Hippocampal evoked potentials were recorded using the P3 tonal oddball paradigm in 30 patients with unilateral temporal lobe seizure focus. Spectral power of the evoked potentials was decreased on the side of seizure focus, but this reduction was much greater when the focus was on the left. The effect of left/right focus does not appear to be due to group differences in age, sex, seizure duration, or operative pathology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough neurochemical reductions in cholinergic systems have been found to occur during aging, such changes do not necessarily translate to functional deficits. The cognitive deficits of normal aging have been attributed in part to hypocholinergic function, but anticholinergic hypersensitivity in the elderly has not been systematically documented. To test the cholinergic hypothesis of aging, we investigated the effects of scopolamine on memory and attention in healthy young and elderly subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNursing home patients frequently have serious disturbances of behavior that can lead to use of chemical or physical restraints. To support research into better management of these problems, we developed the Nursing Home Behavior Problem Scale (NHBPS), a 29-item inventory of serious behavior problems designed to be completed by nurses and nursing assistants. NHBPS scores were obtained for two samples of nursing home residents: 431 in Tennessee and 122 in Texas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychiatry Med
June 1992
One thousand and eleven men under age forty (n = 161) or over age sixty-four (n = 850) admitted to medical and neurological services of an acute care hospital were screened for depressive symptoms as part of the Durham VA Mental Health Survey. Thirty-three percent of younger and 22 percent of older men scored 11 or higher on the Geriatric Depression Scale. Self-rated symptoms were most prevalent among younger whites (40%) and least common in older blacks (19%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Using items from two existing depression scales, we have sought to develop a brief self-rated instrument for detecting major depressive disorder (M.D.D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiofeedback Self Regul
December 1991
This study evaluated the effects of a 12-session frontal electromyographic biofeedback training regimen on the headache activity of eight tension headache sufferers aged 62 and older. The biofeedback sessions were slightly modified for a geriatric population, essentially to increase comprehension and retention of rationale and instructions. Post-treatment assessment at three months revealed significant decreases in overall headache activity (50% or greater) in 50% of the subjects, and moderate improvement (35%-45%) in three of the remaining four subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe P3 event-related potential has been widely employed in both clinical and research investigations. In the present study, P3 latency and amplitude intersession reliability were evaluated in 4 sessions over an average of 33 days in 24 healthy adults using the P3 tonal oddball paradigm. Mean group latencies ranged from 302-305 ms and mean amplitudes ranged from 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Exp Neuropsychol
November 1991
We investigated free recall of visuospatial arrays in a free-field format in epileptic patients following unilateral temporal lobectomy (TL) (left = 15, right = 17). TL patients exhibited leftward deviation in right hemispace, but more variable response in left hemispace, a pattern that has been observed in healthy adults. This finding is postulated to result from combined preferential right cerebral activation and a tendency to err toward peri-personal space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated neuropsychological effects of carbamazepine and phenytoin in 21 healthy adults using a randomized, double-blind, double-crossover design and treating each subject with each drug for 1 month, separated by a 1-month washout. There were neuropsychological evaluations at baseline, the end of each treatment month, and 1 month after the last treatment phase. Cognitive measures included Symbol Digit Modalities Test, Selective Reminding Test, Complex Figures, Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test, Stroop, Finger Tapping, Grooved Pegboard, Choice Reaction Time, P3 Event-Related Potential, Hopkins Symptom Checklist, and Profile of Mood States (POMS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
October 1991
In this study, we describe a computerized method that uses 3 quantified EEG features and discriminant analysis to automatically detect seizure EEG. The quantified EEG features were relative amplitude, dominant frequency and rhythmicity. Using EEGs recorded from intracranial electrodes, the seizure detection method was applied to consecutive non-overlapping 2-channel EEG epochs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To study the epidemiology of depressive disorder in younger and older medical inpatients.
Design, Patients, & Setting: Depressive disorders were examined using the Diagnostic Interview Schedule in 116 young and 332 elderly medically ill men hospitalized in a VA medical center.
Results: Major depressive disorder was diagnosed in 22.
Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
October 1991
The unusual combination of a normal pattern reversal VEP and a delayed flash VEP has been reported in patients with dementia of Alzheimer's type (DAT). Hyoscine hydrobromide has been reported to produce a similar VEP abnormality in young, healthy subjects. In the present study, we assessed the relative sensitivity of DAT patients and healthy young, middle-aged and elderly subjects to temporary cholinergic blockade.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Exp Neuropsychol
July 1991
The effects of hippocampal encroachment in the language dominant-hemisphere were studied in 41 patients who underwent previous temporal lobectomy (TL). Patients undergoing dominant-hemisphere TL including anterior hippocampus (n = 13) performed significantly worse than nondominant TL patients (n = 16) on a verbal learning test (Selective Reminding; p less than or equal to .00001), thereby confirming the sensitivity of this procedure to lateralized temporal-lobe dysfunction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough there has been extensive examination of the behavioral and physiologic correlates of hippocampal theta activity in animals, the human literature consists of a single case study. We investigated the differential effects of four behavioral states on human hippocampal theta activity in 16 epilepsy surgery patients. Behavioral conditions included resting eyes closed (RC), resting eyes open (RO), eyes open with auditory word activation (AW), and eyes open with visuospatial activation (VS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllochiria is the mislocation of sensory stimuli to the corresponding opposite half of the body or space. Obersteiner (1882) introduced the term allochiria (Greek allos = other + chiria = hand), and more than 20 authors employed it in this context over the next 25 years. Stewart (1894) described a related phenomenon in which stimuli are displaced to a different point on the same extremity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents the results of two studies. In the first, 20 tension headache subjects were evaluated in both a headache and non-headache state on bilateral trapezius and unilateral frontalis electromyographic activity during six positions: standing, bending from the waist, rising, sitting with back unsupported, sitting with back supported, and prone. Results indicated no effect of headache state on either measure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied heart rate following unilateral hemispheric inactivation by intracarotid amobarbital in 25 patients undergoing preoperative evaluation for epilepsy surgery. Heart rate increased after left hemisphere inactivation, but decreased following right hemisphere inactivation. The results are consistent with differential left/right cerebral hemispheric effects on autonomic function, and appear related to functional and anatomic asymmetries in both the central and peripheral nervous systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFree recall for auditorially presented spatial information was examined in a patient with a large right cerebral infarction. Despite normal verbal memory at immediate and 30-minute conditions, the patient exhibited a significant loss in verbal recall at 24 hours and a more severe deficit in the recall of the spatial components of prose passages across all delayed recall conditions. These results suggest that although the verbal code is important early in the learning process, spatial imagery exerts an increasing influence over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied spectral components of human hippocampal EEG in relation to behavioral status in 19 patients with intractable complex partial seizures who had depth electrodes implanted into the anterior hippocampi as a part of their preoperative evaluations. Behavioral conditions included: eyes closed resting, eyes open resting, eyes open with a verbal task, and eyes open with a visuospatial task. Hippocampal EEG spectral power uniformly decreased during behavioral activation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the efficacy of the intracarotid amobarbital procedure to accurately predict post-temporal lobectomy anterograde amnesia. We presented items at 2 separate times during amobarbital assessment; both early and late item recall were decreased during the injection contralateral to seizure onset indicating sensitivity to bilateral temporal lobe dysfunction. Ten patients for whom follow-up neuropsychological assessment was available failed either the early or late item recognition portions of their amobarbital evaluation ipsilateral to seizure onset, but had hippocampus included in the temporal lobectomy by virtue of satisfactory performance on other tests of hippocampal function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the neuropsychological effects of carbamazepine, phenobarbital, and phenytoin in 15 partial complex epilepsy patients treated with each drug for 3 months, using a randomized double-blind, triple crossover design. Neuropsychological evaluation at the end of each treatment period included Digit Span, Selective Reminding Test, Digit Symbol, Finger Tapping, Grooved Pegboard, Choice Reaction Time, P3 evoked potential, and Profile of Mood States. Employing anticonvulsant blood levels and seizure frequencies as covariates, the only significant difference was for Digit Symbol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new test was developed to assess direction of errors and hemispatial differences in anterograde memory for visuospatial arrays of abstract figures. After a series of learning trials, delayed recall of figure placement was obtained in 12 healthy dextral adults. Horizontal and vertical errors were measured for each figure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAJR Am J Roentgenol
March 1990
Detailed neurologic studies, high-field-strength MR imaging, and CT scanning were performed preoperatively in 53 patients with intractable complex partial seizures who underwent surgical treatment for epilepsy. Macroscopic structural (tumoral or vascular) lesions were found in 28% of patients. The remainder had pathologic findings consistent with mesial temporal gliosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a right-handed patient who became transiently aphasic following a right temporal lobectomy for control of intractable complex partial seizures. Preoperative intracarotid amobarbital testing revealed right-hemisphere language dominance, although bilateral language representation was present. Memory testing during unilateral electrical hippocampal simulation with depth electrodes indicated reliance on left-hemisphere mesial temporal lobe structures for verbal memory.
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