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Dive into the research topics where Frederick A. Struve is active.

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Featured researches published by Frederick A. Struve.


Brain Research | 1992

Electrical states in the rabbit brain can be altered by light and electromagnetic fields

Glenn B. Bell; Andrew A. Marino; Andrew L. Chesson; Frederick A. Struve

The effect of low-frequency magnetic fields on the rabbit electroencephalograph (EEG) was studied using a quantitative procedure that permitted statistical evaluation of the response of individual animals. The field conditions used were those predicted by various theories to result in field-animal interactions; light and sham exposure were employed as positive and negative controls, respectively. Sixty-seven percent of the rabbits exhibited changes in the EEG power spectra when light was presented in 2-s epochs; none of the animals responded to sham exposure. When 1 Gauss, 5 Hz, was presented in 2-s epochs, 100% of the animals tested responded to the presence of the field. The rabbits did not respond when the magnetic-field frequency was higher than the physiological range (1-20 Hz) or when it was tuned for resonance of K+. The results showed that an electrical state function may be operationally defined for the rabbit brain, and used to assess the occurrence of an interaction between an animal and external magnetic fields.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 1999

Topographic quantitative EEG sequelae of chronic marihuana use: a replication using medically and psychiatrically screened normal subjects

Frederick A. Struve; John J. Straumanis; Gloria Patrick; John Leavitt; Joseph E. Manno; Barbara R. Manno

In two previous studies it was reported that chronic marihuana (THC) use was associated with unique quantitative EEG features which were present in the non-intoxicated state. THC users, as contrasted with controls, had significant elevations of Absolute Power, Relative Power, and Coherence of alpha activity over the bilateral frontal cortex. Furthermore, a quantitative EEG discriminant function analyses permitted a 95% correct user versus non-user classification. However, because all of the THC users and 58% of the non-user controls were psychiatric inpatients, diagnostic and medication effects, if any, were uncontrolled. In the present study the same quantitative EEG methods were used to study daily THC users and non-user controls who underwent a rigorous screening process to insure that they were medically and psychiatrically healthy. The results of previous studies were replicated and an additional EEG correlate of chronic THC exposure (reduced alpha frequency) was identified.


The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology | 1994

Habituation and Motion Sickness

Charles D. Wood; John J. Stewart; Mary J. Wood; Frederick A. Struve; John J. Straumanis; Malcolm E. Mims; Gloria Patrick

The vestibular, cerebellar, and reticular systems are central in importance, in motion sickness and habituation, to the effects of motion. Nuclear medicine single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) studies of cerebral blood flow and power spectral electroencephalographic recordings during motion sickness were used to determine alterations in the central nervous system. The rotating chair with and without visual stimulation was used to study the rate of habituation and the effect of antimotion sickness medications on this rate. An increase of theta waves over the frontal cortex indicated a decreased activation of the higher centers during motion sickness. Motion sickness also produces an increase of blood flow in the central cerebellum that has connections to the reticular system. This increase in cerebellar activity is relayed to the reticular system whereby neural recruitment builds up to trigger the vomiting center, producing motion sickness. Habituation may be a conditioned compensatory activation of the reticular neurons that prevents this disruption of normal activation. The rate of habituation when motion sickness was prevented by scopolamine was slowed, indicating that, if the central nervous system is not challenged by disruption of normal activation, it does not produce the compensatory reactions that result in habituation.


Clinical Eeg and Neuroscience | 1997

Early and Middle Latency Evoked Potentials in Medically and Psychiatrically Normal Daily Marihuana Users: A Paucity of Significant Findings

Gloria Patrick; John J. Straumanis; Frederick A. Struve; Mary Jo Fitz-Gerald; Joseph E. Manno

The use of evoked potentials to study CNS effects of marihuana (THC) have produced inconsistent findings. Our previous pilot studies suggested that auditory P300 latencies and amplitudes, auditory P50 and somatosensory P30 amplitudes and brainstem auditory evoked potential latencies were altered in THC users. Because these findings were flawed by uncontrolled psychiatric diagnostic and medication variables, we undertook a controlled investigation of screened medically and psychiatrically normal THC users and controls. When age effects were controlled, THC related alterations of brain stem and both auditory and visual P300 responses could not be seen. This report extends our analyses to other auditory, somatosensory and visual evoked potentials. With the possible exception of an elevated auditory P50 amplitude, significant evoked potential correlates to daily THC use were not seen when normals were studied and age effects controlled.


Clinical Eeg and Neuroscience | 1997

Decreased multi-band posterior interhemispheric coherence with a lipoma on the corpus callosum: a case report of a possible association.

H. B. Pinkofsky; Frederick A. Struve; M. A. Meyer; Gloria Patrick; Roy R. Reeves

The corpus callosum plays a role in mediating interhemisphere communication. Coherence may be a quantitative EEG-based measure of this communication. The present report is of a female schizophrenic patient with a marked coherence deficit in the temporal-parietal-occipital region involving multiple frequency bands. An MRI scan of her brain revealed a lipoma involving the splenium of the corpus callosum. It is speculated that this lipoma may have caused a physical impingment on or developmental aberration of adjacent callosal fibers, resulting in the observed coherence deficit. Further studies of coherence measures in patients with collosal lipomas are proposed.


Clinical Eeg and Neuroscience | 1995

Topographic Quantitative EEG Measures of Alpha and Theta Power Changes during Caffeine Withdrawal: Preliminary Findings from Normal Subjects

Roy R. Reeves; Frederick A. Struve; Gloria Patrick; John A. Bullen

Neurophysiological consequences of withdrawal from caffeine are poorly understood. In particular, quantitative studies of EEG changes that may occur during the period of caffeine abstinence in caffeine dependent individuals have not been reported. In this pilot study, 13 physically- and psychiatrically-normal caffeine users were asked to abstain from caffeine for a period of 4 days. Quantitative EEGs were obtained prior to stopping caffeine and on Days 1, 2, and 4 of the caffeine abstinence period. Results indicated that significant increases in alpha and theta absolute power accompany the caffeine withdrawal process with return to the pre-abstinent EEG levels when caffeine usage is resumed. The implications of these findings are discussed with special reference to the possible need to control for the variable of caffeine usage in quantitative EEG studies of other phenomena.


Clinical Eeg and Neuroscience | 1994

Brainstem Auditory Response (BAER) in Polydrug Abuse

Gloria Patrick; Frederick A. Struve

Based on preliminary data suggesting that polydrug abuser subjects may have delayed wave V BAER latencies, we contrasted BAER latency and amplitude measures between a group of polydrug users and six different comparison groups of subjects drawn from our laboratory files. A series of analyses showed that BAER latencies were, in fact, prolonged for psychiatric polydrug users as compared with groups of medically screened and unscreened normals not using drugs and normals using marijuana only. However, further analyses which compared polydrug abusers with nondrug users or marijuana-only users drawn from a psychiatric patient population failed to confirm these differences, thus suggesting that psychiatric status was more important than polydrug abuse in producing BAER alterations. Furthermore, subsidiary analyses using wave I latency as statistical covariate suggested that wave V latency prolongations could, under certain circumstances, be epiphenomena or reflections of earlier wave I alterations.


Journal of Addictive Diseases | 2000

Inadequacies of self-report data for exclusion criteria detection in marihuana research: an empirical case for multi-method direct examination screening.

Frederick A. Struve; John J. Straumanis; Joseph E. Manno; Mary-Jo Fitzgerald; Gloria Patrick; John Leavitt

Abstract Stringent exclusion criteria in drug abuse research are necessary to protect against methodological confounds compromising the interpretation of findings. However, reliance on self-report screening may fail to detect important exclusion variables. We compared three levels of exclusion criteria screening in a study of neurophysiological/neurocognitive sequelae of chronic marihuana use in normals. LEVEL 1 (self-report) consisted of telephone pre-screening. LEVEL 2 (also self-report) involved in-depth personal interviews. LEVEL 3 consisted of several direct examination assessments including a medical/psychiatric examination by a board certified psychiatrist, eight weeks of twice per week urine drug screens, an EEG exam and eight hours of neuropsychological testing. Results indicated that 39.0% of subjects passing self-report screening had significant exclusion criteria findings that were only detected through LEVEL 3 direct examination procedures. Of all subjects found to have exclusion criteria after being provisionally accepted following LEVEL 1 telephone pre-screening, 55.7% were detected only through more rigorous LEVEL 3 direct examination screening methods.


Clinical Eeg and Neuroscience | 1996

Does caffeine cessation increase firing rates of diffuse paroxysmal slowing dysrhythmia? A serendipitous observation.

Gloria Patrick; Roy R. Reeves; Frederick A. Struve

As part of a quantitative EEG study of caffeine withdrawal a serendipitous observation suggested that individuals with Diffuse Paroxysmal Slowing (a minor EEG dysrhythmia) in their baseline resting EEGs had an increased firing rate of this pattern while undergoing a period of caffeine abstinence. For all EEGs, individual bursts of Diffuse Paroxysmal Slowing were identified by consensus rating and the firing rate for this pattern expressed as the number of bursts per 10 minutes of alert waking activity. The firing rate of this pattern was seen to increase markedly during 4 days of verified abstinence and to return to baseline or lower than baseline levels following reintroduction of caffeine. Some possible implications of this phenomenon are discussed.


Journal of Addictive Diseases | 1999

Carisoprodol (soma): abuse potential and physician unawareness.

R. R. Reeves; O. S. Carter; H. B. Pinkofsky; Frederick A. Struve; D. M. Bennett

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Gloria Patrick

Louisiana State University

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Joseph E. Manno

Louisiana State University

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John Leavitt

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Roy R. Reeves

Louisiana State University

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Andrew A. Marino

Louisiana State University

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Andrew L. Chesson

Louisiana State University

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Barbara R. Manno

Louisiana State University

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Charles D. Wood

Louisiana State University

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