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Dive into the research topics where Manny Bagary is active.

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Featured researches published by Manny Bagary.


NeuroImage | 2014

The structural and functional connectivity of the posterior cingulate cortex: comparison between deterministic and probabilistic tractography for the investigation of structure-function relationships.

Sakh Khalsa; Stephen D. Mayhew; Magdalena Chechlacz; Manny Bagary; Andrew P. Bagshaw

The default mode network (DMN) is one of the most studied resting-state networks, and is thought to be involved in the maintenance of consciousness within the alert human brain. Although many studies have examined the functional connectivity (FC) of the DMN, few have investigated its underlying structural connectivity (SC), or the relationship between the two. We investigated this question in fifteen healthy subjects, concentrating on connections to the precuneus/posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), commonly considered as the central node of the DMN. We used group independent component analysis (GICA) and seed-based correlation analysis of fMRI data to quantify FC, and streamline and probabilistic tractography to identify structural tracts from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data. We first assessed the presence of structural connections between the DMN regions identified with GICA. Of the 15 subjects, when using the probabilistic approach 15 (15) demonstrated connections between the PCC and mesial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), 11 (15) showed connections from the PCC to the right inferior parietal cortex (rIPC) and 8 (15) to the left IPC. Next, we assessed the strength of FC (magnitude of temporal correlation) and SC (mean fractional anisotropy of reconstructed tracts (streamline), number of super-threshold voxels within the mask region (probabilistic)). The lIPC had significantly reduced FC to the PCC compared to the mPFC and rIPC. No difference in SC strength between connections was found using the streamline approach. For the probabilistic approach, mPFC had significantly lower SC than both IPCs. The two measures of SC strength were significantly correlated, but not for all paired connections. Finally, we observed a significant correlation between SC and FC for both tractography approaches when data were pooled across PCC-lIPL, PCC-rIPL and PCC-mPFC connections, and for some individual paired connections. Our results suggest that the streamline approach is advantageous for characterising the connectivity of long white matter tracts (PCC-mPFC), whilst the probabilistic approach was more reliable at identifying PCC-IPC connections. The direct comparison of FC and SC indicated that pairs of nodes with stronger structural connections also had stronger functional connectivity, and that this was maintained with both tractography approaches. Whilst the definition of SC strength remains controversial, our results could be considered to provide some degree of validation for the measures of SC strength that we have used. Direct comparisons of SC and FC are necessary in order to understand the structural basis of functional connectivity, and to characterise and quantify the changes in the brains functional architecture that occur as a result of normal physiology or pathology.


Sleep | 2016

Variability in Cumulative Habitual Sleep Duration Predicts Waking Functional Connectivity.

Sakhvinder Khalsa; Stephen D. Mayhew; Izabela Przezdzik; Rebecca S. Wilson; Joanne R. Hale; Aimee Goldstone; Manny Bagary; Andrew P. Bagshaw

STUDY OBJECTIVES We examined whether interindividual differences in habitual sleep patterns, quantified as the cumulative habitual total sleep time (cTST) over a 2-w period, were reflected in waking measurements of intranetwork and internetwork functional connectivity (FC) between major nodes of three intrinsically connected networks (ICNs): default mode network (DMN), salience network (SN), and central executive network (CEN). METHODS Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study using seed-based FC analysis combined with 14-d wrist actigraphy, sleep diaries, and subjective questionnaires (N = 33 healthy adults, mean age 34.3, standard deviation ± 11.6 y). Data were statistically analyzed using multiple linear regression. Fourteen consecutive days of wrist actigraphy in participants home environment and fMRI scanning on day 14 at the Birmingham University Imaging Centre. Seed-based FC analysis on ICNs from resting-state fMRI data and multiple linear regression analysis performed for each ICN seed and target. cTST was used to predict FC (controlling for age). RESULTS cTST was specific predictor of intranetwork FC when the mesial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) region of the DMN was used as a seed for FC, with a positive correlation between FC and cTST observed. No significant relationship between FC and cTST was seen for any pair of nodes not including the MPFC. Internetwork FC between the DMN (MPFC) and SN (right anterior insula) was also predicted by cTST, with a negative correlation observed between FC and cTST. CONCLUSIONS This study improves understanding of the relationship between intranetwork and internetwork functional connectivity of intrinsically connected networks (ICNs) in relation to habitual sleep quality and duration. The cumulative amount of sleep that participants achieved over a 14-d period was significantly predictive of intranetwork and inter-network functional connectivity of ICNs, an observation that may underlie the link between sleep status and cognitive performance.


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2015

The management of Convulsive Refractory Status Epilepticus in adults in the UK: No consistency in practice and little access to continuous EEG monitoring

Mitesh Patel; Manny Bagary; Dougall McCorry

PURPOSE Convulsive Status Epilepticus (CSE) is a common neurological emergency with patients presenting with prolonged epileptic activity. Sub-optimal management is coupled with high morbidity and mortality. Continuous electroencephalogram (EEG) monitoring is considered essential by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) in the management of Convulsive Refractory Status Epilepticus (CRSE). The aim of this research was to determine current clinical practice in the management of CRSE amongst adults in intensive care units (ICU) in the UK and establish if the use of a standardised protocol requires re-enforcement within trusts. METHODS 75 randomly selected UK NHS Trusts were contacted and asked to complete a questionnaire in addition to providing their protocol for CRSE management in ICU. RESULTS 55 (73%) trusts responded. While 31 (56% of responders) had a protocol available in ICU for early stages of CSE, just 21 (38%) trusts had specific guidelines if CRSE occurred. Only 23 (42%) trusts involved neurologists at any stage of management and just 18 (33%) have access to continuous EEG monitoring. CONCLUSION This study identifies significant inconsistency in the management of CSE in ICUs across the UK. A minority of ICU units have a protocol for CRSE or access to continuous EEG monitoring despite it being considered fundamental for management and supported by NICE guidance.


Neurobiology of Sleep and Circadian Rhythms | 2017

Habitual sleep durations and subjective sleep quality predict white matter differences in the human brain

Sakh Khalsa; Joanne R. Hale; Aimee Goldstone; Rebecca S. Wilson; Stephen D. Mayhew; Manny Bagary; Andrew P. Bagshaw

Self-imposed short sleep durations are increasingly commonplace in society, and have considerable health and performance implications for individuals. Reduced sleep duration over multiple nights has similar behavioural effects to those observed following acute total sleep deprivation, suggesting that lack of sleep affects brain function cumulatively. A link between habitual sleep patterns and functional connectivity has previously been observed, and the effect of sleep duration on the brains intrinsic functional architecture may provide a link between sleep status and cognition. However, it is currently not known whether differences in habitual sleep patterns across individuals are related to changes in the brains white matter, which underlies structural connectivity. In the present study we use diffusion–weighted imaging and a group comparison application of tract based spatial statistics (TBSS) to investigate changes to fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) in relation to sleep duration and quality, hypothesising that white matter metrics would be positively associated with sleep duration and quality. Diffusion weighted imaging data was acquired from a final cohort of 33 (23–29 years, 10 female, mean 25.4 years) participants. Sleep patterns were assessed for a 14 day period using wrist actigraphs and sleep diaries, and subjective sleep quality with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Median splits based on total sleep time and PSQI were used to create groups of shorter/longer and poorer/better sleepers, whose imaging data was compared using TBSS followed by post-hoc correlation analysis in regions identified as significantly different between the groups. There were significant positive correlations between sleep duration and FA in the left orbito-frontal region and the right superior corona radiata, and significant negative correlations between sleep duration and MD in right orbito-frontal white matter and the right inferior longitudinal fasciculus. Improved sleep quality was positively correlated with FA in left caudate nucleus, white matter tracts to the left orbito-frontal region, the left anterior cingulum bundle and the white matter tracts associated with the right operculum and insula, and negatively correlated with MD in left orbito-frontal white matter and the left anterior cingulum bundle. Our findings suggest that reduced cumulative total sleep time (cTST) and poorer subjective sleep quality are associated with subtle white matter micro-architectural changes. The regions we identified as being related to habitual sleep patterns were restricted to the frontal and temporal lobes, and the functions they support are consistent with those which have previously been demonstrated as being affected by short sleep durations (e.g., attention, cognitive control, memory). Examining how inter-individual differences in brain structure are related to habitual sleep patterns could help to shed light on the mechanisms by which sleep habits are associated with brain function, behaviour and cognition, as well as potentially the networks and systems responsible for variations in sleep patterns themselves.


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2011

Sleep and Mental Illness

Manny Bagary

[⇓][1] ![Figure][2] Sleep can be considered a model for mental illness as a reversible delirium. Sleep is intimately associated with aminergic, cholinergic and gabaergic neuromodulators, which are also associated with mental illness. Sleep and sleep disorders may provide a useful window


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2013

Sleep: Multi-Professional Perspectives

Manny Bagary


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2018

Clinical outcomes of VNS therapy with AspireSR® (including cardiac-based seizure detection) at a large Complex Epilepsy and Surgery Centre

Preci Hamilton; Imad Soryal; Prince Dhahri; Welege Wimalachandra; Anna Leat; Denise Hughes; Nicole Toghill; James Hodson; Vijay Sawlani; Tom Hayton; Shanika Samarasekera; Manny Bagary; Dougall McCorry; Ramesh Chelvarajah


British Journal of Psychiatry | 2018

Treating Sleep Problems: A Transdiagnostic Approach By Allison G. Harvey and Daniel J. Buysse. Guilford Publications. 2017. £22.99 (pb). 192 pp. ISBN: 9781462531950

Manny Bagary


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2016

Early haemodynamic changes observed in patients with epilepsy, in a visual experiment and in simulations

David T. Rollings; Sara Assecondi; Dirk Ostwald; Camillo Porcaro; Dougall McCorry; Manny Bagary; Imad Soryal; Andrew P. Bagshaw


F1000Research | 2014

The structural connectivity of the default mode network

Sakh Khalsa; Stephen D. Mayhew; Magdalena Chechlacz; Manny Bagary; Andrew P. Bagshaw

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Dougall McCorry

Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham

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Imad Soryal

Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham

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Joanne R. Hale

University of Birmingham

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Anna Leat

Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham

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