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Loessner A, Alavi A, Lewandrowski KU, Mozley D, Souder E, Gur RE. Regional cerebral function determined by FDG-PET in healthy volunteers: normal patterns and changes with age. J Nucl Med 1995; 36:1141-9. [PMID: 7790936] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/27/2023] Open
Abstract
UNLABELLED The main objective of this study was to determine patterns of regional brain metabolic activity utilizing high-resolution PET in normal healthy volunteers and variations in different age groups. METHODS High-resolution [18F]FDG PET images of the entire brain were obtained in 120 healthy normal volunteers (64 men, 56 women), age range from 19 to 79 yr. Each anatomic region was assessed using a qualitative rating scale with a score ranging from 1 to 6 (1 = definitely normal and 6 = definitely abnormal). Local metabolic activity was also estimated as showing increased (+) or decreased (-) compared to normal (0) states. RESULTS The most consistent finding in normal aging was decreased cortical metabolism, particularly in the frontal lobes. Temporal, parietal and occipital lobe metabolism varied considerably among subjects within the same age group as well as over decades. Basal ganglia, hippocampal area, thalami, cerebellum, posterior cingulate gyrus and visual cortex remained metabolically unchanged with advancing age. CONCLUSION These data indicate that qualitative interpretation of FDG-PET images allows accurate assessment of regional metabolic activity of the brain in normal subjects similar to those described with quantitative techniques. Adequate knowledge of normal variations and changes related to normal aging is necessary for optimal assessment of pathologic states.
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Affiliation(s)
- A Loessner
- Department of Radiology, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
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102
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Affiliation(s)
- R C Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
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103
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Arnold SE, Gur RE, Shapiro RM, Fisher KR, Moberg PJ, Gibney MR, Gur RC, Blackwell P, Trojanowski JQ. Prospective clinicopathologic studies of schizophrenia: accrual and assessment of patients. Am J Psychiatry 1995; 152:731-7. [PMID: 7726313 DOI: 10.1176/ajp.152.5.731] [Citation(s) in RCA: 76] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to characterize the neuropsychiatric profile of elderly patients with schizophrenia and establish a patient registry for prospective ante-mortem and post-mortem studies. METHOD Medical records of all chronically institutionalized patients in eight state hospitals who were over the age of 65 and had a chart diagnosis of schizophrenia (N = 528) were reviewed. Of the potential subjects, 192 were excluded because of clinical histories inconsistent with a diagnosis of schizophrenia, 56 because of insufficient information to establish a psychiatric diagnosis, and 122 because of family members' refusal to give consent for autopsy in the event of death. To date, 81 of the remaining 158 patients have undergone neuropsychiatric evaluation with standard assessment instruments. RESULTS Mini-Mental State scores of the 81 patients indicated severe dementia, and Functional Assessment Scale scores showed that patients required assistance with activities of daily living. All patients were rated as severely ill on the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale. Ratings on the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms and the Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms indicated a predominance of negative symptoms over positive. Of 30 patients who have died to date, research autopsies have been conducted on 26. CONCLUSIONS Establishing a well characterized, prospective patient registry for clinicopathologic studies of schizophrenia is feasible but labor intensive. Diagnosis of schizophrenia with a high degree of confidence can be achieved by means of detailed chart review and assessment of current neuropsychiatric functioning with standard rating instruments. These data provide a basis for correlations of clinicopathologic factors.
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Affiliation(s)
- S E Arnold
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104-4283, USA
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104
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Arnold SE, Franz BR, Gur RC, Gur RE, Shapiro RM, Moberg PJ, Trojanowski JQ. Smaller neuron size in schizophrenia in hippocampal subfields that mediate cortical-hippocampal interactions. Am J Psychiatry 1995; 152:738-48. [PMID: 7726314 DOI: 10.1176/ajp.152.5.738] [Citation(s) in RCA: 225] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE The goal of this study was to characterize the hippocampal formation in patients with schizophrenia by measuring neuron density, neuron size, and variability of neuronal axis orientation. METHOD Brain tissue was obtained at autopsy from 14 prospectively accrued elderly patients with chronic schizophrenia and 10 age-compatible individuals without psychiatric disorder. Eight hippocampal regions of interest and two internal control regions (primary motor and visual cortices) were identified on Nissl-stained sections. Morphometric measurements were made without knowledge of diagnosis by means of a computer-based image analysis system. RESULTS The patients exhibited smaller neuron size in the hippocampal regions relative to the control regions, which was significant only for the subiculum, CA1, and layer II of the entorhinal cortex. Neuron size in the control regions was nearly identical in the two groups. No significant differences in neuron density or in variability of neuronal axis orientation were identified for any region. There was no correlation between neuron size in any area and several potentially confounding variables (age, post-mortem interval, neuroleptic exposure, sex, brain hemisphere studied, duration of illness), with the exception of a negative correlation with age in layer II of the entorhinal cortex. Regression analyses indicated that the findings could not be attributed to these age effects. CONCLUSIONS The subiculum, entorhinal cortex, and CA1 are the major subfields of the hippocampal region that maintain the afferent and efferent connections of the hippocampus with widespread cortical and subcortical targets. The smaller size of neurons in these subfields may reflect the presence of structural or functional impairments that disrupt these connections, which in turn could have important behavioral sequelae.
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Affiliation(s)
- S E Arnold
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104-4283, USA
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105
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Gur RC, Mozley LH, Mozley PD, Resnick SM, Karp JS, Alavi A, Arnold SE, Gur RE. Sex differences in regional cerebral glucose metabolism during a resting state. Science 1995; 267:528-31. [PMID: 7824953 DOI: 10.1126/science.7824953] [Citation(s) in RCA: 251] [Impact Index Per Article: 8.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/27/2023]
Abstract
Positron emission tomography was used to evaluate the regional distribution of cerebral glucose metabolism in 61 healthy adults at rest. Although the profile of metabolic activity was similar for men and women, some sex differences and hemispheric asymmetries were detectable. Men had relatively higher metabolism than women in temporal-limbic regions and cerebellum and relatively lower metabolism in cingulate regions. In both sexes, metabolism was relatively higher in left association cortices and the cingulate region and in right ventro-temporal limbic regions and their projections. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that differences in cognitive and emotional processing have biological substrates.
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Affiliation(s)
- R C Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104
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106
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Abstract
Two-week test-retest reliabilities were determined for two tachistoscopic tasks, consonant-vowel-consonant trigrams and dot location, in 48 right-handed university students. Both visual field and laterality scores were examined. Analysis of variance showed no significant main effects or interactions of session for either task, indicating stability of mean performance and laterality scores. Likewise, grouping subjects as "high" or "low" by median laterality scores showed concordance across sessions for both tasks. Test-retest correlations were moderately high for all verbal task measures and for visual field scores for the dot location test. However, laterality indices for dot location showed low stability despite comparable within-session reliabilities of laterality scores for the two tasks. These findings suggest stability of group means and subgroups for verbal and dot location tachistoscopic measures. However, the degree to which individual scores are predictable from one session to the next differs between the two tasks.
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Affiliation(s)
- S M Resnick
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4283
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107
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Abstract
Characterization of Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) in adults has been hampered by an absence of well-defined clinical profiles on objective personality measures. A sample of 22 ADD adults completed personality testing (MMPI) in conjunction with cognitive assessment. A sample of 30 normal controls and 20 patients diagnosed with schizophrenia, who had completed the MMPI as part of a larger research protocol, were utilized as comparison groups. Validity and clinical scales revealed multiple elevations in the ADD group which were similar in nature but not to the same degree as elevations observed in the schizophrenia group. Harris-Lingoes subscales identified the sources of clinical scale elevations indicating a pattern of specific and nonspecific symptomatology which differentiated the three groups. The results may aid in identifying ADD in adults.
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Affiliation(s)
- J A Holdnack
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, USA
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108
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Cannon TD, Zorrilla LE, Shtasel D, Gur RE, Gur RC, Marco EJ, Moberg P, Price RA. Neuropsychological functioning in siblings discordant for schizophrenia and healthy volunteers. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1994; 51:651-61. [PMID: 8042914 DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.1994.03950080063009] [Citation(s) in RCA: 244] [Impact Index Per Article: 8.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine whether schizophrenics and their nonschizophrenic siblings have a similar pattern of neuropsychological deficit when compared with normal controls. DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS Fifteen probands with schizophrenia, 16 of their nonschizophrenic siblings, and 31 unrelated, demographically balanced, normal individuals underwent evaluation with a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery. All subjects were screened for history of head injury, neurologic illness, major medical conditions, substance use, and axis I psychiatric disorders other than schizophrenia. Probands underwent evaluation twice: once at intake when half had never received neuroleptic medication and the other half had received none for a minimum of 2 weeks, and again at the 2- to 4-week follow-up, after stabilization with neuroleptic medications. RESULTS Both schizophrenics and their nonschizophrenic siblings were impaired neuropsychologically compared with normal controls, with the nonschizophrenic siblings' performance intermediate between that of the schizophrenic siblings and the normal controls on all measures of functioning. The shapes of the deficit profiles of schizophrenic patients and their siblings were similar; in patients, verbal memory, abstraction, attention, and language functions were significantly more affected compared with spatial abilities, spatial memory, and sensory-motor functions, with a nonsignificant trend in the same direction in siblings. Cognitive functioning in patients was found to be stable across changes in medication status and clinical state. Four fifths of patients obtained more deviant scores than their nonschizophrenic siblings. Among the sibling group, those with probable and certain diagnoses of schizotypal personality disorder were more impaired compared with those without schizophrenia-spectrum symptoms. CONCLUSION These results support the hypothesis that impaired information processing aggregates in the family members of schizophrenics and may serve as an indicator of genetic vulnerability to the disorder. Further work is needed to establish whether particular areas of functioning are selectively impaired in relatives and to determine whether the performance deficits are mediated by structural and/or metabolic disturbances in specific brain regions.
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Affiliation(s)
- T D Cannon
- Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
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109
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Cowell PE, Turetsky BI, Gur RC, Grossman RI, Shtasel DL, Gur RE. Sex differences in aging of the human frontal and temporal lobes. J Neurosci 1994; 14:4748-55. [PMID: 8046448 PMCID: PMC6577197] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023] Open
Abstract
This study investigated effects of age and sex on regional brain structure in humans, focusing on the frontal and temporal lobes. Hemispheric volumes were obtained from magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of 96 young (53 men, 43 women; aged 18-40 years) and 34 older (17 men, 17 women; aged 41-80) healthy volunteers. Images (5 mm axial spin-echo, repetition time of 3000 msec and echo times of 30 and 80 msec) were resliced along the anterior commissure-posterior commissure (AC-PC) axis to standardize for difference in head tilt, and imported into a computer program where borders of the frontal and temporal lobes were delineated. The program calculated regional brain volumes based on slice data from which CSF was segmented out. An age x sex x hemisphere x region interaction indicated that age-related reductions in brain volume were sexually dimorphic, lateralized, and region specific. Greater decrements in brain volume occurred with age in the frontal lobe than in the temporal lobe. Age-related reductions in both regions were greater in men than in women, demonstrating that sexual dimorphisms in human neuroanatomy are not fixed, but continue to change throughout adulthood. The possibility that gonadal hormones play a role in the promotion and/or prevention of neural atrophy with aging is discussed.
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Affiliation(s)
- P E Cowell
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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110
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Abstract
Facial discrimination tasks were applied as activation probes during physiologic neuroimaging ("neurobehavioral probes"). The stimuli pictured professional actors and actresses, posing degrees of happy and sad emotion. Cortical cerebral blood flow (CBF) was determined using the 133Xenon inhalation method during resting baseline, two emotional (happy from neutral and sad from neutral faces) and one nonemotional discrimination task (age). The three tasks produced CBF increase over baseline, which was greater in the right hemisphere (Task x Hemisphere interaction, p = .0001). There were regionally specific effects (Task x Region x Hemisphere interaction, p = .022). Relative to the age discrimination task, both emotion discrimination tasks were associated with greater right parietal activation. In addition, the happy discrimination task induced greater left frontal activation relative to the sad discrimination task. While overall magnitude of CBF increase did not show regionally specific correlations with performance, laterality did show such specificity. Sad discrimination performance correlated with greater right parietal activation, while performance on the happy discrimination task correlated with left frontal activation. Age discrimination performance correlated with higher activated right temporal CBF. These results support the hypothesis of right hemispheric involvement in facial processing and further suggest regionally specific hemispheric participation in happy and sad emotional discrimination. The study underscores the utility of performance measures for understanding the behavioral significance of activation effects in physiologic neuroimaging studies.
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Affiliation(s)
- R C Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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111
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Mozley PD, Gur RE, Resnick SM, Shtasel DL, Richards J, Kohn M, Grossman R, Herman G, Gur RC. Magnetic resonance imaging in schizophrenia: relationship with clinical measures. Schizophr Res 1994; 12:195-203. [PMID: 8054311 DOI: 10.1016/0920-9964(94)90029-9] [Citation(s) in RCA: 19] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
Relationships were examined between clinical features of schizophrenia and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) volume in brain obtained by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a sample of 59 patients. The volumes of the cerebral hemispheres and CSF were measured with a computer program designed to separate reliably neural tissue from CSF. The CSF to cranial volume ratios were related to history, symptom profile and outcome functioning. Earlier age of onset was associated with higher sulcal CSF ratio, r = -0.40. The anatomic measures were unrelated to symptom severity. However, patient subtypes differed in the laterality of measures. Higher left hemispheric ratios were seen in patients with severe negative symptoms, and left predominance of ventricular relative to sulcal ratios was associated with the presence of hallucinations and delusions. The results suggest that while higher CSF is related to earlier age of onset, the clinical symptoms are more related to its lateralization. This is consistent with the hypothesis that schizophrenia is a lateralized brain disease.
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Affiliation(s)
- P D Mozley
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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112
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Abstract
Studies of healthy and clinical populations have suggested valence-specific cortical and subcortical neural systems regulating emotions. In a study of 12 normal volunteers, the 133xenon clearance method for measuring regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) was used to study the effects of experimentally controlled mood states on regional brain activity within superficial cortex. CBF was measured with 254 detectors and bolus infusion during a happy mood induction task, a sad mood induction task, a sex differentiation task, and a resting baseline condition. CBF increased during sad and decreased during happy mood induction, relative to the activated (sex differentiation) and the nonactivated (resting) nonemotional control conditions. Increased CBF during sad mood induction was correlated with greater negative mood changes. Conversely, increased CBF was associated with a stronger subjective experience of positive affect during happy mood induction. This suggests that cortical arousal may serve to intensify the conscious experience of emotion. Heart rate accelerated during happy and sad mood induction and during sex differentiation relative to a pretask baseline condition. Some regional specificity of effects was also observed. The occipital temporal region showed higher overall CBF during sad mood induction than during happy mood induction. The only region that showed specific lateralized changes in CBF which differentiated sad from happy states was the frontal pole, with left CBF being higher during sad and lower during happy mood induction relative to right CBF. For sad mood induction, there were significant regional differences among correlations between CBF and self-ratings. These were attributable to higher negative correlations (i.e., higher CBF correlates with negative self-rating) in midtemporal, occipital temporal, and postcentral regions. These correlations did not vary across the 15 regions for happy mood induction. For sad mood induction, heart rate correlated positively with CBF increase and with negative affect. Correlations were opposite for happy mood induction. The results suggest high cortical and autonomic arousal during negative/sad mood and low cortical and high autonomic arousal during positive/happy mood. They underscore the value of integrating emotional experience with physiologic measures in neuroimaging activation studies.
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Affiliation(s)
- F Schneider
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
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113
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Gur RE, Mozley PD, Shtasel DL, Cannon TD, Gallacher F, Turetsky B, Grossman R, Gur RC. Clinical subtypes of schizophrenia: differences in brain and CSF volume. Am J Psychiatry 1994; 151:343-50. [PMID: 8109642 DOI: 10.1176/ajp.151.3.343] [Citation(s) in RCA: 98] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Investigations of the relation of clinical features of schizophrenia to neuroanatomic measures have produced inconclusive results. The purpose of this study was to examine measures of whole-brain volume in men and women and relate them to clinical subtypes of schizophrenia. METHOD Magnetic resonance imaging measures of cranial, brain, and ventricular and sulcal CSF volume were examined in 81 patients with schizophrenia (50 men and 31 women), divided into subgroups based on their symptom profiles, and 81 demographically matched healthy comparison subjects. RESULTS The men had higher cranial and brain volumes than the women. The patients had smaller cranial and brain volumes than the comparison subjects; they also had higher ventricular CSF volumes and thus higher ventricle-brain ratios (VBRs). Ratio elevations were larger for the female than for the male schizophrenic patients. The patients with predominantly negative symptoms of schizophrenia had higher VBRs and sulcal CSF-brains ratios than the comparison subjects, although the component volumes did not differ. The patients with predominantly Schneiderian symptoms had higher VBRs than the comparison subjects but showed reduced cranial and brain volumes. The paranoid patients had normal VBRs, reduced sulcal CSF-brain ratios, and lower cranial and sulcal CSF volumes. CONCLUSIONS The results suggest two patterns of neuroanatomic whole-brain abnormalities that differ in severity according to the relative prominence of negative, Schneiderian, and paranoid symptoms. These patterns may reflect differential involvement of dysgenic and atrophic pathophysiological processes. Sex moderates abnormalities in the neuroanatomic features of schizophrenia.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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114
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Gur RC, Ragland JD, Resnick SM, Skolnick BE, Jaggi J, Muenz L, Gur RE. Lateralized increases in cerebral blood flow during performance of verbal and spatial tasks: relationship with performance level. Brain Cogn 1994; 24:244-58. [PMID: 8185896 DOI: 10.1006/brcg.1994.1013] [Citation(s) in RCA: 47] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/29/2023]
Abstract
Physiologic neuroimaging studies have shown lateralized regional increase in brain activity during cognitive tasks, but the hypothesis that such changes are correlated with task performance has not been tested directly. We examined cerebral blood flow (CBF) changes induced by cognitive tasks in relation to performance. CBF was measured with the 133Xenon clearance method in 34 normal right-handed young (age < 30) volunteers during resting baseline and during the performance of a verbal analogies and a spatial line orientation test. Performance measures included "speed" and "power" estimates of both activation tasks. Resting CBF was moderately correlated with performance. The correlations were slightly higher with activated CBF for verbal but not spatial performance. The degree of increase (task-baseline) did not correlate with performance for either task. The highest and topographically specific correlations were obtained between laterality of CBF and verbal performance. Higher left hemispheric activation was correlated with verbal performance, and this correlation was significantly higher in the angular gyrus region. For the spatial task the correlations were with relatively higher right hemispheric activation but without regional specificity. The results underscore the importance of integrating behavioral performance data with physiologic measures in neuroimaging activation studies.
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Affiliation(s)
- R C Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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115
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Abstract
The recovery cycle of the P1 component of the auditory evoked potential (50-70 ms latency) has been reported as abnormal in both unmedicated and medicated patients with schizophrenia when a paired stimuli protocol is used to examine recovery. However, findings have been mixed when a stimulus train protocol is used. This study examined the effects of medication history on P1 abnormalities in schizophrenia assessed by a stimulus train protocol. Auditory evoked potentials were recorded from 14 normal controls, 14 neuroleptic naive patients with schizophrenia and 14 previously medicated patients in response to binaural clicks presented at three stimulus rates: 1/s, 5/s and 10/s. Neuroleptic naive patients showed a smaller P1 at the baseline rate (1/s) and greater recovery (less amplitude suppression) at faster rates than did normal controls or previously medicated patients. Additional analyses suggested that this latter effect was not due to smaller baseline P1 amplitudes. Greater recovery in neuroleptic naive patients was not associated with clinical symptomatology contrary to previous findings of the authors for a mixed sample of neuroleptic naive and previously medicated patients. Medication status appears to account for some of the variability in P1 abnormalities in schizophrenia although identification of the underlying mechanism responsible requires further study.
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Affiliation(s)
- R J Erwin
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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116
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Saykin AJ, Shtasel DL, Gur RE, Kester DB, Mozley LH, Stafiniak P, Gur RC. Neuropsychological deficits in neuroleptic naive patients with first-episode schizophrenia. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1994; 51:124-31. [PMID: 7905258 DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.1994.03950020048005] [Citation(s) in RCA: 756] [Impact Index Per Article: 25.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/27/2023]
Abstract
BACKGROUND Medication and chronicity have complicated past attempts to characterize the neuropsychological performance of patients with schizophrenia. There have been inconsistencies regarding the pattern, selectivity, and sources of observed deficits. Our objective was to comprehensively examine neuropsychological function in patients with schizophrenia who had never been exposed to neuroleptic medication, and who were experiencing their first episode (FE) of psychosis. METHODS Subjects were consecutive recruitments that included 37 patients with FE schizophrenia who were never exposed to neuroleptics. These subjects were compared with 65 unmedicated, previously treated (PT) patients and 131 healthy controls. RESULTS The patients groups had nearly identical profiles showing generalized impairment, particularly in verbal memory and learning, attention-vigilance, and speeded visual-motor processing and attention. Verbal memory and learning accounted for most of the variance between patients and controls and removing this effect substantially attenuated all other differences. By contrast, both the FE group and PT group continued to show highly significant deficits in verbal memory and learning after controlling for attention, abstraction, and all other functions. Some functions not typically implicated in schizophrenia (spatial cognition, fine motor speed, and visual memory) were more impaired in the PT group than in the FE group. CONCLUSIONS Verbal memory, as a primary neuropsychological deficit present early in the course of schizophrenia, implicates the left temporal-hippocampal system. Neuropsychological evaluations before treatment permit differentiation of primary deficits from changes secondary to medication or chronicity. This is essential for developing a neurobehavioral perspective on schizophrenia.
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Affiliation(s)
- A J Saykin
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia
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117
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Abstract
The feasibility of applying ecologically valid and socially relevant emotional stimuli in a standardized fashion to obtain reliable mood changes in healthy subjects was examined. The stimuli consisted of happy and sad facial expressions varying in intensity. Two mood-induction procedures (happy and sad, each consisting of 40 slides) were administered to 24 young healthy subjects, who were instructed to look at each slide (self-paced) and try to feel the happy or sad mood expressed by the person in the picture. On an emotional self-rating scale, subjects rated themselves as relatively happier during the happy mood-induction condition and as relatively sadder during the sad mood-induction condition. Conversely, they reported that they were less happy during the sad mood-induction condition and less sad during the happy mood-induction condition. The effects were generalized to positive and negative affect as measured by the Positive and Negative Affect Scale. The intraindividual variability in the effect was very small. In a retest study after 1 month, the mood-induction effects showed good stability over time. The results encourage the use of this mood-induction procedure as a neurobehavioral probe in physiologic neuroimaging studies for investigating the neural substrates of emotional experience.
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Affiliation(s)
- F Schneider
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
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118
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Abstract
Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured with the 133Xenon clearance technique and a high resolution (254 detectors) scanner during the performance of a verbal and a facial memory task in 18 patients with schizophrenia and 18 sociodemographically matched controls. Patients and controls had comparable resting rCBF, but differed in global and hemispheric rCBF changes induced by the memory tasks. Patients had less global increase, which was relatively higher in the left hemisphere, and this was more pronounced for the verbal task. Although controls showed appropriate laterality changes (L > R for verbal and R > L for facial memory) in the midtemporal region, patients failed to show such a focal pattern. They did not show appropriate laterality change in the midtemporal region, but instead showed such changes in other regions. Patients showed greatest impairment in specificity of verbal recognition performance, and this correlated with severity of hallucinations and delusions. This supports a model of left temporal lobe dysfunction in schizophrenia.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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119
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Resnick SM, Karp JS, Turetsky B, Gur RE. Comparison of anatomically-defined versus physiologically-based regional localization: effects on PET-FDG quantitation. J Nucl Med 1993; 34:2201-7. [PMID: 8254412] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/29/2023] Open
Abstract
The potential of anatomic imaging to improve the quantitative accuracy of functional brain imaging through refined regional definition is widely accepted. However, there are little data addressing the impact of approach to regional localization on quantitation of metabolic images in the absence of gross structural pathology. We compared MRI-based versus PET-based approaches to the analysis of PET 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) images using a standard adjustable template based on simple geometric regions. For the MRI-based approach, templates and individual regions were adjusted to each individual's anatomy, whereas the PET-based definition involved only global proportional adjustment of the standard templates. Metabolic rates for glucose and volume-to-whole brain ratios were determined by two operators for 78 volumes of interest in five subjects. Pairwise correlations indicated high interoperator agreement for each approach and high intraoperator agreement for MRI-based versus PET-based metabolic values. The stability of the metabolic rates and ratios among operators and analysis approaches was supported by low coefficients of variation across measurements and small average differences in paired comparisons. Thus, within the current spatial resolution of PET imaging, quantitation of metabolic images is relatively robust to image analysis approach in the absence of gross structural abnormality. To take advantage of the greater quantitative accuracy promised by high-resolution anatomic and functional imaging, more refined delineation of anatomic images will be necessary.
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Affiliation(s)
- S M Resnick
- Laboratory of Personality and Cognition, GRC/NIA, Baltimore, Maryland 21224
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120
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Crawford HJ, Gur RC, Skolnick B, Gur RE, Benson DM. Effects of hypnosis on regional cerebral blood flow during ischemic pain with and without suggested hypnotic analgesia. Int J Psychophysiol 1993; 15:181-95. [PMID: 8166843 DOI: 10.1016/0167-8760(93)90002-7] [Citation(s) in RCA: 69] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/29/2023]
Abstract
Using 133Xe regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) imaging, two male groups having high and low hypnotic susceptibility were compared in waking and after hypnotic induction, while at rest and while experiencing ischemic pain to both arms under two conditions: attend to pain and suggested analgesia. Differences between low and highly-hypnotizable persons were observed during all hypnosis conditions: only highly-hypnotizable persons showed a significant increase in overall CBF, suggesting that hypnosis requires cognitive effort. As anticipated, ischemic pain produced CBF increases in the somatosensory region. Of major theoretical interest is a highly-significant bilateral CBF activation of the orbito-frontal cortex in the highly-hypnotizable group only during hypnotic analgesia. During hypnotic analgesia, highly-hypnotizable persons showed CBF increase over the somatosensory cortex, while low-hypnotizable persons showed decreases. Research is supportive of a neuropsychophysiological model of hypnosis (Crawford, 1991; Crawford and Gruzelier, 1992) and suggests that hypnotic analgesia involves the supervisory, attentional control system of the far-frontal cortex in a topographically specific inhibitory feedback circuit that cooperates in the regulation of thalamocortical activities.
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Affiliation(s)
- H J Crawford
- Department of Psychology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg 24061
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121
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Gur RC, Jaggi JL, Ragland JD, Resnick SM, Shtasel D, Muenz L, Gur RE. Effects of memory processing on regional brain activation: cerebral blood flow in normal subjects. Int J Neurosci 1993; 72:31-44. [PMID: 8225798 DOI: 10.3109/00207459308991621] [Citation(s) in RCA: 54] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/29/2023]
Abstract
The role of the temporal lobe in memory has been implicated in lesion studies, which have also suggested the hypothesis of greater left hemispheric involvement in verbal, and right hemispheric involvement in facial memory. We tested these hypotheses in a sample of 27 normal right-handed subjects using the 133Xenon clearance method for measuring cerebral blood flow (CBF). The CBF was measured during resting baseline, word recognition, and face recognition conditions in counterbalanced order. CBF increased during recognition compared to baseline, and for the midtemporal lobe this increase was asymmetric to the left hemisphere for words and to the right for faces. While overall CBF levels and task related increases in CBF were uncorrelated either with performance or with delta performance (excess performance relative to basal memory abilities), laterality of task-related CBF correlated with both performance indices, showing regional specificity of correlations. This neurobehavioral probe paradigm can be applied in the study of neural substrates of normal and disturbed memory.
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Affiliation(s)
- R C Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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122
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Levick SE, Lorig T, Wexler BE, Gur RE, Gur RC, Schwartz GE. Asymmetrical visual deprivation: a technique to differentially influence lateral hemispheric function. Percept Mot Skills 1993; 76:1363-82. [PMID: 8337093 DOI: 10.2466/pms.1993.76.3c.1363] [Citation(s) in RCA: 14] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/30/2023]
Abstract
This article describes a contact-lens method to sustain asymmetry in visual deprivation and the use of this method to test the general hypothesis that asymmetry in input deprivation can shift activation balance in the integrated brain, differentially influencing lateral hemispheric function. Effects of asymmetrical visual deprivation were as predicted on lateral asymmetry of EEG theta, producing more theta over the deprived hemisphere. Cross-modal influence of such visual deprivation was found in the perception of pleasantness of odors. An interaction was found between side of visual deprivation and performance on verbal reasoning and spatial orientation tasks. A line-bisection test of visual attention was not sensitive to the effects. Fatigue as rated on the Profile of Mood States was greatest when the left hemisphere was deprived.
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Affiliation(s)
- S E Levick
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania
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123
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Abstract
Neuroimaging has advanced the study of brain structure and function in schizophrenia. Magnetic resonance imaging provides measures of whole brain and regional anatomy and cerebrospinal fluid volume. Functional methods have included the Xenon-133 technique for measuring cerebral blood flow (CBF); positron emission tomography for assessing metabolism, CBF, and neuroreceptor functioning; and single photon emission computed tomography for studying CBF and neuroreceptors. Despite heterogeneity of patient samples, and studies which differed in the methodologies applied, there is converging evidence implicating three brain systems: frontal, temporolimbic, and basal ganglia. Current emphasis is aimed at probing specific regions across imaging modalities. Now these findings and research paradigms in neuroimaging must be integrated with phenomenological, neurobehavioral, and neuropathological investigations. The application of this technology is already helping to elucidate the neurobiology of schizophrenia, and further important advances can be anticipated.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Dept. of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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124
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Abstract
Gender differences have been reported for a variety of clinical measures in patients with schizophrenia. Clinical characterization may be helpful in identifying symptom clusters which can then be linked to underlying brain function. In this study 74 men and 33 women meeting DSM-IIIR criteria for schizophrenia were studied off medication and rated on measures of symptom type and severity, as well as premorbid and current function. Men were more severely impaired in ratings of negative symptoms, while positive symptoms were not significantly different. There were also differences in premorbid and current functioning, with women manifesting better social functioning than men.
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Affiliation(s)
- D L Shtasel
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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125
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Gur RE, Gur RC. Neurotransmitters are important, but so is metabolism. Commentary on "The current status of PET scanning with respect to schizophrenia". Neuropsychopharmacology 1992; 7:63-5; discussion 73-5. [PMID: 1355969] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/24/2023]
Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4883
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126
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Warach S, Gur RC, Gur RE, Skolnick BE, Obrist WD, Reivich M. Decreases in frontal and parietal lobe regional cerebral blood flow related to habituation. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab 1992; 12:546-53. [PMID: 1618933 DOI: 10.1038/jcbfm.1992.78] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/27/2022]
Abstract
We previously reported decreased mean CBF between consecutive resting conditions, ascribed to habituation. Here we address the regional specificity of habituation over three consecutive flow studies. Regional CBF (rCBF) was measured in 55 adults (12 right-handed men, 12 right-handed women, 14 left-handed men, 17 left-handed women), with the 133Xe inhalation technique, during three conditions: resting, verbal tasks (analogies), and spatial tasks (line orientation). Changes in rCBF attributable to the cognitive tasks were eliminated by correcting these values to a resting equivalent. There was a progressive decrease in mean rCBF over time, reflecting habituation. This effect differed by region, with specificity at frontal (prefrontal, inferior frontal, midfrontal, superior frontal) and inferior parietal regions. In the inferior parietal region, habituation was more marked in the left than the right hemisphere. Right-handers showed greater habituation than did left-handers. There was no sex difference in global habituation, but males showed greater left whereas females showed greater right hemispheric habituation. The results suggest that habituation to the experimental setting has measurable effects on rCBF, which are differently lateralized for men and women. These effects are superimposed on task activation and are most pronounced in regions that have been implicated in attentional processes. Thus, regional decrement in brain activity related to habituation seems to complement attentional effects, suggesting a neural network for habituation reciprocating that for attention.
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Affiliation(s)
- S Warach
- Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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127
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Abstract
Emotional discrimination was studied in patients with schizophrenia (n = 20) and matched controls. Performance of the emotion-discrimination tasks in the schizophrenic patients was impaired, relative to their performance of an age-discrimination task. Performance patterns in the patient group could also be reliably distinguished from those of normal controls. The impairment was associated with the severity of both emotional and nonemotional symptoms specific to schizophrenia, but not with the severity of nonspecific symptoms. The deficit associated with schizophrenia is more marked than that reported for depression (Gur et al., 1992), particularly for the emotion-discrimination tasks, and showed no difference between "happy" discrimination and "sad" discrimination. The main difficulty in patients with schizophrenia is the assignment of emotional valence to neutral faces. The magnitude of the deficit underscores the salience of emotional impairment in schizophrenia, and its relation to cognitive dysfunction in this disorder merits further scrutiny.
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Affiliation(s)
- C Heimberg
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4283
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128
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Abstract
The facial discrimination tasks described in part I (Erwin et al., 1992) were administered to a sample of 14 patients with depression and 14 normal controls matched for sex (12 women, 2 men) and balanced for age and sociodemographic characteristics. Patients performed more poorly on measures of sensitivity for happy discrimination and specificity for sad discrimination, and had a higher negative bias across tasks. Severity of negative affect was correlated with poorer performance for patients. The results suggest that depression is associated with an impaired ability to recognize facial displays of emotion.
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Affiliation(s)
- R C Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4283
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129
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Abstract
Facial discrimination tasks (age, happy-neutral, and sad-neutral) were developed to address the need for activation tasks that engage emotional processing and can be used during physiologic neuroimaging ("neurobehavioral probes"). The stimuli pictured professional actors and actresses who had been screened for asymmetric features. In experiment I, same-sex stimuli were used to examine the performance of normal subjects (24 men, 15 women) on the three tasks. Performance was better during the emotion-discrimination tasks than during the age-discrimination task, and males had higher sensitivity scores for the detection of sad emotion. However, experiment II showed that the sex of the stimulus interacts with the sex of the subject. Compared with female subjects, male subjects (n = 10) were selectively less sensitive to sad emotion in female faces. Female subjects (n = 10) were more sensitive overall to emotional expression in male faces than in female faces. Thus, men and women differed in performance depending on the sex of the facial stimulus.
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Affiliation(s)
- R J Erwin
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4283
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130
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Abstract
The potential of physiologic neuroimaging for contributing to the understanding of behavior and the psychopathologic condition is being enhanced by increased application of "neurobehavioral probes," tasks performed during measurement. Thus far, little attention has been paid to the psychometric properties of such tasks as reliability, difficulty, and construct validity. We propose steps for applying such probes, considering issues in defining the behavior and task selection. Few available neuropsychometric tasks meet criteria for optimal use in neuroimaging studies, and a procedure is outlined for developing new probes. Highlighted are issues encountered during the phases of conceptualization, assembly and screening of items, task construction, and the psychometric validation. A set of language tasks illustrates the process. The procedure may enhance efficiency of acquiring knowledge in this area where the magnitude of potential may be matched by the costs and complexity of research.
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Affiliation(s)
- R C Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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131
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Abstract
There is active research applying MRI to the study of brain anatomy in schizophrenia. As the technology improves and measurements are refined, this method, in combination with behavioral measures, is likely to contribute to the understanding of brain function in schizophrenia. The heterogeneity of schizophrenia challenges investigators to integrate anatomic and behavioral parameters with physiology. MRI techniques have already been applied to obtain quantitative imaging of cerebral blood flow and holds promise for combined MRI and neurobehavioral studies.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
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132
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Abstract
One current view of schizophrenia is that its clinical and functional features show a deteriorating course, particularly for negative symptoms. However, this is difficult to study in chronic patients who have been exposed to pharmacologic treatment and institutionalization. Examining first-episode (FE) patients can help clarify which symptoms are present initially and how the symptom pattern is linked to functioning. We evaluated a sample of 37 FE patients with schizophrenia and compared them to 70 other schizophrenia (OS) patients on standard clinical scales, measures of premorbid functioning, and quality of life. FE patients showed a symptom profile similar to OS patients; in particular, there was no evidence that negative symptoms are less severe in the FE group. Analysis of the clinical data led us to the conclusion that the symptom profile of schizophrenia exists at the outset, that negative symptoms are associated with poor premorbid and current functioning, but that the role of positive symptoms is more complex and may vary in subtypes.
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Affiliation(s)
- D L Shtasel
- University of Pennsylvania, Dept. of Psychiatry, Philadelphia 19104
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133
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Abstract
Axial and sagittal magnetic resonance (MR) sections and contiguous sections of axial positron emission tomographic (PET) images obtained with fludeoxyglucose F-18 were used to evaluate a new method of registering three-dimensional images of the brain. The users specified the interhemispheric fissure plane in three dimensions for both the MR and PET data sets by specifying its endpoints within several axial sections. A transformation matrix aligning the interhemispheric fissure plane in MR and PET space was calculated and used to create one resectioned PET image on the resectioned PET image, and the user specified the remaining translations and rotation by moving the overlaid outline of the MR image. MR and PET data sets in four subjects were registered. The three-dimensional error on average was less than 3.8 mm and never exceeded 7.5 mm. Less than 1 hour per patient was required for registration. The method is accurate unless the interhemispheric fissure deviates significantly from a planar configuration. It does not need thin or contiguous MR sections and provides an estimate of the total registration error for every case.
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Affiliation(s)
- I Kapouleas
- Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-6021
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134
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Arnold SE, Lee VM, Gur RE, Trojanowski JQ. Abnormal expression of two microtubule-associated proteins (MAP2 and MAP5) in specific subfields of the hippocampal formation in schizophrenia. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1991; 88:10850-4. [PMID: 1961755 PMCID: PMC53029 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.88.23.10850] [Citation(s) in RCA: 133] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/29/2022] Open
Abstract
A variety of cytoarchitectural disturbances have been described in limbic regions in postmortem studies of schizophrenia, many of which suggest a developmental disturbance of normal neuronal geometry. This geometry is established and maintained by elements of the neuronal cytoskeleton. Immunohistochemistry with a panel of 15 monoclonal antibodies was used to monitor the presence of neuronal cytoskeletal proteins in the hippocampal formations of six patients with schizophrenia, six normal controls, and six with neurodegenerative disorders. In five of the six subjects with schizophrenia, prominent and specific alterations were found in the distribution of two microtubule-associated proteins, MAP2 and MAP5, which were anatomically selective for the subiculum and entorhinal cortex. In contrast, the immunoreactivity of other cytoskeletal proteins (i.e., tau, tubulins, and selected neurofilament protein phosphoisoforms) was similar for all subjects. Defects in the expression of MAP2 and MAP5, two proteins that contribute to the establishment and maintenance of neuronal polarity, could underlie some of the cytoarchitectural abnormalities described in schizophrenia and impair signal transduction in the affected dendrites. The subiculum and entorhinal cortex interconnect the hippocampal formation with widespread cortices and subcortical nuclei and play important roles in higher cognitive functions. Hence, pathologic lesions that distort the polarized geometry of neurons could play a role in the emergence of aberrant behavior in schizophrenia.
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Affiliation(s)
- S E Arnold
- Department of Psychiatry and Neurology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104
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135
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Abstract
The authors studied a carefully screened pool of healthy adult volunteers aged 20-80 years, so that a normal brain deep gray matter hypointensity map, as detectable on routine spin-echo magnetic resonance (MR) images, could be formulated. Previous MR imaging studies about brain iron reported findings either in children only or in adults, all of whom had suspected central nervous system disease. The results showed that (a) areas of hypointensity in the red nucleus, substantia nigra, and dentate nucleus were relatively unchanged throughout all age groups; (b) the globus pallidus showed an increased volume of hypointensity in the middle-aged and elderly population compared with that in the young adult; (c) the putamen was hypointense only in the elderly age group; and (d) hypointensity was never seen in the thalamus or caudate nucleus in any subject, regardless of age. In cases in which these patterns are not observed in patients suspected to have central nervous system disease, the presence of such disease should be considered.
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Affiliation(s)
- W J Milton
- Department of Radiology, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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136
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Shtasel DL, Gur RE, Mozley PD, Richards J, Taleff MM, Heimberg C, Gallacher F, Gur RC. Volunteers for biomedical research. Recruitment and screening of normal controls. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1991; 48:1022-5. [PMID: 1747017 DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.1991.01810350062010] [Citation(s) in RCA: 107] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/28/2022]
Abstract
We examined the process of accruing healthy control subjects for biomedical research on brain function. Of 1670 responders to newspaper advertising, 23.1% were uninterested when learning more about the studies, and 50.9% of those remaining were found by structured telephone screening to meet exclusionary criteria for having a history of psychiatric, neurologic, or medical disease that might affect brain function. Of 312 volunteers passing the telephone screening who came to an in-person evaluation by a physician and agreed to participate, 49.7% were found to meet exclusionary criteria, and only 157 were admitted to the study. This underscores the importance of attending to the issue of screening and assessment of "normal volunteers." Alternative strategies should be considered for enriching the pool.
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Affiliation(s)
- D L Shtasel
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4283
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137
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Abstract
The auditory evoked component P50 has been reported as having an abnormal recovery cycle in patients with schizophrenia. Recent studies examining the effects of stimulus rate on the midlatency response (MLR) component P1, found P1 recovery cycles in normals similar to P50. This study examined the P1 recovery cycle in patients using a rate protocol and MLR recording procedures. MLRs were recorded from 13 controls and 13 patients with schizophrenia in response to binaurally presented clicks presented at three stimulus rates: 0.9/sec, 5.1/sec, and 9.9/sec. The P1 (50-70 msec latency) in patients did not decrease as much in amplitude as in controls at the 9.9/sec stimulus rate. This lack of recovery was correlated with clinical ratings of symptomatology. Since evidence from both the human and the cat model suggests that the P1 is generated in thalamus, these findings are consistent with reports of thalamic dysfunction in schizophrenia.
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Affiliation(s)
- R J Erwin
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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138
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Saykin AJ, Gur RC, Gur RE, Mozley PD, Mozley LH, Resnick SM, Kester DB, Stafiniak P. Neuropsychological function in schizophrenia. Selective impairment in memory and learning. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1991; 48:618-24. [PMID: 2069492 DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.1991.01810310036007] [Citation(s) in RCA: 727] [Impact Index Per Article: 22.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/30/2022]
Abstract
Unmedicated schizophrenic patients (according to DSM-III-R criteria) (n = 36) and age-matched normal controls (n = 36), balanced for parental socioeconomic status, were administered a battery of standardized neuropsychological tests. Patients showed generalized impairment relative to controls and a selective deficit in memory and learning compared with other functions. Selective impairment was not found on tests related to frontal system function (abstraction, verbal fluency, and motor). The observed pattern is consistent with greater involvement of the temporal-hippocampal system, against the background of diffuse dysfunction. Although impairment in memory and learning has been reported, the selectivity and relative severity compared with other behavioral functions have not been recognized. The specificity of this profile merits further examination. These findings lend support to the hypothesized importance of the temporal-hippocampal region in understanding the pathophysiology of schizophrenia.
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Affiliation(s)
- A J Saykin
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4883
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139
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Gur RE, Mozley PD, Resnick SM, Shtasel D, Kohn M, Zimmerman R, Herman G, Atlas S, Grossman R, Erwin R. Magnetic resonance imaging in schizophrenia. I. Volumetric analysis of brain and cerebrospinal fluid. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1991; 48:407-12. [PMID: 2021292 DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.1991.01810290019002] [Citation(s) in RCA: 57] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/29/2022]
Abstract
The study reports magnetic resonance imaging data for 42 patients with schizophrenia and 43 normal controls. Volumetric measures were obtained with a validated computerized algorithm for segmentation of cranial volume into brain tissue and central and peripheral cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), with high inter-operator reliability. Patients did not differ significantly in whole-brain volume, but had higher whole-brain CSF volume and higher ratios of ventricular and sulcal CSF to cranial volume. Covarying age and education did not affect the differences. However, there was considerable overlap both in CSF volumes and in volume-cranium ratios, and most patients were within the normal range. This suggests that anatomic changes reflected in CSF can provide a limited substrate for schizophrenia and may apply only to subpopulations. Although there was no gender x diagnosis interaction, the results for sulcal CSF were significant only for men, whereas for women, the ventricular ratios were marginally higher in patients.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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140
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE Clinical scales have become established as tools to quantify phenomenological features of schizophrenia. The goal of this study was to examine relations among the following: the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), the Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms, the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms, and the deficit-nondeficit classification. METHOD Forty-seven patients with schizophrenia were recruited according to specific inclusion and exclusion criteria. The standardized assessment procedures were administered by a trained psychiatric research team. RESULTS Examination of the BPRS showed that the patients had highest scores on the thought disorder factor and the symptoms specific to schizophrenia. Classification of patients as having the positive, negative, or mixed type of schizophrenia resulted in a finding of seven with the positive, seven with the negative, and 33 with the mixed type. The division of patients into those with the deficit syndrome (N = 29) and those without (N = 18) was related to symptom specificity and to positive and negative symptoms. Deficit syndrome patients had more symptoms specific to schizophrenia, fewer nonspecific symptoms, and, as expected, greater severity of negative symptoms. Cluster analysis revealed three clusters of patients: those with low negative symptom scores and high scores on specific symptoms (the majority were without the deficit syndrome); those with high scores on negative, positive, and specific symptoms (the majority had the deficit syndrome); and those with lower scores on specific symptoms and high scores on negative and positive symptoms (the majority had the deficit syndrome). CONCLUSIONS The scales showed some overlap but also seemed to measure complementary aspects of the phenomenology of schizophrenia. Subtypes of patients identified by the combined use of these scales may differ in underlying pathology.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Mental Health Clinical Research Center on Schizophrenia
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141
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Kohn MI, Tanna NK, Herman GT, Resnick SM, Mozley PD, Gur RE, Alavi A, Zimmerman RA, Gur RC. Analysis of brain and cerebrospinal fluid volumes with MR imaging. Part I. Methods, reliability, and validation. Radiology 1991; 178:115-22. [PMID: 1984289 DOI: 10.1148/radiology.178.1.1984289] [Citation(s) in RCA: 167] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/29/2022]
Abstract
A computerized system was developed to process standard spin-echo magnetic resonance (MR) imaging data for estimation of brain parenchyma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) volumes. In phantom experiments, the estimated volumes corresponded closely to the true volumes (r = .998), with a mean error less than 1.0 cm3 (for phantom volumes ranging from 5 to 35 cm3), with excellent intra- and interobserver reliability. In a clinical validation study with actual brain images of 10 human subjects, the average coefficient of variation between observers for the measurement of absolute brain and CSF volumes was 1.2% and 6.4%, respectively. The intraclass correlations for three expert operators is greater than .99 in the measurement of brain and ventricular volumes and greater than .94 for total CSF volume. Therefore, the authors believe that their technique to analyze MR images of the brain performed with acceptable levels of accuracy and reliability and that it can be used to measure brain and CSF volumes for clinical research. This technique could be helpful in the correlation of neuroanatomic measurements to behavioral and physiologic parameters in neuropsychiatric disorders.
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Affiliation(s)
- M I Kohn
- Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-6021
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142
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Abstract
The function of subcortical nuclei in partial epilepsy was investigated using positron emission tomography (PET) to measure metabolism in the basal ganglia and thalamus. Sixteen patients undergoing surgical evaluation were studied with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) interictally and had intensive extracranial and intracranial electrophysiologic evaluations. Eight patients had left temporal lobe seizure foci, six had right temporal lobe foci, and two had right posterotemporal or parietal foci. The PET data were analyzed visually and quantitatively, using a multivariate analysis of variance on the quantitative data. Hypometabolism of subcortical nuclei was present ipsilateral to the cortical seizure focus. Cortical hypometabolism was noted focally in the temporal lobe in patients with left temporal lobe seizure foci, whereas patients with right temporal lobe seizure foci had diffuse hemispheric hypometabolism. We postulate that the subcortical hypometabolism is secondary to decreased efferent activity from temporal lobe structures, in particular amygdala and hippocampus, to subcortical nuclei. Diminished subcortical activity may then lead to defective regulation of cortical excitability in the temporal lobe, increasing the likelihood of seizure development and spread.
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Affiliation(s)
- M R Sperling
- Cerebrovascular Research Center, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
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143
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Abstract
Gender differences have been noted in neurobehavioral studies. The 133xenon inhalation method for measuring regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) can contribute to the understanding of the neural basis of gender differences in brain function. Few studies have examined gender differences in rCBF. In studies of normal subjects, women have higher rates of CBF than men, and this is related to age. Usually by the sixth decade men and women have similar flow rates. Fewer studies on rCBF in schizophrenia have examined sex differences. The pattern of higher flows for females maintains, but its correlates with gender differences in clinical as well as other parameters of brain function remain to be examined.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- University of Pennsylvania, Brain Behavior Laboratory, Philadelphia 19104
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144
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Chawluk JB, Dann R, Alavi A, Hurtig HI, Gur RE, Resnick S, Zimmerman RA, Reivich M. The effect of focal cerebral atrophy in positron emission tomographic studies of aging and dementia. Int J Rad Appl Instrum B 1990; 17:797-804. [PMID: 2079426 DOI: 10.1016/0883-2897(90)90028-y] [Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/30/2022]
Abstract
We used x-ray computed tomographic (XCT) scans to measure the degree of cerebral atrophy in brain regions defined by a region of interest (ROI) anatomy atlas. The same atlas was employed for quantitation of local cerebral glucose metabolic rates (LCMRglc) by PET. PET data were obtained from 9 young controls, 7 healthy elderly controls, and 10 patients with dementia. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in atrophic brain regions was assumed to be metabolically inert, and LCMRglc measurements were corrected for the degree of atrophy. Significantly greater atrophy was seen for 7 of 8 regions in comparisons between demented patients and age-matched controls. This atrophy was most pronounced in superior parietal (SP) regions. Decreases in parietal LCMRglc in dementia patients and SP LCMRglc in old controls were no longer significant after correction for atrophy. These results emphasize the need to consider focal atrophy effects in regional quantitative analyses of emission tomographic data.
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Affiliation(s)
- J B Chawluk
- Department of Radiology, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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145
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Abstract
The application of neurobehavioral methods to the study of brain function in schizophrenia can provide useful information on the neurobiology of schizophrenia. Standard neuropsychological batteries were designed to assess behavioral correlates of regional brain function. Methodological considerations in the application of these tests to schizophrenia are discussed. Although there is considerable evidence for both frontal and temporal lobe dysfunction in schizophrenia, the field is likely to advance further through the systematic study of brain function. A combination of neurobehavioral and physiological data obtained simultaneously is a promising avenue to pursue, and the behavioral imaging method is presented as an example of one approach to data integration.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Dept. of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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146
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Abstract
A standardized neuropsychological battery including measures of intellectual cognitive, memory, attention-concentration, language, abstraction and mental flexibility, and sensory and motor functions was administered to 21 hemiparkinsonian patients (14 with right side and 7 with left side symptoms) and 17 controls matched for age and education. Patients were impaired in all functions except sensory. For motor functions, impairment was ipsilateral to the side of symptoms. For cognitive functions, right side symptoms were associated with verbal deficits whereas left side symptoms were associated with spatial deficits. Thus, a pattern of neuropsychological deficits consistent with the lateralization of motor symptoms may appear in the early stages of the disease.
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Affiliation(s)
- L X Blonder
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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147
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Abstract
Laterality and age of onset effects on semantic and figural memory were evaluated in 30 right-handed, left speech dominant (amobarbital test) patients with epilepsy before and after temporal lobectomy. There were no effects of focus on WAIS-R IQ scores. Early onset (less than or equal to 5 years) was associated with lower IQ and memory (WMS). Left Temporal (LT) patients showed worse semantic than figural memory preoperatively. Unexpectedly, early onset LT had marked postoperative decline of figural memory, whereas late onset LT patients showed the previously reported worsening of semantic memory. Right Temporal (RT) lobectomy patients, in contrast, improved in both semantic and figural memory regardless of age of onset. A "crowding effect" was suggested by the decline in figural memory following surgery in the early onset LT patients who remained stable or improved in semantic memory. Results indicate the need to incorporate age of onset of seizures into laterality models of memory function following unilateral temporal-hippocampal resection.
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Affiliation(s)
- A J Saykin
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104
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148
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Abstract
Two of the hypotheses on regional brain dysfunction in schizophrenia that have received some support in studies of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral metabolic rate (CMR) are: (1) left hemispheric dysfunction and overactivation (laterality) and (2) frontal lobe deactivation or failure to activate (frontality). Although these hypotheses are not mutually exclusive, their relative importance for providing clues to neural underpinnings of symptoms specific to schizophrenia depends on their ability to predict variation in symptomatology. A potentially efficient strategy for such study is to start with physiological parameters of laterality and frontality, and correlate them with measures of severity of clinical symptoms specific to schizophrenia. For two schizophrenic samples reported earlier, we derived laterality (left-right hemispheres) and frontality (frontal-posterior regions) measures of CBF (Study 1) and CMR (Study 2), and correlated them with symptom specificity, defined as the difference in severity of symptoms specific and nonspecific to schizophrenia assessed by the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale. In both studies, low but significant positive correlations were obtained between the specificity score and laterality for CBF in Study 1 and for CMR in Study 2, but not frontality. The results suggest that in these samples disturbances in lateralized activity are more prominently associated with the phenomenology of schizophrenia than disturbed frontal lobe activity.
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Affiliation(s)
- R E Gur
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104-4283
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149
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Trojanowski JQ, Schmidt ML, Otvos L, Gur RC, Gur RE, Hurtig H, Lee VM. Selective expression of epitopes in multiphosphorylation repeats of the high and middle molecular weight neurofilament proteins in Alzheimer neurofibrillary tangles. Ann Med 1989; 21:113-6. [PMID: 2475147 DOI: 10.3109/07853898909149196] [Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/01/2023] Open
Abstract
Here we review our recent "epitope analyses" of a few of the fibrous intraneuronal inclusions that are distinctive hallmarks of human neurodenerative conditions using a large library of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) raised to normal neuronal cytoskeletal proteins. Analyses of the low (NF-L), middle (NF-M), and high (NF-M), and high (NF-H) molecular weight neurofilament (NF) proteins with greater than 500 MAbs enumerated epitopes shared by NF proteins and the intraneuronal neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) that occur in the hippocampus and brainstem of Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects. We identified the NF-H multi-phosphorylation repeat domain, i.e. repeats of Lys-Ser-Pro-X (where X is a small uncharged amino acid and Ser acts as a phosphate acceptor), as the determinant recognized by 15/16 MAbs that detected NFTs in sections of AD hippocampus, and 11 of the same 16 MAbs recognised NF-M multi-phosphorylation repeats. Further, the antigen binding regions of these MAbs were shown to comprise 13 separate classes based on their differential binding to 12 synthetic peptides derived from the NF-H and NF-M multi-phosphorylation sites, NF subunits of 10 diverse mammalian and sub-mammalian species, and normal human tau (tau). None of these anti-NF MAbs recognized NFTs in the brainstem of subjects with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), but NFTs in AD brainstem sections were reactive with five of these MAbs. Both PSP and AD brainstem NFTs were recognized by MAbs specific for tau and paired helical filament antigens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Affiliation(s)
- J Q Trojanowski
- Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19104-4283
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150
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Abstract
For 43 patients with probable Alzheimer's disease who were screened for psychiatric disorders, the interrater reliability of the Global Deterioration Scale, BPRS, and Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression was high (intraclass correlation, 0.82-0.998). As expected, the prevalence of psychiatric symptoms in this sample was low. The score on the Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale correlated with the score on the rater-administered Hamilton depression scale in patients whose Alzheimer's disease was of low severity (N = 24) but not high severity (N = 19).
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Affiliation(s)
- G L Gottlieb
- Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia
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