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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer E. Iudicello is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer E. Iudicello.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2008

HIV-associated prospective memory impairment increases risk of dependence in everyday functioning.

Steven Paul Woods; Jennifer E. Iudicello; Lisa M. Moran; Catherine L. Carey; Matthew S. Dawson; Igor Grant

HIV infection is associated with impairments in prospective memory (ProM), an aspect of episodic memory that refers to the ability to execute a future intention, such as remembering to take a medication at a specific time. The current study sought to examine the relationship between HIV-associated ProM impairment and the successful management of instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs). In a cohort of 66 HIV-infected individuals, ProM accounted for a significant proportion of variance in self-reported IADL dependence, over and above that which was explained by retrospective memory and by current affective distress. Analysis of component cognitive processes revealed that the relationship between HIV-associated ProM deficits and IADL dependence was driven by impaired cue detection and by deficits in self-initiated intention retrieval. Results were not better explained by demographic factors, HIV disease severity, psychiatric comorbidity, or substance use. Collectively, these data support the potential incremental ecological validity of ProM as a predictor of dependence in IADLs among persons living with HIV infection.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2012

Synergistic effects of HIV infection and older age on daily functioning.

Erin E. Morgan; Jennifer E. Iudicello; Erica Weber; Nichole A. Duarte; P. Katie Riggs; Lisa Delano-Wood; Ronald J. Ellis; Igor Grant; Steven Paul Woods

Objective:To determine whether HIV infection and aging act synergistically to disrupt everyday functioning. Design:Cross-sectional factorial study of everyday functioning in the context of HIV serostatus and age (⩽40 years vs. ≥50 years). Methods:One hundred three HIV+ and 87 HIV− participants were administered several measures of everyday functioning, including self-report indices of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and instrumental and basic activities of daily living (IADLs and BADLs), and objective measures of functioning, including employment and Karnofsky Performance Scale ratings. Results:Significant interaction effects of HIV and aging were observed for IADL and BADL declines, and for Karnofsky Performance Scale ratings (Ps < 0.05), independent of potentially confounding factors. Follow-up contrasts revealed significantly worse functioning in the older HIV+ group for most functional outcome measures relative to the other study groups (Ps < 0.05). A significant interaction effect was also observed on the emotional functioning HRQoL subscale, and additive effects of both age and HIV were observed for the physical functioning and general health perceptions HRQoL subscales (Ps < 0.05). Significant predictors of poorer functioning in the older HIV+ group included current major depressive disorder for all outcomes, and comorbid medical conditions, lower estimated premorbid functioning, neurocognitive impairment, and nadir CD4 count for selected outcomes. Conclusion:Findings suggest that older age may exacerbate the adverse effects of HIV on daily functioning, which highlights the importance of evaluating and monitoring the functional status of older HIV-infected adults. Early detection of functional difficulties could facilitate delivery of compensatory strategies (eg, cognitive remediation) or assistive services.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2010

Longer term improvement in neurocognitive functioning and affective distress among methamphetamine users who achieve stable abstinence

Jennifer E. Iudicello; Steven Paul Woods; Ofilio Vigil; J. Cobb Scott; Mariana Cherner; Robert K. Heaton; J. Hampton Atkinson; Igor Grant

Chronic use of methamphetamine (MA) is associated with neuropsychological dysfunction and affective distress. Some normalization of function has been reported after abstinence, but little in the way of data is available on the possible added benefits of long-term sobriety. To address this, we performed detailed neuropsychological and affective evaluations in 83 MA-dependent individuals at a baseline visit and following an average one-year interval period. Among the 83 MA-dependent participants, 25 remained abstinent, and 58 used MA at least once during the interval period. A total of 38 non-MA-addicted, demographically matched healthy comparison (i.e., HC) participants were also examined. At baseline, both MA-dependent participants who were able to maintain abstinence and those who were not performed significantly worse than the healthy comparison subjects on global neuropsychological functioning and were significantly more distressed. At the one-year follow-up, both the long-term abstainers and healthy comparison groups showed comparable global neuropsychological performance and affective distress levels, whereas the MA-dependent group who continued to use MA were worse than the comparison participants in terms of global neuropsychological functioning and affective distress. An interaction was observed between neuropsychological impairment at baseline, MA abstinence, and cognitive improvement, with abstinent MA-dependent participants who were neuropsychologically impaired at baseline demonstrating significantly and disproportionately greater improvement in processing speed and slightly greater improvement in motor abilities than the other participants. These results suggest partial recovery of neuropsychological functioning and improvement in affective distress upon sustained abstinence from MA that may extend beyond a year or more.


Journal of Addiction Medicine | 2013

Human immunodeficiency virus infection heightens concurrent risk of functional dependence in persons with long-term methamphetamine use

Kaitlin Blackstone; Jennifer E. Iudicello; Erin E. Morgan; Erica Weber; David Moore; Donald R. Franklin; Ronald J. Ellis; Igor Grant; Steven Paul Woods

Objectives:Disability among long-term methamphetamine (MA) users is multifactorial. This study examined the additive adverse impact of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, a common comorbidity in MA users, on functional dependence. Methods:A large cohort of participants (N = 798) stratified by lifetime MA-dependence diagnoses (ie, MA+ or MA−) and HIV serostatus (ie, HIV+ or HIV−) underwent comprehensive baseline neuromedical, neuropsychiatric, and functional research evaluations, including assessment of neurocognitive symptoms in daily life, instrumental and basic activities of daily living, and employment status. Results:Independent, additive effects of MA and HIV were observed across all measures of functional dependence, independent of other demographic, psychiatric, and substance-use factors. The prevalence of global functional dependence increased in the expected stepwise fashion across the cohort, with the lowest rates in the MA−/HIV− group (29%) and the highest rates in the MA+/HIV+ sample (69%). The impact of HIV on MA-associated functional dependence was moderated by nadir CD4 count, such that polysubstance use was associated with greater disability among those HIV-infected persons with higher but not lower nadir CD4 count. Within the MA+/HIV+ cohort, functional dependence was reliably associated with neurocognitive impairment, lower cognitive reserve, polysubstance use, and major depressive disorder. Conclusions:HIV infection confers an increased concurrent risk of MA-associated disability, particularly among HIV-infected persons without histories of immune compromise. Directed referrals, earlier HIV treatment, and compensatory strategies aimed at counteracting the effects of low cognitive reserve, neurocognitive impairment, and psychiatric comorbidities on functional dependence in MA+/HIV+ individuals may be warranted.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2008

Cognitive Mechanisms of Switching in HIV-Associated Category Fluency Deficits

Jennifer E. Iudicello; Steven Paul Woods; Erica Weber; Matthew S. Dawson; J. Cobb Scott; Catherine L. Carey; Igor Grant

HIV infection is associated with deficits in category fluency, but the underlying cognitive mechanisms of such impairments have not been determined. Considering the preferential disruption of the structure and function of frontostriatal circuits in HIV disease, the present study evaluated the hypothesis that HIV-associated category fluency deficits are driven by impaired switching. Study participants were 96 HIV-infected individuals and 43 demographically comparable healthy comparison volunteers who were administered a standard measure of animal fluency and an alternating category fluency task (i.e., fruits and furniture) in a randomized order. Consistent with prior research on letter fluency, HIV infection was associated with greater impairments in switching, but not semantic clustering within the animal fluency task. Moreover, a significant interaction was observed whereby the HIV-associated deficits in switching were exacerbated by the explicit demands of the alternating fluency task. Across both fluency tasks, switching demonstrated generally small correlations with standard clinical measures of executive functions, working memory, and semantic memory. Collectively, these findings suggest that HIV-associated category fluency deficits are driven by switching impairments and related cognitive abilities (e.g., mental flexibility), perhaps reflecting underlying neuropathology within prefrontostriatal networks.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2007

Verbal fluency in HIV infection: A meta-analytic review

Jennifer E. Iudicello; Steven Paul Woods; Thomas D. Parsons; Lisa M. Moran; Catherine L. Carey; Igor Grant

Given the largely prefrontostriatal neuropathogenesis of HIV-associated neurobehavioral deficits, it is often presumed that HIV infection leads to greater impairment on letter versus category fluency. A meta-analysis of the HIV verbal fluency literature was conducted (k = 37, n = 7110) to assess this hypothesis and revealed generally small effect sizes for both letter and category fluency, which increased in magnitude with advancing HIV disease severity. Across all studies, the mean effect size of category fluency was slightly larger than that of letter fluency. However, the discrepancy between category and letter fluency dissipated in a more conservative analysis of only those studies that included both tests. Thus, HIV-associated impairments in letter and category fluency are of similar magnitude, suggesting that mild word generation deficits are evident in HIV, regardless of whether traditional letter or semantic cues are used to guide the word search and retrieval process.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2012

Combined effects of aging and HIV infection on semantic verbal fluency: A view of the cortical hypothesis through the lens of clustering and switching

Jennifer E. Iudicello; Steven Paul Woods; Reena Deutsch; Igor Grant

The profile of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) has classically been characterized as “subcortical,” but questions have arisen as to whether aging with HIV in the antiretroviral therapy era has subtly shifted the expression of HAND into a more “cortical” disorder (e.g., decay of semantic memory stores). We evaluated this hypothesis by examining semantic fluency and its component processes (i.e., clustering and switching) in 257 individuals across four groups stratified by age (<40 and ≥50 years) and HIV serostatus. Jonckheere–Terpstra tests revealed significant monotonic trends for the combined effects of HIV and aging on overall semantic (and letter) fluency and switching, but not cluster size, with greatest deficits evident in the older adults with HIV infection. Within the older HIV-infected cohort, poorer switching was uniquely associated with self-reported declines in instrumental activities of daily living and deficits in learning and executive functions, but not semantic memory. Results suggest that HIV infection and aging may confer adverse additive effects on the executive components of semantic fluency (i.e., switching), rather than a degradation of semantic memory stores (i.e., cluster size), which is a profile that is most consistent with combined frontostriatal neuropathological burden of these two conditions.


Clinical Neuropsychologist | 2010

HIV-associated Prospective Memory Impairment in the Laboratory Predicts Failures on a Semi-naturalistic Measure of Health Care Compliance

Jennifer B. Zogg; Steven Paul Woods; Erica Weber; Jennifer E. Iudicello; Matthew S. Dawson; Igor Grant

HIV-associated neurocognitive impairment, particularly in the domain of prospective memory (ProM), increases the risk of poor everyday functioning outcomes, including medication non-adherence. However, whether ProM plays a role in health care compliance outside of the realm of medication adherence remains to be determined. This study evaluated the hypothesis that ProM is an independent predictor of failure to comply with non-medication-related instructions akin to those commonly given by health care providers. Participants were 139 HIV-infected adults who underwent medical, psychiatric, and neuropsychological assessments, including a laboratory-based measure of ProM. To assess real-world compliance, participants were instructed to call the examiner 24 hours after the evaluation and report how many hours they had slept. Individuals who failed to correctly comply with these instructions (n = 104) demonstrated significantly lower performance on both time- and event-based ProM at baseline than the compliant group (n = 35), an effect that was primarily driven by errors of omission. ProM remained a significant predictor of noncompliance after controlling for potential confounders, including demographics (e.g., education), traditional cognitive measures of retrospective memory and executive functions, and psychiatric factors (e.g., depression). Results support the hypothesis that ProM plays a unique role in compliance with health care instructions for HIV disease management and may inform interventions designed to improve treatment outcomes.


Journal of NeuroVirology | 2013

Real-world impact of neurocognitive deficits in acute and early HIV infection

Katie L. Doyle; Erin E. Morgan; Sheldon R. Morris; Davey M. Smith; Susan J. Little; Jennifer E. Iudicello; Kaitlin Blackstone; David Moore; Igor Grant; Scott Letendre; Steven Paul Woods

The acute and early period of HIV-1 infection (AEH) is characterized by neuroinflammatory and immunopathogenic processes that can alter the integrity of neural systems and neurocognitive functions. However, the extent to which central nervous system changes in AEH confer increased risk of real-world functioning (RWF) problems is not known. In the present study, 34 individuals with AEH and 39 seronegative comparison participants completed standardized neuromedical, psychiatric, and neurocognitive research evaluations, alongside a comprehensive assessment of RWF that included cognitive symptoms in daily life, basic and instrumental activities of daily living, clinician-rated global functioning, and employment. Results showed that AEH was associated with a significantly increased risk of dependence in RWF, which was particularly elevated among AEH persons with global neurocognitive impairment (NCI). Among those with AEH, NCI (i.e., deficits in learning and information processing speed), mood disorders (i.e., Bipolar Disorder), and substance dependence (e.g., methamphetamine dependence) were all independently predictive of RWF dependence. Findings suggest that neurocognitively impaired individuals with AEH are at notably elevated risk of clinically significant challenges in normal daily functioning. Screening for neurocognitive, mood, and substance use disorders in AEH may facilitate identification of individuals at high risk of functional dependence who may benefit from psychological and medical strategies to manage their neuropsychiatric conditions.


Clinical Neuropsychologist | 2013

Risky decision-making in HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND)

Jennifer E. Iudicello; Steven Paul Woods; Jordan E. Cattie; Katie L. Doyle; Igor Grant

Individuals infected with HIV show moderate deficits in decision-making, but the ecological relevance of such deficits on everyday functioning has not previously been described. This study sought to examine the magnitude, cognitive correlates, and everyday functioning impact of risky decision-making impairment in HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND). Participants included 68 HIV+ individuals with HAND, 78 HIV+ individuals without HAND, and 51 HIV− comparison participants, who were administered the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) alongside a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery and self-report measures assessing aspects of everyday functioning. HIV+ individuals with HAND performed more poorly on the IGT relative to the other two groups, most notably during the last three trial blocks. Within the HIV+ group, IGT performance during the last three trial blocks was most strongly associated with cognitive flexibility, but was not significantly related to declines in instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), unemployment, or medication non-adherence. While overall IGT performance across the last three trial blocks may be helpful diagnostically in identifying decision-making impairment in HAND, examination of alternate, more specific metrics (e.g., individual deck selections across trial blocks) may be more useful in delineating the role of poor decision-making in HIV-related disability, and should be examined in future research.

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Igor Grant

University of California

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Erin E. Morgan

University of California

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Scott Letendre

University of California

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Erica Weber

University of California

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David Moore

University of California

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Katie L. Doyle

University of California

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