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Dive into the research topics where Eli Iacob is active.

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Featured researches published by Eli Iacob.


Pain Research and Treatment | 2012

Genetics and Gene Expression Involving Stress and Distress Pathways in Fibromyalgia with and without Comorbid Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Kathleen C. Light; Andrea T. White; Scott C Tadler; Eli Iacob; Alan R. Light

In complex multisymptom disorders like fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) that are defined primarily by subjective symptoms, genetic and gene expression profiles can provide very useful objective information. This paper summarizes research on genes that may be linked to increased susceptibility in developing and maintaining these disorders, and research on resting and stressor-evoked changes in leukocyte gene expression, highlighting physiological pathways linked to stress and distress. These include the adrenergic nervous system, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and serotonergic pathways, and exercise responsive metabolite-detecting ion channels. The findings to date provide some support for both inherited susceptibility and/or physiological dysregulation in all three systems, particularly for catechol-O-methyl transferase (COMT) genes, the glucocorticoid and the related mineralocorticoid receptors (NR3C1, NR3C2), and the purinergic 2X4 (P2X4) ion channel involved as a sensory receptor for muscle pain and fatigue and also in upregulation of spinal microglia in chronic pain models. Methodological concerns for future research, including potential influences of comorbid clinical depression and antidepressants and other medications, on gene expression are also addressed.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Antidepressant and Neurocognitive Effects of Isoflurane Anesthesia versus Electroconvulsive Therapy in Refractory Depression

Howard Weeks; Scott C Tadler; Kelly W. Smith; Eli Iacob; Mikala Saccoman; Andrea T. White; Joshua D. Landvatter; Gordon J. Chelune; Yana Suchy; Elaine Clark; Michael K. Cahalan; Lowry Bushnell; Derek Sakata; Alan R. Light; Kathleen C. Light

Background Many patients have serious depression that is nonresponsive to medications, but refuse electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). Early research suggested that isoflurane anesthesia may be an effective alternative to ECT. Subsequent studies altered drug, dose or number of treatments, and failed to replicate this success, halting research on isofluranes antidepressant effects for a decade. Our aim was to re-examine whether isoflurane has antidepressant effects comparable to ECT, with less adverse effects on cognition. Method Patients with medication-refractory depression received an average of 10 treatments of bifrontal ECT (n = 20) or isoflurane (n = 8) over 3 weeks. Depression severity (Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression-24) and neurocognitive responses (anterograde and retrograde memory, processing speed and verbal fluency) were assessed at Pretreatment, Post all treatments and 4-week Follow-up. Results Both treatments produced significant reductions in depression scores at Post-treatment and 4-week Follow-up; however, ECT had modestly better antidepressant effect at follow-up in severity-matched patients. Immediately Post-treatment, ECT (but not isoflurane) patients showed declines in memory, fluency, and processing speed. At Follow-up, only autobiographical memory remained below Pretreatment level for ECT patients, but isoflurane patients had greater test-retest neurocognitive score improvement. Conclusions Our data reconfirm that isoflurane has an antidepressant effect approaching ECT with less adverse neurocognitive effects, and reinforce the need for a larger clinical trial.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2013

Differing leukocyte gene expression profiles associated with fatigue in patients with prostate cancer versus chronic fatigue syndrome

Kathleen C. Light; Neeraj Agarwal; Eli Iacob; Andrea T. White; Anita Y. Kinney; Timothy A. VanHaitsma; Hannah Aizad; Ronald W. Hughen; Lucinda Bateman; Alan R. Light

BACKGROUND Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) often worsens fatigue in patients with prostate cancer, producing symptoms similar to chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Comparing expression (mRNA) of many fatigue-related genes in patients with ADT-treated prostate cancer versus with CFS versus healthy controls, and correlating mRNA with fatigue severity may clarify the differing pathways underlying fatigue in these conditions. METHODS Quantitative real-time PCR was performed on leukocytes from 30 fatigued, ADT-treated prostate cancer patients (PCF), 39 patients with CFS and 22 controls aged 40-79, together with ratings of fatigue and pain severity. 46 genes from these pathways were included: (1) adrenergic/monoamine/neuropeptides, (2) immune, (3) metabolite-detecting, (4) mitochondrial/energy, (5) transcription factors. RESULTS PCF patients showed higher expression than controls or CFS of 2 immune transcription genes (NR3C1 and TLR4), chemokine CXCR4, and mitochondrial gene SOD2. They showed lower expression of 2 vasodilation-related genes (ADRB2 and VIPR2), 2 cytokines (TNF and LTA), and 2 metabolite-detecting receptors (ASIC3 and P2RX7). CFS patients showed higher P2RX7 and lower HSPA2 versus controls and PCF. Correlations with fatigue severity were similar in PCF and CFS for only DBI, the GABA-A receptor modulator (r=-0.50, p<0.005 and r=-0.34, p<0.05). Purinergic P2RY1 was correlated only with PCF fatigue and pain severity (r=+0.43 and +0.59, p=0.025 and p=0.001). CONCLUSIONS PCF patients differed from controls and CFS in mean expression of 10 genes from all 5 pathways. Correlations with fatigue severity implicated DBI for both patient groups and P2RY1 for PCF only. These pathways may provide new targets for interventions to reduce fatigue.


BMC Psychiatry | 2013

Dysregulation of leukocyte gene expression in women with medication-refractory depression versus healthy non-depressed controls

Eli Iacob; Kathleen C. Light; Scott C Tadler; Howard Weeks; Andrea T. White; Ronald W. Hughen; Timothy A. VanHaitsma; Lowry Bushnell; Alan R. Light

BackgroundDepressive Disorders (DD) are a great financial and social burden. Females display 70% higher rate of depression than males and more than 30% of these patients do not respond to conventional medications. Thus medication-refractory female patients are a large, under-served, group where new biological targets for intervention are greatly needed.MethodsWe used real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to evaluate mRNA gene expression from peripheral blood leukocytes for 27 genes, including immune, HPA-axis, ion channels, and growth and transcription factors. Our sample included 23 females with medication refractory DD: 13 with major depressive disorder (MDD), 10 with bipolar disorder (BPD). Our comparison group was 19 healthy, non-depressed female controls. We examined differences in mRNA expression in DD vs. controls, in MDD vs. BPD, and in patients with greater vs. lesser depression severity.ResultsDD patients showed increased expression for IL-10, IL-6, OXTR, P2RX7, P2RY1, and TRPV1. BPD patients showed increased APP, CREB1, NFKB1, NR3C1, and SPARC and decreased TNF expression. Depression severity was related to increased IL-10, P2RY1, P2RX1, and TRPV4 expression.ConclusionsThese results support prior findings of dysregulation in immune genes, and provide preliminary evidence of dysregulation in purinergic and other ion channels in females with medication-refractory depression, and in transcription and growth factors in those with BPD. If replicated in future research examining protein levels as well as mRNA, these pathways could potentially be used to explore biological mechanisms of depression and to develop new drug targets.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2016

Gene Expression Factor Analysis to Differentiate Pathways Linked to Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and Depression in a Diverse Patient Sample

Eli Iacob; Alan R. Light; Gary W. Donaldson; Akiko Okifuji; Ronald W. Hughen; Andrea T. White; Kathleen C. Light

To determine if independent candidate genes can be grouped into meaningful biologic factors, and whether these factors are associated with the diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS), while controlling for comorbid depression, sex, and age.


Pain Medicine | 2018

Tertiary Care Clinical Experience with Intravenous Lidocaine Infusions for the Treatment of Chronic Pain

Eli Iacob; Reviewed by: Emily Hagn; Jill E. Sindt; Shane E. Brogan; Scott C Tadler; Konrad S Kennington; Bradford D. Hare; Christina E Bokat; Gary W. Donaldson; Akiko Okifuji; Scott Junkins

Objective To evaluate the safety of and long-term pain relief due to intravenous lidocaine infusion for the treatment of chronic pain in a tertiary pain management clinic. Design Retrospective chart review. Methods Medical records were reviewed from 233 adult chronic pain patients who underwent one to three lidocaine infusions. The initial lidocaine challenge consisted of 1,000 mg/h administered intravenously for up to 30 minutes until infusion was complete, full pain resolution, the patient requested to stop, side effects (SEs) became intolerable, and/or if there were any safety concerns. Subsequent infusions were tailored to patient response. Data reviewed included pain diagnosis, lidocaine dose, SEs, and duration of pain relief documented at a follow-up visit. Results Patients primarily had neuropathic pain (80%), were 94% white, 58% were female, and there was an average pain duration of 7.9 years. SEs were usually mild and transient, including perioral tingling, dizziness, tinnitus, and nausea/vomiting, and they were uncommon after the initial infusion. Overall, 41% of patients showed long-lasting pain relief, with positive response to the initial infusion associated with receiving and benefitting from subsequent infusions. Benefit by pain diagnoses varied from 32% to 58%. Conclusions Our retrospective study in a heterogeneous population with chronic pain suggests that intravenous lidocaine is a safe treatment. Data also suggest long-term pain relief in a significant proportion of patients. Additional study is important in order to delineate patient selection, determine optimal dosing and treatment frequency, assess pain reduction and duration, and treatment cost-effectiveness.


Pain | 2017

Activity rhythms and clinical correlates in fibromyalgia

Ariel B. Neikrug; Gary W. Donaldson; Eli Iacob; Samuel Williams; Christopher A. Hamilton; Akiko Okifuji

Abstract The primary aim of this study was to evaluate activity rhythms in fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) and their association with FMS-related symptoms. We hypothesized that stronger and more consistent activity rhythms would be associated with reduced symptom severity and presentation in FMS. Two hundred ninety-two patients with FMS (mean age = 45.1 ± 11.1; 272 women) provided a 7-day actigraphy recording and responses to questionnaires addressing degree of pain, fatigue, mood, and physical impairment. Using a simple cosine model, we extracted Amplitude (activity range), Phi (time at maximum), Mesor (mean activity), and their variabilities (across days) from each participants actigraphy. The clinical and actigraphic measures were operationally independent. There was a significant canonical relationship between activity rhythm parameters and clinical FMS measures (r = 0.376, R2 = 0.14, P < 0.001). The set of Mesor, Amplitude, and Phi activity parameters remained associated with clinical measures when controlled statistically for both demographics and activity variability (P < 0.001). Each activity parameter provided unique discrimination of the clinical set by multivariate test (P = 0.003, 0.018, and 0.007 for Amplitude, Phi, and Mesor, respectively). These results revealed that better pain, fatigue, mood, physical impairment, and sleep outcomes were associated with higher activity range and more rhythmicity (Amplitude), increased mean activity (Mesor), and with earlier timing of peak activity (Phi). Exploratory analyses revealed significantly worse sleep for individuals with low Amplitude and more delayed Phi.


Journal of NeuroVirology | 2012

The activity within the CA3 excitatory network during Theiler's virus encephalitis is distinct from that observed during chronic epilepsy

Roy M. Smeal; Kerry Ann A Stewart; Eli Iacob; Robert S. Fujinami; H. Steve White; Karen S. Wilcox


Depression Research and Treatment | 2014

Leukocyte Gene Expression in Patients with Medication Refractory Depression before and after Treatment with ECT or Isoflurane Anesthesia: A Pilot Study

Eli Iacob; Scott C Tadler; Kathleen C. Light; Howard Weeks; Kelly W. Smith; Andrea T. White; Ronald W. Hughen; Timothy A. VanHaitsma; Lowry Bushnell; Alan R. Light


The Journal of Pain | 2016

(121) Self-report ecological momentary assessment in patients with fibromyalgia to examine temporal relationships between pain with mood, fatigue, and sleep

Eli Iacob; Gary W. Donaldson; A. Neikrug; Yoshio Nakamura; Akiko Okifuji

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