Christopher Gottschalk
Yale University
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Featured researches published by Christopher Gottschalk.
Biological Psychiatry | 2006
Ann M. Rasmusson; Graziano Pinna; Prashni Paliwal; David Weisman; Christopher Gottschalk; Dennis S. Charney; John H. Krystal; Alessandro Guidotti
BACKGROUND Alterations in the gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA) neurotransmitter system have been identified in some populations with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). METHODS To further investigate factors of relevance to GABAergic neurotransmission in PTSD, we measured cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of allopregnanolone and pregnanolone combined (ALLO: congeners that potently and positively modulate effects of GABA at the GABA(A) receptor), 5alpha-dihydroprogesterone (5alpha-DHP: the immediate precursor for allopregnanolone), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA: a negative modulator of GABA(A) receptor function), and progesterone with gas chromatography, mass spectrometry in premenopausal women with (n = 9) and without (n = 10) PTSD. Subjects were free of psychotropic medications, alcohol, and illicit drugs; all were in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle except three healthy and four PTSD subjects receiving oral contraceptives. RESULTS There were no group differences in progesterone, 5alpha-DHP, or DHEA levels. The PTSD group ALLO levels were < 39% of healthy group levels. The ALLO/DHEA ratio correlated negatively with PTSD re-experiencing symptoms (n = -.82, p < 008; trend) and with Profile of Mood State depression/dejection scores (n = -0.70, p < 0008). CONCLUSION Low CSF ALLO levels in premenopausal women with PTSD might contribute to an imbalance in inhibitory versus excitatory neurotransmission, resulting in increased PTSD re-experiencing and depressive symptoms.
American Journal on Addictions | 2005
D. Abi-Saab; John E. Beauvais; John Mehm; Michelle L. Brody; Christopher Gottschalk; Thomas R. Kosten
Neuropsychological deficits in the areas of learning, memory, attention, and abstraction abilities have been associated with cocaine dependence, especially during the period of early abstinence. Although cocaine users tend to be multidrug users, few studies have focused on the combined effect of alcohol and cocaine on neuropsychological functioning. Consistent with prior research, results from the current study indicated that cocaine-dependent subjects showed a significantly greater degree of neuropsychological impairment as compared to controls. In addition, cocaine-dependent subjects with a history of alcohol disorder showed less memory impairment but similar impairments in attention and overall neuropsychological functioning as cocaine subjects with no such history. The vasodilatation produced by alcohol may attenuate some of the vasoconstriction and neurotoxic effects of cocaine, accounting for the fewer deficits in this group.
Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2001
Leslie K. Jacobsen; Jay N. Giedd; Mary Jeanne Kreek; Christopher Gottschalk; Thomas R. Kosten
Preclinical and clinical studies have shown that cocaine increases plasma adrenocorticotropin hormone (ACTH) and cortisol. Chronic elevation of plasma cortisol exerts direct toxic effects upon hippocampal neurons and exacerbates hippocampal damage resulting from ischemia and seizures. The authors tested for evidence of hippocampal damage in patients with chronic cocaine dependence. Medial temporal lobe and total brain volumes were quantified using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 27 patients with cocaine dependence and 16 healthy subjects. Basal and ovine corticotropin releasing hormone (oCRH) stimulated ACTH and cortisol levels were also examined in a subset of 8 healthy and 9 cocaine dependent subjects after 21 days of abstinence. No evidence for decreased hippocampal or total brain volume in cocaine dependence was observed. Similarly, basal and oCRH stimulated ACTH and cortisol levels in cocaine dependent patients did not differ from those in healthy subjects.
Toxins | 2015
Sara M. Schaefer; Christopher Gottschalk; Bahman Jabbari
Migraine is the most common neurological disorder, and contributes to disability and large healthcare costs in the United States and the world. The treatment of migraine until recently has focused on medications, both abortive and prophylactic, but treatment of chronic migraine has been revolutionized with the introduction of botulinum toxin injection therapy. In this review, we explore the current understanding of migraine pathophysiology, and the evolution of the use of botulinum toxin therapy including proposed pathophysiological mechanisms through animal data. We also discuss the similarities and differences between three injection techniques.
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs | 2015
Emmanuelle A. D. Schindler; Christopher Gottschalk; Marsha J. Weil; Robert E. Shapiro; Douglas A. Wright; Richard Andrew Sewell
Abstract Cluster headache is one of the most debilitating pain syndromes. A significant number of patients are refractory to conventional therapies. The Clusterbusters.org medication use survey sought to characterize the effects of both conventional and alternative medications used in cluster headache. Participants were recruited from cluster headache websites and headache clinics. The final analysis included responses from 496 participants. The survey was modeled after previously published surveys and was available online. Most responses were chosen from a list, though others were free-texted. Conventional abortive and preventative medications were identified and their efficacies agreed with those previously published. The indoleamine hallucinogens, psilocybin, lysergic acid diethylamide, and lysergic acid amide, were comparable to or more efficacious than most conventional medications. These agents were also perceived to shorten/abort a cluster period and bring chronic cluster headache into remission more so than conventional medications. Furthermore, infrequent and non-hallucinogenic doses were reported to be efficacious. Findings provide additional evidence that several indoleamine hallucinogens are rated as effective in treating cluster headache. These data reinforce the need for further investigation of the effects of these and related compounds in cluster headache under experimentally controlled settings.
Frontiers in Neurology | 2016
Sherif Y. Shalaby; Jeffrey Indes; Benison Keung; Christopher Gottschalk; Duarte Machado; Amar Patel; Daphne Robakis; Elan D. Louis
Background Public awareness of and attitude toward disease is an important issue for patients. Public awareness of essential tremor (ET) has never been studied. Methods We administered a 10-min, 31-item questionnaire to 250 consecutive enrollees. These included three samples carefully chosen to have a potential range of awareness of ET: 100 individuals ascertained from a vascular disease clinic, 100 individuals from a general neurology clinic, and 50 Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients. Results Leaving aside PD patients, only 10–15% of enrollees had ever heard of or read about “ET.” Even among PD patients, only 32.7% had ever heard of or read about ET. After providing enrollees with three synonymous terms for ET (“benign tremor,” “kinetic tremor,” “familial tremor”), ~40% of non-PD enrollees and 51.0% with PD had ever heard or read about the condition. Even among participants who had heard of ET, ~10% did not know what the main symptom was, 1/3 were either unsure or thought ET was the same disease as PD, 1/4 thought that ET was the same condition as frailty- or aging-associated tremor, 2/3 attributed it to odd causes (e.g., trauma or alcohol abuse), only 1/3 knew of the existence of therapeutic brain surgery, fewer than 1/2 knew that children could have ET, and 3/4 did not know of a celebrity or historical figure with ET. Hence, lack of knowledge and misconceptions were common. Conclusion Public knowledge of the existence and features of ET is overall poor. Greater awareness is important for the ET community.
MedEdPORTAL | 2018
Moises Dominguez; Daniel DiCapua; Gary Leydon; Caitlin Loomis; Erin Longbrake; Sara M. Schaefer; Kevin Becker; Kamil Detyniecki; Christopher Gottschalk; Arash Salardini; John Encandela; Jeremy J. Moeller
Introduction Just-in-time teaching is an educational strategy that involves tailoring in-session learning activities based on student performance in presession assessments. We implemented this strategy in a third-year neurology clerkship. Methods Linked to core neurology clerkship lectures, eight brief video-based lectures and knowledge assessments were developed. Students watched videos and completed multiple-choice questions, and results were provided to faculty, who were given the opportunity to adjust the in-person lecture accordingly. Feedback was obtained by surveys of students and faculty lecturers and from student focus groups and faculty. Student performance on the end-of-clerkship examination was analyzed. Results Between October 2016 and April 2017, 135 students participated in the curriculum, and 56 students (41.5%) responded to the surveys. Most students agreed or strongly agreed that the new curriculum enhanced their learning and promoted their sense of responsibility in learning the content. Faculty agreed that this pedagogy helped prepare students for class. Most students watched the entire video-based lecture, although there was a trend toward decreased audience retention with longer lectures. There were no significant changes in performance on the end-of-clerkship examination after implementation of just-in-time teaching. In focus groups, students emphasized the importance of tying just-in-time teaching activities to the lecture and providing video-based lectures well in advance of the lectures. Discussion Just-in-time teaching using video-based lectures is an acceptable and feasible method to augment learning during a neurology clinical clerkship. We believe this method could be used in other neurology clerkships with similar success.
Neurology | 2014
Matthew Kalp; Christopher Gottschalk
A 75-year-old woman complained of a “scrambled brain” for 1 month. She endorsed poor depth perception and an inability to construct “mental maps” of her home and the grocery store. Examination revealed impaired delayed recall, ocular apraxia, optic ataxia, and simultanagnosia (Bálint syndrome). Diffusion-weighted MRI demonstrated cortical hyperintensities in the occipital lobes extending into the right parietal lobe, suggesting spongiform encephalopathy (figure). The 14-3-3 protein and elevated neuron-specific enolase were detected in the CSF. The patient was diagnosed with the Heidenhain variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.1 Early in the disease, this subgroup of patients with prion disease have isolated visual, not cognitive, symptoms and may be referred to an ophthalmologist.2
Headache | 2018
Brian Mac Grory; Linh Vu; Shawna Cutting; Evadne Marcolini; Christopher Gottschalk; David M. Greer
Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a life‐threatening emergency that is frequently missed due to its varied and often subtle presentation. The most common presentation of SAH is with a severe headache. The classical adjective used in SAH is “thunderclap”; however, this has not been well defined in the literature, rendering it a challenge to triage patients in clinical practice presenting with severe headache.
Headache | 2018
Emmanuelle A. D. Schindler; Douglas A. Wright; Marsha J. Weil; Christopher Gottschalk; Brian Pittman; Jason J. Sico
In this secondary analysis of the Clusterbusters® Medication Use survey, the use, effectiveness, and tolerability of inhaled oxygen were investigated and compared with injectable sumatriptan. We also sought to understand the predictors of medication response.