Publications by authors named "P Mross"

Although yoga improves physical functioning, balance, and quality of life in older adults, rural residents are less likely to participate due to issues related to availability, access, and beliefs regarding yoga practice. To address these barriers, we worked with community partners to adapt a yoga program designed for older adults for telehealth delivery. In this report, intervention development and process outcomes are presented.

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Background And Purpose: Infection with COVID-19 can lead to persistent sequelae, such as fatigue, daytime sleepiness or disturbed sleep, that can remain for more than 12 weeks and that are summarized as post-COVID syndrome. The causes remain unclear. The present study investigated the presence of sleep disorders in patients with post-COVID syndrome using polysomnography.

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Background: Assessment of quality of life (QoL) has become an important indicator for chronic neurological diseases. While these conditions often limit personal independence and autonomy, they are also associated with treatment-related problems and reduced life expectancy. Epilepsy has a tremendous impact on the QoL of patients and their families, which is often underestimated by practitioners.

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Objective: Functional seizures (FS) or psychogenic, non-epileptic seizures (PNES) are episodic alterations of behaviour with similar semiology to epileptic seizures but which are not caused by epileptic brain activity. Epilepsy patients show a high risk in developing FS; therefore, the purpose of this study is to examine morphometric correlates in patients with FS as well as in epilepsy patients with FS by comparing them separately to healthy controls (HC).

Methods: Twenty-one clinical three-dimensional (3D) T1-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of patients with FS (FS group) and 15 patients with FS and epilepsy (EFS group) were retrospectively compared with one control group of 21 age- and gender-matched HC.

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Assessment of regional language lateralization is crucial in many scenarios, but not all populations are suited for its evaluation via task-functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). In this study, the utility of structural connectome features for the classification of language lateralization in the anterior temporal lobes (ATLs) was investigated. Laterality indices for semantic processing in the ATL were computed from task-fMRI in 1038 subjects from the Human Connectome Project who were labeled as stronger rightward lateralized (RL) or stronger leftward to bilaterally lateralized (LL) in a data-driven approach.

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