Marije van Beilen
University Medical Center Groningen
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Marije van Beilen.
Cortex | 2009
Katrien Colman; Janneke Koerts; Marije van Beilen; Klaus L. Leenders; Wendy J. Post; Roelien Bastiaanse
A growing number of studies suggest that language problems in Parkinsons disease (PD) are a result of executive dysfunction. To test this hypothesis we compared Dutch verb production in sentence context in a group of 28 PD patients with a control group consisting of 28 healthy participants matched for age, gender and education. All subjects were assessed on both verb production in sentence context as well as on cognitive functions relevant for sentence processing. PD patients scored lower than healthy controls on the verb production ability-scale and showed a response pattern in which performance was worse (1) in base than in derived position; (2) in present than in past tense; (3) for intransitive than in transitive verbs. For the PD group the score on the verb production ability-scale correlated significantly with set-switching and working memory. These results provide support for previous research suggesting that executive dysfunctions underlie the performance of the PD patients on verb production. It is furthermore suggested that because of failing automaticity, PD patients rely more on the cortically represented executive functions. Unfortunately, due to the disturbed intimate relation between the basal ganglia and the frontal cortex, these executive functions are also dysfunctional.
Schizophrenia Research | 2004
Marije van Beilen; Marieke Pijnenborg; Ed H. van Zomeren; Robert J. van den Bosch; Frederiec K. Withaar; Anke Bouma
INTRODUCTION Schizophrenia patients perform below the norm on verbal fluency tests. The causes for this are unknown, but defective memory, executive functioning and psychomotor speed may play a role. METHOD We examined 50 patients with schizophrenia and related disorders, and 25 healthy controls with a cognitive test battery containing tests for verbal memory, executive functioning and psychomotor speed, and a categorical fluency test. RESULTS Patients obtained significantly lower test results than the controls on most cognitive measures including the verbal fluency test. During the fluency test, they formed as many clusters, and switched as often between clusters as the controls did, but they generated fewer words per cluster. Interestingly, in the control group, fluency performance was predicted by memory and executive functioning, but not by psychomotor speed. In patients, verbal fluency was predicted by psychomotor speed, but not by memory or executive functioning. DISCUSSION We conclude that psychomotor speed could be a crucial factor in cognition, and its influence on cognitive test performance should be considered in schizophrenia research. Furthermore, these data illustrate the importance of qualitative analysis of cognitive impairments in schizophrenia patients, as traditional cognitive tests often only provide quantitative information.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Janneke Koerts; Klaus L. Leenders; M. Koning; Axel T. Portman; Marije van Beilen
Motor symptoms form the hallmark of Parkinsons disease (PD), although other features such as depression are often present. Currently‐used depression rating scales measure affective and somatic symptoms. These somatic symptoms of depression can also be core PD symptoms, suggesting an overlap of symptoms between depression and PD. Using in vivo radiotracer methods, striatal dopaminergic dysfunction is found in both PD and depression. This study investigates to what extent the overlapping symptoms of depression and PD are associated with the striatal dopaminergic dysfunction typical of PD. Symptoms of depression were assessed in 23 PD patients who did not have major depression according to the Montgomery–Åsberg depression rating scale (MADRS; cut‐off < 18) and according to a trained psychologist who interviewed all patients. The striatal dopaminergic activity of patients was assessed with FDOPA‐PET. Dopaminergic activity of the putamen and caudate nucleus was associated with MADRS total score and specifically with the symptom ‘Concentration difficulties’. These results suggest that the typical striatal dopaminergic dysfunction of PD can cause symptoms that can also be categorized as symptoms of depression. In particular, cognitive symptoms measured with a depression rating scale may be based on the dopaminergic dysfunction of the striatum in PD patients.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Marije van Beilen; Bauke M. de Jong; Esther W. Gieteling; Remco Renken; Klaus L. Leenders
The etiology of medically unexplained symptoms such as conversion disorder is poorly understood. This is partly because the interpretation of neuroimaging results in conversion paresis has been complicated by the use of different control groups, tasks and statistical comparisons. The present study includes these different aspects in a single data set. In our study we included both normal controls and feigners to control for conversion paresis. We studied both movement execution and imagery, and we contrasted both within-group and between-group activation. Moreover, to reveal hemisphere-specific effects that have not been reported before, we performed these analyses using both flipped and unflipped data. This approach resulted in the identification of abnormal parietal activation which was specific for conversion paresis patients. Patients also showed reduced activity in the prefrontal cortex, supramarginal gyrus and precuneus, including hemisphere-specific activation that is lateralized in the same hemisphere, regardless of right- or left-sided paresis. We propose that these regions are candidates for an interface between psychological mechanisms and disturbed higher-order motor control. Our study presents an integrative neurophysiological view of the mechanisms that contribute to the etiology of this puzzling psychological disorder, which can be further investigated with other types of conversion symptoms.
Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2010
Janneke Koerts; Maarten Borg; Anne Marthe Meppelink; Klaus L. Leenders; Marije van Beilen; Teus van Laar
Visual hallucinations (VH) are common in Parkinsons Disease (PD). Both deficits of perception and attention seem to play a role in the pathogenesis of VH in PD. However, the possible coexistence of impairments in attention and visual perception in PD with VH is not known. This study investigated both attention and visual perception in non-demented PD patients with VH, compared to PD patients without VH and healthy controls. Fourteen participants were included in each group. All patients were assessed with sustained visual attention and object and space perception tests. Only PD patients with VH showed impairments on object and space perception. In addition, PD patients with and without VH showed impairments on sustained visual attention, being more severely affected in PD patients with VH. Only in PD patients with VH sustained visual attention was associated with a decreased object and space perception. The results of our study thus suggest that in PD patients with VH an impairment of object and space perception, possibly in association with a decreased sustained visual attention, might play a role in the pathogenesis of VH.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Janneke Koerts; Marije van Beilen; Oliver Tucha; Klaus L. Leenders; Wiebo Brouwer
Impairments in executive functioning are frequently observed in Parkinsons disease (PD). However, executive functioning needed in daily life is difficult to measure. Considering this difficulty the Cognitive Effort Test (CET) was recently developed. In this multi-task test the goals are specified but participants are free in their approach. This study applies the CET in PD patients and investigates whether initiative, planning and multi-tasking are associated with aspects of executive functions and psychomotor speed. Thirty-six PD patients with a mild to moderate disease severity and thirty-four healthy participants were included in this study. PD patients planned and demonstrated more sequential task execution, which was associated with a decreased psychomotor speed. Furthermore, patients with a moderate PD planned to execute fewer tasks at the same time than patients with a mild PD. No differences were found between these groups for multi-tasking. In conclusion, PD patients planned and executed the tasks of the CET sequentially rather than in parallel presumably reflecting a compensation strategy for a decreased psychomotor speed. Furthermore, patients with moderate PD appeared to take their impairments into consideration when planning how to engage the tasks of the test. This compensation could not be detected in patients with mild PD.
Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2008
Marije van Beilen; Axel T. Portman; Henk A. L. Kiers; Rp Maguire; Valtteri Kaasinen; M. Koning; Jan Pruim; Klaus L. Leenders
This study sought to determine the nature of the relationship between cognition and striatal dopaminergic functioning in 28 patients with advanced Parkinsons disease (PD) using fluorodopa Positron emission tomography (FDOPA-PET) and neuropsychological test scores. Mental flexibility was related to putamen activity while mental organization (executive memory and fluency) was related to caudate FDOPA uptake. Interestingly, the caudate may be more important in the mental components of executive functioning, while the putamen may be more important in the motor components of executive functioning.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2011
Janneke Koerts; Lara Tucha; Klaus L. Leenders; Marije van Beilen; Wiebo Brouwer; Oliver Tucha
Impairments in executive functions (EF) in Parkinsons disease (PD) will have a negative influence on daily life. For the assessment objective and subjective measurement approaches are used. It is however unknown whether these approaches contribute in a different way to the assessment of EF in PD. Thirty-nine PD patients and 24 healthy participants completed the Dysexecutive questionnaire (DEX; subjective measure) and the Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB; objective measure). PD patients showed impaired EF (FAB) and reported more problems with EF in daily life (DEX) than healthy participants. The performance on the FAB could however not be explained by the problems with EF that were reported by PD patients (DEX) and vice versa. In conclusion, not all PD patients who show impairments in EF report them and not all PD patients who report problems with EF in daily life show impairments according to objective measurement. Both measures thus contribute in a different way to the assessment of EF in PD patients. However, it has to be considered that the FAB is not a critical test to assess cognition in PD, since these patients also suffer from posterior abnormalities including memory and visuo-spatial deficits which are strong predictors for PD dementia.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2006
Marije van Beilen; Klaus L. Leenders
Impaired executive functioning is frequently found in PD patients. As a result, impairments in the executive components of other cognitive functions such as memory, visuo-spatial functions and fluency are also present. From a neuroanatomical point of view, different loops are mediating cognitive, emotional and motor functions. The putamen is part of the motor loop, while the caudate nucleus is part of the motor loop but also of the cognitive loop. In PD, multiple neurotransmitter systems are involved in cognitive functioning, including the dopaminergic system. Cognitive functioning in PD is related to striatal FDOPA uptake. This is particularly true for the caudate nucleus, but also for the putamen. We found a relationship between putaminal FDOPA uptake and measures for executive functioning, memory and fluency in a group of 28 non-demented advanced PD patients. This is a surprising finding since the putamen is part of the motor loop, but not the cognitive loop. One possible explanation is that the putamen is involved in motor actions after cognitive switching and is therefore related to neuropsychological test scores, as these require motor responses.
Clinical Neuropsychologist | 2006
Marije van Beilen; Frederiec K. Withaar; Ed H. van Zomeren; Robert J. van den Bosch; Anke Bouma
Impaired executive functioning is found in a considerable proportion of schizophrenia patients. Neuropsychological tests are originally designed to measure the behavior of neurological patients and may therefore miss psychiatry-related cognitive deficits. Qualitative information on tests for executive functioning is important in psychiatric populations. The Modified Six Elements Test (MSET) is a planning test that consists of 6 tasks, for which subjects have limited time and have to obey to switching rules. This study concerns a qualitatively different approach schizophrenia patients use on the MSET, and its relationship with cognitive measures. MSET scores and strategies of schizophrenia patients were compared to those of healthy controls, closed-head-injury patients, and peripheral injury patients. Also, schizophrenia patients and healthy controls were compared on verbal memory and vigilance. Schizophrenia patients finish fewer assignments on the MSET, receive a lower profile score compared to healthy controls, and use a different strategy on the test compared to the other groups. They also perform below healthy controls on the tests for verbal memory and vigilance. Use of the different strategy in schizophrenia patients was related to impaired cognitive functioning. An interesting strategy used by schizophrenia patients on the MSET appears to be indicative of impaired cognitive functioning. This strategy may be a compensatory strategy to spare cognitive resources. It could also be the result of a concrete interpretation of the test instructions.