Publications by authors named "Horne K"

Emerging evidence suggests that autobiographical memory (ABM) is altered in Huntington's disease (HD). While these impairments are typically attributed to frontostriatal dysfunction, the neural substrates of ABM impairment in HD remain unexplored. To this end, we assessed ABM in 30 participants with genetically confirmed HD (18 premanifest, 12 manifest) and 24 age-matched healthy controls.

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Article Synopsis
  • Apathy and impulsivity are common behavioral changes in Huntington's disease (HD), but their co-occurrence and effects on quality of life had not been thoroughly explored until this study.
  • The study involved 42 people with HD and 20 healthy controls who completed various assessments for apathy, impulsivity, and other factors, revealing a significant correlation between apathy and impulsivity in HD patients.
  • The findings indicate that both apathy and impulsivity negatively affect quality of life in individuals with HD, suggesting that these behaviors may be interconnected and warrant further investigation.
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Objectives: Inflexibility of thought and behaviour is a transdiagnostic feature of many neuropsychiatric disorders and presents several empirical measurement challenges. Here, we developed and validated the Flexibility in Daily Life scale (FIDL); a novel, self-report questionnaire, which captures expressions of cognitive and behavioural flexibility in daily life and is sensitive to natural shifts in these processes across the adult lifespan.

Methods: The FIDL was developed using a deductive scale development approach, which aimed to capture common themes within the flexibility literature and across diagnoses (e.

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Article Synopsis
  • Apathy is a common and disabling syndrome found in Huntington's disease (HD), but the underlying mechanisms are still not well understood.
  • Researchers used a framework of motivated behavior to investigate whether individuals with apathy in HD are more sensitive to the costs of actions (like physical effort and time) compared to their sensitivity to rewards.
  • Findings from tasks measuring decision-making indicated that people with HD exhibit a greater sensitivity to physical effort costs and delays, impacting their choices and reinforcing the idea that effort hypersensitivity contributes to apathy in this condition.*
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Purpose: Up to 90% of people with Parkinson's disease (PD) develop communication difficulties over the course of the disease. While the negative effect of dysarthria on communicative participation has been well-documented, the impact of the occurrence of acquired stuttered disfluencies on communication in different speech situations is unknown. This study aimed to determine if the frequency of occurrence of stuttered disfluencies affects communicative participation in individuals with PD, and whether such a relationship is mediated by examiner- and self-rated measures of disease severity.

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Introduction: Recent work suggests that amyloid beta (Aβ) positron emission tomography (PET) tracer uptake shortly after injection ("early phase") reflects brain metabolism and perfusion. We assessed this modality in a predominantly amyloid-negative neurodegenerative condition, Parkinson's disease (PD), and hypothesized that early-phase F-florbetaben (eFBB) uptake would reproduce characteristic hypometabolism and hypoperfusion patterns associated with cognitive decline in PD.

Methods: One hundred fifteen PD patients across the spectrum of cognitive impairment underwent dual-phase Aβ PET, structural and arterial spin labeling (ASL) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and neuropsychological assessments.

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Background And Objectives: A robust understanding of the natural history of apathy in Parkinson disease (PD) is foundational for developing effective clinical management tools. However, large longitudinal studies are lacking while the literature is inconsistent about even cross-sectional associations. We aimed to determine the longitudinal predictors of apathy development in a large cohort of people with PD and its cross-sectional associations and trajectories over time, using sophisticated Bayesian modeling techniques.

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Motivational disturbances are pervasive in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and impact negatively on everyday functioning. Despite mounting evidence of anhedonia in FTD, it remains unclear how such changes fit within the broader motivational symptom profile of FTD, or how anhedonia relates to functional outcomes. Here we sought to comprehensively characterize motivational disturbances in FTD and their respective relationships with functional impairment.

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gene clusters encode transcription factors that drive regional specialization during animal development: for example the Hox factor Ubx is expressed in the insect metathoracic (T3) wing appendages and differentiates them from T2 mesothoracic identities. transcriptional regulation requires silencing activities that prevent spurious activation and regulatory crosstalks in the wrong tissues, but this has seldom been studied in insects other than , which shows a derived dislocation into two genomic clusters that disjoined () and (). Here, we investigated how is restricted to the hindwing in butterflies, amidst a contiguous cluster.

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Background: Rigid and inflexible behaviours are common in frontotemporal dementia (FTD), manifesting in compulsive pursuit of specific interests, routines, and rituals. Paradoxically, these changes occur alongside profound motivational disturbances including apathy and anhedonia. While posited to be related, no study to date has explored the link between motivational changes and behavioural rigidity in FTD.

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Alcohol contributes to cellular accumulation of acetaldehyde, a primary metabolite of alcohol and a major human carcinogen. Acetaldehyde can form DNA adducts and induce interstrand crosslinks (ICLs) that are repaired by the Fanconi anemia DNA repair pathway (FA pathway). Individuals with deficiency in acetaldehyde detoxification or in the FA pathway have an increased risk of squamous-cell carcinomas (SCCs) including those of the esophagus.

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Purpose Of Review: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common syndrome characterized by a sudden reduction in kidney function. It is strongly associated with high mortality and longer, more expensive hospital stays. As AKI often presents silently, a lack of recognition can prevent recommended standards of care.

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Acute kidney injury (AKI) is associated with adverse long-term outcomes, but many studies are retrospective, focused on specific patient groups or lack adequate comparators. The ARID (AKI Risk in Derby) Study was a five-year prospective parallel-group cohort study to examine this. Hospitalized cohorts with and without exposure to AKI were matched 1:1 for age, baseline kidney function, and diabetes.

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Chronic respiratory tract infection by Pseudomonas aeruginosa is the hallmark of established lung disease in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). Antibiotic therapy can usually only suppress but not eradicate infection. In recent years, pulmonary infection with non-tuberculous Mycobacteria (NTM) species has also been increasing.

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Background: Apathy, characterized by a quantifiable reduction in motivation or goal-directed behavior, is a multidimensional syndrome that has been observed across many neurodegenerative diseases.

Objective: To develop a novel task measuring spontaneous action initiation (ie, a nonverbal equivalent to spontaneous speech tasks) and to investigate the association between apathy and executive functions such as the voluntary initiation of speech and actions and energization (ie, ability to initiate and sustain a response).

Method: We compared the energization and executive functioning performance of 10 individuals with neurodegenerative disease and clinically significant apathy with that of age-matched healthy controls (HC).

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Background: Parkinson's disease frequently causes communication impairments, but knowledge about the occurrence of new-onset stuttering is limited.

Objectives: To determine the presence of acquired neurogenic stuttering and its relationship with cognitive and motor functioning in individuals with Parkinson's disease.

Method: Conversation, picture description, and reading samples were collected from 100 people with Parkinson's disease and 25 controls to identify the presence of stuttered disfluencies (SD) and their association with neuropsychological test performance and motor function.

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Temperate Earth-sized exoplanets around late-M dwarfs offer a rare opportunity to explore under which conditions planets can develop hospitable climate conditions. The small stellar radius amplifies the atmospheric transit signature, making even compact secondary atmospheres dominated by N or CO amenable to characterization with existing instrumentation. Yet, despite large planet search efforts, detection of low-temperature Earth-sized planets around late-M dwarfs has remained rare and the TRAPPIST-1 system, a resonance chain of rocky planets with seemingly identical compositions, has not yet shown any evidence of volatiles in the system.

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This scientific commentary refers to 'The architecture of abnormal reward behaviour in dementia: multimodal hedonic phenotypes and brain substrate', by Chokesuwattanaskul (https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcad027).

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Kidney disease, both acute and chronic, is commonly encountered on the intensive care unit. Due to the role the kidneys play in whole body homeostasis, it follows that their dysfunction has wide-ranging implications and can affect prescribing and therapeutic management. This narrative review discusses the pathophysiology of acute kidney injury and chronic kidney disease, and how this relates to critically unwell patients.

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Article Synopsis
  • The New Zealand Parkinson's Progression Programme (NZP3) has studied 354 Parkinson's patients and 89 healthy older individuals over 14 years, focusing on cognitive impairment and identifying future biomarkers.
  • The program has contributed to understanding mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in Parkinson's and validated criteria for its diagnosis, using brain imaging and various biomarker investigations.
  • It has supported other research areas related to Parkinson's, resulting in numerous publications and the training of early-career to senior researchers, while outlining future directions for continued research.
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Cardiovascular events are the leading cause of death in chronic kidney disease. A recent analysis from the High-Sensitivity Troponin in the Evaluation of Patients With Suspected Acute Coronary Syndrome trial focused on results in those with reduced estimated glomerular filtration rate. This commentary discusses aspects of acute coronary syndrome diagnosis in this group and the differential approach to acute coronary syndrome management that was observed between those with normal and reduced kidney function.

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In this method we illustrate how to amplify, sequence, and analyze antibody/immunoglobulin (IG) heavy-chain gene rearrangements from genomic DNA that is derived from bulk populations of cells by next-generation sequencing (NGS). We focus on human source material and illustrate how bulk gDNA-based sequencing can be used to examine clonal architecture and networks in different samples that are sequenced from the same individual. Although bulk gDNA-based sequencing can be performed on both IG heavy (IGH) or kappa/lambda light (IGK/IGL) chains, we focus here on IGH gene rearrangements because IG heavy chains are more diverse, tend to harbor higher levels of somatic hypermutations (SHM), and are more reliable for clone identification and tracking.

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Apathy is a multi-dimensional syndrome associated with reduced initiation, executive function and emotion toward goal-directed behaviour. Affecting ∼30% of stroke patients, apathy can negatively impact rehabilitation outcomes and increase caregiver burden. However, relatively little is known about the multi-dimensional nature of post-stroke apathy and whether these dimensions map onto neuropsychological and neuroanatomical correlates.

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Background: Little is known about the impacts at an individual level of long-term antibiotic consumption. We explored health outcomes of long-term antibiotic therapy prescribed to a cohort of patients to suppress infections deemed incurable.

Methods: We conducted a 5-year longitudinal study of patients on long-term antibiotics at Monash Health, a metropolitan tertiary-level hospital network in Australia.

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Accretion disks around supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei produce continuum radiation at ultraviolet and optical wavelengths. Physical processes in the accretion flow lead to stochastic variability of this emission on a wide range of time scales. We measured the optical continuum variability observed in 67 active galactic nuclei and the characteristic time scale at which the variability power spectrum flattens.

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