Heena Manglani

Heena Manglani
  • Master of Arts
  • The Ohio State University

About

26
Publications
1,550
Reads
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167
Citations
Current institution
The Ohio State University

Publications

Publications (26)
Article
Background Pain is prevalent among adults with Neurofibromatoses (NF) and hinders quality of life. Pain management for NF is predominantly pharmacological and often ineffective. Psychosocial treatments improve pain outcomes in other chronic illness populations but have not been developed and tested in fully powered efficacy trials among adults with...
Article
Objectives: In this meta-regression, we aimed to explore associations between changes in psychosocial factors and changes in sleep disturbance during mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs). We also investigated participant-specific and methodological factors associated with sleep disturbance during MBIs. Method: We utilized data from a published...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Multiple sclerosis is associated with impairments in working memory functioning. Lifestyle physical activity interventions show promise in improving cognitive functioning; however, the evidence is limited. We examined the efficacy of a lifestyle physical activity intervention, involving step tracking and psychoeducational materials, on i...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Neurofibromatosis (NF) is chronic neurogenetic condition that increases risk for poor quality of life, depression, and anxiety. Given the lack of biomedical treatments, we developed the “Relaxation Response Resiliency for NF” (3RP‐NF) program to improve psychosocial outcomes among adults with NF. Objective To move toward effectiveness...
Article
Background: Cognitive dysfunction is a pervasive symptom of multiple sclerosis (MS). Correlational evidence on the relationships between physical activity, sedentary behavior, and cognition has been mixed and limited to a few activity measures. The collinearity of accelerometry-based metrics has precluded an assessment of the full activity spectru...
Article
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive weakness and eventual death, usually within 3-5 years. An ALS diagnosis is associated with substantial emotional distress for both the affected person and their family care-partners which impairs the ability to engage in important conversations about lon...
Article
Full-text available
Importance: Neurofibromatoses (NF; NF1, NF2, and schwannomatosis) are hereditary tumor predisposition syndromes with a risk for poor quality of life (QOL) and no evidence-based treatments. Objective: To compare a mind-body skills training program, the Relaxation Response Resiliency Program for NF (3RP-NF), with a health education program (Health...
Article
Introduction Patients admitted to the Neuroscience Intensive Care Unit (Neuro-ICU) with acute neurological illnesses (ANI; e.g., stroke, tumor, TBI) and their informal caregivers experience high rates of anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress. To address this need, we previously developed the Recovering Together (RT) dyadic intervention to h...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction People with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) experience a range of physical, cognitive, and affective symptoms. Behavioral interventions targeting increased physical activity show promising support as low-cost methods to improve working memory, episodic memory, and processing speed in PwMS. In this randomized controlled trial, we will examine...
Article
Full-text available
Background Mindfulness meditation is a form of mind–body intervention that has increasing scientific support for its ability to reduce age-related declines in cognitive functioning, improve affective health, and strengthen the neural circuitry supporting improved cognitive and affective health. However, the majority of existent studies have been pi...
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Full-text available
Purpose/Objective Research: This secondary analysis of a pilot randomized controlled trial in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) aimed to compare mindfulness-based training (MBT), adaptive cognitive training (aCT), and a waitlist control (WL) on the use of emotion regulation strategies during daily worries and ruminations. Further, we examined c...
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Full-text available
Background Routine cognitive screening is a priority in MS clinical care. The National Institutes of Health Toolbox (NIHTB) Cognition Battery is a 30-min instrument validated in neurological populations excluding MS. Objectives To assess construct validity of NIHTB tests and compare classification of cognitive impairment with gold-standard tests....
Article
Background: Neurodegenerative diseases (NDDs) are increasingly prevalent and radically alter the lives of individuals and their informal care partners (together called a dyad). As symptoms progress, dyads are at risk for elevated emotional distress and declines in relationship functioning and quality of life. Psychosocial interventions delivered t...
Article
Timely personalized medicine is an unmet, critical need in multiple sclerosis (MS). A major barrier to providing individualized care is a lack of information on which interventions are most appropriate for whom. In this viewpoint, we submit a rationale and three-step roadmap to personalized integrative medicine. This multidisciplinary team approach...
Article
Mindfulness-based interventions show increasing promise for improving attention and emotion regulation— processes that critically support healthy aging. Given their complex, multi-faceted nature, identifying specific aspects of attention and emotion regulation that are modifiable with training in older adults, particularly compared with active cont...
Article
Background: Individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS) are vulnerable to deficits in working memory, but the search for neural correlates of working memory within circumscribed areas has been inconclusive. Given the widespread neural alterations observed in MS, predictive modeling approaches that capitalize on whole-brain connectivity may better cap...
Preprint
Background Individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS) are vulnerable to deficits in working memory, and the search for neural correlates of working memory in circumscribed areas has yielded inconclusive findings. Given the widespread neural alterations observed in MS, predictive modeling approaches that capitalize on whole-brain connectivity may bett...
Preprint
With advancing age, declines in the executive control of attention are accompanied by shifts in the functional topology of brain networks. However, there is increasing recognition of the considerable individual variability in the extent and types of attentional deficits that older adults exhibit, with results from neuroimaging investigations parall...
Preprint
Mindfulness-based interventions show increasing promise for improving attention and emotion regulation, processes that critically support healthy aging. Given their complex, multi-faceted nature, identifying specific aspects of attention and emotion regulation that are modifiable with training in older adults, particularly compared with active cont...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: People with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) report greater emotion dysregulation, which is associated with increased symptoms of depression and anxiety, and reduced quality of life. Given the transdiagnostic significance of emotion dysregulation, the current study was designed to assess the feasibility and treatment effects of mindfulness med...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: The aim of this preregistered, secondary analysis of a pilot randomized controlled trial (NCT02717429) was to compare the impact of 4-week mindfulness-based training and adaptive cognitive training, with a waitlist control condition, on processing speed and working memory in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). Method: Sixty-one PwMS w...
Preprint
Objective: The aim of this pre-registered, secondary analysis of a pilot randomized controlled trial was to compare the impact of two four-week interventions with a waitlist control condition on processing speed and working memory in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). Method: Sixty-one PwMS were randomized to mindfulness-based training (MBT), a...
Article
Introduction Smoking-related cues can promote drug-seeking behavior and curtail attempts to quit. One way to understand the potential impact of such cues is to compare cue-elicited behaviors for smoking and other reinforcers (eg, food) using the Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer paradigm, which measures how much control cues can exert over reward-...

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