D A Yurgelun-Todd

Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA

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Publications (43)253.55 Total impact

  • Article: Citicoline enhances frontal lobe bioenergetics as measured by phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
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    ABSTRACT: Citicoline supplementation has been used to ameliorate memory disturbances in older people and those with Alzheimer's disease. This study used MRS to characterize the effects of citicoline on high-energy phosphate metabolites and constituents of membrane synthesis in the frontal lobe. Phosphorus ((31)P) metabolite data were acquired using a three-dimensional chemical-shift imaging protocol at 4 T from 16 healthy men and women (mean +/- SD age 47.3 +/- 5.4 years) who orally self-administered 500 mg or 2000 mg Cognizin Citicoline (Kyowa Hakko Kogyo Co., Ltd, Ibaraki, Japan) for 6 weeks. Individual (31)P metabolites were quantified in the frontal lobe (anterior cingulate cortex) and a comparison region (parieto-occipital cortex). Significant increases in phosphocreatine (+7%), beta-nucleoside triphosphates (largely ATP in brain, +14%) and the ratio of phosphocreatine to inorganic phosphate (+32%), as well as significant changes in membrane phospholipids, were observed in the anterior cingulate cortex after 6 weeks of citicoline treatment. These treatment-related alterations in phosphorus metabolites were not only regionally specific, but tended to be of greater magnitude in subjects who received the lower dose. These data show that citicoline improves frontal lobe bioenergetics and alters phospholipid membrane turnover. Citicoline supplementation may therefore help to mitigate cognitive declines associated with aging by increasing energy reserves and utilization, as well as increasing the amount of essential phospholipid membrane components needed to synthesize and maintain cell membranes.
    NMR in Biomedicine 10/2008; 21(10):1066-75. · 3.21 Impact Factor
  • Article: Basal ganglia volumetric studies in affective disorder: what did we learn in the last 15 years?
    R M Bonelli, H-P Kapfhammer, S S Pillay, D A Yurgelun-Todd
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    ABSTRACT: Until today, morphometric neuroimaging studies on affective disorders concentrate on the limbic system, especially the hippocampus, amygdala, and anterior cingulate. In most of the studies and reviews available today, the basal ganglia are of secondary interest. It seems that the basal ganglia are interest of neurologist, whereas the limbic system is reserved for psychiatric neuroimaging studies. We follow a different approach in this review, studying all available papers on MRI research of the basal ganglia in unipolar depression and bipolar disorder. We found a possibly larger neostriatum in bipolar and possibly smaller one in unipolar patients. None of the unipolar studies found any larger basal ganglion, and only one out of 12 bipolar studies found smaller basal ganglia. Both findings seemed to depend on age (tendency toward smaller volumes in unipolar and bipolar with older age), sex (men tending to pathology in both disorders) and bipolar patients show a possible influence of medication, which is not assessed so far in unipolar depression. We conclude that several methodological shortcomings in volumetric MRI research on the basal ganglia in affective disorders make it necessary to imply more research in this area. We suggest (a) better MRI methods (we do not have a single volumetric 3 Tesla study in this patient group); (b) studies of medication-naïve patients (thus ruling out the medication effect); (c) Studies that directly compare unipolar depressed and bipolar patients are needed to determine whether these apparent differences in morphometric abnormalities, as observed through the mediating comparison with healthy subjects, are real.
    Acta Neurovegetativa 03/2006; 113(2):255-68. · 2.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Neurophysiology of motor function following cannabis discontinuation in chronic cannabis smokers: an fMRI study
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    ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was to identify the differences in cerebral activation between chronic cannabis smokers and controls in response to finger sequencing. We hypothesized that attentional areas related to motor function as well as primary and supplementary motor cortices would show diminished activation in chronic cannabis smokers. Nine cannabis smokers and 16 controls were included in these analyses. Scanning was performed on a GE 1.5T scanner. Echo planar images and high-resolution MR images were acquired. The challenge paradigm included left and right finger sequencing. Group differences in cerebral activation were examined for Brodmann areas (BA) 4, 6, 24, and 32 using ROI analyses in SPM. Cannabis users, tested within 4-36 h of discontinuation, exhibited significantly less activation than controls in BA 24 and 32 bilaterally during right- and left-sided sequencing and for BA 6 in all tasks except for left-sided sequencing in the left hemisphere. There were no statistically significant differences for BA 4. None of these regional activations correlated with urinary cannabis concentration and verbal IQ for smokers. These results suggest that recently abstinent chronic cannabis smokers produce reduced activation in motor cortical areas in response to finger sequencing compared to controls.
    Drug and alcohol dependence. 01/2004; 76(3):261-71.
  • Article: Neural correlates of different types of deception: an fMRI investigation.
    G Ganis, S M Kosslyn, S Stose, W L Thompson, D A Yurgelun-Todd
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    ABSTRACT: Deception is a complex cognitive activity, and different types of lies could arise from different neural systems. We investigated this possibility by first classifying lies according to two dimensions, whether they fit into a coherent story and whether they were previously memorized. fMRI revealed that well-rehearsed lies that fit into a coherent story elicit more activation in right anterior frontal cortices than spontaneous lies that do not fit into a story, whereas the opposite pattern occurs in the anterior cingulate and in posterior visual cortex. Furthermore, both types of lies elicited more activation than telling the truth in anterior prefrontal cortices (bilaterally), the parahippocampal gyrus (bilaterally), the right precuneus, and the left cerebellum. At least in part, distinct neural networks support different types of deception.
    Cerebral Cortex 09/2003; 13(8):830-6. · 6.54 Impact Factor
  • Article: Chronic citicoline increases phosphodiesters in the brains of healthy older subjects: an in vivo phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy study.
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    ABSTRACT: Phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) in brain cell membranes decreases with age. Evidence from both animal and in vitro studies indicates that CDP-choline (citicoline) administration may increase phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) synthesis and might reverse PtdCho loss. We investigated whether oral citicoline can increase PtdCho synthesis in the brains of older subjects by measuring levels of phosphorus-containing metabolites using proton-decoupled phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((31)P-MRS) before and after citicoline treatment. All subjects took 500 mg citicoline once orally each day for 6 weeks, then took either citicoline or placebo once orally per day for a second 6-week period. Subjects underwent a (31)P-MRS scan at baseline and following 6 and 12 weeks of treatment. Treatment with citicoline for 6 weeks was associated with a 7.3% increase from baseline levels in brain phosphodiesters ( P=0.008), including an 11.6% increase in glycerophosphoethanolamine ( P=0.002) and a 5.1% increase in glycerophosphocholine ( P=0.137). Subjects who continued to take citicoline for the second 6-week period did not show significant additional increases in the levels of these metabolites. No changes were seen in other phosphorus-containing metabolites. There was a correlation between improvement on the California Verbal Learning Test and increase in phosphodiesters. The increases in phosphodiesters seen in this study indicate that phospholipid synthesis and turnover were stimulated by 6 weeks of oral citicoline. These results in humans support previous in vitro and animal studies and suggest that the administration of oral citicoline may be of use in reversing age-related changes in the brain.
    Psychopharmacologia 06/2002; 161(3):248-54. · 4.08 Impact Factor
  • Article: Sex differences in amygdala activation during the perception of facial affect.
    W D Killgore, D A Yurgelun-Todd
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    ABSTRACT: The cognitive and affective systems of the cerebral cortex are often more lateralized in males than females, but it is unclear whether these differences extend to subcortical systems. We used fMRI to examine sex differences in lateralized amygdala activity during happy and fearful face perception. Amygdala activation differed for men and women depending on the valence of the expression. Overall, males were more lateralized than females, but the direction differed between valence conditions. Happy faces produced greater right than left amygdala activation for males but not females. Both sexes showed greater left amygdala activation for fearful faces. These findings suggest that the lateralization of affective function may extend beyond the cortex to subcortical regions such as the amygdala.
    Neuroreport 09/2001; 12(11):2543-7. · 1.66 Impact Factor
  • Article: Morphometry of individual cerebellar lobules in schizophrenia.
    R T Loeber, C M Cintron, D A Yurgelun-Todd
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    ABSTRACT: Previous imaging studies have described focal cortical changes in schizophrenia, with predominant findings of abnormalities in the temporal and frontal regions. The current study hypothesized that cerebellar regions involved in feedback and feed-forward loops with cortical regions affected in schizophrenia would also demonstrate structural changes. Using magnetic resonance imaging, the authors measured the volume of individual cerebellar lobules in 19 patients with schizophrenia and 19 healthy comparison subjects. The inferior vermis was significantly smaller in the schizophrenic group than in the comparison group. Patients with schizophrenia also demonstrated a significantly smaller cerebellar asymmetry than the comparison subjects. The authors hypothesize that these morphometric changes may be developmental in origin and possibly related to cortical abnormalities.
    American Journal of Psychiatry 07/2001; 158(6):952-4. · 12.54 Impact Factor
  • Article: Sex-specific developmental changes in amygdala responses to affective faces.
    W D Killgore, M Oki, D A Yurgelun-Todd
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    ABSTRACT: It is hypothesized that adolescent development involves a redistribution of cerebral functions from lower subcortical structures to higher regions of the prefrontal cortex to provide greater self-control over emotional behavior. We further hypothesized that this redistribution is likely to be moderated by sex-specific hormonal changes. To examine developmental sex differences in affective processing, 19 children and adolescents underwent fMRI while viewing photographs of faces expressing fear. Males and females differed in the pattern of their amygdala vs prefrontal activation during adolescent maturation. With age, females showed a progressive increase in prefrontal relative to amygdala activation in the left hemisphere, whereas males failed to show a significant age related difference. There appear to be sex differences in the functional maturation of affect-related prefrontal-amygdala circuits during adolescence.
    Neuroreport 03/2001; 12(2):427-33. · 1.66 Impact Factor
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    Article: Increased orbitofrontal cortex levels of choline in depressed adolescents as detected by in vivo proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
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    ABSTRACT: The frontal lobe has been implicated in the pathology of depression in adults. Through the use of magnetic resonance spectroscopy, altered brain choline levels have also been linked to the pathophysiology of affective disorders. To identify possible alterations in orbitofrontal cortex levels of cytosolic choline in adolescents with and without depression, 22 depressed and 43 control adolescents were recruited. Of those recruited, usable proton magnetic resonance spectra were acquired from a voxel in the left anterior medial frontal lobe of 17 depressed (mean age 15.8+/-1.6) and 28 healthy adolescents (mean age 14.5+/-1.7). Orbitofrontal cytosolic choline/creatine (Cho/Cr) ratios (p =.032) and cytosolic choline/N-acetyl aspartate (Cho/NAA) ratios (p =.043) were significantly higher in the depressed subjects than in the control subjects. There were no significant differences between depressed and control subjects in gray or white matter content within the voxel. These findings suggest that brain cytosolic choline may be increased in depressed adolescents in comparison with control subjects and independent of a corresponding structural change. These results are consistent with similar, previously reported findings in adults and suggest that depression in adolescents is associated with alterations in orbitofrontal metabolism.
    Biological Psychiatry 01/2001; 48(11):1053-61. · 8.28 Impact Factor
  • Article: fMRI during affect discrimination in bipolar affective disorder.
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    ABSTRACT: It has been hypothesized that disturbances in affect may represent distinct etiologic factors for bipolar affective disorder. The neural mechanisms mediating affective processes and their relationship to brain development and the pathophysiology of bipolar affective disorder remain to be clarified. Recent advances in neuroimaging techniques have made possible the non-invasive examination of specific brain regions during cortical challenge paradigms. This study reports findings based on fMRI data acquired during fearful and happy affect recognition paradigms in patients with bipolar affective disorder and in healthy adult subjects. Prior to the scan, subjects were instructed to view the stimuli and to identify the type of facial expression presented. Echo planar scanning was performed on a 1.5 Tesla scanner which had been retrofitted with a whole body echo planar coil, using a head coil. The data indicate that in adult subjects with bipolar affective disorder, there is a reduction in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex activation and an increase in amygdalar activation in response to fearful facial affect. In a healthy comparison group, signal intensity changes were not found in these regions. In addition, although the patients with bipolar affective disorder completed the task demands, they demonstrated an impaired ability to correctly identify fearful facial affect but not the happy facial affect displayed. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that in some patients with bipolar affective disorder, there may be a reduction of frontal cortical function which may be associated with affective as well as attentional processing deficits.
    Bipolar Disorders 10/2000; 2(3 Pt 2):237-48. · 5.29 Impact Factor
  • Article: Choline, myo-inositol and mood in bipolar disorder: a proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging study of the anterior cingulate cortex.
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    ABSTRACT: Alterations in choline and myo-inositol metabolism have been noted in bipolar disorder, and the therapeutic efficacy of lithium in mania may be related to these effects. We wished to determine the relationship between anterior cingulate cortex choline and myo-inositol levels, assessed using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI), and mood state in subjects with bipolar disorder. Serial assessments of anterior cingulate cortex choline and myo-inositol metabolism were performed in nine subjects with bipolar disorder, taking either lithium or valproate, and 14 controls. Each bipolar subject was examined between one and four times (3.1 +/- 1.3). On the occasion of each examination, standardized ratings of both depression and mania were recorded. In the left cingulate cortex, the bipolar subjects' depression ratings correlated positively with MRSI measures of Cho/Cr-PCr. In the right cingulate cortex, the Cho/Cr-PCr ratio was significantly higher in subjects with bipolar disorder compared with control subjects. In addition, bipolar subjects not taking antidepressants had a significantly higher right cingulate cortex Cho/Cr-PCr ratio compared with patients taking antidepressants or controls. No clinical or drug-related changes were observed for the Ino/Cr-PCr ratio. The results of this study suggest that bipolar disorder is associated with alterations in the metabolism of cytosolic, choline-containing compounds in the anterior cingulate cortex. As this resonance arises primarily from phosphocholine and glycerophosphocholine, both of which are metabolites of phosphatidylcholine, these results are consistent with impaired intraneuronal signaling mechanisms.
    Bipolar Disorders 10/2000; 2(3 Pt 2):207-16. · 5.29 Impact Factor
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    Article: Neuroimaging in bipolar disorder: what have we learned?
    A L Stoll, P F Renshaw, D A Yurgelun-Todd, B M Cohen
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    ABSTRACT: New technologies are offering increasingly powerful means to obtain structural, chemical, and functional images of the brain during life, often without the use of ionizing radiation. Bipolar disorder, with its clear physiologic features, would appear to be a prime candidate for the application of current brain imaging; however, only a modest number of studies have been reported to date, and most studies have small sample sizes and heterogeneous subject groups. Nonetheless, there are a few consistent findings among these studies, including the following: 1) Structural imaging studies suggest an increased number of white matter hyperintensities in patients with bipolar disorder. These may be lesions unique to bipolar disorder and its treatment, or related to cardiovascular risk factors, which are more common in bipolar patients. Decreased cerebellar size and anomalies of cerebellar blood volume have also been reported. Increased sulcal prominence and enlargement of the lateral and third ventricles are less consistently observed findings. 2) Spectroscopic imaging suggests abnormalities of metabolism of choline-containing compounds in symptomatically ill bipolar patients and, possibly, treatment-induced changes in choline- and myoinositol-containing compounds. Each of these groups of metabolites serves as a component of membrane phospholipids and cellular second-messenger cycles. 3) Metabolic and blood flow studies provide evidence for decreased activity of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) in bipolar patients during depression. It is not clear if these changes are restricted to particular subregions of the PFC, nor if they are reversed with mania. No single pathophysiologic mechanism yet explains these findings, although all might be due to regional alterations in cellular activity and metabolism or changes in cell membrane composition and turnover. The development of imaging technologies has far outpaced their use in bipolar disorder. The promise of future studies is great, with more powerful magnetic resonance scanners, additional ligands for positron emission tomography and single photon emission computed tomography imaging, and improved image generation and processing already available.
    Biological Psychiatry 10/2000; 48(6):505-17. · 8.28 Impact Factor
  • Article: Functional activation of the left amygdala and hippocampus during associative encoding.
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    ABSTRACT: The human hippocampus is critical to episodic encoding, but the role of the amygdala in memory is less clear. Animal research suggests a role for the amygdala in associative memory, but this has not been examined systematically in humans. Using fMRI, we compared amygdala and hippocampus activation for seven healthy subjects during two visual encoding tasks: serially presented single faces and faces presented as pairs. Single faces activated bilateral hippocampi, but not the amygdala. Paired faces activated bilateral amygdala, but only the left hippocampus. Subtraction of the two conditions revealed greater activation within the left amygdala and hippocampus during paired face encoding, suggesting that associative encoding activates a left-lateralized limbic network including the hippocampus and amygdala.
    Neuroreport 08/2000; 11(10):2259-63. · 1.66 Impact Factor
  • Article: Hippocampal volume in primary unipolar major depression: a magnetic resonance imaging study.
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    ABSTRACT: Previous studies have shown that major depression is frequently accompanied by hypercortisolemia. There is some evidence suggesting that an increase in the glucocorticoid levels may make hippocampal cells more vulnerable to insults caused by hypoxia, hypoglycemia, or excitatory neurotransmitters. Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the hippocampi of patients with major depression were measured and compared with values observed in control subjects. Thirty-eight patients with primary unipolar major depression were recruited. Twenty control subjects were matched for age, gender, and years of education. The hippocampal volume was measured from coronal MRI scans in all of the subjects. Patients were also grouped and compared as responders and nonresponders to treatment with fluoxetine of 20 mg/day, for 8 weeks. Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) was used to determine the severity of depression. No significant differences were observed between the hippocampal volumes of patients with major depression and control subjects; however, a significant correlation was observed between the left hippocampal volume of men and their HDRS baseline values. In addition, female responders had a statistically significant higher mean right hippocampal volume than nonresponders. The results of our study indicate no reduction in the volume of the hippocampus in patients with major depression. Nonetheless, the results do suggest that the effects of disease severity, gender, and treatment response may influence hippocampal volume.
    Biological Psychiatry 07/2000; 47(12):1087-90. · 8.28 Impact Factor
  • Article: Perinatal complications and abnormal proton metabolite concentrations in frontal cortex of adolescents seen on magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
    D K Kinney, R J Steingard, P F Renshaw, D A Yurgelun-Todd
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    ABSTRACT: The relation of perinatal complications to metabolism of orbitofrontal cortex was studied in 12 normal adolescents aged 13 to 17 years. Perinatal complications are associated with both (a) behavioral signs of frontal lobe dysfunction and (b) increased risk for mood disorders and schizophrenia. Perinatal complications are not usually sufficient to produce these disorders, however, suggesting an etiologic model in which perinatal complications interact with a second, familial, liability factor. The present study tested a key prediction of this "two-factor" model, namely, that perinatal complications will be associated with physiologic signs of frontal dysfunction, even in persons who have no personal or family history of these psychiatric disorders. Subjects were screened by structured interviews with the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia and had no personal or family history of psychiatric disorder. Ratios of choline and N-acetyl aspartate to creatine in orbitofrontal cortex were measured using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Perinatal complications were scored with the examiners blinded to magnetic resonance spectroscopy data, applying published scales to hospital records on subjects' gestations and births. Perinatal complications were significantly correlated with reduced concentrations of choline and N-acetyl aspartate. Our results complement earlier findings of significant relations between perinatal complications and signs of frontal lobe dysfunction, as well as elevated rates of these two types of variables in mood disorders and schizophrenia.
    Neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, and behavioral neurology 02/2000; 13(1):8-12.
  • Article: Measurement of human brain dexfenfluramine concentration by 19F magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
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    ABSTRACT: The goals of this study were to quantitate the brain concentration of the anorectic drug dexfenfluramine (DF) in human subjects receiving clinical doses of DF and to determine whether human brain DF concentrations approach those reported to cause irreversible neurochemical changes in animals. Each subject's brain DF concentration was measured several times over an extended period of DF treatment to determine whether drug accumulation in the brain would plateau or continue to increase throughout the treatment period. Fluorine magnetic resonance spectroscopy (19F-MRS) was used to directly detect and quantitate brain levels of the fluorinated drug dexfenfluramine and its active metabolite dex-norfenfluramine (dNF). Patients received 15 mg dexfenfluramine BID for 90 days. 19F-MRS measurements were performed at baseline and at three times during the treatment period. Twelve women (age 38-54 years) who were obese, with body mass indices of 28. 4-37.4, but otherwise healthy. The combined concentration of DF and nDF reached steady-state in the human brain after approximately 10 days of treatment. The steady-state brain concentration averaged approximately 4 microM and did not tend to increase significantly during the 90 day treatment period. These results demonstrate that fluorinated drugs can be quantified using 19F MRS at concentrations below 10 microM in the human brain. The time-course data suggest that brain DF concentrations parallel DF plasma pharmacokinetics in humans. Measured brain dexfenfluramine/nor-dexfenfluramine concentrations were well below levels previously found to cause irreversible brain alterations in animals.
    Brain Research 08/1999; 834(1-2):1-5. · 2.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Eye-tracking dysfunction and birth-month weather in schizophrenia.
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    ABSTRACT: The prevalence of eye-tracking dysfunction (ETD) is significantly elevated in individuals with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and in their nonschizophrenic relatives, suggesting that ETD marks a familial (most likely genetic) risk factor for schizophrenia. Birth in a season with intemperate weather is also a widely reported risk factor for schizophrenia and is particularly marked for the subgroup with no family history of the disorder. This study examined how these two risk factors covaried in 78 patients with a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (3rd ed., rev.; American Psychiatric Association, 1987) diagnosis of schizophrenia. Eye tracking and birth-month weather were independently assessed. As hypothesized, patients without ETD were significantly more likely to be born in months with intemperate weather (both hot and cold) than either patients with ETD or people in the general population. Etiologic factors associated with severe weather near birth may be important sources of nonfamilial schizophrenia.
    Journal of Abnormal Psychology 06/1999; 108(2):359-62. · 4.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Applications of functional MR imaging to research in psychiatry.
    D A Yurgelun-Todd, P F Renshaw
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    ABSTRACT: Functional MR (fMR) imaging techniques have revolutionized the study of psychiatric illness; however, the clinical utility of fMR imaging studies for these disorders is limited. This article addresses the research applications of fMR imaging to the study of psychiatric disorders. The four psychiatric disorders covered in detail include schizophrenia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, Alzheimer's dementia, and substance abuse. Research findings and implications for future study are discussed with reference to both clinical and technological limitations.
    Neuroimaging Clinics of North America 06/1999; 9(2):295-308. · 1.51 Impact Factor
  • Article: Differences in cerebellar blood volume in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
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    ABSTRACT: Brain morphometry has been studied extensively in schizophrenic patients, and among the cortical differences identified two consistent findings are decreased cerebellar vermal volume and increased volume of the fourth ventricle; although contradictory findings are reported as well. Recent cognitive activation studies utilizing PET, SPECT and fMRI have identified both decreased and increased activation in the cerebellum of schizophrenic patients compared with healthy controls. This study used DSC fMRI to map cerebellar blood volume in patients with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder and healthy controls. For all cerebellar regions analyzed, schizophrenic patients had the highest cerebellar blood volume, while bipolars had the lowest blood volume. Morphometric measurements were completed and indicated that the ratio of vermis to whole CBL tissue volume was 24% less for the schizophrenic population than controls, whereas the subjects with bipolar disorder had a ratio that was non-significantly smaller than controls by 19%. Comparison of morphometric data with blood volume data did not reveal any statistically significant correlations among the study groups.
    Schizophrenia Research 06/1999; 37(1):81-9. · 4.75 Impact Factor
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    Article: Functional magnetic resonance imaging of facial affect recognition in children and adolescents.
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    ABSTRACT: To examine further the role of the amygdala in the recognition of facial expression in adolescents. Twelve healthy adolescents were studied using functional magnetic resonance imaging technology during a task of facial affect recognition and a visual control task. All subjects demonstrated a significant increase in signal intensity in the amygdala for the facial expression recognition task. The data are consistent with previous work in healthy adult subjects implicating the amygdala as essential for the recognition of fearful facial expression.
    Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 03/1999; 38(2):195-9. · 6.44 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 1999–2008
    • Harvard University
      • • Department of Psychology
      • • Department of Psychiatry
      • • Brain Imaging Center (BIC)
      Boston, MA, USA
  • 2006
    • Medical University of Graz
      Graz, Styria, Austria
  • 1998
    • Massachusetts General Hospital
      Boston, MA, USA
  • 1996
    • New England Baptist Hospital
      Boston, MA, USA