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Iris-Katharina Penner
Researcher at University of Düsseldorf
Publications - 129
Citations - 4447
Iris-Katharina Penner is an academic researcher from University of Düsseldorf. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Multiple sclerosis. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 109 publications receiving 3566 citations. Previous affiliations of Iris-Katharina Penner include University of Basel & University Hospital of Basel.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Recommendations for a Brief International Cognitive Assessment for Multiple Sclerosis (BICAMS)
Dawn Langdon,Maria Pia Amato,J B Boringa,Bruno Brochet,Frederick W. Foley,Sten Fredrikson,Päivi Hämäläinen,H.-P. Hartung,Lauren B. Krupp,Iris-Katharina Penner,Anthony T. Reder,Ralph H.B. Benedict +11 more
TL;DR: A brief cognitive assessment for multiple sclerosis that is optimized for small centers, with one or few staff members, who may not have neuropsychological training and constructed to maximize international use is recommended.
Journal ArticleDOI
MS quality of life, depression, and fatigue improve after mindfulness training: A randomized trial
Paul Grossman,Ludwig Kappos,Henrik Gensicke,M. D'Souza,David C. Mohr,Iris-Katharina Penner,C. Steiner +6 more
TL;DR: This trial provides Class III evidence that MBI compared with UC improved HRQOL, fatigue, and depression up to 6 months postintervention and effect sizes were larger than for the total sample.
Journal ArticleDOI
The fatigue scale for motor and cognitive functions (FSMC) : validation of a new instrument to assess multiple sclerosis-related fatigue
Iris-Katharina Penner,C. Raselli,Markus Stöcklin,Klaus Opwis,Ludwig Kappos,Pasquale Calabrese +5 more
TL;DR: The FSMC is a new scale that has undergone validation based on a large sample of patients and that provides differential quantification and graduation of cognitive and motor fatigue.
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Fatigue as a symptom or comorbidity of neurological diseases
TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the literature on fatigue in neurological disease is provided, and its complexity is revealed, as well as weaknesses in the concept of fatigue itself.
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Analysis of impairment related functional architecture in MS patients during performance of different attention tasks.
TL;DR: Findings suggest that compensation in MS patients is in part achieved by functional integration of frontal and parietal association areas, and the extent of compensation seems to depend on the brain's capacity to access additional brain structures.