875 results on '"Carter CS"'
Search Results
2. Neuroendocrine mechanisms of social bonds and child-parent attachment, from the child’s perspective
- Author
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Bales, KL and Carter, CS
- Published
- 2023
3. Brain free water alterations in first-episode psychosis: a longitudinal analysis of diagnosis, course of illness, and medication effects
- Author
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Guo, JY, Lesh, TA, Niendam, TA, Ragland, JD, Tully, LM, and Carter, CS
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Biomedical Imaging ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Serious Mental Illness ,Schizophrenia ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Illness ,Bipolar Disorder ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Biomarkers ,California ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Psychotic Disorders ,Water ,Young Adult ,DTI ,first episode psychosis ,FW ,putative neuroinflammatory biomarker ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundMultiple lines of evidence suggest the presence of altered neuroimmune processes in patients with schizophrenia (Sz) and severe mood disorders. Recent studies using a novel free water diffusion tensor imaging (FW DTI) approach, proposed as a putative biomarker of neuroinflammation, atrophy, or edema, have shown significantly increased FW in patients with Sz. However no studies to date have investigated the longitudinal stability of FW alterations during the early course of psychosis, nor have studies focused separately on FE psychosis patients with Sz or bipolar disorder (BD) with psychotic features.MethodsThe current study included 188 participants who underwent diffusion magnetic resonance imaging scanning at baseline. Sixty-four participants underwent follow-up rescanning after 12 months. DTI-based alterations in patients were calculated using voxelwise tract-based spatial statistics and region of interest analyses.ResultsPatients with FE psychosis, both Sz and BD, exhibited increased FW at illness onset which remained unchanged over the 12-month follow-up period. Preliminary analyses suggested that antipsychotic medication exposure was associated with higher FW in gray matter that reached significance in the BD group. Higher FW in white matter correlated with negative symptom severity.ConclusionsOur results support the presence of elevated FW at the onset of psychosis in both Sz and BD, which remains stable during the early course of the illness, with no evidence of either progression or remission.
- Published
- 2021
4. Atypical attentional filtering of visual information in youth with chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome as indexed by event-related potentials
- Author
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Linton, SR, Popa, AM, Luck, SJ, Bolden, K, Angkustsiri, K, Carter, CS, Niendam, TA, and Simon, TJ
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Pediatric ,Schizophrenia ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Mental Illness ,Neurosciences ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Attention ,Chromosomes ,DiGeorge Syndrome ,Electroencephalography ,Evoked Potentials ,Humans ,Psychotic Disorders ,22q11.2 deletion ,Flanker ,Psychosis ,Event-related potential ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundYouth with chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q) face one of the highest genetic risk factors for the development of schizophrenia. Previous research suggests impairments in attentional control and potential interactions with elevated anxiety and reduced adaptive functioning may increase the risk for developing psychosis in this population. Here, we examined how variations in attentional control relate to the presence or severity of psychosis-proneness symptoms in these individuals.MethodsTo achieve this, we measured attentional control in youth (12-18 years) with 22q (N = 35) compared to a typically developing group (N = 45), using a flanker task (the Distractor Target task) while measuring neural activity with event-related potentials.ResultsSimilar to previous findings observed in people with schizophrenia, greater attentional capture by, and reduced suppression of, non-target flanker stimuli characterized participants with 22q and was indexed by the N2pc (N2-posterior-contralateral) and PD (distractor positivity) components. Although we observed no relationships between these components and measures of psychosis-proneness in youth with 22q, these individuals endorsed a relatively low incidence of positive symptoms overall.ConclusionsOur results provide neural evidence of an attentional control impairment in youth with 22q that suggests these individuals experience sustained attentional focus on irrelevant information and reduced suppression of distracting stimuli in their environment. Impairments in attentional control might be a valid biomarker of the potential to develop attenuated positive symptoms or frank psychosis in high-risk individuals long before the age at which such symptoms typically arise. The evaluation of such a hypothesis, and the preventive potential for the putative biomarker, should be the focus of future studies.
- Published
- 2021
5. Disrupted GABAergic facilitation of working memory performance in people with schizophrenia
- Author
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Ragland, JD, Maddock, RJ, Hurtado, MY, Tanase, C, Lesh, TA, Niendam, TA, Carter, CS, and Ranganath, C
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Mental Illness ,Schizophrenia ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Adult ,Brain ,Female ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Male ,Memory ,Short-Term ,White Matter ,Young Adult ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Functional neuroimaging ,Gamma-aminobutyric acid ,Working memory ,Psychosis ,Magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesGamma-Amiobutyric acid (GABA) is a primary inhibitory neurotransmitter that facilitates neural oscillations that coordinate neural activity between brain networks to facilitate cognition. The present magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) study tests the hypothesis that GABAergic facilitation of working memory is disrupted in people with schizophrenia (PSZ).Methods51 healthy participants and 40 PSZ from the UC Davis Early Psychosis Program performed an item and temporal order working memory (WM) task and underwent resting MRS to measure GABA and glutamate concentrations in dorsolateral prefrontal (DLPFC) and anterior cingulate (ACC) regions of interest. MRS was acquired on a 3 Tesla Siemens scanner and GABA and glutamate concentrations were referenced to creatine. Percent correct on the WM task indexed performance and correlation coefficients examined GABAergic or Glutamatergic facilitation of WM, with Fisher's Z transformation testing for group differences.ResultsThere were no group differences in GABA or glutamate concentrations, but WM correlations were reversed between groups. In patients, higher DLPFC GABA was associated with worse rather than better WM performance. This pattern was not observed for glutamate or in the ACC. Although under-powered, there was no indication of medication effects.Conclusions and relevanceResults cannot be explained by group differences in DLPFC GABA or glutamate concentrations but, instead, indicate that schizophrenia disrupts the GABAergic facilitation of WM seen in healthy individuals. Results appear to parallel post mortem findings in suggesting that schizophrenia alters the distribution of different classes of GABAergic interneurons rather than producing a general deficit across the total population of neurons.
- Published
- 2020
6. The birth experience and subsequent maternal caregiving attitudes and behavior: a birth cohort study
- Author
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Bell, AF, Rubin, LH, Davis, JM, Golding, J, Adejumo, OA, and Carter, CS
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Longitudinal Studies ,Maternal Behavior ,Mothers ,Object Attachment ,Parenting ,Parturition ,Postpartum Period ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Social Support ,ALSPAC ,Birth experience ,Maternal attitude ,Maternal behavior ,Systematic review ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry - Abstract
Optimal maternal caregiving is critical for children's healthy development, yet quality of maternal caregiving may be influenced by a negative birth experience. We examined whether the birth experience was associated with maternal caregiving attitudes and behavior throughout the first year. We conducted secondary analysis of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children birth cohort on perinatal data. The birth experience was assessed using self-report data on level of support in labor. Maternal caregiving variables were self-report maternal attitudes at one and eight postnatal months, and observed maternal behavior at 12 postnatal months. Data were analyzed using multivariable logistic regression models adjusting for critical covariates at one (N = 4389), eight (N = 4580), and 12 (N = 842) postnatal months. Feeling supported in labor was associated with a report of "immediately falling in love" with one's baby after birth, surveyed at 1 month (adjusted OR 1.41 [95% CI 1.20-1.65]), and with more positive parenting scores at 8 months (adjusted OR 1.56 [95% CI 1.36-1.79]), but not with more positive observed maternal behavior at 12 months. Additional risk factors were identified. Our findings suggest that we may be able to modify the risk of poor postnatal maternal caregiving by supporting women in labor and facilitating a positive birth experience.
- Published
- 2019
7. Behavioral and epigenetic consequences of oxytocin treatment at birth
- Author
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Kenkel, WM, Perkeybile, A-M, Yee, JR, Pournajafi-Nazarloo, H, Lillard, TS, Ferguson, EF, Wroblewski, KL, Ferris, CF, Carter, CS, and Connelly, JJ
- Subjects
Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Pediatric ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Neurological ,Animals ,Animals ,Newborn ,Arvicolinae ,Behavior ,Animal ,Brain ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Female ,Male ,Methylation ,Oxytocics ,Oxytocin ,Parturition ,Pregnancy ,Receptors ,Oxytocin ,Social Behavior - Abstract
Oxytocin is used in approximately half of all births in the United States during labor induction and/or augmentation. However, the effects of maternal oxytocin administration on offspring development have not been fully characterized. Here, we used the socially monogamous prairie vole to examine the hypothesis that oxytocin exposure at birth can have long-term developmental consequences. Maternally administered oxytocin increased methylation of the oxytocin receptor (Oxtr) in the fetal brain. As adults, oxytocin-exposed voles were more gregarious, with increased alloparental caregiving toward pups and increased close social contact with other adults. Cross-fostering indicated that these effects were the result of direct action on the offspring, rather than indirect effects via postnatal changes in maternal behavior. Male oxytocin-exposed offspring had increased oxytocin receptor density and expression in the brain as adults. These results show that long-term effects of perinatal oxytocin may be mediated by an epigenetic mechanism.
- Published
- 2019
8. Memory and cognition in schizophrenia
- Author
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Guo, JY, Ragland, JD, and Carter, CS
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Brain Disorders ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Schizophrenia ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Aetiology ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Adult ,Brain Mapping ,Cognition ,Cognition Disorders ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Female ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Memory ,Memory Disorders ,Memory ,Episodic ,Memory ,Short-Term ,Middle Aged ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Temporal Lobe ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Episodic memory deficits are consistently documented as a core aspect of cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia patients, present from the onset of the illness and strongly associated with functional disability. Over the past decade, research using approaches from experimental cognitive neuroscience revealed disproportionate episodic memory impairments in schizophrenia (Sz) under high cognitive demand relational encoding conditions and relatively unimpaired performance under item-specific encoding conditions. These specific deficits in component processes of episodic memory reflect impaired activation and connectivity within specific elements of frontal-medial temporal lobe circuits, with a central role for the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), relatively intact function of ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and variable results in the hippocampus. We propose that memory deficits can be understood within the broader context of cognitive deficits in Sz, where impaired DLPFC-related cognitive control has a broad impact across multiple cognitive domains. The therapeutic implications of these findings are discussed.
- Published
- 2019
9. Impact of schizophrenia on anterior and posterior hippocampus during memory for complex scenes
- Author
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Ragland, JD, Layher, E, Hannula, DE, Niendam, TA, Lesh, TA, Solomon, M, Carter, CS, and Ranganath, C
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Schizophrenia ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Illness ,Neurosciences ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Adult ,Brain Mapping ,Female ,Hippocampus ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Memory ,Episodic ,Spatial Memory ,Young Adult ,Neurocognition ,Episodic memory ,Eye tracking ,fMRI ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesHippocampal dysfunction has been proposed as a mechanism for memory deficits in schizophrenia. Available evidence suggests that the anterior and posterior hippocampus could be differentially affected. Accordingly, we used fMRI to test the hypothesis that activity in posterior hippocampus is disproportionately reduced in schizophrenia, particularly during spatial memory retrieval.Methods26 healthy participants and 24 patients with schizophrenia from the UC Davis Early Psychosis Program were studied while fMRI was acquired on a 3 Tesla Siemens scanner. During encoding, participants were oriented to critical items through questions about item features (e.g., "Does the lamp have a square shade?") or spatial location (e.g., "Is the lamp on the table next to the couch?"). At test, participants determined whether scenes were changed or unchanged. fMRI analyses contrasted activation in a priori regions of interest (ROI) in anterior and posterior hippocampus during correct recognition of item changes and spatial changes.ResultsAs predicted, patients with schizophrenia exhibited reduced activation in the posterior hippocampus during detection of spatial changes but not during detection of item changes. Unexpectedly, patients exhibited increased activation of anterior hippocampus during detection of item changes. Whole brain analyses revealed reduced fronto-parietal and striatal activation in patients for spatial but not for item change trials.ConclusionsResults suggest a gradient of hippocampal dysfunction in which posterior hippocampus - which is necessary for processing fine-grained spatial relationships - is underactive, and anterior hippocampus - which may process context more globally - is overactive.
- Published
- 2017
10. Deficits in anticipatory but not consummatory pleasure in people with recent-onset schizophrenia spectrum disorders.
- Author
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Mote, Jasmine, Minzenberg, Michael J, Carter, CS, and Kring, Ann M
- Subjects
Humans ,Acute Disease ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Psychological Tests ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Pleasure ,Anticipation ,Psychological ,Anhedonia ,Anticipatory pleasure ,Consummatory pleasure ,Psychosis ,Anticipation ,Psychological ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Psychiatry ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
The majority of studies examining self-reported anticipatory and consummatory pleasure in schizophrenia, as measured on the Temporal Experience of Pleasure Scale (TEPS), have been conducted on chronically ill people with the disorder. In this study, people with a recent-onset schizophrenia spectrum diagnosis (first psychotic episode within one year of study participation) (n=88) and people without a schizophrenia spectrum diagnosis (n=66) were administered the TEPS. People with a schizophrenia spectrum diagnosis reported significantly lower scores of anticipatory, but not consummatory, pleasure on the TEPS compared to the control group. TEPS anticipatory pleasure scores were also significantly, negatively correlated with negative symptoms, but neither TEPS anticipatory nor consummatory pleasure scores were significantly correlated with functioning measures. Our results replicate previous findings with chronically ill people with schizophrenia on the TEPS.
- Published
- 2014
11. Neuroendocrine mechanisms of social bonds and child-parent attachment, from the child’s perspective
- Author
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Bales, KL and Carter, CS
- Published
- 2021
12. The endocrinology of social relationships in rodents
- Author
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Carter, CS, Boone, E, Grippo, AJ, Ruscio, MG, and Bales, KL
- Published
- 2021
13. Neuroendocrine and Behavioural Responses to Exposure to an Infant in Male Prairie Voles
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Kenkel, WM, Paredes, J, Yee, JR, Pournajafi‐Nazarloo, H, Bales, KL, and Carter, CS
- Subjects
Aggression ,Animals ,Arvicolinae ,Behavior ,Animal ,Corticosterone ,Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone ,Female ,Housing ,Animal ,Male ,Oxytocin ,Paternal Behavior ,Random Allocation ,Social Behavior ,Vasopressins ,alloparental behaviour ,oxytocin ,vasopressin ,corticotrophin-releasing hormone ,pair-bonding ,prairie voles ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Endocrinology & Metabolism - Abstract
Paternal behaviour and pair-bond formation are defining characteristics of social monogamy. However, in comparison to pair-bonding, the endocrine factors associated with the male care of young are not well studied. In the present study, plasma concentrations of oxytocin, vasopressin and corticosterone (CORT) were measured in reproductively naïve male prairie voles as a function of exposure to an infant or control manipulations (i.e. handling or exposure to a wooden dowel). Plasma oxytocin concentrations were transiently elevated within 10 min of pup exposure. Although plasma CORT concentration typically increases after handling, after 10 min of pup exposure, the concentration of plasma CORT was not increased, suggesting an attenuation of CORT release by pup exposure. Group differences in the concentrations of plasma hormones were no longer detected at 20 or 60 min after treatment. These patterns of rapid change in the concentrations of plasma oxytocin and CORT were observed in both juvenile and adult males but not detected after control procedures. Plasma vasopressin, assessed only in adult males, did not vary as a function of pup exposure or other manipulations. In the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus, pup exposure also increased activation (as assessed by the measurement of c-Fos) of neurones that stained for either oxytocin or vasopressin, whereas it decreased c-Fos expression in neurones stained for corticotrophin-releasing hormone. In addition, brief pup exposure (20 min) facilitated subsequent partner preference formation when alloparental males and pup attackers were considered as a group. In the context of other studies, these data support the hypothesis that neuroendocrine changes associated with male alloparental behaviour are related to those implicated in pair-bonding.
- Published
- 2012
14. Neonatal oxytocin manipulations have long-lasting, sexually dimorphic effects on vasopressin receptors
- Author
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Bales, KL, Plotsky, PM, Young, LJ, Lim, MM, Grotte, N, Ferrer, E, and Carter, CS
- Subjects
Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Animals ,Animals ,Newborn ,Arvicolinae ,Autoradiography ,Female ,Globus Pallidus ,Male ,Mediodorsal Thalamic Nucleus ,Neostriatum ,Nucleus Accumbens ,Ornipressin ,Oxytocin ,Preoptic Area ,Receptors ,Dopamine D2 ,Receptors ,Vasopressin ,Septal Nuclei ,Septum of Brain ,Sex Characteristics ,Social Behavior ,oxytocin ,vasopressin ,dopamine ,monogamy ,pair-bonding ,development ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Developmental exposure to oxytocin (OT) or oxytocin antagonists (OTAs) has been shown to cause long-lasting and often sexually dimorphic effects on social behaviors in prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster). Because regulation of social behavior in monogamous mammals involves central receptors for OT, arginine vasopressin (AVP), and dopamine, we examined the hypothesis that the long-lasting, developmental effects of exposure to neonatal OT or OTA might reflect changes in the expression of receptors for these peptides. On postnatal day 1, prairie voles were injected intraperitoneally with either OT (1 mg/kg), an OTA (0.1 mg/kg), saline vehicle, or were handled only. At approximately 60 days of age, vasopressin V1a receptors, OT receptors (OTR) and dopamine D2 receptor binding were quantified using receptor autoradiography in brain tissue taken from males and females. Significant treatment effects on V1a binding were found in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST), cingulate cortex (CgCtx), mediodorsal thalamus (MdThal), medial preoptic area of the hypothalamus (MPOA), and lateral septum (LS). The CgCtx, MPOA, ventral pallidum, and LS also showed significant sex by treatment interactions on V1a binding. No significant treatment or sex differences were observed for D2 receptor binding. No significant treatment difference was observed for OTR receptor binding, and only a marginal sex difference. Changes in the neuropeptide receptor expression, especially the V1a receptor, may help to explain sexually dimorphic changes in behavior that follow comparable neonatal manipulations.
- Published
- 2007
15. neuropeptides influence expression of and capacity to form social bonds
- Author
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carter, CS, bales, KL, and porges, SW
- Subjects
Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology - Abstract
In the present commentary we expand on two concepts relevant to understanding affliliative bonding. Differences and similarities between the functions and actions of oxytocin and vasopressin are difficult to study but may be critical to an understanding of mechanisms for social bonding. What is termed here a "trait of affiliation" may reflect in part the capacity of these same peptides to program the developing nervous system. © 2005 Cambridge University Press.
- Published
- 2005
16. The endocrinology of social relationships in rodents
- Author
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Carter, CS, Carter, CS, Boone, E, Grippo, AJ, Ruscio, MG, Bales, KL, Carter, CS, Carter, CS, Boone, E, Grippo, AJ, Ruscio, MG, and Bales, KL
- Published
- 2022
17. Neuroendocrine mechanisms of social bonds and child-parent attachment, from the child’s perspective
- Author
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Bales, KL, Bales, KL, Carter, CS, Bales, KL, Bales, KL, and Carter, CS
- Published
- 2022
18. Elevated Extracellular Free-Water in a Multicentric First-Episode Psychosis Sample, Decrease During the First 2 Years of Illness
- Author
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Bergé D, Mané A, Lesh TA, Bioque M, Barcones F, Gonzalez-Pinto AM, Parellada M, Vieta E, Castro-Fornieles J, Rodriguez-Jimenez R, García-Portilla MP, Usall J, Carter CS, Bibiana Cabrera Llorca, Bernardo M, and Janssen J
- Abstract
Recent diffusion imaging studies using free-water (FW) elimination have shown increased FW in gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM) in first-episode psychosis (FEP) and lower corrected fractional anisotropy (FAt) in WM in chronic schizophrenia. However, little is known about the longitudinal stability and clinical significance of these findings. To determine tissue-specific FW and FAt abnormalities in FEP, as part of a multicenter Spanish study, 132 FEP and 108 healthy controls (HC) were clinically characterized and underwent structural and diffusion-weighted MRI scanning. FEP subjects were classified as schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SSD) or non-SSD. Of these subjects, 45 FEP and 41 HC were longitudinally assessed and rescanned after 2 years. FA and FW tissue-specific measurements were cross-sectional and longitudinally compared between groups using voxel-wise analyses in the skeletonized WM and vertex-wise analyses in the GM surface. SSD and non-SSD subjects showed (a) higher baseline FW in temporal regions and in whole GM average (P.adj(SSD vs HC) = .003, P.adj(Non-SSD vs HC) = .040) and (b) lower baseline FAt in several WM tracts. SSD, but not non-SSD, showed (a) higher FW in several WM tracts and in whole WM (P.adj(SSD vs HC)= .049) and (b) a significant FW decrease over time in temporal cortical regions and in whole GM average (P.adj = .011). Increased extracellular FW in the brain is a reliable finding in FEP, and in SSD appears to decrease over the early course of the illness. FAt abnormalities are stable during the first years of psychosis.
- Published
- 2020
19. Early Experience and the Developmental Programming of Oxytocin and Vasopressin
- Author
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Carter, CS, Boone, EM, and Bales, KL
- Abstract
This chapter describes how early hormonal experience might influence the offspring. Because of the complexity associated with the birth process, the experimental approaches described focus on direct treatments given to offspring during the immediate postnatal period. Initial investigations have centered around the effects of early experiences on social behaviors and neuroendocrine processes that are known to be, in later life, peptide dependent or strongly influenced by oxytocin (OT) or arginine vasopressin (AVP), a related neuropeptide. Studies subject involve prairie voles, a highly social rodent species in which OT and AVP have been shown to be of particular importance to behavior and physiology. The OT system has exceptional plasticity and may be affected by a variety of developmental factors. OT neurons in adult rats have been described as "immature." These neurons have the capacity to change shape and form new synapses, in part through changes in the glia that normally separate neurons. Both OT and AVP may directly or indirectly influence cellular growth, death or motility, inflammation, or differentiation. The potential to remodel the nervous system, especially in early life, offers another process through which OT or AVP may have effects on physiology and behavior. The OTR is also susceptible to epigenetic regulation, for example, by silencing genes via methylation. The capacity of genes that code for receptors to be silenced or otherwise modified in early life may be particularly relevant to understanding the long-lasting consequences of early experiences, whether originating as behavioral or hormonal experiences. © 2008 Copyright © 2008 Elsevier Inc.
- Published
- 2008
20. Neuropeptides and the Development of Social Behaviors
- Author
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Bales, KL and Carter, CS
- Abstract
This chapter provides an overview of the role of two mammalian neuropeptide hormones, oxytocin (OT) and arginine vasopressin (AVP), in the development and expression of social behaviors, including selective behaviors that are indicative of social bonds. It begins by giving a general background on social behavior in monogamous species, as well as the previously studied physiological and behavioral effects of OT and vasopressin. This is followed by a description of animal studies describing the role of OT and AVP during development. It then discusses current knowledge of possible developmental actions of OT and AVP, especially as these may be related to psychopathologies in later life.
- Published
- 2007
21. T cell-depleted granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) modified allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for hematological malignancy improves graft CD34+ cell content but is associated with delayed pancytopenia
- Author
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Mavroudis, DA, Read, EJ, Molldrem, J, Raptis, A, Plante, M, Carter, CS, Phang, S, Dunbar, CE, and Barrett, AJ
- Published
- 1998
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22. Neuroendocrine mechanisms of social bonds and child-parent attachment, from the child’s perspective
- Author
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Bales, KL and Carter, CS
- Published
- 2016
23. INTRODUCTION
- Author
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Carter Cs, Lederhendler I, and Kirkpatrick B
- Subjects
Social stress ,Aggression ,General Neuroscience ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Experimental research ,Neurochemical ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Expression (architecture) ,Isolation (psychology) ,medicine ,General knowledge ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Social behavior - Abstract
The research presented at this conference, including a series of excellent posters from junior investigators, documents the pervasive importance of affiliation and other social behaviors. Affiliative behaviors interact with, but are distinct from reproductive and aggressive behaviors. Patterns of social behaviors tend to be more species-typical than the behaviors associated with reproduction or aggression. However, neural circuits necessary for approach or avoidance also are necessary for the expression of various types of affiliative behavior such as maternal behavior or pair-bond formation. Furthermore, candidate neurochemical systems have been identified that contribute to various types of affiliative behavior. For example, studies revealing new behavioral functions for steroid hormones of the adrenal axis, such as corticosterone, and neuropeptides, including the endorphins, oxytocin and vasopressin, extend our general knowledge of neurobiology; they may also lead to studies that expand our understanding of social behavior and the connections to systems that regulate emotions. The work represented in this volume also has important implications for the study of serious neuropsychiatric disorders. For example, episodes of certain of these disorders can be induced by social stressors; in other disorders, a marked decrease in affiliative behaviors is a prominent feature of the patients' difficulties. Furthermore, abnormalities in animal systems implicated in the neurobiology of affiliation (oxytocin, vasopressin, and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system) have also been documented for major depression in humans. Animal models, such as those described at this conference, offer evolutionary perspectives, from which it is possible to extract general principles. At the same time, our understanding of the mechanistic and neurobiological substrates of both constructive and destructive social behaviors is increasing. At the conference, the evolutionary and mechanistic perspectives converged on the theme that studies of affiliative behaviors cannot be fully interpreted in isolation from other social behaviors; neither can they effectively be isolated from the biological and social contexts that shape their expression. Advances in this research area seem dependent on integrating experimental research across levels of analysis. Although this task is challenging, we are confident that an awareness of integrative principles can lead to new and important research opportunities.
- Published
- 1997
24. Perinatal Steroid Treatments Alter Alloparental and Affiliative Behavior in Prairie Voles
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Carter Cs, Gustafson Ea, Zullo A, and Roberts Rl
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Corticosterone ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Microtus ,Alloparenting ,Testosterone ,Sex Characteristics ,biology ,Arvicolinae ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,biology.organism_classification ,Androgen ,chemistry ,Maternal Exposure ,Female ,Steroids ,Psychology ,Sex characteristics ,Hormone - Abstract
This experiment was designed to examine the hypothesis that perinatal manipulation of gonadal or adrenal steroids can alter the subsequent expression of juvenile parental (alloparenting) and affiliative behavior in prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster). Corticosterone (PRECORT), testosterone (PRE-TP), or oil injections (PRESES) were given on Prenatal Days 12-20 or on Postnatal Days 1-6 (CORT6, TP6, or SES6, respectively). Alloparenting was reduced significantly in females in the CORT6 group and in males in the TP6 group. Sibling affiliative preferences were increased significantly in PRE-TP females and stranger preferences were increased in TP6 and CORT6 females. The results suggest timing is a critical factor determining whether hormones have a facilitative or inhibitory effect on alloparental and affiliative behavior in prairie voles. In this species, corticosterone and testosterone have similar organizational effects on affiliative behavior in females. Alloparental behavior is inhibited by postnatal corticosterone administration in females and by postnatal testosterone administration in males, whereas prenatal steroid administration had no significant effect on alloparenting in either gender.
- Published
- 1996
25. Axon-sparing lesions of the medial nucleus of the amygdala decrease affiliative behaviors in the prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster): Behavioral and anatomical specificity
- Author
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Thomas R. Insel, Newman Sw, Brian Kirkpatrick, and Carter Cs
- Subjects
biology ,Central nervous system ,biology.organism_classification ,Amygdala ,Prairie vole ,Lesion ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Neurotransmitter ,Psychology ,Paternal care ,Neuroscience ,Nucleus - Abstract
The neural basis of affiliative behavior was examined in the prairie vole, a rodent that exhibits high levels of social contact and paternal behavior. In the first study, the axon-sparing excitotoxin N-methyl-D,L-aspartic acid (NMA) produced lesions in the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala or the corticomedial amygdala. Males with corticomedial lesions showed significantly less contact with a familiar adult female and a pup when compared with males with lesions of the basolateral nucleus or controls. This behavioral change was not associated with changes in exploratory behavior, motor function, performance in an olfactory task, fearfulness, physical well-being, or body temperature. In a second study, NMA lesions restricted to the medial nucleus also decreased paternal behavior. Neurons in the medial nucleus of the amygdala appear to be essential for the normal expression of paternal care in this species.
- Published
- 1994
26. Consequences of early experiences and exposure to oxytocin and vasopressin are sexually dimorphic
- Author
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Carter, CS, Boone, EM, Pournajafi-Nazarloo, H, and Bales, KL
- Subjects
sense organs ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
In the socially monogamous prairie vole, we have observed that small changes in early handling, as well as early hormonal manipulations can have long-lasting and sexually dimorphic effects on behavior. These changes may be mediated in part by changes in parental interactions with their young, acting on systems that rely on oxytocin (OT) and arginine vasopressin (AVP). Knowledge of both endogenous and exogenous influences on systems that rely on OT and AVP may be helpful in understanding sexually dimorphic developmental disorders, such as autism, that are characterized by increased anxiety and deficits in social behavior. © 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel.
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- 2009
27. Effects of enalapril and losartan on mitochondrial apoptosis in rat skeletal muscle
- Author
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Carter, Cs, Marzetti, Emanuele, Dupree, J, Seo, Do, Morgan, D, and Giovannini, S
- Subjects
ACE-inhibitors ,Settore MED/09 - MEDICINA INTERNA ,Mitochondrion - Published
- 2009
28. Context processing performance in bipolar disorder patients
- Author
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paolo brambilla, Macdonald, Aw, Sassi, Rb, Johnson, Mk, Mallinger, Ag, Carter, Cs, and Soares, Jc
- Published
- 2007
29. Effects of stress on parental care are sexually dimorphic in prairie voles
- Author
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Bales, KL, Kramer, KM, Lewis-Reese, AD, and Carter, CS
- Subjects
psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
The effects of stress on parental care are poorly understood, especially in biparental species where males also display care. Data from previous studies in prairie voles, as well as parallels with pair-bonding behavior, suggest the hypothesis that a stressful experience might facilitate parental care in males but not in females. In the present study, male and female prairie voles were exposed to either a 3-min swim stressor or no stressor; 45 min later each animal was tested in a parental care paradigm. Following the parental care test, blood samples were collected and assayed for corticosterone (CORT). After the stressor males, but not females, showed significant changes in parental behavior including significantly more time in kyphosis (arched-back huddling), and a tendency to spend more time licking and grooming pups. In males, CORT levels measured following the parental care test were inversely related to licking and grooming but positively correlated with retrievals. These findings support earlier studies suggesting that the neuroendocrine substrates of parental behavior, as well as the effects of stressors, are sexually dimorphic in this species. © 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2006
30. Neonatal manipulation of oxytocin alters oxytocin levels in the pituitary of adult rats
- Author
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Young E, Caldwell Jd, Carter Cs, and Cushing Bs
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Radioimmunoassay ,Neuropeptide ,Hypothalamus, Middle ,Oxytocin ,Biochemistry ,Oxytocin Antagonist ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Male rats ,Medicine ,Animals ,Postnatal day ,Saline ,Sex Characteristics ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,General Medicine ,Postnatal treatment ,Preoptic Area ,Rats ,Animals, Newborn ,Hypothalamus ,Pituitary Gland ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) and its OT antagonists (OTA) in infant rats affect their behavior as adults. In this study we attempted to determine whether treating rats on the day of birth (postnatal day 1) with OT or OTA would affect brain OT levels of these rats as adults. Rat pups were injected with OT (3 microg), OTA (0.3 microg) or saline vehicle ip on postnatal day 1. As 60-day-old adults, treated rats were killed, and the OT content in their medial preoptic areas (MPOAs), medial hypothalami (MH) and pituitaries were assayed. In females, treatment with OTA on postnatal day 1 significantly decreased pituitary OT levels as adults. In males, by contrast, treatment with OTA on postnatal day 1 resulted in increased pituitary OT levels when they become adults compared to male rats treated with OT on postnatal day 1. There were no significant effects of neonatal treatment on OT levels in either the MH or MPOA. Day 1 postnatal treatment with OT or OTA had a long-term sexually dimorphic effect on OT levels in the pituitary.
- Published
- 2005
31. Sex differences and developmental effects of oxytocin on aggression and social behavior in prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster)
- Author
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Bales, KL and Carter, CS
- Published
- 2003
32. Developmental exposure to oxytocin facilitates partner preferences in male prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster)
- Author
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Bales, KL and Carter, CS
- Published
- 2003
33. Effects of enalapril and losartan on mitochondrial apoptosis in rat skeletal muscle
- Author
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Carter, C, Marzetti, Emanuele, Dupree, J, Seo, Do, Morgan, D, Giovannini, S, Carter CS, Marzetti E (ORCID:0000-0001-9567-6983), DuPree J, Seo DO, Morgan D, Giovannini S, Carter, C, Marzetti, Emanuele, Dupree, J, Seo, Do, Morgan, D, Giovannini, S, Carter CS, Marzetti E (ORCID:0000-0001-9567-6983), DuPree J, Seo DO, Morgan D, and Giovannini S
- Abstract
N/A
- Published
- 2009
34. Anterior cingulate cortex, cognitive dissonance, and attitude change: Evidence from a Solomon four-group design.
- Author
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van Veen, V, primary, Krug, MK, additional, Schooler, JW, additional, and Carter, CS, additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Oxytocin administration, but not social housing condition, reduces growth rate of human breast cancer xenografts (MCF7) in SCID mice.
- Author
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Weihs, KL, primary, Frank, DH, additional, Roe, DJ, additional, Pournajafi-Nazarloo, H, additional, and Carter, CS, additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Extended-cycle elutriation to adjust T-cell content in HLA-disparate bone marrow transplantation
- Author
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Quinones, RR, primary, Gutierrez, RH, additional, Dinndorf, PA, additional, Gress, RE, additional, Ney, AB, additional, Taylor, B, additional, Karandish, S, additional, Carter, CS, additional, Luban, NL, additional, and Reaman, GH, additional
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. 24-hour autonomic dysfunction and depressive behaviors in an animal model of social isolation: implications for the study of depression and cardiovascular disease.
- Author
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Grippo AJ, Carter CS, McNeal N, Chandler DL, Larocca MA, Bates SL, Porges SW, Grippo, Angela J, Carter, C Sue, McNeal, Neal, Chandler, Danielle L, Larocca, Meagan A, Bates, Suzanne L, and Porges, Stephen W
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. CNTRICS final task selection: social cognitive and affective neuroscience-based measures.
- Author
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Carter CS, Barch DM, Gur R, Pinkham A, and Ochsner K
- Abstract
This article describes the results and recommendations of the third Cognitive Neuroscience Treatment Research to Improve Cognition in Schizophrenia meeting related to measuring treatment effects on social and affective processing. At the first meeting, it was recommended that measurement development focuses on the construct of emotion identification and responding. Five Tasks were nominated as candidate measures for this construct via the premeeting web-based survey. Two of the 5 tasks were recommended for immediate translation, the Penn Emotion Recognition Task and the Facial Affect Recognition and the Effects of Situational Context, which provides a measure of emotion identification and responding as well as a related, higher level construct, context-based modulation of emotional responding. This article summarizes the criteria-based, consensus building analysis of each nominated task that led to these 2 paradigms being recommended as priority tasks for development as measures of treatment effects on negative symptoms in schizophrenia. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Depression-like behavior and stressor-induced neuroendocrine activation in female prairie voles exposed to chronic social isolation.
- Author
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Grippo AJ, Cushing BS, Carter CS, Grippo, Angela J, Cushing, Bruce S, and Carter, C Sue
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Comparison of automated culture systems with a CFR/USP-compliant method for sterility testing of cell-therapy products.
- Author
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Khuu, HM, Stock, F, McGann, M, Carter, CS, Atkins, JW, Murray, PR, and Read, EJ
- Subjects
CELL culture ,CELLULAR therapy ,INFERTILITY ,PUBLIC health ,FUNGI ,BACTERIA - Abstract
Background Although widely used, commercially available automated culture methods are not US Food and Drug Administration-approved for sterility testing of cell-therapy products. For cell-therapy products regulated under Section 351 of the Public Health Service Act, sterility testing must be performed by the methods described in 21 CFR 610.12 and USP <71> (CFR/USP method), or by methods demonstrated to be equivalent. Methods Two automated methods, BacT/Alert (BTA; bioMerieux) and Bactec (Becton Dickinson), were compared with the CFR/USP method. Representative mononuclear cell (MNC) products were formulated using six different product media. MNC product aliquots containing 10-50×10 6 cells in a 0.5 mL volume were seeded with organisms, and cultured for 14 days in aerobic and anaerobic bottles of each system. Ten different organisms at target concentrations of 10 and 50 colony-forming units (CFU) per bottle were tested. Results Positives were detected in a mean (range) of 72% (7-100%) of cultures for CFR/USP, 82% (0-100%) for BTA, and 93% (57-100%) for Bactec. For nine of the 10 organisms tested, overall detection rates for BTA and Bactec were equivalent to or higher than CFR/USP. Of the six product media tested, detection of organisms was impaired only by the medium containing multiple antibiotics: this occurred in all three systems. Both BTA and Bactec had shorter times to detection than the CFR/USP method, with overall means (ranges) of 87 (24-264) h for CFR/USP, 24 (12-54) h for BTA, and 33 (12-80) h for Bactec. Detection occurred consistently within 7 days for both BTA and Bactec, but not for CFR/USP. Discussion Both BTA and Bactec are superior to the CFR/USP method for overall detection and time to detection of organisms in MNC products suspended in commonly used media. These data support general use of either BTA or Bactec for sterility testing of a variety of cell-therapy products, and suggest that a 7-day culture period is sufficient to detect clinically relevant organisms. These results confirm the need for bacteriostasis and fungistasis testing of antibiotic-containing products, even when antibiotic-binding substances are used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Catastrophic failures of freezing bags for cellular therapy products: description, cause, and consequences.
- Author
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Khuu, HM, Cowley, H, David-Ocampo, V, Carter, CS, Kasten-Sportes, C, Wayne, AS, Solomon, SR, Bishop, MR, Childs, RM, and Read, EJ
- Subjects
CELLULAR therapy ,CRYOPRESERVATION of organs, tissues, etc. ,LYMPHOCYTES ,LIQUID nitrogen ,MICROBIAL contamination - Abstract
Background: Container integrity is critical for maintaining sterility of cryopreserved cellular therapy products. We investigated a series of catastrophic bag failures, first noticed in early 2001. Methods: Process records were reviewed for all PBPC and lymphocyte products cryopreserved in bags from January 2000 through April 2002. Patient charts were also reviewed. Results: One thousand two hundred and four bags were removed from storage for infusion to 261 patients. All products had been cryopreserved in Cryocyte poly(ethylene co-vinyl acetate) (EVA) bags in either 10% DMSO or 5% DMSO and 6% pentastarch. Product volumes were 25-75 mL, and bags were stored with overwrap bags in a liquid nitrogen tank. From January 2000 to April 2001, failure occurred in 10 of 599 (1.7%) bags. From May 2001 to April 2002, 58 of 605 (9.6%) bags failed, typically with extensive fractures that were visible before thaw. Of the 58 that failed, 24 were salvaged by aseptic methods and infused to patients under antibiotic coverage; 10 of those 24 (42%) had positive bacterial cultures. Bag failures were not related to product type, cryoprotectant solution, liquid versus vapor storage, or freezer location. Failures were linked to use of four Cryocyte bag lots manufactured in 2000 and 2001. After replacing these lots with a 1999 Cryocyte lot and with KryoSafe polyfluoroethylene polyfluoropropylene (FEP) bags, no more failures occurred in 75 and 102 bags, respectively, thawed through April 2002. Discussion: High rates of bag failure were associated with four Cryocyte bag lots. No serious adverse patient effects occurred, but bag failures led to microbial contamination, increased product preparation time, increased antibiotic use, and increased resource expenditure to replace products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Optimized clinical-scale culture conditions for ex vivo selective depletion of host-reactive donor lymphocytes: a strategy for GvHD prophylaxis in allogeneic PBSC transplantation.
- Author
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Solomon, SR, Tran, T, Carter, CS, Donnelly, S, Hensel, N, Schindler, J, Bahceci, E, Ghetie, V, Michálek, J, Mavroudis, D, Read, EJ, Vitetta, ES, and Barrett, AJ
- Subjects
GRAFT versus host disease ,LYMPHOCYTES ,CELLS ,STEM cells ,CELL transplantation - Abstract
Background: Ex vivo selective depletion (SD) is a strategy to prevent GvHD, in which host-reactive donor lymphocytes are selectively eliminated from a PBSC allograft while conserving useful donor immune function. Prior to testing this strategy in patients, our goal was to develop a clinical-scale SD process, which involves co-culture of donor lymphocytes and irradiated recipient cells, followed by the addition of an immunotoxin (IT) directed against the α-chain of the IL-2 receptor (CD25), expressed on activated donor T cells. Methods: Stimulator cells were generated from immunomagnetically selected and expanded recipient T lymphocytes. Donor PBMCs from G-CSF-mobilized peripheral blood were co-cultured for 72 h with irradiated stimulator cells. Alloreactive T cells were targeted for elimination by the addition of the anti-CD25 IT, RFT5-SMPT-dgA, and the IT enhancer, NH[sub 4]Cl. Results: Stimulator-cell selection/expansion yielded > 2×10[sup 10] highly enriched CD3[sup +] cells (98.9 ± 2.2%). After SD, cell recovery was 68.5 ± 23.3% and viability was 84.6 ± 6.4%. This permitted a potential T-cell dose ≥ 1 × 10[sup 8] CD3[sup +] cells kg[sup -1] to transplant recipients. Although SD donor lymphocytes retained little proliferative capacity against the original stimulator cells (2.6 ± 0.6%), responses were conserved against third party cells (107.6 ± 18.6%), the bacterial superantigen staphylococcus enterotoxin B (108.2 ± 4.2%), and CMV Ag (72.1 ± 3.8%). Discussion: We have demonstrated that ex vivo SD is feasible in clinical-scale culture conditions. The ability of this strategy to prevent GvHD is the subject of an ongoing clinical trial, in which the SD lymphocyte product is transplanted in conjunction with a T cell-depleted PBSC allograft. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Development of a closed-system process for clinical-scale generation of DCs: evaluation of two monocyte-enrichment methods and two culture containers.
- Author
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Wong, ECC, Lee, SM, Hines, K, Lee, J, Carter, CS, Kopp, W, Bender, J, and Read, EJ
- Subjects
DENDRITIC cells ,IMMUNOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS ,MONOCYTES ,LEUCOCYTES - Abstract
Background Clinical immunotherapy trials using DCs depend on large-scale methods for DC generation that fulfil current good manufacturing practice requirements. Our goal was to develop data on two variables, monocyte-enrichment method and culture container, which could be used to design a closed-system process for ex vivo generation of immature DCs. Methods Mononuclear cells were collected by leukapheresis and enriched for monocytes by either counterflow centrifugal elutriation, or immunomagnetic selection using Isolex, an automated closed-system device. Monocytes were cultured for 7 days in serum-free medium with GM-CSF and IL-4, using either plastic flasks or gas-permeable Stericell bags. Monocytes and cultured DCs were evaluated for yield, flow cytometric phenotype, and in vitro function in MLR, and autologous recall responses to tetanus toxoid and influenza virus. Results Enriched monocyte products from elutriation and immunomagnetic selection were equivalent in yield and purity, and were capable of generating immature DCs in either flasks or bags. DCs from all four culture conditions were equivalent in yield, phenotype, and in vitro function. Mean DC yield was 67–80% per seeding monocyte, and 11–13% per starting mononuclear cell (MNC). A leukapheresis product containing 5 × 10[sup 9] MNCs processed by this method could therefore yield approximately 5 × 10[sup 8] immature DCs. Discussion In this manufacturing process, the Isolex system was equivalent to elutriation, and Stericell bags were equivalent to flasks. Together, the Isolex system and Stericell bags can be incorporated into a closed-system process to generate immature DCs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Chest pain: it's not cardiac -- what next?
- Author
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Carter CS, Disla E, Katz PO, and Richter JE
- Abstract
Noncardiac chest pain poses a common diagnostic challenge that contributes substantially to morbidity and health care costs. A careful evaluation is required to make an accurate, cost-effective diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
45. Granulocyte transfusion therapy in a child with chronic granulomatous disease and multiple red cell alloantibodies
- Author
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Depalma, L, primary, Leitman, SF, additional, Carter, CS, additional, and Gallin, JI, additional
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Use of a continuous-flow cell separator in density gradient isolation of lymphocytes
- Author
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Carter, CS, primary, Leitman, SF, additional, Cullis, H, additional, Muul, LM, additional, Nason-Burchenal, K, additional, Rosenberg, SA, additional, and Klein, HG, additional
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Conflict of interest-- an issue for every psychiatrist.
- Author
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Freedman R, Lewis DA, Michels R, Pine DS, Schultz SK, Tamminga CA, Andreasen NC, Brady KT, Brent DA, Brzustowicz L, Carter CS, Eisenberg L, Goldman H, Javitt DC, Leibenluft E, Lieberman JA, Milrod B, Oquendo MA, Rosenbaum JF, and Rush AJ
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Reporting checklists in neuroimaging: promoting transparency, replicability, and reproducibility.
- Author
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Ekhtiari H, Zare-Bidoky M, Sangchooli A, Valyan A, Abi-Dargham A, Cannon DM, Carter CS, Garavan H, George TP, Ghobadi-Azbari P, Juchem C, Krystal JH, Nichols TE, Öngür D, Pernet CR, Poldrack RA, Thompson PM, and Paulus MP
- Subjects
- Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Research Design standards, Neuroimaging methods, Neuroimaging standards, Checklist standards, Checklist methods
- Abstract
Neuroimaging plays a crucial role in understanding brain structure and function, but the lack of transparency, reproducibility, and reliability of findings is a significant obstacle for the field. To address these challenges, there are ongoing efforts to develop reporting checklists for neuroimaging studies to improve the reporting of fundamental aspects of study design and execution. In this review, we first define what we mean by a neuroimaging reporting checklist and then discuss how a reporting checklist can be developed and implemented. We consider the core values that should inform checklist design, including transparency, repeatability, data sharing, diversity, and supporting innovations. We then share experiences with currently available neuroimaging checklists. We review the motivation for creating checklists and whether checklists achieve their intended objectives, before proposing a development cycle for neuroimaging reporting checklists and describing each implementation step. We emphasize the importance of reporting checklists in enhancing the quality of data repositories and consortia, how they can support education and best practices, and how emerging computational methods, like artificial intelligence, can help checklist development and adherence. We also highlight the role that funding agencies and global collaborations can play in supporting the adoption of neuroimaging reporting checklists. We hope this review will encourage better adherence to available checklists and promote the development of new ones, and ultimately increase the quality, transparency, and reproducibility of neuroimaging research., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to American College of Neuropsychopharmacology.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The relationship between cardiac activity, behaviour and endogenous oxytocin and vasopressin in Prader-Willi Syndrome: An exploratory study.
- Author
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Rice LJ, Agu J, Carter CS, Cho YH, Harris J, Heilman K, Nazarloo HP, Naanai H, Porges S, and Einfeld SL
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Adolescent, Oxytocin blood, Oxytocin metabolism, Prader-Willi Syndrome physiopathology, Prader-Willi Syndrome metabolism, Heart Rate physiology, Vasopressins metabolism, Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia physiology
- Abstract
This study aimed to increase our understanding of cardiac activity abnormalities in Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) and the relationship between cardiac activity, PWS behaviours thought to be associated with cardiac vagal tone and endogenous oxytocin and vasopressin levels. We compared cardiac activity (respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA), low-frequency heart rate variability (LF-HRV), heart period) in 30 adolescents and adults with PWS to 30 typically developing age-matched controls. RSA, LF-HRV, and heart period were lower in individuals with PWS than in the control group. In the control group, RSA was higher for females than males. However, for those with PWS, there was no difference between the sexes. Individuals with the mUPD genetic subtype had lower RSA and LF-HRV than participants with the PWS deletion subtype and compared to typically developing controls, no difference was found between the latter two groups. Heart period was also lower for those with mUPD compared to controls. Higher RSA reduced the odds of having temper outbursts and skin-picking. RSA was lower in those with PWS and psychosis compared to those with PWS without psychosis. Finally, we found RSA correlated with vasopressin for those with mUPD but not deletion. There was no relationship between RSA and oxytocin plasma or saliva levels. Our findings suggest autonomic dysfunction in PWS that is more marked in mUPD than deletion and potentially due to greater loss of parasympathetic activity in mUPD., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Effects of human-animal interaction on salivary and urinary oxytocin in children and dogs.
- Author
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Gnanadesikan GE, King KM, Carranza E, Flyer AC, Ossello G, Smith PG, Steklis NG, Steklis HD, Carter CS, Connelly JJ, Barnett M, Gee N, Tecot SR, and MacLean EL
- Subjects
- Animals, Dogs, Humans, Male, Female, Child, Child, Preschool, Human-Animal Bond, Oxytocin urine, Oxytocin metabolism, Saliva chemistry, Saliva metabolism, Receptors, Oxytocin metabolism, Social Behavior, Human-Animal Interaction
- Abstract
Oxytocin pathways are hypothesized to play important roles in human-animal interactions and may contribute to some benefits of these interspecific social relationships. We explored the effects of naturalistic interactions between children and dogs on oxytocin release in both species, as well as associations between methylation of the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTRm), social behavior, and oxytocin response in this context. Children (N = 55) participated in a within-subjects design involving a) interaction with their pet dog, b) interaction with an unfamiliar dog, and c) a nonsocial control condition (solitary play). We used immunoassays to measure salivary and urinary oxytocin in both the children and dogs, behavioral coding to characterize dog-child interactions, and bisulfite sequencing to quantify methylation of the oxytocin receptor gene (N = 32 children). Child salivary oxytocin decreased moderately across time in all conditions, but the extent of this effect varied between conditions, with greater oxytocin output during interactions with dogs than the control condition. In the pet dog condition, children's salivary oxytocin response was positively associated with the duration of visual co-orientation between the child and dog. Child urinary oxytocin did not deviate substantially from baseline in any condition. Children with higher levels of OXTRm had greater oxytocin output during interactions with their pet dogs, but lower oxytocin output in the control condition, and engaged in lower levels of affectionate interaction with dogs across conditions. Children's pet dogs exhibited increases in salivary oxytocin, but we observed the opposite pattern in the unfamiliar dog, who exhibited decreases in both urinary and salivary oxytocin on average. Collectively, our results support the hypothesis that oxytocin pathways may shape and respond to social interactions between children and dogs, highlighting an important role for companion animals in child development., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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