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Dive into the research topics where Virginia Elderkin-Thompson is active.

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Featured researches published by Virginia Elderkin-Thompson.


Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology | 2003

Neuropsychological deficits among patients with late-onset minor and major depression

Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Anand Kumar; Warren B. Bilker; Jennifer J. Dunkin; Jim Mintz; Paul J. Moberg; Raquelle I. Mesholam; Ruben E. Gur

Cognitive ability of minor depressed patients (N=28), major depressed patients (N=26) and healthy elderly (N=38) was examined cross-sectionally to determine if cognitive abilities of patients with late-onset depression decrease with increasing severity of disease and if cognitive scores for minor depressed patients fall between those of healthy elderly and major depressed patients. A pooled within-group principal component analysis of cognitive test scores identified five components, three of which showed significant group differences. Verbal Recall and Maintenance of Set separated controls from major depressed patients and minor from major depressed patients. Executive Functioning separated controls from minor depressed patients, and Working Memory was borderline for separating controls from major depressed patients. The component representing Nonverbal Recognition was not statistically significant. Partial correlations controlling for age and education indicate that cognitive performance does decrease as severity of depression increases, and the magnitude of the change varies from a trend to a significant deficit depending on the cognitive domain. This decline in cognitive performance parallels a similar trend observed in neuroanatomical studies in which the volume of the frontal and temporal lobes decrease with increasing severity of depression.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2008

Executive function and MRI prefrontal volumes among healthy older adults.

Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Martina Ballmaier; Gerhard Hellemann; Daniel Pham; Anand Kumar

Brain atrophy and decline in executive functioning have been reported during late life, but the relationship between the 2 phenomena is not clear. To examine associations between executive tasks and morphometry, MRIs of the prefrontal cortex from 23 healthy elders were manually masked and automatically segmented. Total brain matter of the bilateral orbitofrontal, anterior cingulate, gyrus rectus, precentral gyrus, and middle frontal gyrus were computed as ratios of intracranial volume. A neuropsychological battery of five clinical tests of executive function was administered. Better performance on a response inhibition task was associated with larger volume in anterior cingulate, and performance on a nonverbal inductive reasoning task was associated with larger gyrus rectus volumes. In contrast, larger orbitofrontal volumes were associated with lower verbal and nonverbal generative output. An aggregated error index from 4 executive tests correlated negatively with a regional composite brain index. In conclusion, some executive abilities correlate with volumes of specific prefrontal subregions despite a robust neural interconnectedness between the subregions.


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2009

Prefrontal brain morphology and executive function in healthy and depressed elderly

Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Gerhard Hellemann; Daniel Pham; Anand Kumar

Late‐life depression is known to correlate independently with decreased brain volumes in anterior cingulate, gyrus rectus and orbitofrontal cortex and with executive dysfunction, but the relationship between morphometry of reduced volume regions and executive dysfunction has not been well defined.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2011

Explicit and Implicit Memory in Late-Life Depression

Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Teena D. Moody; Barbara J. Knowlton; Gerhard Hellemann; Anand Kumar

OBJECTIVE Late-life depression has been associated with memory loss and is frequently assumed to be a risk factor for continued cognitive decline. This study examined cognition in patients with late-life depression with a focus on the assessment of the extent and type of memory loss among elderly depressed patients. METHODS Two-year cross-sectional study of elderly depressed (N = 112) and nondepressed (N = 138) individuals at or older than 60 years in an urban area surrounding a major medical center in southern California. Participants had little to moderate stroke risk. Volunteers were screened with the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) Axis I Disorders. Patients were diagnosed for major depression by a geriatric psychiatrist using DSM-IV criteria. Volunteers completed neuropsychological testing, a standard battery of laboratory tests, and a neurologic and psychiatric evaluation to rule out a medical burden that might contribute to depression or early dementia. RESULTS Depressed patients showed deficits in attention and processing, executive function, and immediate explicit recall. Implicit learning and episodic recall of the testing procedure, semantic and phonetic fluency, and retention of newly acquired verbal material after a delay period were comparable with controls. CONCLUSION Moderately depressed patients demonstrate a pattern of cognitive deficits suggestive of mild frontal dysfunction during recall tasks. Their retention of material over a delay period and their intact language skills indicate medial hippocampal function similar to controls. Subcortically mediated implicit memory is also at normal levels. These findings support current efforts to identify pathways of frontal and/or striatal compromise during depressive episodes.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2012

Interleukin-6 and Memory Functions of Encoding and Recall in Healthy and Depressed Elderly Adults

Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Michael R. Irwin; Gerhard Hellemann; Anand Kumar

Activation of proinflammatory cytokines is associated with depressed mood, feelings of fatigue, and changes in cognitive function. This study examined the relationships between cognitive performance and circulating cellular markers of inflammation, interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP), in moderately depressed and comparison healthy older adults. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of 87 volunteers (45 nondepressed and 42 depressed) in which participants completed the Structured Clinical Diagnostic Interview and were evaluated by a geriatric psychiatrist for dementia, depression, stroke risk, and neurologic disorders. Volunteers also completed an electrocardiogram, standard battery of laboratory tests, and neuropsychological examination that assessed memory functions of Encoding and Recall, Executive Function, and Attention/Processing. Mid-morning IL-6 and CRP levels were assessed. The data analysis showed that Encoding and Recall were inversely associated with IL-6 across diagnostic groups after controlling for chronological age, Mini-Mental State Examination, body mass index, literacy level, depression severity, and sex. CRP was not associated with cognition. Depression status was associated with recall independent of IL-6 levels. In conclusion, IL-6 serum levels among elderly individuals is a significant correlate of memory performance. Women, in particular, appear sensitive to IL-6 fluctuations across diagnostic groups.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2004

Neurocognitive profiles in elderly patients with frontotemporal degeneration or major depressive disorder.

Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Kyle Brauer Boone; Sun Hwang; Anand Kumar

Major depressive disorder (MDD) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) are both disorders in elderly populations that involve the prefrontal cortex and appear to have similar neurocognitive deficits. This review examined whether there are testable deficits in cognition that are consistent across individuals within the same neuropathological condition that could be used to facilitate early diagnoses. Medline and PsychInfo databases were searched for cognitive studies of depressed and FTD patients that used a matched control group and reported findings with means and standard deviations (N = 312). Effect sizes for FTD patients with mild and moderately advanced disease were compared to effect sizes within subgroups of depressed patients, such as inpatients, outpatients and community volunteers. Moderately advanced FTD patients were more impaired than depressed patients over all domains, particularly in language ability, although depressed inpatients appeared similar to FTD patients in some domains. Effect sizes for FTD patients who were in the mild, or early, stage of the disease (MMSE = 28) were similar to those of depressed outpatients but slightly worse than those of community volunteers in all domains except semantic memory and executive ability. In the latter two domains, even mild FTD patients had notably large deficits. All FTD patients showed more severe deficits in some domains relative to other domains. In contrast, depressed patients tended to vary by clinical presentation or disease severity, but the magnitude of impairment for each subgroup remained relatively consistent across domains and they did not have the severe focal deficits in one or two domains demonstrated by FTD patients.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2008

Voxel-based diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging evaluation of low-grade hepatic encephalopathy

Rajesh Kumar; Rakesh K. Gupta; Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Amir Huda; James Sayre; Claudia Kirsch; Barry H. Guze; Steve Han; M. Albert Thomas

To quantify the changes in brain water diffusivity in hepatic encephalopathy (HE) associated with cirrhosis using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and to correlate with neuropsychological (NP) scores.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2008

Mapping Callosal Morphology in Early- and Late-Onset Elderly Depression: An Index of Distinct Changes in Cortical Connectivity

Martina Ballmaier; Anand Kumar; Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Katherine L. Narr; Eileen Luders; Paul M. Thompson; Cornelius Hojatkashani; Daniel Pham; Andreas Heinz; Arthur W. Toga

There is some evidence of corpus callosum abnormalities in elderly depression, but it is not known whether these deficits are region-specific or differ based on age at onset of depression. Twenty-four patients with early-onset depression (mean age=68.00, SD±5.83), 22 patients with late-onset depression (mean age=74.50, SD±8.09) and 34 elderly control subjects (mean age=72.38; SD±6.93) were studied. Using 3D MRI data, novel mesh-based geometrical modeling methods were applied to compare the midsagittal thickness of the corpus callosum at high spatial resolution between groups. Neuropsychological correlates of midsagittal callosal area differences were additionally investigated in a subsample of subjects. Depressed patients exhibited significant callosal thinning in the genu and splenium compared to controls. Significant callosal thinning was restricted to the genu in early-onset patients, but patients with late-onset depression exhibited significant callosal thinning in both the genu and splenium relative to controls. The splenium of the corpus callosum was also significantly thinner in subjects with late- vs early-onset depression. Genu and splenium midsagittal areas significantly correlated with memory and attention functioning among late-onset depressed patients, but not early-onset depressed patients or controls. Circumscribed structural alterations in callosal morphology may distinguish late- from early-onset depression in the elderly. These findings suggest distinct abnormalities of cortical connectivity in late- and early-onset elderly depression with possible influence on the course of illness. Patients with a late onset of depression may be at higher risk of illness progression and eventually dementia conversion than early-onset depression, with potentially important implications for research and therapy.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2010

Regional cortical gray matter thickness differences associated with type 2 diabetes and major depression

Olusola Ajilore; Katherine L. Narr; Jonah Rosenthal; Daniel Pham; Liberty S. Hamilton; Kecia Watari; Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Christine Darwin; Arthur W. Toga; Anand Kumar

The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of type 2 diabetes with major depression on cortical gray matter using magnetic resonance imaging and cortical pattern matching techniques. We hypothesized that diabetic subjects and depressed diabetic subjects would demonstrate decreased cortical gray matter thickness in prefrontal areas as compared to healthy control subjects. Patients with type 2 diabetes (n=26) and patients with diabetes and major depression (n=26) were compared with healthy controls (n=20). Gray matter thickness across the entire cortex was measured using cortical pattern matching methods. All subjects with diabetes demonstrated decreased cortical gray matter thickness in the left anterior cingulate region. Additionally, depressed diabetic subjects showed significant cortical gray matter decreases in bilateral prefrontal areas compared with healthy controls. Correlations between clinical variables and cortical gray matter thickness revealed a significant negative relationship with cerebrovascular risk factors across all three groups, most consistently in the left dorsomedial prefrontal cortex. A significant positive relationship between performance on attention and executive function tasks and cortical gray matter thickness predominantly in left hemisphere regions was also seen across all subjects. Depression and diabetes are associated with significant cortical gray matter thinning in medial prefrontal areas.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2010

Two-dimensional MR spectroscopy of minimal hepatic encephalopathy and neuropsychological correlates in vivo.

Aparna Singhal; Rajakumar Nagarajan; Charles H. Hinkin; Rajesh Kumar; James Sayre; Virginia Elderkin-Thompson; Amir Huda; Rakesh K. Gupta; Steven-Huy Han; M. Albert Thomas

To evaluate regional cerebral metabolic and structural changes in patients with minimal hepatic encephalopathy (MHE) using two‐dimensional (2D) MR spectroscopy (MRS) and T   1 ‐weighted MRI, to correlate the observed MR changes with neuropsychological (NP) test scores, and to compare the diagnostic accuracy of MRI, 2D MRS, and NP tests in discriminating between patients and healthy subjects.

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Anand Kumar

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Jim Mintz

University of California

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Kecia Watari

Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior

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Arthur W. Toga

University of Southern California

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Kyle Brauer Boone

Alliant International University

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