keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38651018/neural-biomarkers-for-identifying-atopic-dermatitis-and-assessing-acupuncture-treatment-response-using-resting-state-fmri
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
In-Seon Lee, Da-Eun Yoon, Seoyoung Lee, Jae-Hwan Kang, Younbyoung Chae, Hi-Joon Park, Junsuk Kim
PURPOSE: Only a few studies have focused on the brain mechanisms underlying the itch processing in AD patients, and a neural biomarker has never been studied in AD patients. We aimed to develop a deep learning model-based neural signature which can extract the relevant temporal dynamics, discriminate between AD and healthy control (HC), and between AD patients who responded well to acupuncture treatment and those who did not. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We recruited 41 AD patients (22 male, age mean ± SD: 24...
2024: Journal of Asthma and Allergy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38650773/cingulotomy-for-intractable-pain-a-systematic-review-of-an-underutilized-procedure
#22
REVIEW
Billy McBenedict, Wilhelmina N Hauwanga, Mariana P Pires, José Geraldo M Netto, Dulci Petrus, Jumana A Kanchwala, Rhea Joshi, Shaista Rizwan Ahamed Alurkar, Otari Chankseliani, Zaeemah Mansoor, Sona Subash, Berley Alphonse, Ana Abrahão, Bruno Lima Pessôa
Pain management is a critical aspect of cancer treatment and palliative care, where pain can significantly impact quality of life. Chronic pain, which affects a significant number of people worldwide, remains a prevalent and challenging symptom for patients. While medications and psychosocial support systems play a role in pain management, surgical and radiological interventions, including cingulotomy, may be necessary for refractory cases. Cingulotomy, a neurosurgical procedure targeting the cingulate gyrus, aims to disrupt neural pathways associated with emotional processing and pain sensation, thereby reducing the affective component of pain...
March 2024: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38650167/chronotype-and-subjective-sleep-quality-predict-white-matter-integrity-in-young-people-with-emerging-mental-disorders
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jacob J Crouse, Shin Ho Park, Daniel F Hermens, Jim Lagopoulos, Minji Park, Mirim Shin, Joanne S Carpenter, Elizabeth M Scott, Ian B Hickie
Protecting brain health is a goal of early intervention. We explored whether sleep quality or chronotype could predict white matter (WM) integrity in emerging mental disorders. Young people (N = 364) accessing early-intervention clinics underwent assessments for chronotype, subjective sleep quality, and diffusion tensor imaging. Using machine learning, we examined whether chronotype or sleep quality (alongside diagnostic and demographic factors) could predict four measures of WM integrity: fractional anisotropy (FA), and radial, axial, and mean diffusivities (RD, AD and MD)...
April 22, 2024: European Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38649337/narcissus-reflected-grey-and-white-matter-features-joint-contribution-to-the-default-mode-network-in-predicting-narcissistic-personality-traits
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Khanitin Jornkokgoud, Teresa Baggio, Richard Bakiaj, Peera Wongupparaj, Remo Job, Alessandro Grecucci
Despite the clinical significance of narcissistic personality, its neural bases have not been clarified yet, primarily because of methodological limitations of the previous studies, such as the low sample size, the use of univariate techniques and the focus on only one brain modality. In this study, we employed for the first time a combination of unsupervised and supervised machine learning methods, to identify the joint contributions of grey matter (GM) and white matter (WM) to narcissistic personality traits (NPT)...
April 22, 2024: European Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38648868/out-of-phase-transcranial-alternating-current-stimulation-modulates-the-neurodynamics-of-inhibitory-control
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeehye Seo, Jehyeop Lee, Byoung-Kyong Min
Transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) is an efficient neuromodulation technique that enhances cognitive function in a non-invasive manner. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we investigated whether tACS with different phase lags (0° and 180°) between the dorsal anterior cingulate and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortices modulated inhibitory control performance during the Stroop task. We found out-of-phase tACS mediated improvements in task performance, which was neurodynamically reflected as putamen, dorsolateral prefrontal, and primary motor cortical activation as well as prefrontal-based top-down functional connectivity...
April 20, 2024: NeuroImage
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38648473/evolutionarily-conserved-neural-responses-to-affective-touch-in-monkeys-transcend-consciousness-and-change-with-age
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joey A Charbonneau, Anthony C Santistevan, Erika P Raven, Jeffrey L Bennett, Brian E Russ, Eliza Bliss-Moreau
Affective touch-a slow, gentle, and pleasant form of touch-activates a different neural network than which is activated during discriminative touch in humans. Affective touch perception is enabled by specialized low-threshold mechanoreceptors in the skin with unmyelinated fibers called C tactile (CT) afferents. These CT afferents are conserved across mammalian species, including macaque monkeys. However, it is unknown whether the neural representation of affective touch is the same across species and whether affective touch's capacity to activate the hubs of the brain that compute socioaffective information requires conscious perception...
April 30, 2024: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38648470/impact-of-repeated-blast-exposure-on-active-duty-united-states-special-operations-forces
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natalie Gilmore, Chieh-En J Tseng, Chiara Maffei, Samantha L Tromly, Katryna B Deary, Isabella R McKinney, Jessica N Kelemen, Brian C Healy, Collin G Hu, Gabriel Ramos-Llordén, Maryam Masood, Ryan J Cali, Jennifer Guo, Heather G Belanger, Eveline F Yao, Timothy Baxter, Bruce Fischl, Andrea S Foulkes, Jonathan R Polimeni, Bruce R Rosen, Daniel P Perl, Jacob M Hooker, Nicole R Zürcher, Susie Y Huang, W Taylor Kimberly, Douglas N Greve, Christine L Mac Donald, Kristen Dams-O'Connor, Yelena G Bodien, Brian L Edlow
United States (US) Special Operations Forces (SOF) are frequently exposed to explosive blasts in training and combat, but the effects of repeated blast exposure (RBE) on SOF brain health are incompletely understood. Furthermore, there is no diagnostic test to detect brain injury from RBE. As a result, SOF personnel may experience cognitive, physical, and psychological symptoms for which the cause is never identified, and they may return to training or combat during a period of brain vulnerability. In 30 active-duty US SOF, we assessed the relationship between cumulative blast exposure and cognitive performance, psychological health, physical symptoms, blood proteomics, and neuroimaging measures (Connectome structural and diffusion MRI, 7 Tesla functional MRI, [11 C]PBR28 translocator protein [TSPO] positron emission tomography [PET]-MRI, and [18 F]MK6240 tau PET-MRI), adjusting for age, combat exposure, and blunt head trauma...
May 7, 2024: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645237/reward-circuit-local-field-potential-modulations-precede-risk-taking
#28
Natasha C Hughes, Helen Qian, Michael Zargari, Zixiang Zhao, Balbir Singh, Zhengyang Wang, Jenna N Fulton, Graham W Johnson, Rui Li, Benoit M Dawant, Dario J Englot, Christos Constantinidis, Shawniqua Williams Roberson, Sarah K Bick
Risk taking behavior is a symptom of multiple neuropsychiatric disorders and often lacks effective treatments. Reward circuitry regions including the amygdala, orbitofrontal cortex, insula, and anterior cingulate have been implicated in risk-taking by neuroimaging studies. Electrophysiological activity associated with risk taking in these regions is not well understood in humans. Further characterizing the neural signalling that underlies risk-taking may provide therapeutic insight into disorders associated with risk-taking...
April 11, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38645037/more-widespread-and-rigid-neuronal-representation-of-reward-expectation-underlies-impulsive-choices
#29
Rhiannon L Cowan, Tyler Davis, Bornali Kundu, Shervin Rahimpour, John D Rolston, Elliot H Smith
Impulsive choices prioritize smaller, more immediate rewards over larger, delayed, or potentially uncertain rewards. Impulsive choices are a critical aspect of substance use disorders and maladaptive decision-making across the lifespan. Here, we sought to understand the neuronal underpinnings of expected reward and risk estimation on a trial-by-trial basis during impulsive choices. To do so, we acquired electrical recordings from the human brain while participants carried out a risky decision-making task designed to measure choice impulsivity...
April 12, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38644997/cytoarchitectonic-gradients-of-laminar-degeneration-in-behavioral-variant-frontotemporal-dementia
#30
Daniel T Ohm, Sharon X Xie, Noah Capp, Sanaz Arezoumandan, Katheryn A Q Cousins, Katya Rascovsky, David A Wolk, Vivianna M Van Deerlin, Edward B Lee, Corey T McMillan, David J Irwin
Behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) is a clinical syndrome primarily caused by either tau (bvFTD-tau) or TDP-43 (bvFTD-TDP) proteinopathies. We previously found lower cortical layers and dorsolateral regions accumulate greater tau than TDP-43 pathology; however, patterns of laminar neurodegeneration across diverse cytoarchitecture in bvFTD is understudied. We hypothesized that bvFTD-tau and bvFTD-TDP have distinct laminar distributions of pyramidal neurodegeneration along cortical gradients, a topologic order of cytoarchitectonic subregions based on increasing pyramidal density and laminar differentiation...
April 9, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38644789/naloxone-increases-conditioned-fear-responses-during-social-buffering-in-male-rats
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Takumi Yamasaki, Yasushi Kiyokawa, Arisa Munetomo, Yukari Takeuchi
Social buffering is the phenomenon in which the presence of an affiliative conspecific mitigates stress responses. We previously demonstrated that social buffering completely ameliorates conditioned fear responses in rats. However, the neuromodulators involved in social buffering are poorly understood. Given that opioids, dopamine, oxytocin and vasopressin play an important role in affiliative behaviour, here, we assessed the effects of the most well-known antagonists, naloxone (opioid receptor antagonist), haloperidol (dopamine D2 receptor antagonist), atosiban (oxytocin receptor antagonist) and SR49059 (vasopressin V1a receptor antagonist), on social buffering...
April 22, 2024: European Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38643360/the-influence-of-anterior-cingulate%C3%A2-gaba-and-glutamate%C3%A2-on-emotion-regulation-and-reactivity-in-adolescents-and-adults
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ebba Widegren, Matilda A Frick, Johanna Motilla Hoppe, Jan Weis, Stefan Möller, David Fällmar, Johanna Mårtensson, Karin Brocki, Malin Gingnell, Andreas Frick
During adolescence, emotion regulation and reactivity are still developing and are in many ways qualitatively different from adulthood. However, the neurobiological processes underpinning these differences remain poorly understood, including the role of maturing neurotransmitter systems. We combined magnetic resonance spectroscopy in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) and self-reported emotion regulation and reactivity in a sample of typically developed adolescents (n = 37; 13-16 years) and adults (n = 39; 30-40 years), and found that adolescents had higher levels of glutamate to total creatine (tCr) ratio in the dACC than adults...
May 2024: Developmental Psychobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38642615/neuroinflammation-in-post-acute-sequelae-of-covid-19-pasc-as-assessed-by-11-c-pbr28-pet-correlates-with-vascular-disease-measures
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael B VanElzakker, Hannah F Bues, Ludovica Brusaferri, Minhae Kim, Deena Saadi, Eva-Maria Ratai, Darin D Dougherty, Marco L Loggia
The COVID-19 pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 has triggered a consequential public health crisis of post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC), sometimes referred to as long COVID. The mechanisms of the heterogeneous persistent symptoms and signs that comprise PASC are under investigation, and several studies have pointed to the central nervous and vascular systems as being potential sites of dysfunction. In the current study, we recruited individuals with PASC with diverse symptoms, and examined the relationship between neuroinflammation and circulating markers of vascular dysfunction...
April 18, 2024: Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38642083/functional-mapping-of-the-somatosensory-cortex-using-noninvasive-fmri-and-touch-in-awake-dogs
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
C-N Alexandrina Guran, Magdalena Boch, Ronald Sladky, Lucrezia Lonardo, Sabrina Karl, Ludwig Huber, Claus Lamm
Dogs are increasingly used as a model for neuroscience due to their ability to undergo functional MRI fully awake and unrestrained, after extensive behavioral training. Still, we know rather little about dogs' basic functional neuroanatomy, including how basic perceptual and motor functions are localized in their brains. This is a major shortcoming in interpreting activations obtained in dog fMRI. The aim of this preregistered study was to localize areas associated with somatosensory processing. To this end, we touched N = 22 dogs undergoing fMRI scanning on their left and right flanks using a wooden rod...
April 20, 2024: Brain Structure & Function
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38640150/association-of-basal-forebrain-volume-with-amyloid-tau-and-cognition-in-alzheimer-s-disease
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Han Soo Yoo, Han-Kyeol Kim, Jae-Hoon Lee, Joong-Hyun Chun, Hye Sun Lee, Michel J Grothe, Stefan Teipel, Enrica Cavedo, Andrea Vergallo, Harald Hampel, Young Hoon Ryu, Hanna Cho, Chul Hyoung Lyoo
BACKGROUND: Degeneration of cholinergic basal forebrain (BF) neurons characterizes Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, what role the BF plays in the dynamics of AD pathophysiology has not been investigated precisely. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the baseline and longitudinal roles of BF along with core neuropathologies in AD. METHODS: In this retrospective cohort study, we enrolled 113 subjects (38 amyloid [Aβ]-negative cognitively unimpaired, 6 Aβ-positive cognitively unimpaired, 39 with prodromal AD, and 30 with AD dementia) who performed brain MRI for BF volume and cortical thickness, 18F-florbetaben PET for Aβ, 18F-flortaucipir PET for tau, and detailed cognitive testing longitudinally...
April 16, 2024: Journal of Alzheimer's Disease: JAD
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38638415/weakened-effective-connectivity-between-salience-network-and-default-mode-network-during-resting-state-in-adolescent-depression
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Willinger, Isabelle Häberling, Iva Ilioska, Gregor Berger, Susanne Walitza, Silvia Brem
Adolescent major depressive disorder (MDD) is associated with altered resting-state connectivity between the default mode network (DMN) and the salience network (SN), which are involved in self-referential processing and detecting and filtering salient stimuli, respectively. Using spectral dynamical causal modelling, we investigated the effective connectivity and input sensitivity between key nodes of these networks in 30 adolescents with MDD and 32 healthy controls while undergoing resting-state fMRI. We found that the DMN received weaker inhibition from the SN and that the medial prefrontal cortex and the anterior cingulate cortex showed reduced self-inhibition in MDD, making them more prone to external influences...
2024: Frontiers in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38637627/longitudinal-microstructural-changes-in-18-amygdala-nuclei-resonate-with-cortical-circuits-and-phenomics
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karam Ghanem, Karin Saltoun, Aparna Suvrathan, Bogdan Draganski, Danilo Bzdok
The amygdala nuclei modulate distributed neural circuits that most likely evolved to respond to environmental threats and opportunities. So far, the specific role of unique amygdala nuclei in the context processing of salient environmental cues lacks adequate characterization across neural systems and over time. Here, we present amygdala nuclei morphometry and behavioral findings from longitudinal population data (>1400 subjects, age range 40-69 years, sampled 2-3 years apart): the UK Biobank offers exceptionally rich phenotyping along with brain morphology scans...
April 18, 2024: Communications Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38637155/reconfiguration-of-behavioral-signals-in-the-anterior-cingulate-cortex-based-on-emotional-state
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Adrian J Lindsay, Isabella Gallello, Barak F Caracheo, Jeremy K Seamans
Behaviours and their execution depend on the context and emotional state in which they are performed. The contextual modulation of behavior likely relies on regions such as the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) that multiplex information about emotional/autonomic states and behaviours. The objective of the present study was to understand how the representations of behaviors by ACC neurons become modified when performed in different emotional states. A pipeline of machine learning techniques was developed to categorize and classify complex, spontaneous behaviors in male rats from video...
April 18, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38636886/early-life-adversities-are-associated-with-lower-expected-value-signaling-in-the-adult-brain
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Seda Sacu, Magda Dubois, Frank H Hezemans, Pascal-M Aggensteiner, Maximilian Monninger, Daniel Brandeis, Tobias Banaschewski, Tobias U Hauser, Nathalie E Holz
BACKGROUND: Early adverse experiences are assumed to affect fundamental processes of reward learning and decision-making. However, computational neuroimaging studies investigating these circuits in the context of adversity are sparse and limited to studies conducted in adolescent samples, leaving the long-term effects unexplored. METHODS: Using data from a longitudinal birth cohort study (n=156, 87 females), we investigated associations between adversities and computational markers of reward learning (i...
April 16, 2024: Biological Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38636785/the-deep-and-the-deeper-spinal-cord-and-deep-brain-stimulation-for-neuropathic-pain
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pedro Henrique Martins da Cunha, Daniel Ciampi de Andrade
Neuropathic pain occurs in people experiencing lesion or disease affecting the somatosensorial system. It is present in 7% of the general population and may not fully respond to first- and second-line treatments in up to 40% of cases. Neuromodulation approaches are often proposed for those not tolerating or not responding to usual pharmacological management. These approaches can be delivered surgically (invasively) or non-invasively. Invasive neuromodulation techniques were the first to be employed in neuropathic pain...
April 16, 2024: La Presse Médicale
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