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Dive into the research topics where Monique M. Cherrier is active.

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Featured researches published by Monique M. Cherrier.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2006

Effects of intranasal insulin on cognition in memory-impaired older adults: modulation by APOE genotype.

Mark A. Reger; G.S. Watson; William H. Frey; Laura D. Baker; Brenna Cholerton; Michelle L. Keeling; Dana Belongia; Mark A. Fishel; S. R. Plymate; Gerard D. Schellenberg; Monique M. Cherrier; Suzanne Craft

Raising insulin acutely in the periphery and in brain improves verbal memory. Intranasal insulin administration, which raises insulin acutely in the CNS without raising plasma insulin levels, provides an opportunity to determine whether these effects are mediated by central insulin or peripheral processes. Based on prior research with intravenous insulin, we predicted that the treatment response would differ between subjects with (epsilon4+) and without (epsilon4-) the APOE-epsilon4 allele. On separate mornings, 26 memory-impaired subjects (13 with early Alzheimers disease and 13 with amnestic mild cognitive impairment) and 35 normal controls each underwent three intranasal treatment conditions consisting of saline (placebo) or insulin (20 or 40 IU). Cognition was tested 15 min post-treatment, and blood was acquired at baseline and 45 min after treatment. Intranasal insulin treatment did not change plasma insulin or glucose levels. Insulin treatment facilitated recall on two measures of verbal memory in memory-impaired epsilon4- adults. These effects were stronger for memory-impaired epsilon4- subjects than for memory-impaired epsilon4+ subjects and normal adults. Unexpectedly, memory-impaired epsilon4+ subjects showed poorer recall following insulin administration on one test of memory. These findings suggest that intranasal insulin administration may have therapeutic benefit without the risk of peripheral hypoglycemia and provide further evidence for apolipoprotein E (APOE) related differences in insulin metabolism.


Neurology | 2001

Testosterone supplementation improves spatial and verbal memory in healthy older men

Monique M. Cherrier; Sanjay Asthana; S. R. Plymate; Laura D. Baker; Alvin M. Matsumoto; Elaine R. Peskind; Murray A. Raskind; K. Brodkin; William J. Bremner; Andreana Petrova; Shawn Latendresse; Suzanne Craft

Objective: To determine the relationship between exogenous testosterone administration and cognitive abilities in a population of healthy older men. Background: Serum levels of total and bioavailable testosterone gradually decrease with age in men and are associated with reductions in muscle mass, osteoporosis, decreased sexual activity, and changes in cognition. Methods: Twenty-five healthy, community-dwelling volunteers, aged 50 to 80 years, completed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Participants received weekly intramuscular injections of either 100 mg testosterone enanthate or placebo (saline) for 6 weeks. Cognitive evaluations were conducted at baseline, week 3, and week 6 of treatment by use of a battery of neuropsychologic tests. Results: Circulating total testosterone was raised an average of 130% from baseline at week 3 and 116% at week 6 in the treatment group. Because of aromatization of testosterone, estradiol increased an average of 77% at week 3 and 73% at week 6 in the treatment group. Significant improvements in cognition were observed for spatial memory (recall of a walking route), spatial ability (block construction), and verbal memory (recall of a short story) in older men treated with testosterone compared with baseline and the placebo group, although improvements were not evident for all measures. Conclusions: The results suggest that short-term testosterone administration enhances cognitive function in healthy older men. However, it remains unclear whether these improvements in cognition are attributable to increased testosterone or estradiol levels, or both. The potential role of testosterone vs its metabolites on cognition requires further research.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2008

Intranasal Insulin Administration Dose-Dependently Modulates Verbal Memory and Plasma Amyloid-β in Memory-Impaired Older Adults

Mark A. Reger; G. Stennis Watson; Pattie S. Green; Laura D. Baker; Brenna Cholerton; Mark A. Fishel; Stephen R. Plymate; Monique M. Cherrier; Gerard D. Schellenberg; William H. Frey; Suzanne Craft

Intranasal insulin administration raises central nervous system (CNS) insulin levels in humans and acutely facilitates verbal memory in patients with Alzheimers disease (AD), an effect that may differ by APOE genotype. The purpose of this study was to examine the cognitive dose response curves for intranasal insulin administration, and determine whether the effects of insulin differ between participants with (epsilon4+) and without (epsilon4-) the APOE- epsilon4 allele. On separate mornings, 33 memory-impaired adults with AD or amnestic mild cognitive impairment and 59 normal adults each underwent five intranasal treatment conditions consisting of insulin (10, 20, 40, or 60 IU) or placebo. Cognition was tested 15-minutes post-treatment, and blood was acquired at baseline and 45-minutes post-treatment. Plasma insulin and glucose levels were unaffected by treatment. Insulin administration facilitated recall on two measures of verbal memory in memory-impaired epsilon4- adults, with performance generally peaking at 20 IU. In contrast, memory-impaired epsilon4+ subjects demonstrated a relative decline in verbal memory. Insulin also differentially modulated plasma amyloid-beta for memory-impaired subjects and normal controls, effects that again differed by APOE genotype. These findings suggest that groups with different genetic risks for AD may show differential dose-response curves following intranasal insulin administration.


BMC Cancer | 2010

Changes in neuronal activation patterns in response to androgen deprivation therapy: a pilot study.

Monique M. Cherrier; Paul R. Borghesani; Amy L. Shelton; Celestia S. Higano

BackgroundA common treatment option for men with prostate cancer is androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). However, men undergoing ADT may experience physical side effects, changes in quality of life and sometimes psychiatric and cognitive side effects.MethodsIn this study, hormone naïve patients without evidence of metastases with a rising PSA were treated with nine months of ADT. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of the brain during three visuospatial tasks was performed at baseline prior to treatment and after nine months of ADT in five subjects. Seven healthy control patients, underwent neuroimaging at the same time intervals.ResultsADT patients showed reduced, task-related BOLD-fMRI activation during treatment that was not observed in control subjects. Reduction in activation in right parietal-occipital regions from baseline was observed during recall of the spatial location of objects and mental rotation.ConclusionsFindings, while preliminary, suggest that ADT reduces task-related neural activation in brain regions that are involved in mental rotation and accurate recall of spatial information.


Neurology | 2005

Testosterone improves spatial memory in men with Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment.

Monique M. Cherrier; Alvin M. Matsumoto; John K. Amory; Sanjay Asthana; William J. Bremner; Elaine R. Peskind; Murray A. Raskind; Suzanne Craft

Objective: To determine the efficacy of testosterone (T) supplementation on cognition in a sample of men with Alzheimer disease (AD) or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Methods: Fifteen patients with AD and 17 patients with MCI aged 63 to 85 years completed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Nineteen participants received weekly intramuscular (IM) injections of 100 mg T enanthate and 13 participants received weekly injections of placebo (saline) for 6 weeks. Cognitive evaluations using a battery of neuropsychological tests were conducted at baseline, week 3, and week 6 of treatment and again after 6 weeks of washout. Results: Peak serum total T levels were raised from baseline an average of 295% in the active treatment group. Improvements in spatial memory (p < 0.05) and constructional abilities (p < 0.05) and verbal memory were evident in the T group. No changes were noted for selective and divided attention or language. Prostate specific antigen did not significantly change during this brief treatment. Conclusion: Testosterone supplementation may benefit selective cognitive functions in men with Alzheimer disease and mild cognitive impairment.


Neurology | 2005

The role of aromatization in testosterone supplementation: Effects on cognition in older men

Monique M. Cherrier; Alvin M. Matsumoto; John K. Amory; S. Ahmed; William J. Bremner; Elaine R. Peskind; Murray A. Raskind; M. Johnson; Suzanne Craft

Objective: To determine the contribution of conversion of testosterone (T) to estradiol on cognitive processing in a population of healthy older men who received T supplementation. Methods: Sixty healthy, community-dwelling volunteers aged 50 to 90 years completed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Participants were randomized to receive weekly IM injections of 100 mg T enanthate plus daily oral placebo pill (T group, n = 20), 100 mg testosterone enanthate plus 1 mg daily of anastrozole, an aromatase inhibitor (oral pill), to block the conversion of T to estradiol (AT group, n = 19), or saline injection and placebo pill (placebo group, n = 21) for 6 weeks. Cognitive evaluations using a battery of neuropsychological tests were conducted at baseline, week 3 and week 6 of treatment, and after 6 weeks of washout. Results: Circulating total T was increased from baseline an average of 238% in the T and AT treatment groups. Estradiol increased an average of 81% in the T group and decreased 50% in the AT group during treatment. Significant improvements in spatial memory were evident in the AT and T treatment groups. However, only the group with elevated estradiol levels (T group) demonstrated significant verbal memory improvement. Conclusion: In healthy older men, improvement in verbal memory induced by testosterone administration depends on aromatization of testosterone to estradiol, whereas improvement in spatial memory occurs in the absence of increases in estradiol.


Neurology | 2005

Cognitive differences in dementia patients with autopsy-verified AD, Lewy body pathology, or both

M. L. Kraybill; Eric B. Larson; Debby W. Tsuang; Linda Teri; Wayne C. McCormick; J. D. Bowen; Walter A. Kukull; James B. Leverenz; Monique M. Cherrier

Objective: To examine the neuropsychological profile of dementia patients from a community-based autopsy sample of dementia, comparing Alzheimer disease (AD), Lewy body pathology (LBP) alone, and LBP with coexistent AD (AD/LBP). Methods: The authors reviewed 135 subjects from a community-based study of dementia for whom autopsy and brain tissue was available. Diagnostic groups were determined according to standard neuropathologic methods and criteria, and the presence of LBs was determined using α-synuclein immunostaining. Neuropathologically defined diagnostic groups of AD, AD/LBP, and LBP were examined for differences on neuropsychological test performance at the time of initial study enrollment. Results: There were 48 patients with AD alone, 65 with LB and AD pathology (AD/LBP), and 22 with LBP alone (LBP alone). There were no significant differences between groups demographically or on performance of enrollment Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) or Dementia Rating Scale (DRS). AD patients performed worse than the LBP patients on memory measures (Fuld Object Memory Evaluation Delayed Recall, Wechsler Memory Scale Logical Memory Immediate and Delayed Recall; p < 0.05) and a naming task (Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer’s Disease Naming; p < 0.05). LBP patients were more impaired than AD patients on executive function (Trail Making Test Part B; p < 0.05) and attention tasks (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale–Revised Digit Span; p < 0.05). Decline in MMSE and DRS scores over time were greatest in the patients with AD/LBP. Conclusions: In a community-based sample of older, medically complicated patients with dementia, there are neuropsychological differences between dementia subtypes at the time of diagnosis. In particular, patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) alone and AD/Lewy body pathology (LBP) had more severe memory impairment than patients with LBP. LBP alone was associated with more severe executive dysfunction. Patients with AD/LBP had the most rapid rate of cognitive decline.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2000

Insulin effects on glucose metabolism, memory, and plasma amyloid precursor protein in Alzheimer's disease differ according to apolipoprotein-E genotype.

Suzanne Craft; Sanjay Asthana; Gerard D. Schellenberg; Laura D. Baker; Monique M. Cherrier; Adam Boyt; Ralph N. Martins; Murray A. Raskind; Elaine R. Peskind; Stephen R. Plymate

Abstract: Higher fasting plasma insulin levels and reduced CSF‐to‐plasma insulin‐ratios, suggestive of insulin resistance, have been observed in patients with Alzheimers disease (AD) who do not possess an apolipoprotein E (ApoE)‐ɛ4 allele. Insulin has also been implicated in processing of β‐amyloid and amyloid precursor protein (APP). We examined the effects of intravenous insulin administration while maintaining euglycemia on insulin‐mediated glucose disposal, memory, and plasma APP in patients with AD and normal adults of varying ApoE genotypes. AD subjects without an ɛ4 allele had significantly lower insulin‐mediated glucose disposal rates than did AD patients with an ɛ4 allele (p < 0.03) or than did normal adults without an ɛ4 allele (p < 0.02). AD subjects without an ɛ4 allele also showed significant memory facilitation with insulin administration (p < 0.04), whereas the AD‐ɛ4 group did not. Insulin reduced APP levels for AD patients without an ApoE ɛ4 allele, but raised APP for AD patients with an ApoE ɛH4 allele These results document ApoE‐related differences in insulin metabolism in AD that may relate to disease pathogenesis.


Neuroendocrinology | 1999

Insulin Metabolism in Alzheimer’s Disease Differs According to Apolipoprotein E Genotype and Gender

Suzanne Craft; Sanjay Asthana; Gerard D. Schellenberg; Monique M. Cherrier; Laura D. Baker; John W. Newcomer; Stephen R. Plymate; Shawn Latendresse; Andreana Petrova; Murray A. Raskind; Elaine R. Peskind; Cassin Lofgreen; Karla Grimwood

Higher fasting plasma insulin levels and reduced CSF-to-plasma insulin ratios, suggestive of insulin resistance, have been observed in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) who do not possess an apolipoprotein E (APOE)-Ε4 allele. We examined the relationship of APOE and gender to peripheral insulin action and hyperinsulinemic memory facilitation in patients with AD using a sensitive measure of insulin-mediated glucose disposal. Participants were 32 patients with AD (9 without an Ε4 allele, 23 with an Ε4 allele) and 25 healthy age-matched adults (16 without an Ε4 allele, 9 with an Ε4 allele). AD subjects without an Ε4 allele had significantly lower insulin-mediated glucose disposal rates than AD patients with an Ε4 allele (p < 0.03), or than normal adults without an Ε4 allele (p < 0.02). Female AD subjects showed lower insulin-mediated glucose disposal rates than did male AD subjects (p < 0.02). No significant interaction was observed between APOE group and gender, suggesting that these effects are independent. AD subjects without an Ε4 allele also showed significant memory facilitation in the hyperinsulinemic condition (p < 0.04), whereas the AD-Ε4 group did not. Also in the hyperinsulinemic condition, AD patients without an Ε4 allele had lower insulin levels than patients with an Ε4 allele (p < 0.02), and women with AD had lower insulin levels than did men with AD despite similar insulin infusion rates and body mass (p < 0.004). No gender or genotype effects were observed in either condition for normal subjects. These results provide in vivo evidence of differences in insulin-mediated energy metabolism between Ε4 and non-Ε4 AD, and suggest that defective insulin action may be of particular pathophysiologic significance for patients without an Ε-4 allele.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2006

Salivary cortisol and memory function in human aging.

Ge Li; Monique M. Cherrier; Debby W. Tsuang; Eric C. Petrie; Elizabeth A. Colasurdo; Suzanne Craft; Gerard D. Schellenberg; Elaine R. Peskind; Murray A. Raskind; Charles W. Wilkinson

OBJECTIVE To examine the association of salivary cortisol with cognitive changes in a 3 year longitudinal study. Previous studies have suggested that elevated glucocorticoid concentrations alter hippocampal neuronal morphology, inhibit neurogenesis, and impair cognition. METHODS Salivary cortisol samples were collected at home by 79 cognitively intact older persons (mean age 78+/-7 years) at 08:00, 15:00 and 23:00h, and collections were repeated annually for 3 years. Cognitive function was also assessed annually. RESULTS The mean cortisol level of samples taken at three times of day and the cortisol concentration at 23:00h were significantly associated with poorer performance on tasks of declarative memory and executive function. Of 46 subjects who completed the entire 3 year study, higher initial cortisol concentration at 23:00h predicted a decline in performance of delayed paragraph recall. CONCLUSION These results partially confirm previous findings that high cortisol is associated with impaired declarative memory function in non-demented older persons. In addition, our data show that high salivary cortisol concentrations predict a decline in memory function over the next 3 years.

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Suzanne Craft

University of Washington

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Sanjay Asthana

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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