PI: Michele Cavallari
A visiting research trainee – Fernanda Troili, MD – is evaluating the association between enlarged perivascular spaces (as visible on magnetic resonance imaging) and beta-amyloid burden (as measured by positron emission tomography) in subjects from families carrying gene mutations known to cause familial Alzheimer’s disease, under the mentorship of Drs. Cavallari and Guttmann.
Retinal abnormalities in patients with multiple sclerosis
PI: Michele Cavallari
Aim: to describe retinal vascular abnormalities in multiple sclerosis patients and assess their relationship with inflammatory and neurodegenerative features of the disease. This study is in collaboration with the Partners Multiple Sclerosis Center at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and is part of the CLIMB study (Comprehensive Longitudinal Investigation of Multiple Sclerosis at Brigham and Women’s Hospital).
Overview
Our overall goal is to develop next generation MRI markers of clinical disease progression to be used as primary outcome measures in phase 2 trials for progressive MS (PMS) in a fashion analogous to the use of Gadolinium-enhancement in relapsing MS trials. The underlying hypothesis is that disease progression in MS is detectable through MRI prior to its clinical expression, and that we will be able to infer measures or features of the MRI that may not be directly observable and that have the following characteristics:
Intensive Blood Pressure Reduction to Lessen Functional Decline
Principal Investigators: William B. White, M.D., Leslie Wolfson, M.D., University of Connecticut Health Center
Local PI: Charles R.G. Guttmann, MD
Co-investigator: Nicola Moscufo, PhD
Site: University of Connecticut Health Center
NIH R01 AG022092
Years: 2011-2018
Reductions in mobility and cognitive function linked to accrual of brain microvascular disease related white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) on magnetic resonance imaging can occur in older hypertensive patients in as little as 2 years. We…
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