Publications by authors named "Basso M"

Previous research suggests that women have better verbal learning than men, whereas there is little evidence of sex differences in nonverbal learning. The present study examined whether sex differences occur on subtests from the Wechsler Memory Scale-III (Wechsler, 1997). Verbal Paired Associates I & II (VPA) and Faces I & II were administered to 26 male and 26 female undergraduates.

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The Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Revised (PPVT-R) was examined as an estimate of premorbid intelligence in a clinical sample of elderly patients (N = 150) undergoing clinical neuropsychological evaluation. PPVT-R standard scores were compared across grossly cognitively intact, mildly/moderately and severely impaired groups of patients, and compared to a short form of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised (WAIS-R) and the Barona regression equation. Results indicate that, while the PPVT-R is vulnerable to increasing levels of cognitive impairment among patients with fewer years of education, the PPVT-R is stable across mild to moderate levels of impairment for patients with greater than 12 years of education.

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Unlabelled: The purpose of this study was to determine whether capillary dilation is one of the earliest structural changes in the diabetic-like retinopathy of the galactose-fed rat model and thus may represent a stage where intervention treatment might still be effective. Weanling female Sprague-Dawley rats were randomized into 3 groups and fed Purina laboratory chow plus one of the following for 4 months: 50% starch (CONTROL); 50% D-galactose (Galactose); or 50% D-galactose with ARI-509 (25 mg/kg body wt/day) (Inhibitor). One eye from each of 5 rats per treatment group was processed for retinal vasculature wholemounts using elastase digestion, stained with a standard periodic-acid-Schiff reaction and counterstained with hematoxylin.

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This study tested whether estimated premorbid intelligence moderates worsening neurobehavioral dysfunction in HIV infection. 155 homosexual men (54 controls, 49 HIV+ asymptomatic, 24 HIV+ symptomatic, 28 AIDS) with stable disease status were tested on measures of executive function at baseline and 12-month follow-up. Premorbid intelligence was estimated on the basis of a demographically-based regression equation (Hamsher, 1984), and participants were classified as average or above-average intelligence.

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Fifty men (age M = 32.50; education M = 14.98 years) were administered the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), Ruff Figural Fluency Test (FFT), Verbal Concept Attainment Test (VCAT) Trail Making Test, Parts A and B (TMT), and F-A-S Verbal Fluency at baseline and 12 months later.

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Effects of immunosuppression and illness severity upon neuropsychological function were assessed in a group of homosexual men with AIDS across 6 months. Participants included 62 who were seronegative (HIV-), 74 asymptomatic seropositives (HIV+A), 31 symptomatic seropositives (HIV+S), 23 with AIDS defining illnesses (AIDS-DI), and 10 who were diagnosed with AIDS solely on the basis of CD4+ levels falling below 200 /mm3 (AIDS-CD4). Groups were equivalent in age, education, and IQ.

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Introduction: A two stages reimplantation is advised by most authors in salvage of infected total knee arthroplasty. This treatment is more difficult, but seems more successful in controlling infection. It set the problem of the attitude between the two operative stages: an antibiotic cement spacer is usually used, but articular mobilization is not possible, except with an articulating spacer.

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Although memory deficits are associated with major depressive disorder, few studies have identified which patient characteristics predict impairment. Because recurrent depression appears related to more severe cerebral dysfunction, the present study tested whether recurrent depressed individuals have worse memory function than first-episode depressed individuals. Two groups of young-adult, nonpsychotic, depressed inpatients (20 single episode [SE] and 46 recurrent episode [RE]) were administered the California Verbal Learning Test within a broader battery of neuropsychological tests.

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The availability of the myeloid hemopoietic growth factors (HGF) granulocyte- and granulocyte/macrophage-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF and GM-CSF) has enhanced the therapeutic index of high-dose chemotherapeutic antitumoral regimens (HDCT), as well as the rate of severe damage to immune competence. We investigated some immune functions before, during and after one course of HDCT for poor-risk breast cancer and compared the effects of G-CSF and GM-CSF on the immune recovery. They exerted different influences on the functions we examined and showed distinctive patterns of both qualitative and quantitative in vivo activities on the immune system.

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Purpose Of The Study: 57 cases of infected total hip prosthesis treated by removal of the implant and implantation of unncemented prosthesis, were studied to evaluate functional and sepsis results.

Material And Methods: 57 patients treated by reimplantation of an uncemented total hip prosthesis after removal of the infected prosthesis were observed. 16 patients underwent a single-stage exchange, 41 a two-stage reimplantation.

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Aims/hypothesis: Increased protein kinase C activity has been linked to diabetic vascular complications in the retina and kidney, which were attenuated by protein kinase C antagonist treatment. Neuropathy has a vascular component, therefore, the aim was to assess whether treatment with WAY151 003 or chelerythrine, inhibitors of protein kinase C regulatory and catalytic domains respectively, could correct nerve blood flow, conduction velocity, Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, and glutathione deficits in diabetic rats.

Methods: Diabetes was induced by streptozotocin.

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A growing body of evidence suggests that dysphoric and euphoric emotional states are associated with reliable patterns of frontal lobe activity. Specifically, dysphoric affect coincides with greater right than left frontal lobe activity, and euphoric affect tends to correspond with a converse pattern of activity. The present study examined whether cognitive outcomes associated with the left and right frontal lobes are differentially influenced by dysphoric and euphoric affect.

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A broad range of neuropsychological function was compared in samples of young adult unipolar depressed inpatients with and without psychotic features. Consistent with expectations, the psychotic depressive group demonstrated a broad range of deficit and had more impaired performances than the nonpsychotic group. Relevance of these data for hypotheses concerning psychotic depression as a unique diagnostic entity is discussed.

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Complex visual scenes require that a target for an impending saccadic eye movement be selected from a larger number of possible targets. We investigated whether changing the probability that a visual stimulus would be selected as the target for a saccade altered activity of monkey superior colliculus (SC) neurons in two experiments. First, we changed the number of possible targets on each trial.

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Purpose: To determine whether the diabetic-like thickening of retinal capillary basement membrane (RCBM) that develops in the galactose-fed rat model of diabetic ocular complications could be halted or ameliorated after 4 or 8 months of galactosemia by treatment with ARI-509, a potent new aldose reductase inhibitor (ARI), or by withdrawal of the galactose diet.

Methods: Weanling female Sprague-Dawley rats were randomized into eight groups and fed laboratory chow plus 50% starch, control group (CON); 50% D-galactose, galactose-fed group (GAL); 50% D-galactose with ARI-509 at 25 mg/kg or 10 mg/kg body wt per day, high-dose prevention group (HDP) and low-dose prevention group (LDP), respectively; 50% D-galactose for 4 or 8 months and then intervention by addition of ARI-509 (25 mg/kg body wt per day), 4-month intervention group (4IN) and 8-month intervention group (8IN), respectively; or 50% D-galactose for 4 or 8 months and then intervention by withdrawing galactose and replacing it with the 50% starch diet, 4-month galactose withdrawal group (4GW) and 8-month galactose withdrawal group (8GW), respectively. After 4, 8, 16, and 24 months of the experimental diets, the levels of carbohydrates in tissues and the extent of RCBM thickening in capillaries of the outer plexiform layer were determined in all groups.

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Recent studies suggest that three dimensions (negative, disorganized and psychotic) categorize schizophrenic symptoms. A developing literature indicates distinct cerebral correlates of each symptom cluster, but few investigations have determined their neuropsychological correlates. In the present study, the Schedules of Negative and Positive Symptoms measured symptom severity in 62 schizophrenics, and a subsequent principal components analysis revealed three symptom dimensions.

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This paper reviews important aspects about teaching nursing, in order to give nursing professionals an outline of the present pedagogical approaches (Traditional, Cognitivist, Behaviorist, Humanistic, Sociocultural), so that they can reflect upon their role as educators.

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The authors report worrisome radiological changes which were noted after implantation of absorbable interference screws in ligamentoplasty at the knee joint. Seventeen screws were implanted between September 1995 and July 1996, in eleven patients (average age 27) who were operated upon for chronic anterior knee instability. They underwent a modified Kenneth Jones procedure using autografts with absorbable interference screws (Acufex in 2 cases and Bio-interférix in 9 cases).

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A cluster of six cases of fungemia among hematology, bone marrow transplant, and oncology patients was investigated in a case-control study (18 controls). The use of implantable and semi-implantable central venous catheters was significantly associated with cases (p = 0.016).

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In this study we used microstimulation to investigate the influence of the superior colliculus on the trigeminal blink reflex. We report that stimulation in the intermediate to deep layers of the tectum produced inhibition of reflex blinks at a latency of approximately 26 ms. We considered the hypothesis that the blink inhibition was mediated via the omnipause neurons (OPNs) of the eye movement control system in the brainstem.

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Visual scenes are composed of many elements and although we can appreciate a scene as a whole, we can only move our eyes to one element of the scene at a time. As visual scenes become more complex, the number of potential targets in the scene increases, and the uncertainty that any particular one will be selected for an eye movement also increases. How motor systems accommodate this target uncertainty remains unknown.

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Objective: To determine the rates of colonization and infection related to central venous catheter (CVC), the causative microorganisms, and the influence of various factors. Methods: From June to August 1993, all CVC in 4 Intensive Care Units were evaluated from their insertion to removaL Data were collected by 3 nurses. Blood and catheter tips were cultured.

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Most natural actions are accomplished with a seamless combination of individual movements. Such coordination poses a problem: How does the motor system orchestrate multiple movements to produce a single goal-directed action? The results from current experiments suggest one possible solution. Oculomotor neurons in the superior colliculus of a primate responded to mismatches between eye and target positions, even when the animal made two different types of eye movements.

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