O
Ophélia Godin
Researcher at University of Paris
Publications - 131
Citations - 3353
Ophélia Godin is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Bipolar disorder. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 106 publications receiving 2671 citations. Previous affiliations of Ophélia Godin include Paris 12 Val de Marne University & Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Antihypertensive Treatment and Change in Blood Pressure Are Associated With the Progression of White Matter Lesion Volumes The Three-City (3C)–Dijon Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study
TL;DR: The hypothesis that hypertension is a strong predictor of white matter lesions progression is reinforced and that adequate treatment may reduce the course of WML progression.
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Longitudinal neuroimaging correlates of subjective memory impairment: 4-year prospective community study.
Robert Stewart,Ophélia Godin,Ophélia Godin,Fabrice Crivello,Pauline Maillard,Bernard Mazoyer,Christophe Tzourio,Carole Dufouil +7 more
TL;DR: Complaints of poor memory by older people, particularly when new, may be a realistic subjective appraisal of recent brain changes independent of observed cognitive decline.
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White Matter Lesions as a Predictor of Depression in the Elderly: The 3C-Dijon Study
Ophélia Godin,Ophélia Godin,Carole Dufouil,Carole Dufouil,Pauline Maillard,Pauline Maillard,Nicolas Delcroix,Nicolas Delcroix,Bernard Mazoyer,Fabrice Crivello,Fabrice Crivello,Annick Alpérovitch,Annick Alpérovitch,Christophe Tzourio,Christophe Tzourio +14 more
TL;DR: The data show that depression and WML volumes are strongly related, consistent with the hypothesis of a vascular depression in the elderly.
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C-reactive protein alterations in bipolar disorder: a meta-analysis.
TL;DR: This meta-analysis supports an association between increased CRP levels and BD, which is a marker of low-grade inflammation and a risk factor for cardiovascular and malignant diseases, and measurement of CRP level might be relevant to the clinical care of bipolar patients.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of MRI markers in subcortical vascular dementia: A multi-modal analysis in CADASIL
Anand Viswanathan,Ophélia Godin,Eric Jouvent,Michael O'Sullivan,Andreas Gschwendtner,Nils Peters,Marco Duering,Jean-Pierre Guichard,Markus Holtmannspötter,Carole Dufouil,Chahin Pachai,Marie-Germaine Bousser,Martin Dichgans,Hugues Chabriat +13 more
TL;DR: Brain atrophy has the strongest independent influence on clinical impairment in CADASIL when all MRI markers in the disease are considered together, and the results suggest that the clinical impact of cerebral tissue loss plays a principal role in this genetic model of subcortical ischemic vascular dementia.