Publications by authors named "Laura Domingo-Rodriguez"

Rationale: The clinical impact of a novel mechanical thrombectomy strategy, which integrates distal access with flow reversal and flow arrest via a distal balloon, all within a single procedure [Safety and Efficacy of the overall throMbectomy system for sTroke (SEMTiC) strategy], has not been tested.

Aim: The SEMTiC-01 study is the first prospective, multicenter study evaluating the safety and efficacy of the combined thrombectomy system-iNedit, iNdeep, and iNtercept-in patients with acute ischemic stroke.

Sample Size Estimates: The study was designed with a sequential structure based on the efficacy endpoint (eTICI ≥2b) reported in the literature [71.

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Objectives: Overconsumption of palatable food and energy accumulation are evolutionary mechanisms of survival when food is scarce. These innate mechanisms becom detrimental in obesogenic environment promoting obesity and related comorbidities, including mood disorders. This study aims at elucidating the role of the endocannabinoid system in energy accumulation and hedonic feeding.

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Objective: Food addiction is a multifactorial disorder characterised by a loss of control over food intake that may promote obesity and alter gut microbiota composition. We have investigated the potential involvement of the gut microbiota in the mechanisms underlying food addiction.

Design: We used the Yale Food Addiction Scale (YFAS) 2.

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Cocaine addiction is a complex brain disorder involving long-term alterations that lead to loss of control over drug seeking. The transition from recreational use to pathological consumption is different in each individual, depending on the interaction between environmental and genetic factors. Epigenetic mechanisms are ideal candidates to study psychiatric disorders triggered by these interactions, maintaining persistent malfunctions in specific brain regions.

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Food addiction is characterized by a loss of behavioral control over food intake and is associated with obesity and other eating disorders. The mechanisms underlying this behavioral disorder are largely unknown. We aimed to investigate the changes in miRNA expression promoted by food addiction in animals and humans and their involvement in the mechanisms underlying the behavioral hallmarks of this disorder.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines how drug addiction, particularly to cocaine, may be influenced by changes in gene expression regulated by micro-RNAs (miRNAs), focusing on their role in specific brain regions involved in addiction.
  • Researchers found that certain miRNAs were elevated in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) of mice after prolonged cocaine use, with a particular emphasis on miR-1 due to its impact on key genes like Fosb and Npas4 that are involved in addiction responses.
  • Through experiments that overexpressed miR-1 in different types of striatal neurons, the study revealed contrasting effects on cocaine-seeking behavior, suggesting that miR-1 plays a specific and important role in modulating addiction behaviors depending
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Recent progress in the genomics and epigenomics of addiction has contributed to improving our understanding of this complex mental disorder's etiology, filling the gap between genes, environment, and behavior. We review the behavioral genetic studies reporting gene and environment interactions that explain the polygenetic contribution to the resilience and vulnerability to develop addiction. We discuss the evidence of polymorphic candidate genes that confer susceptibility to develop addiction as well as the studies of specific epigenetic marks that contribute to vulnerability and resilience to addictive-like behavior.

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The study of food addiction comprises 3 hallmarks that include the persistence to response without an outcome, the strong motivation for palatable food, and the loss of inhibitory control over food intake that leads to compulsive behavior in addicted individuals. The complex multifactorial nature of this disorder and the unknown neurobiological mechanistic correlation explains the lack of effective treatments. Our operant conditioning model allows deciphering why some individuals are vulnerable and develop food addiction while others are resilient and do not.

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Palatable food can promote overfeeding beyond homeostatic requirements, thereby constituting a major risk to obesity. Here, the lack of cannabinoid type 1 receptor (CB1) in dorsal telencephalic glutamatergic neurons (Glu-CB1-KO) abrogated the overconsumption of palatable food and the development of obesity. On low-fat diet, no genotype differences were observed.

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Food addiction is linked to obesity and eating disorders and is characterized by a loss of behavioral control and compulsive food intake. Here, using a food addiction mouse model, we report that the lack of cannabinoid type-1 receptor in dorsal telencephalic glutamatergic neurons prevents the development of food addiction-like behavior, which is associated with enhanced synaptic excitatory transmission in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and in the nucleus accumbens (NAc). In contrast, chemogenetic inhibition of neuronal activity in the mPFC-NAc pathway induces compulsive food seeking.

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