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Dive into the research topics where Natalie Kaiser is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalie Kaiser.


American Journal of Alzheimers Disease and Other Dementias | 2012

Neuropsychological and neuroimaging markers in early versus late-onset Alzheimer's disease.

Natalie Kaiser; Rebecca J. Melrose; Collin Y. Liu; David L. Sultzer; Elvira Jimenez; Michael Su; Lorena Monserratt; Mario F. Mendez

Background: Early-onset Alzheimer’s disease (EOAD) has been overshadowed by the more common late-onset AD (LOAD). Yet, the literature indicates EOAD may have less hippocampal-memory presentations and more focal neocortical localization early in the disease. Objective: To evaluate these proposed differences between these 2 forms of AD and to explore what they inform about differences in AD pathophysiology. Methods: In all, 21 patients with EOAD and 24 patients with LOAD matched for disease progression and severity were compared on neurocognitive measures and resting state fluorodeoxy-glucose positron–emission tomography (FDG-PET). Results: Patients with EOAD had worse executive functions with greater hypometabolism in the parietal regions; whereas patients with LOAD had worse confrontation naming and verbal recognition memory with greater hypometabolism in inferior frontotemporal regions. Conclusions: In addition to highlighting significant differences between EOAD and LOAD, these results reveal dissociation between executive deficits in AD and frontal hypometabolism, suggesting early disturbances of the parietal–frontal network in EOAD.


American Journal of Alzheimers Disease and Other Dementias | 2014

Observation of social behavior in frontotemporal dementia.

Mario F. Mendez; Sylvia S. Fong; Jill S. Shapira; Elvira Jimenez; Natalie Kaiser; Sarah Kremen; Po-Heng Tsai

Background: The most characteristic manifestations of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) are abnormalities in social behavior. However, distinguishing bvFTD based on social behavior can be difficult in structured clinical settings. Methods: Using a Social Observation Inventory, 10 patients with bvFTD and 10 patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) were compared to their caregiver interlocutors on 1-hour mealtime, in-home videotaped segments. Results: Compared to caregivers and patients with AD, patients with bvFTD were significantly disturbed in social behavior. In contrast, patients with AD were indistinguishable from their caregivers. The lack of “you” comments and decreased tact and manners distinguished 92.6% of the patients with bvFTD from patients with AD and caregivers. The Social Observation Inventory scores correlated with scores on frontal-executive tests and socioemotional scales. Conclusions: The systematic observation of social behavior during routine activities may be one of the best ways to distinguish patients with bvFTD from normal individuals and from patients with other dementias.


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2014

Differences in Anxiety Among Patients With Early- Versus Late-Onset Alzheimer’s Disease

Natalie Kaiser; Li-Jung Liang; Rebecca J. Melrose; Stacy Schantz Wilkins; David L. Sultzer; Mario F. Mendez

The authors sought to evaluate the incidence and correlates of anxiety in early-onset Alzheimers disease (EOAD) versus the more typical late-onset AD (LOAD). A group of 23 EOAD and 22 LOAD patients were compared by the Neuropsychiatric Inventory Anxiety subscale. Demographic and disease-related relationships with anxiety were evaluated, as well as types of anxiety symptoms that were endorsed. EOAD patients had significantly more anxiety symptoms than LOAD patients. Among those with EOAD, anxiety was associated with male gender, higher Mini-Mental State Exam score, and separation from caregivers. Among LOAD patients, anxiety was associated with psychotic and activating psychiatric symptoms. These results have implications for the management and alleviation of anxiety in AD.


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2014

Skin Conductance Levels May Reflect Emotional Blunting in Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia

Aditi Joshi; Mario F. Mendez; Natalie Kaiser; Elvira Jimenez; Michelle Mather; Jill S. Shapira

Emotional blunting is a core diagnostic feature of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). The authors evaluated skin conductance as a measure of emotional blunting among 10 patients with bvFTD compared with 10 with Alzheimers disease and 14 healthy control subjects. Despite responses to an auditory startle stimulus, skin conductance levels (SCLs) were lower in the patients with bvFTD compared with the other groups. The low SCLs significantly correlated with ratings of emotional blunting. The authors conclude that low SCLs in bvFTD indicate a low resting sympathetic state and low emotional arousal. The measurement of SCLs may be a useful noninvasive diagnostic test for bvFTD.


Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology | 2013

Suicidal Behavior and Loss of the Future Self in Semantic Dementia

Julia J. Hsiao; Natalie Kaiser; Sylvia S. Fong; Mario F. Mendez

Semantic dementia impairs semantic autobiographical memory, but tends to spare its episodic components that are critical for the sense of self. Investigators have recently discovered disturbances in the “future self” in semantic dementia. We report a 63-year-old man with semantic dementia who was hospitalized after suicide attempts that he attributed to his loss of a sense of future self. He complained of a decreased sense of being human, because he could not imagine doing things in the future that he had done in the past. Suicidal thinking and inability to place himself in future tasks persisted despite resolution of depression. Clinical assessment revealed a crossmodal loss of semantic knowledge, and neuroimaging showed bilateral anterior temporal atrophy and hypometabolism. On specific tests of autobiographical memory, identity, attribute knowledge, and future projection, the patient could return to the past and visualize himself in familiar scenarios, but he could not visualize himself even passively in these scenarios in the future. His future self was impaired not from seeing himself disabled; it was from an absence of semantic details of potential experiences, associated with impaired semantic autobiographical memory. His self-representations were concrete and specific rather than abstract and generalizable. This patient and recent publications indicate that semantic dementia impairs the ability to imagine oneself as capable in the future, leading some patients to suicidal behavior. We discuss possible mechanisms for these findings, including the potential role of abstract construals for future thinking.


Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology | 2014

A Scale of Socioemotional Dysfunction in Frontotemporal Dementia

Joseph P. Barsuglia; Natalie Kaiser; Stacy Schantz Wilkins; Aditi Joshi; Robin J. Barrows; Pongsatorn Paholpak; Hemali Panchal; Elvira Jimenez; Michelle Mather; Mario F. Mendez

Early social dysfunction is a hallmark symptom of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD); however, validated measures for assessing social deficits in dementia are needed. The purpose of the current study was to examine the utility of a novel informant-based measure of social impairment, the Socioemotional Dysfunction Scale (SDS) in early-onset dementia. Sixteen bvFTD and 18 early-onset Alzheimers disease (EOAD) participants received standard clinical neuropsychological measures and neuroimaging. Caregiver informants were administered the SDS. Individuals with bvFTD exhibited greater social dysfunction on the SDS compared with the EOAD group; t(32) = 6.32, p < .001. The scale demonstrated preliminary evidence for discriminating these frequently misdiagnosed groups (area under the curve = 0.920, p = <.001) and internal consistency α = 0.977. The SDS demonstrated initial evidence as an effective measure for detecting abnormal social behavior and discriminating bvFTD from EOAD. Future validation is recommended in larger and more diverse patient groups.


Neuropsychologia | 2013

What dementia reveals about proverb interpretation and its neuroanatomical correlates

Natalie Kaiser; Grace Lee; Po H. Lu; Michelle Mather; Jill S. Shapira; Elvira Jimenez; Paul M. Thompson; Mario F. Mendez

OBJECTIVE Neuropsychologists frequently include proverb interpretation as a measure of executive abilities. A concrete interpretation of proverbs, however, may reflect semantic impairments from anterior temporal lobes, rather than executive dysfunction from frontal lobes. The investigation of proverb interpretation among patients with different dementias with varying degrees of temporal and frontal dysfunction may clarify the underlying brain-behavior mechanisms for abstraction from proverbs. We propose that patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), who are characteristically more impaired on proverb interpretation than those with Alzheimers disease (AD), are disproportionately impaired because of anterior temporal-mediated semantic deficits. METHODS Eleven patients with bvFTD and 10 with AD completed the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System (D-KEFS) Proverbs Test and a series of neuropsychological measures of executive and semantic functions. The analysis included both raw and age-adjusted normed data for multiple choice responses on the D-KEFS Proverbs Test using independent samples t-tests. Tensor-based morphometry (TBM) applied to 3D T1-weighted MRI scans mapped the association between regional brain volume and proverb performance. Computations of mean Jacobian values within select regions of interest provided a numeric summary of regional volume, and voxel-wise regression yielded 3D statistical maps of the association between tissue volume and proverb scores. RESULTS The patients with bvFTD were significantly worse than those with AD in proverb interpretation. The worse performance of the bvFTD patients involved a greater number of concrete responses to common, familiar proverbs, but not to uncommon, unfamiliar ones. These concrete responses to common proverbs correlated with semantic measures, whereas concrete responses to uncommon proverbs correlated with executive functions. After controlling for dementia diagnosis, TBM analyses indicated significant correlations between impaired proverb interpretation and the anterior temporal lobe region (left>right). CONCLUSIONS Among two dementia groups, those with bvFTD, demonstrated a greater number of concrete responses to common proverbs compared to those with AD, and this performance correlated with semantic deficits and the volume of the left anterior lobe, the hub of semantic knowledge. The findings of this study suggest that common proverb interpretation is greatly influenced by semantic dysfunction and that the use of proverbs for testing executive functions needs to include the interpretation of unfamiliar proverbs.


Aging Health | 2013

The impact of age and Alzheimer's disease risk factors on memory performance over time

Natalie Kaiser; Karen J. Miller; Prabha Siddarth; Linda M. Ercoli; Gary W. Small


Neurology | 2013

Social Dysfunction in Patients with Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia and Early-Onset Alzheimer's Disease (P05.112)

Stephanie Melchor; Grace Lee; Po Lu; Jill S. Shapira; Michelle Mather; Natalie Kaiser; Elvira Jimenez; Paul M. Thompson; Mario F. Mendez


Neurology | 2013

Auditory Startle in Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia Compared to Alzheimer's Disease and Healthy Controls (P07.167)

Aditi Joshi; David Shapiro; Elvira Jimenez; Michelle Mather; Jill S. Shapira; Natalie Kaiser; Mario F. Mendez

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Elvira Jimenez

University of California

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Aditi Joshi

University of California

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Collin Y. Liu

University of Southern California

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Grace Lee

University of California

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Paul M. Thompson

University of Southern California

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