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Dive into the research topics where María Luisa Bringas is active.

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Featured researches published by María Luisa Bringas.


Experimental Brain Research | 2011

Deficits in inhibitory control and conflict resolution on cognitive and motor tasks in Parkinson’s disease

Ignacio Obeso; Leonora Wilkinson; Enrique Casabona; María Luisa Bringas; Mario Álvarez; Lázaro Álvarez; Nancy Pavón; M. C. Rodriguez-Oroz; Raúl Macías; Jose A. Obeso; Marjan Jahanshahi

Recent imaging studies in healthy controls with a conditional stop signal reaction time (RT) task have implicated the subthalamic nucleus (STN) in response inhibition and the pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA) in conflict resolution. Parkinson’s disease (PD) is characterized by striatal dopamine deficiency and overactivity of the STN and underactivation of the pre-SMA during movement. We used the conditional stop signal RT task to investigate whether PD produced similar or dissociable effects on response initiation, response inhibition and response initiation under conflict. In addition, we also examined inhibition of prepotent responses on three cognitive tasks: the Stroop, random number generation and Hayling sentence completion. PD patients were impaired on the conditional stop signal reaction time task, with response initiation both in situations with or without conflict and response inhibition all being significantly delayed, and had significantly greater difficulty in suppressing prepotent or habitual responses on the Stroop, Hayling and random number generation tasks relative to controls. These results demonstrate the existence of a generalized inhibitory deficit in PD, which suggest that PD is a disorder of inhibition as well as activation and that in situations of conflict, executive control over responses is compromised.


Behavioural Neurology | 2012

Semantic and phonemic verbal fluency in Parkinson's disease: Influence of clinical and demographic variables.

Ignacio Obeso; Enrique Casabona; María Luisa Bringas; Lázaro Álvarez; Marjan Jahanshahi

Changes of cognitive function in PD have been extensively documented and defined as a ‘frontal’ type executive dysfunction. One of the main components of this executive dysfunction is the impairment of verbal fluency. The aim of the present study was to assess semantic and phonemic fluency in a large sample of PD patients and to investigate the effect of clinical and sociodemographic variables on verbal fluency in this patient group. Three hundred patients with idiopathic Parkinsons disease who were consecutive referrals to our clinic and 50 age and education matched healthy controls completed the phonemic and semantic verbal fluency tasks. Both phonemic and semantic verbal fluency were significantly impaired in PD patients relative to matched controls. Stage of illness, presence of depression, education and age influenced verbal fluency measures. Regression analyses established that global measures of cognitive ability (MMSE) and executive function (FAB) and side of onset of motor symptoms predicted 36–37% of variance of phonemic or semantic verbal fluency measures. Thus, future studies aimed at assessing cognitive functioning in PD patients treated by deep brain stimulation (DBS) should adequately take into account several factors (stage of illness, depression, executive functioning) which may potentially influence performance on verbal fluency tasks.


MEDICC Review | 2012

Clinical impact of RehaCom Software for cognitive rehabilitation of patients with acquired brain injury

Elízabeth Fernández; María Luisa Bringas; Sonia Salazar; Daymí Rodríguez; María Eugenia García; Maydané Torres

We describe the clinical impact of the RehaCom computerized cognitive training program instituted in the International Neurological Restoration Center for rehabilitation of brain injury patients. Fifty patients admitted from 2008 through 2010 were trained over 60 sessions. Attention and memory functions were assessed with a pre- and post-treatment design, using the Mini-Mental State Examination, Wechsler Memory Scale and Trail Making Test (Parts A and B). Negative effects were assessed, including mental fatigue, headache and eye irritation. The programs clinical usefulness was confirmed, with 100% of patients showing improved performance in trained functions.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2015

Effectiveness of music therapy as an aid to neurorestoration of children with severe neurological disorders

María Luisa Bringas; Marilyn Zaldívar; Pedro A. Rojas; Karelia Martinez-Montes; Dora Chongo; Maria A. Ortega; Reynaldo Galvizu; Alba E. Perez; Lilia Morales; Carlos Maragoto; Héctor Vera; Lídice Galán; Mireille Besson; Pedro A. Valdes-Sosa

This study was a two-armed parallel group design aimed at testing real world effectiveness of a music therapy (MT) intervention for children with severe neurological disorders. The control group received only the standard neurorestoration program and the experimental group received an additional MT “Auditory Attention plus Communication protocol” just before the usual occupational and speech therapy. Multivariate Item Response Theory (MIRT) identified a neuropsychological status-latent variable manifested in all children and which exhibited highly significant changes only in the experimental group. Changes in brain plasticity also occurred in the experimental group, as evidenced using a Mismatch Event Related paradigm which revealed significant post intervention positive responses in the latency range between 308 and 400 ms in frontal regions. LORETA EEG source analysis identified prefrontal and midcingulate regions as differentially activated by the MT in the experimental group. Taken together, our results showing improved attention and communication as well as changes in brain plasticity in children with severe neurological impairments, confirm the importance of MT for the rehabilitation of patients across a wide range of dysfunctions.


Case Reports | 2011

Cognitive changes after stem cell transplantation in a patient with subcortical stroke.

María Luisa Bringas; Carlos Suarez; Carlos Javier Sánchez; Lázaro Álvarez; P. Valdés; Sonia Salazar; Dora Chongo; Marjan Jahanshahi

The authors report a case of a 55-year-old Caucasian woman who received autologous bone marrow stem cell transplantation 3 years after a subcortical stroke. She exhibited positive cognitive changes 6 months and 1 year after the surgery without rehabilitation. The blood flow changes, measured with SPECT, were statistical significant in prefrontal areas. During the presurgical neuropsychological assessment, the patient presented a critical speech reduction, reflected in impaired performance in verbal fluency, vocabulary and in each task which required overt verbal response. One year later, she showed improvement in mental flexibility, receptive language, phonological fluency, verbal memory and auditory verbal memory. Positive cognitive changes in verbal and executive functions seem to be contingent on increased blood flow in prefrontal areas. Posterior neuropsychological evaluation 3 and 5 years after transplantation did not show deterioration of the cognitive improvement.


Cortex | 2017

Unilateral subthalamotomy in Parkinson's disease: Cognitive, psychiatric and, neuroimaging changes

Ignacio Obeso; Enrique Casabona; Rafael Rodríguez-Rojas; María Luisa Bringas; Raúl Macías; Nancy Pavón; J A Obeso; Marjan Jahanshahi

Unilateral subthalamotomy is an effective treatment for the cardinal motor features of Parkinsons disease (PD). However, non-motor changes possibly associated with right or left subthalamotomy remain unknown. Our aim was to assess cognitive, psychiatric and neuroimaging changes after treatment with unilateral subthalamotomy. Fourteen medicated patients with PD were evaluated before and after (mean 6 months after operation) unilateral subthalamotomy (5 right, 9 left). In addition to motor assessments, cognitive (global cognition and executive functions), psychiatric (apathy, depression, anxiety, mania, hypo- and hyperdopaminergic behaviours, impulsivity), quality of life evaluations and volume of lesions were obtained. After surgery, significant improvement of motor signs was observed. Unilateral subthalamotomy improved general cognitive status, but left subthalamotomy reduced semantic verbal fluency compared to the pre-operative state. Depression and quality of life were improved with both right and left subthalamotomy. However, hyper-emotionality was present after surgery and right subthalamotomy increased impulsivity and disinhibition (on NeuroPsychiatric Inventory and Ardouin Scale for Behaviour in PD), a result linked to larger lesion volumes. We conclude that unilateral subthalamotomy is effective for treating the cardinal motor features of PD and improves mood. Right subthalamotomy is associated with greater risk of impulsivity and disinhibition, while left subthalamotomy induces further impairment of semantic verbal fluency.


Systems Research and Behavioral Science | 2018

Protective Activity of Erythropoyetine in the Cognition of Patients with Parkinson’s Disease

Ivonne Pedroso; Marité Garcia; Enrique Casabona; Lilia Morales; María Luisa Bringas; Leslie Pérez; Teresita Rodríguez; Ileana Sosa; Yordanka Ricardo; Arnoldo Padrón; Daniel Amaro

Introduction: Treatment strategies in Parkinson’s disease (PD) can improve a patient’s quality of life but cannot stop the progression of PD. We are looking for different alternatives that modify the natural course of the disease and recent research has demonstrated the neuroprotective properties of erythropoietin. In Cuba, the Center for Molecular Immunology (CIM) is a cutting edge scientific center where the recombinant form (EPOrh) and recombinant human erythropoietin with low sialic acid (NeuroEPO) are produced. We performed two clinical trials to evaluate the safety and tolerability of these two drugs in PD patients. In this paper we want to show the positive results of the additional cognitive tests employed, as part of the comprehensive assessment. Materials and method: Two studies were conducted in PD patients from the outpatient clinic of CIREN, including n = 10 and n = 26 patients between 60 and 66 years of age, in stages 1 to 2 of the Hoehn and Yahr Scale. The first study employed recombinant human (rhEPO) and the second an intranasal formulation of neuroEPO. All patients were evaluated with a battery of neuropsychological scales composed to evaluate global cognitive functioning, executive function, and memory. Results: The general results in both studies showed a positive response to the cognitive functions in PD patients, who were undergoing pharmacological treatment with respect to the evaluation (p < 0.05) before the intervention. Conclusions: Erythropoietin has a discrete positive effect on the cognitive functions of patients with Parkinson’s disease, which could be interpreted as an effect of the neuroprotective properties of this molecules. To confirm the results another clinical trial phase III with neuroEPO is in progress, also designed to discard any influence of a placebo effect on cognition.


Systems Research and Behavioral Science | 2017

Effectiveness of a Computer-Based Training Program of Attention and Memory in Patients with Acquired Brain Damage

Elízabeth Fernández; Jorge Bergado Rosado; Daymi Rodriguez Perez; Sonia Salazar Santana; Maydane Torres Aguilar; María Luisa Bringas

Many training programs have been designed using modern software to restore the impaired cognitive functions in patients with acquired brain damage (ABD). The objective of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a computer-based training program of attention and memory in patients with ABD, using a two-armed parallel group design, where the experimental group (n = 50) received cognitive stimulation using RehaCom software, and the control group (n = 30) received the standard cognitive stimulation (non-computerized) for eight weeks. In order to assess the possible cognitive changes after the treatment, a post-pre experimental design was employed using the following neuropsychological tests: Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS) and Trail Making test A and B. The effectiveness of the training procedure was statistically significant (p < 0.05) when it established the comparison between the performance in these scales, before and after the training period, in each patient and between the two groups. The training group had statistically significant (p < 0.001) changes in focused attention (Trail A), two subtests (digit span and logical memory), and the overall score of WMS. Finally, we discuss the advantages of computerized training rehabilitation and further directions of this line of work.


Brain | 2014

The subthalamic nucleus and inhibitory control: impact of subthalamotomy in Parkinson's disease

Ignacio Obeso; Leonora Wilkinson; Enrique Casabona; Maarten Speekenbrink; María Luisa Bringas; Mario Álvarez; Lázaro Álvarez; Nancy Pavón; Maria C. Rodriguez-Oroz; Raúl Macías; Jose A. Obeso; Marjan Jahanshahi


MEDICC Review | 2012

Use of cuban recombinant human erythropoietin in Parkinson's disease treatment

Ivonne Pedroso; María Luisa Bringas; Anubis Aguiar; Lilia Morales; Mario Álvarez; P. Valdés; Lázaro Álvarez

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Marjan Jahanshahi

UCL Institute of Neurology

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Ignacio Obeso

UCL Institute of Neurology

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P. Valdés

Cuban Neuroscience Center

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Ignacio Obeso

UCL Institute of Neurology

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Leonora Wilkinson

UCL Institute of Neurology

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J A Obeso

CEU San Pablo University

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