keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37738096/resilience-to-pain-related-depression-in-%C3%AF-1-receptor-knockout-mice-is-associated-with-the-reversal-of-pain-induced-brain-changes-in-affect-related-genes
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Beatriz de la Puente, Daniel Zamanillo, Luz Romero, Alicia Carceller, José Miguel Vela, Manuel Merlos, Enrique Portillo-Salido
Mice lacking the σ1 receptor chaperone (σ1 R-/- ) are resilient to depressive-like behaviors secondary to neuropathic pain. Examining the resilience's brain mechanisms could help develop conceptually novel therapeutic strategies. We explored the diminished motivation for a natural reinforcer (white chocolate) in the partial sciatic nerve ligation (PSNL) model in wild-type (WT) and σ1 R-/- mice. In the same mice, we performed a comprehensive reverse transcription quantitative PCR (qPCR) analysis across ten brain regions of seven genes implicated in pain regulation and associated affective disorders, such as anxiety and depression...
September 22, 2023: ACS Chemical Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37713654/association-between-ovarian-reserve-and-spontaneous-miscarriage-and-their-shared-genetic-architecture
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yan Yi, Jing Fu, Shi Xie, Qiong Zhang, Bin Xu, Yonggang Wang, Yijing Wang, Bin Li, Guihu Zhao, Jinchen Li, Yanping Li, Jing Zhao
STUDY QUESTION: Can potential mechanisms involved in the likely concurrence of diminished ovarian reserve (DOR) and miscarriage be identified using genetic data? SUMMARY ANSWER: Concurrence between ovarian reserve and spontaneous miscarriage was observed, and may be attributed to shared genetic risk loci enriched in antigen processing and presentation and autoimmune disease pathways. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: Previous studies have shown that lower serum anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) levels are associated with increased risk of embryo aneuploidy and spontaneous miscarriage, although findings have not been consistent across all studies...
November 2, 2023: Human Reproduction
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37640922/delayed-estrogen-actions-diminish-food-consumption-without-changing-food-approach-motor-activity-or-hypothalamic-activation-elicited-by-corticostriatal-%C3%A2%C2%B5-opioid-signaling
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julio C Diaz, Kate Dunaway, Carla Zuniga, Elizabeth Sheil, Ken Sadeghian, Anthony P Auger, Brian A Baldo
Mu-opioid receptor (μ-OR) signaling in forebrain sites including nucleus accumbens (Acb) and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) modulates reward-driven feeding and may play a role in the pathophysiology of disordered eating. In preclinical models, intra-Acb or intra-vmPFC μ-OR stimulation causes overeating and vigorous responding for food rewards. These effects have been studied mainly in male animals, despite demonstrated sex differences and estrogen modulation of central reward systems. Hence, the present study investigated sex differences and estrogen modulation of intra-Acb and intra-vmPFC μ-OR-driven feeding behaviors...
August 28, 2023: Neuropsychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37626135/negative-symptoms-and-cognitive-impairment-are-associated-with-distinct-motivational-deficits-in-treatment-resistant-schizophrenia
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Y Saleh, I Jarratt-Barnham, P Petitet, E Fernandez-Egea, S G Manohar, M Husain
BACKGROUND: Motivational deficits are a central feature of the negative syndrome in schizophrenia. They have consistently been associated with reduced willingness to expend physical effort in return for monetary rewards on effort based decision making (EBDM) paradigms. Nevertheless, the mechanisms underlying such altered performance are not well characterised, and it remains unclear if they are driven purely by negative symptoms, or also in part by cognitive impairment, antipsychotic treatment or even positive symptoms...
August 25, 2023: Molecular Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37612455/effects-of-fentanyl-self-administration-on-risk-taking-behavior-in-male-rats
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexa-Rae Wheeler, Leah M Truckenbrod, Emily M Cooper, Sara M Betzhold, Barry Setlow, Caitlin A Orsini
RATIONALE: Individuals with opioid use disorder (OUD) exhibit impaired decision making and elevated risk-taking behavior. In contrast to the effects of natural and semi-synthetic opioids, however, the impact of synthetic opioids on decision making is still unknown. OBJECTIVES: The objective of the current study was to determine how chronic exposure to the synthetic opioid fentanyl alters risk-based decision making in adult male rats. METHODS: Male rats underwent 14 days of intravenous fentanyl or oral sucrose self-administration...
August 23, 2023: Psychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37600017/chronic-unpredictable-mild-stress-alters-odor-hedonics-and-adult-olfactory-neurogenesis-in-mice
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Athanassi, Marine Breton, Laura Chalençon, Jérome Brunelin, Anne Didier, Kevin Bath, Nathalie Mandairon
Experiencing chronic stress significantly increases the risk for depression. Depression is a complex disorder with varied symptoms across patients. However, feeling of sadness and decreased motivation, and diminished feeling of pleasure (anhedonia) appear to be core to most depressive pathology. Odorants are potent signals that serve a critical role in social interactions, avoiding danger, and consummatory behaviors. Diminished quality of olfactory function is associated with negative effects on quality of life leading to and aggravating the symptoms of depression...
2023: Frontiers in Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37591972/bile-acids-modulate-reinstatement-of-cocaine-conditioned-place-preference-and-accumbal-dopamine-dynamics-without-compromising-appetitive-learning
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniele Zanella, Nicholas K Smith, J Andrew Hardaway, Anna Marie Buchanan, Clarence H Mullins, Aurelio Galli, Angela M Carter
Psychostimulants target the dopamine transporter (DAT) to elicit their psychomotor actions. Bile acids (BAs) can also bind to DAT and reduce behavioral responses to cocaine, suggesting a potential therapeutic application of BAs in psychostimulant use disorder. Here, we investigate the potential of BAs to decrease drug-primed reinstatement when administered during an abstinence phase. To do this, after successful development of cocaine-associated contextual place preference (cocaine CPP), cocaine administration was terminated, and animals treated with vehicle or obeticholic acid (OCA)...
August 17, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37524494/boosting-serotonin-increases-information-gathering-by-reducing-subjective-cognitive-costs
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jochen Michely, Ingrid M Martin, Raymond J Dolan, Tobias U Hauser
Serotonin is implicated in the valuation of aversive costs, such as delay or physical effort. However, its role in governing sensitivity to cognitive effort, for example deliberation costs during information gathering, is unclear. We show that treatment with a serotonergic antidepressant in healthy human individuals of either sex enhances a willingness to gather information when trying to maximize reward. Using computational modelling, we show this arises from a diminished sensitivity to subjective deliberation costs during the sampling process...
July 31, 2023: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37372898/parental-experiences-of-melatonin-administration-to-manage-sleep-disturbances-in-autistic-children-and-adolescent-in-the-uk
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jade Horsnell, Stephen Mangar, Dagmara Dimitriou, Elizabeth J Halstead
BACKGROUND: Autistic children and adolescents are 40-80% more likely to experience sleep disturbances than their neurotypical peers. In the United Kingdom, melatonin is licensed for short-term usage in adults at age 55 years and above; however, it is often prescribed to autistic children and adolescents to help manage their sleep. The current study sought to understand parental experiences and their motivation of using melatonin to manage sleep disturbances of their autistic children...
June 16, 2023: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37372084/a-rat-model-of-the-brain-derived-neurotrophic-factor-val66met-polymorphism-shows-attenuated-motivation-for-alcohol-self-administration-and-diminished-propensity-for-cue-induced-relapse-in-females
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily J Jaehne, Elizabeth McInerney, Ronan Sharma, Shannyn G Genders, Elvan Djouma, Maarten van den Buuse
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) has been implicated in alcohol use disorder. The Val66Met polymorphism is a common variant of the BDNF gene (rs6265) which reduces activity-dependent BDNF release, and has been suggested as a risk factor for psychiatric disorders and substance use. Using an operant self-administration paradigm, this study aimed to investigate ethanol preference and ethanol seeking in a novel rat model of the BDNF Val66Met polymorphism, Val68Met rats. Male and female BDNF Val68Met rats of three genotypes (Val/Val, Val/Met and Met/Met) were trained to lever press for a 10% ethanol solution...
May 31, 2023: Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37358532/what-is-this-measuring-comment-on-gatner-et-al-2022
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Edelyn Verona, Keanan Joyner
In their crime cost estimation, Gatner et al. (2022) conclude that psychopathic personality disorder (PPD) is associated with billions of dollars of crime costs in the United States (US) and Canada. Gatner et al.'s analysis goes far in putting a cost estimate to PPD, when the burden of psychopathy for the criminal justice system has been unspecified for years. Nonetheless, in the present commentary, we identify two broad problems with their analyses that motivate caution in the interpretation of the findings and their potential applicability: (a) the conceptualization of psychopathy that formed the bases for estimates of PPD, and (b) the assumptions underlying crime cost estimates made by Gatner et al...
July 2023: Personality Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37056480/low-level-language-processing-in-brain-injured-patients
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Parul Jain, Mary M Conte, Henning U Voss, Jonathan D Victor, Nicholas D Schiff
Assessing cognitive function-especially language processing-in severely brain-injured patients is critical for prognostication, care, and development of communication devices (e.g. brain-computer interfaces). In patients with diminished motor function, language processing has been probed using EEG measures of command-following in motor imagery tasks. While such tests eliminate the need for motor response, they require sustained attention. However, passive listening tasks, with an EEG response measure can reduce both motor and attentional demands...
2023: Brain communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37016202/the-traps-of-adaptation-addiction-as-maladaptive-referent-dependent-evaluation
#33
REVIEW
Francesco Rigoli, Giovanni Pezzulo
Referent-dependent evaluation theories propose that the ongoing context influences how the brain attributes value to stimuli. What are the implications of these theories for understanding addiction? The paper asks this question by casting this disorder as a form of maladaptive referent-dependent evaluation. Specifically, addiction is proposed to arise from the establishment of an excessive reference point following repeated drug consumption. Several key aspects of the disorder emerge from this perspective, including withdrawal, tolerance, enhanced craving, negative mood, and diminished stimulus discriminability...
April 4, 2023: Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36983593/recent-advances-in-psychopharmacology-from-bench-to-bedside-novel-trends-in-schizophrenia
#34
REVIEW
Asim A Shah, Syed Z Iqbal
Research in the field of psychopharmacology is ongoing to develop novel compounds which can revolutionize the treatment of psychiatric disorders. The concept of bench-to-bedside is a tedious process, transforming the initial research performed in the laboratories into novel treatment options. Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a chronic psychiatric illness with significant morbidity and mortality. SCZ not only presents with psychotic symptoms including hallucinations and delusions but also with negative and cognitive symptoms...
February 25, 2023: Journal of Personalized Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36934601/aberrant-modulation-of-broadband-neural-oscillations-reflects-vocal-sensorimotor-deficits-in-post-stroke-aphasia
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Roozbeh Behroozmand, Kimaya Sarmukadam, Julius Fridriksson
OBJECTIVE: The present study investigated the neural oscillatory correlates of impaired vocal sensorimotor control in left-hemisphere stroke. METHODS: Electroencephalography (EEG) signals were recorded from 34 stroke and 46 control subjects during speech vowel vocalization and listening tasks under normal and pitch-shifted auditory feedback. RESULTS: Time-frequency analyses revealed aberrantly decreased theta (4-8 Hz) and increased gamma band (30-80 Hz) power in frontal and posterior parieto-occipital regions as well as reduced alpha (8-13 Hz) and beta (13-30 Hz) desynchronization over sensorimotor areas before speech vowel vocalization in left-hemisphere stroke compared with controls...
March 9, 2023: Clinical Neurophysiology: Official Journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36855759/identification-of-nanoscale-processes-associated-with-the-disorder-to-order-transformation-of-carbon-supported-alloy-nanoparticles
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hannah M Ashberry, Xun Zhan, Sara E Skrabalak
Due to their ordered crystal structures and high structural stabilities, intermetallic nanoparticles often display enhanced catalytic, magnetic, and optical properties compared to their random alloy counterparts. Intermetallic nanoparticles can be achieved by thermal annealing of their disordered (random alloy) counterparts. However, high temperatures and long annealing times needed to achieve the disorder-to-order transition often lead to a loss of sample monodispersity and an increase in the average size of nanoparticles...
March 9, 2022: ACS Mater Au
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36740134/prefrontal-cortex-neurons-in-adult-rats-exposed-to-early-life-stress-fail-to-appropriately-signal-the-consequences-of-motivated-actions
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Florencia M Bercum, Maria J Navarro Gomez, Michael P Saddoris
Early life stress (ELS) can set the stage for susceptibility to cognitive and emotional dysfunction in adulthood by disrupting typical neural development. The prefrontal cortex (PFC) continues to mature during early life, making this region particularly vulnerable to disruption for animals who experience ELS. Despite this, the effects of ELS experience on in vivo PFC function in awake and behaving adult animals are currently poorly understood. To assess this, we employed an instrumental conflict task to assess how hungry adult rats, either ELS (wet bedding) or unstressed Controls, were able to flexibly alter their motivation for food reward seeking (lever presses) in situations that were either threatening or safe...
February 3, 2023: Physiology & Behavior
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36633673/two-and-five-factor-models-of-negative-symptoms-in-schizophrenia-are-differentially-associated-with-trait-affect-defeatist-performance-beliefs-and-psychosocial%C3%A2-functioning
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nina B Paul, Gregory P Strauss, Jessica J Gates-Woodyatt, Kimberly A Barchard, Daniel N Allen
Recent factor analytic evidence supports both two-factor (motivation and pleasure, MAP; diminished expression, EXP) and five-factor (anhedonia, asociality, avolition, blunted affect, alogia) conceptualizations of negative symptoms. However, it is unclear whether these two conceptualizations of the latent structure of negative symptoms have differential associations with external correlates. The current study evaluated external correlates of the two- and five-factor structures by examining associations with variables known to have critical relations with negative symptoms: trait affect, defeatist performance beliefs, neurocognition, and community-based psychosocial functioning...
January 12, 2023: European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36549342/randomized-controlled-trial-of-computerized-approach-avoidance-training-in-social-anxiety-disorder-neural-and-symptom-outcomes
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Bomyea, Alison Sweet, Delaney K Davey, Matthew Boland, Martin P Paulus, Murray B Stein, Charles T Taylor
Social anxiety is associated with diminished automatic approach toward positive social cues that may limit the ability to connect with others. This diminished approach bias may be a modifiable treatment target. We evaluated the effects of an approach avoidance training procedure on positive emotions, social relationship outcomes, clinical symptoms, and neural indices of social approach and reward processing. Forty-five individuals with social anxiety disorder were randomized (parallel 1:1 randomization) to complete computerized Approach Positive training (n = 21) or Balanced training(n = 24)...
December 19, 2022: Journal of Affective Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36481530/weakly-supervised-detection-of-amd-related-lesions-in-color-fundus-images-using-explainable-deep-learning
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
José Morano, Álvaro S Hervella, José Rouco, Jorge Novo, José I Fernández-Vigo, Marcos Ortega
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a degenerative disorder affecting the macula, a key area of the retina for visual acuity. Nowadays, AMD is the most frequent cause of blindness in developed countries. Although some promising treatments have been proposed that effectively slow down its development, their effectiveness significantly diminishes in the advanced stages. This emphasizes the importance of large-scale screening programs for early detection...
December 1, 2022: Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine
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