7,710 results on '"Cameron, S"'
Search Results
2. Interfacility Patient Transfers During COVID-19 Pandemic: Mixed-Methods Study
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Henry, Michael B., Funsten, Emily, Michealson, Marisa A., Albright, Danielle, Crandall, Cameron S., Sklar, David P., George, Naomi, and Greenwood-Ericksen, Margaret
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patient transfer ,COVID-19 ,Rural Medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,qualitative ,Pandemic - Abstract
Introduction: The United States lacks a national interfacility patient transfer coordination system. During the coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, many hospitals were overwhelmed and faced difficulties transferring sick patients, leading some states and cities to form transfer centers intended to assist sending facilities. In this study we aimed to explore clinician experiences with newly implemented transfer coordination centers.Methods: This mixed-methods study used a brief national survey along with in-depth interviews. The American College of Emergency Physicians Emergency Medicine Practice Research Network (EMPRN) administered the national survey in March 2021. From September–December 2021, semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with administrators and rural emergency clinicians in Arizona and New Mexico, two states that started transfer centers during COVID-19.Results: Among 141 respondents (of 765, 18.4% response rate) to the national EMPRN survey, only 30% reported implementation or expansion of a transfer coordination center during COVID-19. Those with new transfer centers reported no change in difficulty of patient transfers during COVID-19 while those without had increased difficulty. The 17 qualitative interviews expanded upon this, revealing four major themes: 1) limited resources for facilitating transfers even before COVID-19; 2) increased number of and distance to transfer partners during the COVID-19 pandemic; 3) generally positive impacts of transfer centers on workflow, and 4) the potential for continued use of centers to facilitate transfers.Conclusion: Transfer centers may have offset pandemic-related transfer challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. Clinicians who frequently need to transfer patients may particularly benefit from ongoing access to such transfer coordination services.
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- 2024
3. Association of neurotransmitter pathway polygenic risk with specific symptom profiles in psychosis
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Warren, Tracy L, Tubbs, Justin D, Lesh, Tyler A, Corona, Mylena B, Pakzad, Sarvenaz S, Albuquerque, Marina D, Singh, Praveena, Zarubin, Vanessa, Morse, Sarah J, Sham, Pak Chung, Carter, Cameron S, and Nord, Alex S
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Serious Mental Illness ,Bipolar Disorder ,Mental Illness ,Brain Disorders ,Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Schizophrenia ,Mental Health ,Prevention ,Human Genome ,Behavioral and Social Science ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Psychotic Disorders ,Adult ,Neurotransmitter Agents ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Endophenotypes ,Glutamic Acid ,Dopamine ,Case-Control Studies ,Young Adult ,Genotype ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Risk Factors ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
A primary goal of psychiatry is to better understand the pathways that link genetic risk to psychiatric symptoms. Here, we tested association of diagnosis and endophenotypes with overall and neurotransmitter pathway-specific polygenic risk in patients with early-stage psychosis. Subjects included 205 demographically diverse cases with a psychotic disorder who underwent comprehensive psychiatric and neurological phenotyping and 115 matched controls. Following genotyping, we calculated polygenic scores (PGSs) for schizophrenia (SZ) and bipolar disorder (BP) using Psychiatric Genomics Consortium GWAS summary statistics. To test if overall genetic risk can be partitioned into affected neurotransmitter pathways, we calculated pathway PGSs (pPGSs) for SZ risk affecting each of four major neurotransmitter systems: glutamate, GABA, dopamine, and serotonin. Psychosis subjects had elevated SZ PGS versus controls; cases with SZ or BP diagnoses had stronger SZ or BP risk, respectively. There was no significant association within psychosis cases between individual symptom measures and overall PGS. However, neurotransmitter-specific pPGSs were moderately associated with specific endophenotypes; notably, glutamate was associated with SZ diagnosis and with deficits in cognitive control during task-based fMRI, while dopamine was associated with global functioning. Finally, unbiased endophenotype-driven clustering identified three diagnostically mixed case groups that separated on primary deficits of positive symptoms, negative symptoms, global functioning, and cognitive control. All clusters showed strong genome-wide risk. Cluster 2, characterized by deficits in cognitive control and negative symptoms, additionally showed specific risk concentrated in glutamatergic and GABAergic pathways. Due to the intensive characterization of our subjects, the present study was limited to a relatively small cohort. As such, results should be followed up with additional research at the population and mechanism level. Our study suggests pathway-based PGS analysis may be a powerful path forward to study genetic mechanisms driving psychiatric endophenotypes.
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- 2024
4. Whole-brain intrinsic functional connectivity predicts symptoms and functioning in early psychosis
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Smucny, Jason, Wylie, Korey P, Lesh, Tyler A, Carter, Cameron S, and Tregellas, Jason R
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Schizophrenia ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Illness ,Serious Mental Illness ,Bipolar Disorder ,Neurosciences ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Mental health ,Humans ,Psychotic Disorders ,Male ,Female ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Adult ,Young Adult ,Connectome ,Nerve Net ,Adolescent ,Brain ,Biomarker ,Bipolar disorder ,fMRI ,Resting state ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Theories of psychotic illness suggest that abnormal intrinsic functional connectivity may explain its characteristic positive and disorganization symptoms as well as lead to impaired general functioning. Here we used resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to evaluate associations between these symptoms and the degree to which global connectivity is abnormal in early psychosis (EP). Eighty-six healthy controls (HCs) and 108 individuals with EP with resting state fMRI data were included in primary analyses. The EP group included 83 participants with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders and 25 with bipolar disorder type I with psychotic features. A global intrinsic connectivity "similarity index" for each EP individual was determined by calculating its correlation with the average HC connectivity matrix extracted using Schaefer atlases of multiple parcellations (100, 200, 300, and 400 region parcellations). As hypothesized, connectivity similarity with the average HC matrix was negatively associated with Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale total score, Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms total score, and disorganization symptoms. Similarity was also positively associated with Global Assessment of Functioning score. Results were not driven by sex or diagnosis effects and were consistent across parcellation schemes. These results support the hypothesis that changes in whole-brain connectivity patterns are associated with psychosis symptoms and support the use of functional connectivity as a biomarker for these symptoms in EP.
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- 2024
5. Reporting checklists in neuroimaging: promoting transparency, replicability, and reproducibility
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Ekhtiari, Hamed, Zare-Bidoky, Mehran, Sangchooli, Arshiya, Valyan, Alireza, Abi-Dargham, Anissa, Cannon, Dara M., Carter, Cameron S., Garavan, Hugh, George, Tony P., Ghobadi-Azbari, Peyman, Juchem, Christoph, Krystal, John H., Nichols, Thomas E., Öngür, Dost, Pernet, Cyril R., Poldrack, Russell A., Thompson, Paul M., and Paulus, Martin P.
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- 2024
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6. Functional genomic screens with death rate analyses reveal mechanisms of drug action
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Honeywell, Megan E., Isidor, Marie S., Harper, Nicholas W., Fontana, Rachel E., Birdsall, Gavin A., Cruz-Gordillo, Peter, Porto, Sydney A., Jerome, Madison, Fraser, Cameron S., Sarosiek, Kristopher A., Guertin, David A., Spinelli, Jessica B., and Lee, Michael J.
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- 2024
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7. Myocardial infarction augments sleep to limit cardiac inflammation and damage
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Huynh, Pacific, Hoffmann, Jan D., Gerhardt, Teresa, Kiss, Máté G., Zuraikat, Faris M., Cohen, Oren, Wolfram, Christopher, Yates, Abi G., Leunig, Alexander, Heiser, Merlin, Gaebel, Lena, Gianeselli, Matteo, Goswami, Sukanya, Khamhoung, Annie, Downey, Jeffrey, Yoon, Seonghun, Chen, Zhihong, Roudko, Vladimir, Dawson, Travis, Ferreira da Silva, Joana, Ameral, Natalie J., Morgenroth-Rebin, Jarod, D’Souza, Darwin, Koekkoek, Laura L., Jacob, Walter, Munitz, Jazz, Lee, Donghoon, Fullard, John F., van Leent, Mandy M. T., Roussos, Panos, Kim-Schulze, Seunghee, Shah, Neomi, Kleinstiver, Benjamin P., Swirski, Filip K., Leistner, David, St-Onge, Marie-Pierre, and McAlpine, Cameron S.
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- 2024
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8. A γδ T cell–IL-3 axis controls allergic responses through sensory neurons
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Flayer, Cameron H., Kernin, Isabela J., Matatia, Peri R., Zeng, Xiangsunze, Yarmolinsky, David A., Han, Cai, Naik, Parth R., Buttaci, Dean R., Aderhold, Pamela A., Camire, Ryan B., Zhu, Xueping, Tirard, Alice J., McGuire, John T., Smith, Neal P., McKimmie, Clive S., McAlpine, Cameron S., Swirski, Filip K., Woolf, Clifford J., Villani, Alexandra-Chloe, and Sokol, Caroline L.
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- 2024
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9. Validating the IDRIS and IDRIA: Two infrequency/frequency scales for detecting careless and insufficient effort survey responders
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Kay, Cameron S.
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- 2024
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10. The diagnostic accuracy of screening for psychosis spectrum disorders in behavioral health clinics integrated into primary care
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Savill, Mark, Loewy, Rachel L, Niendam, Tara A, Porteus, A Jonathan, Rosenthal, Adi, Gobrial, Sarah, Meyer, Monet, Bolden, Khalima A, Lesh, Tyler A, Ragland, J Daniel, and Carter, Cameron S
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Mental Illness ,Schizophrenia ,Health Services ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Serious Mental Illness ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,4.4 Population screening ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Psychotic Disorders ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Psychiatry ,Primary Health Care ,Prodromal Symptoms ,Clinical high risk ,Integrated behavioral health ,Assessment ,Prodromal questionnaire ,PQ -B ,PQ-B ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Screening for psychosis spectrum disorders in primary care could improve early identification and reduce the duration of untreated psychosis. However, the accuracy of psychosis screening in this setting is unknown. To address this, we conducted a diagnostic accuracy study of screening for psychosis spectrum disorders in eight behavioral health services integrated into primary care clinics. Patients attending an integrated behavioral health appointment at their primary care clinic completed the Prodromal Questionnaire - Brief (PQ-B) immediately prior to their intake assessment. This was compared to a diagnostic phone interview based on the Structured Interview for Psychosis Risk Syndromes (SIPS). In total, 145 participants completed all study procedures, of which 100 screened positive and 45 negative at a provisional PQ-B threshold of ≥20. The PQ-B was moderately accurate at differentiating psychosis spectrum from no psychosis spectrum disorders; a PQ-B distress score of ≥27 had a sensitivity and specificity of 71.2 % and 57.0 % respectively. In total, 66 individuals (45.5 %) met criteria for a psychosis spectrum disorder and 24 (16.7 %) were diagnosed with full psychosis, indicating a high prevalence of psychosis in the sample. Overall, screening for psychosis spectrum disorders in an IBH primary care setting identified a relatively high number of individuals and may identify people that would otherwise be missed. The PQ-B performed slightly less well than in population-based screening in community mental health settings. However, the findings suggest this may represent an effective way to streamline the pathway between specialty early psychosis programs and primary care clinics for those in need.
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- 2024
11. Heritability of complex traits in sub-populations experiencing bottlenecks and growth
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Taylor, Cameron S. and Lawson, Daniel J.
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- 2024
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12. Sisterly Bonds and Rewriting Urban Gendered Spheres in Amy Levy’s The Romance of a Shop
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Cameron, S. Brooke and Bird, Danielle
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- 2015
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13. Greater Choline-Containing Compounds and Myo-inositol in Treatment-Resistant Versus Responsive Schizophrenia: A 1H-Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Meta-analysis
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Smucny, Jason, Carter, Cameron S, and Maddock, Richard J
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Biomedical Imaging ,Brain Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Mental Illness ,Neurosciences ,Mental health ,Humans ,Choline ,Phosphorylcholine ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Glutamic Acid ,Inositol ,(1)H-MRS ,Myo-inositol ,N-acetyl-aspartate ,NAA ,Spectroscopy ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundThe neurobiology of treatment-resistant schizophrenia (TRS) is poorly understood, and meta-analytic consensus regarding magnetic resonance spectroscopic profiles of glutamate, choline-containing compounds, myo-inositol, and other metabolites in the condition is lacking.MethodsIn this meta-analysis, we examined published findings for N-acetylaspartate, choline-containing compounds (phosphocholine+glycerophosphocholine), myo-inositol, creatine+phosphocreatine, glutamate, and glutamate+glutamine in the anterior cingulate cortex and dorsal striatum in people with TRS versus non-TRS as well as TRS versus healthy control participants (HCs) and TRS versus ultra TRS (i.e., TRS with clozapine resistance). A MEDLINE search revealed 9 articles including 239 people with pooled TRS and ultra TRS, 59 with ultra TRS, 175 with non-TRS, and 153 (HCs) that met meta-analytic criteria.ResultsSignificant effects included higher anterior cingulate cortex phosphocholine+glycerophosphocholine and myo-inositol in the pooled TRS and ultra TRS group than in both the non-TRS group and HCs as well as higher dorsal striatal phosphocholine+glycerophosphocholine in ultra TRS versus HCs, but no differences in other regional metabolites.ConclusionsThe observed metabolite profile in TRS (higher phosphocholine+glycerophosphocholine and myo-inositol signal) is consistent with the hypothesis that TRS has a neuroinflammatory component, although this meta-analysis is not a critical test of that hypothesis. A similar profile is seen in healthy aging, which is known to involve increased neuroinflammation and glial activation. Because the overall number of datasets was low, however, results should be considered preliminary and highlight the need for additional studies of brain metabolites in TRS and their possible association with inflammatory processes.
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- 2024
14. Exploring the acceptability, barriers, and facilitators to psychosis screening in the integrated behavioral health primary care setting: a qualitative study
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Savill, Mark, Loewy, Rachel L, Gobrial, Sarah, Kirkpatrick, Julianna, Porteus, A Jonathan, Lesh, Tyler A, Ragland, J Daniel, Niendam, Tara A, and Carter, Cameron S
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Brain Disorders ,Health Services ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Primary Health Care ,Psychotic Disorders ,Qualitative Research ,Male ,Female ,Adult ,Mass Screening ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Interviews as Topic ,Middle Aged ,Delivery of Health Care ,Integrated ,Mental Health Services ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Prodromal questionnaire - brief ,Schizophrenia ,Clinical high-risk syndrome ,Primary care ,Pathways to care ,Screening ,Qualitative interviews ,Prodromal questionnaire – brief ,Library and Information Studies ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundA longer duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) is associated with poorer treatment outcomes. Screening for psychosis spectrum disorders in the primary care setting could help support the earlier detection and treatment of individuals in need. However, the acceptability of screening for psychosis in this setting as part of routine care is currently unknown.MethodsWe conducted a qualitative interview study with providers and service users who participated in an early psychosis screening program conducted in an integrated behavioral health primary care (IBH-PC) setting. Interviews were recruited from one of eight WellSpace Federally Qualified Health Center IBH-PC clinics in the Sacramento, CA area. Transcripts of the recorded interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis.ResultsIn total, 12 providers and eight service users participated in the interviews. Most service user and provider participants were supportive of psychosis screening in an IBH-PC setting, but not as part of the general practitioner consultation due to the brief, non-behavioral health nature of many of the appointments, and the expected low prevalence of psychosis in this population. The support of leadership, adequate training and support, staff turnover, and organizational changes were all seen to impact the successful implementation of the program. Different barriers and facilitators were considered important at each stage of the process from introducing the screening procedures to service users; to determining when, where, and how to screen; and how to effectively manage the referral and post-referral stages.ConclusionsDespite the additional challenges of screening in an IBH-PC setting relative to secondary mental health services, the process was considered acceptable and feasible to providers and service users. Services that plan to conduct psychosis screening in their clinics need to consider the challenges and their potential solutions to implementation at each stage of the screening process.
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- 2024
15. Using Task-fMRI to Explore the Relationship Between Lifetime Cannabis Use and Cognitive Control in Individuals With First-Episode Schizophrenia
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Lesh, Tyler A, Rhilinger, Joshua, Brower, Rylee, Mawla, Alex M, Ragland, J Daniel, Niendam, Tara A, and Carter, Cameron S
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Substance Misuse ,Cannabinoid Research ,Mental Illness ,Schizophrenia ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Marijuana ,cognition ,neuroimaging ,psychosis ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
While continued cannabis use and misuse in individuals with schizophrenia is associated with a variety of negative outcomes, individuals with a history of use tend to show higher cognitive performance compared to non-users. While this is replicated in the literature, few studies have used task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to evaluate whether the brain networks underpinning these cognitive features are similarly impacted. Forty-eight first-episode individuals with schizophrenia (FES) with a history of cannabis use (FES + CAN), 28 FES individuals with no history of cannabis use (FES-CAN), and 59 controls (CON) performed the AX-Continuous Performance Task during fMRI. FES+CAN showed higher cognitive control performance (d'-context) compared to FES-CAN (P
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- 2024
16. Interfacility Patient Transfers During COVID-19 Pandemic: Mixed-Methods Study
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Michael B. Henry, Emily Funsten, Marisa A. Michealson, Danielle Albright, Cameron S. Crandall, David P. Sklar, Naomi George, and Margaret Greenwood-Ericksen
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Medicine ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Introduction: The United States lacks a national interfacility patient transfer coordination system. During the coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, many hospitals were overwhelmed and faced difficulties transferring sick patients, leading some states and cities to form transfer centers intended to assist sending facilities. In this study we aimed to explore clinician experiences with newly implemented transfer coordination centers. Methods: This mixed-methods study used a brief national survey along with in-depth interviews. The American College of Emergency Physicians Emergency Medicine Practice Research Network (EMPRN) administered the national survey in March 2021. From September–December 2021, semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with administrators and rural emergency clinicians in Arizona and New Mexico, two states that started transfer centers during COVID-19. Results: Among 141 respondents (of 765, 18.4% response rate) to the national EMPRN survey, only 30% reported implementation or expansion of a transfer coordination center during COVID-19. Those with new transfer centers reported no change in difficulty of patient transfers during COVID-19 while those without had increased difficulty. The 17 qualitative interviews expanded upon this, revealing four major themes: 1) limited resources for facilitating transfers even before COVID-19; 2) increased number of and distance to transfer partners during the COVID-19 pandemic; 3) generally positive impacts of transfer centers on workflow, and 4) the potential for continued use of centers to facilitate transfers. Conclusion: Transfer centers may have offset pandemic-related transfer challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. Clinicians who frequently need to transfer patients may particularly benefit from ongoing access to such transfer coordination services.
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- 2024
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17. Pharmacological and physiological effects of cannabidiol: a dose escalation, placebo washout study protocol
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J. Patrick Neary, Jyotpal Singh, Jane Alcorn, Robert B. Laprairie, Payam Dehghani, Cameron S. Mang, Bruce H. Bjornson, Thomas Hadjistavropoulos, Holly A. Bardutz, Lanishen Bhagaloo, Zachary Walsh, Michael Szafron, Kim D. Dorsch, and Elizabeth S. Thompson
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Cannabidiol ,Neurophysiology ,Pharmacokinetics ,Cardiovascular physiology ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background Cannabinoids such as cannabidiol (CBD) exhibit anti-inflammatory properties and have the potential to act as a therapeutic following mild traumatic brain injury. There is limited evidence available on the pharmacological, physiological and psychological effects of escalating CBD dosages in a healthy, male, university athlete population. Furthermore, no dosing regimen for CBD is available with implications of improving physiological function. This study will develop an optimal CBD dose based on the pharmacokinetic data in contact-sport athletes. The physiological and psychological data will be correlated to the pharmacokinetic data to understand the mechanism(s) associated with an escalating CBD dose. Methods/design Forty participants will receive escalating doses of CBD ranging from 5 mg CBD/kg/day to 30 mg CBD/kg/day. The CBD dose is escalated every two weeks in increments of 5 mg CBD/kg/day. Participants will provide blood for pharmacological assessments at each of the 10 visits. Participants will complete a physiological assessment at each of the visits, including assessments of cerebral hemodynamics, blood pressure, electrocardiogram, seismocardiogram, transcranial magnetic stimulation, and salivary analysis for genomic sequencing. Finally, participants will complete a psychological assessment consisting of sleep, anxiety, and pain-related questionnaires. Discussion This study will develop of an optimal CBD dose based on pharmacological, physiological, and psychological properties for future use during contact sport seasons to understand if CBD can help to reduce the frequency of mild traumatic injuries and enhance recovery. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT06204003.
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- 2024
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18. “She is Not a Lady, But a Legal Document”: The Tattoo as Contract in Mr. Meeson’s Will
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Cameron, S. Brooke
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- 2014
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19. Is treatment-resistant schizophrenia a neuroimmune condition? Meta-analytic evidence from magnetic resonance spectroscopy
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Smucny, Jason and Carter, Cameron S.
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- 2024
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20. The Pleasures of Looking and the Feminine Gaze in Michael Field’s Sight and Song
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Cameron, S. Brooke
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- 2013
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21. Managing EEG studies: How to prepare and what to do once data collection has begun
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Boudewyn, Megan A, Erickson, Molly A, Winsler, Kurt, Ragland, John Daniel, Yonelinas, Andrew, Frank, Michael, Silverstein, Steven M, Gold, Jim, MacDonald, Angus W, Carter, Cameron S, Barch, Deanna M, and Luck, Steven J
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Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Electroencephalography ,Humans ,Data Collection ,Software ,Research Design ,EEG methods ,guidelines ,large-scale ,multisite ,protocol ,recommendations ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
In this paper, we provide guidance for the organization and implementation of EEG studies. This work was inspired by our experience conducting a large-scale, multi-site study, but many elements could be applied to any EEG project. Section 1 focuses on study activities that take place before data collection begins. Topics covered include: establishing and training study teams, considerations for task design and piloting, setting up equipment and software, development of formal protocol documents, and planning communication strategy with all study team members. Section 2 focuses on what to do once data collection has already begun. Topics covered include: (1) how to effectively monitor and maintain EEG data quality, (2) how to ensure consistent implementation of experimental protocols, and (3) how to develop rigorous preprocessing procedures that are feasible for use in a large-scale study. Links to resources are also provided, including sample protocols, sample equipment and software tracking forms, sample code, and tutorial videos (to access resources, please visit: https://osf.io/wdrj3/).
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- 2023
22. Altered Associations Between Task Performance and Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex Activation During Cognitive Control in Schizophrenia
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Smucny, Jason, Hanks, Timothy D, Lesh, Tyler A, and Carter, Cameron S
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Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Schizophrenia ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Mental Illness ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Mental health ,Humans ,Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Task Performance and Analysis ,Cognition ,Drift diffusion model ,Drift rate ,Executive function ,Frontal cortex ,Psychosis ,fMRI ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundDysfunctional cognitive control processes are now well understood to be core features of schizophrenia (SZ). A body of work suggests that the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) plays a critical role in explaining cognitive control disruptions in SZ. Here, we examined relationships between DLPFC activation and drift rate (DR), a model-based performance measure that combines reaction time and accuracy, in people with SZ and healthy control (HC) participants.MethodsOne hundred fifty-one people with recent-onset SZ spectrum disorders and 118 HC participants performed the AX-Continuous Performance Task during functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning. Proactive cognitive control-associated activation was extracted from left and right DLPFC regions of interest. Individual behavior was fit using a drift diffusion model, allowing DR to vary between task conditions.ResultsBehaviorally, people with SZ showed significantly lower DRs than HC participants, particularly during high proactive control trial types ("B" trials). Recapitulating previous findings, the SZ group also demonstrated reduced cognitive control-associated DLPFC activation compared with HC participants. Furthermore, significant group differences were also observed in the relationship between left and right DLPFC activation with DR, such that positive relationships between DR and activation were found in HC participants but not in people with SZ.ConclusionsThese results suggest that DLPFC activation is less associated with cognitive control-related behavioral performance enhancements in SZ. Potential mechanisms and implications are discussed.
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- 2023
23. Extracellular free water elevations are associated with brain volume and maternal cytokine response in a longitudinal nonhuman primate maternal immune activation model
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Lesh, Tyler A, Iosif, Ana-Maria, Tanase, Costin, Vlasova, Roza M, Ryan, Amy M, Bennett, Jeffrey, Hogrefe, Casey E, Maddock, Richard J, Geschwind, Daniel H, Van de Water, Judy, McAllister, A Kimberley, Styner, Martin A, Bauman, Melissa D, and Carter, Cameron S
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Mental Illness ,Women's Health ,Mental Health ,Prevention ,Biomedical Imaging ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Female ,Animals ,Humans ,Male ,Cytokines ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Brain ,Schizophrenia ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Primates ,Behavior ,Animal ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Maternal infection has emerged as an important environmental risk factor for neurodevelopmental disorders, including schizophrenia and autism spectrum disorders. Animal model systems of maternal immune activation (MIA) suggest that the maternal immune response plays a significant role in the offspring's neurodevelopment and behavioral outcomes. Extracellular free water is a measure of freely diffusing water in the brain that may be associated with neuroinflammation and impacted by MIA. The present study evaluates the brain diffusion characteristics of male rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) born to MIA-exposed dams (n = 14) treated with a modified form of the viral mimic polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid at the end of the first trimester. Control dams received saline injections at the end of the first trimester (n = 10) or were untreated (n = 4). Offspring underwent diffusion MRI scans at 6, 12, 24, 36, and 45 months. Offspring born to MIA-exposed dams showed significantly increased extracellular free water in cingulate cortex gray matter starting as early as 6 months of age and persisting through 45 months. In addition, offspring gray matter free water in this region was significantly correlated with the magnitude of the maternal IL-6 response in the MIA-exposed dams. Significant correlations between brain volume and extracellular free water in the MIA-exposed offspring also indicate converging, multimodal evidence of the impact of MIA on brain development. These findings provide strong evidence for the construct validity of the nonhuman primate MIA model as a system of relevance for investigating the pathophysiology of human neurodevelopmental psychiatric disorders. Elevated free water in individuals exposed to immune activation in utero could represent an early marker of a perturbed or vulnerable neurodevelopmental trajectory.
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- 2023
24. Evidence for functional improvement in reward anticipation in recent onset schizophrenia after one year of coordinated specialty care
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Smucny, Jason, Lesh, Tyler A, Niendam, Tara A, Ragland, J Daniel, Tully, Laura M, and Carter, Cameron S
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Schizophrenia ,Clinical Research ,Serious Mental Illness ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Mental Illness ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain ,Reward ,Motivation ,Anticipation ,Psychological ,Anterior cingulate ,fMRI ,insula ,positive symptoms ,ventral striatum ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundMotivational impairment associated with deficits in processing the anticipation of future reward is hypothesized to be a cardinal feature of schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SZ). Evidence from short-term follow-up (6-week post-treatment) studies suggests that these deficits may improve or be reversed with treatment, although longer-term outcomes are unknown. Here we examined the one-year trajectory of functional activation in brain circuitry associated with reward anticipation in people with recent onset SZ who participated in coordinated specialty care (CSC) treatment, hypothesizing normalization of brain response mirroring previous short-term findings in first-episode individuals.MethodBlood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) response in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, anterior insula, and ventral striatum (VS) associated with reward anticipation during the Incentivized Control Engagement Task (ICE-T) was analyzed in a baseline sample of 49 healthy controls (HCs) and 52 demographically matched people with SZ, with follow-up data available for 35 HCs and 17 people with SZ.ResultsIn agreement with our hypothesis, significant time × diagnosis interactions were observed across all regions, in which reward anticipation-associated BOLD response increased in SZ to above baseline HC levels at follow-up. Increased VS activation was associated with decreased reality distortion symptoms over the follow-up period. Baseline reward anticipation-associated BOLD response in the right anterior insula was associated with improvement in reality distortion symptoms.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that functional deficits in reward anticipation may be reversed after one year of CSC in recent onset participants with SZ, and that this improvement is associated with reduced positive symptoms in the illness.
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- 2023
25. Sex-specific role of high-fat diet and stress on behavior, energy metabolism, and the ventromedial hypothalamus
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Shetty, Sanutha, Duesman, Samuel J., Patel, Sanil, Huynh, Pacific, Toh, Pamela, Shroff, Sanjana, Das, Anika, Chowhan, Disha, Keller, Benjamin, Alvarez, Johana, Fisher-Foye, Rachel, Sebra, Robert, Beaumont, Kristin, McAlpine, Cameron S., Rajbhandari, Prashant, and Rajbhandari, Abha K.
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- 2024
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26. Effects of black soldier fly larval meal on the growth performance, survival, immune responses, and resistance to Vibrio parahaemolyticus infection of Pacific white shrimp (Litopenaeus vannamei)
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Keetanon, Arunothai, Chuchird, Niti, Phansawat, Putsucha, Kitsanayanyong, Lalitphan, Chou, Chi-Chung, Verstraete, Piet, Ménard, Romain, Richards, Cameron S., Ducharne, Franck, and Rairat, Tirawat
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- 2024
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27. Exploring the acceptability, barriers, and facilitators to psychosis screening in the integrated behavioral health primary care setting: a qualitative study
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Mark Savill, Rachel L Loewy, Sarah Gobrial, Julianna Kirkpatrick, A. Jonathan Porteus, Tyler A Lesh, J. Daniel Ragland, Tara A Niendam, and Cameron S Carter
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Prodromal questionnaire – brief ,Schizophrenia ,Clinical high-risk syndrome ,Primary care ,Pathways to care ,Screening ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background A longer duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) is associated with poorer treatment outcomes. Screening for psychosis spectrum disorders in the primary care setting could help support the earlier detection and treatment of individuals in need. However, the acceptability of screening for psychosis in this setting as part of routine care is currently unknown. Methods We conducted a qualitative interview study with providers and service users who participated in an early psychosis screening program conducted in an integrated behavioral health primary care (IBH-PC) setting. Interviews were recruited from one of eight WellSpace Federally Qualified Health Center IBH-PC clinics in the Sacramento, CA area. Transcripts of the recorded interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis. Results In total, 12 providers and eight service users participated in the interviews. Most service user and provider participants were supportive of psychosis screening in an IBH-PC setting, but not as part of the general practitioner consultation due to the brief, non-behavioral health nature of many of the appointments, and the expected low prevalence of psychosis in this population. The support of leadership, adequate training and support, staff turnover, and organizational changes were all seen to impact the successful implementation of the program. Different barriers and facilitators were considered important at each stage of the process from introducing the screening procedures to service users; to determining when, where, and how to screen; and how to effectively manage the referral and post-referral stages. Conclusions Despite the additional challenges of screening in an IBH-PC setting relative to secondary mental health services, the process was considered acceptable and feasible to providers and service users. Services that plan to conduct psychosis screening in their clinics need to consider the challenges and their potential solutions to implementation at each stage of the screening process.
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- 2024
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28. Sex-specific role of high-fat diet and stress on behavior, energy metabolism, and the ventromedial hypothalamus
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Sanutha Shetty, Samuel J. Duesman, Sanil Patel, Pacific Huynh, Pamela Toh, Sanjana Shroff, Anika Das, Disha Chowhan, Benjamin Keller, Johana Alvarez, Rachel Fisher-Foye, Robert Sebra, Kristin Beaumont, Cameron S. McAlpine, Prashant Rajbhandari, and Abha K. Rajbhandari
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Medicine ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
Abstract Background Scientific evidence highlights the influence of biological sex on the relationship between stress and metabolic dysfunctions. However, there is limited understanding of how diet and stress concurrently contribute to metabolic dysregulation in both males and females. Our study aimed to investigate the combined effects of high-fat diet (HFD) induced obesity and repeated stress on fear-related behaviors, metabolic, immune, and hypothalamic outcomes in male and female mice. Methods To investigate this, we used a highly reliable rodent behavioral model that faithfully recapitulates key aspects of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-like fear. We subjected mice to footshock stressor followed by a weekly singular footshock stressor or no stressor for 14 weeks while on either an HFD or chow diet. At weeks 10 and 14 we conducted glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity measurements. Additionally, we placed the mice in metabolic chambers to perform indirect calorimetric measurements. Finally, we collected brain and peripheral tissues for cellular analysis. Results We observed that HFD-induced obesity disrupted fear memory extinction, increased glucose intolerance, and affected energy expenditure specifically in male mice. Conversely, female mice on HFD exhibited reduced respiratory exchange ratio (RER), and a significant defect in glucose tolerance only when subjected to repeated stress. Furthermore, the combination of repeated stress and HFD led to sex-specific alterations in proinflammatory markers and hematopoietic stem cells across various peripheral metabolic tissues. Single-nuclei RNA sequencing (snRNAseq) analysis of the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) revealed microglial activation in female mice on HFD, while male mice on HFD exhibited astrocytic activation under repeated stress. Conclusions Overall, our findings provide insights into complex interplay between repeated stress, high-fat diet regimen, and their cumulative effects on health, including their potential contribution to the development of PTSD-like stress and metabolic dysfunctions, emphasizing the need for further research to fully understand these interconnected pathways and their implications for health.
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- 2024
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29. Differential processing of VesB by two rhomboid proteases in Vibrio cholerae
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Cameron S. Roberts, Austin B. Shannon, Konstantin V. Korotkov, and Maria Sandkvist
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proteases ,rhomboid ,protein secretion ,type II secretion system ,T2SS ,posttranslational modification ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Rhomboid proteases are universally conserved and facilitate the proteolysis of peptide bonds within or adjacent to cell membranes. While eukaryotic rhomboid proteases have been demonstrated to harbor unique cellular roles, prokaryotic members have been far less characterized. For the first time, we demonstrate that Vibrio cholerae expresses two active rhomboid proteases that cleave a shared substrate at distinct sites, resulting in differential localization of the processed protein. The rhomboid protease rhombosortase (RssP) was previously found to process a novel C-terminal domain called GlyGly-CTERM, as demonstrated by its effect on the extracellular serine protease VesB during its transport through the V. cholerae cell envelope. Here, we characterize the substrate specificity of RssP and GlpG, the universally conserved bacterial rhomboid proteases. We show that RssP has distinct cleavage specificity from GlpG, and specific residues within the GlyGly-CTERM of VesB target it to RssP over GlpG, allowing for efficient proteolysis. RssP cleaves VesB within its transmembrane domain, whereas GlpG cleaves outside the membrane in a disordered loop that precedes the GlyGly-CTERM. Cleavage of VesB by RssP initially targets VesB to the bacterial cell surface and, subsequently, to outer membrane vesicles, while GlpG cleavage results in secreted, fully soluble VesB. Collectively, this work builds on the molecular understanding of rhomboid proteolysis and provides the basis for additional rhomboid substrate recognition while also demonstrating a unique role of RssP in the maturation of proteins containing a GlyGly-CTERM.IMPORTANCEDespite a great deal of insight into the eukaryotic homologs, bacterial rhomboid proteases have been relatively understudied. Our research aims to understand the function of two rhomboid proteases in Vibrio cholerae. This work is significant because it will help us better understand the catalytic mechanism of rhomboid proteases as a whole and assign a specific role to a unique subfamily whose function is to process a subset of effector molecules secreted by V. cholerae and other pathogenic bacteria.
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- 2024
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30. Evolution of Heroism
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Arrow, Holly, Kay, Cameron S., Allison, Scott T., Section editor, Allison, Scott T., editor, Beggan, James K., editor, and Goethals, George R., editor
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- 2024
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31. Carmilla in Context
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Cameron, S. Brooke, O’Dea, Peadar, and Bacon, Simon, editor
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- 2024
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32. Altered Associations Between Motivated Performance and Frontostriatal Functional Connectivity During Reward Anticipation in Schizophrenia
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Smucny, Jason, Hanks, Timothy D, Lesh, Tyler A, O’Reilly, Randall C, and Carter, Cameron S
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Brain Disorders ,Biomedical Imaging ,Neurosciences ,Schizophrenia ,Mental Illness ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Mental health ,Humans ,Corpus Striatum ,Putamen ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Reward ,Neural Pathways ,Prefrontal Cortex ,caudate ,dorsolateral prefrontal cortex ,drift rate ,psychosis ,putamen ,striatum ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background and hypothesisThe neuronal mechanisms that underlie deficits in effort cost computation in schizophrenia (SZ) are poorly understood. Given the role of frontostriatal circuits in valence-oriented motivation, we hypothesized that these circuits are either dysfunctional in SZ or do not appropriately predict behavior in SZ when task conditions are difficult and good performance is rewarded.Study designA total of 52 people with recent onset SZ-spectrum disorders and 48 healthy controls (HCs) performed a 3T fMRI task with 2 valence conditions (rewarded vs neutral) and 2 difficulty conditions. Frontostriatal connectivity was extracted during the cue (anticipatory) phase. Individual behavior was fit using a drift-diffusion model, allowing the performance parameter, drift rate (DR), to vary between task conditions. Three models were examined: A group × condition model of DR, a group × condition model of connectivity, and a regression model of connectivity predicting DR depending on group and condition.Study resultsDRs showed the expected positive correlation with accuracy and a negative association with reaction time. The SZ group showed a deficit in DR but did not differ in overall connectivity or show a valence-specific deficit in connectivity. Significant group × valence × difficulty interactions, however, were observed on the relationship between right dorsolateral prefrontal (DLPFC)-striatal connectivity and DR (DLPFC-Caudate: F = 10.92, PFDR = .004; DLPFC-Putamen: F = 5.14, PFDR = .048) driven by more positive relationships between DR and connectivity during cues for the difficult-rewarded condition in HCs compared to SZ.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that frontostriatal connectivity is less predictive of performance in SZ when task difficulty is increased and a reward incentive is applied.
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- 2023
33. Increased Striatal Presynaptic Dopamine in a Nonhuman Primate Model of Maternal Immune Activation: A Longitudinal Neurodevelopmental Positron Emission Tomography Study With Implications for Schizophrenia
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Smucny, Jason, Vlasova, Roza M, Lesh, Tyler A, Rowland, Douglas J, Wang, Guobao, Chaudhari, Abhijit J, Chen, Shuai, Iosif, Ana-Maria, Hogrefe, Casey E, Bennett, Jeffrey L, Shumann, Cynthia M, Van de Water, Judy A, Maddock, Richard J, Styner, Martin A, Geschwind, Daniel H, McAllister, A Kimberley, Bauman, Melissa D, and Carter, Cameron S
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Pediatric ,Women's Health ,Serious Mental Illness ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Mental Illness ,Schizophrenia ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Pregnancy ,Animals ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Dopamine ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Primates ,Caudate ,Dopaminergic ,Inflammation ,Macaque ,Putamen ,Striatum ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundEpidemiological studies suggest that maternal immune activation (MIA) is a significant risk factor for future neurodevelopmental disorders, including schizophrenia (SZ), in offspring. Consistent with findings in SZ research and work in rodent systems, preliminary cross-sectional findings in nonhuman primates suggest that MIA is associated with dopaminergic hyperfunction in young adult offspring.MethodsIn this unique prospective longitudinal study, we used [18F]fluoro-l-m-tyrosine positron emission tomography to examine the developmental time course of striatal presynaptic dopamine synthesis in male rhesus monkeys born to dams (n = 13) injected with a modified form of the inflammatory viral mimic, polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid [poly(I:C)], in the late first trimester. Striatal (caudate, putamen, and nucleus accumbens) dopamine from these animals was compared with that of control offspring born to dams that received saline (n = 10) or no injection (n = 4). Dopamine was measured at 15, 26, 38, and 48 months of age. Prior work with this cohort found decreased prefrontal gray matter volume in MIA offspring versus controls between 6 and 45 months of age. Based on theories of the etiology and development of SZ-related pathology, we hypothesized that there would be a delayed (relative to the gray matter decrease) increase in striatal fluoro-l-m-tyrosine signal in the MIA group versus controls.Results[18F]fluoro-l-m-tyrosine signal showed developmental increases in both groups in the caudate and putamen. Group comparisons revealed significantly greater caudate dopaminergic signal in the MIA group at 26 months.ConclusionsThese findings are highly relevant to the known pathophysiology of SZ and highlight the translational relevance of the MIA model in understanding mechanisms by which MIA during pregnancy increases risk for later illness in offspring.
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- 2023
34. Altered dendritic morphology in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of nonhuman primates prenatally exposed to maternal immune activation
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Hanson, Kari L, Weir, Ruth K, Iosif, Ana-Maria, Van de Water, Judy, Carter, Cameron S, McAllister, A Kimberley, Bauman, Melissa D, and Schumann, Cynthia M
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Biological Psychology ,Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Prevention ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Mental Illness ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Infectious Diseases ,Pregnancy ,Women's Health ,Mental Health ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Humans ,Animals ,Male ,Female ,Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Maternal Exposure ,Brain ,Mental Disorders ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Poly I-C ,Behavior ,Animal ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Animal model ,Poly IC ,Neuroimmunology ,Schizophrenia ,Autism ,NHP ,Neuroanatomy ,Golgi ,Maternal immune activation ,Immunology ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Women who contract a viral or bacterial infection during pregnancy have an increased risk of giving birth to a child with a neurodevelopmental or psychiatric disorder. The effects of maternal infection are likely mediated by the maternal immune response, as preclinical animal models have confirmed that maternal immune activation (MIA) leads to long lasting changes in offspring brain and behavior development. The present study sought to determine the impact of MIA-exposure during the first or second trimester on neuronal morphology in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and hippocampus from brain tissue obtained from MIA-exposed and control male rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) during late adolescence. MIA-exposed offspring display increased neuronal dendritic branching in pyramidal cells in DLPFC infra- and supragranular layers relative to controls, with no significant differences observed between offspring exposed to maternal infection in the first and second trimester. In addition, the diameter of apical dendrites in DLPFC infragranular layer is significantly decreased in MIA-exposed offspring relative to controls, irrespective of trimester exposure. In contrast, alterations in hippocampal neuronal morphology of MIA-exposed offspring were not evident. These findings demonstrate that a maternal immune challenge during pregnancy has long-term consequences for primate offspring dendritic structure, selectively in a brain region vital for socioemotional and cognitive development.
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- 2023
35. Multimodal spatiotemporal phenotyping of human retinal organoid development
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Wahle, Philipp, Brancati, Giovanna, Harmel, Christoph, He, Zhisong, Gut, Gabriele, del Castillo, Jacobo Sarabia, Xavier da Silveira dos Santos, Aline, Yu, Qianhui, Noser, Pascal, Fleck, Jonas Simon, Gjeta, Bruno, Pavlinić, Dinko, Picelli, Simone, Hess, Max, Schmidt, Gregor W., Lummen, Tom T. A., Hou, Yanyan, Galliker, Patricia, Goldblum, David, Balogh, Marton, Cowan, Cameron S., Scholl, Hendrik P. N., Roska, Botond, Renner, Magdalena, Pelkmans, Lucas, Treutlein, Barbara, and Camp, J. Gray
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- 2023
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36. Effect of Technology-Enhanced Screening in Addition to Standard Targeted Clinician Education on the Duration of Untreated Psychosis
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Niendam, Tara A, Loewy, Rachel, Savill, Mark, Delucchi, Kevin L, Lesh, Tyler A, Ragland, J Daniel, Bolden, Khalima, Skymba, Haley V, Gobrial, Sarah, Meyer, Monet S, Pierce, Katherine M, Rosenthal, Adi, Fedechko, Taylor L, Tully, Laura M, Tryon, Valerie L, Goldman, Howard, Cress, Rosemary D, Kravitz, Richard L, and Carter, Cameron S
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Prevention ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Mental Illness ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Brain Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Female ,Adolescent ,Male ,Psychotic Disorders ,Mental Health Services ,Educational Status ,Schools ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Clinical sciences ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ImportanceReducing the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) is essential to improving outcomes for people with first-episode psychosis (FEP). Current US approaches are insufficient to reduce DUP to international standards of less than 90 days.ObjectiveTo determine whether population-based electronic screening in addition to standard targeted clinician education increases early detection of psychosis and decreases DUP, compared with clinician education alone.Design, setting, and participantsThis cluster randomized clinical trial included individuals aged 12 to 30 years presenting for services between March 2015 and September 2017 at participating sites that included community mental health clinics and school support and special education services. Eligible participants were referred to the Early Diagnosis and Preventative Treatment (EDAPT) Clinic. Data analyses were performed in September and October 2019 for the primary and secondary analyses, with the exploratory subgroup analyses completed in May 2021.InterventionsAll sites in both groups received targeted education about early psychosis for health care professionals. In the active screening group, clients also completed the Prodromal Questionnaire-Brief using tablets at intake; referrals were based on those scores and clinical judgment. In the group receiving treatment as usual (TAU), referrals were based on clinical judgment alone.Main outcomes and measuresPrimary outcomes included DUP, defined as the period from full psychosis onset to the date of the EDAPT diagnostic telephone interview, and the number of individuals identified with FEP or a psychosis spectrum disorder. Exploratory analyses examined differences by site type, completion rates between conditions, and days from service entry to telephone interview.ResultsTwenty-four sites agreed to participate, and 12 sites were randomized to either the active screening or TAU group. However, only 10 community clinics and 4 school sites were able to fully implement population screening and were included in the final analysis. The total potentially eligible population size within each study group was similar, with 2432 individuals entering at active screening group sites and 2455 at TAU group sites. A total of 303 diagnostic telephone interviews were completed (178 [58.7%] female individuals; mean [SD] age, 17.09 years [4.57]). Active screening sites reported a significantly higher detection rate of psychosis spectrum disorders (136 cases [5.6%], relative to 65 [2.6%]; P
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- 2023
37. Comparing the functional neuroanatomy of proactive and reactive control between patients with schizophrenia and healthy controls
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Kwashie, Anita N, Ma, Yizhou, Barch, Deanna M, Chafee, Matthew, Ragland, J Daniel, Silverstein, Steven M, Carter, Cameron S, Gold, James M, and MacDonald, Angus W
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Serious Mental Illness ,Brain Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Neurosciences ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Neuroanatomy ,Frontal Lobe ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Temporal Lobe ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Cognitive control ,fMRI ,Functional neuroanatomy ,Dot pattern expectancy task ,Psychosis ,Cognitive Sciences ,Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Cognitive control deficits are associated with impaired executive functioning in schizophrenia. The Dual Mechanisms of Control framework suggests that proactive control requires sustained dorsolateral prefrontal activity, whereas reactive control marshals a larger network. However, primate studies suggest these processes are maintained by dual-encoding regions. To distinguish between these theories, we compared the distinctiveness of proactive and reactive control functional neuroanatomy. In a reanalysis of data from a previous study, 47 adults with schizophrenia and 56 controls completed the Dot Pattern Expectancy task during an fMRI scan examining proactive and reactive control in frontoparietal and medial temporal regions. Areas suggesting specialized control or between-group differences were tested for association with symptoms and task performance. Elastic net models additionally explored these areas' predictive abilities regarding performance. Most regions were active in both reactive and proactive control. However, evidence of specialized proactive control was found in the left middle and superior frontal gyri. Control participants showed greater proactive control in the left middle and right inferior frontal gyri. Elastic net models moderately predicted task performance and implicated various frontal gyri regions in control participants, with additional involvement of anterior cingulate and posterior parietal regions for reactive control. Elastic nets for patient participants implicated the inferior and superior frontal gyri, and posterior parietal lobe. Specialized cognitive control was unassociated with either performance or schizophrenia symptomatology. Future work is needed to clarify the distinctiveness of proactive and reactive control, and its role in executive deficits in severe psychopathology.
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- 2023
38. 6. Queer Vampires: What We Want is in the Shadows
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Cameron, S. Brooke, primary
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- 2023
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39. Anti-microbial properties of a multi-component alloy
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Murray, Anne F., Bryan, Daniel, Garfinkel, David A., Jogensen, Cameron S., Tang, Nan, Liyanage, WLNC, Lass, Eric A., Yang, Ying, Rack, Philip D., Denes, Thomas G., and Gilbert, Dustin A.
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Physics - Biological Physics ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
High traffic touch surfaces such as doorknobs, countertops, and handrails can be transmission points for the spread of pathogens, emphasizing the need to develop materials that actively self-sanitize. Metals are frequently used for these surfaces due to their durability, but many metals also possess antimicrobial properties which function through a variety of mechanisms. This work investigates metallic alloys comprised of several bioactive metals with the target of achieving broad-spectrum, rapid bioactivity through synergistic activity. An entropy-motivated stabilization paradigm is proposed to prepare scalable alloys of copper, silver, nickel and cobalt. Using combinatorial sputtering, thin-film alloys were prepared on 100 mm wafers with 50% compositional grading of each element across the wafer. The films were then annealed and investigated for alloy stability. Bioactivity testing was performed on both the as-grown alloys and the annealed films using four microorganisms -- Phi6, MS2, Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli -- as surrogates for human viral and bacterial pathogens. Testing showed that after 30 s of contact with some of the test alloys, Phi6, an enveloped, single-stranded RNA bacteriophage that serves as a SARS-CoV 2 surrogate, was reduced up to 6.9 orders of magnitude (>99.9999%). Additionally, the non-enveloped, double-stranded DNA bacteriophage MS2, and the Gram-negative E. coli and Gram-positive B. subtilis bacterial strains showed a 5.0, 6.4, and 5.7 log reduction in activity after 30, 20 and 10 minutes, respectively. Bioactivity in the alloy samples showed a strong dependence on the composition, with the log reduction scaling directly with the Cu content. Concentration of Cu by phase separation after annealing improved activity in some of the samples. The results motivate a variety of themes which can be leveraged to design ideal bioactive surfaces., Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures
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- 2022
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40. Interleukin-3 gets a fresh start in the brain
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Yates, Abi G., Khamhoung, Annie, and McAlpine, Cameron S.
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- 2023
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41. Improvement in prefrontal thalamic connectivity during the early course of the illness in recent-onset psychosis: a 12-month longitudinal follow-up resting-state fMRI study
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Bergé, Daniel, Lesh, Tyler A, Smucny, Jason, and Carter, Cameron S
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Biomedical Imaging ,Mental Illness ,Clinical Research ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Follow-Up Studies ,Psychotic Disorders ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Thalamus ,Neural Pathways ,schizophrenia ,first-episode psychosis ,fMRI ,resting state ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundPrevious research in resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) has shown a mixed pattern of disrupted thalamocortical connectivity in psychosis. The clinical meaning of these findings and their stability over time remains unclear. We aimed to study thalamocortical connectivity longitudinally over a 1-year period in participants with recent-onset psychosis.MethodsTo this purpose, 129 individuals with recent-onset psychosis and 87 controls were clinically evaluated and scanned using rs-fMRI. Among them, 43 patients and 40 controls were re-scanned and re-evaluated 12 months later. Functional connectivity between the thalamus and the rest of the brain was calculated using a seed to voxel approach, and then compared between groups and correlated with clinical features cross-sectionally and longitudinally.ResultsAt baseline, participants with recent-onset psychosis showed increased connectivity (compared to controls) between the thalamus and somatosensory and temporal regions (k = 653, T = 5.712), as well as decreased connectivity between the thalamus and left cerebellum and right prefrontal cortex (PFC; k = 201, T = -4.700). Longitudinal analyses revealed increased connectivity over time in recent-onset psychosis (relative to controls) in the right middle frontal gyrus.ConclusionsOur results support the concept of abnormal thalamic connectivity as a core feature in psychosis. In agreement with a non-degenerative model of illness in which functional changes occur early in development and do not deteriorate over time, no evidence of progressive deterioration of connectivity during early psychosis was observed. Indeed, regionally increased connectivity between thalamus and PFC was observed.
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- 2022
42. Using Computational Modeling to Capture Schizophrenia-Specific Reinforcement Learning Differences and Their Implications on Patient Classification
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Geana, Andra, Barch, Deanna M, Gold, James M, Carter, Cameron S, MacDonald, Angus W, Ragland, J Daniel, Silverstein, Steven M, and Frank, Michael J
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Schizophrenia ,Serious Mental Illness ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Mental health ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Computer Simulation ,Humans ,Psychotic Disorders ,Reinforcement ,Psychology ,Classification ,Computational psychiatry ,Modeling ,Reinforcement learning ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundPsychiatric diagnosis and treatment have historically taken a symptom-based approach, with less attention on identifying underlying symptom-producing mechanisms. Recent efforts have illuminated the extent to which different underlying circuitry can produce phenotypically similar symptomatology (e.g., psychosis in bipolar disorder vs. schizophrenia). Computational modeling makes it possible to identify and mathematically differentiate behaviorally unobservable, specific reinforcement learning differences in patients with schizophrenia versus other disorders, likely owing to a higher reliance on prediction error-driven learning associated with basal ganglia and underreliance on explicit value representations associated with orbitofrontal cortex.MethodsWe used a well-established probabilistic reinforcement learning task to replicate those findings in individuals with schizophrenia both on (n = 120) and off (n = 44) antipsychotic medications and included a patient comparison group of bipolar patients with psychosis (n = 60) and healthy control subjects (n = 72).ResultsUsing accuracy, there was a main effect of group (F3,279 = 7.87, p < .001), such that all patient groups were less accurate than control subjects. Using computationally derived parameters, both medicated and unmediated individuals with schizophrenia, but not patients with bipolar disorder, demonstrated a reduced mixing parameter (F3,295 = 13.91, p < .001), indicating less dependence on learning explicit value representations as well as greater learning decay between training and test (F1,289 = 12.81, p < .001). Unmedicated patients with schizophrenia also showed greater decision noise (F3,295 = 2.67, p = .04).ConclusionsBoth medicated and unmedicated patients showed overreliance on prediction error-driven learning as well as significantly higher noise and value-related memory decay, compared with the healthy control subjects and the patients with bipolar disorder. Additionally, the computational model parameters capturing these processes can significantly improve patient/control classification, potentially providing useful diagnosis insight.
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- 2022
43. Precision medicine for genetic epilepsy on the horizon: Recent advances, present challenges, and suggestions for continued progress
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Knowles, Juliet K, Helbig, Ingo, Metcalf, Cameron S, Lubbers, Laura S, Isom, Lori L, Demarest, Scott, Goldberg, Ethan M, George, Alfred L, Lerche, Holger, Weckhuysen, Sarah, Whittemore, Vicky, Berkovic, Samuel F, and Lowenstein, Daniel H
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Neurodegenerative ,Epilepsy ,Neurological ,Good Health and Well Being ,Genetic Testing ,Humans ,Precision Medicine ,Seizures ,Suggestion ,epilepsy ,exome sequencing ,genomic medicine ,personalized medicine ,precision medicine ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
The genetic basis of many epilepsies is increasingly understood, giving rise to the possibility of precision treatments tailored to specific genetic etiologies. Despite this, current medical therapy for most epilepsies remains imprecise, aimed primarily at empirical seizure reduction rather than targeting specific disease processes. Intellectual and technological leaps in diagnosis over the past 10 years have not yet translated to routine changes in clinical practice. However, the epilepsy community is poised to make impressive gains in precision therapy, with continued innovation in gene discovery, diagnostic ability, and bioinformatics; increased access to genetic testing and counseling; fuller understanding of natural histories; agility and rigor in preclinical research, including strategic use of emerging model systems; and engagement of an evolving group of stakeholders (including patient advocates, governmental resources, and clinicians and scientists in academia and industry). In each of these areas, we highlight notable examples of recent progress, new or persistent challenges, and future directions. The future of precision medicine for genetic epilepsy looks bright if key opportunities on the horizon can be pursued with strategic and coordinated effort.
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- 2022
44. Wound Healing and Scar Patterning After Addition of Autologous Skin Cell Suspension to Meshed Grafts
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Collins, Monica L., Williams, Dillon, Pierson, Brooke E., D'Orio, Cameron S., Oliver, Mary A., Moffatt, Lauren T., Shupp, Jeffrey W., Travis, Taryn E., and Carney, Bonnie C.
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- 2024
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45. Are factors that predict conversion to psychosis associated with initial transition to a high risk state? An adolescent brain cognitive development study analysis
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Smucny, Jason, Wood, Avery, Davidson, Ian N., and Carter, Cameron S.
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- 2024
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46. Altered brain metabolites in male nonhuman primate offspring exposed to maternal immune activation
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Maddock, Richard J., Vlasova, Roza M., Chen, Shuai, Iosif, Ana-Maria, Bennett, Jeffrey, Tanase, Costin, Ryan, Amy M., Murai, Takeshi, Hogrefe, Casey E., Schumann, Cynthia D., Geschwind, Daniel H., Van de Water, Judy, Amaral, David G., Lesh, Tyler A., Styner, Martin A., Kimberley McAllister, A., Carter, Cameron S., and Bauman, Melissa D.
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- 2024
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47. TRPV1 channel in the pathophysiology of epilepsy and its potential as a molecular target for the development of new antiseizure drug candidates
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Socała, Katarzyna, Jakubiec, Marcin, Abram, Michał, Mlost, Jakub, Starowicz, Katarzyna, Kamiński, Rafał M., Ciepiela, Katarzyna, Andres-Mach, Marta, Zagaja, Mirosław, Metcalf, Cameron S., Zawadzki, Przemysław, Wlaź, Piotr, and Kamiński, Krzysztof
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- 2024
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48. Task-oriented exercise effects on walking and corticospinal excitability in multiple sclerosis: protocol for a randomized controlled trial
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Zahra Moslemi, Eduardo A. Toledo-Aldana, Bruce Baldwin, Sarah J. Donkers, Janice J. Eng, Prosanta Mondal, Julia O. Totosy de Zepetnek, Josef Buttigieg, Michael C. Levin, and Cameron S. Mang
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Multiple sclerosis ,Neurological rehabilitation ,Motor function ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,Biomarkers ,Sports medicine ,RC1200-1245 - Abstract
Abstract Background Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a degenerative disease of the central nervous system (CNS) that disrupts walking function and results in other debilitating symptoms. This study compares the effects of ‘task-oriented exercise’ against ‘generalized resistance and aerobic exercise’ and a ‘stretching control’ on walking and CNS function in people with MS (PwMS). We hypothesize that task-oriented exercise will enhance walking speed and related neural changes to a greater extent than other exercise approaches. Methods This study is a single-blinded, three-arm randomized controlled trial conducted in Saskatchewan, Canada. Eligible participants are those older than 18 years of age with a diagnosis of MS and an expanded Patient-Determined Disease Steps (PDDS) score between 3 (‘gait disability’) and 6 (‘bilateral support’). Exercise interventions are delivered for 12 weeks (3 × 60-min per week) in-person under the supervision of a qualified exercise professional. Interventions differ in exercise approach, such that task-oriented exercise involves weight-bearing, walking-specific activities, while generalized resistance and aerobic exercise uses seated machine-based resistance training of major upper and lower body muscle groups and recumbent cycling, and the stretching control exercise involves seated flexibility and relaxation activities. Participants are allocated to interventions using blocked randomization that stratifies by PDDS (mild: 3–4; moderate: 5–6). Assessments are conducted at baseline, post-intervention, and at a six-week retention time point. The primary and secondary outcome measures are the Timed 25-Foot Walk Test and corticospinal excitability for the tibialis anterior muscles determined using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), respectively. Tertiary outcomes include assessments of balance, additional TMS measures, blood biomarkers of neural health and inflammation, and measures of cardiorespiratory and musculoskeletal fitness. Discussion A paradigm shift in MS healthcare towards the use of “exercise as medicine” was recently proposed to improve outcomes and alleviate the economic burden of MS. Findings will support this shift by informing the development of specialized exercise programming that targets walking and changes in corticospinal excitability in PwMS. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05496881, Registered August 11, 2022. https://classic.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05496881 . Protocol amendment number: 01; Issue date: August 1, 2023; Primary reason for amendment: Expand eligibility to include people with all forms of MS rather than progressive forms of MS only.
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- 2023
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49. Active dosimetry for VHEE FLASH radiotherapy using beam profile monitors and charge measurements
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Rieker, Vilde F., Corsini, Roberto, Stapnes, Steinar, Adli, Erik, Farabolini, Wilfrid, Grilj, Veljko, Sjobak, Kyrre N., Wroe, Laurence M., Aksoy, Avni, Robertson, Cameron S., Bateman, Joseph J., Korysko, Pierre, Malyzhenkov, Alexander, Gilardi, Antonio, and Dosanjh, Manjit
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- 2024
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50. Magnetism in Metastable and Annealed Compositionally Complex Alloys
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Tang, Nan, Quigley, Lizabeth, Boldman, Walker L., Jorgensen, Cameron S., Koch, Rémi, O'Leary, Daniel, Meda, Hugh R., Rack, Philip D., and Gilbert, Dustin A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Compositionally complex materials (CCMs) present a potential paradigm shift in the design of magnetic materials. These alloys exhibit long-range structural order coupled with limited or no chemical order. As a result, extreme local environments exist with a large opposing magnetic energy term, which can manifest large changes in the magnetic behavior. In the current work, the magnetic properties of (Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni) alloys are presented. These materials were prepared by room-temperature combinatorial sputtering, resulting in a range of compositions with a single BCC structural phase and no chemical ordering. The combinatorial growth technique allows CCMs to be prepared outside of their thermodynamically stable phase, enabling the exploration of otherwise inaccessible order. The mixed ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interactions in these alloys causes frustrated magnetic behavior, which results in an extremely low coercivity (<1 mT), which increases rapidly at 50 K. At low temperatures, the coercivity achieves values of nearly 500 mT, which is comparable to some high-anisotropy magnetic materials. Commensurate with the divergent coercivity is an atypical drop in the temperature dependent magnetization. These effects are explained by a mixed magnetic phase model, consisting of ferro-, antiferro , and frustrated magnetic regions, and are rationalized by simulations. A machine-learning algorithm is employed to visualize the parameter space and inform the development of subsequent compositions. Annealing the samples at 600 {\deg}C orders the sample, more-than doubling the Curie temperature and increasing the saturation magnetization by as much as 5x. Simultaneously, the large coercivities are suppressed, resulting in magnetic behavior that is largely temperature independent over a range of 350 K., Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures
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- 2021
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