10 results match your criteria: "Memory and Aging Center and[Affiliation]"

Personal narrative is a powerful way to include people in their care and to understand their values that drive their needs. In this paper, we describe a program designed to teach oral history to clinicians and trainees in the field of aging, dementia and caregiving. The training uses empathic listening, open-ended interviewing, and the discovery of individual values and experience to breakdown stigma and preconceptions of what it means to age with cognitive impairment.

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Teaching Vocabulary to Improve Print Knowledge in Preschool Children with Hearing Loss.

Perspect ASHA Spec Interest Groups

December 2020

Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC.

Purpose: The purpose of this article was to examine evidence that (a) published measures may tap different categories of print knowledge and result in disparate findings in the literature, (b) concept vocabulary knowledge in children with hearing loss may exacerbate deficits in conceptual print knowledge, and (c) concept vocabulary can be taught via direct instruction for preschool children with hearing loss.

Method: In Study 1, an item analysis of published print knowledge measures was performed to determine the prevalence of concept vocabulary in test items. Additionally, the performance on a conceptual print knowledge measure was compared for preschool children with and without hearing loss.

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Frontotemporal dementia.

Handb Clin Neurol

April 2020

Cognitive and Behavior Research Unit, National Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Havana, Cuba; Global Brain Health Institute, University of California, San Francisco, CA, United States.

Recent research reveals an overlap between frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and a variety of primary psychiatric disorders, challenging the artificial divisions between psychiatry and neurology. This chapter offers an overview of the clinical syndromes associated with FTD while describing links between these syndromes and neuroimaging. This is followed by a review of the neuropathology and genetic changes in the brain.

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Background: Central nervous system levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), a pro-inflammatory cytokine, regulate the neuroinflammatory response and may play a role in age-related neurodegenerative diseases. The longitudinal relation between peripheral levels of TNF-α and typical brain aging is understudied. We hypothesized that within-person increases in systemic TNF-α would track with poorer brain health outcomes in functionally normal adults.

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Changes in higher-order cognitive behaviors such as reward recognition, salience processing, novelty perception, decision-making, emotional contagion, motivation, and empathy may contribute to intimacy dysfunction. Network circuitry underlying these cognitive functions is often activated in sexually intimate behavior. We propose that sexual dysfunction in AD and bvFTD is more nuanced than is commonly believed, and propose how AD and bvFTD atrophy may correlate neuroanatomically to brain regions and networks that contribute to the higher-order cognitive aspects of intimacy.

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Molecular imaging in dementia: Past, present, and future.

Alzheimers Dement

November 2018

Department of Neurology and Alzheimer Center, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Molecular imaging techniques using F-fluorodeoxyglucose, amyloid tracers, and, more recently, tau ligands have taken dementia research by storm and undoubtedly improved our understanding of neurodegenerative diseases. The ability to image in vivo the pathological substrates of degenerative diseases and visualize their downstream impact has led to improved models of pathogenesis, better differential diagnosis of atypical conditions, as well as focused subject selection and monitoring of treatment in clinical trials aimed at delaying or preventing the symptomatic phase of Alzheimer's disease. In this article, we present the main molecular imaging techniques used in research and practice.

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Dynamic relationships between age, amyloid-β deposition, and glucose metabolism link to the regional vulnerability to Alzheimer's disease.

Brain

August 2016

1 Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA 2 Life Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.

SEE HANSSON AND GOURAS DOI101093/AWW146 FOR A SCIENTIFIC COMMENTARY ON THIS ARTICLE: Although some brain regions such as precuneus and lateral temporo-parietal cortex have been shown to be more vulnerable to Alzheimer's disease than other areas, a mechanism underlying the differential regional vulnerability to Alzheimer's disease remains to be elucidated. Using fluorodeoxyglucose and Pittsburgh compound B positron emission tomography imaging glucose metabolism and amyloid-β deposition, we tested whether and how life-long changes in glucose metabolism relate to amyloid-β deposition and Alzheimer's disease-related hypometabolism. Nine healthy young adults (age range: 20-30), 96 cognitively normal older adults (age range: 61-96), and 20 patients with Alzheimer's disease (age range: 50-90) were scanned using fluorodeoxyglucose and Pittsburgh compound B positron emission tomography.

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Practical utility of amyloid and FDG-PET in an academic dementia center.

Neurology

January 2014

From the Memory and Aging Center and Department of Neurology (P.S.-J., P.M.G., J.H., B.G., M.H., L.T.G., M.G.-T., W.W.S., A.L.B., H.J.R., J.H.K., B.L.M.,W.J.J., G.D.R.) and Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (E.J.H.), University of California, San Francisco; University Hospital "Marqués de Valdecilla," IFIMAV and Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red sobre Enfermedades Neurodegenerativas (P.S.-J.), Santander, Spain; Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute (P.M.G., W.J.J., G.D.R.), University of California, Berkeley; Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (P.M.G., J.P.O., M.J., W.J.J., G.D.R.), Berkeley, CA; Center for Neurodegenerative Research (J.Q.T.), University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; and Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (H.V.V.), University of California, Los Angeles.

Objective: To evaluate the effect of amyloid imaging on clinical decision making.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of 140 cognitively impaired patients (mean age 65.0 years, 46% primary β-amyloid (Aβ) diagnosis, mean Mini-Mental State Examination 22.

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Buccofacial apraxia and the expression of emotion.

Ann N Y Acad Sci

December 2003

Memory and Aging Center and the Department of Neuroscience, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, California 94143-1207, USA.

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Background: Progressive brain atrophy is associated with Alzheimer disease (AD) and other dementias. Regional differences in brain atrophy may reflect clinical features of disease.

Objective: To identify regions of cerebral atrophy that are associated with AD vs other dementias.

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