Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Robert I. Block is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Robert I. Block.


Psychopharmacology | 1993

Effects of chronic marijuana use on human cognition

Robert I. Block; M. M. Ghoneim

Impairments of human cognition and learning following chronic marijuana use are of serious concern, but have not been clearly demonstrated. To determine whether such impairments occurred, this study compared performance of adult marijuana users and non-users (N=144 andN=72, respectively) matched on intellectual functioning before the onset of drug use, i.e., on scores from standardized tests administered during the fourth grade of grammar school (Iowa Tests of Basic Skills). Subjects were given the twelfth grade versions of these tests (Iowa Tests of Educational Development) and other, computerized cognitive tests in successive test sessions. “Heavy” marijuana use (defined by use seven or more times weekly) was associated with deficits in mathematical skills and verbal expression in the Iowa Tests of Educational Development and selective impairments in memory retrieval processes in Buschkes Test. The retrieval impairments were restricted to words that were easy to visualize. Impairments depended on the frequency of chronic marijuana use, i.e., “light” and “intermediate” marijuana use (defined by use one to four and five to six times weekly, respectively) were not associated with deficits. Intermediate use was associated with superior performance in one condition (“fuzzy” concepts) of a Concept Formation test.


Neuroreport | 2000

Effects of frequent marijuana use on brain tissue volume and composition

Robert I. Block; Daniel S. O'Leary; James C. Ehrhardt; Jean C. Augustinack; M. M. Ghoneim; Stephan Arndt; James A. Hall

To investigate CNS effects of frequent marijuana use, brain tissue volume and composition were measured using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 18 current, frequent, young adult marijuana users and 13 comparable, non-using controls. Automated image analysis techniques were used to measure global and regional brain volumes, including, for most regions, separate measures of gray and white matter. The marijuana users showed no evidence of cerebral atrophy or global or regional changes in tissue volumes. Volumes of ventricular CSF were not higher in marijuana users than controls, but were, in fact, lower. There were no clinically significant abnormalities in any subjects MRI. Sex differences were detected in several global volume measures.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2002

Effects of Smoking Marijuana on Brain Perfusion and Cognition

Daniel S. O'Leary; Robert I. Block; Julie A. Koeppel; Michael Flaum; Susan K. Schultz; Nancy C. Andreasen; Laura L. Boles Ponto; G. Leonard Watkins; Richard R. Hurtig; Richard D. Hichwa

The effects of smoking marijuana on regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and cognitive performance were assessed in 12 recreational users in a double-blinded, placebo-controlled study. PET with [15Oxygen]-labeled water ([15O]H2O) was used to measure rCBF before and after smoking of marijuana and placebo cigarettes, as subjects repeatedly performed an auditory attention task. Smoking marijuana resulted in intoxication, as assessed by a behavioral rating scale, but did not significantly alter mean behavioral performance on the attention task. Heart rate and blood pressure increased dramatically following smoking of marijuana but not placebo cigarettes. However, mean global CBF did not change significantly. Increased rCBF was observed in orbital and mesial frontal lobes, insula, temporal poles, anterior cingulate, as well as in the cerebellum. The increases in rCBF in anterior brain regions were predominantly in “paralimbic” regions and may be related to marijuanas mood-related effects. Reduced rCBF was observed in temporal lobe auditory regions, in visual cortex, and in brain regions that may be part of an attentional network (parietal lobe, frontal lobe and thalamus). These rCBF decreases may be the neural basis of perceptual and cognitive alterations that occur with acute marijuana intoxication. There was no significant rCBF change in the nucleus accumbens or other reward-related brain regions, nor in basal ganglia or hippocampus, which have a high density of cannabinoid receptors.


Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 2003

Treatment of methamphetamine abuse: research findings and clinical directions

Margaret Cretzmeyer; Mary Vaughan Sarrazin; Diane L. Huber; Robert I. Block; James A. Hall

Over the past few years, methamphetamine has appeared in mass quantities, in part, because of the ease and cost efficiency of manufacturing. With this increase in availability, the use of methamphetamine has increased significantly. The purpose of this article is to describe the existing treatment options for methamphetamine abuse and provide recommendations for practitioners and researchers. Methamphetamine abuse adversely impacts physical functioning, brain functioning and cognition, social support and social networks, and behavioral functioning. Negative consequences have also been documented to the environment and communities. In the studies reviewed on effective treatments, interventions consisted of aversion therapy, medication, psychosocial treatment, and case management. Each specific treatment is described as connected with an overall drug treatment program. If methamphetamine abuse continues to increase and the consequences continue to be so devastating, researchers and clinicians could advance the field by particular focus on the treatment of this type of drug use.


Anesthesia & Analgesia | 2009

Awareness During Anesthesia: Risk Factors, Causes and Sequelae: A Review of Reported Cases in the Literature

M. M. Ghoneim; Robert I. Block; Mary Haffarnan; Maya J. Mathews

BACKGROUND: Awareness during anesthesia is uncommon. The number of cases that are found in one single study are insufficient to identify and estimate the risks, causal factors and sequelae. One method of studying a large number of cases is to analyze reports of cases of awareness that have been published in scientific journals. METHODS: We conducted an electronic search of the literature in the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed database for case reports on “Awareness” and “Anesthesia” for the time period between 1950 through August, 2005. We also manually searched references cited in these reports and in other articles on awareness. We used two surgical control groups for comparative purposes. The first group in a study by Sebel et al. consisted of patients who did not experience awareness. The second group, from the 1996 data from the National Survey of Ambulatory Surgery included patients who received general anesthesia. We also used data from the National Center for Health Statistics to compare weight and Body Mass Index. RESULTS: We compared the data of 271 cases of awareness with 19,504 patients who did not suffer it. Aware patients were more likely to be females (P < 0.05), younger (P < 0.001) and to have cardiac and obstetrics operations (P < 0.0001). Only 35% reported the awareness episode during the stay in the recovery room. They received fewer anesthetic drugs (P < 0.0001), and were more likely to exhibit episodes of tachycardia and hypertension during surgery (P < 0.0001). A much larger percentage of these patients (52%, P < 0.0001) voiced postoperative complaints related to awareness. Inability to move and feelings such as helplessness, sensation of weakness, and hearing noises and voices were related to the persistence of complaints such as sleep disturbances and fear about future anesthetics (P < 0.041–0.0003). Twenty-two percent of the patients suffered late psychological symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Our review suggested light anesthesia and a history of awareness as risk factors. Obesity and avoidance of nitrous oxide use did not seem to increase the risk. Light anesthesia was the most common cause. Our findings suggest preventive procedures that may lead to a decrease in the incidence of awareness.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2002

Effects of frequent marijuana use on memory-related regional cerebral blood flow.

Robert I. Block; Daniel S. O'Leary; Richard D. Hichwa; Jean C. Augustinack; Laura L. Boles Ponto; M. M. Ghoneim; Stephan Arndt; Richard R. Hurtig; G. Leonard Watkins; James A. Hall; Peter E. Nathan; Nancy C. Andreasen

It is uncertain whether frequent marijuana use adversely affects human brain function. Using positron emission tomography (PET), memory-related regional cerebral blood flow was compared in frequent marijuana users and nonusing control subjects after 26+ h of monitored abstention. Memory-related blood flow in marijuana users, relative to control subjects, showed decreases in prefrontal cortex, increases in memory-relevant regions of cerebellum, and altered lateralization in hippocampus. Marijuana users differed most in brain activity related to episodic memory encoding. In learning a word list to criterion over multiple trials, marijuana users, relative to control subjects, required means of 2.7 more presentations during initial learning and 3.1 more presentations during subsequent relearning. In single-trial recall, marijuana users appeared to rely more on short-term memory, recalling 23% more than control subjects from the end of a list, but 19% less from the middle. These findings indicate altered memory-related brain function in marijuana users.


Anesthesiology | 2012

Are anesthesia and surgery during infancy associated with altered academic performance during childhood

Robert I. Block; Joss J. Thomas; Emine O. Bayman; James Y. Choi; Karolie K. Kimble; Michael M. Todd

Background: Although studies in neonatal animals show that anesthetics have neurotoxic effects, relevant human evidence is limited. We examined whether children who had surgery during infancy showed deficits in academic achievement. Methods: We attempted to contact parents of 577 children who, during infancy, had one of three operations typically performed in otherwise healthy children. We compared scores on academic achievement tests with population norms. Results: Composite scores were available for 287 patients. The mean normal curve equivalent score was 43.0 ± 22.4 (mean ± SD), lower than the expected normative value of 50, P < 0.0001 by one-sample Student t test; and 35 (12%) had scores below the 5th percentile, more than expected, P < 0.00001 by binomial test. Of 133 patients who consented to participate so that their scores could be examined in relation to their medical records, the mean score was 45.9 ± 22.9, P = 0.0411; and 15 (11%) scored below the 5th percentile, P = 0.0039. Of 58 patients whose medical records showed no central nervous system problems/potential risk factors during infancy, 8 (14%) scored below the 5th percentile, P = 0.008; however, the mean score, 47.6 ± 23.4, was not significantly lower than expected, P = 0.441. Duration of anesthesia and surgery correlated negatively with scores (r = −0.34, N = 58, P = 0.0101). Conclusions: Although the findings are consistent with possible adverse effects of anesthesia and surgery during infancy on subsequent academic achievement, other explanations are possible and further investigations are needed.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2010

Cannabis Use and Memory Brain Function in Adolescent Boys: A Cross-Sectional Multicenter Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Gerry Jager; Robert I. Block; Maartje Luijten; Nick F. Ramsey

OBJECTIVE Early-onset cannabis use has been associated with later use/abuse, mental health problems (psychosis, depression), and abnormal development of cognition and brain function. During adolescence, ongoing neurodevelopmental maturation and experience shape the neural circuitry underlying complex cognitive functions such as memory and executive control. Prefrontal and temporal regions are critically involved in these functions. Maturational processes leave these brain areas prone to the potentially harmful effects of cannabis use. METHOD We performed a two-site (United States and The Netherlands; pooled data) functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study with a cross-sectional design, investigating the effects of adolescent cannabis use on working memory (WM) and associative memory (AM) brain function in 21 abstinent but frequent cannabis-using boys (13-19) years of age and compared them with 24 nonusing peers. Brain activity during WM was assessed before and after rule-based learning (automatization). AM was assessed using a pictorial hippocampal-dependent memory task. RESULTS Cannabis users performed normally on both memory tasks. During WM assessment, cannabis users showed excessive activity in prefrontal regions when a task was novel, whereas automatization of the task reduced activity to the same level in users and controls. No effect of cannabis use on AM-related brain function was found. CONCLUSIONS In adolescent cannabis users, the WM system was overactive during a novel task, suggesting functional compensation. Inefficient WM recruitment was not related to a failure in automatization but became evident when processing continuously changing information. The results seem to confirm the vulnerability of still developing frontal lobe functioning for early-onset cannabis use.


Neuroreport | 2000

Cerebellar hypoactivity in frequent marijuana users

Robert I. Block; Daniel S. O'Leary; Richard D. Hichwa; Jean C. Augustinack; Laura L. Boles Ponto; M. M. Ghoneim; Stephan Arndt; James C. Ehrhardt; Richard R. Hurtig; Gordon Watkins; James A. Hall; Peter E. Nathan; Nancy C. Andreasen

It is uncertain whether frequent marijuana use adversely affects human brain function. Using PET, regional cerebral blood flow was compared in frequent marijuana users and comparable, non-using controls after at least 26 h of monitored abstention by all subjects. Marijuana users showed substantially lower brain blood flow than controls in a large region of posterior cerebellum, indicating altered brain function in frequent marijuana users. A cerebellar locus of some chronic and acute effects of marijuana is plausible, e.g. the cerebellum has been linked to an internal timing system, and alterations of time sense are common following marijuana smoking.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2002

Chronic drug use and cognitive impairments

Robert I. Block; Wesley J. Erwin; M. M. Ghoneim

Reports regarding the effects of chronic drug use on human cognition and comparisons of different drug user groups have been inconsistent. Methodological flaws may account for some inconsistencies. To determine the effects of chronic drug use on cognition, drug users (n=192) were tested 17.1+/-0.3 days (mean+/-S.E.) and 99.4+/-1.7 days on average after their last use of drugs before beginning treatment. Drug users were categorized as stimulant, alcohol, or polydrug users. Their performance on tests of academic achievement, verbal memory, and abstraction was compared to performance of community-dwelling controls (n=137). The groups were matched on selected demographic and psychiatric characteristics. Historical records of achievement test scores were used to attempt to control for premorbid intellectual ability. Drug users showed impairments on each of the achievement tests (P<.001), as well as poorer total recall (P<.01) and abstraction ability (P<.05). Stimulant users performed worse on several tests relative to the other drug use groups. Only one of six tests demonstrated improvements following about 3 months of abstinence. Thus, chronic drug use is associated with cognitive impairments that do not improve substantially even after several months of abstinence.

Collaboration


Dive into the Robert I. Block's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nunzio Pomara

Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Laura L. Boles Ponto

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge