13:30 |
0351. |
Exercise-related changes in
hippocampal and white matter structures: A longitudinal MRI
and serum marker study
Karsten Mueller1, Harald E Möller1,
Franziska Busse1, Annette Horstmann1,2,
Jöran Lepsien1, Matthias L Schroeter1,3,
Matthias Blüher2,4, Michael Stumvoll4,
Arno Villringer1,3, and Burkhard Pleger1,3
1Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and
Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany, 2Integrated
Research and Treatment Center (IFB) Adiposity Diseases,
Leipzig, Germany, 3Day
Clinic for Cognitive Neurology, University Hospital
Leipzig, Germany, 4Department
for Internal Medicine, University Hospital Leipzig,
Germany
We investigated the effect of intense physical exercise
on brain structure in relation to the brain-derived
neurotrophic factor (BDNF), leptin and high-density
lipoprotein (HDL) serum concentrations in 16 young
overweight and obese participants. After a 3-months
fitness program, we found a significant decrease of
leptin and an increase of HDL and BDNF. Structural MRI
was performed directly after blood withdrawal.
Significant correlations were found between the
intra-individual changes in serum markers concentration
and grey matter density, particularly in the left
hippocampus, and radial diffusivity in large white
matter regions including the whole corpus callosum.
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13:42 |
0352. |
Effects of working memory
training on cognition and white matter microstructure: Does
brain training work?
Claudia Metzler-Baddeley1, Karen Caeyenberghs2,
Sonya Foley3, and Derek K Jones3
1CUBRIC, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United
Kingdom, 2University
of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium, 3CUBRIC,
Cardiff University, Wales, United Kingdom
Brain trainings are popular and used by many to improve
mental capacity and combat age-related decline. However,
the evidence for training benefits on brain structure
remains limited and controversial. This research
investigated the effects of a 2 months working memory
training on microstructure in white matter pathways
mediating cognitive control (the superior longitudinal
fasciculus, the arcuate and the cingulum). Relative to
an active placebo condition, training led to
improvements in working memory span capacity, which were
related to alterations in white matter microstructure in
the cingulum and the arcuate and were dependent on
inter-individual differences in baseline microstructural
properties.
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13:54 |
0353. |
Diminishing GABAA alpha5
receptor mediated inhibition rescues hippocampal perfusion
deficit in a mouse model of Down syndrome
Thomas Mueggler1, Michael Honer1,
Basil Künnecke1, Andreas Bruns1,
Andrew W. Thomas2, Maria-Clemencia Hernandez1,
and Markus von Kienlin1
1Pharma Research & Early Development, DTA
Neuroscience, Hoffmann-La Roche, Basel, Basel-City,
Switzerland, 2Pharma
Research & Early Development, Pharma Research & Early
Development, Small Molecule Research, Hoffmann-La Roche,
Basel, Basel-City, Switzerland
Increased GABA-mediated inhibition has been proposed as
a mechanism underlying deficient cognition in the Ts65Dn
(TS) mouse model of Down syndrome. Using ASL-based fMRI
we reveal a region-specific perfusion phenotype in TS
mice and demonstrate complete reversal after chronic
treatment with RO4938581, a negative allosteric
modulator (NAM) selective for the GABAA alpha5
receptor subtype, specifically of the observed
hippocampal deficits. This novel finding is in line with
recently reported effects of RO4938581 to rescue
hippocampal synaptic plasticity, spatial learning and
memory in TS mice supporting the potential therapeutic
use of selective GABAA alpha5
NAMs to treat cognitive dysfunction in Down syndrome.
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14:06 |
0354. |
Changes in Resting-State
fMRI Activity during Salicylate-Induced Tinnitus and Sound
Stimulation
Yu-Chen Chen1, Jian Wang2,3, Yun
Jiao1, Richard Salvi4, and Gao-Jun
Teng1
1Jiangsu Key Laboratory of Molecular Imaging
and Functional Imaging, Department of Radiology, Zhongda
Hospital, Medical School of Southeast
University,Nanjing,China, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China, 2Department
of Physiology and Pharmacology, Medical School of
Southeast University,Nanjing,China, Nanjing, Jiangsu,
China, 3School
of Human Communication Disorders, Dalhousie University,
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, Nova Scotia, Canada, 4Center
for Hearing and Deafness, University at Buffalo,
Buffalo, NY, USA, New York, United States
Recent studies suggest that low frequency neural
oscillatory activity contributes to tinnitus generation.
To explore this issue, we measured the amplitude of
low-frequency fluctuations (ALFF) in resting-state
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during
salicylate-induced tinnitus and during sound
stimulation. We found that salicylate significantly
increased ALFF oscillatory activity in several auditory
and non-auditory regions previously implicated in
tinnitus. Music stimulation tended to potentiate the
salicylate-induced hyperactivity in the ALFF responses
in many auditory areas. Resting-state ALFF fMRI might be
used to identify the aberrant neural networks in humans
who suffer from severe, debilitating tinnitus.
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14:18 |
0355. |
Association between
Mother’s Depression and Children’s Hippocampal Shape
Analyzed Using Non-Rigid Registration
Peter T. Fwu1, Elysia P. Davis2,
Claudia Buss2, Muqing Lin1, Kevin
Head2, Curt A. Sandman2, and
Min-Ying Lydia Su1
1Tu & Yuen Center for Functional
Onco-Imaging, Department of Radiological Sciences,
University of California, Irvine, CA, United States, 2Women
and Children’s Health and Well-Being Project, Department
of Psychiatry & Human Behavior, University of
California, Irvine, CA, United States
Hippocampal volume and shape analysis was applied to 103
children (6-10 years old) to evaluate the association
with prenatal and post-partum depression of their
mothers during and after pregnancy. Non-rigid
registration was applied to analyze shape based on the
deformation matrix. The head segment of the right
hippocampus showed a significant association with
prenatal depression, and the body segment of the left
hippocampus showed a significant correlation with the
post-partum depression. The results were similar in
males and females. None of the volumetric measurements
revealed significant correlations, suggesting that shape
analysis may provide a more sensitive tool for
subregional analysis.
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14:30 |
0356. |
Effect of chronic
administration of -hydroxybutyrate
in spontaneously epileptic kcna1-null mice measured with
Manganese Enhanced MRI (MEMRI)
Gregory Harrison Turner1, Johana Vallejo2,
Mohammed Abdelwahab3, Qingwei Liu1,
Lana Leung2, Younghee Ahn4, Jong
Rho4, and Do Young Kim3
1Neuroimaging Research, Barrow Neurological
Institute, Phoenix, AZ, United States, 2Physiology,
Midwestern University, Glendale, AZ, United States,3Barrow
Neurological Institute, AZ, United States, 4Alberta
Children's Hospital, University of Calgary, Alberta,
Canada
Chronic in vivo administration of BHB results in a
significant anticonvulsant effect in Kcna1-null mice.
Moreover, Manganese Enhanced MRI found that BHB alone
appears to exert a structural neuroprotective effect in
hippocampus. The combination of morphological and
functional neuroprotective effects of BHB in this
genetic model of epilepsy suggests that KB may be
beneficial for neurological conditions other than
epilepsy.
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14:42 |
0357. |
Reduced cortical
connectivity in excised rat brain with thyroid hormone
deficiency
Luis Manuel Colon-Perez1, Eric Montie2,
Michelle Couret3, and Thomas Mareci1
1Biochemistry and Molecular Biology,
University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United States, 2Natural
Science, University of South Carolina Beaufort,
Bluffton, SC, United States, 3University
of Florida, FL, United States
Thyroid hormone (TH) deficiencies have been shown to
affect the developmental process of myelination in rat
brains. Thyroid hormone deficiencies induce various
neurological symptoms, as cognitive deficits, sensory
and motor impairments. The neurological symptoms related
to TH deficiencies are also associated with changes in
brain structure, which result from the reduction of
white matter volume. Thyroid-hormone deficiency leads to
a decrease in the strength of connectivity measures and
changes in network connectivity. In order to study the
effects of thyroid disruption in rat cortical networks,
we acquired diffusion-weighted data, performed
tractography on ex vivo rat brains and graph theory
analysis
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14:54 |
0358.
|
In vivo high-resolution
diffusion tensor imaging shows progressive changes in
hippocampal subfields after status epilepticus in rat -
permission withheld
Tuukka Miettinen1, Raimo Salo1,
Heikki Yli-Ollila1, Teemu Laitinen1,
Juhana Sorvari1, Asla Pitkänen1,2,
Olli Gröhn1, and Alejandra Sierra1
1Department of Neurobiology, A. I. Virtanen
Institute for Molecular Sciences, University of Eastern
Finland, Kuopio, Finland, 2Department
of Neurology, Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio,
Finland
In this study, our hypothesis was that in
vivo DTI
is able to detect progression of microstructural
alterations in the hippocampus and in other white matter
and grey matter areas during the early stages of
epileptogenesis. Rats were scanned using in
vivo high
resolution DTI before, and 10, 20, 34 and 79 days after
status epilepticus induced by kainic acid or pilocarpine.
We found robust and progressive changes in fractional
anisotropy, axial, linear and spherical diffusivities
and also in the orientation of principal diffusion
direction in the hippocampus and other brain areas
throughout the brain. These findings have potential to
serve as predictive biomarkers for epilepsy in the
future.
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15:06 |
0359. |
High-resolution 7T MRI and
MRSI in patients with suspected mesial temporal epilepsy
Peter B Barker1, Gregory K Bergey2,
Huong Trinh3, Tilak Ratnanather3,
He Zhu4, David Bonekamp5, and
Doris D.M. Lin5
1Radiology, JHU SOM, Baltimore, MD, United
States, 2Neurology,
JHU SOM, MD, United States, 3Center
for Imaging Science, JHU, MD, United States,4Radiology,
Vanderbilt University, TN, United States, 5Radiology,
JHU SOM, MD, United States
Although MRI plays an important role in the evaluation
of patients with drug-resistant partial epilepsy, it has
been reported that approximately 30% of patients with
mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (mTLE, the most common
form) have normal scans at 1.5 or 3.0T. This study
investigates the use of high resolution MRI and MRSI at
7.0T for the evaluation of mTLE. Results suggests that
subtle abnormalities may be detected at 7.0T in patients
with scans read as normal at 3T. 7.0T MR may therefore
allow more patients to proceed directly to surgery
without the need for invasive EEG monitoring.
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15:18 |
0360. |
Mapping the presurgical
neuroanatomical correlates of postoperative outcome in
temporal lobe epilepsy
Simon Sean Keller1, Mark Richardson2,
Jan-Christoph Schoene-Bake3, Jonathan
O’Muircheartaigh4, Christian Elger3,
and Bernd Weber3
1Molecular and Clinical Pharmacology,
Institute of Translational Medicine, University of
Liverpool, Liverpool, Merseyside, United Kingdom, 2Clinical
Neuroscience, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College
London, London, United Kingdom, 3Department
of Epileptology, University of Bonn, Bonn, Germany,4Neuroimaging,
Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, London,
United Kingdom
We have applied multiple automated mapping methods to
T1-weighted MRIs to determine the presurgical
neuroanatomical correlates of persistent postoperative
seizures (PPS) in patients with medically intractable
temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). We report that patients
with PPS have atrophy of the mesial temporal lobe
contralateral to the side of intended surgery and of the
thalamus and striatum bilaterally relative to patients
surgically rendered seizure free. The identification of
preoperative bihemispheric hippocampo-thalamo-striatal
abnormalities may indicate susceptibility to PPS in
patients with intractable TLE.
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