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Dive into the research topics where Robert B. Santulli is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert B. Santulli.


Neurology | 2006

Older adults with cognitive complaints show brain atrophy similar to that of amnestic MCI

Andrew J. Saykin; Heather A. Wishart; Laura A. Rabin; Robert B. Santulli; Laura A. Flashman; John D. West; Tara L. McHugh; Alexander C. Mamourian

Objective: To examine the neural basis of cognitive complaints in healthy older adults in the absence of memory impairment and to determine whether there are medial temporal lobe (MTL) gray matter (GM) changes as reported in Alzheimer disease (AD) and amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Methods: Participants were 40 euthymic individuals with cognitive complaints (CCs) who had normal neuropsychological test performance. The authors compared their structural brain MRI scans to those of 40 patients with amnestic MCI and 40 healthy controls (HCs) using voxel-based morphometry and hippocampal volume analysis. Results: The CC and MCI groups showed similar patterns of decreased GM relative to the HC group on whole brain analysis, with differences evident in the MTL, frontotemporal, and other neocortical regions. The degree of GM loss was associated with extent of both memory complaints and performance deficits. Manually segmented hippocampal volumes, adjusted for age and intracranial volume, were significantly reduced only in the MCI group, with the CC group showing an intermediate level. Conclusions: Cognitive complaints in older adults may indicate underlying neurodegenerative changes even when unaccompanied by deficits on formal testing. The cognitive complaint group may represent a pre–mild cognitive impairment stage and may provide an earlier therapeutic opportunity than mild cognitive impairment. MRI analysis approaches incorporating signal intensity may have greater sensitivity in early preclinical stages than volumetric methods.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 1999

Neuroanatomic substrates of semantic memory impairment in Alzheimer's disease: patterns of functional MRI activation.

Andrew J. Saykin; Laura A. Flashman; Sally A. Frutiger; Sterling C. Johnson; Alexander C. Mamourian; Chad H. Moritz; Judith R. O'Jile; Henry Riordan; Robert B. Santulli; Cynthia A. Smith; John B. Weaver

Impairment in semantic processing occurs early in Alzheimers disease (AD) and differential impact on subtypes of semantic relations have been reported, yet there is little data on the neuroanatomic basis of these deficits. Patients with mild AD and healthy controls underwent 3 functional MRI auditory stimulation tasks requiring semantic or phonological decisions (match-mismatch) about word pairs (category-exemplar, category-function, pseudoword). Patients showed a significant performance deficit only on the exemplar task. On voxel-based fMRI activation analyses, controls showed a clear activation focus in the left superior temporal gyrus for the phonological task; patients showed additional foci in the left dorsolateral prefrontal and bilateral cingulate areas. On the semantic tasks, predominant activation foci were seen in the inferior and middle frontal gyrus (left greater than right) in both groups but patients showed additional activation suggesting compensatory recruitment of locally expanded foci and remote regions, for example, right frontal activation during the exemplar task. Covariance analyses indicated that exemplar task performance was strongly related to signal increase in bilateral medial prefrontal cortex. The authors conclude that fMRI can reveal similarities and differences in functional neuroanatomical processing of semantic and phonological information in mild AD compared to healthy elderly, and can help to bridge cognitive and neural investigations of the integrity of semantic networks in AD.


NeuroImage | 2000

The Relationship between fMRI Activation and Cerebral Atrophy: Comparison of Normal Aging and Alzheimer Disease

Sterling C. Johnson; Andrew J. Saykin; Leslie C. Baxter; Laura A. Flashman; Robert B. Santulli; Thomas W. McAllister; Alexander C. Mamourian

Functional MRI has recently been used to examine activation associated with aging and dementia, yet little is known regarding the effect of cerebral atrophy on fMRI signal. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between measures of global and regionally specific atrophy and fMRI activation in normal aging and in Alzheimer disease (AD). Two groups of subjects were studied with echoplanar imaging and quantitative structural volumetry: healthy controls spanning a broad age and atrophy range (n = 16) and patients with mild AD (n = 8). Results from a semantic task previously found to activate left inferior frontal (LIFG) and left superior temporal (LSTG) gyri were analyzed. The correlations between clusters of activation in the LIFG and LSTG and measures of local atrophy in the LIFG and LSTG regions were evaluated. For control subjects, there was no significant correlation between activation and regional or total brain atrophy (for LIFG r = -0.03, NS; for LSTG r = 0.20, NS). In contrast, for AD patients, there was a significant positive correlation between atrophy and activation in LIFG (r = 0.70, P = 0.05) but not LSTG (r = 0.00, NS). These results suggest that activation of language regions and atrophy within those regions may be independent among healthy adults spanning a broad age and atrophy range. However, in AD, a relationship exists in the LIFG that may reflect compensatory recruitment of cortical units or disease-specific changes in the hemodynamic response.


Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition | 2009

Differential Memory Test Sensitivity for Diagnosing Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment and Predicting Conversion to Alzheimer's Disease

Laura A. Rabin; Nadia Pare; Andrew J. Saykin; Michael J. Brown; Heather A. Wishart; Laura A. Flashman; Robert B. Santulli

ABSTRACT Episodic memory is the first and most severely affected cognitive domain in Alzheimers disease (AD), and it is also the key early marker in prodromal stages including amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI). The relative ability of memory tests to discriminate between MCI and normal aging has not been well characterized. We compared the classification value of widely used verbal memory tests in distinguishing healthy older adults (n = 51) from those with MCI (n = 38). Univariate logistic regression indicated that the total learning score from the California Verbal Learning Test-II (CVLT-II) ranked highest in terms of distinguishing MCI from normal aging (sensitivity = 90.2; specificity = 84.2). Inclusion of the delayed recall condition of a story memory task (i.e., WMS-III Logical Memory, Story A) enhanced the overall accuracy of classification (sensitivity = 92.2; specificity = 94.7). Combining Logical Memory recognition and CVLT-II long delay best predicted progression from MCI to AD over a 4-year period (accurate classification = 87.5%). Learning across multiple trials may provide the most sensitive index for initial diagnosis of MCI, but inclusion of additional variables may enhance overall accuracy and may represent the optimal strategy for identifying individuals most likely to progress to dementia.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2006

Regionally specific atrophy of the corpus callosum in AD, MCI and cognitive complaints

Paul Wang; Andrew J. Saykin; Laura A. Flashman; Heather A. Wishart; Laura A. Rabin; Robert B. Santulli; Tara L. McHugh; John W. MacDonald; Alexander C. Mamourian

The goal of the present study was to determine if there are global or regionally specific decreases in callosal area in early Alzheimers disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). In addition, this study examined the corpus callosum of healthy older adults who have subjective cognitive complaints (CC) but perform within normal limits on neuropsychological tests. We used a semi-automated procedure to examine the total and regional areas of the corpus callosum in 22 patients with early AD, 28 patients with amnestic MCI, 28 healthy older adults with cognitive complaints, and 50 demographically matched healthy controls (HC). The AD, MCI, and CC groups all showed a significant reduction of the posterior region (isthmus and splenium) relative to healthy controls. The AD group also had a significantly smaller overall callosum than the controls. The demonstration of callosal atrophy in older adults with cognitive complaints suggests that callosal changes occur very early in the dementing process, and that these earliest changes may be too subtle for detection by neuropsychological assessments, including memory tests.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Selective Changes in White Matter Integrity in MCI and Older Adults with Cognitive Complaints

Yang Wang; John D. West; Laura A. Flashman; Heather A. Wishart; Robert B. Santulli; Laura A. Rabin; Nadia Pare; Konstantinos Arfanakis; Andrew J. Saykin

BACKGROUND White matter changes measured using diffusion tensor imaging have been reported in Alzheimers disease and amnestic mild cognitive impairment, but changes in earlier pre-mild cognitive impairment stages have not been fully investigated. METHODS In a cross-sectional analysis, older adults with mild cognitive impairment (n=28), older adults with cognitive complaints but without psychometric impairment (n=29) and healthy controls (n=35) were compared. Measures included whole-brain diffusion tensor imaging, T1-weighted structural magnetic resonance imaging, and neuropsychological assessment. Diffusion images were analyzed using Tract-Based Spatial Statistics. Voxel-wise fractional anisotropy and mean, axial, and radial diffusivities were assessed and compared between groups. Significant tract clusters were extracted in order to perform further region of interest comparisons. Brain volume was estimated using FreeSurfer based on T1 structural images. RESULTS The mild cognitive impairment group showed lower fractional anisotropy and higher radial diffusivity than controls in bilateral parahippocampal white matter. When comparing extracted diffusivity measurements from bilateral parahippocampal white matter clusters, the cognitive complaint group had values that were intermediate to the mild cognitive impairment and healthy control groups. Group difference in diffusion tensor imaging measures remained significant after controlling for hippocampal atrophy. Across the entire sample, diffusion tensor imaging indices in parahippocampal white matter were correlated with memory function. CONCLUSIONS These findings are consistent with previous results showing changes in parahippocampal white matter in Alzheimers disease and mild cognitive impairment compared to controls. The intermediate pattern found in the cognitive complaint group suggests the potential of diffusion tensor imaging to contribute to earlier detection of neurodegenerative changes during prodromal stages. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Imaging Brain Aging and Neurodegenerative disease.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2007

The Memory and Aging Telephone Screen: Development and preliminary validation

Laura A. Rabin; Andrew J. Saykin; Heather A. Wishart; Katherine E. Nutter-Upham; Laura A. Flashman; Nadia Pare; Robert B. Santulli

Telephone interviews are widely used in geriatric settings to identify eligible research participants and to perform brief follow‐up assessments of cognition. This article reports on the development and validation of the Memory and Aging Telephone Screen (MATS), a structured interview for older adults with mild cognitive impairment and/or significant memory complaints. We also developed three alternate forms of the MATS objective memory test to reduce practice effects engendered by multiple administrations.


Current Gerontology and Geriatrics Research | 2016

Caregiver Stigma and Burden in Memory Disorders: An Evaluation of the Effects of Caregiver Type and Gender.

Phoebe V. Kahn; Heather A. Wishart; Jennifer S. Randolph; Robert B. Santulli

Despite considerable gains in public awareness of dementia, dementia patients and their caregivers continue to be stigmatized. Previous work has explored stigma and burden among adult children of persons with dementia in Israel, but no similar data exist for spousal caregivers or caregivers in general in the United States. This study examines the differences in stigma and burden experienced by spousal and adult child caregivers and male and female caregivers of persons with dementia. Eighty-two caregivers were given the Zarit Burden Inventory Short Form (ZBI) and the Caregiver Section of the Family Stigma in Alzheimers Disease Scale (FS-ADS-C). Scores on the FS-ADS-C and ZBI were positively correlated (r s = .51, p < .001). Female caregivers reported experiencing more stigma on the FS-ADS-C (t(80) = −4.37, p < .001) and more burden on the ZBI (t(80) = −2.68, p = .009) compared to male caregivers, and adult child caregivers reported experiencing more stigma on the FS-ADS-C (t(30.8) = −2.22, p = .034) and more burden on the ZBI (t(80) = −2.65, p = .010) than spousal caregivers. These results reinforce the importance of support for caregivers, particularly adult child and female caregivers who may experience higher levels of stigma and burden.


Brain Imaging and Behavior | 2009

Judgment in Older Adults with Normal Cognition, Cognitive Complaints, MCI, and Mild AD: Relation to Regional Frontal Gray Matter.

Laura A. Rabin; Andrew J. Saykin; John D. West; Marlana J. Borgos; Heather A. Wishart; Katherine E. Nutter-Upham; Laura A. Flashman; Robert B. Santulli

We investigated regional gray matter (GM) reduction as a predictor of judgment ability in 120 non-depressed older adults with varying degrees of cognitive complaints and/or impairment (including those with MCI and mild AD). Participants underwent neuropsychological assessment, including the Test of Practical Judgment (TOP-J), a recently developed instrument that evaluates judgment and problem solving related to safety, medical, social/ethical, and financial issues. Structural MR scanning included T1-weighted SPGR volumes acquired at 1.5 Tesla. We used voxel-based morphometry to analyze the relationship between GM density and TOP-J scores, controlling for age, education, gender, intracranial volume, verbal memory, and crystallized knowledge. Consistent with our hypothesis, judgment ability correlated with GM density in prefrontal regions (left inferior and superior frontal gyri). Findings extend previous observations of frontal involvement in higher-order cognitive abilities/executive functions and provide initial validation of the TOP-J’s sensitivity to the integrity of these brain regions in individuals at risk for dementia.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2005

Diffusion tensor mri in preclinical AD: Diffusivity and anisotropy in MCI and older adults with cognitive complaints

John D. West; Andrew J. Saykin; Konstantinos Arfanakis; Heather A. Wishart; Laura A. Rabin; Laura A. Flashman; Robert B. Santulli; Alexander C. Mamourian

John D. West, Andrew J. Saykin, Konstantinos Arfanakis, Heather A. Wishart, Laura A. Rabin, Laura A. Flashman, Robert B. Santulli, Alexander C. Mamourian; Neuropsychology Program and Brain Imaging Lab, Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth Medical School/DHMC, Lebanon, NH, USA; Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, USA; Department of Psychiatry, DHMC, Lebanon, NH, USA; Department of Radiology, DHMC, Lebanon, NH, USA

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Laura A. Rabin

City University of New York

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