11 results match your criteria: "at Imperial College London and the University of Surrey[Affiliation]"

Population incidence and associated mortality of urinary tract infection in people living with dementia.

J Infect

June 2024

UK Dementia Research Institute Care Research and Technology Centre (UK DRI CR&T) at Imperial College London and the University of Surrey, Imperial College London, White City Campus, 86 Wood Lane, London W12 0BZ, UK. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Urinary tract infections (UTIs) significantly contribute to hospitalizations and fatalities among individuals with dementia compared to matched controls and those with diabetes.
  • A large study analyzed data from over 2.4 million people aged 50+ in Wales between 2000-2021, finding that UTIs in dementia and diabetes were linked to increased mortality rates, especially in those with both conditions.
  • Delayed or untreated UTIs led to a notable increase in the risk of death, with 5.4% of untreated individuals with dementia dying within 60 days after diagnosis, rising to 5.9% for those also having diabetes.
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Association between sleep slow-wave activity and in-vivo estimates of myelin in healthy young men.

Neuroimage

May 2023

GIGA-CRC in Vivo Imaging, University of Liège, Belgium; Psychology and Neurosciences of Cognition (PsyNCog), Faculty of Psychology, Logopedics and Educational Sciences University of Liège, Belgium. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Sleep plays a role in myelin formation and brain structure, with slow-wave activity (SWA) being a key indicator of sleep health and brain maturation.
  • A study involving 226 young men examined how individual differences in SWA and responses to sleep deprivation and saturation relate to myelin levels in the brain.
  • Findings showed that early-night frontal SWA was linked to lower myelin content in specific brain areas, suggesting that variations in SWA may reflect changes in brain structure during early adulthood.
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Algorithm and hardware considerations for real-time neural signal on-implant processing.

J Neural Eng

February 2022

Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom.

Various on-workstation neural-spike-based brain machine interface (BMI) systems have reached the point of in-human trials, but on-node and on-implant BMI systems are still under exploration. Such systems are constrained by the area and battery. Researchers should consider the algorithm complexity, available resources, power budgets, CMOS technologies, and the choice of platforms when designing BMI systems.

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Sleep and circadian rhythm dysfunction is prevalent in schizophrenia, is associated with distress and poorer clinical status, yet remains an under-recognized therapeutic target. The development of new therapies requires the identification of the primary drivers of these abnormalities. Understanding of the regulation of sleep-wake timing is now sufficiently advanced for mathematical model-based analyses to identify the relative contribution of endogenous circadian processes, behavioral or environmental influences on sleep-wake disturbance and guide the development of personalized treatments.

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Implantable brain machine interfaces: first-in-human studies, technology challenges and trends.

Curr Opin Biotechnol

December 2021

Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Imperial College London, UK; Centre for Bio-Inspired Technology, Imperial College London, UK; Care Research and Technology (CR&T) based at Imperial College London and the University of Surrey, UK Dementia Research Institute (UK DRI), UK. Electronic address:

Implantable brain machine interfaces (BMIs) are now on a trajectory to go mainstream, wherein what was once considered last resort will progressively become elective at earlier stages in disease treatment. First-in-human successes have demonstrated the ability to decode highly dexterous motor skills such as handwriting, and speech from human cortical activity. These have been used for cursor and prosthesis control, direct-to-text communication and speech synthesis.

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The rs1344706 polymorphism in ZNF804A is robustly associated with schizophrenia and schizophrenia is, in turn, associated with abnormal non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep neurophysiology. To examine whether rs1344706 is associated with intermediate neurophysiological traits in the absence of disease, we assessed the relationship between genotype, sleep neurophysiology, and sleep-dependent memory consolidation in healthy participants. We recruited healthy adult males with no history of psychiatric disorder from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) birth cohort.

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A recent elegant study published in this journal (Zerbini, Winnebeck & Merrow, J Pineal Res, e12723, 2021) reported data on weekly and seasonal changes in circadian timing, as assessed by the melatonin rhythm in dim light in a population that was exposed to a change from standard time to day light saving time. The authors highlight a one hour earlier timing of melatonin onset in summer compared with winter and a 20 minutes delay on work-free days compared with work days. The variations in the timing of the melatonin rhythm are reported in standard time and the authors imply that the data are consistent with synchronization to midday and that "we know that humans entrain to sun time.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to explore how subjective measures of sleepiness in young adults relate to their sleep patterns, specifically looking at bedtime and sleep duration.
  • Previous assessments showed significant variation in sleepiness levels, which were linked to subsequent sleep behaviors, with increased sleepiness leading to earlier bedtimes and longer sleep durations.
  • The findings suggest that subjective sleepiness is a reliable indicator of sleep drive and effectively encourages better sleep habits when acknowledged.
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Adaptive spike detection and hardware optimization towards autonomous, high-channel-count BMIs.

J Neurosci Methods

April 2021

Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Imperial College London, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, UK; UK Dementia Research Institute (UKDRI) Care Research & Technology Centre, based at Imperial College London and the University of Surrey, UK. Electronic address:

Background: The progress in microtechnology has enabled an exponential trend in the number of neurons that can be simultaneously recorded. The data bandwidth requirement is however increasing with channel count. The vast majority of experimental work involving electrophysiology stores the raw data and then processes this offline; to detect the underlying spike events.

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