C
Charles DeCarli
Researcher at University of California, Davis
Publications - 721
Citations - 77364
Charles DeCarli is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dementia & Hyperintensity. The author has an hindex of 125, co-authored 614 publications receiving 65820 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles DeCarli include University of Southern California & French Institute of Health and Medical Research.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Vascular risk factors impact cognition independent of pib pet and mri measures of ad and vascular brain injury
Charles DeCarli,Dan M Mungas,Owen Carmichael,Sylvia Villeneuve,Evan Fletcher,Baljeet Singh,William J. Jagust,Bruce R Reed +7 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Stroke: 'Brain health': what is it, what can we do about it and when should we start?
TL;DR: Implementation of 'Life's Simple 7' is a laudable step in that direction as science and society to view brain health across the lifespan of every individual as critically important.
Journal ArticleDOI
MRI free water as a biomarker for cognitive performance: Validation in the MarkVCID consortium
Pauline Maillard,Laura J. Hillmer,Hanzhang Lu,Konstantinos Arfanakis,Brian T. Gold,Christopher E. Bauer,Joel H. Kramer,Adam M. Staffaroni,L. Stables,Danny J.J. Wang,Sudha Seshadri,Claudia L. Satizabal,Alexa S. Beiser,Mohamad Habes,Myriam Fornage,Thomas H. Mosley,Gary A. Rosenberg,Baljeet Singh,Herpreet Singh,Kristin Schwab,Karl G. Helmer,Steven M. Greenberg,Charles DeCarli,Arvind Caprihan +23 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors evaluated the clinical validity of free water (FW), a diffusion tensor imaging-based biomarker kit proposed by the MarkVCID consortium, by investigating the association between mean free water and executive function.
Journal Article
Abstract 16816: Association of Exhaled Carbon Monoxide With Stroke Incidence and Subclinical Vascular Brain Injury: The Framingham Study
Matthew Nayor,Danielle Enserro,Alexa S. Beiser,Susan Cheng,Charles DeCarli,Ramachandran S. Vasan,Sudha Seshadri +6 more
TL;DR: Higher exhaled CO was associated with a greater burden of subclinical cerebrovascular disease cross-sectionally, and with increased risk of stroke/TIA prospectively in the Framingham Offspring Study, and the biological mechanisms linking CO with stroke are explored.