M
Marshal F. Folstein
Researcher at Johns Hopkins University
Publications - 109
Citations - 92830
Marshal F. Folstein is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dementia & Population. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 109 publications receiving 86932 citations. Previous affiliations of Marshal F. Folstein include Oregon Health & Science University & Cornell University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Physostigmine in Alzheimer's disease: effects on cognitive functioning, cerebral glucose metabolism analyzed by positron emission tomography and cerebral blood flow analyzed by single photon emission tomography.
Larry E. Tune,Jason Brandt,J. James Frost,Gordon J. Harris,Helen S. Mayberg,Cynthia D. Steele,Alistair Burns,J. Sapp,Marshal F. Folstein,Henry N. Wagner,Godfrey D. Pearlson +10 more
TL;DR: Although physostigmine enhanced cerebral blood flow in most patients, only one patient showed significant clinical improvement and this patient, however, also showed a very pronounced improvement in cerebral glucose metabolism.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical correlates of Alzheimer's disease with and without silent radiographic abnormalities.
Karen Marder,Marcus Richards,Jacqueline A. Bello,Karen L. Bell,Mary Sano,Lisa Miller,Marshal F. Folstein,Marilyn S. Albert,Yaakov Stern +8 more
TL;DR: In this cross-sectional analysis using clinical measures, patients with AD who have well-defined radiographic abnormalities cannot be differentiated from patients withAD who do not have them.
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessment of DSM-III personality structure in a general-population survey.
Gerald Nestadt,William W. Eaton,Alan J. Romanoski,Roberta Garrison,Marshal F. Folstein,Paul R. McHugh +5 more
TL;DR: Exploratory factor analysis showed that these DSM-III personality features are parsimoniously described by a five-factor model, which includes warmth, animation, timidity, trust, and scrupulousness.
Journal Article
Clinical predictors of improvement after electroconvulsive therapy of patients with schizophrenia, neurotic reactions, and affective disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI
Social disability and psychiatric morbidity in sickle cell anemia and diabetes patients
Namir F. Damlouji,Ruth Kevess-Cohen,Samuel Charache,Angeliki Georgopoulos,Marshal F. Folstein +4 more
TL;DR: No significant relationship existed between the psychosocial impairment and the presence or absence of physical complications of the two medical disorders.