Patricia Sampedro Piquero

Patricia Sampedro Piquero
Autonomous University of Madrid | UAM · Biological and Health Psychology

PhD Psychology

About

69
Publications
19,041
Reads
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851
Citations
Additional affiliations
January 2016 - November 2017
Autonomous University of Madrid
Position
  • false
Education
September 2005 - November 2015
University of Oviedo
Field of study
  • Psicología

Publications

Publications (69)
Article
Full-text available
The college years represent a crucial developmental period in which unhealthy behaviors, including smoking, alcohol consumption, inadequate physical activity (PA), poor sleep quality, and unhealthy nutrition habits are often acquired, influencing the onset or exacerbation of pre-existing mental disturbances such as anxiety, depression, or difficult...
Article
Background Most electroencephalographic (EEG) investigations on alcohol have focused on adults, and scarce data is available about the potential of EEG measurements to detect young people at high-risk, as well as, to understand possible sex differences in alcohol impact on the brain. Objective This systematic review aimed to explore sex-related di...
Article
Full-text available
Background Stress is one of the main environmental factors involved in the onset of different psychopathologies. In youth, stressful life events can trigger inappropriate and health-damaging behaviors, such as binge drinking. This behavior, in turn, can lead to long-lasting changes in the neurophysiological response to stress and the development of...
Article
The identification of the risk factors of alcohol consumption in youths is crucial for early interventions focused on reducing harmful alcohol use. In our study, 82 college students (40 healthy control (CO group) and 42 with risky alcohol use (RAU group) determined by AUDIT questionnaire) between the ages of 18 and 25 years underwent a comprehensiv...
Article
Anxious depression is a prevalent disease with devastating consequences. Despite the lack of knowledge about the neurobiological basis of this subtype of depression, recently our group has identified a relationship between the LPA1 receptor, one of the six characterized G protein-coupled receptors (LPA1–6) for lysophosphatidic acid, with a mixed de...
Article
Full-text available
The social stigma of people with addictions is a topic that has aroused great interest in recent years. The present study aims to analyze the accuracy with which Psychology students estimate the presence of prefrontal symptomatology in people they imagine having to treat for addictions in their professional future. That estimate is compared with th...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Loneliness is a distressful feeling that can affect mental and physical health, particularly among older adults. Cortisol, the primary hormone of the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal axis (HPA-axis), may act as a biological transducer through which loneliness affects health. While most previous studies have evaluated the association betw...
Article
Stressful events appear to be risky situations that can precipitate the consumption of drugs. One way to recreate stressful contexts, in an ecological and controlled method, is through immersive virtual reality (VR). In our study, we designed the scenario of an elevated plus-maze (EPM) using VR, which is widely used in animal models to assess uncon...
Article
Full-text available
Adolescence and youth are critical periods in which alcohol consumption is usually initiated, especially in the form of binge drinking. In recent years, it is increasingly common to find adolescents and young people who also present binge behaviors towards unhealthy food with the aim of alleviating their anxiety (emotional eating) and/or because of...
Article
Full-text available
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a crucial brain signaling protein that is integral to many signaling pathways. This neurotrophin has shown to be highly involved in brain plastic processes such as neurogenesis, synaptic plasticity, axonal growth, and neurotransmission, among others. In the first part of this review, we revise the role of...
Article
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The conception of addiction as a chronic brain disease has become prevalent promoting the idea that a person with an addictive disorder undergoes changes in the structure and functioning of his or her brain. Unfortunately, when these brain changes occur, the individual loses selfcontrol over his/her behavior. From this biomedical model of addiction...
Article
Our aim was to assess the cognitive and emotional state, as well as related-changes in the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), the corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression of adolescent C57BL/6J male mice after a five-week two-bottle choice protocol (postnatal day (pd) 21 to pd52). Additionally, we...
Article
Cocaine addiction is a chronic disorder in which the person loses control over drug use. The past memories of the stimuli associated with the drug are a relevant clinical problem, since they trigger compulsive drug‐seeking and drug‐taking habits. Furthermore, these persistent drug‐related memories seemingly coexist with cognitive decline that predi...
Article
Both preclinical and clinical studies have pointed that aerobic exercise, at moderate doses, is beneficial at all stages of life by promoting a range of physiological and neuroplastic adaptations that reduce the anxiety response. Previous research about this topic has repeatedly described how the regular practice of aerobic exercise induces a posit...
Chapter
Introduction: Binge drinking (BD) is the most observed drinking pattern among young people and has been related to problematic consumption in the adult age (dependence). In this context, aerobic exercise seems to be a promising intervention strategy, which either alone or as a complement to others, may be able to reduce the motivational value of th...
Article
Full-text available
Cortisol is a glucocorticoid hormone secreted by the adrenal cortex upon the activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Assessment of cortisol in saliva has emerged as a reliable way of evaluating HPA function. We examined the relationships between salivary cortisol levels with both craving and cognitive performance, as a possible...
Poster
Full-text available
Brain Awareness for Addiction Recovery Initiative (BARI) works to help people who suffer from substance use disorders and their families have a better understanding about how brain is affected by drug addiction and how they can help the brain in the process of recovery.
Article
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The binge-drinking pattern of EtOH consumption, which is frequently observed in adolescents, is known to induce several neurobehavioral alterations, but protection strategies against these impairments remain scarcely explored. We aimed to study the protective role of treadmill physical exercise on the deficits caused after repeated cycles of bin...
Chapter
Throughout our lifes we are exposed to different stressors that can make us more vulnerable to suffer from mental disorders, such as depression or anxiety. However, resilient individuals are characterized by their ability to achieve a positive outcome when they are in the face of adversity. Interestingly, both clinical and pre-clinical studies have...
Article
The concept of cognitive reserve (CR) is being considered in the field of substance use disorder (SUD) by observing that there are individuals whose brain alterations are not related to the cognitive symptomatology they present. Our aims were to characterise the possible neuropsychological deficits in a sample of subjects with SUD compared to healt...
Article
Background One challenge in the treatment of substance use disorders is to re-engage the interest toward non-drug-related activities. Among these activities, social interaction has had a prominent role due to its positive influence on treatment outcome. Aims and methods Our aim was to study whether the presence of a social stimulus during the coca...
Research Proposal
Open call for manuscripts: https://www.frontiersin.org/research-topics/10814/environmental-enrichment-as-a-treatment-epigenetic-mechanisms-challenges-and-limitations
Article
Full-text available
Background: Cognitive reserve (CR) refers to the ability of an individual to cope with brain pathology remaining free of cognitive symptoms. This protective factor has been related to compensatory and more efficient brain mechanisms involved in resisting brain damage. For its part, Brain reserve (BR) refers to individual differences in the structu...
Article
Full-text available
The classic hole-board paradigm (a square arena with 16 holes arranged equidistantly in a 4 × 4 pattern) assesses both exploration and spatial memory in rodents. For spatial memory training, food rewards are hidden in a fixed set of holes. The animal must not visit (i.e. nose-poke) the holes that are never baited (reference memory; RM) nor re-visit...
Article
Drug addiction is a chronic and relapsing disorder in which repeated drug exposure compromises brain neuroplasticity. Brain areas normally involved in learning and goal-directed behaviors become corrupted, which may lead to cognitive deficits that coexist with other addiction symptoms and predict a worse treatment outcome. New learning experiences...
Article
Full-text available
Exposure to environmental enrichment (EE) has been a useful model for studying the effects of experience on brain plasticity, but to date, few is known about the impact of this condition on the brain functional networks that probably underlies the multiple behavioural improvements. Hence, we assessed the effect of an EE protocol in adult Wistar rat...
Article
Learning experiences are potent modulators of adult hippocampal neurogenesis (AHN). However, the vast majority of findings on the learning-induced regulation of AHN derive from aversively-motivated tasks, mainly the water maze paradigm, in which stress is a confounding factor that affects the AHN outcome. Currently, little is known regarding the ef...
Article
Potentiating social, cognitive, and sensorimotor stimulations the Environmental Enrichment (EE) increases levels of novelty and complexity experienced by individuals. Growing evidence demonstrates that parental EE experience, even occurring in the pre-reproductive phase, affects behavioral and neural developmental trajectories of the offspring. To...
Article
Full-text available
Our brain has this extraordinary ability to experience functional and structural changes before environmental stimuli, cognitive demand, or our experience itself. Exercise, diet, an appropriate sleep pattern, and reading habits are among those activities proposed to induce effects on cerebral architecture - an active lifestyle seems to induce chang...
Article
Background: Resilience is the ability to achieve a positive outcome when we are in the face of adversity. It supposes an active resistance to adversity by coping mechanisms in which genetic, molecular, neural and environmental factors are involved. Resilience has been usually studied in early ages and few is known about it during aging. Methods:...
Article
Full-text available
Environmental enrichment (EE) is an experimental setting broadly used for investigating the effects of complex social, cognitive, and sensorimotor stimulations on brain structure and function. Recent studies point out that parental EE experience, even occurring in the pre-reproductive phase, affects neural development and behavioral trajectories of...
Article
Environmental enrichment (EE) is an experimental setting broadly used for investigating the effects of complex social, cognitive, and sensorimotor stimulations on brain structure and function. Recent studies point out that parental EE experience, even occurring in the pre-reproductive phase, affects neural development and behavioral trajectories of...
Chapter
It is well documented that ageing is accompanied by a decline in cognitive functions such as, memory, attention, and speed of information processing. Different nonpharmacological approaches have been proposed for the purpose of promoting health, such as, mental training, mediterranean diet, and physical exercise. This is because their benefits on b...
Article
There is a growing interest in individual visuo-spatial skills and their role in environment learning from navigation because they can be key factors in explaining how navigation performance varies across individuals. The present study examined the role of visuo-spatial skills in navigation-based environment learning, focusing on rotation ability a...
Article
The use of more ethological animal models to study the neurobiology of anxiety has increased in recent years. We assessed the effect of an Environmental enrichment (EE) protocol (24h/day over a period of two months) on anxiety-related behaviors when aged Wistar rats (21 months old) were confronted with cat odor stimuli. Owing to the relationship be...
Article
Background: In recent decades, the interest in behavioral interventions has been growing due to the higher prevalence of age-related cognitive impairments. Hence, behavioral interventions, such as cognitive stimulation and physical activity, and along with these, our lifestyle (education level, work position, frequency of cognitive and social acti...
Article
The capacity to remain spatially oriented is an essential function in our day to day lives and it seems that the form in which we acquire the spatial information affects the way in which the spatial knowledge is represented in our memory. The goal of this research was to investigate whether the acquisition of spatial information through the learnin...
Article
Our study examined how different housing conditions modulated the acquisition of a spatial reference memory task and also, a reversal task in the 4-radial arm water maze (4-RAWM). The animals were randomly assigned to standard or enriched cages, and, as a type of complementary stimulation along with the environmental enrichment (EE), a group of rat...
Article
Full-text available
The environmental enrichment (EE) and the aerobic exercise (EX) are interventions capable of reducing anxiety levels in the aging, but few is known about how they modulating the projections to the hypothalamic-pituitary axis (HPA). We studied the effect of an EE and EX programs carried out during two months in 18 month-old Wistar rats assigned to 3...
Article
It is often necessary in daily experience to change one's point of view to adopt mentally the spatial perspective of other persons, learn the position of different objects in a new environment or even describe an environment to other persons. Hence, the ability to link spatial information from different perspectives seems to be necessary to orient...
Article
Full-text available
El enriquecimiento ambiental (EAM) y el ejercicio aeróbico (EJ) son intervenciones capaces de reducir la ansiedad durante el envejecimiento, pero poco se sabe acerca de cómo modulan las proyecciones cerebrales hacia el eje hipotálamo-pituitario adrenal (HPA). Estudiamos el efecto de un programa de EAM y de EJ durante 2 meses en ratas Wistar macho d...
Article
Spatial orientation is an essential ability, which has shown to decline with aging. Although several researches have focused on the different orientation behaviors and perspectives, few of them have examined the acquisition of multiple paths at the same time. The current study was designed with the intention of investigating age differences in mult...
Article
We have studied the performance of a spatial reference memory task, the navigation strategy and the changes in the cytochrome c oxidase activity (COx) in different brain regions in exercised (forced exercise, 10 consecutive days, 15 min/day) and non-exercised adult Wistar rats. The spatial learning task was carried out in the radial-arm water maze...
Article
Our aim was to assess the changes in the Synapsin I and glucocorticoid receptor (GR) expression induced by behavioral testing in the dorsal and ventral hippocampi of standard and enriched aged Wistar rats. The environmental enrichment (EE) was carried out 3h/day over a period of two months and then, the rats were tested in the elevated zero-maze (E...
Article
Currently, little is known about the effect of environmental enrichment (EE) on astrocytic plasticity, especially during aging. Given the newly discovered role of the astrocytes in regulating the synaptic transmission and thereby, the cognitive functions, we aimed to study the impact of EE on the performance in a spatial memory task and on the numb...
Article
Environmental enrichment (EE) produces a remarkable degree of structural and functional plasticity in the hippocampus and possible mediators of these changes, such as glucocorticoid receptors (GRs), are of considerable interest. GRs are richly expressed in the hippocampus and they are involved in the adaptation to stressors and facilitate active co...
Article
Full-text available
En las últimas décadas se han desarrollado varias estrategias farmacológicas para prevenir el declive cognitivo en el envejecimiento, sin embargo la inefectividad de la mayoría de ellas ha hecho que las intervenciones conductuales estén recibiendo cada vez más atención. La estimulación cognitiva y la actividad física han mostrado importantes benefi...
Article
Mild cognitive impairment is understood as a cognitive deficit of insufficient severity to fulfil the criteria for Alzheimer's disease. Many studies have attempted to identify which cognitive functions are most affected by this type of impairment and which is the most sensitive neuropsychological test for early detection. This study investigated su...
Article
Full-text available
Mild cognitive impairment is understood as a cognitive deficit of insufficient severity to fulfil the criteria for Alzheimer’s disease. Many studies have attempted to identify which cognitive functions are most affected by this type of impairment and which is the most sensitive neuropsychological test for early detection. This study investigated su...
Article
Full-text available
In recent decades, several pharmacological strategies have been developed to prevent age-related cognitive impairment. However, the ineffectiveness of the majority of these strategies has led to growing interest in behavioural intervention. Cognitive stimulation and physical activity have been shown to provide significant benefits by counteracting...
Article
We have studied the effect of an environmental enrichment (EE) protocol in adult Wistar rats on the activity in the elevated zero-maze (EZM), performance in the radial-arm water maze (RAWM) and we have also examined the changes in the neuronal metabolic activity of several brain regions related to anxiety response and spatial memory through cytochr...
Article
We assessed the effect of 3 hours of EE exposure per day started at different ages (3 and 18 months old) on the performance in a spatial memory task and on brain regions involved in the spatial learning process using the Principal Component Analysis (PCA). The animals were tested in the four-arm radial water maze (4-RAWM) for 4 days, with 6 daily t...
Article
Currently, little is known about the effect of environmental enrichment (EE) on astrocytic plasticity, especially during aging. Given the newly discovered role of the astrocytes in regulating the synaptic transmission and thereby, the cognitive functions, we aimed to study the impact of EE on the performance in a spatial memory task and on the numb...
Article
We have studied the effects of exercise in aged rats (18 months-old) on spatial learning and changes in neuronal metabolic activity associated with exercise program and the spatial learning process. The changes on neuronal oxidative metabolic activity was studied through cytochrome c oxidase histochemistry (COx) in brain regions related to spatial...
Article
The aim of this study was to assess the functional contribution of brain limbic system regions at different moments after the acquisition of a short-term spatial memory task performed in the Morris water maze. Adult male Wistar rats were submitted to a matching-to-sample procedure with a hidden platform. The trials were made up of two daily identic...

Questions

Questions (7)
Question
I want to perform CRH immunohistochemistry in free floating mice sections and I would like to have a protocol that works. Someone have experience in this antibody?
Thanks!!
Question
Does anyone have experience in conducting voluntary alcohol consumption protocols under normal and non-reversed light cycle conditions with mice? If it so, do the animals drink in two-bottle choice protocols ?
Question
We are interested in using this task in our experiments with Wistar rats. What is the best protocol?
Question
I do not know if a product exists that I can add at the beginning of the immunohistrochemistry process to avoid the different solutions entering under my brain sections and producing this wave effect.
Question
I have several brain sections embedded in paraffin and I want to do double-labeling with immunofluorescence but I do not know if the resolution of the staining will be correct for the count. 
Question
The rats (20 months-old) were deeply anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital and transcardially perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde. The brains were included in paraphin and cut in a microtome at 20 microns.

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