Publications by authors named "Mizuho Takayanagi"

This study was a systematic review of research using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) to examine cognitive characteristics of children with ASD beyond the impact of revisions based on WISC and diagnostic criteria changes. The classic "islets of ability" was found in individuals with full-scale IQs < 100. The "right-descending profiles" were observed among high IQ score individuals.

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Apathy commonly accompanies both traumatic brain injury (TBI) and deficit syndrome schizophrenia (DSZ), despite unclear neurological bases. The authors examined differences in cortical thickness and subcortical/cerebellar regional volumes between adult TBI survivors, patients with DSZ, and healthy-control subjects by use of 3-D magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and correlated imaging findings with clinical ratings of apathy and selected cognitive test scores. Imaging findings revealed specific areas of volume reduction in TBI survivors and areas of cortical thinning among patients with DSZ.

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Background: Patients with deficit schizophrenia (D-SZ) differ from patients with the non-deficit form of schizophrenia (ND-SZ) in several aspects such as risk factors, neurobiological correlates, treatment response and clinical outcome. It has been debated if brain morphology could differentiate D-SZ from ND-SZ. Anterior cingulate gyrus (ACG) region regulates cognitive and emotional processing and past studies reported structural changes in this region in patients with SZ.

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This study examined paroxysmal abnormalities and epilepsy in EEG for individuals with pervasive developmental disorders (PDD) in two parts: first with a large number of subjects (n=1624); and second with extracted subjects followed from 5 years into adolescence and beyond (n=92). Many paroxysms in PDD patients in their childhood tended to appear at various sites and the same held for paroxysms at the time of epilepsy onset. However, in adolescence and beyond, paroxysms in the frontal region prevailed as those appearing at sites other than the frontal region tended to disappear.

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