitive subtypes in recent onset psychosis: distinct neurobiological fingerprints?
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Wenzel J, Haas SS, Dwyer DB, Ruef A, Oeztuerk OF, Antonucci LA, von Saldern S, Bonivento C, Garzitto M, Ferro A, Paolini M, Blautzik J, Borgwardt S, Brambilla P, Meisenzahl E, Salokangas RKR, Upthegrove R, Wood SJ, Kambeitz J, Koutsouleris N, and Kambeitz-Ilankovic L
- Subjects
- Brain diagnostic imaging, Cognition, Gray Matter diagnostic imaging, Humans, Psychotic Disorders diagnostic imaging, Schizophrenia diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
In schizophrenia, neurocognitive subtypes can be distinguished based on cognitive performance and they are associated with neuroanatomical alterations. We investigated the existence of cognitive subtypes in shortly medicated recent onset psychosis patients, their underlying gray matter volume patterns and clinical characteristics. We used a K-means algorithm to cluster 108 psychosis patients from the multi-site EU PRONIA (Prognostic tools for early psychosis management) study based on cognitive performance and validated the solution independently (N = 53). Cognitive subgroups and healthy controls (HC; n = 195) were classified based on gray matter volume (GMV) using Support Vector Machine classification. A cognitively spared (N = 67) and impaired (N = 41) subgroup were revealed and partially independently validated (N
spared = 40, Nimpaired = 13). Impaired patients showed significantly increased negative symptomatology (pfdr = 0.003), reduced cognitive performance (pfdr < 0.001) and general functioning (pfdr < 0.035) in comparison to spared patients. Neurocognitive deficits of the impaired subgroup persist in both discovery and validation sample across several domains, including verbal memory and processing speed. A GMV pattern (balanced accuracy = 60.1%, p = 0.01) separating impaired patients from HC revealed increases and decreases across several fronto-temporal-parietal brain areas, including basal ganglia and cerebellum. Cognitive and functional disturbances alongside brain morphological changes in the impaired subgroup are consistent with a neurodevelopmental origin of psychosis. Our findings emphasize the relevance of tailored intervention early in the course of psychosis for patients suffering from the likely stronger neurodevelopmental character of the disease.- Published
- 2021
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27. "I was seen by a radiologist, but unfortunately I can't remember the name and I still have questions. What should I do?" Radiologists should give thoughts to improve service professionalism and patient esteem.
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Gutzeit A, Fischmann A, Forstner R, Goette R, Herzog B, Kurtz C, Hebler C, Ladinger A, Froehlich JM, Blautzik J, Kolokythas O, Matoori S, Kos S, Reischauer C, Schefer H, Dubsky P, Gampenrieder SP, Hergan K, Gaissmaier W, Koh DM, and Meissnitzer M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Early Detection of Cancer, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Breast Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Mammography, Professionalism, Radiologists, Ultrasonography, Mammary
- Abstract
Background: The aim of the study is to investigate how well patients remember the radiologist's name after a radiological examination, and whether giving the patient a business card improves the patient's perception of the radiologist's professionalism and esteem., Methods: In this prospective and randomized two-centre study, a total of 141 patients with BI-RADS 1 and 2 scores were included. After screening examination comprising mammography and ultrasound by a radiologist, 71 patients received a business card (group 1), while 70 received no business card (group 2). Following the examination, patients were questioned about their experiences., Results: The patients in group 1 could remember the name of the radiologist in 85% of cases. The patients in group 2, in contrast, could only remember the name in 7% of cases (p < 0.001). 90% of the patients in group 1 believed it was very important that they are able to contact the radiologist at a later time, whereas only 76% of patients in group 2 felt that this was a very important service (p < 0.025). A total of 87% of the patients in group 1 indicated that they would contact the radiologist if they had any questions whereas 73% of the patients in group 2 would like to contact the radiologist but were not able to do so, because they could not remember the name (p < 0.001). All questions were analysed with a Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel (CMH) test that took study centre as stratification into account. In some cases, two categories were collapsed to avoid zero cell counts., Conclusions: Using business cards significantly increased the recall of the radiologist's name and could be an important tool in improving the relationships between patients and radiologists and enhancing service professionalism., Trial Registration: We have a general approval from our ethics committee. The patients have given their consent to this study.
- Published
- 2020
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28. FDG PET Data is Associated with Cognitive Performance in Patients from a Memory Clinic.
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Henkel R, Brendel M, Paolini M, Brendel E, Beyer L, Gutzeit A, Pogarell O, Rominger A, and Blautzik J
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases metabolism, Cognition, Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Germany, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory, Middle Aged, Radiopharmaceuticals, Retrospective Studies, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Positron-Emission Tomography methods
- Abstract
Background: Various reasons may lead to cognitive symptoms in elderly, including the development of cognitive decline and dementia. Often, mixed pathologies such as neurodegeneration and cerebrovascular disease co-exist in these patients. Diagnostic work-up commonly includes imaging modalities such as FDG PET, MRI, and CT, each delivering specific information., Objective: To study the informative value of neuroimaging-based data supposed to reflect neurodegeneration (FDG PET), cerebral small vessel disease (MRI), and cerebral large vessel atherosclerosis (CT) with regard to cognitive performance in patients presenting to our memory clinic., Methods: Non-parametric partial correlations and an ordinal logistic regression model were run to determine relationships between scores for cortical hypometabolism, white matter hyperintensities, calcified plaque burden, and results from Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). The final study group consisted of 162 patients (female: 94; MMSE: 6-30)., Results: Only FDG PET data was linked to and predicted cognitive performance (r(157) = -0.388, p < 0.001). Overall, parameters linked to cerebral small and large vessel disease showed no significant association with cognition. Further findings demonstrated a relationship between white matter hyperintensities and FDG PET data (r(157) = 0.230, p = 0.004)., Conclusion: Only FDG PET imaging mirrors cognitive performance, presumably due to the examination's ability to reflect neurodegeneration and vascular dysfunction, thus capturing a broader spectrum of pathologies. This makes the examination a useful imaging-based diagnostic tool in the work-up of patients presenting to a memory clinic. Parameters of vascular dysfunction alone as depicted by conventional MRI and CT are less adequate in such a situation, most likely because they reflect one pathology complex only.
- Published
- 2020
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29. What and how should we measure in paediatric oncology FDG-PET/CT? Comparison of commonly used SUV metrics for differentiation between paediatric tumours.
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Blautzik J, Grelich L, Schramm N, Henkel R, Bartenstein P, and Pfluger T
- Abstract
Background: In clinical routine, SUV
max and SUVpeak are most often used to determine the glucose metabolism in tumours by18 F-FDG PET/CT. Both metrics can be further normalised to SUVs in reference regions resulting in a SUV ratio (SUVratio ). The aim of the study was to directly compare several widely used SUVs/SUVratios with regard to differentiation between common tumours in paediatric patients; a special focus was put on characteristics of reference region SUVs., Methods: The final study population consisted of 61 children and adolescents with diagnoses of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL, n = 25), Hodgkin lymphoma (HL, n = 14), and sarcoma (n = 22). SUV metrics included SUVmax and SUVpeak as well as both parameters normalised to liver and mediastinal blood pool, respectively, yielding the SUVratios SUVmax/liver , SUVmax/mediastinum , SUVpeak/liver , and SUVpeak/mediastinum ., Results: The metrics SUVmax , SUVpeak , SUVmax/liver , and SUVpeak/liver all proved to be sensitive for tumour differentiation (p ≤ 0.008); in contrast, SUVmax/mediastinum and SUVpeak/mediastinum revealed to be non-sensitive approaches. Correlation analyses showed inverse associations between reference region SUVs and SUVratios (p < 0.05). Multiple regression analyses demonstrated significant effects of factors as bodyweight and uptake time on reference region SUVs (p < 0.01), and thus indirectly on the corresponding SUVratios ., Conclusions: In the paediatric population, the ability to differentiate between common tumours remarkably varies between SUV metrics. When using SUVratios , the choice of reference region is crucial. Factors potentially influencing reference region SUVs (and thus SUVratios ) should be taken into account in order to avoid erroneous conclusions. When not possible, SUVmax and SUVpeak represent less complex, more robust alternatives.- Published
- 2019
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30. [ 18 F]-THK5351 PET Correlates with Topology and Symptom Severity in Progressive Supranuclear Palsy.
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Brendel M, Schönecker S, Höglinger G, Lindner S, Havla J, Blautzik J, Sauerbeck J, Rohrer G, Zach C, Vettermann F, Lang AE, Golbe L, Nübling G, Bartenstein P, Furukawa K, Ishiki A, Bötzel K, Danek A, Okamura N, Levin J, and Rominger A
- Abstract
Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a neurodegenerative movement disorder characterized by deposition of fibrillar aggregates of 4R tau-protein in neurons and glial cells of the brain. These deposits are a key neuropathological finding, allowing a diagnosis of "definite PSP," which is usually established post mortem. To date criteria for clinical diagnosis of PSP in vivo do not include biomarkers of tau pathology. For intervention trials, it is increasingly important to (i) establish biomarkers for an early diagnosis and (ii) to develop biomarkers that correlate with disease progression of PSP. [
18 F]-THK5351 is a novel PET-ligand that may afford in vivo visualization and quantification of tau-related alterations. We investigated binding characteristics of [18 F]-THK5351 in patients with clinically diagnosed PSP and correlate tracer uptake with clinical findings. Eleven patients (68.4 ± 7.4 year; N = 6 female) with probable PSP according to current clinical criteria and nine healthy controls (71.7 ± 7.2 year; N = 4 female) underwent [18 F]-THK5351 PET scanning. Voxel-wise statistical parametric comparison and volume-of-interest based quantification of standardized-uptake-values (SUV) were conducted using the cerebellar cortex as reference region. We correlated disease severity as measured with the help of the PSP Rating Scale (PSPRS) as well as several other clinical parameters with the individual PET findings. By voxel-wise mapping of [18 F]-THK5351 uptake in the patient group we delineated typical distribution patterns that fit to known tau topology for PSP post mortem. Quantitative analysis indicated the strongest discrimination between PSP patients and healthy controls based on tracer uptake in the midbrain (+35%; p = 3.01E-7; Cohen's d: 4.0), followed by the globus pallidus, frontal cortex, and medulla oblongata. Midbrain [18 F]-THK5351 uptake correlated well with clinical severity as measured by PSPRS ( R = 0.66; p = 0.026). OCT and MRI delineated PSP patients from healthy controls by use of established discrimination thresholds but only OCT did as well correlate with clinical severity ( R = 0.79; p = 0.024). Regional [18 F]-THK5351 binding patterns correlated well with the established post mortem distribution of lesions in PSP and with clinical severity. The contribution of possible MAO-B binding to the [18 F]-THK5351 signal needs to be further evaluated, but nevertheless [18 F]-THK5351 PET may still serve as valuable biomarker for diagnosis of PSP.- Published
- 2018
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31. Serotonin Selective Reuptake Inhibitor Treatment Improves Cognition and Grey Matter Atrophy but not Amyloid Burden During Two-Year Follow-Up in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease Patients with Depressive Symptoms.
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Brendel M, Sauerbeck J, Greven S, Kotz S, Scheiwein F, Blautzik J, Delker A, Pogarell O, Ishii K, Bartenstein P, and Rominger A
- Subjects
- Aged, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Alzheimer Disease pathology, Alzheimer Disease psychology, Amyloid drug effects, Amyloid metabolism, Amyloidosis metabolism, Amyloidosis pathology, Amyloidosis psychology, Aniline Compounds, Atrophy, Cognition drug effects, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction pathology, Cognitive Dysfunction psychology, Depression complications, Depression diagnostic imaging, Depression pathology, Ethylene Glycols, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Gray Matter diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Organ Size, Positron-Emission Tomography, Radiopharmaceuticals, Superior Sagittal Sinus, Treatment Outcome, Alzheimer Disease drug therapy, Amyloidosis drug therapy, Cognitive Dysfunction drug therapy, Depression drug therapy, Gray Matter drug effects, Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors therapeutic use
- Abstract
Late-life depression, even when of subsyndromal severity, has shown strong associations with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Preclinical studies have suggested that serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) can attenuate amyloidogenesis. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the effect of SSRI medication on amyloidosis and grey matter volume in subsyndromal depressed subjects with MCI and AD during an interval of two years. 256 cognitively affected subjects (225 MCI/ 31 AD) undergoing [18F]-AV45-PET and MRI at baseline and 2-year follow-up were selected from the ADNI database. Subjects with a positive depression item (DEP(+); n = 73) in the Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire were subdivided to those receiving SSRI medication (SSRI(+); n = 24) and those without SSRI treatment (SSRI(-); n = 49). Longitudinal cognition (Δ-ADAS), amyloid deposition rate (standardized uptake value, using white matter as reference region (SUVRWM), and changes in grey matter volume were compared using common covariates. Analyses were performed separately in all subjects and in the subgroup of amyloid-positive subjects. Cognitive performance in DEP(+)/SSRI(+) subjects (Δ-ADAS: -5.0%) showed less deterioration with 2-year follow-up when compared to DEP(+)/SSRI(-) subjects (Δ-ADAS: +18.6%, p < 0.05), independent of amyloid SUVRWM at baseline. With SSRI treatment, the progression of grey matter atrophy was reduced (-0.9% versus -2.7%, p < 0.05), notably in fronto-temporal cortex. A slight trend towards lower amyloid deposition rate was observed in DEP(+)/SSRI(+) subjects versus DEP(+)/SSRI(-). Despite the lack of effect to amyloid PET, SSRI medication distinctly rescued the declining cognitive performance in cognitively affected patients with depressive symptoms, and likewise attenuated grey matter atrophy.
- Published
- 2018
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32. Relationship Between Body Mass Index, ApoE4 Status, and PET-Based Amyloid and Neurodegeneration Markers in Amyloid-Positive Subjects with Normal Cognition or Mild Cognitive Impairment.
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Blautzik J, Kotz S, Brendel M, Sauerbeck J, Vettermann F, Winter Y, Bartenstein P, Ishii K, and Rominger A
- Subjects
- Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing, Aged, Aniline Compounds, Brain metabolism, Cognition, Cognitive Dysfunction genetics, Cognitive Dysfunction metabolism, Ethylene Glycols, Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Follow-Up Studies, Glucose metabolism, Heterozygote, Humans, Male, Neurodegenerative Diseases genetics, Neurodegenerative Diseases metabolism, Positron-Emission Tomography, Radiopharmaceuticals, Repressor Proteins, Weight Loss, Zebrafish Proteins, Amyloid metabolism, Apolipoprotein E4 genetics, Body Mass Index, Brain diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Neurodegenerative Diseases diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Body weight loss in late-life is known to occur at a very early stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Apolipoprotein E4 (ApoE4) represents a major genetic risk factor for AD and is linked to an increased cortical amyloid-β (Aβ) accumulation. Since the relationship between body weight, ApoE4, and AD pathology is poorly investigated, we aimed to evaluate whether ApoE4 allelic status modifies the association of body mass index (BMI) with markers of AD pathology. A total of 368 Aβ-positive cognitively healthy or mild cognitive impaired subjects had undergone [18F]-AV45-PET, [18F]-FDG-PET, and T1w-MRI examinations. Composite cortical [18F]-AV45 uptake and [18F]-FDG uptake in posterior cingulate cortex were calculated as surrogates of cortical Aβ load and glucose metabolism, respectively. Multiple linear regressions were performed to assess the relationships between these PET biomarkers with BMI, present cognitive performance, and cognitive changes over time. Multivariate analysis of covariance was conducted to test for statistical differences between ApoE4/BMI categories on the PET markers and cognitive scores. In carriers of the ApoE4 allele only, BMI was inversely associated with cortical amlyoid load (β= -0.193, p < 0.005) and recent cognitive decline (β= -0.209, p < 0.05), and positively associated with cortical glucose metabolism in an AD-vulnerable region (β= 0.145, p < 0.05). ApoE4/BMI category analyses demonstrated lower Aβ load, higher posterior cingulate glucose metabolism, improved cognitive performance, and lower progression of cognitive decline in obese ApoE4 carriers. The effect of ApoE4 in promoting the accumulation of cortical amyoid, which may itself be a driver for weight loss, may be moderated by altering leptin signaling in the hypothalamus.
- Published
- 2018
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33. Disrupted white matter structural networks in healthy older adult APOE ε4 carriers - An international multicenter DTI study.
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Cavedo E, Lista S, Rojkova K, Chiesa PA, Houot M, Brueggen K, Blautzik J, Bokde ALW, Dubois B, Barkhof F, Pouwels PJW, Teipel S, and Hampel H
- Subjects
- Aged, Aging genetics, Aging pathology, Brain pathology, Europe, Female, Humans, Internationality, Linear Models, Male, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Neuropsychological Tests, Retrospective Studies, White Matter pathology, Apolipoprotein E4 genetics, Brain diagnostic imaging, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Heterozygote, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, White Matter diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The ε4 allelic variant of the Apolipoprotein E gene (APOE ε4) is the best-established genetic risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD). White matter (WM) microstructural damages measured with Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) represent an early sign of fiber tract disconnection in AD. We examined the impact of APOE ε4 on WM microstructure in elderly individuals from the multicenter European DTI Study on Dementia. Voxelwise statistical analysis of fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity, radial and axial diffusivity (MD, radD and axD respectively) was carried out using Tract-Based Spatial Statistics. Seventy-four healthy elderly individuals - 31 APOE ε4 carriers (APOE ε4+) and 43 APOE ε4 non-carriers (APOE ε4-) -were considered for data analysis. All the results were corrected for scanner acquisition protocols, age, gender and for multiple comparisons. APOE ε4+ and APOE ε4- subjects were comparable regarding sociodemographic features and global cognition. A significant reduction of FA and increased radD was found in the APOE ε4+ compared to the APOE ε4- in the cingulum, in the corpus callosum, in the inferior fronto-occipital and in the inferior longitudinal fasciculi, internal and external capsule. APOE ε4+, compared to APOE ε4- showed higher MD in the genu, right internal capsule, superior longitudinal fasciculus and corona radiate. Comparisons stratified by center supported the results obtained on the whole sample. These findings support previous evidence in monocentric studies indicating a modulatory role of APOE ɛ4 allele on WM microstructure in elderly individuals at risk for AD suggesting early vulnerability and/or reduced resilience of WM tracts involved in AD., (Copyright © 2017 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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34. Reference region selection and the association between the rate of amyloid accumulation over time and the baseline amyloid burden.
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Blautzik J, Brendel M, Sauerbeck J, Kotz S, Scheiwein F, Bartenstein P, Seibyl J, and Rominger A
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain metabolism, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging standards, Male, Positron-Emission Tomography standards, Reference Standards, Time Factors, Amyloid metabolism, Neuroimaging standards
- Abstract
Relative quantitative analysis of amyloid plaque burden in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients can be reported as standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) from positron emission tomography (PET). Here, the SUVR is the ratio of the mean amyloid radioligand retention in a composite (COMP) neocortical volume of interest (VOI) to that in a reference VOI, such as the cerebellum, brainstem (BST)/pons, or white matter (WM). Some longitudinal PET investigations show that the rate of amyloid accumulation to follow-up has an inverted U relationship with baseline amyloid SUVR relative to cerebellar or brainstem/pons reference VOIs. The corresponding association with SUVR relative to WM is unknown. To test the possible benefits of WM normalization, we analyzed [
18 F]-AV45 PET data from 404 subjects in the AD Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) database at baseline and 2-year follow-up (144 cognitively normal controls, 225 patients with mild cognitive impairment, and 35 AD patients). Reference regions included subcortical WM as well as conventional cerebellar gray matter (CBL), and BST. We tested associations between each subject's inter-session change (∆) of SUVR and their baseline SUVR by applying linear, logarithmic, and quadratic regression analyses. Unscaled standardized uptake values (SUVs) were correlated between VOIs at baseline and follow-up, and within VOIs in the longitudinal run. The association between ∆SUVR and baseline SUVR relative to WM reference was best described by an inverted U-shaped function. Correlation analyses demonstrated a high regional and temporal correlation between COMP and WM VOI SUVs. For WM normalization, we confirm that the rate of amyloid accumulation over time follows an inverted U-shaped function of baseline amyloid burden. Reference region selection, however, has substantial effects on SUVR results. This reflects the extent of covariance between SUVs in the COMP VOI and those in the various reference VOIs. We speculate that PET labeling of amyloid deposition within target regions is partially confounded by effects of longitudinal changes of cerebral blood flow (CBF) on tracer delivery. Indeed, CBF may be the leading factor influencing longitudinal SUV changes. We suggest that SUVR relative to WM may be more robust to changes in CBF, and thus fitter for sensitive detection of amyloid accumulation in intervention studies.- Published
- 2017
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35. The European DTI Study on Dementia - A multicenter DTI and MRI study on Alzheimer's disease and Mild Cognitive Impairment.
- Author
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Brueggen K, Grothe MJ, Dyrba M, Fellgiebel A, Fischer F, Filippi M, Agosta F, Nestor P, Meisenzahl E, Blautzik J, Frölich L, Hausner L, Bokde ALW, Frisoni G, Pievani M, Klöppel S, Prvulovic D, Barkhof F, Pouwels PJW, Schröder J, Hampel H, Hauenstein K, and Teipel S
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Information Dissemination, Male, Middle Aged, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Databases, Factual, Diffusion Tensor Imaging
- Abstract
The European DTI Study on Dementia (EDSD) is a multicenter framework created to study the diagnostic accuracy and inter-site variability of DTI-derived markers in patients with manifest and prodromal Alzheimer's disease (AD). The dynamically growing database presently includes 493 DTI, 512 T1-weighted MRI, and 300 FLAIR scans from patients with AD dementia, patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and matched Healthy Controls, acquired on 13 different scanner platforms. The imaging data is publicly available, along with the subjects' demographic and clinical characterization. Detailed neuropsychological information, cerebrospinal fluid information on biomarkers and clinical follow-up diagnoses are included for a subset of subjects. This paper describes the rationale and structure of the EDSD, summarizes the available data, and explains how to gain access to the database. The EDSD is a useful database for researchers seeking to investigate the contribution of DTI to dementia diagnostics., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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36. Prefrontal Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation for Treatment of Schizophrenia With Predominant Negative Symptoms: A Double-Blind, Sham-Controlled Proof-of-Concept Study.
- Author
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Palm U, Keeser D, Hasan A, Kupka MJ, Blautzik J, Sarubin N, Kaymakanova F, Unger I, Falkai P, Meindl T, Ertl-Wagner B, and Padberg F
- Subjects
- Adult, Double-Blind Method, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Connectome methods, Nerve Net physiopathology, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Negative symptoms are highly relevant in the long-term course of schizophrenia and are an important target domain for the development of novel interventions. Recently, transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) of the prefrontal cortex has been investigated as a treatment option in schizophrenia. In this proof-of-concept study, 20 schizophrenia patients with predominantly negative symptoms were randomized to either 10 sessions of add-on active (2 mA, 20min) or sham tDCS (anode: left DLPFC/F3; cathode: right supraorbital/F4). Primary outcome measure was the change in the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS) sum score; secondary outcomes included reduction in Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) scores and improvement of depressive symptoms, cognitive processing speed, and executive functioning. Sixteen patients underwent 4 functional connectivity magnetic resonance imaging (fcMRI) scans (pre and post 1st and pre and post 10th tDCS) to investigate changes in resting state network connectivity after tDCS. Per-protocol analysis showed a significantly greater decrease in SANS score after active (-36.1%) than after sham tDCS (-0.7%). PANSS sum scores decreased significantly more with active (-23.4%) than with sham stimulation (-2.2%). Explorative analysis of fcMRI data indicated changes in subgenual cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) connectivity within frontal-thalamic-temporo-parietal networks. The results of this first proof-of-concept study indicate that prefrontal tDCS may be a promising intervention for treatment of schizophrenia with predominant negative symptoms. Large-scale randomized controlled studies are needed to further establish prefrontal tDCS as novel treatment for negative symptoms in schizophrenia., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
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37. Functional connectivity increase in the default-mode network of patients with Alzheimer's disease after long-term treatment with Galantamine.
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Blautzik J, Keeser D, Paolini M, Kirsch V, Berman A, Coates U, Reiser M, Teipel SJ, and Meindl T
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Alzheimer Disease diagnostic imaging, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Cholinesterase Inhibitors pharmacology, Cholinesterase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Oxygen blood, Principal Component Analysis, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Rest, Time Factors, Alzheimer Disease drug therapy, Brain drug effects, Galantamine pharmacology, Galantamine therapeutic use, Models, Neurological
- Abstract
Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) are efficacious for the treatment of mild to moderate forms of Alzheimer's dementia (AD). Default-mode network (DMN) connectivity is considered to be early impaired in AD. Long-term effects of AChEIs on the DMN in AD have not yet been investigated. Twenty-eight AD patients and 11 age-matched healthy volunteers (HC) participated in the prospective study. AD patients were randomly assigned to either a pharmacotherapy arm (Galantamine, AD G) or to a placebo arm (AD P+G) for the period of 6 months followed by open-label Galantamine therapy from month 7-12. All subjects underwent neuropsychological testing, resting-state functional and structural MRI at baseline and after 12 months, AD patients additionally in between after 6 months. Thirteen AD patients completed the treatment trial and underwent all functional MRI follow-up sequences of good quality. Functional connectivity significantly increased within the AD G group in the posterior cingulate cortex and in the Precuneus between baseline and 12 months follow-up (pcorr<0.05). Between-group analyses demonstrated that functional connectivity in the AD G group significantly increased in the posterior cingulate cortex as well as in the Precuneus compared to the HC group and in the anteromedial aspect of the temporal lobes compared to the AD P+G group, respectively, at 12 months follow-up (pcorr<0.05). Cognitive performance remained stable within groups over time indicating that resting-state fMRI may be sensitive for the detection of pharmacologically induced effects on brain function of AD patients., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. and ECNP. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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38. Synchronization as a biological, psychological and social mechanism to create common time: A theoretical frame and a single case study.
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Bao Y, Pöppel E, Wang L, Lin X, Yang T, Avram M, Blautzik J, Paolini M, Silveira S, Vedder A, Zaytseva Y, and Zhou B
- Subjects
- Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Models, Biological, Time Factors, Circadian Rhythm physiology, Interpersonal Relations, Time Perception
- Abstract
Synchronizing neural processes, mental activities, and social interactions is considered to be fundamental for the creation of temporal order on the personal and interpersonal level. Several different types of synchronization are distinguished, and for each of them examples are given: self-organized synchronizations on the neural level giving rise to pre-semantically defined time windows of some tens of milliseconds and of approximately 3 s; time windows that are created by synchronizing different neural representations, as for instance in aesthetic appreciations or moral judgments; and synchronization of biological rhythms with geophysical cycles, like the circadian clock with the 24-hr rhythm of day and night. For the latter type of synchronization, an experiment is described that shows the importance of social interactions for sharing or avoiding common time. In a group study with four subjects being completely isolated together for 3 weeks from the external world, social interactions resulted both in intra- and interindividual circadian synchronization and desynchronization. A unique phenomenon in circadian regulation is described, the "beat phenomenon," which has been made visible by the interaction of two circadian rhythms with different frequencies in one body. The separation of the two physiological rhythms was the consequence of social interactions, that is, by the desire of a subject to share and to escape common time during different phases of the long-term experiment. The theoretical arguments on synchronization are summarized with the general statement: "Nothing in cognitive science makes sense except in the light of time windows." The hypothesis is forwarded that time windows that express discrete timing mechanisms in behavioral control and on the level of conscious experiences are the necessary bases to create cognitive order, and it is suggested that time windows are implemented by neural oscillations in different frequency domains., (© 2015 The Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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39. Does a bishop pray when he prays? And does his brain distinguish between different religions?
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Silveira S, Bao Y, Wang L, Pöppel E, Avram M, Simmank F, Zaytseva Y, and Blautzik J
- Subjects
- Aged, Brain anatomy & histology, Germany, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Models, Neurological, Reading, Brain physiology, Brain Mapping, Catholicism psychology, Religion and Psychology
- Abstract
Does a religion shape belief-related decisions and influence neural processing? We investigated an eminent bishop of the Catholic Church in Germany by using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to assess neural processing while he was responding to short sentences of the Christian Bible, the Islamic Quran, and the Daodejing ascribed to Laozi in Experiment 1. In Experiment 2, continuous praying was further compared to the resting state activity. In contrast to explicit statements of agreeing or not agreeing to different statements from the Bible and the Quran, we found in Experiment 1 no difference in neural activation when the bishop was reading these statements from the two religions. However, compared to reading statements from the Bible, reading statements from the Daodejing resulted in significantly higher activation in the left inferior and middle frontal cortices and the left middle temporal gyrus, although he equally agreed to both statements explicitly. In Experiment 2, no difference during continuous praying and the resting state activity was observed. Our results confirm the difference between explicit and implicit processing, and they suggest that a highly religious person may pray always-or never. On a more general level this observation suggests that ritualized activities might be subliminally represented in resting state activities., (© 2015 The Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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40. Modulation of Craving Related Brain Responses Using Real-Time fMRI in Patients with Alcohol Use Disorder.
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Karch S, Keeser D, Hümmer S, Paolini M, Kirsch V, Karali T, Kupka M, Rauchmann BS, Chrobok A, Blautzik J, Koller G, Ertl-Wagner B, and Pogarell O
- Subjects
- Adult, Alcoholism physiopathology, Alcoholism psychology, Computer Systems, Connectome, Cues, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Alcoholism therapy, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Craving physiology, Functional Neuroimaging, Gyrus Cinguli physiopathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neurofeedback methods, Prefrontal Cortex physiopathology
- Abstract
Literature: One prominent symptom in addiction disorders is the strong desire to consume a particular substance or to display a certain behaviour (craving). Especially the strong association between craving and the probability of relapse emphasises the importance of craving in the therapeutic process. Neuroimaging studies have shown that craving is associated with increased responses, predominantly in fronto-striatal areas., Aim and Methods: The aim of the present study is the modification of craving-related neuronal responses in patients with alcohol addiction using fMRI real-time neurofeedback. For that purpose, patients with alcohol use disorder and healthy controls participated once in neurofeedback training; during the sessions neuronal activity within an individualized cortical region of interest (ROI) (anterior cingulate cortex, insula, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) was evaluated. In addition, variations regarding the connectivity between brain regions were assessed in the resting state., Results and Discussion: The results showed a significant reduction of neuronal activity in patients at the end of the training compared to the beginning, especially in the anterior cingulate cortex, the insula, the inferior temporal gyrus and the medial frontal gyrus. Furthermore, the results show that patients were able to regulate their neuronal activities in the ROI, whereas healthy subjects achieved no significant reduction. However, there was a wide variability regarding the effects of the training within the group of patients. After the neurofeedback-sessions, individual craving was slightly reduced compared to baseline. The results demonstrate that it seems feasible for patients with alcohol dependency to reduce their neuronal activity using rtfMRI neurofeedback. In addition, there is some evidence that craving can be influenced with the help of this technique., Future Prospects: In future, real-time fMRI might be a complementary neurophysiological-based strategy for the psychotherapy of patients with psychiatric or psychosomatic diseases. For that purpose, the stability of this effect and the generalizability needs to be assessed.
- Published
- 2015
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41. Resting-state networks in healthy adult subjects: a comparison between a 32-element and an 8-element phased array head coil at 3.0 Tesla.
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Paolini M, Keeser D, Ingrisch M, Werner N, Kindermann N, Reiser M, and Blautzik J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Male, Phantoms, Imaging, Reference Values, Rest, Signal-To-Noise Ratio, Young Adult, Brain anatomy & histology, Brain Mapping methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging instrumentation, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Background: Little research exists on the influence of a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) head coil's channel count on measured resting-state functional connectivity., Purpose: To compare a 32-element (32ch) and an 8-element (8ch) phased array head coil with respect to their potential to detect functional connectivity within resting-state networks., Material and Methods: Twenty-six healthy adults (mean age, 21.7 years; SD, 2.1 years) underwent resting-state functional MRI at 3.0 Tesla with both coils using equal standard imaging parameters and a counterbalanced design. Independent component analysis (ICA) at different model orders and a dual regression approach were performed. Voxel-wise non-parametric statistical between-group contrasts were determined using permutation-based non-parametric inference., Results: Phantom measurements demonstrated a generally higher image signal-to-noise ratio using the 32ch head coil. However, the results showed no significant differences between corresponding resting-state networks derived from both coils (p < 0.05, FWE-corrected)., Conclusion: Using the identical standard acquisition parameters, the 32ch head coil does not offer any significant advantages in detecting ICA-based functional connectivity within RSNs., (© The Foundation Acta Radiologica 2015 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav.)
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- 2015
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42. Neurofunctional correlates of environmental cognition: an FMRI study with images from episodic memory.
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Vedder A, Smigielski L, Gutyrchik E, Bao Y, Blautzik J, Pöppel E, Zaytseva Y, and Russell E
- Subjects
- Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Love, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Motor Cortex anatomy & histology, Pleasure physiology, Prefrontal Cortex anatomy & histology, Young Adult, Cognition physiology, Memory, Episodic, Motor Cortex physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Prefrontal Cortex physiology
- Abstract
This study capitalizes on individual episodic memories to investigate the question, how dif-ferent environments affect us on a neural level. Instead of using predefined environmental stimuli, this study relied on individual representations of beauty and pleasure. Drawing upon episodic memories we conducted two experiments. Healthy subjects imagined pleasant and non-pleasant environments, as well as beautiful and non-beautiful environments while neural activity was measured by using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Although subjects found the different conditions equally simple to visualize, our results revealed more distribut-ed brain activations for non-pleasant and non-beautiful environments than for pleasant and beautiful environments. The additional regions activated in non-pleasant (left lateral prefrontal cortex) and non-beautiful environments (supplementary motor area, anterior cortical midline structures) are involved in self-regulation and top-down cognitive control. Taken together, the results show that perceptual experiences and emotional evaluations of environments within a positive and a negative frame of reference are based on distinct patterns of neural activity. We interpret the data in terms of a different cognitive and processing load placed by exposure to different environments. The results hint at the efficiency of subject-generated representations as stimulus material.
- Published
- 2015
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43. Sadness is unique: neural processing of emotions in speech prosody in musicians and non-musicians.
- Author
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Park M, Gutyrchik E, Welker L, Carl P, Pöppel E, Zaytseva Y, Meindl T, Blautzik J, Reiser M, and Bao Y
- Abstract
Musical training has been shown to have positive effects on several aspects of speech processing, however, the effects of musical training on the neural processing of speech prosody conveying distinct emotions are yet to be better understood. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate whether the neural responses to speech prosody conveying happiness, sadness, and fear differ between musicians and non-musicians. Differences in processing of emotional speech prosody between the two groups were only observed when sadness was expressed. Musicians showed increased activation in the middle frontal gyrus, the anterior medial prefrontal cortex, the posterior cingulate cortex and the retrosplenial cortex. Our results suggest an increased sensitivity of emotional processing in musicians with respect to sadness expressed in speech, possibly reflecting empathic processes.
- Published
- 2015
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44. Compassion, guilt and innocence: An fMRI study of responses to victims who are responsible for their fate.
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Fehse K, Silveira S, Elvers K, and Blautzik J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Male, Oxygen blood, Photic Stimulation, Young Adult, Crime Victims psychology, Empathy physiology, Guilt, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Prefrontal Cortex blood supply
- Abstract
Compassion is a human feeling towards an individual who is suffering. However, the responses toward a victim are not always compassionate and may, for example, be moderated by the perceived responsibility of the victim. In the present study, we investigated the neural correlates of compassion and specifically differentiated the responses to other individuals' misfortunes depending on whether the victim was responsible for the event that occurred. In particular, we identified increased activation of the left insula, medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), and adjacent anterior cingulate cortex when the participants read sentences with innocent compared with responsible victims. The reverse contrast revealed increased activation of the bilateral temporoparietal junction, right precuneus, and right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC). Using a psycho-physiological interaction (PPI) analysis, we demonstrated that in the responsible condition, right dlPFC activation was accompanied by decreased activation in the left insula, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and mPFC. This inverse effective connectivity illustrates the antagonism of the dlPFC and mPFC in compassion-related appraisal of external events. More specifically, our results imply that regulatory mechanisms of compassion are related to the perception of responsibility.
- Published
- 2015
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45. An open science resource for establishing reliability and reproducibility in functional connectomics.
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Zuo XN, Anderson JS, Bellec P, Birn RM, Biswal BB, Blautzik J, Breitner JC, Buckner RL, Calhoun VD, Castellanos FX, Chen A, Chen B, Chen J, Chen X, Colcombe SJ, Courtney W, Craddock RC, Di Martino A, Dong HM, Fu X, Gong Q, Gorgolewski KJ, Han Y, He Y, He Y, Ho E, Holmes A, Hou XH, Huckins J, Jiang T, Jiang Y, Kelley W, Kelly C, King M, LaConte SM, Lainhart JE, Lei X, Li HJ, Li K, Li K, Lin Q, Liu D, Liu J, Liu X, Liu Y, Lu G, Lu J, Luna B, Luo J, Lurie D, Mao Y, Margulies DS, Mayer AR, Meindl T, Meyerand ME, Nan W, Nielsen JA, O'Connor D, Paulsen D, Prabhakaran V, Qi Z, Qiu J, Shao C, Shehzad Z, Tang W, Villringer A, Wang H, Wang K, Wei D, Wei GX, Weng XC, Wu X, Xu T, Yang N, Yang Z, Zang YF, Zhang L, Zhang Q, Zhang Z, Zhang Z, Zhao K, Zhen Z, Zhou Y, Zhu XT, and Milham MP
- Subjects
- Datasets as Topic, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Reproducibility of Results, Brain physiology, Connectome methods
- Abstract
Efforts to identify meaningful functional imaging-based biomarkers are limited by the ability to reliably characterize inter-individual differences in human brain function. Although a growing number of connectomics-based measures are reported to have moderate to high test-retest reliability, the variability in data acquisition, experimental designs, and analytic methods precludes the ability to generalize results. The Consortium for Reliability and Reproducibility (CoRR) is working to address this challenge and establish test-retest reliability as a minimum standard for methods development in functional connectomics. Specifically, CoRR has aggregated 1,629 typical individuals' resting state fMRI (rfMRI) data (5,093 rfMRI scans) from 18 international sites, and is openly sharing them via the International Data-sharing Neuroimaging Initiative (INDI). To allow researchers to generate various estimates of reliability and reproducibility, a variety of data acquisition procedures and experimental designs are included. Similarly, to enable users to assess the impact of commonly encountered artifacts (for example, motion) on characterizations of inter-individual variation, datasets of varying quality are included.
- Published
- 2014
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46. Dysregulated daily rhythmicity of neuronal resting-state networks in MCI patients.
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Blautzik J, Vetter C, Schneider A, Gutyrchik E, Reinisch V, Keeser D, Paolini M, Pöppel E, Bao Y, Reiser M, Roenneberg T, and Meindl T
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Brain physiology, Executive Function, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Nerve Net, Neuropsychological Tests, Brain physiopathology, Circadian Rhythm physiology, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Rest physiology
- Abstract
In young healthy participants, the degree of daily rhythmicity largely varies across different neuronal resting-state networks (RSNs), while it is to date unknown whether this temporal pattern of activity is conserved in healthy and pathological aging. Twelve healthy elderly (mean age=65.1±5.7 years) and 12 patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI; mean age=69.6±6.2 years) underwent four resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging scans at fixed 2.5 h intervals throughout a day. Time courses of a RSN were extracted by a connectivity strength and a spatial extent approach performed individually for each participant. Highly rhythmic RSNs included a sensorimotor, a cerebellar and a visual network in healthy elderly; the least rhythmic RSNs in this group included a network associated with executive control and an orbitofrontal network. The degree of daily rhythmicity in aMCI patients was reduced and dysregulated. For healthy elderly, the findings are in accordance with results reported for young healthy participants suggesting a comparable distribution of daily rhythmicity across RSNs during healthy aging. In contrast, the reduction and dysregulation of daily rhythmicity observed in aMCI patients is presumably indicative of underlying neurodegenerative processes in this group.
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- 2014
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47. Existential neuroscience: effects of mortality salience on the neurocognitive processing of attractive opposite-sex faces.
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Silveira S, Graupmann V, Agthe M, Gutyrchik E, Blautzik J, Demirçapa I, Berndt A, Pöppel E, Frey D, Reiser M, and Hennig-Fast K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Defense Mechanisms, Female, Functional Laterality, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Oxygen blood, Prefrontal Cortex blood supply, Young Adult, Mortality, Motivation physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Sex Characteristics, Sexual Behavior
- Abstract
Being reminded of the inherently finite nature of human existence has been demonstrated to elicit strivings for sexual reproduction and the formation and maintenance of intimate relationships. Recently, it has been proposed that the perception of potential mating partners is influenced by mortality salience. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we investigated the neurocognitive processing of attractive opposite-sex faces after priming with death-related words for heterosexual men and women. Significant modulations of behavioral and neural responses were found when participants were requested to decide whether they would like to meet the presented person. Men were more in favor of meeting attractive women after being primed with death-related words compared to a no-prime condition. Increased neural activation could be found under mortality salience in the left anterior insula and the adjacent lateral prefrontal cortex (lPFC) for both men and women. As previously suggested, we believe that the lPFC activation reflects an approach-motivated defense mechanism to overcome concerns that are induced by being reminded of death and dying. Our results provide insight on a neurocognitive level that approach motivation in general, and mating motivation in particular is modulated by mortality salience., (© The Author (2013). Published by Oxford University Press. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2014
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48. Self processing in the brain: a paradigmatic fMRI case study with a professional singer.
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Zaytseva Y, Gutyrchik E, Bao Y, Pöppel E, Han S, Northoff G, Welker L, Meindl T, and Blautzik J
- Subjects
- Aged, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Singing, Brain physiology, Self Concept
- Abstract
Understanding the mechanisms involved in perception and conception of oneself is a fundamental psychological topic with high relevance for psychiatric and neurological issues, and it is one of the great challenges in neuroscientific research. The paradigmatic single-case study presented here aimed to investigate different components of self- and other-processes and to elucidate corresponding neurobiological underpinnings. An eminent professional opera singer with profound performance experience has undergone functional magnetic resonance imaging and was exposed to excerpts of Mozart arias, sung by herself or another singer. The results indicate a distinction between self- and other conditions in cortical midline structures, differentially involved in self-related and self-referential processing. This lends further support to the assumption of cortical midline structures being involved in the neural processing of self-specific stimuli and also confirms the power of single case studies as a research tool., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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49. Differences between musicians and non-musicians in neuro-affective processing of sadness and fear expressed in music.
- Author
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Park M, Gutyrchik E, Bao Y, Zaytseva Y, Carl P, Welker L, Pöppel E, Reiser M, Blautzik J, and Meindl T
- Subjects
- Arousal, Brain Mapping, Fear, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Nerve Net physiology, Young Adult, Brain physiology, Emotions, Music
- Abstract
Music is known to convey and evoke emotional states. Musical training has been argued to lead to changes in neural architecture and enhanced processing of emotions. It is not clear, however, whether musical training is also associated with changes in behavioral and neural responses to musically conveyed discrete emotions. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we investigated the responses to three musically conveyed emotions (happiness, sadness, fear) in a group of musicians and a group of non-musicians. We find that musicians rate sadness and fear as significantly more arousing than non-musicians, and that musical training is associated with specific neural activations: In response to sadness expressed in music, musicians show activation increases in the right prefrontal cortex, specifically in the superior and middle frontal gyri. In response to fear, musicians show activation increases in the right parietal cortex, specifically in the supramarginal and inferior parietal gyri. No specific activations were observed in response to happiness. Our results highlight the strong association between musical training and altered processing of "negative" emotions on both the behavioral and on the neural level., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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50. Neural correlates of moral judgments in first- and third-person perspectives: implications for neuroethics and beyond.
- Author
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Avram M, Hennig-Fast K, Bao Y, Pöppel E, Reiser M, Blautzik J, Giordano J, and Gutyrchik E
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Retrospective Moral Judgment, Artifacts, Brain physiology, Brain Mapping methods, Emotions physiology, Judgment physiology, Morals
- Abstract
Background: There appears to be an inconsistency in experimental paradigms used in fMRI research on moral judgments. As stimuli, moral dilemmas or moral statements/ pictures that induce emotional reactions are usually employed; a main difference between these stimuli is the perspective of the participants reflecting first-person (moral dilemmas) or third-person perspective (moral reactions). The present study employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in order to investigate the neural correlates of moral judgments in either first- or third-person perspective., Results: Our results indicate that different neural mechanisms appear to be involved in these perspectives. Although conjunction analysis revealed common activation in the anterior medial prefrontal cortex, third person-perspective elicited unique activations in hippocampus and visual cortex. The common activation can be explained by the role the anterior medial prefrontal cortex may play in integrating different information types and also by its involvement in theory of mind. Our results also indicate that the so-called "actor-observer bias" affects moral evaluation in the third-person perspective, possibly due to the involvement of the hippocampus. We suggest two possible ways in which the hippocampus may support the process of moral judgment: by the engagement of episodic memory and its role in understanding the behaviors and emotions of others., Conclusion: We posit that these findings demonstrate that first or third person perspectives in moral cognition involve distinct neural processes, that are important to different aspects of moral judgments. These results are important to a deepened understanding of neural correlates of moral cognition-the so-called "first tradition" of neuroethics, with the caveat that any results must be interpreted and employed with prudence, so as to heed neuroethics "second tradition" that sustains the pragmatic evaluation of outcomes, capabilities and limitations of neuroscientific techniques and technologies.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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