11 results on '"Laurice, Yang"'
Search Results
2. Illusory responses across the Lewy body disease spectrum
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Marian Shahid, Ashley Rawls, Veronica Ramirez, Sephira Ryman, Veronica E. Santini, Laurice Yang, Sharon J. Sha, Jacob N. Hall, Thomas J. Montine, Amy Lin, Lu Tian, Victor W. Henderson, Brenna Cholerton, Maya Yutsis, and Kathleen L. Poston
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
To study pareidolias, or perceived meaningful objects in a meaningless stimulus, in patients across the Lewy body (LB) disease spectrum, where most do not report hallucinations or delusions.We studied illusory responses on the Noise Pareidolia Task in 300 participants [38 cognitively-impaired LB, 65 cognitively-unimpaired LB, 51 Alzheimer's disease-spectrum (AD-s), 146 Controls]. Pairwise between-group comparisons examined how diagnosis impacts the number of illusory responses. Ordinal regression analysis compared the number of illusory responses across diagnosis groups, adjusting for age, sex, and education. Analyses were repeated after removing participants with reported hallucinations or delusions.Cognitively-impaired LB participants were 12.3, 4.9, and 4.6 times more likely than Control, cognitively-unimpaired LB, and AD-s participants, respectively, to endorse illusory responses. After adjusting for age, sex and education, the probability of endorsing one or more illusory response was 61% in the cognitively-impaired LB group, compared to 26% in AD-s, 25% in cognitively-unimpaired LB, and 12% in Control participants. All results were similar after repeated analysis only in participants without hallucinations or delusions. In LB without hallucinations or delusions, 52% with mild cognitive impairment and 66.7% with dementia endorsed at least one illusory response.We found illusory responses are common in cognitively impaired LB patients, including those without any reported psychosis. Our data suggest that, prior to the onset of hallucinations and delusions, the Noise Pareidolia Task can easily be used to screen for unobtrusive pareidolias in all LB patients. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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- 2022
3. Semantic fluency and processing speed are reduced in non-cognitively impaired participants with Parkinson’s disease
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Joseph F. Quinn, Alexander Pantelyat, Lu Tian, Karen L. Edwards, Thomas J. Montine, Liana S. Rosenthal, Brenna Cholerton, Amie L. Hiller, Kathryn A. Chung, Cyrus P. Zabetian, Ted M. Dawson, Laurice Yang, Shu Ching Hu, and Kathleen L. Poston
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cognition ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Elementary cognitive task ,Parkinson's disease ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Disease ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Neurodegenerative ,Audiology ,Article ,Cognition ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychology ,Verbal fluency test ,Dementia ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Neuropsychological assessment ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Neurosciences ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Parkinson Disease ,Experimental Psychology ,medicine.disease ,Semantics ,Brain Disorders ,Cognitive test ,neuropsychological assessment ,Clinical Psychology ,healthy volunteers ,Neurology ,Neurological ,Parkinson’s disease ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Introduction: Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with a range of cognitive deficits. Few studies have carefully examined the subtle impacts of PD on cognition among patients who do not meet formal criteria for MCI or dementia. The aim of the current study was thus to describe the impact of PD on cognition in those without cognitive impairment in a well-characterized cohort.Methods: Non-cognitively impaired participants (122 with PD, 122 age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers) underwent extensive cognitive testing. Linear regression analyses compared diagnostic group performance across cognitive measures. For cognitive tasks that were significantly different between groups, additional analyses examined group differences restricting the group inclusion to PD participants with mild motor symptoms or disease duration less than 10years.Results: Processing speed and semantic verbal fluency were significantly lower in the PD group (B =-3.77, 95% CIs [-5.76 to -1.77], p
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- 2021
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4. Accelerated launch of video visits in ambulatory neurology during COVID-19
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Erika A. Saliba-Gustafsson, Marcy Winget, Jonathan G. Shaw, Cati Brown-Johnson, Carl A. Gold, Laurice Yang, Samantha M.R. Kling, and Rebecca Miller-Kuhlmann
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Telemedicine ,Quality management ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Pneumonia, Viral ,education ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Betacoronavirus ,medicine ,Humans ,Normalization (sociology) ,Program Development ,Pandemics ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Stakeholder ,Champion ,COVID-19 ,medicine.disease ,Triage ,Workflow ,Neurology ,Software deployment ,Videoconferencing ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,Coronavirus Infections ,Psychology - Abstract
The SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic has rapidly moved telemedicine from discretionary to necessary. Here, we describe how the Stanford Neurology Department (1) rapidly adapted to the COVID-19 pandemic, resulting in over 1,000 video visits within 4 weeks, and (2) accelerated an existing quality improvement plan of a tiered roll out of video visits for ambulatory neurology to a full-scale roll out. Key issues we encountered and addressed were related to equipment/software, provider engagement, workflow/triage, and training. On reflection, the key drivers of our success were provider engagement and dedicated support from a physician champion, who plays a critical role understanding stakeholder needs. Before COVID-19, physician interest in telemedicine was mixed. However, in response to county and state stay-at-home orders related to COVID-19, physician engagement changed completely; all providers wanted to convert a majority of visits to video visits as quickly as possible. Rapid deployment of neurology video visits across all its subspecialties is feasible. Our experience and lessons learned can facilitate broader utilization, acceptance, and normalization of video visits for neurology patients in the present as well as the much anticipated postpandemic era.
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- 2020
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5. Viewpoint on Milestones for Fellowship Training in Movement Disorders
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Jeffrey B. Ratliff, Sara M. Schaefer, Shilpa Chitnis, Jeffrey W. Cooney, Christopher W. Hess, Njideka Okubadejo, Ali Shalash, Elena Moro, Carolyn Sue, Sanjay Pandey, Pramod K. Pal, and Laurice Yang
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Movement Disorders ,Neurology ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Fellowships and Scholarships ,Societies, Medical - Published
- 2022
6. Cognitive associations with comprehensive gait and static balance measures in Parkinson's disease
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Cyrus P. Zabetian, Thomas J. Grabowski, Kathryn A. Chung, Douglas N. Martini, Amie L. Hiller, Shu Ching Hu, Kathleen L. Poston, Joseph F. Quinn, Laurice Yang, Fay B. Horak, Katrijn Smulders, Valerie E. Kelly, Karen L. Edwards, Thomas J. Montine, Rosie Morris, and Brenna Cholerton
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Parkinson's disease ,Jerkiness ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Gait (human) ,medicine ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Gait ,Postural Balance ,Gait Disorders, Neurologic ,Aged ,Balance (ability) ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Trunk ,030104 developmental biology ,Neurology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction Gait and balance impairments are cardinal features of Parkinson's disease (PD) that require cognitive input. However, the extent to which specific gait and balance characteristics relate to cognition in PD is unclear. In addition, independent models of gait and balance have not been developed from the same cohort. We aimed to i) develop models of gait and balance in a large PD cohort and ii) determine which gait and balance characteristics best related to cognition. Methods One hundred and ninety-eight people with PD were recruited to the Pacific Udall Center. Using six inertial sensors (APDM, Inc.), comprehensive gait measurements were collected over a 2-min continuous walk and comprehensive static balance measures were collected during a 60-second standing task. Six domains of cognition were assessed: global cognition, attention, executive function, language, memory, and visuospatial function. Correlations and hierarchical linear regression determined independent associations. Results Principal components analysis identified a gait model containing four domains accounting for 80.1% of total variance: pace/turning, rhythm, variability, and trunk. The balance model contained four independent domains accounting for 84.5% of total variance: sway area/jerkiness, sway velocity, sway frequency anteroposterior, and sway frequency mediolateral. Gait domains of pace/turning and variability were strongly associated with attention and executive function. Sway area and jerkiness of balance associated with attention and visuospatial function. Conclusions Gait and balance characteristics were associated with specific types of cognition. The specific relationships between gait or balance with cognitive functions suggests shared cerebral cortical circuitry for mobility and cognitive functions.
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- 2019
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7. Dopaminergic medication normalizes aberrant cognitive control circuit signalling in Parkinson's disease
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Weidong Cai, Christina B Young, Rui Yuan, Byeongwook Lee, Sephira Ryman, Jeehyun Kim, Laurice Yang, Victor W Henderson, Kathleen L Poston, and Vinod Menon
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Cognition ,Dopamine Agents ,Humans ,Parkinson Disease ,Neurology (clinical) ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Basal Ganglia - Abstract
Dopaminergic medication is widely used to alleviate motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease, but these medications also impact cognition with significant variability across patients. It is hypothesized that dopaminergic medication impacts cognition and working memory in Parkinson’s disease by modulating frontoparietal-basal ganglia cognitive control circuits, but little is known about the underlying causal signalling mechanisms and their relation to individual differences in response to dopaminergic medication. Here we use a novel state-space computational model with ultra-fast (490 ms resolution) functional MRI to investigate dynamic causal signalling in frontoparietal-basal ganglia circuits associated with working memory in 44 Parkinson’s disease patients ON and OFF dopaminergic medication, as well as matched 36 healthy controls. Our analysis revealed aberrant causal signalling in frontoparietal-basal ganglia circuits in Parkinson’s disease patients OFF medication. Importantly, aberrant signalling was normalized by dopaminergic medication and a novel quantitative distance measure predicted individual differences in cognitive change associated with medication in Parkinson’s disease patients. These findings were specific to causal signalling measures, as no such effects were detected with conventional non-causal connectivity measures. Our analysis also identified a specific frontoparietal causal signalling pathway from right middle frontal gyrus to right posterior parietal cortex that is impaired in Parkinson’s disease. Unlike in healthy controls, the strength of causal interactions in this pathway did not increase with working memory load and the strength of load-dependent causal weights was not related to individual differences in working memory task performance in Parkinson’s disease patients OFF medication. However, dopaminergic medication in Parkinson’s disease patients reinstated the relation with working memory performance. Our findings provide new insights into aberrant causal brain circuit dynamics during working memory and identify mechanisms by which dopaminergic medication normalizes cognitive control circuits.
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- 2021
8. Patient and Clinician Perspectives of New and Return Ambulatory Teleneurology Visits
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Marcy Winget, Erika A. Saliba-Gustafsson, Cati Brown-Johnson, Samantha M.R. Kling, Carl A. Gold, Jessica Falco-Walter, Jonathan G. Shaw, Rebecca Miller-Kuhlmann, Laurice Yang, Steven M. Asch, and Donn W. Garvert
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Neurology clinic ,Perceived quality ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Ambulatory care ,business.industry ,Research ,Ambulatory ,medicine ,Physical exam ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,medicine.disease ,business - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the adoption and perceived utility of video visits for new and return patient encounters in ambulatory neurology subspecialties.MethodsVideo visits were launched in an academic, multi-subspecialty, ambulatory neurology clinic in March 2020. Adoption of video visits for new and return patient visits was assessed using clinician-level scheduling data from March 22 to May 16, 2020. Perceived utility of video visits was explored via a clinician survey and semi-structured interviews with clinicians and patients/caregivers. Findings were compared across 5 subspecialties and 2 visit types (new vs return).ResultsVideo visits were adopted rapidly; all clinicians (n = 65) integrated video visits into their workflow within the first 6 weeks and 92% of visits were conducted via video although this varied by subspeciality. Utility of video visits was higher for return than new patient visits, as indicated by surveyed (n = 48) and interviewed clinicians (n = 30), aligning with adoption patterns. Compared to in-person visits, clinicians believed it was easier to achieve a similar physical exam, patient-clinician rapport, and perceived quality of care over video for return rather than new patient visits. Of the 25 patients/caregivers interviewed, most were satisfied with the care provided via video, regardless of visit type, with the main limitation being the physical exam.ConclusionsTeleneurology was robustly adopted for both new and return ambulatory neurology patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. Return patient visits were preferred over new patient visits, but both were feasible. These results provide a foundation for developing targeted guidelines for sustaining teleneurology in ambulatory care.
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- 2020
9. Quality Improvement in Neurology: 2020 Parkinson Disease Quality Measurement Set Update
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Erin R Foster, Kelvin L. Chou, Laurice Yang, Steven A. Gunzler, Glenn T. Stebbins, Abhimanyu Mahajan, Karen Freshwater, Hojoong Kim, Harini Sarva, Juliana Atem, Justin Martello, Matt Elrod, and Erin Lee
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Sleep Wake Disorders ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality management ,Neurology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,MEDLINE ,Disease ,Antiparkinson Agents ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Set (psychology) ,media_common ,Quality of Health Care ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Insurance, Health ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Rehabilitation ,Quality measurement ,Parkinson Disease ,Evidence-based medicine ,Quality Improvement ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Parkinson disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder, after Alzheimer disease,1 and the number of individuals with PD worldwide more than doubled between 1990 and 2015.2 In 2016, PD affected an estimated 6.1 million people globally.3 In the United States, an estimated 680,000 individuals ≥45 years of age had PD in 2010.4 These numbers were projected to rise to 930,000 in 2020 and to reach 1,238,000 by 2030.4 Both motor (rest tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity) and nonmotor (including but not limited to neuropsychiatric, autonomic, and sensory) symptoms of PD contribute to decreased quality of life5 and neurologic disability.3
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- 2020
10. Hallucinations and Development of Dementia in Parkinson's Disease
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Wojciech Gryc, Cyrus P. Zabetian, John Q. Trojanowski, Kathryn A. Chung, Joseph F. Quinn, Daniel Weintraub, Karen L. Edwards, Amie L. Hiller, Laurice Yang, Kathryn A. Roberts, Thomas J. Montine, Kathleen L. Poston, Shu Ching Hu, and Brenna Cholerton
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Parkinson's disease ,Hallucinations ,Disease ,Behavioral Symptoms ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Cognitive diagnosis ,Dementia ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Psychiatry ,Aged ,business.industry ,Cognition ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Neuropsychiatric inventory ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire - Abstract
Neuropsychiatric symptoms are common in Parkinson’s disease (PD). We investigated the relationship between neuropsychiatric symptoms and current and future diagnosis of PD dementia (PDD). Individuals with PD who had a study partner were enrolled (n = 696). Study partners were administered the Neuropsychiatric Inventory or Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire at baseline. Participants were assigned a cognitive diagnosis at baseline and follow up visits. Hallucinations were significantly associated with a diagnosis of PDD cross-sectionally (p
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- 2020
11. Platelet mitochondrial activity and pesticide exposure in early Parkinson's disease
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Richard H. Haas, Beate Ritz, Laurice Yang, Clifford W. Shults, Thuy Le, Kimberly C. Paul, and Jeff M. Bronstein
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,education.field_of_study ,Parkinson's disease ,Population ,Disease ,Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide ,Pesticide ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Pathogenesis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Neurology ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Cohort ,medicine ,Platelet ,Neurology (clinical) ,education - Abstract
Background Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD), but the cause of this dysfunction is unclear. Methods Platelet mitochondrial complex I and I/III (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide cytochrome c reductase, NCCR) activities were measured in early PD patients and matched controls enrolled in a population-based case-control study. Ambient agricultural pesticide exposures were assessed with a geographic information system and California Pesticide Use Registry. Results In contrast to some previous reports, we found no differences in complex I and I/III activities in subjects with PD and controls. We did find that NCCR activity correlated with subjects' exposure to pesticides known to inhibit mitochondrial activity regardless of their diagnosis. Conclusions Electron transport chain (ETC) activity is not altered in PD in this well-characterized cohort when compared with community-matched controls but appears to be affected by environmental toxins, such as mitochondria-inhibiting pesticides. © 2015 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society
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- 2015
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