42 results on '"Roser Pueyo"'
Search Results
2. Interventions with an Impact on Cognitive Functions in Cerebral Palsy: a Systematic Review
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Montse, Blasco, María, García-Galant, Alba, Berenguer-González, Xavier, Caldú, Miquel, Arqué, Olga, Laporta-Hoyos, Júlia, Ballester-Plané, Júlia, Miralbell, María Ángeles, Jurado, and Roser Pueyo
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Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology - Abstract
This systematic review aimed at investigating those interventions that impact on cognitive functioning in children and adults with cerebral palsy (CP). A systematic database search was conducted and twenty-eight studies suitable for inclusion were identified, of which only nine were randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Among all the studies included, ten were multi-modal (cognitive and physical tasks), eleven physical, five cognitive, and two alternative and augmentative communication interventions. The evidence suggests that multi-modal and physical interventions improve general cognitive functioning. Multi-modal and cognitive interventions have an impact on visual perception. Both interventions, together with physical interventions have an effect on a specific executive function domain (inhibitory control), and only cognitive interventions improved other executive function domains such as working memory. However, no RCT assessed the effects of all executive function domains. Few studies have looked at interventions to improve memory and language, and there is a scarcity of long-term research. Future RCTs must be of higher quality and better account for age and sex differences, as well as the clinical heterogeneity of CP. To date, there is evidence that multi-modal, cognitive or physical interventions have an impact on general cognitive functioning, visual perception and executive functions in children with CP, which may support their cognitive development.The protocol was registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO): CRD42020152616.
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- 2022
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3. Neuropsychological impairment in post-COVID condition individuals with and without cognitive complaints
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Mar, Ariza, Neus, Cano, Bàrbara, Segura, Ana, Adan, Núria, Bargalló, Xavier, Caldú, Anna, Campabadal, Maria Angeles, Jurado, Maria, Mataró, Roser, Pueyo, Roser, Sala-Llonch, Cristian, Barrué, Javier, Bejar, Claudio Ulises, Cortés, Carme, Junqué, Sandra, Navarro, [Ariza M, Cano N, Segura B] Medical Psychology Unit, Departament de Medicina, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. [Ariza M, Segura B, Adan A, Caldú X] Institute of Neurosciences, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. [Ariza M, Cano N, Garolera M] Clinical Research Group for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Hospital de Terrassa, Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa, Terrassa, Spain. [Segura B, Bargallo N] Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS), Barcelona, Spain. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red sobre Enfermedades Neurodegenerativas (CIBERNED), Barcelona, Spain. [Adan A, Caldú X] Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychobiology, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. [Bargallo N] Diagnostic Imaging Centre, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental (CIBERSAM), Institut de Salut Carlos III, Barcelona, Spain.[Caldú X] Institut de Recerca Sant Joan de Déu (IRSJD), Barcelona, Spain. NAUTILUS-Project Collaborative Group. [Garolera M] Unitat de Neuropsicologia, Hospital de Terrassa, Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa, Terrassa, Spain, Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament de Ciències de la Computació, and Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. IDEAI-UPC - Intelligent Data sciEnce and Artificial Intelligence Research Group
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Aging ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,enfermedades del sistema nervioso::manifestaciones neurológicas [ENFERMEDADES] ,COVID-19 ,Neuropsicologia--Tests ,Virus Diseases::RNA Virus Infections::Nidovirales Infections::Coronaviridae Infections::Coronavirus Infections [DISEASES] ,Neuropsychological test ,Infeccions per coronavirus ,COVID-19 (Malaltia) ,Post-COVID-19 condition ,COVID-19 (Disease) ,Nervous System Diseases::Neurologic Manifestations [DISEASES] ,Neuropsychological tests ,Mental Disorders::Neurocognitive Disorders::Cognition Disorders::Cognitive Dysfunction [PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHOLOGY] ,Deteriorament cognitiu lleu ,virosis::infecciones por virus ARN::infecciones por Nidovirales::infecciones por Coronaviridae::infecciones por Coronavirus [ENFERMEDADES] ,Ciències de la salut::Salut mental::Psicologia [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC] ,NeuroCOVID ,Cognitive function ,Disfunció cerebral mínima ,trastornos mentales::trastornos neurocognitivos::trastornos cognitivos::disfunción cognitiva [PSIQUIATRÍA Y PSICOLOGÍA] - Abstract
One of the most prevalent symptoms of post-COVID condition is cognitive impairment, which results in a significant degree of disability and low quality of life. In studies with large sample sizes, attention, memory, and executive function were reported as long-term cognitive symptoms. This study aims to describe cognitive dysfunction in large post-COVID condition individuals, compare objective neuropsychological performance in those post-COVID condition individuals with and without cognitive complaints, and identify short cognitive exams that can differentiate individuals with post-COVID symptoms from controls. To address these aims, the Nautilus project was started in June 2021. During the first year, we collected 428 participants’ data, including 319 post-COVID and 109 healthy controls (18–65 years old) from those who underwent a comprehensive neuropsychological battery for cognitive assessment. Scores on tests assessing global cognition, learning and long-term memory, processing speed, language and executive functions were significantly worse in the post-COVID condition group than in healthy controls. Montreal Cognitive Assessment, digit symbol test, and phonetic verbal fluency were significant in the binomial logistic regression model and could effectively distinguish patients from controls with good overall sensitivity and accuracy. Neuropsychological test results did not differ between those with and without cognitive complaints. Our research suggests that patients with post-COVID conditions experience significant cognitive impairment and that routine tests like the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, digit symbol, and phonetic verbal fluency test might identify cognitive impairment. Thus, the administration of these tests would be helpful for all patients with post-COVID-19 symptoms, regardless of whether cognitive complaints are present or absent.Study registrationwww.ClinicalTrials.gov, identifiers NCT05307549 and NCT05307575.
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- 2022
4. Correction to: Interventions with an Impact on Cognitive Functions in Cerebral Palsy: A Systematic Review
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Montse Blasco, María García-Galant, Alba Berenguer-González, Xavier Caldú, Miquel Arqué, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Júlia Miralbell, María Ángeles Jurado, and Roser Pueyo
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Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology - Published
- 2023
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5. Executive function and general intellectual functioning in dyskinetic cerebral palsy: Comparison with spastic cerebral palsy and typically developing controls
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Maria Eugenia Russi, Roser Pueyo, Júlia Miralbell, Francisca Gimeno, Mar Meléndez-Plumed, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, David Leiva, Clara Torroja-Nualart, Teresa Ribas, Esther Toro-Tamargo, and Alfons Macaya
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Intelligence ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Typically developing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Spastic cerebral palsy ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Borderline intellectual functioning ,Interquartile range ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Social Behavior ,business.industry ,Cerebral Palsy ,Gross Motor Function Classification System ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy - Abstract
Aim To comprehensively describe intellectual and executive functioning (EF) in people with dyskinetic cerebral palsy (DCP), by comparing their performance with that of: 1) age- and sex-matched typically developing controls (TDC); and 2) participants with spastic cerebral palsy (SCP) matched for age, sex, term/preterm and gross motor function classification system (GMFCS). Method This cross-sectional study was conducted by the University of Barcelona in collaboration with five institutions. Participants were people with DCP (n = 52; 24 females, median age 20.5 y: 5mo, interquartile range [IQR] = 13.75 y: 7mo; GMFCS I–V). As comparison groups, participants with SCP (n = 20; 10 females, median age = 20.5 y: 5.5mo, IQR = 13.75 y 9mo; GMFCS I–V) and TDC (n = 52; 24 females, median age = 20 y: 4mo, IQR = 12 y 7mo) were included. Intelligence and EF were assessed using common tests in all participants. Results Both CP groups had lower intelligence than TDC and performed poorer in almost all EF tasks. Intelligence was higher in DCP than SCP (z = −2.51, p = 0.01). Participants with DCP also performed significantly better in goal-setting tasks (z = 2.27, p = 0.03) and information processing (z = −2.54, p = 0.01) than those with SCP. Conclusion People with DCP present lower general intellectual functioning and poorer EF across multiple domains than typically developing controls. People with DCP have higher general intellectual functioning and better EF than people with SCP when levels of motor severity are similar.
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- 2019
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6. Whole-brain structural connectivity in dyskinetic cerebral palsy and its association with motor and cognitive function
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Olga Laporta-Hoyos, Ruben Schmidt, Martijn P. van den Heuvel, Marcel A. de Reus, P Póo, Elida Vazquez, Carme Junqué, Leire Zubiaurre-Elorza, Alfons Macaya, Esther Toro, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Ignacio Delgado, and Roser Pueyo
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Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,05 social sciences ,Hippocampus ,050105 experimental psychology ,White matter ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Supramarginal gyrus ,Fractional anisotropy ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,Connectome ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy ,Tractography - Abstract
Dyskinetic cerebral palsy (CP) has long been associated with basal ganglia and thalamus lesions. Recent evidence further points at white matter (WM) damage. This study aims to identify altered WM pathways in dyskinetic CP from a standardized, connectome-based approach, and to assess structure-function relationship in WM pathways for clinical outcomes. Individual connectome maps of 25 subjects with dyskinetic CP and 24 healthy controls were obtained combining a structural parcellation scheme with whole-brain deterministic tractography. Graph theoretical metrics and the network-based statistic were applied to compare groups and to correlate WM state with motor and cognitive performance. Results showed a widespread reduction of WM volume in CP subjects compared to controls and a more localized decrease in degree (number of links per node) and fractional anisotropy (FA), comprising parieto-occipital regions and the hippocampus. However, supramarginal gyrus showed a significantly higher degree. At the network level, CP subjects showed a bilateral pathway with reduced FA, comprising sensorimotor, intraparietal and fronto-parietal connections. Gross and fine motor functions correlated with FA in a pathway comprising the sensorimotor system, but gross motor also correlated with prefrontal, temporal and occipital connections. Intelligence correlated with FA in a network with fronto-striatal and parieto-frontal connections, and visuoperception was related to right occipital connections. These findings demonstrate a disruption in structural brain connectivity in dyskinetic CP, revealing general involvement of posterior brain regions with relative preservation of prefrontal areas. We identified pathways in which WM integrity is related to clinical features, including but not limited to the sensorimotor system. Hum Brain Mapp 38:4594-4612, 2017. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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- 2017
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7. Is cognitive training an effective tool for improving cognitive function and real-life behaviour in healthy children and adolescents? A systematic review
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Xavier Caldú, Cristina Sánchez-Castañeda, Roser Pueyo, Sandra Luis-Ruiz, María Ángeles Jurado, and Maite Garolera
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Adult ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Weight loss ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Cognitive skill ,Eating behaviour ,Child ,Pathological ,Working memory ,05 social sciences ,Executive functions ,Cognitive training ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Memory, Short-Term ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Cognition Disorders ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Computerised cognitive training (CCT) has been applied to improve cognitive function in pathological conditions and in healthy populations. Studies suggest that CCT produces near-transfer effects to cognitive functions, with less evidence for far-transfer. Newer applications of CTT in adults seem to produce certain far-transfer effects by influencing eating behaviour and weight loss. However, this is more unexplored in children and adolescents. We conducted a systematic review of 16 studies with randomised controlled design to assess the impact of CCT on cognitive functioning and real-life outcomes, including eating behaviour, in children and adolescents with typical development (PROSPERO registration number: CRD42019123889). Results show near-transfer effects to working memory, with inconsistent results regarding far-transfer effects to other cognitive functions and real-life measures. Long-term effects show the same trend. Far-transfer effects occurred after cue-related inhibitory control and attentional training, although effects seem not to last. CCT may be a potential weight-loss treatment option but more research is needed to determine the specific characteristics to enhance treatment outcomes.
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- 2020
8. Study protocol of a randomized controlled trial of home-based computerized executive function training for children with cerebral palsy
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Xavi Caldú, María García-Galant, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Esther Toro-Tamargo, Marc Coronas, Francisca Gimeno, Júlia Miralbell, Emili Soro-Camats, Mar Meléndez-Plumed, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, Kerstin Pannek, Roser Pueyo, Lee B. Reid, Xènia Alonso, David Leiva, Roslyn N. Boyd, and Montse Blasco
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Quality of life ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neuroimaging ,law.invention ,Cerebral palsy ,Executive functions ,Executive Function ,Study Protocol ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Teràpia cognitiva per a infants ,medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive therapy for children ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Children ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Intelligence quotient ,Computerized therapy ,business.industry ,Participation ,lcsh:RJ1-570 ,Neuropsychology ,Brain ,lcsh:Pediatrics ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Cognitive training ,Diagnòstic per la imatge ,Treatment Outcome ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Physical therapy ,Diagnostic imaging ,Paràlisi cerebral ,business ,Infants ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Executive dysfunction - Abstract
Background Cerebral palsy (CP) is frequently associated with specific cognitive impairments, such as executive dysfunction which are related to participation and quality of life (QOL). The proposed study will examine whether a computerized executive function (EF) training programme could provide superior benefits for executive functioning, participation, QOL and brain plasticity, as compared to usual care. Methods A single-blind randomized controlled trial (RCT) design will be performed. Thirty children with CP aged 8 to 12 years will participate in a home-based computerized multi-modal executive training programme (12 weeks, 5 days a week, 30 min a day training, total dose = 30 h). Thirty children with CP matched by age, sex, motor and intelligence quotient (IQ) will compose the waitlist group. Cognitive, behavioural, emotional, participation and QOL measures will be obtained at three time points: before, immediately after and 9 months after completing the training. Additionally, structural and functional (resting state) magnetic resonance images (MRI) will be obtained in a subsample of 15 children from each group. Outcomes between groups will be compared following standard principles for RCTs. Discussion The study will test whether the cognitive training programme exerts a positive effect not only on neuropsychological and daily functioning of children with CP but also on other measures such as participation and QOL. We will also use brain MRI to test brain functional and structural changes after the intervention. If this on-line and home-based training programme proves effective, it could be a cost-effective intervention with short- and long-term effects on EF, participation or QOL in CP. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04025749. Registered 19 July 2019. Retrospectively registered.
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- 2020
9. Measuring intellectual ability in cerebral palsy: The comparison of three tests and their neuroimaging correlates
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Leire Zubiaurre-Elorza, Dolors Segarra, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Alfons Macaya, P Póo, Maria Eugenia Russi, Mar Meléndez-Plumed, Ignacio Delgado, Elida Vazquez, Roser Pueyo, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, Esther Toro-Tamargo, V Tenorio, and Ana Narberhaus
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Adult ,Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Neuroimaging ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,Basal Ganglia ,Cerebral palsy ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Raven's Progressive Matrices ,Thalamus ,Intellectual Disability ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Intelligence Tests ,Bilateral cerebral palsy ,Intelligence quotient ,Cerebral Palsy ,Wechsler Scales ,Neuropsychology ,Brain ,Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,White Matter ,Clinical Psychology ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Standard intelligence scales require both verbal and manipulative responses, making it difficult to use in cerebral palsy and leading to underestimate their actual performance. This study aims to compare three intelligence tests suitable for the heterogeneity of cerebral palsy in order to identify which one(s) could be more appropriate to use. Forty-four subjects with bilateral dyskinetic cerebral palsy (26 male, mean age 23 years) conducted the Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices (RCPM), the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-3rd (PPVT-III) and the Wechsler Nonverbal Scale of Ability (WNV). Furthermore, a comprehensive neuropsychological battery and magnetic resonance imaging were assessed. The results show that PPVT-III gives limited information on cognitive performance and brain correlates, getting lower intelligence quotient scores. The WNV provides similar outcomes as RCPM, but cases with severe motor impairment were unable to perform it. Finally, the RCPM gives more comprehensive information on cognitive performance, comprising not only visual but also verbal functions. It is also sensitive to the structural state of the brain, being related to basal ganglia, thalamus and white matter areas such as superior longitudinal fasciculus. So, the RCPM may be considered a standardized easy-to-administer tool with great potential in both clinical and research fields of bilateral cerebral palsy.
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- 2016
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10. Affected connectivity organization of the reward system structure in obesity
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C. Sánchez-Garre, María José Sender-Palacios, Isabel García-García, Maria Vernet-Vernet, P. González-Tartiere, Idoia Marqués-Iturria, Barbara Segura, Lianne H. Scholtens, Maite Garolera, M.P. van den Heuvel, Roser Pueyo, M. A. de Reus, Carme Junqué, María Ángeles Jurado, and Human genetics
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Body mass index, Diffusion imaging, Eating, Neuroanatomy, Orbitofrontal cortex, Striatum ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Striatum ,Cognitive neuroscience ,Research Support ,White matter ,Reward system ,Eating ,Reward ,medicine ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Obesity ,Non-U.S. Gov't ,Child ,Body mass index ,Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ,Putamen ,White Matter ,Diffusion imaging ,Neostriatum ,Neuroanatomy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neurology ,Female ,Nerve Net ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
With the prevalence of obesity rapidly increasing worldwide, understanding the processes leading to excessive eating behavior becomes increasingly important. Considering the widely recognized crucial role of reward processes in food intake, we examined the white matter wiring and integrity of the anatomical reward network in obesity. Anatomical wiring of the reward network was reconstructed derived from diffusion weighted imaging in 31 obese participants and 32 normal-weight participants. Network wiring was compared in terms of the white matter volume as well as in terms of white matter microstructure, revealing lower number of streamlines and lower fiber integrity within the reward network in obese subjects. Specifically, the orbitofrontal cortex and striatum nuclei including accumbens, caudate and putamen showed lower strength and network clustering in the obesity group as compared to healthy controls. Our results provide evidence for obesity-related disruptions of global and local anatomical connectivity of the reward circuitry in regions that are key in the reinforcing mechanisms of eating-behavior processes.
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- 2015
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11. Towards a comprehensive profile of dyskinetic cerebral palsy
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Roser Pueyo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cerebral Palsy ,medicine.disease ,Cerebral palsy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Developmental Neuroscience ,030225 pediatrics ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Medicine ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy - Published
- 2017
12. White matter integrity in dyskinetic cerebral palsy : Relationship with intelligence quotient and executive function
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Mar Meléndez-Plumed, Leire Zubiaurre-Elorza, Roslyn N. Boyd, Roser Pueyo, Alfons Macaya, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, Elida Vazquez, Lee B. Reid, P Póo, Ignacio Delgado, Carme Junqué, and Kerstin Pannek
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Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Intelligence ,Corpus callosum ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,White matter ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Fractional anisotropy ,medicine ,Humans ,Cingulum (brain) ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Intelligence Tests ,Cerebral Palsy ,Superior longitudinal fasciculus ,Parietal lobe ,Brain ,Regular Article ,White Matter ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Frontal lobe ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy - Abstract
Background Dyskinetic cerebral palsy (CP) is one of the most disabling motor types of CP and has been classically associated with injury to the basal ganglia and thalamus. Although cognitive dysfunction is common in CP, there is a paucity of published quantitative analyses investigating the relationship between white matter (WM) microstructure and cognition in this CP type. Aims This study aims (1) to compare brain WM microstructure between people with dyskinetic CP and healthy controls, (2) to identify brain regions where WM microstructure is related to intelligence and (3) to identify brain regions where WM microstructure is related to executive function in people with dyskinetic CP and (4) to identify brain regions where the correlations are different between controls and people with CP in IQ and executive functions. Patients and methods Thirty-three participants with dyskinetic CP (mean ± SD age: 24.42 ± 12.61, 15 female) were age and sex matched with 33 controls. Participants underwent a comprehensive neuropsychological battery to assess intelligence quotient (IQ) and four executive function domains (attentional control, cognitive flexibility, goal setting and information processing). Diffusion weighted MRI scans were acquired at 3T. Voxel-based whole brain groupwise analyses were used to compare fractional anisotropy (FA) and of the CP group to the matched controls using a general lineal model. Further general linear models were used to identify regions where white matter FA correlated with IQ and each of the executive function domains. Results White matter FA was significantly reduced in the CP group in all cerebral lobes, predominantly in regions connected with the parietal and to a lesser extent the temporal lobes. There was no significant correlation between IQ or any of the four executive function domains and WM microstructure in the control group. In participants with CP, lower IQ was associated with lower FA in all cerebral lobes, predominantly in locations that also showed reduced FA compared to controls. Attentional control, goal setting and information processing did not correlate with WM microstructure in the CP group. Cognitive flexibility was associated with FA in regions known to contain connections with the frontal lobe (such as the superior longitudinal fasciculus and cingulum) as well as regions not known to contain tracts directly connected with the frontal lobe (such as the posterior corona radiata, posterior thalamic radiation, retrolenticular part of internal capsule, tapetum, body and splenium of corpus callosum). Conclusion The widespread loss in the integrity of WM tissue is mainly located in the parietal lobe and related to IQ in dyskinetic CP. Unexpectedly, executive functions are only related with WM microstructure in regions containing fronto-cortical and posterior cortico-subcortical pathways, and not being specifically related to the state of fronto-striatal pathways which might be due to brain reorganization. Further studies of this nature may improve our understanding of the neurobiological bases of cognitive impairments after early brain insult., Graphical abstract Image 4, Highlights • There is widespread loss in the integrity of WM in dyskinetic CP. • WM integrity is mainly reduced in regions near the parietal cortex. • IQ is related to FA in the majority of the regions showing a reduced WM integrity. • Executive function is related with cortico-cortical and posterior cortico-subcortical WM FA. • Executive function is not associated with WM FA of the fronto-striatal circuit in dyskinetic CP.
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- 2017
13. Neural Responses to Visual Food Cues: Insights from Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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María Ángeles Jurado, A. Rădoi, Mar Ariza, Maite Garolera, Roser Pueyo, Idoia Marqués-Iturria, Ana Narberhaus, Isabel García-García, and Bàrbara Segura
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medicine.diagnostic_test ,Bulimia nervosa ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Developmental psychology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Eating disorders ,Neuroimaging ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Binge-eating disorder ,Healthy individuals ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Neuroscience - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to describe the patterns of functional magnetic resonance imaging activation produced by visual food stimuli in healthy participants, as well as in those with anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating disorder and obesity. We conducted a systematic review of studies published in the last decade on normal and abnormal eating. This review suggested the existence of neural differences in response to the sight of food between healthy individuals, those with an eating disorder and obese subjects. Differences were identified in two brain circuits: (i) limbic and paralimbic areas associated with salience and reward processes and (ii) prefrontal areas supporting cognitive control processes.
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- 2013
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14. Proxy-reported quality of life in adolescents and adults with dyskinetic cerebral palsy is associated with executive functions and cortical thickness
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Dolors Segarra, Roser Pueyo, Mar Meléndez-Plumed, Esther Toro-Tamargo, Ignacio Delgado, P Póo, Ana Narberhaus, Alfons Macaya, Leire Zubiaurre-Elorza, Elida Vazquez, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, V. L. Botellero, and Júlia Ballester-Plané
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Adult ,Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Quality of life ,Cerebral palsy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Wisconsin Card Sorting Test ,Sickness Impact Profile ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Cerebral Palsy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Cognitive flexibility ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Executive functions ,humanities ,Cortical thickness ,Posterior cingulate ,Physical therapy ,Anxiety ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
PURPOSE: Quality of life (QOL) is a key outcome for people with cerebral palsy (CP), and executive functioning is an important predictor of QOL in other health-related conditions. Little is known about this association in CP or about its neural substrate. We aim to analyze the influence of executive functioning (including cognitive flexibility) as well as that of other psychological, motor, communication and socioeconomic variables on QOL and to identify neuroanatomical areas related to QOL in adolescents and adults with CP. METHODS: Fifty subjects diagnosed with dyskinetic CP (mean age 25.96 years) were recruited. Their caregivers completed the primary caregiver proxy report version of the CP QOL-Teen questionnaire. Motor status, communication, IQ, four executive function domains, anxiety/depression and socioeconomic status were evaluated. Correlations and multiple linear regression models were used to relate CP QOL domains and total score to these variables. Thirty-six participants underwent an MRI assessment. Correlations were examined between cortical thickness and CP QOL total score and between cortical thickness and variables that might predict the CP QOL total score. RESULTS: Executive functions predict scores in four domains of CP QOL (General well-being and participation, Communication and physical health, Family health and Feelings about functioning) in the regression model. Among the cognitive domains that comprise executive function, only cognitive flexibility measured in terms of performance on the Wisconsin card sorting test (WCST) predicts the CP QOL total score. Monthly income, fine motor functioning and communication ability predict scores on the domains Access to services and Family Health, Feelings about functioning and School well-being, respectively. The clusters resulting from the correlation between cortical thickness and both CP QOL total score and WCST performance overlapped in the posterior cingulate and precuneus cortices. CONCLUSIONS: Cognitive flexibility predicts proxy report CP QOL-Teen total score in dyskinetic CP. This relationship has its anatomical correlate in the posterior cingulate and precuneus cortices.
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- 2016
15. Alterations of the salience network in obesity: A resting-state fMRI study
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Ana Narberhaus, Idoia Marqués-Iturria, Carme Junqué, María Ángeles Jurado, Maria Vernet-Vernet, Roser Sala-Llonch, Bàrbara Segura, Roser Pueyo, Isabel García-García, María José Sender-Palacios, Mar Ariza, and Maite Garolera
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Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Resting state fMRI ,Putamen ,Correlation ,Neurology ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neurology (clinical) ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Anatomy ,Overeating ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Obesity is a major health problem in modern societies. It has been related to abnormal functional organization of brain networks believed to process homeostatic (internal) and/or salience (external) information. This study used resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging analysis to delineate possible functional changes in brain networks related to obesity. A group of 18 healthy adult participants with obesity were compared with a group of 16 lean participants while performing a resting-state task, with the data being evaluated by independent component analysis. Participants also completed a neuropsychological assessment. Results showed that the functional connectivity strength of the putamen nucleus in the salience network was increased in the obese group. We speculate that this abnormal activation may contribute to overeating through an imbalance between autonomic processing and reward processing of food stimuli. A correlation was also observed in obesity between activation of the putamen nucleus in the salience network and mental slowness, which is consistent with the notion that basal ganglia circuits modulate rapid processing of information.
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- 2012
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16. Doing and reporting a neuropsychological assessment
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Angeles Jurado, Maria and Roser Pueyo
- Subjects
lcsh:Psychology ,lcsh:BF1-990 - Abstract
El proceso de la evaluación neuropsicológica implica varios estadios. Primero se identifican los objetivos y se analizan las características de los participantes que van a ser evaluados y después se seleccionan las pruebas, se administran, corrigen e interpretan. El último paso es la redacción de un informe clínico o científico. El presente trabajo comienza con una breve reseña de la historia de la neuropsicología, considera los enfoques de la evaluación y los principales manuales de referencia en evaluación. También se listan las mejores revistas de la especialidad. Continúa con un apartado en el que se explican los aspectos más relevantes para las distintas fases de la evaluación clínica o de investigación y finaliza exponiendo unas pautas sobre aspectos específicos de la publicación de evaluaciones neuropsicológicas, principalmente en relación a los apartados de método ¿ participantes, evaluación, análisis estadístico- y resultados. Esta información se puede consultar en una tabla anexa en la que se diferencia entre la información que consideramos necesaria para publicar sobre evaluación neuropsicológica y aquélla aconsejable aunque no imprescindible.
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- 2012
17. Corpus callosum and prefrontal functions in adolescents with history of very preterm birth
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Ana Narberhaus, Dolors Segarra, Mónica Giménez, Francesc Botet, Roser Pueyo, Carme Junqué, and Xavier Caldú
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Statistics as Topic ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Splenium ,Posterior parietal cortex ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,Corpus callosum ,Corpus Callosum ,Developmental psychology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Cognition ,medicine ,Humans ,Verbal fluency test ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Child ,Prefrontal cortex ,Verbal Behavior ,Executive functions ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Case-Control Studies ,Premature Birth ,Female ,Psychology - Abstract
Very preterm (VPT) birth can account for thinning of the corpus callosum and poorer cognitive performance. Research findings about preterm and VPT adolescents usually describe a small posterior corpus callosum, although our research group has also found reductions of the anterior part, specifically the genu. The aim of the present study was to investigate the functional implications of this concrete reduction. Fifty-two VPT adolescents were compared with 52 adolescents born at term; there were no significant differences in age and gender, and socioeconomic status was similar between the groups. All participants underwent a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study and assessment of prefrontal functioning and vocabulary. The VPT group showed significant reductions of the genu, isthmus and splenium, as well as a significantly worse performance on category verbal fluency, executive functions, everyday memory and vocabulary. Although several parts of the corpus callosum correlated with some prefrontal functions, the genu was the part which principally explained these correlations. The subtest Vocabulary only correlated with the splenium. The relationship between genu and prefrontal functions and between splenium and vocabulary may be due to the fact that these parts of the corpus callosum connect prefrontal and posterior parietal cortex, respectively. The work presented here provides evidence of specific associations between reductions in the anterior corpus callosum (genu) and lower prefrontal functioning in VPT adolescents.
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- 2008
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18. Neuropsychologic Differences Between Bilateral Dyskinetic and Spastic Cerebral Palsy
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Roser Pueyo, Pere Vendrell, and Carme Junqué
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual perception ,Adolescent ,Psychometrics ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Cerebral palsy ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Spastic cerebral palsy ,Visual memory ,Reference Values ,medicine ,Humans ,Language Development Disorders ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Dominance, Cerebral ,Problem Solving ,Cerebral Palsy ,05 social sciences ,Neuropsychology ,Cognition ,030229 sport sciences ,medicine.disease ,Frontal Lobe ,Memory, Short-Term ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Speech Perception ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Verbal memory ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy - Abstract
This study compared the neuropsychologic performance of 30 adolescents and adults with bilateral dyskinetic, mixed, and spastic cerebral palsy aged between 16 and 38 years. The sample was relatively homogeneous in terms of motor severity; no patients were able to walk unaided. In all subjects, we evaluated the general function of nonverbal reasoning and the following specific neuropsychologic areas: language, visual perception, memory, praxis, and frontal functions. Individuals with dyskinetic cerebral palsy had better auditory comprehension, visuospatial abilities, immediate visual memory, and working verbal memory than those with spastic cerebral palsy. Frontal function was the only cognitive function on which subjects with dyskinetic cerebral palsy had lower scores. We conclude that the neuropsychologic profiles of dyskinetic and spastic cerebral palsy are different. ( J Child Neurol 2003;18:845-850).
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- 2003
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19. FADR: Functional-Anatomical Discriminative Regions for Rest fMRI Characterization
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Sonja Simpraga, Laura Igual, Maite Garolera, Roser Pueyo, Marta Nuñez-Garcia, and María Ángeles Jurado
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Elastic net regularization ,Rest (physics) ,Resting state fMRI ,business.industry ,Functional connectivity ,Feature selection ,Pattern recognition ,Sparse approximation ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Independent component analysis ,Discriminative model ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,Mathematics - Abstract
Resting state fMRI is a powerful method of functional brain imaging, which can reveal information of functional connectivity between regions during rest. In this paper, we present a novel method, called Functional-Anatomical Discriminative Regions FADR, for selecting a discriminative subset of functional-anatomical regions of the brain in order to characterize functional connectivity abnormalities in mental disorders. FADR integrates Independent Component Analysis with a sparse feature selection strategy, namely Elastic Net, in a supervised framework to extract a new sparse representation. In particular, ICA is used for obtaining group Resting State Networks and functional information is extracted from the subject-specific spatial maps. Anatomical information is incorporated to localize the discriminative regions. Thus, functional-anatomical information is combined in the new descriptor, which characterizes areas of different networks and carries discriminative power. Experimental results on the public database ADHD-200 validate the method being able to automatically extract discriminative areas and extending results from previous studies. The classification ability is evaluated showing that our method performs better than the average of the teams in the ADHD-200 Global Competition while giving relevant information about the disease by selecting the most discriminative regions at the same time.
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- 2015
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20. Functional network centrality in obesity: a resting-state and task fMRI study
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Maria Vernet-Vernet, Arno Villringer, Roser Pueyo, Carme Junqué, María Ángeles Jurado, Jane Neumann, Idoia Marqués-Iturria, María José Sender-Palacios, Bàrbara Segura, Annette Horstmann, Isabel García-García, Daniel S. Margulies, Maite Garolera, University of Barcelona, Max-Planck-Institut für Neuro- und Kognitionswissenschaften, Grup de Recerca Consolidat en Neuropsicologia (2014 SGR 98), Hospital de Terrassa, Universitätsklinikum Leipzig, Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa, and Institut d'Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS)
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,body-mass index, fMRI, functional connectivity, graph analysis, brain ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Rest ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Statistical parametric mapping ,Young Adult ,Perception ,medicine ,Middle frontal gyrus ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Attention ,Obesity ,ddc:610 ,media_common ,Brain Mapping ,Resting state fMRI ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Body-mass index, Brain, Functional connectivity, Graph analysis, fMRI ,Executive functions ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Frontal Lobe ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Body-Mass-Index, fMRT, funktionelle Konnektivität, Graphenanalyse, Gehirn ,FMRIB Software Library ,Female ,Occipital Lobe ,Nerve Net ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Centrality ,Neuroscience ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
Obesity is associated with structural and functional alterations in brain areas that are often functionally distinct and anatomically distant. This suggests that obesity is associated with differences in functional connectivity of regions distributed across the brain. However, studies addressing whole brain functional connectivity in obesity remain scarce. Here, we compared voxel-wise degree centrality and eigenvector centrality between participants with obesity (n=20) and normal-weight controls (n=21). We analyzed resting state and task-related fMRI data acquired from the same individuals. Relative to normal-weight controls, participants with obesity exhibited reduced degree centrality in the right middle frontal gyrus in the resting-state condition. During the task fMRI condition, obese participants exhibited less degree centrality in the left middle frontal gyrus and the lateral occipital cortex along with reduced eigenvector centrality in the lateral occipital cortex and occipital pole. Our results highlight the central role of the middle frontal gyrus in the pathophysiology of obesity, a structure involved in several brain circuits signaling attention, executive functions and motor functions. Additionally, our analysis suggests the existence of task-dependent reduced centrality in occipital areas; regions with a role in perceptual processes and that are profoundly modulated by attention.
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- 2015
21. Cognitive and behavioral changes after unilateral posteroventral pallidotomy: Relationship with lesional data from MRI
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Josep Maria Mercader, Eduardo Tolosa, Jordi Rumià, Roser Pueyo, Carme Junqué, Montse Alegret, Frederich A. Nobbe, Francesc Valldeoriola, and Pere Vendrell
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Male ,Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Parkinson's disease ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Audiology ,Globus Pallidus ,Severity of Illness Index ,Functional Laterality ,Central nervous system disease ,Postoperative Complications ,medicine ,Humans ,Verbal fluency test ,Pallidotomy ,Aged ,Ventral Thalamic Nuclei ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Neuropsychology ,Parkinson Disease ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Neurology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cognition Disorders ,Motor learning ,Psychology - Abstract
We investigated cognitive and behavioral changes after unilateral posteroventral pallidotomy, and their relationship with lesion size and location as identified in magnetic resonance image quantitative analysis. Fifteen consecutive patients with Parkinson's disease were assessed neuropsychologically before and after unilateral posteroventral pallidotomy (five right and 10 left). Immediate postsurgery evaluation (1 week) demonstrated significant worsening of memory, motor learning, motor speed, and verbal fluency. In the 3-month follow up, learning, memory, and speed returned to the presurgical level, but verbal fluency remained below the baseline. Significant improvements were observed in visuospatial functions and obsessive-compulsive behavior. Lesional volume did not correlate with neuropsychologic changes. Left lesions produced more impairment in verbal fluency than right-sided lesions. Regression analysis identified two lesional areas in the pallidum mediale internum. These regions accounted for 68% of the variance in the visuospatial changes.
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- 1999
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22. Does verbal and gestural expression ability predict comprehension ability in cerebral palsy?
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Ana Narberhaus, Roser Pueyo, Mar Ariza, Pere Vendrell, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Carme Junqué, and Olga Laporta-Hoyos
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Cerebral palsy ,Young Adult ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Young adult ,Child ,Bilateral cerebral palsy ,Language Tests ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Gestures ,Verbal Behavior ,Cerebral Palsy ,medicine.disease ,Sensory Systems ,Comprehension ,Female ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology ,Gesture - Abstract
Some people with cerebral palsy have motor and associated impairments that may hinder verbal and gestural expression to various extents. This study explores whether the ability to produce verbal or gestural expressions may be related to the comprehension of verbal communications and gestures. The influence of severity of motor impairment, general cognitive performance, and age on comprehension ability was also explored. Forty people with cerebral palsy were assigned to different groups according to their verbal and gestural expression abilities. A neuropsychological assessment of comprehension abilities and general cognitive performance was carried out. Multiple linear regression analysis was applied to identify the possible influence of expression abilities on comprehension abilities and also to detect the possible contribution of severity of motor impairment, general cognitive performance, and age. Results indicate that verbal and gestural comprehension was mainly predicted by general cognitive performance. Severity of motor impairment and age did not contribute to predicting comprehension abilities. Only verbal grammar comprehension was significantly predicted by verbal expression ability. Verbal expression ability may be an important marker for cerebral palsy therapies. In non-ambulant patients with bilateral cerebral palsy, impaired gestural expression should not be taken as an indicator of impaired gestural comprehension.
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- 2013
23. The interaction effect between BDNF val66met polymorphism and obesity on executive functions and frontal structure
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Maite Garolera, Ana Narberhaus, Carme Junqué, María Ángeles Jurado, Idoia Marqués-Iturria, Imma Hernan, Maria Vernet-Vernet, C. Sánchez-Garre, Barbara Segura, Mar Ariza, María José Sender-Palacios, Isabel García-García, and Roser Pueyo
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Trail Making Test ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Audiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,Cognition ,Wisconsin Card Sorting Test ,medicine ,Humans ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Obesity ,Prefrontal cortex ,Child ,Genetics (clinical) ,Alleles ,Brain-derived neurotrophic factor ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,Cognitive flexibility ,Executive functions ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Female ,business ,Stroop effect - Abstract
The prevalence of obesity is increasing worldwide. Previous research has shown a relationship between obesity and both executive functioning alterations and frontal cortex volume reductions. The Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor val66met polymorphism, involved in eating behavior, has also been associated with executive functions and prefrontal cortex volume, but to date it has not been studied in relation to obesity. Our aim is to elucidate whether the interaction between the Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor val66met polymorphism and obesity status influences executive performance and frontal-subcortical brain structure. Sixty-one volunteers, 34 obese and 27 controls, age range 12–40, participated in the study. Participants were assigned to one of two genotype groups (met allele carriers, n = 16, or non-carriers, n = 45). Neuropsychological assessment comprised the Trail Making Test, the Stroop Test and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, all tasks that require response inhibition and cognitive flexibility. Subjects underwent magnetic resonance imaging in a Siemens TIM TRIO 3T scanner and images were analyzed using the FreeSurfer software. Analyses of covariance controlling for age and intelligence showed an effect of the obesity-by-genotype interaction on perseverative responses on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test as well as on precentral and caudal middle frontal cortical thickness: obese met allele carriers showed more perseverations on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test and lower frontal thickness than obese non-carriers and controls. In conclusion, the Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor may play an important role in executive functioning and frontal brain structure in obesity. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Published
- 2013
24. Functional connectivity in obesity during reward processing
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María José Sender-Palacios, Carme Junqué, María Ángeles Jurado, Idoia Marqués-Iturria, Mar Ariza, Maite Garolera, Ana Narberhaus, Roser Pueyo, Maria Vernet-Vernet, Isabel García-García, Roser Sala-Llonch, and Bàrbara Segura
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Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Developmental psychology ,Reward processing ,Young Adult ,Reward ,Cognitive resource theory ,Neural Pathways ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,Obesity ,Young adult ,Association (psychology) ,Default mode network ,Brain Mapping ,Connectivity, Functional magnetic resonance imaging, Obesity, Reward ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Functional connectivity ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Neurology ,Female ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Obesity is a health problem that has become a major focus of attention in recent years. There is growing evidence of an association between obesity and differences in reward processing. However, it is not known at present whether these differences are linked exclusively to food, or whether they can be detected in other rewarding stimuli. We compared responses to food, rewarding non-food and neutral pictures in 18 young adults with obesity and 19 normal-weight subjects using independent component analysis. Both groups modulated task-related activity in a plausible way. However, in response to both food and non-food rewarding stimuli, participants with obesity showed weaker connectivity in a network involving activation of frontal and occipital areas and deactivation of the posterior part of the default mode network. In addition, obesity was related with weaker activation of the default mode network and deactivation of frontal and occipital areas while viewing neutral stimuli. Together, our findings suggest that obesity is related to a different allocation of cognitive resources in a fronto-occipital network and in the default mode network.
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- 2013
25. Frontal cortical thinning and subcortical volume reductions in early adulthood obesity
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Maite Garolera, Ana Narberhaus, Idoia Marqués-Iturria, Carme Junqué, María Ángeles Jurado, Maria Vernet-Vernet, Roser Pueyo, Isabel García-García, Mar Ariza, María José Sender-Palacios, and Bàrbara Segura
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Adult ,Male ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Physiology ,Body Mass Index ,Diencephalon ,Young Adult ,Neuroplasticity ,medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Obesity ,Young adult ,Cerebral Cortex ,Analysis of Variance ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Frontal lobe ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Female ,Brainstem ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Obesity depends on homeostatic and hedonic food intake behavior, mediated by brain plasticity changes in cortical and subcortical structures. The aim of this study was to investigate cortical thickness and subcortical volumes of regions related to food intake behavior in a healthy young adult sample with obesity. Thirty-seven volunteers, 19 with obesity (age=33.7±5.7 (20-39) years body-mass index (BMI)=36.08±5.92 (30.10-49.69)kg/m(2)) and 18 controls (age=32.3±5.9 (21-40) years; BMI=22.54±1.94 (19.53-24.97)kg/m(2)) participated in the study. Patients with neuropsychiatric or biomedical disorders were excluded. We used FreeSurfer software to analyze structural magnetic resonance images (MRI) and obtain global brain measures, cortical thickness and subcortical volume estimations. Finally, correlation analyses were performed for brain structure data and obesity measures. There were no between-group differences in age, gender, intelligence or education. Results showed cortical thickness reductions in obesity in the left superior frontal and right medial orbitofrontal cortex. In addition, the obesity group had lower ventral diencephalon and brainstem volumes than controls, while there were no differences in any other subcortical structure. There were no statistically significant correlations between brain structure and obesity measures. Overall, our work provides evidence of the structural brain characteristics associated with metabolically normal obesity. We found reductions in cortical thickness, ventral diencephalon and brainstem volumes in areas that have been implicated in food intake behavior.
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- 2012
26. Dopamine genes (DRD2/ANKK1-TaqA1 and DRD4-7R) and executive function: their interaction with obesity
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Roser Pueyo, María José Sender-Palacios, María Ángeles Jurado, Ana Narberhaus, Maria Vernet-Vernet, C. Sánchez-Garre, Idoia Marqués-Iturria, Mar Ariza, Imma Hernan, Bàrbara Segura, Isabel García-García, Maite Garolera, and Universitat de Barcelona
- Subjects
Male ,Environmental effects on human beings ,Eating Disorders ,Dopamine ,Dopamina ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Body Mass Index ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Cognition ,Human genetics ,Psychology ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Gene–environment interaction ,Psychiatry ,Genetics ,ANKK1 ,Genètica humana ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Executive functions ,Mental Health ,Obesitat ,Medicine ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Science ,Decision Making ,Biology ,Impulsivity ,Neuropsychology ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Obesity ,Working Memory ,Allele ,Alleles ,Nutrition ,Influència del medi ambient en l'home ,Behavior ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Receptors, Dopamine D4 ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Gene Function ,Body mass index ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Obesity is a multifactorial disease caused by the interaction between genotype and environment, and it is considered to be a type of addictive alteration. The A1 allele of the DRD2/ANKK1-TaqIA gene has been associated with addictive disorders, with obesity and with the performance in executive functions. The 7 repeat allele of the DRD4 gene has likewise been associated with the performance in executive functions, as well as with addictive behaviors and impulsivity. Participants were included in the obesity group (N = 42) if their body mass index (BMI) was equal to or above 30, and in the lean group (N = 42) if their BMI was below 25. The DRD2/ANKK1-TaqIA and DRD4 VNTR polymorphisms were obtained. All subjects underwent neuropsychological assessment. Eating behavior traits were evaluated. The 'DRD2/ANKK1-TaqIA A1-allele status' had a significant effect on almost all the executive variables, but no significant 'DRD4 7R-allele status' effects were observed for any of the executive variables analyzed. There was a significant 'group' x 'DRD2/ANKK1-TaqIA A1-allele status' interaction effect on LN and 'group' x 'DRD4 7R-allele status' interaction effect on TMT B-A score. Being obese and a carrier of the A1 allele of DRD2/ANKK1-TaqIA or the 7R allele of DRD4 VNTR polymorphisms could confer a weakness as regards the performance of executive functions.
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- 2012
27. Alterations of the salience network in obesity: a resting-state fMRI study
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Isabel, García-García, María Ángeles, Jurado, Maite, Garolera, Bàrbara, Segura, Roser, Sala-Llonch, Idoia, Marqués-Iturria, Roser, Pueyo, María José, Sender-Palacios, Maria, Vernet-Vernet, Ana, Narberhaus, Mar, Ariza, and Carme, Junqué
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Hunger ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Body Mass Index ,Young Adult ,Cognition ,Mental Processes ,Memory ,Neural Pathways ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Limbic System ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Obesity ,Research Articles ,Brain Mapping ,Principal Component Analysis ,Putamen ,Verbal Learning ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Body Composition ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Nerve Net ,Psychomotor Performance - Abstract
Obesity is a major health problem in modern societies. It has been related to abnormal functional organization of brain networks believed to process homeostatic (internal) and/or salience (external) information. This study used resting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging analysis to delineate possible functional changes in brain networks related to obesity. A group of 18 healthy adult participants with obesity were compared with a group of 16 lean participants while performing a resting‐state task, with the data being evaluated by independent component analysis. Participants also completed a neuropsychological assessment. Results showed that the functional connectivity strength of the putamen nucleus in the salience network was increased in the obese group. We speculate that this abnormal activation may contribute to overeating through an imbalance between autonomic processing and reward processing of food stimuli. A correlation was also observed in obesity between activation of the putamen nucleus in the salience network and mental slowness, which is consistent with the notion that basal ganglia circuits modulate rapid processing of information. Hum Brain Mapp 34:2786–2797, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
- Published
- 2011
28. Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices as a measure of cognitive functioning in Cerebral Palsy
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Ana Narberhaus, Pere Vendrell, Carme Junqué, Dolors Segarra, and Roser Pueyo
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Color ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Vocabulary ,Cerebral palsy ,Raven's Progressive Matrices ,Cognition ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Visual memory ,Memory ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Language ,Psychomotor learning ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cerebral Palsy ,Rehabilitation ,Reproducibility of Results ,Neuropsychological test ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Spain ,Space Perception ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Verbal memory ,Psychology ,Cognition Disorders ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Background Cognitive dysfunction is frequent in Cerebral Palsy (CP). CP motor impairment and associated speech deficits often hinder cognitive assessment, with the result being that not all CP studies consider cognitive dysfunction. Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices is a simple, rapid test which can be used in persons with severe motor impairment and speech limitations. We studied whether this test can offer a reliable measure of cognitive functioning in CP. Method Visuoperceptual, language, memory and frontal lobe functions were evaluated in 30 participants with severe motor impaired CP and a variety of speech difficulties. The relationship between Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices and a variety of tests was analysed. Results Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices performance was associated with visuoperceptual, language, visual and verbal memory but not with frontal functions. Receptive vocabulary and visuospatial measures were the best predictors of Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices raw scores. Conclusions Raven's Coloured Progressive Matrices is a fast, easy-to-administer test able to obtain a measure related with linguistic, visuoperceptual, and memory cognitive functioning in persons with CP despite their motor and speech disorders.
- Published
- 2008
29. Neuropsychologic impairment in bilateral cerebral palsy
- Author
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Pere Vendrell, Dolors Segarra, Roser Pueyo, Ana Narberhaus, and Carme Junqué
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Audiology ,Vocabulary ,Developmental psychology ,Cerebral palsy ,Young Adult ,Cognition ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Visual memory ,Memory ,Neuropsychology ,medicine ,Spastic ,Memory impairment ,Birth Weight ,Humans ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Child ,Bilateral cerebral palsy ,Cerebral Palsy ,Verbal Learning ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Space Perception ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Verbal memory ,Psychology ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy - Abstract
The lower-than-average cognitive performance of individuals with bilateral cerebral palsy found in previous studies does not always refer to an abnormal performance or clinically significant impairment. We aimed to establish the percentage of persons with bilateral cerebral palsy who present neuropsychologic impairment, and its relationship to perinatal data and motor signs. Forty children, adolescents, and adults (age range, 6-38 years; 15 females and 25 males) with bilateral cerebral palsy were neuropsychologically assessed. Vocabulary was impaired in 85% of participants, language comprehension in 13-48%, visuoperceptual abilities in 60%, visuospatial abilities in 90%, short-term memory in 21-58%, declarative memory in 47-67%, and praxis comprehension in 20%, with executive deficits in 58-74%. Perinatal data (intrauterine growth and birth weight) contributed to explaining memory impairment. Among cerebral palsy subtypes (spastic, mixed, and dyskinetic), forms of impairment differed only in short-term verbal memory. No persons with dyskinetic cerebral palsy experienced impairment in immediate memory or working visual memory. We conclude that visuospatial deficit is the most frequent impairment in people with bilateral cerebral palsy. Moreover, short-term memory impairment seems sensitive to perinatal complications, and differs among bilateral cerebral palsy subtypes.
- Published
- 2007
30. Gestational age at preterm birth in relation to corpus callosum and general cognitive outcome in adolescents
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Dolors Segarra, Xavier Caldú, Mónica Giménez, Carme Junqué, Roser Pueyo, Ana Narberhaus, and Francesc Botet
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Battery ,Statistics as Topic ,Splenium ,Gestational Age ,Corpus callosum ,Corpus Callosum ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Intelligence Tests ,Analysis of Variance ,Intelligence quotient ,Gestational age ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Premature Birth ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Prematurity is associated with corpus callosum abnormalities and low general cognitive functioning. The present study explores the specific relationship between gestational age, corpus callosum, and intelligence quotient (IQ) in a sample of preterm-born adolescents. Sixty-four adolescents born at a gestational age of 36 weeks or less were divided into 4 groups attending to their gestational age (GA) (group 1, ≤ 27; group 2, 28-30; group 3, 31-33; group 4, 34-36). These individuals were compared with 53 adolescents born at term and of similar age, gender, and sociocultural status. Individuals born at a gestational age of 27 or less (group 1) presented a generalized corpus callosum reduction in the posterior part (posterior midbody, isthmus, and splenium) as well as in the anterior part (anterior midbody and genu), a reduced total white-matter volume, and a low Full-Scale IQ. Group 2 (GA between 28 and 30) also showed a low IQ, but corpus callosum reduction was only found in the splenium, without total white-matter volume reductions. Group 3 (GA between 31 and 33) did not present differences in corpus callosum size or a reduced total white- matter volume, but they showed a low Full-Scale IQ. Group 4 (GA between 34 and 36) did not show a smaller corpus callosum or a lower general cognitive performance. Specific significant correlations were found between corpus callosum subregions and gestational age. These results suggest the importance of gestational age in prematurity in relation to brain structural and functional outcome. Premature babies born at a gestational age of 27 weeks or less are the target group for long-term corpus callosum and white-matter anomalies and for a low IQ.
- Published
- 2007
31. Memory performance in a sample of very low birth weight adolescents
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Roser Pueyo, Francesc Botet, Dolors Segarra, Ana Narberhaus, Carme Junqué, and Mónica Giménez
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Birth weight ,Intelligence ,Gestational Age ,Infant, Premature, Diseases ,Audiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Developmental psychology ,Visual memory ,Risk Factors ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Infant, Very Low Birth Weight ,Memory disorder ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Child ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Memory Disorders ,Memoria ,Cognitive disorder ,Infant, Newborn ,Gestational age ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Respiration, Artificial ,Low birth weight ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Child, Preschool ,Brain Damage, Chronic ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Prematurely born participants with very low birth weight (VLBW) are at high risk of brain injury in the perinatal period and of later cognitive impairment. Studies of long-term memory sequelae in VLBW participants are scarce and focus on verbal and visual memory assessed by standard clinical memory tests. There is even less research into everyday memory, and the results obtained are contradictory. This study explores long-term memory deficits in VLBW adolescents using 2 standard clinical memory tests and 1 everyday memory test. Results show impairment only in everyday memory. These memory deficits are not specific; they are related to an impaired general cognitive performance. Unlike birth weight, gestational age is a good predictor of intelligence.
- Published
- 2007
32. Post‐surgical changes in brain metabolism detected by magnetic resonance spectroscopy in normal pressure hydrocephalus: results of a pilot study
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Juan Sahuquillo, Carles Falcon, Núria Bargalló, Carme Junqué, Maria Mataró, Maria del Mar Matarín, Roser Pueyo, and Maria A. Poca
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Urology ,Short Report ,Pilot Projects ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Creatine ,Central nervous system disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Normal pressure hydrocephalus ,medicine ,Dementia ,Choline ,Humans ,Intracranial pressure ,Aged ,business.industry ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Cerebrospinal Fluid Shunts ,Hydrocephalus, Normal Pressure ,Hydrocephalus ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Surgery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Protons ,business ,Cognition Disorders ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Background: Adult normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is one of the few potentially treatable causes of dementia. Some morphological and functional abnormalities attributed to hydrocephalus improve following treatment. Objectives: We focused on analysis of changes in cerebral metabolites using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ( 1 H-MRS) after NPH treatment, and its clinical and cognitive correlation. Methods: 1 H-MRS, neuropsychological and clinical status examinations were performed before and 6 months after shunting in 12 adults with idiopathic NPH. We obtained N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA), choline (Cho), myoinositol (MI) and creatine (Cr) values. Results: After surgery, NAA/Cr was significantly increased. Moreover, NAA/Cr values were related to cognitive deterioration. Conclusion: MRS could be a marker of neuronal dysfunction in NPH.
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- 2007
33. Functional and magnetic resonance imaging correlates of corpus callosum in normal pressure hydrocephalus before and after shunting
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Juan Sahuquillo, Maria Mataró, Carme Junqué, Maite Barrios, Maria A. Poca, Roser Pueyo, and Mar Matarín
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Male ,Paper ,medicine.medical_specialty ,endocrine system ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Audiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Corpus callosum ,Corpus Callosum ,White matter ,Normal pressure hydrocephalus ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Brain Diseases ,Memory Disorders ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Leukoaraiosis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Cerebrospinal Fluid Shunts ,Hydrocephalus, Normal Pressure ,Surgery ,Hydrocephalus ,Frontal Lobe ,nervous system diseases ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Frontal lobe ,nervous system ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychomotor Disorders ,Psychology ,Psychomotor disorder ,Cognition Disorders - Abstract
Background: Normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is associated with corpus callosum abnormalities. Objectives: To study the clinical and neuropsychological effect of callosal thinning in 18 patients with idiopathic NPH and to investigate the postsurgical callosal changes in 14 patients. Methods: Global corpus callosum size and seven callosal subdivisions were measured. Neuropsychological assessment included an extensive battery assessing memory, psychomotor speed, visuospatial and frontal lobe functioning. Results: After surgery, patients showed improvements in memory, visuospatial and frontal lobe functions, and psychomotor speed. Two frontal corpus callosum areas, the genu and the rostral body, were the regions most related to the clinical and neuropsychological dysfunction. After surgery, total corpus callosum and four of the seven subdivisions presented a significant increase in size, which was related to poorer neuropsychological and clinical outcome. Conclusion: The postsurgical corpus callosum increase might be the result of decompression, re-expansion and increase of interstitial fluid, although it may also be caused by differences in shape due to cerebral reorganisation.
- Published
- 2007
34. Differences in visual vs. verbal memory impairments as a result of focal temporal lobe damage in patients with traumatic brain injury
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Roser Pueyo, Juan Sahuquillo, Mar Ariza, Maria Pau Mena, Carme Junqué, Maria A. Poca, and Maria Mataró
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Traumatic brain injury ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,Audiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Verbal learning ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Temporal lobe ,Visual memory ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Memory impairment ,Humans ,Dominance, Cerebral ,Recognition memory ,Brain Mapping ,Memory Disorders ,Recognition, Psychology ,Middle Aged ,Verbal Learning ,medicine.disease ,Temporal Lobe ,Neuroanatomy of memory ,Brain Injuries ,Face ,Mental Recall ,Neurology (clinical) ,Verbal memory ,Psychology ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Primary objective: The aim of the present study was to determine whether the type of lesion in a sample of moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) was related to material-specific memory impairment.Methods and procedures: Fifty-nine patients with TBI were classified into three groups according to whether the site of the lesion was right temporal, left temporal or diffuse. Six-months post-injury, visual (Warrington's Facial Recognition Memory Test and Rey's Complex Figure Test) and verbal (Rey's Auditory Verbal Learning Test) memories were assessed.Main outcome and results: Visual memory deficits assessed by facial memory were associated with right temporal lobe lesion, whereas verbal memory performance assessed with a list of words was related to left temporal lobe lesion. The group with diffuse injury showed both verbal and visual memory impairment.Conclusions: These results suggest a material-specific memory impairment in moderate and severe TBI after focal temporal lesions and a non-specific m...
- Published
- 2006
35. Influence of APOE polymorphism on cognitive and behavioural outcome in moderate and severe traumatic brain injury
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Carme Junqué, Juan Sahuquillo, M Del Mar Matarín, Roser Pueyo, A. Garnacho, Imma C. Clemente, Mar Ariza, Pedro Moral, M Mataró, and Maria A. Poca
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Apolipoprotein E ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Traumatic brain injury ,Trail Making Test ,Short Report ,Neuropsychology ,macromolecular substances ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,Verbal learning ,Temporal lobe ,nervous system diseases ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Frontal lobe ,nervous system ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Surgery ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Verbal memory ,Psychiatry ,Psychology - Abstract
Aim: To analyse the influence of apolipoprotein (APOE) e4 status on the cognitive and behavioural functions usually impaired after moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Methods: In all, 77 patients with TBI selected from 140 consecutive admissions were genotyped for APOE. Each patient was subjected to neuropsychological and neurobehavioural assessment at least 6 months after injury. Results: Performance of participants carrying the e4 allele was notably worse on verbal memory (Auditory Verbal Learning Test), motor speed, fine motor coordination, visual scanning, attention and mental flexibility (Grooved Pegboard, Symbol Digit Modalities Test and part B of the Trail Making Test) and showed considerably more neurobehavioural disturbances (Neurobehavioral Rating Scale—Revised) than the group without the e4 allele. Conclusions: In particular, performance on neuropsychological tasks that are presumed to be related to temporal lobe, frontal lobe and white matter integrity is worse in patients with the APOE e4 allele than in those without it. More neurobehavioural disturbances are observed in APOE e4 carriers than in APOE e2 and e3 carriers.
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- 2006
36. Quantitative signal intensity measures on magnetic resonance imaging in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
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Carme Junqué, Maria Mataró, Carme García-Sánchez, Jesús Pujol, Armando Estévez-González, Cristina Mañeru, Roser Pueyo, and Pere Vendrell
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Male ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Corpus callosum ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Nerve Fibers, Myelinated ,Functional Laterality ,Corpus Callosum ,White matter ,Functional neuroimaging ,Reference Values ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ,Humans ,Cerebral Cortex ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Frontal Lobe ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Frontal lobe ,Cerebral cortex ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Female ,Signal intensity ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate possible abnormalities of cerebral myelination in subjects with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Background: Anatomic and functional neuroimaging studies of subjects with ADHD demonstrated a right fronto-striatal deficit and abnormal cerebral asymmetries. Some also reported white matter abnormalities, such as smaller white matter volumes in the right anterior-superior frontal region, and the smaller bilateral retrocallosal region. Smaller volumes in specific areas of the corpus callosum have also been reported. We hypothesized that white matter signal intensities may also show differences indicating abnormal cerebral myelination. Methods We analyzed T2-weighted magnetic resonance images of 11 adolescents with ADHD and 20 controls. Regions of interest were set in both the white and gray matter in frontal and parieto-occipital associative regions. Results: The ADHD group showed a higher signal intensity ratio, probably inflecting a higher degree of myelination. Significant Interhemisphericdifferences emerged only In the posterior region in the ADHD group. Conclusions: The higher degree of myelination in the right frontal region of ADHD may be due to a compensatory mechanism for the right frontostriatal dysfunction.
- Published
- 2004
37. O-073 Total And Regional Corpus Callosum Volumes Are Related To Intelligence And Motor Function In Dyskinetic Cerebral Palsy
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V Tenorio, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, C Torroja-Nualart, P Póo, Roser Pueyo, Alfons Macaya, Leire Zubiaurre-Elorza, Dolors Segarra, Maria Eugenia Russi, Elida Vazquez, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Ignacio Delgado, T Castelló, M Meléndez, and Ana Narberhaus
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Motor impairment ,medicine.disease ,Corpus callosum ,Motor function ,Cerebral palsy ,Surgery ,Perinatal asphyxia ,Spastic cerebral palsy ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Diffuse brain injury ,business ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy - Abstract
Background The relationship between corpus callosum (CC) morphology and mainly motor outcomes has been studied in spastic cerebral palsy (CP) but not yet in dyskinetic CP, which has been recently related to a diffuse brain injury pattern. This study aims to analyse the relationship of total and regional CC volumes with intelligence and motor impairment severity in dyskinetic CP. Methods 15 subjects (age range, 12–34) with dyskinetic CP and signs of perinatal asphyxia underwent a MRI. CC total, anterior, central and posterior volumes were calculated (Figure 1). The intelligence and motor scales most commonly used in CP were administered. Results The CC total volume and most of its parts were related to intelligence and motor measures (Table 1). Conclusions Total CC volume may be indicative of intelligence and motor status in dyskinetic CP. Regionally, the posterior part is the most related to intelligence, in agreement with recent theories of intelligence. The anterior part of the CC is not found to be related to motor function. This result agrees with the fact that premotor and sensorimotor fibres are located more posteriorly than previously thought.
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- 2014
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38. PS-247 Association Of Motor Function With Basal Ganglia And Thalamus Volumes In Dyskinetic Cerebral Palsy
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P Póo, V Tenorio, Elida Vazquez, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, Roser Pueyo, Maria Eugenia Russi, Alfons Macaya, Leire Zubiaurre-Elorza, Júlia Miralbell, Júlia Ballester-Plané, T Castelló, M Meléndez, Ignacio Delgado, Dolors Segarra, and Ana Narberhaus
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business.industry ,Thalamus ,Gross Motor Function Classification System ,Anatomy ,Grey matter ,medicine.disease ,Motor function ,Cerebral palsy ,Perinatal asphyxia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,business ,Dyskinetic cerebral palsy - Abstract
Background and aims Dyskinetic Cerebral Palsy (CP) is mainly characterised by basal ganglia and thalamus injury as well as worse motor functioning compared to other CP types. Associations of higher levels in Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) and in Bimanual Fine Motor Function (BFMF) with basal ganglia and thalamus lesions have only been described qualitatively. This study aims to analyse the quantitative relationship of basal ganglia and thalamus volumes with motor status measured by means of the three Surveillance of Cerebral Palsy in Europe (SCPE) recommended scales: GMFCS, BFMF and Manual Ability Classification System (MACS). Methods Gross and fine motor status of 15 dyskinetic CP participants with signs of perinatal asphyxia (age range: 12–34) were assessed. 3T-MRI was obtained and Free Surfer software was used to estimate basal ganglia and thalamus volumes. Partial correlations controlling for age were performed. Results Caudate (r = -.70; p Conclusions Greater gross and fine motor impairment severity is associated with lower basal ganglia and thalamus volumes, which is consistent with qualitative results of previous studies. This is the first evidence of a quantitative relationship between two widely used scales of motor functioning and deep brain grey matter in dyskinetic CP. GMFCS and MACS, but maybe not BFMF scale, are sensitive to basal ganglia and thalamus injury in this CP type.
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- 2014
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39. DOES VERBAL AND GESTURAL EXPRESSION ABILITY PREDICT COMPREHENSION ABILITY IN CEREBRAL PALSY?1,2
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Roser Pueyo, Mar Ariza, Ana Narberhaus, Júlia Ballester-Plané, Olga Laporta-Hoyos, Carme Junqué, and Pere Vendrell
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Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Sensory Systems - Published
- 2013
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40. Trastorno por déficit de atención con hiperactividad. Asimetrías cerebrales observadas en resonancia magnética
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Cristina Mañeru, Carmen García-Sánchez, M Mataró, Carme Junqué, Pere Vendrell, Roser Pueyo, and Armando Estévez-González
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Caudate nucleus ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,Ventricular system ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Frontal lobe ,Functional neuroimaging ,mental disorders ,Basal ganglia ,medicine ,Brain asymmetry ,Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
INTRODUCTION Anatomical and functional neuroimaging data from subjects with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) have consistently implicated a reversal of cerebral asymmetry and suggested a fronto-striatal dysfunction in this disorder. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study is to investigate the brain asymmetries in a homogeneous and non-medicated sample of adolescents with ADHD who had been previously studied in our laboratory. PATIENTS AND METHODS T1-weighted magnetic resonance images were obtained for 11 adolescents with ADHD and 19 control subjects. Frontal and posterior brain regions, caudate nucleus, and ventricular system were quantitatively measured. RESULTS A reversed pattern of asymmetry for the caudate nucleus (right > left) was found in ADHD when compared to the control group. We also found a reversed pattern of asymmetry for the frontal lobe (right < left) and a smaller right frontal volume (prefrontal specifically) in the ADHD subjects most severely impaired. Right caudate and frontal measures were inversely correlated. CONCLUSIONS ADHD is associated with fronto-striatal abnormalities, which may be explicable via extant neurodevelopmental theories. Enlargement of the right caudate nucleus may suggest the failure of a process of synaptic 'pruning' by which attentional functions could be improperly transferred from the basal ganglia to frontal regions during development.
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- 2000
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41. Long-term cognitive dysfunctions related to prematurity
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Narberhaus, A., Roser Pueyo, Segarra-Castells, M. D., Perapoch-Lopez, J., Botet-Mussons, F., and Junque, C.
42. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Cerebral asymmetry observed on magnetic resonance
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Roser Pueyo, Maneru, C., Vendrell, P., Mataro, N., Estevez-Gonzalez, A., Garcia-Sanchez, C., and Junque, C.
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