Publications by authors named "Victor Gutierrez-de-Pablo"

Article Synopsis
  • Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a brain sickness that affects memory and thinking skills.
  • Researchers have been using special techniques called MEG and EEG to look at how the brain changes in people with AD.
  • The study found that patients with AD show a simpler and more disrupted brain organization compared to healthy individuals, making their brains more vulnerable.
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Connectivity analyses are widely used to assess the interaction brain networks. This type of analyses is usually conducted considering the well-known classical frequency bands: delta, theta, alpha, beta, and gamma. However, this parcellation of the frequency content can bias the analyses, since it does not consider the between-subject variability or the particular idiosyncrasies of the connectivity patterns that occur within a band.

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The main objective of this study was to examine the influence that recording length, sampling frequency, and imaging modality have on the estimation and characterization of spontaneous brain meta-states during rest. To this end, a recently developed method of meta-state extraction and characterization was applied to a subset of 16 healthy elderly subjects from two independent electroencephalographic and magnetoencephalographic (EEG/MEG) databases. The recordings were segmented into the first 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 60 and 90-s of artifact-free activity and meta-states were extracted.

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PICALM and CLU genes have been linked to alterations in brain biochemical processes that may have an impact on Alzheimer's disease (AD) development and neurophysiological dynamics. The aim of this study is to analyze the relationship between the electroencephalographic (EEG) activity and the PICALM and CLU alleles described as conferring risk or protective effects on AD patients and healthy controls. For this purpose, EEG activity was acquired from: 18 AD patients and 12 controls carrying risk alleles of both PICALM and CLU genes, and 35 AD patients and 12 controls carrying both protective alleles.

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Background: Dementia due to Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder, which much of heritability remains unexplained. At the clinical level, one of the most common physiological alterations is the slowing of oscillatory brain activity, measurable by electroencephalography (EEG). Relative power (RP) at the conventional frequency bands (i.

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This study had two main objectives: (i) to study the effects of volume conduction on different connectivity metrics (Amplitude Envelope Correlation AEC, Phase Lag Index PLI, and Magnitude Squared Coherence MSCOH), comparing the coupling patterns at electrode- and sensor-level; and (ii) to characterize spontaneous EEG activity during different stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD) continuum by means of three complementary network parameters: node degree (k), characteristic path length (L), and clustering coefficient (C). Our results revealed that PLI and AEC are weakly influenced by volume conduction compared to MSCOH, but they are not immune to it. Furthermore, network parameters obtained from PLI showed that AD continuum is characterized by an increase in L and C in low frequency bands, suggesting lower integration and higher segregation as the disease progresses.

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most prevalent cause of dementia, being considered a major health problem, especially in developed countries. Late-onset AD is the most common form of the disease, with symptoms appearing after 65 years old. Genetic determinants of AD risk are vastly unknown, though, ε 4 allele of the gene has been reported as the strongest genetic risk factor for AD.

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