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Dive into the research topics where Gilberto Sousa Alves is active.

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Featured researches published by Gilberto Sousa Alves.


Progress in Neurobiology | 2012

Cognitive and behavioural effects of physical exercise in psychiatric patients

Christian Knöchel; Viola Oertel-Knöchel; Laurence O’Dwyer; David Prvulovic; Gilberto Sousa Alves; Bianca Kollmann; Harald Hampel

The current review outlines the under-appreciated effects of physical exercise on the course of psychiatric disorders, focussing on recent findings from animal and human research. Several studies have shown that regular physical exercise is significantly beneficial for psychiatric patients both on a biological and a psychological level. Positive effects of controlled exercise include improved metabolic responses, neuro-protection, increased quality of life, and reduced psychopathological symptoms. Studies investigating the effectiveness of various physical training interventions in alleviating severe mental diseases, such as Alzheimers dementia (AD), schizophrenia (SZ) or major depressive disorder (MDD) indicate that physical exercise can relieve symptoms of depression, psychosis and dementia and more importantly can curtail further progression of these diseases. This review assesses the most effective methods of physical training for specific psychiatric symptoms. Introducing physical exercise in therapeutic regimes would be an innovative approach that could significantly reduce the severity of psychopathological and cognitive symptoms in patients. The positive biological and molecular outcomes associated with physical exercise render it a concrete therapeutic strategy for improving the quality of live and reducing physical illness in psychiatric patients. Therefore, integrating physical activity into a patients social life may be an effective treatment strategy. Furthermore, exercise might have the potential to be a preventative treatment within the context of multi-modal therapeutic programs.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Different Patterns of White Matter Degeneration Using Multiple Diffusion Indices and Volumetric Data in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer Patients

Gilberto Sousa Alves; Laurence O’Dwyer; Alina Jurcoane; Viola Oertel-Knöchel; Christian Knöchel; David Prvulovic; Felipe Kenji Sudo; Carlos Eduardo de Oliveira Alves; Letice Valente; Denise Madeira Moreira; Fabian Fuβer; Tarik Karakaya; Johannes Pantel; Eliasz Engelhardt; Jerson Laks

Alzheimeŕs disease (AD) represents the most prevalent neurodegenerative disorder that causes cognitive decline in old age. In its early stages, AD is associated with microstructural abnormalities in white matter (WM). In the current study, multiple indices of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and brain volumetric measurements were employed to comprehensively investigate the landscape of AD pathology. The sample comprised 58 individuals including cognitively normal subjects (controls), amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD patients. Relative to controls, both MCI and AD subjects showed widespread changes of anisotropic fraction (FA) in the corpus callosum, cingulate and uncinate fasciculus. Mean diffusivity and radial changes were also observed in AD patients in comparison with controls. After controlling for the gray matter atrophy the number of regions of significantly lower FA in AD patients relative to controls was decreased; nonetheless, unique areas of microstructural damage remained, e.g., the corpus callosum and uncinate fasciculus. Despite sample size limitations, the current results suggest that a combination of secondary and primary degeneration occurrs in MCI and AD, although the secondary degeneration appears to have a more critical role during the stages of disease involving dementia.


Schizophrenia Research | 2012

Association between white matter fiber integrity and subclinical psychotic symptoms in schizophrenia patients and unaffected relatives

Christian Knöchel; Laurence O'Dwyer; Gilberto Sousa Alves; Britta Reinke; Jörg Magerkurth; Anna Rotarska-Jagiela; David Prvulovic; Harald Hampel; David Edmund Johannes Linden; Viola Oertel-Knöchel

In this study, we investigate whether aberrant integrity of white matter (WM) fiber tracts represents a genetically determined biological marker of schizophrenia (SZ), and its relation with clinical symptoms. We collected brain DTI data from 28 SZ patients, 18 first-degree relatives and 22 matched controls and used voxel-based analysis with tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) in order to compare fractional anisotropy (FA) between groups. Mean voxel-based FA values from the entire skeleton of each group were compared. We did a multiple regression analysis, followed by single post-hoc contrasts between groups. FA values were extracted from the statistically significant areas. The results showed significantly smaller FA values for SZ patients in comparison with controls in cortico-spinal tracts, in commissural fibers, in thalamic projections, in association fibers and in cingulum bundles. A significant increase of FA in SZ patients in comparison with healthy controls was only found in the arcuate fasciculus. Relatives had intermediate values between patients and controls which were deemed significant in the comparison to patients and controls in association fibers, arcuate fasciculus and cingulum bundles. Lower FA values in association fibers were significantly associated with predisposition toward hallucinations (in SZ patients and relatives), with higher PANSS scores of positive symptoms and with duration of illness (SZ patients). Our results suggest that clinical and subclinical presentations of psychotic symptoms are associated with aberrant integrity of multiple WM tracts. This association may represent an endophenotype of schizophrenia, since it is present in unaffected relatives as well. Such endophenotypes may serve as quantitative traits for future genetic studies and as candidate markers for early and preclinical identification of subjects at risk.


Cns & Neurological Disorders-drug Targets | 2015

Cognitive Dysfunction in Depression – Pathophysiology and Novel Targets

André F. Carvalho; Kamilla K. Miskowiak; Thomas Hyphantis; Cristiano A. Köhler; Gilberto Sousa Alves; Beatrice Bortolato; Paulo Marcelo Gondim Sales; Rodrigo Machado-Vieira; Michael Berk; Roger S. McIntyre

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is associated with cognitive dysfunction encompassing several domains, including memory, executive function, processing speed and attention. Cognitive deficits persist in a significant proportion of patients even in remission, compromising psychosocial functioning and workforce performance. While monoaminergic antidepressants may improve cognitive performance in MDD, most antidepressants have limited clinical efficacy. The overarching aims of this review were: (1) to synthesize extant literature on putative biological pathways related to cognitive dysfunction in MDD and (2) to review novel neurotherapeutic targets for cognitive enhancement in MDD. We found that reciprocal and overlapping biological pathways may contribute to cognitive dysfunction in MDD, including an hyperactive hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, an increase in oxidative and nitrosative stress, inflammation (e.g., enhanced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines), mitochondrial dysfunction, increased apoptosis as well as a diminished neurotrophic support. Several promising neurotherapeutic targets were identified such as minocycline, statins, anti-inflammatory compounds, N-acetylcysteine, omega-3 poliunsaturated fatty acids, erythropoietin, thiazolidinediones, glucagon-like peptide-1 analogues, S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAMe), cocoa flavonols, creatine monohydrate and lithium. Erythropoietin and SAMe had pro-cognitive effects in randomized controlled trials (RCT) involving MDD patients. Despite having preclinical and/or preliminary evidences from trials suggesting possible efficacy as novel cognitive enhancing agents for MDD, no RCT to date was performed for most of the other therapeutic targets reviewed herein. In conclusion, multiple biological pathways are involved in cognitive dysfunction in MDD. RCTs testing genuinely novel pro-cognitive compounds for MDD are warranted.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2016

T helper 17 cells may drive neuroprogression in major depressive disorder: proposal of an integrative model

Anastasiya Slyepchenko; Michael Maes; Cristiano A. Köhler; George M. Anderson; João Quevedo; Gilberto Sousa Alves; Michael Berk; Brisa Simoes Fernandes; André F. Carvalho

The exact pathophysiology of major depressive disorder (MDD) remains elusive. The monoamine theory, which hypothesizes that MDD emerges as a result of dysfunctional serotonergic, dopaminergic and noradrenergic pathways, has guided the therapy of this illness for several decades. More recently, the involvement of activated immune, oxidative and nitrosative stress pathways and of decreased levels of neurotrophic factors has provided emerging insights regarding the pathophysiology of MDD, leading to integrated theories emphasizing the complex interplay of these mechanisms that could lead to neuroprogression. In this review, we propose an integrative model suggesting that T helper 17 (Th17) cells play a pivotal role in the pathophysiology of MDD through (i) microglial activation, (ii) interactions with oxidative and nitrosative stress, (iii) increases of autoantibody production and the propensity for autoimmunity, (iv) disruption of the blood-brain barrier, and (v) dysregulation of the gut mucosa and microbiota. The clinical and research implications of this model are discussed.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2012

Association of microstructural white matter abnormalities with cognitive dysfunction in geriatric patients with major depression.

Gilberto Sousa Alves; Tarik Karakaya; Fabian Fußer; Martha Kordulla; Laurence O'Dwyer; Julia Christl; Jörg Magerkurth; Viola Oertel-Knöchel; Christian Knöchel; David Prvulovic; Alina Jurcoane; Jerson Laks; Eliasz Engelhardt; Harald Hampel; Johannes Pantel

Major depression disorder (MDD) is one of the most common causes of disability in people over 60years of age. Previous studies have linked affective and cognitive symptoms of MDD to white matter (WM) disruption in limbic-cortical circuits. However, the relationship between clinical cognitive deficits and loss of integrity in particular WM tracts is poorly understood. Fractional anisotropy (FA) as a measure of WM integrity was investigated in 17 elderly MDD subjects in comparison with 18 age-matched controls using tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) and correlated with clinical and cognitive parameters. MDD patients revealed significantly reduced FA in the right posterior cingulate cluster (PCC) compared with controls. FA in the right PCC (but not in the left PCC) showed a significant positive correlation with performance in a verbal naming task, and showed a non-significant trend toward a correlation with verbal fluency and episodic memory performance. In control subjects, no correlations were found between cognitive tasks and FA values either in the right or left PCC. Results provide additional evidence supporting the neuronal disconnection hypothesis in MDD and suggest that cognitive deficits are related to the loss of integrity in WM tracts associated with the disorder.


BioMed Research International | 2015

Integrating Retrogenesis Theory to Alzheimer’s Disease Pathology: Insight from DTI-TBSS Investigation of the White Matter Microstructural Integrity

Gilberto Sousa Alves; Viola Oertel Knöchel; Christian Knöchel; André F. Carvalho; Johannes Pantel; Eliasz Engelhardt; Jerson Laks

Microstructural abnormalities in white matter (WM) are often reported in Alzheimers disease (AD) and may reflect primary or secondary circuitry degeneration (i.e., due to cortical atrophy). The interpretation of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) eigenvectors, known as multiple indices, may provide new insights into the main pathological models supporting primary or secondary patterns of WM disruption in AD, the retrogenesis, and Wallerian degeneration models, respectively. The aim of this review is to analyze the current literature on the contribution of DTI multiple indices to the understanding of AD neuropathology, taking the retrogenesis model as a reference for discussion. A systematic review using MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PUBMED was performed. Evidence suggests that AD evolves through distinct patterns of WM disruption, in which retrogenesis or, alternatively, the Wallerian degeneration may prevail. Distinct patterns of WM atrophy may be influenced by complex interactions which comprise disease status and progression, fiber localization, concurrent risk factors (i.e., vascular disease, gender), and cognitive reserve. The use of DTI multiple indices in addition to other standard multimodal methods in dementia research may help to determine the contribution of retrogenesis hypothesis to the understanding of neuropathological hallmarks that lead to AD.


Current Neuropharmacology | 2015

Beyond Monoamines-Novel Targets for Treatment-Resistant Depression: A Comprehensive Review.

Joshua D. Rosenblat; Roger S. McIntyre; Gilberto Sousa Alves; Konstantinos N. Fountoulakis; André F. Carvalho

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a leading cause of disability worldwide. Current first line therapies target modulation of the monoamine system. A large variety of agents are currently available that effectively alter monoamine levels; however, approximately one third of MDD patients remain treatment refractory after adequate trials of multiple monoamine based therapies. Therefore, patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD) may require modulation of pathways outside of the classic monoamine system. The purpose of this review was thus to discuss novel targets for TRD, to describe their potential mechanisms of action, the available clinical evidence for these targets, the limitations of available evidence as well as future research directions. Several alternate pathways involved in the patho-etiology of TRD have been uncovered including the following: inflammatory pathways, the oxidative stress pathway, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, the metabolic and bioenergetics system, neurotrophic pathways, the glutamate system, the opioid system and the cholinergic system. For each of these systems, several targets have been assessed in preclinical and clinical models. Preclinical models strongly implicate these pathways in the patho-etiology of MDD. Clinical trials for TRD have been conducted for several novel targets; however, most of the trials discussed are small and several are uncontrolled. Therefore, further clinical trials are required to assess the true efficacy of these targets for TRD. As well, several promising novel agents have been clinically tested in MDD populations, but have yet to be assessed specifically for TRD. Thus, their applicability to TRD remains unknown.


Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria | 2015

Religious coping and its influence on psychological distress, medication adherence, and quality of life in inflammatory bowel disease

Thiago H. Freitas; Thomas Hyphantis; Elias Andreoulakis; João Quevedo; Hesley Ll Miranda; Gilberto Sousa Alves; Marcellus H.L.P. Souza; Lucia Libanez Bessa Campelo Braga; Kenneth I. Pargament; Joanna K. Soczynska; Roger S. McIntyre; André F. Carvalho

OBJECTIVE Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is associated with elevated levels of anxiety and depression and a reduction in health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Nonadherence to treatment is also frequent in IBD and compromises outcomes. Religious coping plays a role in the adaptation to several chronic diseases. However, the influence of religious coping on IBD-related psychological distress, HRQoL, and treatment adherence remains unknown. METHOD This cross-sectional study recruited 147 consecutive patients with either Crohns disease or ulcerative colitis. Sociodemographic data, disease-related variables, psychological distress (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), religious coping (Brief RCOPE Scale), HRQoL (WHOQOL-Bref), and adherence (8-item Morisky Medication Adherence Scale) were assessed. Hierarchical multiple regression models were used to evaluate the effects of religious coping on IBD-related psychological distress, treatment adherence, and HRQoL. RESULTS Positive RCOPE was negatively associated with anxiety (b = 0.256; p = 0.007) as well as with overall, physical, and mental health HRQoL. Religious struggle was significantly associated with depression (b = 0.307; p < 0.001) and self-reported adherence (b = 0.258; p = 0.009). Finally, anxiety symptoms fully mediated the effect of positive religious coping on overall HRQoL. CONCLUSION Religious coping is significantly associated with psychological distress, HRQoL, and adherence in IBD.


Current Alzheimer Research | 2016

Neuropsychiatric Disturbances in Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI): A Systematic Review of Population-Based Studies.

Cristiano A. Köhler; Thaís F. Magalhaes; Joao M.M.P. Oliveira; Gilberto Sousa Alves; Christian Knöchel; Viola Oertel-Knöchel; Johannes Pantel; André F. Carvalho

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a nosological entity associated with a higher risk of developing dementia. Previous evidence indicates that behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSDs) frequently occur in individuals of MCI. These neuropsychiatric manifestations may predict conversion to dementia. However, no updated systematic review has been conducted aiming to investigate the prevalence of BPSDs in MCI in general population samples. We conducted a systematic review to summarize research results regarding the prevalence of any or specific BPSDs in MCI subjects out of the clinical setting, compared to subjects who are either cognitively intact and/or demented. The PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PsycInfo databases were searched from January 1st, 1990 to January 3rd, 2015 for general population studies in which the prevalence of BPSDs in individuals with MCI was estimated. Twenty-one studies met inclusion criteria. Studies varied in overall methodological quality as evaluated with a modified version of the New Castle-Ottawa Scale for cross-sectional studies. Depression (median prevalence: 29.8%; range: 6.8-63.3%), sleep disturbances (median prevalence: 18.3%; range: 7.9-49.0%), and apathy (median prevalence: 15.2%; range: 2.3-18.5%) were the more frequent BPSDs across studies. The prevalence range for any BPSD was 12.8-66.0%. No consistent pattern for differences in the prevalence of BPSDs according to MCI subtype emerged. Studies considered different diagnostic criteria for MCI and used different instruments to assess BPSDs in this population. In conclusion, BPSDs are prevalent among communitydwelling individuals with MCI. However, consistent socio-demographic and clinical correlates for BPSDs in this population remains to be established.

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Christian Knöchel

Goethe University Frankfurt

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David Prvulovic

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Jerson Laks

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Eliasz Engelhardt

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Felipe Kenji Sudo

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Johannes Pantel

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Andreas Reif

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Michael Stäblein

Goethe University Frankfurt

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