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Ana Solodkin

Department of Neurology
The University of Chicago
MC 2030. 5841 S Maryland Avenue
Chicago, IL 60637

solodkin@uchicago.edu

 

Expertise:
Clinical Research, Brain Imaging, Basic Neuroanatomy

My research interest has been centered around brain plasticity. First as an undergraduate student I performed research on plasticity during REM sleep. During my Ph.D. at the " National Polytechnic Institute" in Mexico, I did studies with Dr. Pablo Rudomin in long-term plasticity in the spinal cord. With an aim toward investigating mechanisms of neuronal plasticity and the neuropharmacology of serotonin, I was invited to NIH where I completed some studies on plastic changes in development.

Later on at the University of Iowa I joined the Cognitive Neurology group under the direction of Dr. Antonio Damasio receiving direct training with Dr. van Hoesen in the area of human neuroanatomy. My work concentrated on one of the limbic structures, the entorhinal cortex. This is an area of particular importance because it is one of the first structures affected in Alzheimer's Disease and because the neurons exhibiting pathological alterations (such as neurofibrillary tangles) are for the most part projection neurons responsible for interconnections between the entorhinal cortex and the hippocampus. During these years, I published a number of papers on the pathological alterations in these structures. One important result originally postulated by Dr. Van Hoesen and further elaborated with my work, was that the changes in the reciprocal connectivity between these structures in AD results in a "functional isolation" of the hippocampus. This could be at least in part, the structural basis for some of the memory and emotional deficits of AD. The technical aspects of this work focused on the cyto- and chemoarchitectural description of the vertical-modular organization of limbic cortices in man.

From my initial work in an animal model system addressing issues of plasticity and synaptic habituation to the study of human cortical anatomy in dementia, my active and long-term research has focused on the relationship between basic neurobiology and cognitive neurology. To accomplish this goal however, I realized that the anatomical assessment albeit very informative, lacked a direct physiological correlation. Hence, I decided to complete my scientific approach by adding Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). I started working in close collaboration with Dr. Steven Small who introduced me to MRI and to vascular disease, especially ischemic stroke. The study of rehabilitation after ischemic stroke proved to be a wonderful model for cortical plasticity since unlike Alzheimer's disease, stroke patients can at least in part, recover over time. In these studies as before, the theoretical approach has been the determination of changes in brain connectivity.

The aim with my work has been to study anatomical and physiological substrates of disease that have a reasonable likelihood of leading to therapeutic interventions. My present interest on recovery after focal ischemic damage builds on previous work in two ways: (1) integrating previous areas of investigation, including CNS plasticity, cortical network analysis, serotonergic pharmacology, and human fronto-temporal anatomy, into a coherent program of clinically relevant basic scientific study; (2) applying the neurological localizational method to study the most prevalent of all causes of disability (especially in the population over 65 years). So my work currently focuses in two issues: a) Motor recovery after stroke b) Early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease.

Specific research projects:
Early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease by DTI; Network changes during recovery from motor stroke; Hand motor therapy using mirror System physiology; Prevention of post-stroke depression; Assessment of brain vascular compliance through aging.

 

© 2005Center for Integrative Neuroscience and Neuroengineering
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