Andrew H. Miller
Emory University
336 Papers
1.8K Citations
Andrew H. Miller is an academic researcher from Emory University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 90, co-authored 307 publications. Previous affiliations of Andrew H. Miller include Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai & University of Texas at Arlington.
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Papers
TNF-α and IL-6 are associated with the deficit syndrome and negative symptoms in patients with chronic schizophrenia.
David R. Goldsmith,Ebrahim Haroon,Andrew H. Miller,Gregory P. Strauss,Peter F. Buckley,Brian J. Miller +5 more
TL;DR: Findings suggest that deficit schizophrenia subtype is associated with increased inflammation and immunotherapies may be a novel target for negative symptoms.
102
Chronic caregiving stress alters peripheral blood immune parameters: the role of age and severity of stress
Carmine M. Pariante,Bernardo Carpiniello,M. G. Orru,R. Sitzia,A Piras,A. M. G. Farci,G.S. Del Giacco,G. Piludu,Andrew H. Miller +8 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that psychological stress differentially affects various aspects of the immune system and confirm the relevant role of age and severity of stress in modulating these influences.
102
Association between posttraumatic stress disorder and inflammation: a twin study.
Laura C. Plantinga,J. Douglas Bremner,J. Douglas Bremner,Andrew H. Miller,Dean P. Jones,Emir Veledar,Jack Goldberg,Viola Vaccarino +7 more
TL;DR: Elevated hsCRP and ICAM-1 are associated with PTSD, and these associations may be confounded by shared non-genetic, antecedent familial and environmental factors.
Estradiol and Progestins Differentially Modulate Leukocyte Infiltration After Vascular Injury
TL;DR: E2 may limit the neointimal response to endoluminal vascular injury, at least in part, by limiting leukocyte entry from adventitial/periadventitial tissues into injured vessels early in the injury response.
97
Increased inflammation and brain glutamate define a subtype of depression with decreased regional homogeneity, impaired network integrity, and anhedonia
Ebrahim Haroon,Xiangchuan Chen,Zhihao Li,Thrusharth Patel,Bobbi J. Woolwine,Xiaoping Hu,Jennifer C. Felger,Andrew H. Miller +7 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that decreased ReHo and related disruptions in network integrity may reflect toxic effects of inflammation-induced increases in extrasynaptic glutamate signaling, and local BOLD oscillatory activity as reflected in ReHo might be a useful measure of target-engagement in the brain for treatment ofinflammatory-induced behaviors.