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Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

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Page 1: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CNProfessor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology

University at Buffalo, SUNY

Brains & Gains

November 2013

Page 2: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

[In] most of the patients affected by multi-locular sclerosis whom I have had occasion to observe … there is marked enfeeblement of the memory; conceptions are formed slowly; the intellectual and emotional faculties are blunted in their totality. The dominant feeling in the patients appears to be a sort of almost cheerful indifference in reference to all things.

Jean-Martin Charcot (1877)

Page 3: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Demyelination and axonopathy

cerebral cortex r = 0.65 [Amato 2004; Benedict 2006; Tekok-Kilic 2007]

3rd ventricle r = 0.71[Christodolou 2003; Benedict 2004]

mesial temporal r = 0.42 [Sicotte 2008; Benedict 2009]

thalamus r = 0.75 [Houtchens 2007]

Page 4: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

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Page 5: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

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Page 6: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

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Page 7: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

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Page 8: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013
Page 9: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Job LossReduced work hours

DemotionLess Salary

Miss Promotion

WalkingUpper Extremity Function

Cognitive AbilityDepression

Negative Work EventsWork Errors

Forgetting AppointmentsSlow Work, Reduced

ProductivityUnequal Work Distribution

Social Difficulty

Accommodations/InterventionHigh Tech, Low Tech Aids

Overt, Covert AidsAdditional Time to Complete Tasks

Flexible Schedule

EmployerPatient

Coworker

Page 10: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Cognitive Impairment Mild

Maintain Employment

Private Disability

Social Security Disability

Early Retirement

Severe

Page 11: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013
Page 12: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

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Hours Worked per Week

Income

Extra Time Spent Outside Work

Page 13: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013
Page 14: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

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How to Monitor Clinical Status?

Page 15: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

www.BICAMS.net

Page 16: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Published Collecting data/analysis DiscussionUSA Canada Portugal PeruIran UK Belgium OmanCzech Republic Italy Ireland Poland

Germany Hungary RomaniaAustria Australia Slovenia

Egypt SwedenEstonia TurkeyLithuania BrazilNorway MexicoColumbia

Page 17: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

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Page 18: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Why do some MS Patients Fare so Well?

• Cognitive Reserve• Exercise• Personality• Cognitive Retraining

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Page 19: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Dimensional models of personality: the five-factor model and the DSM-5Timothy J. Trull, PhD; Thomas A. Widiger, PhD. Dialogues Clin Neurosci. 2013;15:135-146.

Page 20: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013
Page 21: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013
Page 22: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Conscientiousness

p = 0.023

Neuroticism

p = 0.001

Page 23: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013
Page 24: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013
Page 25: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Adam J. BoothJonathan D. RodgersCarolyn E. Schwartz, Sc.DBrian R. QuarantoBianca Weinstock-GuttmanRobert ZivadinovRalph H. B. Benedict

Active Cognitive Reserve Influences the Regional Atrophy to Cognition Link in Multiple SclerosisIn Press

Page 26: Ralph H. B. Benedict, PhD, ABPP-CN Professor of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychology University at Buffalo, SUNY Brains & Gains November 2013

Thank You

Bianca Weinstock-Guttman MD

Robert Zivadinov MD; Murali Ramanathan PhD

David Hojnacki MD; Channa Kolb MD

Margaret Bucello NP; Audrey Smerbeck PhD

Jonathan Rodgers PhD, Natalie Emmert BA