F. Gonzalez-Lima

F. Gonzalez-Lima
University of Texas at Austin | UT · Psychology/Neuroscience Institute/Pharmacology & Toxicology/Psychiatry

Doctor of Philosophy

About

262
Publications
52,735
Reads
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12,019
Citations
Introduction
Prof. Dr. Francisco Gonzalez-Lima currently works at the Departments of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Pharmacology/Toxicology, and Institute for Neuroscience, University of Texas at Austin. His lab group does research in Behavioral Neuroscience, Psychobiology and Biological Psychiatry. Their current projects focus mainly on human neurocognitive enhancement and brain energy metabolism.
Additional affiliations
September 2017 - present
University of Texas at Austin, Dell Medical School
Position
  • Professor
August 1999 - present
University of Texas at Austin
Position
  • Professor
January 1997 - present
University of Texas at Austin
Position
  • Professor
Education
September 1982 - November 1983
Technische Universität Darmstadt
Field of study
  • Neurobiology of Behavior
August 1977 - June 1980
University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus
Field of study
  • Anatomy and Neurobiology
August 1975 - June 1977
Tulane University
Field of study
  • Biology and Psychology

Publications

Publications (262)
Article
Full-text available
There is growing evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction and prefrontal cortex (PFC) hypometabolism in bipolar disorder (BD). Older adults with BD exhibit greater decline in PFC-related neurocognitive functions than is expected for age-matched controls, and clinical interventions intended for mood stabilization are not targeted to prevent or ameliora...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction This is the first study mapping the duration of action of in vivo photobiomodulation (PBM) on cytochrome-c-oxidase (CCO). In cellular bioenergetics, CCO is the terminal rate-limiting enzyme in the mitochondrial electron transport chain, which catalyzes oxygen utilization for aerobic energy production. PBM using transcranial infrared la...
Article
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Background Neuroinflammation is a response that involves different cell lineages of the central nervous system, such as neurons and glial cells. Among the non-pharmacological interventions for neuroinflammation, photobiomodulation (PBM) is gaining prominence because of its beneficial effects found in experimental brain research. We systematically r...
Article
Full-text available
Preliminary evidence shows that brief, condensed imaginal exposure only interventions can be effective in the treatment of PTSD, but we need to understand its mechanisms of action. Consistent with extinction learning and retrieval processes, the present study examined whether a pattern of between-session distress reduction observed during standard...
Article
Transcranial photobiomodulation improves cerebral cortex metabolism. We hypothesized that chronic laser treatment may stimulate neuronal growth. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the morphology of neurons in the cerebral cortex of rats submitted to brief (2.5 minutes) daily sham or transcranial laser treatment (810 nm wavelength at 100 mW) f...
Article
Full-text available
In cellular bioenergetics, cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) is the enzyme responsible for oxygen consumption in the mitochondrial electron transport chain, which drives oxidative phosphorylation for adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production. CCO is also the major intracellular acceptor of photons in the light wavelengths used for photobiomodulation (PBM)....
Article
Full-text available
Photobiomodulation is a non-pharmacological tool widely used to reduce inflammation in many tissues. However, little is known about its effects on the inflammatory response in the aged brain. We conducted the study to examine anti-inflammatory effects of photobiomodulation in aging brains. We used aged rats (20 months old) with control (handled, la...
Article
Full-text available
Our recent study demonstrated that prefrontal transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) with 1064-nm laser enables significant changes in EEG rhythms, but these changes might result from the laser-induced heat rather than tPBM. This study hypothesized that tPBM-induced and heat-induced alterations in EEG power topography were significantly distinct. W...
Article
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Aging is often accompanied by exacerbated activation of cell death-related signaling pathways and decreased energy metabolism. We hypothesized that transcranial near-infrared laser may increase intracellular signaling pathways beneficial to aging brains, such as those that regulate brain cell proliferation, apoptosis, and energy metabolism. To test...
Chapter
Full-text available
This chapter describes our animal and human studies using red to near-infrared lasers and LEDs, a noninvasive and relatively inexpensive intervention, which we are investigating for neuroprotection and for the augmentation of cognitive brain functions. The first part deals with animal studies on the prevention of neurodegeneration and behavioral de...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Preclinical findings suggest that transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) improves fear extinction learning and cognitive function by enhancing prefrontal cortex (PFC) oxygen metabolism. These findings prompted our investigation of treating pathological fear using this non-invasive stimulation approach either alone to the dorsol...
Article
Full-text available
Longevity is one of the great triumphs of humanity. Worldwide, the elderly is the fastest growing segment of the population. As a consequence, the number of cases of age-related cognitive decline and neurological diseases associated with aging, such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, has been increasing. Among the non-pharmacological interventions stu...
Preprint
Full-text available
Transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) of the prefrontal cortex can improve human cognition and increase electroencephalogram (EEG) alpha and beta powers, but it was unclear whether tPBM-induced heat would influence EEG oscillation powers. This study aimed to prove that tPBM-induced increases in anterior-posterior EEG powers at alpha and beta bands...
Preprint
Full-text available
Photobiomodulation is a non-pharmacological tool widely used to reduce inflammation in many tissues. However, little is known about its effects on the inflammatory response in the aged brain. We conducted the study to examine anti-inflammatory effects of photobiomodulation in aging brains. We used aged rats (20 months old) with control (handled, la...
Article
Full-text available
As part of transcranial photobiomodulation, transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) refers to the non-invasive delivery of 1064 nm wavelength infrared laser light to the brain to modulate energy metabolism and hemodynamics. The primary mechanism rests on the photo-oxidation of cytochrome-c-oxidase, the key mitochondrial enzyme that catalyzes...
Article
Full-text available
This is the first study to examine if transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) improves cognition in older euthymic bipolar patients, who exhibit greater cognitive decline than is expected for age-matched controls. TILS is a non-invasive novel form of photobiomodulation that augments prefrontal oxygenation and improves cognition in young adul...
Article
Full-text available
Background Transcranial laser stimulation is a novel method of noninvasive brain stimulation found safe and effective for improving prefrontal cortex neurocognitive functions in healthy young adults. This method is different from electric and magnetic stimulation because it causes the photonic oxidation of cytochrome-c-oxidase, the rate-limiting en...
Article
Full-text available
Since laser photobiomodulation has been found to enhance brain energy metabolism and cognition, we conducted the first metabolomics study to systematically analyze the metabolites modified by brain photobiomodulation. Aging is often accompanied by cognitive decline and susceptibility to neurodegeneration, including deficits in brain energy metaboli...
Article
Exposure therapy is highly effective for anxiety-related disorders, but there is a need for enhancement. Recent trials of adjunctive neuromodulation have shown promise, warranting evaluation of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) as an augmentation. In a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, contamination- and animal-phobic participant...
Article
Full-text available
Transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) with near-infrared light on the human head has been shown to enhance human cognition. In this study, tPBM-induced effects on resting state brain networks were investigated using 111-channel functional near-infrared spectroscopy over the whole head. Measurements were collected with and without 8-minute tPBM in...
Article
Full-text available
Chronic cerebral hypoperfusion in neurocognitive disorders diminishes cytochrome oxidase activity leading to neurodegenerative effects and impairment of learning and memory. Methylene blue at low doses stimulates cytochrome oxidase activity and may thus counteract the adverse effects of cerebral hypoperfusion. However, the effects of methylene blue...
Article
When food is restricted daily to a fixed time, animals show uncoupled molecular, physiological and behavioral circadian rhythms from those entrained by light and controlled by the suprachiasmatic nucleus. The loci of the food-entrainable oscillator and the mechanisms by which rhythms emerge are unclear. Using animals entrained to the light-dark cyc...
Article
Full-text available
Transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) is a novel, safe, non-invasive method of brain photobiomodulation. Laser stimulation of the human prefrontal cortex causes cognitive enhancement. To investigate the hemodynamic effects in prefrontal cortex by which this cognitive enhancement occurs, we used functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS)...
Article
Noninvasive transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) with a 1064-nm laser has been reported to improve human performance on cognitive tasks as well as locally upregulate cerebral oxygen metabolism and hemodynamics. However, it is unknown whether 1064-nm tPBM also modulates electrophysiology, and specifically neural oscillations, in the human brain. T...
Preprint
Full-text available
Non-invasive transcranial photobiomodulation with a 1064-nm laser (tPBML1064) has been reported to improve human performance on cognitive tasks as well as locally upregulate cerebral oxygen metabolism and hemodynamics. However, it is unknown whether tPBML1064 also modulates electrophysiology, and specifically neural oscillations, in the human brain...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Previously, we showed that consumption of a diet supplemented with omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3FAs) for two rounds of gestation and lactation increased the ability of rat dams to cope with stress when compared to dams that ingested a diet lacking n-3FAs. The objective of this study was to determine if the diets of these dams...
Article
Full-text available
This RCT will test whether transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) administered immediately following standard exposure therapy enhances the retention of fear extinction for naturally acquired pathological fear. A second aim is to investigate the efficacy of TILS as a stand-alone intervention for reducing pathological fear. Participants with...
Article
Full-text available
Studies of the effects of physical activity on cognition suggest that aerobic fitness can improve cognitive abilities. However, the physiological mechanisms for the cognitive benefit of aerobic fitness are less well understood. We examined the association between aerobic fitness and cerebrovascular function with neurocognitive functions in healthy,...
Article
Full-text available
This study is a new analysis to obtain novel metabolic data on the functional connectivity of prefrontal-limbic regions in Pavlovian fear acquisition and extinction of tone-footshock conditioning. Mice were analyzed with the fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) autoradiographic method to metabolically map regional brain activity. New FDG data were sampled from...
Conference Paper
We measured laser- and heat-induced cerebral responses of the human forehead during placebo-controlled photobiomodulation by 1064-nm laser. Significant enhancement in cerebral cytochrome-c-oxidase and hemodynamics was observed, revealing physiological mechanisms of transcranial photobiomodulation.
Conference Paper
We conducted placebo-controlled 1064 nm Transcranial Laser Stimulation (TLS) on 20 human foreheads. Significant alterations of EEG power and information flow were observed, indicating important neurophysiological benefits of photoneuromodulation by 1064 nm laser.
Article
Full-text available
Transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) has shown effectiveness in improving human cognition and was investigated using broadband near-infrared spectroscopy (bb-NIRS) in our previous study, but the effect of laser heating on the actual bb-NIRS measurements was not investigated. To address this potential confounding factor, 11 human participa...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: The memory-enhancing drug methylene blue (MB) administered after extinction training improves fear extinction retention in rats and humans with claustrophobia. Robust findings from animal research, in combination with established safety and data showing MB-enhanced extinction in humans, provide a foundation to extend this work to extinc...
Article
Full-text available
Transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) at 1064 nm, 250 mW/cm² has been proven safe and effective for increasing neurocognitive functions in young adults in controlled studies using photobiomodulation of the right prefrontal cortex. The objective of this pilot study was to determine whether there is any effect from TILS on neurocognitive fun...
Article
Full-text available
Transcranial Infrared Brain Stimulation (TIBS) with a 1064-nm laser applied to the right forehead has been shown to improve human cognitive function. To explore the neurophysiological effect of this photobiomodulation, we measured the 64-channel electroencephalogram (EEG) before, during and after the laser stimulation. After data collection from 20...
Article
Full-text available
Recently, alternative drug therapies for Parkinson’s disease (PD) have been investigated as there are many shortcomings of traditional dopamine-based therapies including difficulties in treating cognitive and attentional dysfunction. A promising therapeutic avenue is to target mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress in PD. One option might b...
Article
Full-text available
Methylene blue USP (MB) is a FDA-grandfathered drug used in clinics to treat methemoglobinemia, carbon monoxide poisoning and cyanide poisoning that has been shown to increase fMRI evoked blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) response in rodents. Low dose MB also has memory enhancing effect in rodents and humans. However, the neural correlates o...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) is a novel form of brain photobiomodulation. Controlled human studies show that TILS involves up-regulation of cytochrome c oxidase (CCO), the terminal enzyme in mitochondrial respiration, resulting in improved cerebral oxygenation and cognitive and emotional benefits. Eight controlled experiments were...
Article
Full-text available
Many factors account for how well individuals extinguish conditioned fears, such as genetic variability, learning capacity and conditions under which extinction training is administered. We predicted that memory-based interventions would be more effective to reduce the reinstatement of fear in subjects genetically predisposed to display more extinc...
Article
Transcranial infrared laser stimulation (TILS) is a noninvasive form of brain photobiomulation. Cytochrome-c-oxidase (CCO), the terminal enzyme in the mitochondrial electron transport chain, is hypothesized to be the primary intracellular photoacceptor. We hypothesized that TILS up-regulates cerebral CCO and causes hemodynamic changes. We delivered...
Article
Full-text available
Fear extinction typically results in the formation of a new inhibitory memory that suppresses the original conditioned response. Evidence also suggests that extinction training during a retrieval-induced labile period results in integration of the extinction memory into the original fear memory, rendering the fear memory less susceptible to reinsta...
Article
Full-text available
This is the first randomized, controlled study comparing the cognitive effects of transcranial laser stimulation on category learning tasks. Transcranial infrared laser stimulation is a new non-invasive form of brain stimulation that shows promise for wide-ranging experimental and neuropsychological applications. It involves using infrared laser to...
Article
When food is restricted to a brief fixed period every day, animals show an increase in temperature, corticosterone concentration and locomotor activity for 2-3hours before feeding time, termed food anticipatory activity. Mechanisms and neuroanatomical circuits responsible for food anticipatory activity remain unclear, and may involve both oscillato...
Article
Full-text available
Photobiomodulation, also known as low-level laser/light therapy (LLLT), refers to the use of red-to-near-infrared light to stimulate cellular functions for physiological or clinical benefits. The mechanism of LLLT is assumed to rely on photon absorption by cytochrome c oxidase (CCO), the terminal enzyme in the mitochondrial respiratory chain that c...
Article
Full-text available
Methylene blue (MB) is an FDA-grandfathered drug with memory-enhancing effects at low doses, but opposite effects at high doses. We investigated the effects of four MB doses (0.1, 0.5, 5.0, or 10.0 μM) on zebrafish memory retention in the T-maze task. After training fish to swim into a certain arm of the T-maze, the fish were placed into a tank con...
Article
Full-text available
This is the first randomized, controlled study comparing the cognitive effects of transcranial laser stimulation and acute aerobic exercise on the same cognitive tasks. We examined whether transcranial infrared laser stimulation of the prefrontal cortex, acute high-intensity aerobic exercise, or the combination may enhance performance in sustained...
Article
Purpose To investigate the sustained-attention and memory-enhancing neural correlates of the oral administration of methylene blue in the healthy human brain. Materials and Methods The institutional review board approved this prospective, HIPAA-compliant, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial, and all patients provided infor...
Article
Background: Low-level light therapy (LLLT) with transcranial laser is a non-invasive form of neuroenhancement shown to regulate neuronal metabolism and cognition. Attention bias modification (ABM) is a cognitive intervention designed to improve depression by decreasing negative attentional bias, but to date its efficacy has been inconclusive. Adju...
Article
Aim: To evaluate the behavioural effects of head electroacupuncture (EA) using the Holtzman rat model, a genetic strain showing susceptibility to stress-evoked helplessness. Methods: Putative anxiolytic and antidepressant behavioural effects of head EA were investigated using the light-dark and forced swim tests, respectively. The open field tes...
Article
Rodent models have shown a relationship between omega‐3 fatty acid (n‐3FA) consumption and offspring behaviors related to anxiety, depression, and cognition. In these studies, offspring n‐3FA deficiency or supplementation continued after weaning, obscuring phenomena due solely to the developmental effects of maternal consumption of n‐3FAs during pr...
Article
Background and objective: Transcranial laser stimulation of the brain with near-infrared light is a novel form of non-invasive photobiomodulation or low-level laser therapy (LLLT) that has shown therapeutic potential in a variety of neurological and psychological conditions. Understanding of its neurophysiological effects is essential for mechanis...
Article
Full-text available
Neurons are metabolically protected against degeneration using low-level methylene blue and near-infrared light interventions. Both of these novel interventions act by a cellular mechanism involving enhancement of the electron transport chain in mitochondria, which promotes energy metabolism and neuronal survival (Gonzalcate-Lima et al., 2014). Met...
Article
Full-text available
Transcranial infrared laser stimulation is a new non-invasive form of low-level light therapy that may have a wide range of neuropsychological applications. It entails using low-power and high-energy-density infrared light from lasers to increase metabolic energy. Preclinical work showed that this intervention can increase cortical metabolic energy...
Article
When a neutral cue is followed by a significant event such as food delivery, some animals become engaged with the cue itself and acquire cue-directed behaviors. One type of cue-directed behavior is observed following insertion of a lever used as a conditioned stimulus (CS). Rats showing robust approach behavior to the lever also display impulsivity...
Article
Full-text available
Chronic cerebral hypoperfusion, a risk factor for mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease, affects mitochondrial respiration and memory consolidation. Therefore, drugs that improve mitochondrial function may be appropriate cognitive treatments for cerebral hypoperfusion. Methylene blue (MB) crosses the blood-brain barrier and at low doses...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Preclinical studies have shown that low-dose methylene blue increases mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase activity in the brain and improves memory retention after learning tasks, including fear extinction. The authors report on the first controlled experiment to examine the memory-enhancing effects of posttraining methylene blue administr...
Article
Repeated social subjugation in early puberty lowers testosterone levels. We used hamsters to investigate the effects of social subjugation on male sexual behavior and metabolic activity within neural systems controlling social and motivational behaviors. Subjugated animals were exposed daily to aggressive adult males in early puberty for postnatal...
Article
Full-text available
Neuroimaging studies of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-related memory impairments have consistently implicated abnormal activities in the frontal and parietal lobes. However, most studies have used block designs and could not dissociate the multiple phases of working memory. In this study, the involvement of the prefrontal cortex in working...
Article
Prenatal supplementation with omega‐3 fatty acids (O3FAs) is common because O3FAs are integral to fetal brain development. Our objective was to assess effects of prenatal O3FA consumption on offspring behavior using a rat model. Pups were obtained from the second litter of mothers that consumed diets with or without O3FAs for two cycles of gestatio...
Article
Full-text available
Discovering that transcranial infrared laser stimulation produces beneficial effects on frontal cortex functions such as sustained attention, working memory, and affective state has been groundbreaking. Transcranial laser stimulation with low-power density (mW/cm2) and high-energy density (J/cm2) monochromatic light in the near-infrared wavelengths...
Article
Full-text available
Matsumoto and Hikosaka (2007) provided the first electrophysiological evidence that lateral habenula (LHb) neurons are inhibited by stimuli predicting reward and excited by stimuli predicting no reward, in exact opposition to the firing responses of midbrain dopamine (DA) neurons. Discovering the temporal relationship between LHb neuronal activity...
Article
Omega‐3 fatty acid (O3FA) supplementation may relieve symptoms of post‐partum depression (PPD) and anxiety and aid in learning and memory. Our objective was to determine if O3FA supplementation could decrease anxiety and improve learning and memory in a rat model of PPD. Rats consumed diets prepared with 7% menhaden or sunflower oil (24% vs. 0% O3F...
Article
Full-text available
This is the first controlled study demonstrating the beneficial effects of transcranial laser stimulation on cognitive and emotional functions in humans. Photobiomodulation with red to near-infrared light is a novel intervention shown to regulate neuronal function in cell cultures, animal models, and clinical conditions. Light that intersects with...
Article
Cerebral hypometabolism characterizes mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease. Low-level light therapy (LLLT) enhances the metabolic capacity of neurons in culture through photostimulation of cytochrome oxidase, the mitochondrial enzyme that catalyzes oxygen consumption in cellular respiration. Growing evidence supports that neuronal meta...
Article
Behavioral function lost in mammals (including humans) after peripheral nerve severance is slowly (weeks to years) and often poorly restored by 1-2-mm/day, nonspecifically directed outgrowths from proximal axonal stumps. To survive, proximal stumps must quickly repair (seal) plasmalemmal damage. We report that, after complete cut- or crush-severanc...
Conference Paper
Objective The objective was immediate restoration of axonal membrane continuity and distal motor and sensory innervation after peripheral nerve transection, using both the lipid membrane fusogen polyethylene glycol (PEG) and the antioxidant methylene blue (MB), enhancing functional recovery. Methods Animals were subjected to sciatic nerve tra...
Article
Full-text available
This paper provides the first review of the memory-enhancing and neuroprotective metabolic mechanisms of action of methylene blue in vivo. These mechanisms have important implications as a new neurobiological approach to improve normal memory and to treat memory impairment and neurodegeneration associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Methylene b...
Article
Full-text available
Low-level light therapy (LLLT) using red to near-infrared light energy has gained attention in recent years as a new scientific approach with therapeutic applications in ophthal-mology, neurology, and psychiatry. The ongoing therapeutic revolution spearheaded by LLLT is largely propelled by progress in the basic science fields of photobiology and b...
Article
This is the first metabolic mapping study of the effects of fluoxetine after learned helplessness training. Antidepressants are the most commonly prescribed medications, but the regions underlying treatment effects in affectively disordered brains are poorly understood. We hypothesized the antidepressant action of fluoxetine would produce adaptatio...

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Question
If you have to select only one test among the various psychological tests available for diagnosing mild cognitive impairment (MCI), which one do you think is the best? Thank you for your opinion.

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