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Dive into the research topics where Clifford I. Workman is active.

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Featured researches published by Clifford I. Workman.


Brain Stimulation | 2015

Deep Brain Stimulation Influences Brain Structure in Alzheimer's Disease

Tejas Sankar; M. Mallar Chakravarty; Agustin Bescos; Monica Lara; Toshiki Obuchi; Adrian W. Laxton; Mary Pat McAndrews; David F. Tang-Wai; Clifford I. Workman; Gwenn S. Smith; Andres M. Lozano

BACKGROUND Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) is thought to improve the symptoms of selected neurological disorders by modulating activity within dysfunctional brain circuits. To date, there is no evidence that DBS counteracts progressive neurodegeneration in any particular disorder. OBJECTIVE/HYPOTHESIS We hypothesized that DBS applied to the fornix in patients with Alzheimers Disease (AD) could have an effect on brain structure. METHODS In six AD patients receiving fornix DBS, we used structural MRI to assess one-year change in hippocampal, fornix, and mammillary body volume. We also used deformation-based morphometry to identify whole-brain structural changes. We correlated volumetric changes to hippocampal glucose metabolism. We also compared volumetric changes to those in an age-, sex-, and severity-matched group of AD patients (n = 25) not receiving DBS. RESULTS We observed bilateral hippocampal volume increases in the two patients with the best clinical response to fornix DBS. In one patient, hippocampal volume was preserved three years after diagnosis. Overall, mean hippocampal atrophy was significantly slower in the DBS group compared to the matched AD group, and no matched AD patients demonstrated bilateral hippocampal enlargement. Across DBS patients, hippocampal volume change correlated strongly with hippocampal metabolism and with volume change in the fornix and mammillary bodies, suggesting a circuit-wide effect of stimulation. Deformation-based morphometry in DBS patients revealed local volume expansions in several regions typically atrophied in AD. CONCLUSION We present the first in-human evidence that, in addition to modulating neural circuit activity, DBS may influence the natural course of brain atrophy in a neurodegenerative disease.


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2013

Longitudinal Studies of Cerebral Glucose Metabolism in Late-Life Depression and Normal Aging

Christopher Marano; Clifford I. Workman; Elisse Kramer; Carol R. Hermann; Yilong Ma; Vijay Dhawan; Thomas Chaly; David Eidelberg; Gwenn S. Smith

Late‐life depression (LLD) has a substantial public health impact and is both a risk factor for and a prodrome of dementia. Positron emission tomography (PET) studies of cerebral glucose metabolism have demonstrated sensitivity in evaluating neural circuitry involved in depression, aging, incipient cognitive decline, and dementia. The present study evaluated the long term effects of a course of antidepressant treatment on glucose metabolism in LLD patients.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2015

Structural imaging in late-life depression: Association with mood and cognitive responses to antidepressant treatment

Christopher Marano; Clifford I. Workman; Christopher H. Lyman; Cynthia A. Munro; Michael A. Kraut; Gwenn S. Smith

OBJECTIVES Recent positron emission tomography studies of cerebral glucose metabolism have identified the functional neural circuitry associated with mood and cognitive responses to antidepressant treatment in late life depression (LLD). The structural alterations in these networks are not well understood. The present study used magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and voxel-based morphometry to evaluate the association between gray matter volumes and changes in mood symptoms and cognitive function with treatment with the antidepressant citalopram. DESIGN Open-label trial with baseline brain MR scan. Mood and cognitive assessments performed at baseline and during citalopram treatment. SETTING Outpatient clinics of an academic medical center. PARTICIPANTS 17 previously unmedicated patients age 55 years or older with a major depressive episode and 17 non-depressed comparison subjects. INTERVENTION 12-week trial of flexibly dosed citalopram. MEASUREMENTS Gray matter volumes, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, California Verbal Learning Test, Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System. RESULTS In LLD, higher gray matter volumes in the cingulate gyrus, superior and middle frontal gyri, middle temporal gyrus, and precuneus was associated with greater mood improvement. Higher gray matter volumes in primarily frontal areas were associated with greater improvement in verbal memory and verbal fluency performance. CONCLUSIONS Associations with antidepressant induced improvements in mood and cognition were observed in several brain regions previously correlated with normalization of glucose metabolism after citalopram treatment in LLD. Future studies will investigate molecular mechanisms underlying these associations (e.g., beta-amyloid, inflammation, glutamate).


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2014

The relationship between fasting serum glucose and cerebral glucose metabolism in late-life depression and normal aging

Christopher Marano; Clifford I. Workman; Christopher H. Lyman; Elisse Kramer; Carol R. Hermann; Yilong Ma; Vijay Dhawan; Thomas Chaly; David Eidelberg; Gwenn S. Smith

Evidence exists for late-life depression (LLD) as both a prodrome of and risk factor for Alzheimer׳s disease (AD). The underlying neurobiological mechanisms are poorly understood. Impaired peripheral glucose metabolism may explain the association between depression and AD given the connection between type 2 diabetes mellitus with both depression and AD. Positron emission tomography (PET) measures of cerebral glucose metabolism are sensitive to detecting changes in neural circuitry in LLD and AD. Fasting serum glucose (FSG) in non-diabetic young (YC; n=20) and elderly controls (EC; n=12) and LLD patients (n=16) was correlated with PET scans of cerebral glucose metabolism on a voxel-wise basis. The negative correlations were more extensive in EC versus YC and in LLD patients versus EC. Increased FSG correlated with decreased cerebral glucose metabolism in LLD patients to a greater extent than in EC in heteromodal association cortices involved in mood symptoms and cognitive deficits observed in LLD and dementia. Negative correlations in YC were observed in sensory and motor regions. Understanding the neurobiological consequences of diabetes and associated conditions will have substantial public health significance given that this is a modifiable risk factor for which prevention strategies could have an important impact on lowering dementia risk.


Synapse | 2012

Serotonin modulation of cerebral glucose metabolism: Sex and age effects

Cynthia A. Munro; Clifford I. Workman; Elisse Kramer; Carol R. Hermann; Yilong Ma; Vijay Dhawan; Thomas Chaly; David Eidelberg; Gwenn S. Smith

The serotonin system is implicated in a variety of psychiatric disorders whose clinical presentation and response to treatment differ between males and females, as well as with aging. However, human neurobiological studies are limited. Sex differences in the cerebral metabolic response to an increase in serotonin concentrations were measured, as well as the effect of aging, in men compared to women. Thirty‐three normal healthy individuals (14 men/19 women, age range 20–79 years) underwent two resting positron emission tomography studies with the radiotracer [18F]‐2‐deoxy‐2‐fluoro‐D‐glucose ([18F]‐FDG) after placebo and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI, citalopram) infusions on two separate days. Results indicated that women demonstrated widespread areas of increased cortical glucose metabolism with fewer areas of decrease in metabolism in response to citalopram. Men, in contrast, demonstrated several regions of decreased cortical metabolism, but no regions of increased metabolism. Age was associated with greater increases in women and greater decreases in men in most brain regions. These results support prior studies indicating that serotonin function differs in men and women across the lifespan. Future studies aimed at characterizing the influences of age and sex on the serotonin system in patients with psychiatric disorders are needed to elucidate the relationship between sex and age differences in brain chemistry and associated differences in symptom presentation and treatment response. Synapse 66:955–964, 2012.


Human Brain Mapping | 2017

Association between serotonin denervation and resting‐state functional connectivity in mild cognitive impairment

Frederick S. Barrett; Clifford I. Workman; Haris I. Sair; Alena V. Savonenko; Michael A. Kraut; Devin J. Sodums; Jin J. Joo; Najlla Nassery; Christopher Marano; Cynthia A. Munro; Jason Brandt; Yun Zhou; Dean F. Wong; Gwenn S. Smith

Resting‐state functional connectivity alterations have been demonstrated in Alzheimers disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) before the observation of AD neuropathology, but mechanisms driving these changes are not well understood. Serotonin neurodegeneration has been observed in MCI and AD and is associated with cognitive deficits and neuropsychiatric symptoms, but the role of the serotonin system in relation to brain network dysfunction has not been a major focus of investigation. The current study investigated the relationship between serotonin transporter availability (SERT; measured using positron emission tomography) and brain network functional connectivity (measured using resting‐state functional MRI) in 20 participants with MCI and 21 healthy controls. Two SERT regions of interest were selected for the analysis: the Dorsal Raphe Nuclei (DRN) and the precuneus which represent the cell bodies of origin and a cortical target of projections of the serotonin system, respectively. Both regions show decreased SERT in MCI compared to controls and are the site of early AD pathology. Average resting‐state functional connectivity did not differ between MCI and controls. Decreased SERT in DRN was associated with lower hippocampal resting‐state connectivity in MCI participants compared to controls. Decreased SERT in the right precuneus was also associated with lower resting‐state connectivity of the retrosplenial cortex to the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex and higher resting‐state connectivity of the retrosplenial cortex to the posterior cingulate and in patients with MCI but not in controls. These results suggest that a serotonergic mechanism may underlie changes in brain functional connectivity in MCI. Hum Brain Mapp 38:3391–3401, 2017.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2017

Molecular imaging of serotonin degeneration in mild cognitive impairment

Gwenn S. Smith; Frederick S. Barrett; Jin Hui Joo; Najlla Nassery; Alena V. Savonenko; Devin J. Sodums; Christopher Marano; Cynthia A. Munro; Jason Brandt; Michael A. Kraut; Yun Zhou; Dean F. Wong; Clifford I. Workman

Neuropathological and neuroimaging studies have consistently demonstrated degeneration of monoamine systems, especially the serotonin system, in normal aging and Alzheimers disease. The evidence for degeneration of the serotonin system in mild cognitive impairment is limited. Thus, the goal of the present study was to measure the serotonin transporter in vivo in mild cognitive impairment and healthy controls. The serotonin transporter is a selective marker of serotonin terminals and of the integrity of serotonin projections to cortical, subcortical and limbic regions and is found in high concentrations in the serotonergic cell bodies of origin of these projections (raphe nuclei). Twenty-eight participants with mild cognitive impairment (age 66.6±6.9, 16 males) and 28 healthy, cognitively normal, demographically matched controls (age 66.2±7.1, 15 males) underwent magnetic resonance imaging for measurement of grey matter volumes and high-resolution positron emission tomography with well-established radiotracers for the serotonin transporter and regional cerebral blood flow. Beta-amyloid imaging was performed to evaluate, in combination with the neuropsychological testing, the likelihood of subsequent cognitive decline in the participants with mild cognitive impairment. The following hypotheses were tested: 1) the serotonin transporter would be lower in mild cognitive impairment compared to controls in cortical and limbic regions, 2) in mild cognitive impairment relative to controls, the serotonin transporter would be lower to a greater extent and observed in a more widespread pattern than lower grey matter volumes or lower regional cerebral blood flow and 3) lower cortical and limbic serotonin transporters would be correlated with greater deficits in auditory-verbal and visual-spatial memory in mild cognitive impairment, not in controls. Reduced serotonin transporter availability was observed in mild cognitive impairment compared to controls in cortical and limbic areas typically affected by Alzheimers disease pathology, as well as in sensory and motor areas, striatum and thalamus that are relatively spared in Alzheimers disease. The reduction of the serotonin transporter in mild cognitive impairment was greater than grey matter atrophy or reductions in regional cerebral blood flow compared to controls. Lower cortical serotonin transporters were associated with worse performance on tests of auditory-verbal and visual-spatial memory in mild cognitive impairment, not in controls. The serotonin system may represent an important target for prevention and treatment of MCI, particularly the post-synaptic receptors (5-HT4 and 5-HT6), which may not be as severely affected as presynaptic aspects of the serotonin system, as indicated by the observation of lower serotonin transporters in MCI relative to healthy controls.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2018

Neurometabolites and associations with cognitive deficits in mild cognitive impairment: A magnetic resonance spectroscopy study at 7 Tesla

Georg Oeltzschner; S. Andrea Wijtenburg; Mark Mikkelsen; Richard A.E. Edden; Peter B. Barker; Jin Hui Joo; Jeannie-Marie S. Leoutsakos; Laura M. Rowland; Clifford I. Workman; Gwenn S. Smith

The levels of several brain metabolites were investigated in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) in 13 healthy controls (HC) and 13 patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) using single-voxel magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 7T. Levels of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glutamate (Glu), glutathione (GSH), N-acetylaspartylglutamate (NAAG), N-acetylaspartate (NAA), and myo-inositol (mI) were quantified relative to total creatine (tCr). The effect of diagnosis on metabolite levels, and relationships between metabolite levels and memory and executive function, correcting for age, were investigated. MCI patients showed significantly decreased GABA/tCr (ACC, PCC), Glu/tCr (PCC), and NAA/tCr (PCC), and significantly increased mI/tCr (ACC). In the combined group, worse episodic verbal memory performance was correlated with lower Glu/tCr (PCC), lower NAA/tCr (PCC), and higher mI/tCr (ACC, PCC). Worse verbal fluency performance was correlated with lower GSH/tCr (PCC). In summary, MCI is associated with decreased GABA and Glu, most consistently in the PCC. Further studies in larger patient samples should be undertaken to determine the utility of 7T magnetic resonance spectroscopy in detecting MCI-related neurochemical changes.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2011

The relationship between the acute cerebral metabolic response to citalopram and chronic citalopram treatment outcome

Gwenn S. Smith; Clifford I. Workman; Elisse Kramer; Carol R. Hermann; Rachel Ginsberg; Yilong Ma; Vijay Dhawan; Thomas Chaly; David Eidelberg


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2013

Cortical Beta-Amyloid Deposition in Late-Life Depression

Christopher Marano; Clifford I. Workman; Christopher H. Lyman; Tova Narrow; Yun Zhou; Cynthia A. Munro; Robert F. Dannals; Daniel P. Holt; Jeannie-Marie S. Leoutsakos; Constantine G. Lyketsos; Dean Wong; Gwenn S. Smith

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Gwenn S. Smith

University of Pittsburgh

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Christopher Marano

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Cynthia A. Munro

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Carol R. Hermann

North Shore-LIJ Health System

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David Eidelberg

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Elisse Kramer

North Shore-LIJ Health System

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Thomas Chaly

North Shore-LIJ Health System

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Vijay Dhawan

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Yilong Ma

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Yun Zhou

Johns Hopkins University

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