10 results on '"Saiz-Masvidal, C"'
Search Results
2. Elevated Extracellular Free-Water in a Multicentric First-Episode Psychosis Sample, Decrease During the First 2 Years of Illness.
- Author
-
Bergé, Daniel, Mané, Anna, Lesh, Tyler A, Bioque, Miquel, Barcones, Fe, Gonzalez-Pinto, Ana Maria, Parellada, Mara, Vieta, Eduard, Castro-Fornieles, Josefina, Rodriguez-Jimenez, Roberto, García-Portilla, Maria Paz, Usall, Judith, Carter, Cameron S, Cabrera, Bibiana, Bernardo, Miguel, Janssen, Joost, Mezquida, Gisela, Amoretti, Silvia, Pina-Camacho, Laura, Arango, Celso, González-Ortega, I, García, S, De-la-Cámara, C, Fayed, N, Sanjuan, Julio, Aguilar, EJ, Guo, Joyce Y, Salgado, Purificación, Raduà, Joquim, Sánchez-Moreno, J, de la Serna, Elena, Baeza, Ima, Contreras-Fernández, Fernando, Saiz-Masvidal, C, González-Blanco, L, Jiménez-Treviño, L, Dompablo, M, Torío, I, Butjosa, A, Rubio-Abadel, E, Sarró, S, and Pomarol-Clotet, E
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Neurosciences ,Schizophrenia ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Serious Mental Illness ,Biomedical Imaging ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Body Water ,Child ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Gray Matter ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Psychotic Disorders ,White Matter ,Young Adult ,PEPs group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry - Abstract
Recent diffusion imaging studies using free-water (FW) elimination have shown increased FW in gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM) in first-episode psychosis (FEP) and lower corrected fractional anisotropy (FAt) in WM in chronic schizophrenia. However, little is known about the longitudinal stability and clinical significance of these findings. To determine tissue-specific FW and FAt abnormalities in FEP, as part of a multicenter Spanish study, 132 FEP and 108 healthy controls (HC) were clinically characterized and underwent structural and diffusion-weighted MRI scanning. FEP subjects were classified as schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SSD) or non-SSD. Of these subjects, 45 FEP and 41 HC were longitudinally assessed and rescanned after 2 years. FA and FW tissue-specific measurements were cross-sectional and longitudinally compared between groups using voxel-wise analyses in the skeletonized WM and vertex-wise analyses in the GM surface. SSD and non-SSD subjects showed (a) higher baseline FW in temporal regions and in whole GM average (P.adj(SSD vs HC) = .003, P.adj(Non-SSD vs HC) = .040) and (b) lower baseline FAt in several WM tracts. SSD, but not non-SSD, showed (a) higher FW in several WM tracts and in whole WM (P.adj(SSD vs HC)= .049) and (b) a significant FW decrease over time in temporal cortical regions and in whole GM average (P.adj = .011). Increased extracellular FW in the brain is a reliable finding in FEP, and in SSD appears to decrease over the early course of the illness. FAt abnormalities are stable during the first years of psychosis.
- Published
- 2020
3. Behavioural and neurophysiological signatures in the retrieval of individual memories of recent and remote real-life routine episodic events
- Author
-
Nicolás, B., Wu, X., García-Arch, J., Dimiccoli, M., Sierpowska, J., Saiz-Masvidal, C., Soriano-Mas, C., Radeva, P., Fuentemilla, L., Nicolás, B., Wu, X., García-Arch, J., Dimiccoli, M., Sierpowska, J., Saiz-Masvidal, C., Soriano-Mas, C., Radeva, P., and Fuentemilla, L.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 233427.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), Autobiographical memory (AM) has been largely investigated as the ability to recollect specific events that belong to an individual's past. However, how we retrieve real-life routine episodes and how the retrieval of these episodes changes with the passage of time remain unclear. Here, we asked participants to use a wearable camera that automatically captured pictures to record instances during a week of their routine life and implemented a deep neural network-based algorithm to identify picture sequences that represented episodic events. We then asked each participant to return to the lab to retrieve AMs for single episodes cued by the selected pictures 1 week, 2 weeks and 6 to 14 months after encoding while scalp electroencephalographic (EEG) activity was recorded. We found that participants were more accurate in recognizing pictured scenes depicting their own past than pictured scenes encoded in the lab, and that memory recollection of personally experienced events rapidly decreased with the passing of time. We also found that the retrieval of real-life picture cues elicited a strong and positive 'ERP old/new effect' over frontal regions and that the magnitude of this ERP effect was similar throughout memory tests over time. However, we observed that recognition memory induced a frontal theta power decrease and that this effect was mostly seen when memories were tested after 1 and 2 weeks but not after 6 to 14 months from encoding. Altogether, we discuss the implications for neuroscientific accounts of episodic retrieval and the potential benefits of developing individual-based AM exploration strategies at the clinical level.
- Published
- 2021
4. Structural covariance predictors of clinical improvement at 2-year follow-up in first-episode psychosis
- Author
-
Saiz-Masvidal, C., Soriano-Mas, C., Contreras, F., Mezquida, G., Lobo, A., Gonzalez-Pinto, A., Pina-Camacho, L., Parellada, M., and Miguel, B.
- Abstract
Background: Neural correlates of psychotic disorders encompass multiple brain regions in multiple brain circuits, even at early stages. Previous research has characterized structural brain alterations in ¿rst-episode psychosis (FEP), but few studies have focused on the relationship between brain alterations and disease trajectories. First psychotic episodes typically evolve into a chronic course, affecting quality of life of patients and their families, with huge societal costs. Importantly, up to 80% of the patients relapse in the next five years after a first psychotic episode, with a significant risk of developing treatment resistance. Here, we investigated whether disease course may be predicted from brain structural assessments. Specifically, we measured structural covariance, a well-established approach to identify abnormal patterns of volumetric correlation across distant brain regions, which allows to incorporate network-level information to structural assessments. We performed a whole-brain structural covariance assessment of three bilateral regions form to three different cortical networks - dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) for the executive network, posterior cingulate cortex for the default mode network and insulae for the salience network - and subcortical structures (hippocampi, amygdalae and dorsomedial nucleus of the thalamus) that have shown to play a key role in schizophrenia. Methods: We assessed a sample of 74 subjects from a multicenter, naturalistic, prospective and longitudinal study designed to evaluate clinical, neuropsychological, neuroimaging, biochemical, environmental and pharmacogenetic variables in first episode psychotic patients (PEPs project). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were acquired at baseline and at 2-year follow-up, as well as clinical assessments. Psychotic symptoms were assessed using the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS) due its widespread use in clinical studies and its reliability in assessing psychopathology across a range of patient populations. The sample was split in two groups as a function of the clinical improvement at 2-year follow-up: responders (i.e. 40% reduction in PANSS global score from baseline; n=29) and non-responders (n=45). Results: Responder patients showed increase structural covariance between the left dlPFC and the left middle frontal gyrus, and between the right dlPFC and the right middle and superior gyrus, the left rectus and inferior frontal gyrus, the right hippocampus, and the vermis of the cerebellum. In addition, they showed increased structural covariance between the left anterior hippocampus and the ipsilateral middle occipital gyrus and the contralateral postcentral gyrus. Likewise, the structural covariance of right anterior hippocampus with right superior occipital gyrus and precentral gyrus was also increased in responder patients. Discussion: This study shows, for the first time in the literature, that increased structural covariance at baseline within the executive network and between the hippocampi and posterior brain regions was associated with a superior treatment response at two-year follow-up. These results indicate that the integrity of structural networks should be taken into account to predict treatment outcome in FEP patients.
- Published
- 2020
5. Association study of candidate genes with obesity and metabolic traits in antipsychotic-treated patients with first-episode psychosis over a 2-year period
- Author
-
Gasso P, Arnaiz J, Mas S, Lafuente A, Bioque M, Cuesta M, Diaz-Caneja C, Garcia C, Lobo A, Gonzalez-Pinto A, Parellada M, Corripio I, Vieta E, Castro-Fornieles J, Mane A, Rodriguez N, Bolac D, Saiz-Ruiz J, Bernardo M, Mezquida G, Amoretti S, Pina-Camacho L, Gonzalez-Penas J, Alonso-Solis A, Rabetla M, Zorrilla I, Garcia S, Barcones F, Modrego P, Sanjuan J, Nacher J, Berge D, Monserrat C, Verdolini N, Gil-Badenes J, Baeza I, de la Serna E, Contreras F, Saiz-Masvidal C, Garcia-Portilla M, Bobes J, Gutierrez M, Segarra R, Dompablo M, Rodriguez-Jimenez R, Usall J, Butjosa A, Sarro S, Pomarol-Clotet E, Ibanez A, Ribeiro M, Selva-Vera G, and PEPs Grp
- Subjects
Antipsychotic ,obesity ,first episode of psychosis ,gene ,side-effect ,polymorphism - Abstract
Aims: Patients with a first episode of psychosis (FEP) often display different metabolic disturbances even independently of drug therapy. However, antipsychotic (AP) treatment, especially with second-generation APs, is strongly linked to weight gain, which increases patients' risk of developing obesity and other metabolic diseases. There is an important genetic risk component that can contribute to the appearance of these disturbances. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effect of polymorphisms in selected candidate genes on obesity and other anthropometric and metabolic traits in 320 AP-treated FEP patients over the course of a 2-year follow-up. Methods: These patients were recruited in the multicentre PEPs study (Phenotype-genotype and environmental interaction; Application of a predictive model in first psychotic episodes). A total of 127 validated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 18 candidate genes were included in the genetic analysis. Results: After Bonferroni correction, SNPs in ADRA2A, FTO, CNR1, DRD2, DRD3, LEPR and BDNF were associated with obesity, abdominal circumference, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, and/or percentage of glycated haemoglobin. Conclusions: Although our results should be interpreted as exploratory, they support previous evidence of the impact of these candidate genes on obesity and metabolic status. Further research is required to gain a better knowledge of the genetic variants that can be considered relevant metabolic risk factors. The ability to identify FEP patients at higher risk for these metabolic disturbances would enable clinicians to better select and control their AP treatment.
- Published
- 2020
6. Brain functional connectivity is associated with subclinical obsessive-compulsive symptoms in healthy children
- Author
-
Saiz Masvidal, C., primary, Suñol, M., additional, Contreras-Rodríguez, O., additional, Macià, D., additional, Martínez-Vilavella, G., additional, Martínez-Zalacaín, I., additional, Subirà, M., additional, Menchón, J.M., additional, Pujol, J., additional, Sunyer, J., additional, and Soriano-Mas, C., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. S18. STRUCTURAL COVARIANCE PREDICTORS OF CLINICAL IMPROVEMENT AT 2-YEAR FOLLOW-UP IN FIRST-EPISODE PSYCHOSIS
- Author
-
Saiz-Masvidal C, Soriano-Mas C, Contreras F, Mezquida G, Lobo A, González-Pinto A, Laura Pina-Camacho, Parellada M, and Miguel B
8. Structural covariance predictors of clinical improvement at 2-year follow-up in first-episode psychosis.
- Author
-
Saiz-Masvidal C, Contreras F, Soriano-Mas C, Mezquida G, Díaz-Caneja CM, Vieta E, Amoretti S, Lobo A, González-Pinto A, Janssen J, Sagué-Vilavella M, Castro-Fornieles J, Bergé D, Bioque M, Lois NG, Parellada M, and Bernardo M
- Subjects
- Humans, Follow-Up Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Brain, Gyrus Cinguli, Psychotic Disorders complications
- Abstract
The relationship between structural brain alterations and prediction of clinical improvement in first-episode psychosis (FEP) has been scarcely studied. We investigated whether structural covariance, a well-established approach to identify abnormal patterns of volumetric correlation across distant brain regions, which allows incorporating network-level information to structural assessments, is associated with longitudinal clinical course. We assessed a sample of 74 individuals from a multicenter study. Magnetic resonance imaging scans were acquired at baseline, and clinical assessments at baseline and at a 2-year follow-up. Participants were split in two groups as a function of their clinical improvement after 2 years (i.e., ≥ < 40% reduction in psychotic symptom severity, (n = 29, n = 45)). We performed a seed-based approach and focused our analyses on 3 cortical and 4 subcortical regions of interest to identify alterations in cortical and cortico-subcortical networks. Improvers presented an increased correlation between the volumes of the right posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) and the left precentral gyrus, and between the left PCC and the left middle occipital gyrus. They also showed an increased correlation between right posterior hippocampus and left angular gyrus volumes. Our study provides a novel mean to identify structural correlates of clinical improvement in FEP, describing clinically-relevant anatomical differences in terms of large-scale brain networks, which is better aligned with prevailing neurobiological models of psychosis. The results involve brain regions considered to participate in the multisensory processing of bodily signals and the construction of bodily self-consciousness, which resonates with recent theoretical accounts in psychosis research., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Behavioural and neurophysiological signatures in the retrieval of individual memories of recent and remote real-life routine episodic events.
- Author
-
Nicolás B, Wu X, García-Arch J, Dimiccoli M, Sierpowska J, Saiz-Masvidal C, Soriano-Mas C, Radeva P, and Fuentemilla L
- Subjects
- Cues, Electroencephalography, Humans, Mental Recall, Recognition, Psychology, Memory, Episodic
- Abstract
Autobiographical memory (AM) has been largely investigated as the ability to recollect specific events that belong to an individual's past. However, how we retrieve real-life routine episodes and how the retrieval of these episodes changes with the passage of time remain unclear. Here, we asked participants to use a wearable camera that automatically captured pictures to record instances during a week of their routine life and implemented a deep neural network-based algorithm to identify picture sequences that represented episodic events. We then asked each participant to return to the lab to retrieve AMs for single episodes cued by the selected pictures 1 week, 2 weeks and 6-14 months after encoding while scalp electroencephalographic (EEG) activity was recorded. We found that participants were more accurate in recognizing pictured scenes depicting their own past than pictured scenes encoded in the lab, and that memory recollection of personally experienced events rapidly decreased with the passing of time. We also found that the retrieval of real-life picture cues elicited a strong and positive 'ERP old/new effect' over frontal regions and that the magnitude of this ERP effect was similar throughout memory tests over time. However, we observed that recognition memory induced a frontal theta power decrease and that this effect was mostly seen when memories were tested after 1 and 2 weeks but not after 6-14 months from encoding. Altogether, we discuss the implications for neuroscientific accounts of episodic retrieval and the potential benefits of developing individual-based AM exploration strategies at the clinical level., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Brain Functional Connectivity Correlates of Subclinical Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms in Healthy Children.
- Author
-
Suñol M, Saiz-Masvidal C, Contreras-Rodríguez O, Macià D, Martínez-Vilavella G, Martínez-Zalacaín I, Menchón JM, Pujol J, Sunyer J, and Soriano-Mas C
- Subjects
- Brain diagnostic imaging, Child, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neural Pathways, Brain Mapping, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objective: Commonly observed subclinical obsessive-compulsive symptoms in healthy children may predispose to obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Therefore, investigating the underlying neurobiology may be relevant to identify alterations in specific brain circuits potentially accounting for clinical heterogeneity in OCD without the confounding effects of clinical samples. We analyzed the brain correlates of different obsessive-compulsive symptoms in a large group of healthy children using functional connectivity measures., Method: We evaluated 227 healthy children (52% girls; mean [SD] age 9.71 [0.86] years; range, 8-12.1 years). Participants underwent clinical assessment with the Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory-Child Version and a resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging examination. Total and symptom-specific severity were correlated with voxelwise global functional connectivity degree values. Significant clusters were then used as seeds of interest in seed-to-voxel analyses. Modulating effects of age and sex were also assessed., Results: Global functional connectivity of the left ventral putamen and medial dorsal thalamus correlated negatively with total obsessive-compulsive symptom severity. Seed-to-voxel analyses revealed specific negative correlations from these clusters with limbic, sensorimotor, and insular regions in association with obsessing, ordering, and doubt-checking symptoms, respectively. Hoarding symptoms were associated with negative correlations between the left medial dorsal thalamus and a widespread pattern of regions, with such associations modulated by sex and age., Conclusion: Our findings concur with prevailing neurobiological models of OCD on the importance of cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical dysfunction to account for symptom severity. Notably, we showed that changes in cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical connectivity are present at subclinical stages, which may result in an increased vulnerability for OCD. Moreover, we mapped different symptom dimensions onto specific cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical circuit attributes., (Copyright © 2020 American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.