Houwei Wu
North Shore-LIJ Health System
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Featured researches published by Houwei Wu.
Schizophrenia Research | 1995
Robert M. Bilder; Bernhard Bogerts; Manzar Ashtari; Houwei Wu; Jose Alvir; Darlene Jody; Gail Reiter; Lisa Bell; Jeffrey A. Lieberman
This study examined relations of mesiotemporal lobe tissue volumes with neuropsychological (NP) functions in a sample of patients with first episode schizophrenia. Three contiguous compartments of the mesiotemporal lobe were measured on magnetic resonance images, comprising primarily amygdaloid, anterior hippocampal, and posterior hippocampal tissue volumes. NP measures were derived from a comprehensive battery. Decreased volume selectively in the anterior hippocampal formation was associated with lower scores on measures of executive and motor functions usually considered sensitive to the integrity of frontal lobe systems. Measures of other NP functions, and global intellectual ability, were not related to mesiotemporal volumes. The findings that morphologic abnormalities in the mesiotemporal lobe are associated with impairment of frontal lobe functions point to a defect in an integrated functional system that includes both frontal and mesiotemporal components. The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that neurodevelopmental defects affecting the morphology of the anterior hippocampal formation may be manifest later in life as impairments in fronto-limbic control. .
Psychological Medicine | 1999
Manzar Ashtari; Blaine S. Greenwald; Elisse Kramer-Ginsberg; Jian Hu; Houwei Wu; Mahendra Patel; P. Aupperle; S. Pollack
BACKGROUND The hippocampus, amygdala and related functional circuits have been implicated in the regulation of emotional expression and memory processes, which are affected in major depression. Several recent investigations have reported abnormalities in these structures in adult and elderly depressives. METHODS Elderly DSM-III-R unipolar depressives (N = 40) and normal controls (N = 46) participated in a magnetic resonance imaging study (1.0T). Brain images were obtained in the coronal plane. Using established anatomical guidelines for structure delineation, volumetric measurements of left and right hippocampus and anterior hippocampus/amygdala complex were completed under blinded conditions using a semi-automated computer mensuration system, with patients and controls in random order. RESULTS Medial temporal volumes did not significantly distinguish either elderly depressed and age-similar normal control subjects, or late onset and early onset depressed patients (ANCOVA). Major overlap of measured volumes existed between patient and control groups. In depressives, hippocampal volumes significantly correlated with age, and cognitive and depression ratings, but not with number of prior depressive episodes or age-at-onset of first depression. CONCLUSIONS Hippocampal volumes do not discriminate a typical clinical population of elderly depressed patients from age-similar normal control subjects. If hippocampal dysfunction contributes to a diagnosis of syndromal depression in the elderly, such dysfunction does not appear to be regularly reflected in structural abnormalities captured by volumetric measurement as conducted. On the other hand, relationships between hippocampal volumes and clinical phenomena in depressives, but not controls, suggest potentially meaningful interactions between hippocampal structure and the expression of major depression in the elderly.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2001
Blaine S. Greenwald; Elisse Kramer-Ginsberg; K. Ranga Rama Krishnan; Jian Hu; Manzar Ashtari; Houwei Wu; Peter Aupperle; Mahendra Patel; Simcha Pollack
To compare the frequency/severity of signal hyperintensities—likely markers of cerebrovascular disease—in the subcortical gray and deep white matter on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of brains of hypertensive and normotensive older depressed and nondepressed comparison subjects.
Journal of Neuroimaging | 1998
Peter J. Snyder; Bernhard Bogerts; Houwei Wu; Robert M. Bilder; Kiran S. Deoras; Jeffrey A. Lieberman
Several recent studies have reported an association between midline cerebral malformations (e.g., corpus callosum, cavum septum pellucidum) and schizophrenia. The authors investigated whether absence of the adhesio interthalamica (AI), a midline structure that develops in concert with prominent features of the ventricular system soon after the bridge from the late embryonic stages to early fetal life, might constitute a marker of early developmental neuropathologic changes in schizophrenia. Eighty‐two patients (54 men, 28 women) with a diagnosis of first‐episode schizophrenia (FES) were recruited from consecutive admissions to a psychiatric inpatient service. Fifty‐two healthy control subjects (30 men, 22 women) were recruited and matched to the patient sample on distributions of sex and age. Magnetic resonance imaging studies were performed, and the presence versus absence of the AI was determined for each subject. The length and volume of the third ventricle were measured for each subject. The AI was found to be absent more often among patients with FES compared with control subjects, and patients without an observable AI also had larger third‐ventricle volumes. These differences in presence or absence of the AI observed in vivo (but not in a comparable postmortem sample of histologically fixed and prepared brain slices), which are likely related to third‐ventricle enlargement, may represent yet another early developmental marker of cerebral malformation among patients with FES.
Archives of General Psychiatry | 1999
Philip R. Szeszko; Delbert G. Robinson; Jose Alvir; Robert M. Bilder; Todd Lencz; Manzar Ashtari; Houwei Wu; Bernhard Bogerts
Archives of General Psychiatry | 1995
Delbert G. Robinson; Houwei Wu; Rafael A. Munne; Manzar Ashtari; Jose Alvir; Gail Lerner; A. Koreen; Karyl Cole; Bernhard Bogerts
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1999
Philip R. Szeszko; Robert M. Bilder; Todd Lencz; Simcha Pollack; Jose Alvir; Manzar Ashtari; Houwei Wu; Jeffrey A. Lieberman
Schizophrenia Research | 2000
Philip R. Szeszko; Robert M. Bilder; Todd Lencz; Manzar Ashtari; Robert Goldman; Gail Reiter; Houwei Wu; Jeffrey A. Lieberman
International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1999
Robert M. Bilder; Houwei Wu; Bernhard Bogerts; Manzar Ashtari; Delbert G. Robinson; Margaret G. Woerner; Jeffrey A. Lieberman; Gustav Degreef
American Journal of Psychiatry | 1999
Robert Leadbetter; Michael S. Shutty; Ahmed Elkashef; Darrell G. Kirch; Thomas Spraggins; Wayne S. Cail; Houwei Wu; Robert M. Bilder; J.A. Lieberman; Richard Jed Wyatt