ALANA XAVIER BATISTA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
6
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  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Behavioral and Neural Correlates of Cognitive Training and Transfer Effects in Stroke Patients (vol 11, 1048, 2020)
    (2021) MIOTTO, Eliane C.; BAZAN, Paulo R.; BATISTA, Alana X.; CONFORTO, Adriana B.; FIGUEIREDO, Eberval G.; MARTIN, Maria da Graca M.; AVOLIO, Isabella B.; AMARO, Edson; TEIXEIRA, Manoel J.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cognitive and emotional factors influence specific domains of postural control in individuals with moderate-to-severe Parkinson's disease
    (2023) OLIVEIRA, Claudia Eunice Neves de; COELHO, Daniel Boari; SOUZA, Caroline Ribeiro de; BATISTA, Alana Xavier; MARQUESINI, Raquel; MOREIRA-NETO, Acacio; SILVA-BATISTA, Carla; BITIATI, Adriana Tanigawa; TEIXEIRA, Luis Augusto; LIMA-PARDINI, Andrea Cristina de
    Introduction: Cognition and emotional state are domains that highly interfere with postural control in individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD). This study aims to find associations between executive function, anxiety, depression, and reactive and anticipatory postural control domains in individuals with moderate-to-severe Parkinson's disease.Methods: In this study, 34 individuals with PD while on medication were thoroughly assessed for postural control in perturbed, quiet standing and stepping. We performed multiple linear stepwise regressions using postural variables as dependent and cognitive/emotional as independent variables.Results: The results showed that cognitive flexibility explained 23 % of anticipatory postural adjustments (APA) duration, inhibitory control explained 42 % of instability on a malleable surface, anxiety explained 21 % of APA amplitude, and 38 % of reactive postural response amplitude.Conclusion: Our results highlight the impact of emotional and cognitive states on particular domains of postural control in individuals with PD while on medication. These results may have significant implications for future treatments, mainly considering the predictors for postural control domains, which were consistent with the assumption that impairments in affective and executive domains underlie posture. As we have shown that cognitive and emotional states influence postural control domains in individuals with PD, this should be taken into account in rehabilitation protocols
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Behavioral and Neural Correlates of Cognitive Training and Transfer Effects in Stroke Patients
    (2020) MIOTTO, Eliane C.; BAZAN, Paulo R.; BATISTA, Alana X.; CONFORTO, Adriana B.; FIGUEIREDO, Eberval G.; MARTIN, Maria Graca M.; AVOLIO, Isabella B.; JR, Edson Amaro; TEIXEIRA, Manoel J.
    Stroke lesions are frequently followed by cognitive impairments. Cognitive training is a non-pharmacological intervention that can promote neural compensation mechanisms and strategies to remediate cognitive impairments. The aims of this study were: (1) To investigate the cognitive performance, generalization effects, and neural correlates of semantic organization strategy training (SOST) in patients with chronic left frontoparietal stroke and healthy controls (HC); and (2) to compare the behavioral effects and neural correlates of SOST with an active control psychoeducation intervention (PI). In this randomized controlled study, all participants were randomly allocated into two groups, one group received SOST, and the other received PI intervention. Participants underwent two fMRI sessions, one prior and the other, after intervention. In each fMRI session, images were obtained during memory encoding task using a list of semantically related words. We found improved post-intervention memory performance in participants that received SOST (both patients and controls), indicated by number of words recalled, word clustering scores, and performance in a generalization task. The fMRI analysis revealed negative correlation between task performance and regions of the default-mode network. These results suggest that cognitive training using semantic organization strategy can improve episodic memory performance and promote potential functional neuroplasticity in patients with ischemic stroke lesions.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Perilesional and contralesional brain activations related to associative encoding of unfamiliar face-names pairs in adults with left chronic stroke with or without ischemic infarct on left inferior frontal gyrus
    (2023) BATISTA, Alana X.; BAZAN, Paulo R.; MARTIN, Maria da Graca M.; CONFORTO, Adriana B.; HOSHINO, Mauricio; SIMON, Sharon S.; HAMPSTEAD, Benjamin; FIGUEIREDO, Eberval Gadelha; AMARO JR., Edson; MIOTTO, Eliane C.
    The study of an Ischemic stroke infarction allows verifying how the lesion produces alterations in the neuronal networks resulting in cognitive deficits. It also allows the verification of adaptive and maladaptive cerebral reorganization related to the injury. In our previous fMRI study, we found that patients without ischemic vascular lesions in left inferior frontal gyrus showed an efficient compensation mechanism during the associative encoding of face name pairs, by the increased activation of ventrolateral and dorsolateral areas of contralesional hemisphere associated with better memory performance. While patients with ischemic vascular lesions on left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) demonstrated worse memory performance and no signs of compensation mechanism. The present study explores more of these findings by analyzing perilesional and contralesional activations related to unfamiliar face name associative encoding in adults with chronic ischemic stroke, with or without left IFG lesion, compared to healthy controls. The main results showed that stroke survivors without lesions in IFG demonstrated increased activation in perilesional and contralesional prefrontal regions associated with better associative memory recognition, which are indicative of adaptive compensatory mechanisms. However, they also showed a negative correlation between the activation of right anterior prefrontal and inferior parietal regions and the associative memory performance, which may indicate the presence of maladaptive interhemispheric disinhibition. On the other hand, stroke survivors with IFG lesions demonstrated negative correlations in activations of the ipsilesional inferior parietal cortex and positive correlations in activations of the left middle frontal gyrus and left precentral cortex, which demonstrate the simultaneous occurrence of adaptive and maladaptive brain reorganization mechanisms in this group. However, the increase in perilesional prefrontal regions, associated with bilateral activation of the hippocampus and amygdala, was not enough to compensate for the inefficiency of associative memory performance. Finally, the differences in activation observed in stroke survivors reflect their clinical heterogeneity and demonstrate that adaptive or maladaptive compensatory mechanisms can coexist in the same group of patients. Furthermore, they reinforce the importance of the left IFG in the associative encoding of unfamiliar face name pairs and may suggest a deficit in associative memory related to injury in this region. (C) 2023 Published by Elsevier Ltd.