2016
Abnormal reward circuitry in anorexia nervosa: A longitudinal, multimodal MRI study
Cha J, Ide J, Bowman F, Simpson H, Posner J, Steinglass J. Abnormal reward circuitry in anorexia nervosa: A longitudinal, multimodal MRI study. Human Brain Mapping 2016, 37: 3835-3846. PMID: 27273474, PMCID: PMC5448464, DOI: 10.1002/hbm.23279.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAnorexia nervosaWeight restorationResting-state functional MRI scansStructural connectivityInpatient weight restorationFunctional MRI scansHum Brain MappUnderweight phaseUnderweight stateWhite matter anisotropyHealthy controlsUnderweight individualsFemale inpatientsAltered connectionsMRI scansFunctional connectivityDisorder symptomsEffective connectivityIllnessReward processingEffect sizeSame timeframeInpatientsPathophysiologySymptoms
2015
Using network dynamic fMRI for detection of epileptogenic foci
Nedic S, Stufflebeam S, Rondinoni C, Velasco T, dos Santos A, Leite J, Gargaro A, Mujica-Parodi L, Ide J. Using network dynamic fMRI for detection of epileptogenic foci. BMC Neurology 2015, 15: 262. PMID: 26689596, PMCID: PMC4687299, DOI: 10.1186/s12883-015-0514-y.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEpileptogenic focusHealthy controlsTemporal lobe epilepsy patientsCohort of patientsDuration of epilepsyVoxel functional connectivity analysisIntracranial EEG studiesPrevalent neurological disordersFunctional MRI methodsResting-state fMRIIpsilateral temporal poleFunctional connectivity analysisEpilepsy durationSuccessful surgeryEpileptogenic zoneFocal epilepsySeizure initiationEpilepsy patientsInterictal dischargesPatientsEpileptic regionsTemporal poleNeurological disordersFunctional connectivityImpaired memory