Publications by authors named "E P Drobny"

Article Synopsis
  • Long-term music training enhances the neural processing of sound, particularly in recognizing musical chords, although its effects on complex pitch encoding are not well studied.
  • The study involved young adult participants categorized as musicians or nonmusicians while recording EEG data as they identified musical triads during active and passive listening tasks.
  • Results showed musicians had better accuracy in chord identification, with distinct subcortical and cortical brain responses; musicians maintained consistent neural activity regardless of attention, unlike nonmusicians who showed reduced activity during passive listening.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Context: Tumor-induced osteomalacia (TIO) is a paraneoplastic syndrome of hypophosphatemia, decreased renal phosphate reabsorption, normal or low serum 1,25-dihydryxyvitamin-D concentration, myopathy, and osteomalacia. Fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) is a phosphaturic protein overexpressed in tumors that cause TIO and is, at least partly, responsible for the manifestations of TIO.

Objective: The objective of this study was to determine the sensitivity of FGF23 measurements in TIO.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To document a case of reversible thioridazine-induced pituitary enlargement associated with hyperprolactinemia in a patient with schizophrenia.

Methods: We describe a 19-year-old woman with paranoid schizophrenia who was taking thioridazine (a phenothiazine), in whom hyperprolactinemia, galactorrhea, oligomenorrhea, and a reversible anatomic pituitary abnormality developed. Serial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies were used to assess the status of the pituitary gland during various pharmaceutical therapies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Detailed clinical neurological examinations were conducted on 44 nondiabetic volunteers and 59 diabetic subjects. The examinations focused particularly on sensory symptomatic and physical evaluation. Standardized assessment of symptoms and physical testing of light touch, pain, vibratory, and thermal sensation was performed at the hand, wrist, elbow, foot, ankle, and knee.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A laser Doppler device with the capability to simultaneously measure skin blood flow, microvascular volume, and erythrocyte velocity was used to assess blood flow changes in 35 insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) subjects, mean age 33 +/- 1 yr, with average duration of diabetes 14 +/- 1 yr, and in a nondiabetic control group. Blood flow was determined at 35 and 44 degree C at several sites on the upper and lower extremities with a temperature-regulated probe. Blood flow was highest at both temperatures on the pulps of the index finger and the first toe, regions of high density of arteriovenous anastomoses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF