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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(7): e2215423120, 2023 02 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36745780

RESUMEN

Due to the ubiquitous nature of language in the environment of infants, how it affects the anatomical structure of the brain language system over the lifespan is not well understood. In this study, we investigated the effects of early language experience on the adult brain by examining anatomical features of individuals born deaf with typical or restricted language experience in early childhood. Twenty-two deaf adults whose primary language was American Sign Language and were first immersed in it at ages ranging from birth to 14 y participated. The control group was 21 hearing non-signers. We acquired T1-weighted magnetic resonance images and used FreeSurfer [B. Fischl, Neuroimage 62, 774-781(2012)] to reconstruct the brain surface. Using an a priori regions of interest (ROI) approach, we identified 17 language and 19 somatomotor ROIs in each hemisphere from the Human Connectome Project parcellation map [M. F. Glasser et al., Nature 536, 171-178 (2016)]. Restricted language experience in early childhood was associated with negative changes in adjusted grey matter volume and/or cortical thickness in bilateral fronto-temporal regions. No evidence of anatomical differences was observed in any of these regions when deaf signers with infant sign language experience were compared with hearing speakers with infant spoken language experience, showing that the effects of early language experience on the brain language system are supramodal.


Asunto(s)
Sordera , Preescolar , Humanos , Adulto , Sordera/patología , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen , Encéfalo/patología , Lenguaje , Audición , Lengua de Signos
2.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 34(2): 224-235, 2022 01 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34964898

RESUMEN

Areas within the left-lateralized neural network for language have been found to be sensitive to syntactic complexity in spoken and written language. Previous research has revealed that these areas are active for sign language as well, but whether these areas are specifically responsive to syntactic complexity in sign language independent of lexical processing has yet to be found. To investigate the question, we used fMRI to neuroimage deaf native signers' comprehension of 180 sign strings in American Sign Language (ASL) with a picture-probe recognition task. The ASL strings were all six signs in length but varied at three levels of syntactic complexity: sign lists, two-word sentences, and complex sentences. Syntactic complexity significantly affected comprehension and memory, both behaviorally and neurally, by facilitating accuracy and response time on the picture-probe recognition task and eliciting a left lateralized activation response pattern in anterior and posterior superior temporal sulcus (aSTS and pSTS). Minimal or absent syntactic structure reduced picture-probe recognition and elicited activation in bilateral pSTS and occipital-temporal cortex. These results provide evidence from a sign language, ASL, that the combinatorial processing of anterior STS and pSTS is supramodal in nature. The results further suggest that the neurolinguistic processing of ASL is characterized by overlapping and separable neural systems for syntactic and lexical processing.


Asunto(s)
Lenguaje , Lengua de Signos , Mapeo Encefálico , Comprensión , Humanos , Lingüística , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Lóbulo Temporal
3.
Epilepsy Behav ; 22 Suppl 1: S74-81, 2011 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22078523

RESUMEN

We investigated the possibility of differential diagnosis of patients with epileptic seizures (ES) and patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) through an advanced analysis of the dynamics of the patients' scalp EEGs. The underlying principle was the presence of resetting of brain's preictal spatiotemporal entrainment following onset of ES and the absence of resetting following PNES. Long-term (days) scalp EEGs recorded from five patients with ES and six patients with PNES were analyzed. It was found that: (1) Preictal entrainment of brain sites was reset at ES (P<0.05) in four of the five patients with ES, and not reset (P=0.28) in the fifth patient. (2) Resetting did not occur (p>0.1) in any of the six patients with PNES. These preliminary results in patients with ES are in agreement with our previous findings from intracranial EEG recordings on resetting of brain dynamics by ES and are expected to constitute the basis for the development of a reliable and supporting tool in the differential diagnosis between ES and PNES. Finally, we believe that these results shed light on the electrophysiology of PNES by showing that occurrence of PNES does not assist patients in overcoming a pathological entrainment of brain dynamics. This article is part of a Supplemental Special Issue entitled The Future of Automated Seizure Detection and Prediction.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/fisiopatología , Trastornos de Conversión/diagnóstico , Epilepsia/diagnóstico , Epilepsia/psicología , Dinámicas no Lineales , Trastornos Psicofisiológicos/diagnóstico , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Ondas Encefálicas , Electroencefalografía , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Trastornos Psicofisiológicos/psicología , Adulto Joven
4.
Front Hum Neurosci ; 13: 320, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31607879

RESUMEN

Previous research has identified ventral and dorsal white matter tracts as being crucial for language processing; their maturation correlates with increased language processing capacity. Unknown is whether the growth or maintenance of these language-relevant pathways is shaped by language experience in early life. To investigate the effects of early language deprivation and the sensory-motor modality of language on white matter tracts, we examined the white matter connectivity of language-relevant pathways in congenitally deaf people with or without early access to language. We acquired diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data from two groups of individuals who experienced language from birth, twelve deaf native signers of American Sign Language, and twelve hearing L2 signers of ASL (native English speakers), and from three, well-studied individual cases who experienced minimal language during childhood. The results indicate that the sensory-motor modality of early language experience does not affect the white matter microstructure between crucial language regions. Both groups with early language experience, deaf and hearing, show leftward laterality in the two language-related tracts. However, all three cases with early language deprivation showed altered white matter microstructure, especially in the left dorsal arcuate fasciculus (AF) pathway.

5.
Cortex ; 99: 390-403, 2018 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29406150

RESUMEN

The extent to which development of the brain language system is modulated by the temporal onset of linguistic experience relative to post-natal brain maturation is unknown. This crucial question cannot be investigated with the hearing population because spoken language is ubiquitous in the environment of newborns. Deafness blocks infants' language experience in a spoken form, and in a signed form when it is absent from the environment. Using anatomically constrained magnetoencephalography, aMEG, we neuroimaged lexico-semantic processing in a deaf adult whose linguistic experience began in young adulthood. Despite using language for 30 years after initially learning it, this individual exhibited limited neural response in the perisylvian language areas to signed words during the 300-400 ms temporal window, suggesting that the brain language system requires linguistic experience during brain growth to achieve functionality. The present case study primarily exhibited neural activations in response to signed words in dorsolateral superior parietal and occipital areas bilaterally, replicating the neural patterns exhibited by two previously case studies who matured without language until early adolescence (Ferjan Ramirez N, Leonard MK, Torres C, Hatrak M, Halgren E, Mayberry RI. 2014). The dorsal pathway appears to assume the task of processing words when the brain matures without experiencing the form-meaning network of a language.


Asunto(s)
Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen , Período Crítico Psicológico , Sordera , Desarrollo del Lenguaje , Lengua de Signos , Adolescente , Adulto , Encéfalo/fisiología , Encéfalo/fisiopatología , Estudios de Casos y Controles , Cognición , Comprensión , Femenino , Neuroimagen Funcional , Humanos , Magnetoencefalografía , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Adulto Joven
6.
Methods Mol Biol ; 325: 47-57, 2006.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16761718

RESUMEN

The use of cell fusion to study exchange of information at the molecular level between the nucleus and the cytoplasm of cells during regulation of gene expression was pioneered by Harris and Ringertz more than three decades ago. The ability to make heterokaryons with cells from different species or genetic strains is especially useful because genetic differences in gene products allow the origin of trans-acting regulatory factors to be determined. Heterokaryons between adult nucleated erythroid cells of one species and embryonic/larval nucleated erythroid cells of another species, for example, show cross-induction between the two types of nuclei, resulting in reprogramming of the adult nucleus to embryonic/larval globin gene expression and/or reprogramming of the embryonic/larval cell nucleus to adult globin expression. These experiments provided definitive evidence that developmental program switching is mediated by trans-acting factors. Other possible uses of this cell fusion protocol in stem cell biology and transplantation of genetically engineered cells for tissue regeneration are briefly discussed.


Asunto(s)
Técnicas de Cultivo de Célula/métodos , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Técnicas Genéticas , Células Híbridas , Animales , Comunicación Celular , Fusión Celular , Clonación de Organismos/métodos , Hemoglobinas/genética , Ratones , Microscopía de Contraste de Fase , Matriz Nuclear , Polietilenglicoles/química
7.
EuroIntervention ; 10(10): 1230-8, 2015 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25349043

RESUMEN

AIMS: The Paradise Ultrasound Renal Denervation System is a next-generation catheter-based device which was used to investigate whether the target ablation area can be controlled by changing ultrasound energy and duration to optimise nerve injury while preventing damage to the arterial wall. METHODS AND RESULTS: Five ultrasound doses were tested in a thermal gel model. Catheter-based ultrasound denervation was performed in 15 swine (29 renal arteries) to evaluate five different doses in vivo, and animals were euthanised at seven days for histopathologic assessment. In the gel model, the peak temperature was highest in the low power-long duration (LP-LD) dose, followed by the mid-low power-mid duration (MLP-MD) dose and the mid-high power-short duration (MHP-SD) dose, and lowest in the mid power-short duration (MP-SD) dose and the high power-ultra short duration (HP-USD) dose. In the animal study, total ablation area was significantly greater in the LP-LD group, followed by the MLP-MD group, and it was least in the HP-USD, MP-SD and MHP-SD groups (p=0.02). Maximum distance was significantly greater in the LP-LD group, followed by the MLP-MD group, the MHP-SD group, and the HP-USD group, and shortest in the MP-SD group (p=0.007). The short spare distance was not different among the five groups (p=0.38). Renal artery damage was minimal, while preserving significant nerve damage in all groups. CONCLUSIONS: The Paradise Ultrasound Renal Denervation System is a controllable system where total ablation area and depth of ablation can be optimised by changing ultrasound power and duration while sparing renal arterial tissue damage but allowing sufficient peri-arterial nerve damage.


Asunto(s)
Ablación por Catéter/instrumentación , Hipertensión/cirugía , Piezocirugía/instrumentación , Arteria Renal/cirugía , Simpatectomía/instrumentación , Animales , Ablación por Catéter/métodos , Geles , Técnicas In Vitro , Modelos Anatómicos , Piezocirugía/métodos , Arteria Renal/inervación , Arteria Renal/patología , Porcinos , Simpatectomía/métodos
8.
EuroIntervention ; 11(4): 477-84, 2015 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26298415

RESUMEN

AIMS: Circumferential ablation of renal sympathetic nerves using catheter-based ultrasound energy was studied in a preclinical in vivo model. The aim was to investigate the benefit of cooling the arterial wall and the extent of renal nerve injury based on histopathology, and to correlate the injury with kidney norepinephrine levels. METHODS AND RESULTS: Computer simulations of the ultrasound transducer within the cooling balloon demonstrated a circumferentially uniform heating profile. In vivo characterisation was performed in 10 normotensive pigs. Nine were treated bilaterally with ultrasound and survived for seven days (n=8) or were sacrificed acutely (n=1). Acutely, TTC staining of the renal arteries treated with ultrasound energy in the presence of cooling demonstrated viable tissue consistent with preservation of the arterial medial layer. Histological studies demonstrated no endothelial injury and minimal to no injury to the media of the renal arterial wall at seven days. Overall, circumferential nerve damage with up to 76% of nerve bundles affected within 7.5 mm of the arterial lumen was observed. Kidney norepinephrine (NEPI) levels were significantly reduced in all animals compared to a non-treated control animal (n=1) and correlated with the degree of nerve damage. A greater reduction in NEPI and a greater percentage of affected nerves was observed in arteries treated with two or three bilateral ultrasound emissions. CONCLUSIONS: Catheter-based ultrasound delivered within a cooling balloon is effective at targeting the majority of the renal nerves circumferentially, resulting in significantly decreased kidney NEPI levels without damaging the arterial wall in a porcine model.


Asunto(s)
Ablación por Catéter/instrumentación , Frío , Riñón/irrigación sanguínea , Arteria Renal/inervación , Simpatectomía/instrumentación , Sistema Nervioso Simpático/cirugía , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Ultrasónicos/instrumentación , Dispositivos de Acceso Vascular , Animales , Ablación por Catéter/efectos adversos , Ablación por Catéter/métodos , Diseño de Equipo , Femenino , Masculino , Modelos Animales , Norepinefrina/metabolismo , Arteria Renal/metabolismo , Arteria Renal/patología , Sus scrofa , Simpatectomía/efectos adversos , Simpatectomía/métodos , Sistema Nervioso Simpático/lesiones , Sistema Nervioso Simpático/metabolismo , Sistema Nervioso Simpático/patología , Factores de Tiempo , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Ultrasónicos/efectos adversos , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Ultrasónicos/métodos
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