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Dive into the research topics where Serge A. Mitelman is active.

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Featured researches published by Serge A. Mitelman.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2007

Amygdala-prefrontal disconnection in borderline personality disorder.

Antonia S. New; Erin A. Hazlett; Monte S. Buchsbaum; Marianne Goodman; Serge A. Mitelman; Randall E. Newmark; Roanna Trisdorfer; M. Mehmet Haznedar; Harold W. Koenigsberg; Janine D. Flory; Larry J. Siever

Abnormal fronto-amygdala circuitry has been implicated in impulsive aggression, a core symptom of borderline personality disorder (BPD). We examined relative glucose metabolic rate (rGMR) at rest and after m-CPP (meta-chloropiperazine) with 18fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) with positron emission tomography (PET) in 26 impulsive aggressive (IED)-BPD patients and 24 controls. Brain edges/amygdala were visually traced on MRI scans co-registered to PET scans; rGMR was obtained for ventral and dorsal regions of the amygdala and Brodmann areas within the prefrontal cortex (PFC). Correlation coefficients were calculated between rGMR for dorsal/ventral amygdala regions and PFC. Additionally, amygdala volumes and rGMR were examined in BPD and controls. Correlations PFC/amygdala Placebo: Controls showed significant positive correlations between right orbitofrontal (OFC) and ventral, but not dorsal, amygdala. Patients showed only weak correlations between amygdala and the anterior PFC, with no distinction between dorsal and ventral amygdala. Correlations PFC/amygdala: m-CPP response: Controls showed positive correlations between OFC and amygdala regions, whereas patients showed positive correlations between dorsolateral PFC and amygdala. Group differences between interregional correlational matrices were highly significant. Amygdala volume/metabolism: No group differences were found for amygdala volume, or metabolism in the placebo condition or in response to meta-chloropiperazine (m-CPP). We demonstrated a tight coupling of metabolic activity between right OFC and ventral amygdala in healthy subjects with dorsoventral differences in amygdala circuitry, not present in IED-BPD. We demonstrated no significant differences in amygdala volumes or metabolism between BPD patients and controls.


Schizophrenia Research | 2005

Volume of the cingulate and outcome in schizophrenia

Serge A. Mitelman; Lina Shihabuddin; Adam M. Brickman; Erin A. Hazlett; Monte S. Buchsbaum

BACKGROUND Previous studies indicated that schizophrenia patients have reduced frontal volumes in comparison with normal, but among schizophrenics, reduced volumes of the posterior (temporal, parietal and occipital) cortex were associated with poor outcome. We examined whether this pattern is seen within the anteroposterior arch of the cingulate gyrus. METHODS MR images were acquired in 37 schizophrenia patients (Kraepelinian, n = 13; non-Kraepelinian, n = 24) and 37 controls, and CSF, gray and white matter volumes in individual Brodmanns areas (BA) of the cingulate arch (areas 25, 24, 23, 31, 30, 29) were assessed and examined in relation to outcome. RESULTS Schizophrenia patients had significant gray matter reductions in the absolute (mm(3)) volume of Brodmanns area 24 in anterior cingulate and, when corrected for brain size, in the whole cingulate and retrosplenial (areas 29-30) cortex. White matter volumes were increased in right posterior cingulate (area 31). Schizophrenia patients also showed abnormal lateralization of white matter volumes in retrosplenial cortex (area 30) and had lower correlations between frontal and anterior cingulate regions than controls. Poor-outcome subgroup exhibited significant bilateral gray matter deficits in posterior cingulate and retrosplenial cortices compared to good-outcome patients, while no white matter increases in these areas were seen. CONCLUSIONS Poor outcome was associated with gray matter deficits in posterior cingulate while compensatory white matter increases in dorsal posterior regions may be related to better outcome. Possible consequences of this may include thought disorder, disturbance of consciousness, treatment resistance, and cognitive decline indicative of a dementing process as a superimposed or inherent part of this schizophrenia subtype.


Annals of General Psychiatry | 2006

Diffusion tensor imaging of frontal lobe white matter tracts in schizophrenia

Monte S. Buchsbaum; Peter Schoenknecht; Yuliya Torosjan; Randall E. Newmark; King-Wai Chu; Serge A. Mitelman; Adam M. Brickman; Lina Shihabuddin; M. Mehmet Haznedar; Erin A. Hazlett; Shabeer Ahmed; Cheuk Y. Tang

We acquired diffusion tensor and structural MRI images on 103 patients with schizophrenia and 41 age-matched normal controls. The vector data was used to trace tracts from a region of interest in the anterior limb of the internal capsule to the prefrontal cortex. Patients with schizophrenia had tract paths that were significantly shorter in length from the center of internal capsule to prefrontal white matter. These tracts, the anterior thalamic radiations, are important in frontal-striatal-thalamic pathways. These results are consistent with findings of smaller size of the anterior limb of the internal capsule in patients with schizophrenia, diffusion tensor anisotropy decreases in frontal white matter in schizophrenia and hypothesized disruption of the frontal-striatal-thalamic pathway system.


International Review of Psychiatry | 2007

Very poor outcome schizophrenia: clinical and neuroimaging aspects.

Serge A. Mitelman; Monte S. Buchsbaum

In spite of significant advances in treatment of patients with schizophrenia and continued efforts towards their deinstitutionalization, a considerable group of patients remain chronically hospitalized or otherwise dependent on others for basic necessities of life. It has been proposed that these patients belong to a distinct etiopathological subgroup, termed Kraepelinian, whose course of illness may be progressive and resistant to treatment. Indeed, longitudinal studies appear to show that elderly Kraepelinian patients follow a course of rapid cognitive and functional deterioration, commensurate with a dementing process, and that their poor functional status is closely correlated with the cognitive deterioration. Recent neuroimaging studies described a pattern of posteriorization of grey and white matter deficits with poor outcome in schizophrenia, and produced a constellation of findings implicating primary processing of visual and auditory information as central to the impaired functional status in this patient group. These studies are summarized in detail in this review and future directions for neuroimaging assessment of very poor outcome patients with schizophrenia are suggested.


Schizophrenia Research | 2009

A longitudinal study of the corpus callosum in chronic schizophrenia

Serge A. Mitelman; Yekaterina K. Nikiforova; Emily L. Canfield; Erin A. Hazlett; Adam M. Brickman; Lina Shihabuddin; Monte S. Buchsbaum

BACKGROUND Decreased callosal size and anisotropy have been described in schizophrenia patients but their longitudinal progression remains poorly understood. METHODS We performed diffusion-tensor and structural magnetic resonance imaging at baseline and at follow-up four years later in 49 chronic schizophrenia patients and 16 healthy comparison subjects. Schizophrenia patients were subdivided into good-outcome (n=23) and poor-outcome (n=26) groups. Baseline-to-follow-up changes in size, shape, position and fractional anisotropy of the corpus callosum, divided into five sagittal sections and five rostro-caudal segments, were assessed. RESULTS At baseline scan and in comparison to healthy subjects, schizophrenia patients displayed 1) smaller callosal size, 2) lower average anisotropy in all sagittal sections except the midline, and 3) more dorsal average coordinate position. During the four years after the baseline scan, patients with schizophrenia exhibited a more pronounced decline in absolute size of the corpus callosum than healthy comparison subjects. As compared with the good-outcome group, the corpus callosum in poor-outcome patients at baseline was of smaller size and lower average anisotropy, more elongated and posteriorly positioned. During the follow-up interval, poor-outcome patients displayed a more pronounced decline in size but less pronounced decline in anisotropy of the corpus callosum than patients with good outcomes. CONCLUSIONS Differences in callosal size between schizophrenia patients and healthy subjects seen at baseline continue to widen in the chronic phase of the illness, especially in patients with poor functional outcome. Baseline differences in callosal anisotropy among patients with different outcomes, however, diminish over time.


Schizophrenia Research | 2005

Correlations between MRI-assessed volumes of the thalamus and cortical Brodmann's areas in schizophrenia

Serge A. Mitelman; Adam M. Brickman; Lina Shihabuddin; Randall E. Newmark; King Wai Chu; Monte S. Buchsbaum

BACKGROUND We compared the thalamic-cortical volumetric correlational patterns in patients with schizophrenia and normal comparison subjects, and evaluated their relations to outcome. METHODS High-resolution MR images were acquired in patients with schizophrenia (n=106) and normal comparison subjects (n=42). Patients were divided into good-outcome (n=52) and poor-outcome (Kraepelinian, n=54) subtypes based on their ability for self-care. Correlations between the relative gray and white matter volumes of the individual cortical Brodmanns areas and five dorsoventral levels of the thalamus were assessed. RESULTS Compared to normal subjects, schizophrenia patients lacked significant thalamic gray matter volume correlations with the prefrontal and medial temporal cortical regions in the right hemisphere, and with frontal, cingulate, posterior parietal and occipital regions in the left hemisphere, while normal white matter volume cortical-thalamic correlations along the cingulate gyrus and in the temporal lobe were not found in schizophrenia patients in both hemispheres. In contrast to both normal comparison subjects and good-outcome group, schizophrenia patients with poor outcomes showed significant bilateral gray matter volume correlations between the dorsal thalamus and ventral prefrontal cortex, while the group differences in the white matter volume correlations were mostly restricted to the cingulate arch. CONCLUSIONS Whereas patients with schizophrenia exhibit deficiencies in cortical-thalamic correlational patterns, poor outcome is associated with abnormal interregional correlations not observed in either normal subjects or patients with good outcomes. This latter finding may be explained by a core neurodevelopmental disturbance that results in aberrant cortical-thalamic connectivity in poor-outcome schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia Research | 2009

Poor outcome in chronic schizophrenia is associated with progressive loss of volume of the putamen

Serge A. Mitelman; Emily L. Canfield; King-Wai Chu; Adam M. Brickman; Lina Shihabuddin; Erin A. Hazlett; Monte S. Buchsbaum

BACKGROUND We have previously demonstrated that putaminal but not caudate volumes are associated with poor outcome in patients with chronic schizophrenia. Present longitudinal study was designed to investigate progressive differences in striatal volumes among chronic schizophrenia patients with different outcomes and healthy subjects. METHODS Structural MRI scans were acquired at baseline and at follow-up four years later to evaluate volumetric changes in 26 poor-outcome schizophrenia patients, 23 good-outcome patients and 16 healthy subjects. RESULTS Schizophrenia patients with different outcomes entered the study with similar volumes of the caudate nucleus and putamen. The rate of decline in volumes of the putamen was greater in patients with poor outcome than in the good-outcome group, so that their putaminal but not caudate volumes were significantly smaller at the time of follow-up. There were no differences in baseline and follow-up volumes of the putamen or in the rate of their progression among patients with schizophrenia and healthy comparison subjects. The caudate volumes were lower in schizophrenia patients than healthy subjects at baseline and follow-up, but showed no differential patterns of progression between the groups. CONCLUSIONS Volumes of the putamen may represent a longitudinal marker of treatment responsiveness and outcome in patients with chronic schizophrenia.


The Open Neuroimaging Journal | 2009

Longitudinal Assessment of Gray and White Matter in Chronic Schizophrenia: A Combined Diffusion-Tensor and Structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Serge A. Mitelman; Emily L. Canfield; Randall E. Newmark; Adam M. Brickman; Yuliya Torosjan; King-Wai Chu; Erin A. Hazlett; M. Mehmet Haznedar; Lina Shihabuddin; Monte S. Buchsbaum

Previous studies have reported continued focal gray matter loss after the clinical onset of schizophrenia. Longitudinal assessments in chronic illness, of white matter in particular, have been less conclusive. We used diffusion-tensor and structural magnetic resonance imaging in 16 healthy subjects and 49 chronic schizophrenia patients, subdivided into good-outcome (n=23) and poor-outcome (n=26) groups, scanned twice 4 years apart. Fractional anisotropy, gray matter and white matter volumes were parcellated into the Brodmann’s areas and entered into multiway ANCOVAs. At baseline, schizophrenia patients had 1) lower anisotropy in frontoparietal white matter, 2) larger posterior frontal white matter volumes, and 3) smaller frontal, temporal, and parietal gray matter volumes. On follow-up, healthy subjects showed a more pronounced 1) decline in anisotropy, 2) expansion of regional white matter volumes, and 3) reduction in regional gray matter volumes than schizophrenia patients. Good-outcome patients showed a more pronounced decline in white matter anisotropy and a less pronounced increase in white matter volumes than poor-outcome patients. Poor-outcome patients displayed a greater gray matter loss throughout the brain than good-outcome patients. In the chronic phase of the illness, longitudinal changes in both gray and white matter are in the direction of an effacement of between-group differences among schizophrenia patients and healthy subjects. Similarly, preexisting white matter differences between good-outcome and poor-outcome patients diminish over time. In contrast, gray matter volumes in poor-outcome patients continue to decline more rapidly than in patients with good outcome. These patterns are consistent with earlier onset of aging-associated changes in schizophrenia.


Neuroscience Letters | 2006

Correlations between volumes of the pulvinar, centromedian, and mediodorsal nuclei and cortical Brodmann's areas in schizophrenia

Serge A. Mitelman; William Byne; Eileen Kemether; Erin A. Hazlett; Monte S. Buchsbaum

Correlations between the MRI-assessed volumes of the pulvinar, centromedian, and mediodorsal nuclei of the thalamus and 39 cortical Brodmanns areas were evaluated and compared in 41 unmedicated schizophrenia patients and 59 healthy comparison subjects. For the right pulvinar, positive intercorrelations with ipsilateral orbitofrontal and occipital cortices were significantly weaker while negative intercorrelations with dorsolateral prefrontal and temporopolar/entorhinal cortices were stronger in schizophrenia patients compared to healthy subjects. For the centromedian nucleus, positive correlation with the dorsolateral prefrontal area 46 in the right hemisphere was significantly weaker in patients than in healthy subjects. Higher cortical/pulvinar volume ratios for the right frontotemporal regions with stronger negative correlations in patients were associated with better performance on recall and semantic memory tasks. Right pulvinocortical disconnections in patients with schizophrenia may be related to visual attentional deficits whereas stronger-than-normal inverse pulvinar associations with the heteromodal cortical regions may reflect compensatory reliance on alternative information-processing strategies.


Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology | 2010

Progressive ventricular expansion in chronic poor-outcome schizophrenia.

Serge A. Mitelman; Emily L. Canfield; Adam M. Brickman; Lina Shihabuddin; Erin A. Hazlett; Monte S. Buchsbaum

ObjectiveTo compare progressive changes in lateral ventricular size in chronic schizophrenia patients with good and poor outcomes. BackgroundSeveral longitudinal studies associated excessive ventricular enlargement with poor outcome early in the course of schizophrenia. Changes in its chronic phase have not been as well ascertained. MethodsWe used MRI to evaluate progression of the lateral ventricular size in 49 chronic schizophrenia patients (26 with poor outcome, 23 with good outcome) and 16 healthy comparison participants, scanned twice 4 years apart. ResultsIn comparison with healthy participants, schizophrenia patients displayed significantly enlarged body, and anterior and posterior horns of the lateral ventricles at baseline and follow-up, but no between-group differences in their longitudinal expansion were observed. Progressive enlargement of the posterior horn in the poor-outcome (Kraepelinian) group, however, was more pronounced than in schizophrenia patients with good outcome. ConclusionsExcessive ventricular enlargement in the chronic phase of schizophrenia may be specifically associated with poor functional outcome of the illness.

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Erin A. Hazlett

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Lina Shihabuddin

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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M. Mehmet Haznedar

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Randall E. Newmark

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Emily L. Canfield

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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King-Wai Chu

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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William Byne

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Lina Shihabuddin

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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