Lisa James, PhD

Anita Kunin Professor of Healthy Brain Aging
Clinical Psychologist, Minneapolis VAMC
Director, Brain Resilience Initiative

Education

PhD, Clinical Psychology, Florida State University
MS, Clinical Psychology, Florida State University
BS, Psychology/Women^aEURTMs Studies, Boston University

Specialty/Focus

aging, dementia, human leukocyte antigen, PTSD, resilience, personality

Publications

Pages:
1

2023-05-26 through 2020-05-18

2

2019-12-28 through 2017-06-15

3

2017-01-01 through 2011-06-01

4

2010-12-24 through 2006-03-20

  1. Charonis S, James L, & Georgopoulos AP (2019, October) In Silico Analysis of the Binding Affinities of Antigenic Epitopes of Vaccines Administered to Gulf War Veterans to Specific
    Human Leukocyte Antigen

    Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA)

    Genes that are located in the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) of chromosome 6 and play a central role in immune recognition. Most investigations of association of HLA to various diseases have focused on evaluating HLA allele frequencies in diseases of interest, as compared to the general, healthy population. Such studies have demonstrated HLA involvement with cancer, autoimmune, and in- fectious diseases. HLA Class I proteins (HLA-A, B, C) are expressed on all nucleated cells and present peptides from endogenous proteins to cytotoxic T lymphocytes engaged in immune surveillance. HLA Class II proteins (HLA-DRB1, DRB3/4/5, DQB1, DPB1) are expressed on antigen-presenting cells and present peptides derived from exogenous proteins to CD4+helper T cells. A previous study of Gulf War syndrome in 27 veterans found that HLA DRB1*15 was more prevalent in cases than controls with an odds ratio of 1.66, although this association was not statistically significant.
    Class II Alleles Protective for
    Gulf War Illness

    Gulf War Illness (GWI)

    Shortly after the Gulf War (1990^aEUR"91), veterans started to report a variety of health problems that began during, or soon after returning from, deployment, prompting investigation into the epidemiology and etiology of the complaints. Those investigations revealed that diffuse symptoms such as fatigue, musculoskeletal pain, mood and neurocognitive complaints, gastrointestinal problems, and rashes were most commonly reported. The constellation of symptoms, now commonly referred to as Gulf War Illness (GWI), has affected a substantial number of Gulf War veterans. Several population-based studies have demonstrated that these symptoms occur at significantly higher rates in deployed Gulf War veterans relative to their nondeployed peers and other veterans, raising the issue about possible in-theater exposures and stress as contributing factors. However, these symptoms are also present in non-deployed military personnel, leading some to suspect other causes, including reactions to vaccine adjuvants. In summary, GWI is now a recognized constellation of symptoms of unclear etiology, also co-occurring with psychiatric disorders.
    Journal of Neurology & Neuromedicine 4(5) 23-30