MARISTELA SCHAUFELBERGER SPANGHERO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
13
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto de Psiquiatria, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico
LIM/21 - Laboratório de Neuroimagem em Psiquiatria, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 8 de 8
  • article 137 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Age-related gray matter volume changes in the brain during non-elderly adulthood
    (2011) TERRIBILLI, Debora; SCHAUFELBERGER, Maristela S.; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; ZANETTI, Marcus V.; CURIATI, Pedro K.; MENEZES, Paulo R.; SCAZUFCA, Marcia; AMARO JR., Edson; LEITE, Claudia C.; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.
    Previous magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies described consistent age-related gray matter (GM) reductions in the fronto-parietal neocortex, insula and cerebellum in elderly subjects, but not as frequently in limbic/paralimbic structures. However, it is unclear whether such features are already present during earlier stages of adulthood, and if age-related GM changes may follow non-linear patterns at such age range. This voxel-based morphometry study investigated the relationship between GM volumes and age specifically during non-elderly life (18-50 years) in 89 healthy individuals (48 males and 41 females). Voxelwise analyses showed significant (p < 0.05, corrected) negative correlations in the right prefrontal cortex and left cerebellum, and positive correlations (indicating lack of GM loss) in the medial temporal region, cingulate gyrus, insula and temporal neocortex. Analyses using ROI masks showed that age-related dorsolateral prefrontal volume decrements followed non-linear patterns, and were less prominent in females compared to males at this age range. These findings further support for the notion of a heterogeneous and asynchronous pattern of age-related brain morphometric changes, with region-specific non-linear features.
  • article 15 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Corpus callosum volumes in the 5 years following the first-episode of schizophrenia: Effects of antipsychotics, chronicity and maturation
    (2018) MOURA, Mariana T. M. de; ZANETTI, Marcus V.; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; SCHAUFELBERGER, Maristela S.; MENEZES, Paulo R.; SCAZUFCA, Marcia; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.; SERPA, Mauricio H.
    Background: White matter (WM) structural changes, particularly affecting the corpus callosum (CC), seem to be critically implicated in psychosis. Whether such abnormalities are progressive or static is still a matter of debate in schizophrenia research. Aberrant maturation processes might also influence the longitudinal trajectory of age-related CC changes in schizophrenia patients. We investigated whether patients with first-episode schizophreniarelated psychoses (FESZ) would present longitudinal CC and whole WM volume changes over the 5 years after disease onset. Method: Thirty-two FESZ patients and 34 controls recruited using a population-based design completed a 5-year assessment protocol, including structural MRI scanning at baseline and follow-up. The linear effects of disease duration, clinical outcome and antipsychotic (AP) use over time on WM and CC volumes were studied using both voxelwise and volume-based morphometry analyses. We also examined maturation/aging abnormalities through cross-sectional analyses of age-related trajectories of total WM and CC volume changes. Results: No interaction between diagnosis and time was observed, and clinical outcome did not influence CC volumes in patients. On the other hand, FESZ patients continuously exposed to AP medication showed volume increase over time in posterior CC. Curve-estimation analyses revealed a different aging pattern in FESZ patients versus controls: while patients displayed a linear decline of total WM and anterior CC volumes with age, a non-linear trajectory of total WM and relative preservation of CC volumes were observed in controls. Conclusions: Continuous AP exposure can influence CC morphology during the first years after schizophrenia onset. Schizophrenia is associated with an abnormal pattern of total WM and anterior CC aging during nonelderly adulthood, and this adds complexity to the discussion on the static or progressive nature of structural abnormalities in psychosis.
  • conferenceObject
    Brain Structure and the Prediction of Outcome in First-Episode Schizophrenia-Spectrum Disorders and Affective Psychosis: A Population-Based Study
    (2012) ROSA, Pedro G.; SCHALFELBERGER, Maristela S.; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; SANTOS, Luciana C.; MENEZES, Paulo R.; SCAZUFCA, Marcia; MURRAY, Robin M.; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.
    Background: MRI studies of the prediction of outcome among subjects with first-episode psychosis (FEP) have brought misleading evidence to discussion. Cognitive impairment in subjects with psychosis is receiving particular attention, and may be the symptom dimension most associated with outcome in those patients. Methods: Structural MRI on a FEP (N=96) sample with subjects with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders (N=55) and affective psychoses (N=41). Outcome evaluation after a median period of one year consisted on PANSS, cognitive measures (verbal fluency and digit spans) and disability evaluation (WHO-DAS). Lateral ventricles, studied using a region of interest approach, and regional GM, analyzed using VBM with SPM, at the baseline entered statistics as predictive of outcome at the follow-up. Results: Frontal and temporal cortices GM volume were associated with outcome measures, in particular with the performance o cognitive tasks, in the overall FEP Group and in the subgroups (schizophrenia and affective psychoses). Particularly, the affective psychosis subgroup showed more robust associations of GM volumes with outcome measures than the schizophrenia-spectrum subgroup. Furthermore, temporal horns measures were negatively correlated with digit spans’ performances in the FEP group and in the subgroups. None of these findings could be attributed to confounding factors, such as outcome measures at baseline and antipsychotic intake. Conclusions: Brain structure at the moment of the first-episode of psychosis of patients with schizophrenia and subjects with affective psychoses was associated with outcome, particularly cognitive measures. The predominance of findings on frontal-temporal regions is compatible with the presence of a fronto-temporal disconnectivity underlying psychoses. Keyword(s): Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Neuroimaging, Outcome, Cognition
  • article 94 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Patterns of regional gray matter loss at different stages of schizophrenia: A multisite, cross-sectional VBM study in first-episode and chronic illness
    (2016) TORRES, Ulysses S.; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; SCHAUFELBERGER, Maristela S.; CRIPPA, Jose A. S.; LOUZA, Mario R.; SALLET, Paulo C.; KANEGUSUKU, Caroline Y. O.; ELKIS, Helio; GATTAZ, Wagner F.; BASSITT, Debora P.; ZUARDI, AntonioW.; HALLAK, Jaime Eduardo C.; LEITE, Claudia C.; CASTRO, Claudio C.; SANTOS, Antonio Carlos; MURRAY, Robin M.; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.
    Background: Structural brain abnormalities in schizophrenia have been repeatedly demonstrated in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies, but it remains unclear whether these are static or progressive in nature. While longitudinalMRI studies have been traditionally used to assess the issue of progression of brain abnormalities in schizophrenia, information from cross-sectional neuroimaging studies directly comparing first-episode and chronic schizophrenia patients to healthy controls may also be useful to further clarify this issue. With the recent interest in multisite mega-analyses combining structural MRI data from multiple centers aiming at increased statistical power, the present multisite voxel-basedmorphometry (VBM) studywas carried out to examine patterns of brain structural changes according to the different stages of illness and to ascertainwhich (if any) of such structural abnormalities would be specifically correlated to potential clinical moderators, including cumulative exposure to antipsychotics, age of onset, illness duration and overall illness severity. Methods: Wegathered a large sample of schizophrenia patients (161, being 99 chronic and 62 first-episode) and controls (151) fromfour previousmorphometricMRI studies (1.5 T) carried out in the same geographical region of Brazil. Image processing and analyses were conducted using Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM8) software with the diffeomorphic anatomical registration through exponentiated Lie algebra (DARTEL) algorithm. Group effects on regional gray matter (GM) volumes were investigated through whole-brain voxel-wise comparisons using General LinearModel Analysis of Co-variance (ANCOVA), always including total GMvolume, scan protocol, age and gender as nuisance variables. Finally, correlation analyseswere performed between the aforementioned clinical moderators and regional and global brain volumes. Results: First-episode schizophrenia subjects displayed subtle volumetric deficits relative to controls in a circumscribed brain regional network identified only in small volume-corrected (SVC) analyses (p < 0.05, FWE-corrected), including the insula, temporolimbic structures and striatum. Chronic schizophrenia patients, on the other hand, demonstrated an extensive pattern of regional GM volume decreases relative to controls, involving bilateral superior, inferior and orbital frontal cortices, right middle frontal cortex, bilateral anterior cingulate cortices, bilateral insulae and right superior and middle temporal cortices (p < 0.05, FWE-corrected over the whole brain). GM volumes in several of those brain regionswere directly correlated with age of disease onset on SVC analyses for conjoined (first-episode and chronic) schizophrenia groups. There were also widespread foci of significant negative correlation between duration of illness and relative GM volumes, but such findings remained significant only for the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex after accounting for the influence of age of disease onset. Finally, significant negative correlations were detected between life-time cumulative exposure to antipsychotics and total GM and white matter volumes in schizophrenia patients, but no significant relationship was found between indices of antipsychotic usage and relative GM volume in any specific brain region. Conclusion: The above data indicate that brain changes associated with the diagnosis of schizophrenia are more widespread in chronic schizophrenia compared to first-episode patients. Our findings also suggest that relative GM volume deficits may be greater in (presumably more severe) cases with earlier age of onset, as well as varying as a function of illness duration in specific frontal brain regions. Finally, our results highlight the potentially complex effects of the continued use of antipsychotic drugs on structural brain abnormalities in schizophrenia, as we found that cumulative doses of antipsychotics affected brain volumes globally rather than selectively on frontal-temporal regions. (C) 2016 The Authors.
  • conferenceObject
    Structural Brain Changes in First-Episode Schizophrenia: A 4-5 Year Follow-Up Study Using MRI
    (2012) SCHALFELBERGER, Maristela S.; ROSA, Pedro G. P.; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; MENEZES, Paulo R.; SCAZUFCA, Marcia; MURRAY, Robin M.; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.
    Background: The presence of progressive structural brain changes over the first years of disease in first-episode schizophrenia (FES) patients is still controversial. The supposed progression of brain abnormalities in these patients may be associated with outcome and with antipsychotic exposure. Methods: Longitudinal population-based study performed in São Paulo - Brazil. Longitudinal analysis of GM matter volume using SPM was performed in 32 FES and 34 controls 4-5 years after baseline. Outcome measures were assessed by clinical course of symptoms (DSM-IV) and by global functioning (GAF scores). Results: FES did not differ from controls regarding GM changes over time, but those that remained psychotic and had lower global functioning over the follow-up period had GM concentration reduction in the left insula and in the left superior temporal gyrus in comparison to controls. Medication status had no effect on GM volumetric changes. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that a poor outcome, with chronic symptoms and a poor global functioning over 4-5 years after the first episode of psychosis is associated with brain abnormalities progression in brain regions which showed GM reduction at baseline (Schaufelberger et al, 2007). These results suggest that the progressive hypothesis in schizophrenia is probably not valid to all subjects that suffer from this illness.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cannabis use, cognition and brain structure in first-episode psychosis (vol 147, pg 209, 2013)
    (2013) CUNHA, Paulo Jannuzzi; ROSA, Pedro Gomes P.; AYRES, Adriana de Mello; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; SANTOS, Luciana C.; SCAZUFCA, Marcia; MENEZES, Paulo R.; SANTOS, Bernardo dos; MURRAY, Robin M.; CRIPPA, Jose Alexandre S.; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.; SCHAUFELBERGER, Maristela S.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Evaluation of relationships between presence of adhesio interthalamica and cannabis use in first-episode psychosis: a magnetic resonance imaging investigation
    (2021) SANCHEZ, Luciano De Menezes; CUNHA, Paulo Jannuzzi; SCHAUFELBERGER, Maristela S.; TRZESNIAK, Clarissa; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; SCAZUFCA, Marcia; MENEZES, Paulo R.; MURRAY, Robin M.; HALLAK, Jaime E.; CRIPPA, JosE Alexandre S.; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.
    Recent studies suggested that cannabis use influences on the emergence of psychosis by disrupting neurodevelopmental processes that occur during adolescence and early adulthood and which are reflected on brain anatomical changes detectable with MRI. However, no MRI studies have investigated whether intrauterine neurodevelopmental abnormalities also interact with later cannabis use to influence on psychosis risk. We investigated differences between first-episode psychosis (FEP) patients with history of cannabis use (FEPC+, n=28), FEP subjects without cannabis use (FEPC-, n=78) and healthy controls (n=80) in regard to the frequency of absent or short Adhesio Interthalamica (AI), a well-established marker of intrauterine neurodevelopment. The FEPC+ subgroup had a significantly lower prevalence of absent AI than FEPC- subjects, as well as a lack of a significantly shorter AI length compared to controls (as found in FEPC- subjects). These preliminary results show that psychosis subjects with cannabis use present a low rather than high frequency of absent AI, suggesting that fixed intrauterine neurodevelopmental abnormalities may not be associated with cannabis use later in life to influence on the emergence of psychosis. This is consistent with a view that multiple different etiological processes may lead to similar clinical presentations in patients with FEP.
  • article 41 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A population-based morphometric MRI study in patients with first-episode psychotic bipolar disorder: comparison with geographically matched healthy controls and major depressive disorder subjects
    (2011) PERICO, Cintia de Azevedo-Marques; DURAN, Fabio L. S.; ZANETTI, Marcus V.; SANTOS, Luciana C.; MURRAY, Robin M.; SCAZUFCA, Marcia; MENEZES, Paulo R.; BUSATTO, Geraldo F.; SCHAUFELBERGER, Maristela S.
    Objectives: Many morphometric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies that have investigated the presence of gray matter (GM) volume abnormalities associated with the diagnosis of bipolar disorder (BD) have reported conflicting findings. None of these studies has compared patients with recent-onset psychotic BD with asymptomatic controls selected from exactly the same environment using epidemiological methods, or has directly contrasted BD patients against subjects with first-onset psychotic major depressive disorder (MDD). We examined structural brain differences between (i) BD (type I) subjects and MDD subjects with psychotic features in their first contact with the healthcare system in Brazil, and (ii) these two mood disorder groups relative to a sample of geographically matched asymptomatic controls. Methods: A total of 26 BD subjects, 20 subjects with MDD, and 94 healthy controls were examined using either of two identical MRI scanners and acquisition protocols. Diagnoses were based on DSM-IV criteria and confirmed one year after brain scanning. Image processing was conducted using voxel-based morphometry. Results: The BD group showed increased volume of the right dorsal anterior cingulate cortex relative to controls, while the MDD subjects exhibited bilateral foci GM deficits in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (p < 0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons). Direct comparison between BD and MDD patients showed a focus of GM reduction in the right-sided dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (p < 0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons) and a trend (p < 0.10, corrected) toward left-sided GM deficits in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of MDD patients. When analyses were repeated with scanner site as a confounding covariate the finding of increased right anterior cingulate volumes in BD patients relative to controls remained statistically significant (p = 0.01, corrected for multiple comparisons). Conclusions: These findings reinforce the view that there are important pathophysiological distinctions between BD and MDD, and indicate that subtle dorsal anterior cingulate abnormalities may be relevant to the pathophysiology of BD.