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Dive into the research topics where Leslie S. Libow is active.

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Featured researches published by Leslie S. Libow.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1999

Restraint Reduction Reduces Serious Injuries Among Nursing Home Residents

Richard R. Neufeld; Leslie S. Libow; William J. Foley; Joan M. Dunbar; Camille E. Cohen; Brenda Breuer

OBJECTIVES: To describe how removing physical restraints affected injuries in nursing home settings.


Neurology | 2006

Dissociation of neuropathology from severity of dementia in late-onset Alzheimer disease

Isak Prohovnik; Daniel P. Perl; K.L. Davis; Leslie S. Libow; Gerson T. Lesser; Vahram Haroutunian

Background: Little is known about Alzheimer disease at advanced ages, although its incidence continues to increase at least through the ninth decade of life. Objective: To examine the effects of age on the relationship between clinical dementia severity and neuropathologic hallmarks in a large sample spanning the full age range. Methods: The authors assessed 81 subjects during life for dementia severity, and examined their brains. They analyzed plaque and tangle burden, as well as the activities of the cholinergic marker enzymes acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), in relation to age at death and the clinical severity of dementia. Results: Dementia severity was strongly related to plaque and tangle burden in relatively young patients (aged <75 years), but this correlation diminished with age and disappeared in the ninth decade of life. Among the oldest patients studied, there was no difference in plaque and tangle load between the mild and severe dementia cases. This interaction (p < 0.0001 for plaque density) was not observed for the cholinergic markers ChAT and AChE. Conclusion: The nature or expression of Alzheimer disease may be different in severely demented older patients, who have equal cholinergic deficits but significantly lower plaque and tangle burden. If confirmed in a prospective study, these findings have diagnostic and therapeutic implications.


JAMA Neurology | 2008

Role of the Neuropathology of Alzheimer Disease in Dementia in the Oldest-Old

Vahram Haroutunian; Michal Schnaider-Beeri; James Schmeidler; Michael Wysocki; Dushyant P. Purohit; Daniel P. Perl; Leslie S. Libow; Gerson T. Lesser; Maria Maroukian; Hillel Grossman

BACKGROUND Neuritic plaques (NPs) and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in the brain, especially in the hippocampus, entorhinal cortex, and isocortex, are hallmark lesions of Alzheimer disease and dementia in the elderly. However, this association has not been extensively studied in the rapidly growing population of the very old. OBJECTIVE To assess the relationship between estimates of cognitive function and NP and NFT pathologic conditions in 317 autopsied persons aged 60 to 107 years. DESIGN We studied the relationship between severity of dementia and the density of these characteristic lesions of Alzheimer disease in young-old, middle-old, and oldest-old persons. The relationship of the severity of dementia as measured by the Clinical Dementia Rating scale to the density of NPs and NFTs was then assessed in each age group. PARTICIPANTS Three hundred seventeen brains of persons aged 60 years and older were selected to have either no remarkable neuropathological lesions or only NP and NFT lesions. Brains with any other neuropathological conditions, either alone or in addition to Alzheimer disease findings, were excluded. The study cohort was then stratified into the youngest quartile (aged 60-80 years), middle 2 quartiles (aged 81-89 years), and oldest quartile (aged 90-107 years). RESULTS While the density of NPs and NFTs rose significantly by more than 10-fold as a function of the severity of dementia in the youngest-old group, significant increases in the densities of NPs and NFTs were absent in the brains of the oldest-old. This lack of difference in the densities of NPs and NFTs was due to reduced lesion densities in the brains of oldest-old persons with dementia rather than to increased density of these lesions in the brains of nondemented oldest-old persons. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that the neuropathological features of dementia in the oldest-old are not the same as those of cognitively impaired younger-old persons and compel a vigorous search for neuropathological indices of dementia in this most rapidly growing segment of the elderly population.


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2007

The neuropathological basis for depression in Parkinson's disease.

Pasquale G. Frisina; Vahram Haroutunian; Leslie S. Libow

Depression is found in 30-40% of all patients with Parkinsons disease (PD), but its etiology is unclear. Using neuropathology as a signpost for neurotransmitter function, we investigated the prevalence of pathological features found at postmortem and sought to uncover differences between depressed (n=11) and non-depressed (n=9) elderly PD patients. The results indicate a higher prevalence of pathological features in depressed compared to non-depressed PD patients, particularly in catecholamine areas of the brain; the locus coeruleus (neuronal loss: odds ratio=7.2, p=08; gliosis: odds ratio=18.0, p=008); dorsal vagus nerve (gliosis: odds ratio=7.63, p<0.05), and substantia nigra pars compacta (gliosis: odds ratio=2.85, ns). However, neuropathological differences were absent in the dorsal raphe nuclei, amygdala, and cortical regions. Our evidence suggests that depression in PD is related more to catecholaminergic than serotonergic system dysfunction.


Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders | 2001

Elevated Serum Total and LDL Cholesterol in Very Old Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease

Gerson T. Lesser; K. Kandiah; Leslie S. Libow; Antonios Likourezos; Brenda Breuer; Deborah B. Marin; Richard C. Mohs; Vahram Haroutunian; Richard R. Neufeld

The relationships of serum lipids with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and other dementias in very old patients are not clear. All residents of an academic nursing home were studied clinically for dementia and for serum lipids. All those autopsied over a 7.7-year period had apolipoprotein E (apoE) genotyping and detailed neuropathological examination. Those with pathologically defined criteria for AD (n = 84) were compared to all others who also had clinical dementia but did not show AD changes (n = 22). In contrast to most other reports of serum lipids in very old patients with AD, total cholesterol (TC) and low density lipoprotein cholesterol levels were each significantly higher for those with AD. The lipid-AD associations were progressively stronger with increasing pathological certainty of AD diagnosis. These relationships remained significant after adjustment for apoE genotype and for other known risk factors. The lipid-AD associations in a very old cohort, and prior evidence that elevated TC in middle life is a risk factor for later dementia, prompt consideration of factors associated with lipid metabolism in the development of Alzheimer’s dementia.


Atherosclerosis | 1998

The relationship between apolipoprotein E, dementia, and vascular illness

Deborah B. Marin; Brenda Breuer; Michael L. Marin; Jeremy M. Silverman; James Schmeidler; David A. Greenberg; Sean Flynn; Marlene Mare; Melinda S. Lantz; Leslie S. Libow; Richard R. Neufeld; Lawrence Altstiel; Kenneth L. Davis; Richard C. Mohs

The purpose of this study was to concurrently assess the relationship of Apolipoprotein E (APOE) with both dementias and vascular illnesses in the very old. Nine hundred and fifty nine subjects (mean age 85 years) in a long-term care facility were genotyped and cognitively tested with the Mini Mental State Exam. All subjects were studied for the relationship of APOE with atherosclerotic heart disease, hypertension, or stroke without concomitant dementia. Four hundred fifty individuals met criteria for inclusion into one of the following groups: Alzheimers disease (n = 318), vascular dementia (n = 49), or not demented controls (n = 83) and were investigated for the relationship between APOE and these diagnostic categories. APOE epsilon4 was not associated with atherosclerotic heart disease, hypertension, or stroke without concomitant dementia. The APOE epsilon3 allele was more common in men with atherosclerotic heart disease. In contrast, the APOE epsilon4 allele was more common in patients with Alzheimers disease (22%) and vascular dementia (26%) than in not demented controls (7%). APOE epsilon4 is associated with dementias in the very old, whereas its relationship with either peripheral or central nervous system vascular disease without dementia is not as robust.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1996

Sequential outbreak of influenza A and B in a nursing home : Efficacy of vaccine and amantadine

Leslie S. Libow; Richard R. Neufeld; Ellen Olson; Brenda Breuer; Perry Starer

OBJECTIVE: To describe the sequential occurrence of influenza A and B in a nursing home, and to determine the efficacy of influenza vaccine and/or amantadine treatment with respect to incidence and sequelae.


Maturitas | 2001

Relationships of sex hormone levels to dependence in activities of daily living in the frail elderly

Brenda Breuer; Sari Trungold; Charles Martucci; Sylvan Wallenstein; Antonios Likourezos; Leslie S. Libow; Barnett Zumoff

OBJECTIVES We undertook this nursing home study in order to determine the relationships between dependency in activities of daily living (ADL) and blood levels of estrone, testosterone, androstenedione, and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA). Little is known about this issue. METHODS cross-sectional study of 370 nursing home residents. Hormone levels in blood specimens drawn in 1997 and 1998 were correlated with degree of ADL dependency recorded in medical charts. RESULTS Because of multiple comparisons associations were deemed significant for P-values < or =0.017 for males and < or =0.0125 for females. In males, the following were inversely related: testosterone levels with dependency in transferring and eating; estrone with eating and a summary ADL index; and androstenedione with toileting and a summary ADL index (in all cases, r=-0.4; P=0.007-0.015). Inverse trends existed between testosterone levels and dependency in mobility and a summary ADL index; and androstenedione and eating (in all cases r=-0.3; P=0.030-0.055). Among females the following were directly related: estrone levels with dependence in mobility, toileting, transferring, and a summary ADL index; and DHEA with transferring and a summary ADL index (r=0.2-0.3, P=0.0001-0.01). Trends existed between estrone and eating, and DHEA and toileting (r=0.1-0.2, P=0.04). CONCLUSION In male residents, higher sex hormone levels are associated with better ADL performance. Among females the opposite is true. While further studies are needed to elucidate these relationships, our results and recent findings of others suggest sex hormone actions in older women differ from those in younger populations. A possible stress-related mechanism is also presented.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989

Care of the Nursing Home Patient

Leslie S. Libow; Perry Starer

THE expanding role of nursing homes in patient care necessitates their recognition as an integral component of the health care system. Although collectively nursing homes in the United States have ...


Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders | 2009

Serum Lipids Are Related to Alzheimer’s Pathology in Nursing Home Residents

Gerson T. Lesser; Vahram Haroutunian; Dushyant P. Purohit; Michal Schnaider Beeri; James Schmeidler; Linda Honkanen; Richard R. Neufeld; Leslie S. Libow

Background: Studies of associations between serum lipids and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) or other dementias in the elderly show conflicting results, perhaps due to misclassification of the various dementias. Methods: For 358 nursing home residents, serum lipids were studied at admission and diagnoses established at autopsy. We used defined neuropathological criteria to distinguish the presence of AD and to avoid errors of clinical dementia assessment. Results: Residents with any AD pathology, as compared to those without AD pathology, had higher mean serum total cholesterol (TC; 200.4 vs. 185.9 mg/dl; p = 0.02) and higher mean low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL; 124.5 vs. 111.5 mg/dl; p = 0.03). Further, mean TC, LDL and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels all increased progressively with increasing pathological certainty of AD (p for trend = 0.001, 0.02 and 0.02). Conclusions: TC and LDL were significantly related to pathologically defined AD. If serum lipids have a role in the pathogenesis of AD, interventions may modify the course of disease.

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Richard R. Neufeld

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Gerson T. Lesser

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Vahram Haroutunian

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Pasquale G. Frisina

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Perry Starer

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Dushyant P. Purohit

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Antonios Likourezos

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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