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New and Noteworthy Information for March 2012
Men show higher rates of amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) and nonamnestic mild cognitive impairment (naMCI) than women, researchers reported in the January 31 Neurology. Starting in 2004, a cohort of Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents ages 70 to 89 underwent baseline and 15-month interval evaluations to assess their cognitive status. Of the 1,450 participants who were cognitively normal at baseline, 296 developed MCI, with an age- and sex-standardized incidence rate of 63.6 (per 1,000 person years) overall. Men (72.4) showed higher rates of MCI than women (57.3), and this trend continued for both aMCI and naMCI. Participants with fewer years of education had higher rates of MCI. “Differences in incidence rates by clinical subtype and by sex suggest that risk factors for MCI should be investigated separately for aMCI and naMCI, and in men and women,” the study authors stated.
Infants who are eventually diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) show abnormal development of white matter pathways starting as early as 6 months of age, according to a study published in the February 17 online American Journal of Psychiatry. Researchers analyzed imaging results from 92 high-risk infants who had siblings with autism. The participants underwent diffusion tensor imaging at 6 months, 12 months, and 24 months. After characterizing the white matter fiber tracts of the 28 infants who met criteria for ASD at 24 months and the 64 infants who did not meet the criteria, the investigators found notable differences in the infants’ development. Compared with the 64 infants who did not develop ASD, infants who had ASD had different white matter development for 12 of the 15 brain pathways studied. “These results suggest that aberrant development of white matter pathways may precede the manifestation of autistic symptoms in the first year of life,” the researchers concluded.
Epilepsy surgery has long-term beneficial effects on patients’ seizure control and overall quality of life, according to research published in the February 7 online Epilepsia. Patients who underwent epilepsy surgery by Sidney Goldring, MD, from 1967 to 1990 were followed up for a mean duration of 26 years. Of the 361 patients who had epilepsy surgery, 117 completed follow-up interviews, and 80% reported a higher quality of life on the Quality of Life in Epilepsy (QOLIE-31) questionnaire after surgery. In addition, an association was observed between seizure freedom and better quality of life, and patients who underwent temporal lobe resection showed better seizure outcomes than those who had different procedures. Considering that the positive outcomes of epilepsy surgery from decades ago seem sustainable, the researchers said they are “optimistic that the outcomes from modern epilepsy surgery will be even better and that our present enthusiasm for this treatment modality is not misplaced.”
Elderly nursing home residents show an increased mortality risk with higher doses of antipsychotic drugs, according to a study in the February 23 online BMJ. All 75,445 study participants were age 65 or older, lived in nursing homes from 2001 to 2005, and were new users of antipsychotic drugs (haloperidol, aripiprazole, olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and ziprasidone). After comparing 180-day risks of all-cause and cause-specific mortality by individual drug, the researchers found that users of haloperidol had an increased rate of mortality and users of quetiapine had a decreased risk of mortality, compared with users of risperidone. These effects were seen for all causes of mortality examined, remained after adjustment for dose, and were strongest immediately following the start of treatment. “There was no evidence that the treatment effect differed for patients with a diagnosis of dementia or behavioral disturbances,” noted the researchers. They added that although their findings do not prove causality, “….they provide more evidence of the risk of using these drugs in older patients, reinforcing the concept that they should not be used in the absence of clear need.”
—Lauren LeBano
Men show higher rates of amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) and nonamnestic mild cognitive impairment (naMCI) than women, researchers reported in the January 31 Neurology. Starting in 2004, a cohort of Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents ages 70 to 89 underwent baseline and 15-month interval evaluations to assess their cognitive status. Of the 1,450 participants who were cognitively normal at baseline, 296 developed MCI, with an age- and sex-standardized incidence rate of 63.6 (per 1,000 person years) overall. Men (72.4) showed higher rates of MCI than women (57.3), and this trend continued for both aMCI and naMCI. Participants with fewer years of education had higher rates of MCI. “Differences in incidence rates by clinical subtype and by sex suggest that risk factors for MCI should be investigated separately for aMCI and naMCI, and in men and women,” the study authors stated.
Infants who are eventually diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) show abnormal development of white matter pathways starting as early as 6 months of age, according to a study published in the February 17 online American Journal of Psychiatry. Researchers analyzed imaging results from 92 high-risk infants who had siblings with autism. The participants underwent diffusion tensor imaging at 6 months, 12 months, and 24 months. After characterizing the white matter fiber tracts of the 28 infants who met criteria for ASD at 24 months and the 64 infants who did not meet the criteria, the investigators found notable differences in the infants’ development. Compared with the 64 infants who did not develop ASD, infants who had ASD had different white matter development for 12 of the 15 brain pathways studied. “These results suggest that aberrant development of white matter pathways may precede the manifestation of autistic symptoms in the first year of life,” the researchers concluded.
Epilepsy surgery has long-term beneficial effects on patients’ seizure control and overall quality of life, according to research published in the February 7 online Epilepsia. Patients who underwent epilepsy surgery by Sidney Goldring, MD, from 1967 to 1990 were followed up for a mean duration of 26 years. Of the 361 patients who had epilepsy surgery, 117 completed follow-up interviews, and 80% reported a higher quality of life on the Quality of Life in Epilepsy (QOLIE-31) questionnaire after surgery. In addition, an association was observed between seizure freedom and better quality of life, and patients who underwent temporal lobe resection showed better seizure outcomes than those who had different procedures. Considering that the positive outcomes of epilepsy surgery from decades ago seem sustainable, the researchers said they are “optimistic that the outcomes from modern epilepsy surgery will be even better and that our present enthusiasm for this treatment modality is not misplaced.”
Elderly nursing home residents show an increased mortality risk with higher doses of antipsychotic drugs, according to a study in the February 23 online BMJ. All 75,445 study participants were age 65 or older, lived in nursing homes from 2001 to 2005, and were new users of antipsychotic drugs (haloperidol, aripiprazole, olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and ziprasidone). After comparing 180-day risks of all-cause and cause-specific mortality by individual drug, the researchers found that users of haloperidol had an increased rate of mortality and users of quetiapine had a decreased risk of mortality, compared with users of risperidone. These effects were seen for all causes of mortality examined, remained after adjustment for dose, and were strongest immediately following the start of treatment. “There was no evidence that the treatment effect differed for patients with a diagnosis of dementia or behavioral disturbances,” noted the researchers. They added that although their findings do not prove causality, “….they provide more evidence of the risk of using these drugs in older patients, reinforcing the concept that they should not be used in the absence of clear need.”
—Lauren LeBano
Men show higher rates of amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) and nonamnestic mild cognitive impairment (naMCI) than women, researchers reported in the January 31 Neurology. Starting in 2004, a cohort of Olmsted County, Minnesota, residents ages 70 to 89 underwent baseline and 15-month interval evaluations to assess their cognitive status. Of the 1,450 participants who were cognitively normal at baseline, 296 developed MCI, with an age- and sex-standardized incidence rate of 63.6 (per 1,000 person years) overall. Men (72.4) showed higher rates of MCI than women (57.3), and this trend continued for both aMCI and naMCI. Participants with fewer years of education had higher rates of MCI. “Differences in incidence rates by clinical subtype and by sex suggest that risk factors for MCI should be investigated separately for aMCI and naMCI, and in men and women,” the study authors stated.
Infants who are eventually diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) show abnormal development of white matter pathways starting as early as 6 months of age, according to a study published in the February 17 online American Journal of Psychiatry. Researchers analyzed imaging results from 92 high-risk infants who had siblings with autism. The participants underwent diffusion tensor imaging at 6 months, 12 months, and 24 months. After characterizing the white matter fiber tracts of the 28 infants who met criteria for ASD at 24 months and the 64 infants who did not meet the criteria, the investigators found notable differences in the infants’ development. Compared with the 64 infants who did not develop ASD, infants who had ASD had different white matter development for 12 of the 15 brain pathways studied. “These results suggest that aberrant development of white matter pathways may precede the manifestation of autistic symptoms in the first year of life,” the researchers concluded.
Epilepsy surgery has long-term beneficial effects on patients’ seizure control and overall quality of life, according to research published in the February 7 online Epilepsia. Patients who underwent epilepsy surgery by Sidney Goldring, MD, from 1967 to 1990 were followed up for a mean duration of 26 years. Of the 361 patients who had epilepsy surgery, 117 completed follow-up interviews, and 80% reported a higher quality of life on the Quality of Life in Epilepsy (QOLIE-31) questionnaire after surgery. In addition, an association was observed between seizure freedom and better quality of life, and patients who underwent temporal lobe resection showed better seizure outcomes than those who had different procedures. Considering that the positive outcomes of epilepsy surgery from decades ago seem sustainable, the researchers said they are “optimistic that the outcomes from modern epilepsy surgery will be even better and that our present enthusiasm for this treatment modality is not misplaced.”
Elderly nursing home residents show an increased mortality risk with higher doses of antipsychotic drugs, according to a study in the February 23 online BMJ. All 75,445 study participants were age 65 or older, lived in nursing homes from 2001 to 2005, and were new users of antipsychotic drugs (haloperidol, aripiprazole, olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and ziprasidone). After comparing 180-day risks of all-cause and cause-specific mortality by individual drug, the researchers found that users of haloperidol had an increased rate of mortality and users of quetiapine had a decreased risk of mortality, compared with users of risperidone. These effects were seen for all causes of mortality examined, remained after adjustment for dose, and were strongest immediately following the start of treatment. “There was no evidence that the treatment effect differed for patients with a diagnosis of dementia or behavioral disturbances,” noted the researchers. They added that although their findings do not prove causality, “….they provide more evidence of the risk of using these drugs in older patients, reinforcing the concept that they should not be used in the absence of clear need.”
—Lauren LeBano
New and Noteworthy Information for February 2012
Using a nicotine patch may induce cognitive improvement in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) who do not smoke, researchers reported in the January 10 Neurology. All 74 subjects enrolled in the study had amnestic MCI and did not smoke; the investigators randomized 39 participants to receive 15 mg of transdermal nicotine daily for six months and 35 to receive placebo daily for the same time period. Results showed that participants safely tolerated the transdermal nicotine and that they improved on measures of attention, memory, and mental processing, but not in clinical overall impression of change. “We conclude that this initial study provides evidence for nicotine–induced cognitive improvement in subjects with MCI; however, whether these effects are clinically important will require larger studies,” the researchers wrote.
Physicians may need to be cautious of potential drug interactions when selecting seizure medications for people with HIV/AIDs, according to a new guideline issued by the American Academy of Neurology and published in the online January 4 Neurology. A systematic review of the literature showed that antiepileptic drug (AED) and antiretroviral drug administration may be indicated in up to 55% of patients taking antiretrovirals. Investigators found that clinicians might need to adjust the dosage of seizure drugs such as phenytoin and valproic acid to avoid adversely affecting patients’ antiretroviral levels. “It may be important to avoid enzyme-inducing AEDs in people on antiretroviral regimens that include protease inhibitors or nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, as pharmacokinetic interactions may result in virologic failure,” the study authors said. The researchers recommend that physicians use pharmacokinetic assessment to monitor patients who must be on certain AED regimens for seizure control.
Subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias were frequently observed in patients with pacemakers and were linked with a heightened risk of ischemic stroke or systemic embolism, according to a study published in the January 12 New England Journal of Medicine. For three months, researchers monitored 2,580 patients 65 and older for subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias, defined as episodes of atrial rate of greater than 190 beats per minute for more than six minutes. The patients, who had hypertension and no history of atrial fibrillation, had recently been implanted with a pacemaker or defibrillator and were followed for a mean of 2.5 years for ischemic stroke or systemic embolism. Of the 2,580 patients, 261 experienced subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias, which were associated with an increased risk of clinical atrial fibrillation and of ischemic stroke or systemic embolism. “The data from the present study support the concept that there is a link between subclinical atrial fibrillation and cryptogenic stroke,” the investigators stated.
The FDA has permitted marketing of the Stratify JCV (John Cunningham Virus) Antibody ELISA test to help determine the risk of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) in patients taking natalizumab to treat multiple sclerosis (MS) or Crohn’s disease. The test, which cannot diagnose PML, is intended to be used in conjunction with other clinical data from patients, such as the presence of anti-JCV antibodies, treatment with natalizumab for longer than two years, and treatment with certain immunosuppressants before receiving natalizumab. By considering these patient risk factors as well as the results of the Stratify JCV Antibody ELISA test, physicians may better assess the risks of continuing natalizumab treatment in patients on immunomodulatory therapy. The test will be available only to professionals, administered by prescription, and performed at Focus Diagnostics’ Reference Laboratory in Cypress, California.
Patients who experience stroke and later develop delirium are likely to have a higher mortality, longer hospitalizations, and a greater degree of dependence after discharge, researchers reported in the January 19 online Stroke. Investigators determined that 10 of 78 eligible studies met approval criteria for eligibility, validity, and quality, and a review of those studies showed that patients with stroke and delirium had higher in-patient mortality as well as mortality at 12 months, compared to patients without delirium. Furthermore, patients with stroke and delirium remained in the hospital for more time than those without delirium. Patients with stroke and delirium were also more likely to be discharged to an institution, such as a nursing home. “Early recognition and prevention of delirium may improve outcomes in stroke patients,” the researchers concluded.
—Lauren LeBano
Using a nicotine patch may induce cognitive improvement in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) who do not smoke, researchers reported in the January 10 Neurology. All 74 subjects enrolled in the study had amnestic MCI and did not smoke; the investigators randomized 39 participants to receive 15 mg of transdermal nicotine daily for six months and 35 to receive placebo daily for the same time period. Results showed that participants safely tolerated the transdermal nicotine and that they improved on measures of attention, memory, and mental processing, but not in clinical overall impression of change. “We conclude that this initial study provides evidence for nicotine–induced cognitive improvement in subjects with MCI; however, whether these effects are clinically important will require larger studies,” the researchers wrote.
Physicians may need to be cautious of potential drug interactions when selecting seizure medications for people with HIV/AIDs, according to a new guideline issued by the American Academy of Neurology and published in the online January 4 Neurology. A systematic review of the literature showed that antiepileptic drug (AED) and antiretroviral drug administration may be indicated in up to 55% of patients taking antiretrovirals. Investigators found that clinicians might need to adjust the dosage of seizure drugs such as phenytoin and valproic acid to avoid adversely affecting patients’ antiretroviral levels. “It may be important to avoid enzyme-inducing AEDs in people on antiretroviral regimens that include protease inhibitors or nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, as pharmacokinetic interactions may result in virologic failure,” the study authors said. The researchers recommend that physicians use pharmacokinetic assessment to monitor patients who must be on certain AED regimens for seizure control.
Subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias were frequently observed in patients with pacemakers and were linked with a heightened risk of ischemic stroke or systemic embolism, according to a study published in the January 12 New England Journal of Medicine. For three months, researchers monitored 2,580 patients 65 and older for subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias, defined as episodes of atrial rate of greater than 190 beats per minute for more than six minutes. The patients, who had hypertension and no history of atrial fibrillation, had recently been implanted with a pacemaker or defibrillator and were followed for a mean of 2.5 years for ischemic stroke or systemic embolism. Of the 2,580 patients, 261 experienced subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias, which were associated with an increased risk of clinical atrial fibrillation and of ischemic stroke or systemic embolism. “The data from the present study support the concept that there is a link between subclinical atrial fibrillation and cryptogenic stroke,” the investigators stated.
The FDA has permitted marketing of the Stratify JCV (John Cunningham Virus) Antibody ELISA test to help determine the risk of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) in patients taking natalizumab to treat multiple sclerosis (MS) or Crohn’s disease. The test, which cannot diagnose PML, is intended to be used in conjunction with other clinical data from patients, such as the presence of anti-JCV antibodies, treatment with natalizumab for longer than two years, and treatment with certain immunosuppressants before receiving natalizumab. By considering these patient risk factors as well as the results of the Stratify JCV Antibody ELISA test, physicians may better assess the risks of continuing natalizumab treatment in patients on immunomodulatory therapy. The test will be available only to professionals, administered by prescription, and performed at Focus Diagnostics’ Reference Laboratory in Cypress, California.
Patients who experience stroke and later develop delirium are likely to have a higher mortality, longer hospitalizations, and a greater degree of dependence after discharge, researchers reported in the January 19 online Stroke. Investigators determined that 10 of 78 eligible studies met approval criteria for eligibility, validity, and quality, and a review of those studies showed that patients with stroke and delirium had higher in-patient mortality as well as mortality at 12 months, compared to patients without delirium. Furthermore, patients with stroke and delirium remained in the hospital for more time than those without delirium. Patients with stroke and delirium were also more likely to be discharged to an institution, such as a nursing home. “Early recognition and prevention of delirium may improve outcomes in stroke patients,” the researchers concluded.
—Lauren LeBano
Using a nicotine patch may induce cognitive improvement in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (MCI) who do not smoke, researchers reported in the January 10 Neurology. All 74 subjects enrolled in the study had amnestic MCI and did not smoke; the investigators randomized 39 participants to receive 15 mg of transdermal nicotine daily for six months and 35 to receive placebo daily for the same time period. Results showed that participants safely tolerated the transdermal nicotine and that they improved on measures of attention, memory, and mental processing, but not in clinical overall impression of change. “We conclude that this initial study provides evidence for nicotine–induced cognitive improvement in subjects with MCI; however, whether these effects are clinically important will require larger studies,” the researchers wrote.
Physicians may need to be cautious of potential drug interactions when selecting seizure medications for people with HIV/AIDs, according to a new guideline issued by the American Academy of Neurology and published in the online January 4 Neurology. A systematic review of the literature showed that antiepileptic drug (AED) and antiretroviral drug administration may be indicated in up to 55% of patients taking antiretrovirals. Investigators found that clinicians might need to adjust the dosage of seizure drugs such as phenytoin and valproic acid to avoid adversely affecting patients’ antiretroviral levels. “It may be important to avoid enzyme-inducing AEDs in people on antiretroviral regimens that include protease inhibitors or nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, as pharmacokinetic interactions may result in virologic failure,” the study authors said. The researchers recommend that physicians use pharmacokinetic assessment to monitor patients who must be on certain AED regimens for seizure control.
Subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias were frequently observed in patients with pacemakers and were linked with a heightened risk of ischemic stroke or systemic embolism, according to a study published in the January 12 New England Journal of Medicine. For three months, researchers monitored 2,580 patients 65 and older for subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias, defined as episodes of atrial rate of greater than 190 beats per minute for more than six minutes. The patients, who had hypertension and no history of atrial fibrillation, had recently been implanted with a pacemaker or defibrillator and were followed for a mean of 2.5 years for ischemic stroke or systemic embolism. Of the 2,580 patients, 261 experienced subclinical atrial tachyarrhythmias, which were associated with an increased risk of clinical atrial fibrillation and of ischemic stroke or systemic embolism. “The data from the present study support the concept that there is a link between subclinical atrial fibrillation and cryptogenic stroke,” the investigators stated.
The FDA has permitted marketing of the Stratify JCV (John Cunningham Virus) Antibody ELISA test to help determine the risk of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) in patients taking natalizumab to treat multiple sclerosis (MS) or Crohn’s disease. The test, which cannot diagnose PML, is intended to be used in conjunction with other clinical data from patients, such as the presence of anti-JCV antibodies, treatment with natalizumab for longer than two years, and treatment with certain immunosuppressants before receiving natalizumab. By considering these patient risk factors as well as the results of the Stratify JCV Antibody ELISA test, physicians may better assess the risks of continuing natalizumab treatment in patients on immunomodulatory therapy. The test will be available only to professionals, administered by prescription, and performed at Focus Diagnostics’ Reference Laboratory in Cypress, California.
Patients who experience stroke and later develop delirium are likely to have a higher mortality, longer hospitalizations, and a greater degree of dependence after discharge, researchers reported in the January 19 online Stroke. Investigators determined that 10 of 78 eligible studies met approval criteria for eligibility, validity, and quality, and a review of those studies showed that patients with stroke and delirium had higher in-patient mortality as well as mortality at 12 months, compared to patients without delirium. Furthermore, patients with stroke and delirium remained in the hospital for more time than those without delirium. Patients with stroke and delirium were also more likely to be discharged to an institution, such as a nursing home. “Early recognition and prevention of delirium may improve outcomes in stroke patients,” the researchers concluded.
—Lauren LeBano
News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information
Researchers have found that having a transient ischemic attack (TIA) can reduce a person’s life expectancy up to 20%, according to a study published online November 10 in Stroke. “There is a lack of modern-day data quantifying the effect of TIA on survival, and recent data do not take into account expected survival,” the researchers commented. To investigate the impact of a TIA on survival, the investigators analyzed data from 22,157 patients hospitalized with a TIA, then estimated survival relative to the age- and sex-matched general population up to nine years after hospitalization. At one-year follow-up, 91.5% of TIA patients survived, compared with 95.0% expected survival in the general population; by nine-years follow-up, observed survival was 20% lower than expected. Older age, prior hospitalization for stroke (but not TIA), atrial fibrillation, and congestive heart failure significantly increased the risk of excess death in these patients.
Higher levels of urinary sodium excretion were associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events, while lower levels were associated with cardiovascular death and hospitalization for congestive heart failure, according to a study published in the November 23 JAMA. “[Our objective was] to determine the association between estimated urinary sodium and potassium excretion (surrogates for intake) and cardiovascular events in patients with established cardiovascular disease or diabetes mellitus,” stated the researchers. The results of their observational analyses revealed that “compared with baseline sodium excretion of 4 to 5.99 g per day, sodium excretion of greater than 7 g per day was associated with an increased risk of all cardiovascular events.” In addition, a sodium excretion of less than 3 g per day was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular mortality and hospitalization for congestive heart failure, and a higher estimated potassium excretion was associated with a reduced risk of stroke.
Serum vitamin D levels are significantly lower in patients with recurrent inflammatory spinal cord disease, according to the results of a study published online November 14 in Archives of Neurology. The study authors performed a retrospective analysis evaluating vitamin D levels of 77 patients with monophasic and recurrent inflammatory spinal cord diseases. “Vitamin D levels are significantly lower in patients who developed recurrent spinal cord disease, adjusting for season, age, sex, and race,” the investigators concluded. “This study provides a basis for a prospective trial of measuring 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels in these patient populations and assessing the influence of vitamin D supplementation on the frequency of relapses in those with recurrent inflammatory spinal cord disease.”
The FDA has approved AdaptiveStim with RestoreSensor neurostimulation system for the management of chronic pain. Unlike other implantable neurostimulation devices that require frequent manual adjustments with changes in body positions, the AdaptiveStim system (Medtronic, Inc; Minneapolis) automatically adapts stimulation levels to the needs of people with chronic back and/or leg pain by recognizing and remembering the correlation between a change in body position and the level of stimulation needed. The FDA’s approval was based on data from a clinical trial in which 86.5% of study participants with chronic pain experienced better pain relief and convenience when the system was turned on, compared with a control period when the participants manually adjusted neurostimulation settings; 80.3% of study participants also reported functional improvements, including improved comfort during position changes. The AdaptiveStim system was also approved for use in MRI head scans if recommended by a physician.
Brain overgrowth in boys with autism involves an abnormal excess number of neurons, according to the results of a small preliminary study published in the November 9 JAMA. “Autism often involves early brain overgrowth, including the prefrontal cortex,” the investigators stated. “Although prefrontal abnormality has been theorized to underlie some autistic symptoms, the cellular defects that cause abnormal overgrowth remain unknown.” To investigate whether this overgrowth in children with autism involves excess neuron numbers, the researchers compared postmortem tissue from the prefrontal cortex of seven boys (age range, 2 to 16) who had autism with postmortem tissue of six typically developing boys. They found that children with autism had 67% more neurons in the prefrontal cortex. “Brain weight in the autistic case differed from normative mean weight for age by a mean of 17.6%, while brains in controls differed by a mean of 0.2%,” the researchers reported.
A person’s stroke risk profile may also be helpful in predicting whether a person will develop memory problems and cognitive impairment later in life, according to a study published in the November 8 Neurology. “Participants included subjects without stroke at baseline … with at least two cognitive function assessments during the follow-up,” the researchers explained. “During a mean follow-up of 4.1 years, 1,907 participants met criteria for incident cognitive impairment.” The researchers determined that male sex, black race, less education, older age, and presence of left ventricular hypertrophy were related to the development of cognitive impairment. “Total Framingham Stroke Risk Profile score, elevated blood pressure, and left ventricular hypertrophy predict development of clinically significant cognitive dysfunction,” the investigators concluded. “Prevention and treatment of high blood pressure may be effective in preserving cognitive health.”
The FDA has approved Xarelto (rivaroxaban) to reduce the risk of stroke in people who have nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. Xarelto (Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc; Titusville, New Jersey) is an oral anti-clotting drug that has also been approved to reduce the risk of blood clots, deep vein thrombosis, and pulmonary embolism following knee or hip replacement surgery. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of a clinical trial with more than 14,000 patients that compared Xarelto with the anti-clotting drug warfarin; Xarelto proved similar to warfarin in its ability to prevent stroke. Bleeding was the most common adverse event reported by patients treated with Xarelto in this clinical trial, and the risk of bleeding was similar to the risk of bleeding associated with warfarin.
Patients with dementia who have a stroke have a higher likelihood of becoming disabled and being institutionalized, compared with patients who did not have dementia at the time of their stroke, according to a report in the November 1 Neurology. Investigators conducted a retrospective cohort study that included 9,304 patients with an acute ischemic stroke, 702 of whom had a history of dementia. “Patients with dementia were older (mean age, 81 vs 70), had more severe strokes, and were more likely to have atrial fibrillation than those without dementia,” the investigators determined. They also found that patients with dementia were slightly less likely to be admitted to a stroke unit, had a higher disability at discharge, and were less likely to be discharged to their prestroke place of residence. “In patients with stroke, preexisting dementia is associated with high rates of disability and institutionalization, representing an increasing challenge for the health care system,” the researchers concluded.
—Ariel Jones
Researchers have found that having a transient ischemic attack (TIA) can reduce a person’s life expectancy up to 20%, according to a study published online November 10 in Stroke. “There is a lack of modern-day data quantifying the effect of TIA on survival, and recent data do not take into account expected survival,” the researchers commented. To investigate the impact of a TIA on survival, the investigators analyzed data from 22,157 patients hospitalized with a TIA, then estimated survival relative to the age- and sex-matched general population up to nine years after hospitalization. At one-year follow-up, 91.5% of TIA patients survived, compared with 95.0% expected survival in the general population; by nine-years follow-up, observed survival was 20% lower than expected. Older age, prior hospitalization for stroke (but not TIA), atrial fibrillation, and congestive heart failure significantly increased the risk of excess death in these patients.
Higher levels of urinary sodium excretion were associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events, while lower levels were associated with cardiovascular death and hospitalization for congestive heart failure, according to a study published in the November 23 JAMA. “[Our objective was] to determine the association between estimated urinary sodium and potassium excretion (surrogates for intake) and cardiovascular events in patients with established cardiovascular disease or diabetes mellitus,” stated the researchers. The results of their observational analyses revealed that “compared with baseline sodium excretion of 4 to 5.99 g per day, sodium excretion of greater than 7 g per day was associated with an increased risk of all cardiovascular events.” In addition, a sodium excretion of less than 3 g per day was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular mortality and hospitalization for congestive heart failure, and a higher estimated potassium excretion was associated with a reduced risk of stroke.
Serum vitamin D levels are significantly lower in patients with recurrent inflammatory spinal cord disease, according to the results of a study published online November 14 in Archives of Neurology. The study authors performed a retrospective analysis evaluating vitamin D levels of 77 patients with monophasic and recurrent inflammatory spinal cord diseases. “Vitamin D levels are significantly lower in patients who developed recurrent spinal cord disease, adjusting for season, age, sex, and race,” the investigators concluded. “This study provides a basis for a prospective trial of measuring 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels in these patient populations and assessing the influence of vitamin D supplementation on the frequency of relapses in those with recurrent inflammatory spinal cord disease.”
The FDA has approved AdaptiveStim with RestoreSensor neurostimulation system for the management of chronic pain. Unlike other implantable neurostimulation devices that require frequent manual adjustments with changes in body positions, the AdaptiveStim system (Medtronic, Inc; Minneapolis) automatically adapts stimulation levels to the needs of people with chronic back and/or leg pain by recognizing and remembering the correlation between a change in body position and the level of stimulation needed. The FDA’s approval was based on data from a clinical trial in which 86.5% of study participants with chronic pain experienced better pain relief and convenience when the system was turned on, compared with a control period when the participants manually adjusted neurostimulation settings; 80.3% of study participants also reported functional improvements, including improved comfort during position changes. The AdaptiveStim system was also approved for use in MRI head scans if recommended by a physician.
Brain overgrowth in boys with autism involves an abnormal excess number of neurons, according to the results of a small preliminary study published in the November 9 JAMA. “Autism often involves early brain overgrowth, including the prefrontal cortex,” the investigators stated. “Although prefrontal abnormality has been theorized to underlie some autistic symptoms, the cellular defects that cause abnormal overgrowth remain unknown.” To investigate whether this overgrowth in children with autism involves excess neuron numbers, the researchers compared postmortem tissue from the prefrontal cortex of seven boys (age range, 2 to 16) who had autism with postmortem tissue of six typically developing boys. They found that children with autism had 67% more neurons in the prefrontal cortex. “Brain weight in the autistic case differed from normative mean weight for age by a mean of 17.6%, while brains in controls differed by a mean of 0.2%,” the researchers reported.
A person’s stroke risk profile may also be helpful in predicting whether a person will develop memory problems and cognitive impairment later in life, according to a study published in the November 8 Neurology. “Participants included subjects without stroke at baseline … with at least two cognitive function assessments during the follow-up,” the researchers explained. “During a mean follow-up of 4.1 years, 1,907 participants met criteria for incident cognitive impairment.” The researchers determined that male sex, black race, less education, older age, and presence of left ventricular hypertrophy were related to the development of cognitive impairment. “Total Framingham Stroke Risk Profile score, elevated blood pressure, and left ventricular hypertrophy predict development of clinically significant cognitive dysfunction,” the investigators concluded. “Prevention and treatment of high blood pressure may be effective in preserving cognitive health.”
The FDA has approved Xarelto (rivaroxaban) to reduce the risk of stroke in people who have nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. Xarelto (Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc; Titusville, New Jersey) is an oral anti-clotting drug that has also been approved to reduce the risk of blood clots, deep vein thrombosis, and pulmonary embolism following knee or hip replacement surgery. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of a clinical trial with more than 14,000 patients that compared Xarelto with the anti-clotting drug warfarin; Xarelto proved similar to warfarin in its ability to prevent stroke. Bleeding was the most common adverse event reported by patients treated with Xarelto in this clinical trial, and the risk of bleeding was similar to the risk of bleeding associated with warfarin.
Patients with dementia who have a stroke have a higher likelihood of becoming disabled and being institutionalized, compared with patients who did not have dementia at the time of their stroke, according to a report in the November 1 Neurology. Investigators conducted a retrospective cohort study that included 9,304 patients with an acute ischemic stroke, 702 of whom had a history of dementia. “Patients with dementia were older (mean age, 81 vs 70), had more severe strokes, and were more likely to have atrial fibrillation than those without dementia,” the investigators determined. They also found that patients with dementia were slightly less likely to be admitted to a stroke unit, had a higher disability at discharge, and were less likely to be discharged to their prestroke place of residence. “In patients with stroke, preexisting dementia is associated with high rates of disability and institutionalization, representing an increasing challenge for the health care system,” the researchers concluded.
—Ariel Jones
Researchers have found that having a transient ischemic attack (TIA) can reduce a person’s life expectancy up to 20%, according to a study published online November 10 in Stroke. “There is a lack of modern-day data quantifying the effect of TIA on survival, and recent data do not take into account expected survival,” the researchers commented. To investigate the impact of a TIA on survival, the investigators analyzed data from 22,157 patients hospitalized with a TIA, then estimated survival relative to the age- and sex-matched general population up to nine years after hospitalization. At one-year follow-up, 91.5% of TIA patients survived, compared with 95.0% expected survival in the general population; by nine-years follow-up, observed survival was 20% lower than expected. Older age, prior hospitalization for stroke (but not TIA), atrial fibrillation, and congestive heart failure significantly increased the risk of excess death in these patients.
Higher levels of urinary sodium excretion were associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events, while lower levels were associated with cardiovascular death and hospitalization for congestive heart failure, according to a study published in the November 23 JAMA. “[Our objective was] to determine the association between estimated urinary sodium and potassium excretion (surrogates for intake) and cardiovascular events in patients with established cardiovascular disease or diabetes mellitus,” stated the researchers. The results of their observational analyses revealed that “compared with baseline sodium excretion of 4 to 5.99 g per day, sodium excretion of greater than 7 g per day was associated with an increased risk of all cardiovascular events.” In addition, a sodium excretion of less than 3 g per day was associated with increased risk of cardiovascular mortality and hospitalization for congestive heart failure, and a higher estimated potassium excretion was associated with a reduced risk of stroke.
Serum vitamin D levels are significantly lower in patients with recurrent inflammatory spinal cord disease, according to the results of a study published online November 14 in Archives of Neurology. The study authors performed a retrospective analysis evaluating vitamin D levels of 77 patients with monophasic and recurrent inflammatory spinal cord diseases. “Vitamin D levels are significantly lower in patients who developed recurrent spinal cord disease, adjusting for season, age, sex, and race,” the investigators concluded. “This study provides a basis for a prospective trial of measuring 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels in these patient populations and assessing the influence of vitamin D supplementation on the frequency of relapses in those with recurrent inflammatory spinal cord disease.”
The FDA has approved AdaptiveStim with RestoreSensor neurostimulation system for the management of chronic pain. Unlike other implantable neurostimulation devices that require frequent manual adjustments with changes in body positions, the AdaptiveStim system (Medtronic, Inc; Minneapolis) automatically adapts stimulation levels to the needs of people with chronic back and/or leg pain by recognizing and remembering the correlation between a change in body position and the level of stimulation needed. The FDA’s approval was based on data from a clinical trial in which 86.5% of study participants with chronic pain experienced better pain relief and convenience when the system was turned on, compared with a control period when the participants manually adjusted neurostimulation settings; 80.3% of study participants also reported functional improvements, including improved comfort during position changes. The AdaptiveStim system was also approved for use in MRI head scans if recommended by a physician.
Brain overgrowth in boys with autism involves an abnormal excess number of neurons, according to the results of a small preliminary study published in the November 9 JAMA. “Autism often involves early brain overgrowth, including the prefrontal cortex,” the investigators stated. “Although prefrontal abnormality has been theorized to underlie some autistic symptoms, the cellular defects that cause abnormal overgrowth remain unknown.” To investigate whether this overgrowth in children with autism involves excess neuron numbers, the researchers compared postmortem tissue from the prefrontal cortex of seven boys (age range, 2 to 16) who had autism with postmortem tissue of six typically developing boys. They found that children with autism had 67% more neurons in the prefrontal cortex. “Brain weight in the autistic case differed from normative mean weight for age by a mean of 17.6%, while brains in controls differed by a mean of 0.2%,” the researchers reported.
A person’s stroke risk profile may also be helpful in predicting whether a person will develop memory problems and cognitive impairment later in life, according to a study published in the November 8 Neurology. “Participants included subjects without stroke at baseline … with at least two cognitive function assessments during the follow-up,” the researchers explained. “During a mean follow-up of 4.1 years, 1,907 participants met criteria for incident cognitive impairment.” The researchers determined that male sex, black race, less education, older age, and presence of left ventricular hypertrophy were related to the development of cognitive impairment. “Total Framingham Stroke Risk Profile score, elevated blood pressure, and left ventricular hypertrophy predict development of clinically significant cognitive dysfunction,” the investigators concluded. “Prevention and treatment of high blood pressure may be effective in preserving cognitive health.”
The FDA has approved Xarelto (rivaroxaban) to reduce the risk of stroke in people who have nonvalvular atrial fibrillation. Xarelto (Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc; Titusville, New Jersey) is an oral anti-clotting drug that has also been approved to reduce the risk of blood clots, deep vein thrombosis, and pulmonary embolism following knee or hip replacement surgery. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of a clinical trial with more than 14,000 patients that compared Xarelto with the anti-clotting drug warfarin; Xarelto proved similar to warfarin in its ability to prevent stroke. Bleeding was the most common adverse event reported by patients treated with Xarelto in this clinical trial, and the risk of bleeding was similar to the risk of bleeding associated with warfarin.
Patients with dementia who have a stroke have a higher likelihood of becoming disabled and being institutionalized, compared with patients who did not have dementia at the time of their stroke, according to a report in the November 1 Neurology. Investigators conducted a retrospective cohort study that included 9,304 patients with an acute ischemic stroke, 702 of whom had a history of dementia. “Patients with dementia were older (mean age, 81 vs 70), had more severe strokes, and were more likely to have atrial fibrillation than those without dementia,” the investigators determined. They also found that patients with dementia were slightly less likely to be admitted to a stroke unit, had a higher disability at discharge, and were less likely to be discharged to their prestroke place of residence. “In patients with stroke, preexisting dementia is associated with high rates of disability and institutionalization, representing an increasing challenge for the health care system,” the researchers concluded.
—Ariel Jones
News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information
Premature birth may increase the risk of epilepsy as an adult, according to a study published in the October 4 Neurology. Investigators observed rates of hospitalization for epilepsy and prescription of antiepileptic drugs during a four-year period in 630,090 adults (including 27,953 who were born preterm). “We found a strong association between preterm birth and epilepsy that increased by earlier gestational age,” the researchers stated. After adjusting for fetal growth and potential confounders, the investigators found that individuals who were born at 23 to 31 weeks were almost five times more likely to be hospitalized for epilepsy than those who were born full-term. The odds ratios for those born at 32 to 34 weeks and 35 to 36 weeks were 1.98 and 1.76, respectively. “These associations persisted after excluding individuals with cerebral palsy, inflammatory diseases of the CNS, cerebrovascular disease, and brain tumors,” the investigators noted.
The use of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) medications is not associated with an increased risk of serious cardiovascular events, as some adverse-event reports have suggested, according to a report published online November 1 in the New England Journal of Medicine. A group of researchers estimated the risk of serious cardiovascular events (sudden cardiac death, acute myocardial infarction, and stroke) among more than 1 million children and young adults (age range, 2 to 24). There were 81 cardiovascular events among the cohort members and seven serious cardiovascular events in current users. “Current users of ADHD drugs were not at increased risk for serious cardiovascular events (hazard ratio, 0.75),” the investigators reported. “Risk was not increased for any of the individual end points, or for current users as compared with former users (hazard ratio, 0.70).”
Researchers have identified several genetic variants that contribute to early stent thrombosis, as reported in the October 26 JAMA. Twenty-three genetic variants were examined in 15 different genes in a population of patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention. “Among the 23 genetic variants investigated in 15 different genes, the significant determinants of early stent thrombosis were CYP2C19 metabolic status (odds ratio, 1.99), ABCB1 3435 TT genotype (odds ratio, 2.16), and ITGB3 PLA2 carriage (odds ratio, 0.52),” the investigators reported. The researchers also found that certain nongenetic factors (including use of proton pump inhibitors and higher clopidogrel loading doses) were associated with early stent thrombosis. “Future studies are needed to validate the prognostic accuracy of these risk factors in prospective cohorts,” the investigators concluded.
Changes in the blurring of the cortical gray and white matter border were associated with lower verbal expression abilities, according to a study that was published in the October 26 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience. Healthy participants underwent MRI to determine their gray and white matter contrast (GWC), and they also completed measures of verbal expression and verbal working memory. The investigators found that blurring in the participants’ left hemisphere inferior frontal cortex and temporal pole was associated with reduced verbal expression abilities, and that reduced verbal working memory was associated with blurring in widespread left frontal and temporal cortices. “Such lateralized and focal results provide support for GWC as a measure of regional functional integrity and highlight its potential role in probing the neuroanatomic substrates of cognition in healthy and diseased populations,” the researchers concluded.
The FDA has approved ONFI (clobazam) for use as an adjunctive therapy for seizures that are associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome in patients who are two years and older. ONFI (Lundbeck, Inc; Deerfield, Illinois) is an oral antiepileptic drug and is a derivative of benzodiazepine. The drug will be available in 5-, 10-, and 20-mg tablets. The exact mechanism of action of clobazam is not fully understood, but it is thought to involve potentiation of GABA-ergic neurotransmission resulting from binding at the benzodiazepine site of the GABA A receptor. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of two multicenter controlled studies, including a phase 3 trial involving 238 patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome who experienced a significant reduction in the weekly frequency of drop seizures. The most common side effects of clobazam include sleepiness, fever, drooling, aggressive behavior, irritability, and lack of coordination.
People who rate their health as poor or fair may be significantly more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease or vascular dementia, compared with those who rate their health as good, according to a study that was published in the October 11 issue of Neurology. Study participants rated their health status at baseline (as “good,” “fair,” or “poor”) and were followed for a median of 6.7 years for the incidence of dementia. During the follow-up period, 618 participants developed dementia, and risk of dementia was increased among participants with poor (hazard ratio, 1.70) or fair (hazard ratio, 1.34) self-rated health, compared with participants with good self-rated health. “Self-rated health could help raise awareness of medical doctors about a patient’s risk of dementia, especially in those without conditions indicative of potential cognitive impairment,” the investigators concluded.
Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) had a higher predictive value than fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI for detecting patients within the recommended time window for thrombolysis, according to a study that was published in the November issue of Lancet Neurology. Researchers analyzed the clinical and MRI data from patients with acute stroke who had undergone DWI and FLAIR imaging within 12 hours of symptom onset, and they determined that patients with an acute ischemic lesion detected with DWI but not with FLAIR imaging are likely to be within a time window for which thrombolysis is safe and effective. “DWI-FLAIR mismatch identified patients within four to five hours of symptom onset with 62% sensitivity, 78% specificity, 83% positive predictive value, and 54% negative predictive value,” the investigators stated. “These findings lend support to the use of DWI-FLAIR mismatch for selection of patients in a future randomized trial of thrombolysis in patients with unknown time of symptom onset.”
Older adults who were taking statins before sustaining moderate or severe head injury had improved survival and functional outcomes, according to the results of a study that was published in the October issue of the Journal of Trauma. “Of 523 eligible individuals, 117 (22%) used statins at the time of injury,” the investigators wrote. “Statin use was associated with a 76% lower adjusted risk of in-hospital death.” Patients who took the cholesterol-lowering drugs were also 13% more likely to have a good recovery at 12 months postinjury, compared with patients who did not use statins. However, individuals with cardiovascular comorbidities lose this benefit, the investigators noted. “Statins, as possible protective agents in head trauma, warrant further study,” the study authors concluded.
A neuron’s inability to secrete beta-amyloid (Aß) plays a major role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease, a finding that contradicts the dominant theory in Alzheimer’s disease pathology, according to a study in the October 26 Journal of Neuroscience. By studying neurons in Alzheimer’s disease–transgenic and wild-type mice, the investigators found that an increase in intracellular Aß occurred early in the beginning stages of the disease, and that this accumulation of Aß inside the neuron was caused by the neuron’s inability to properly secrete Aß. “We demonstrate that synaptic activity promotes an increase in the Aß-degrading protease neprilysin at the cell surface and a concomitant increase in colocalization with Aß42,” the investigators stated. “Remarkably, Alzheimer’s disease–transgenic but not wild-type neurons show reduced levels of neprilysin with time in culture. This impaired ability to secrete Ab and reduce intraneuronal Aß has important implications for the pathogenesis and treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.”
Long-term estrogen deprivation in aging rats is associated with a decrease in estrogen receptors in the brain, and with a loss of the hormone’s neuroprotective effects, according to a study that was published in the August 30 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers studied estrogen levels in middle-aged rats that had undergone long periods of estrogen deprivation and observed an enhanced interaction between estrogen receptors and the CHIP enzyme (a carboxyl terminus of Hsc70-interacting protein), which contributed to the decrease of estrogen receptors in the hippocampus. They also found that administration of 17b-estradiol (E2) replacement therapy shortly before, but not after, the drop in hormone levels prevented degradation of estrogen receptors in the brain, and preserved estrogen’s neuroprotective effects. “As a whole, the study provides support for a ‘critical period’ for E2 neuroprotection of the hippocampus and provides important insight into the mechanism underlying the critical period,” the researchers concluded.
Premature birth may increase the risk of epilepsy as an adult, according to a study published in the October 4 Neurology. Investigators observed rates of hospitalization for epilepsy and prescription of antiepileptic drugs during a four-year period in 630,090 adults (including 27,953 who were born preterm). “We found a strong association between preterm birth and epilepsy that increased by earlier gestational age,” the researchers stated. After adjusting for fetal growth and potential confounders, the investigators found that individuals who were born at 23 to 31 weeks were almost five times more likely to be hospitalized for epilepsy than those who were born full-term. The odds ratios for those born at 32 to 34 weeks and 35 to 36 weeks were 1.98 and 1.76, respectively. “These associations persisted after excluding individuals with cerebral palsy, inflammatory diseases of the CNS, cerebrovascular disease, and brain tumors,” the investigators noted.
The use of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) medications is not associated with an increased risk of serious cardiovascular events, as some adverse-event reports have suggested, according to a report published online November 1 in the New England Journal of Medicine. A group of researchers estimated the risk of serious cardiovascular events (sudden cardiac death, acute myocardial infarction, and stroke) among more than 1 million children and young adults (age range, 2 to 24). There were 81 cardiovascular events among the cohort members and seven serious cardiovascular events in current users. “Current users of ADHD drugs were not at increased risk for serious cardiovascular events (hazard ratio, 0.75),” the investigators reported. “Risk was not increased for any of the individual end points, or for current users as compared with former users (hazard ratio, 0.70).”
Researchers have identified several genetic variants that contribute to early stent thrombosis, as reported in the October 26 JAMA. Twenty-three genetic variants were examined in 15 different genes in a population of patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention. “Among the 23 genetic variants investigated in 15 different genes, the significant determinants of early stent thrombosis were CYP2C19 metabolic status (odds ratio, 1.99), ABCB1 3435 TT genotype (odds ratio, 2.16), and ITGB3 PLA2 carriage (odds ratio, 0.52),” the investigators reported. The researchers also found that certain nongenetic factors (including use of proton pump inhibitors and higher clopidogrel loading doses) were associated with early stent thrombosis. “Future studies are needed to validate the prognostic accuracy of these risk factors in prospective cohorts,” the investigators concluded.
Changes in the blurring of the cortical gray and white matter border were associated with lower verbal expression abilities, according to a study that was published in the October 26 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience. Healthy participants underwent MRI to determine their gray and white matter contrast (GWC), and they also completed measures of verbal expression and verbal working memory. The investigators found that blurring in the participants’ left hemisphere inferior frontal cortex and temporal pole was associated with reduced verbal expression abilities, and that reduced verbal working memory was associated with blurring in widespread left frontal and temporal cortices. “Such lateralized and focal results provide support for GWC as a measure of regional functional integrity and highlight its potential role in probing the neuroanatomic substrates of cognition in healthy and diseased populations,” the researchers concluded.
The FDA has approved ONFI (clobazam) for use as an adjunctive therapy for seizures that are associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome in patients who are two years and older. ONFI (Lundbeck, Inc; Deerfield, Illinois) is an oral antiepileptic drug and is a derivative of benzodiazepine. The drug will be available in 5-, 10-, and 20-mg tablets. The exact mechanism of action of clobazam is not fully understood, but it is thought to involve potentiation of GABA-ergic neurotransmission resulting from binding at the benzodiazepine site of the GABA A receptor. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of two multicenter controlled studies, including a phase 3 trial involving 238 patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome who experienced a significant reduction in the weekly frequency of drop seizures. The most common side effects of clobazam include sleepiness, fever, drooling, aggressive behavior, irritability, and lack of coordination.
People who rate their health as poor or fair may be significantly more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease or vascular dementia, compared with those who rate their health as good, according to a study that was published in the October 11 issue of Neurology. Study participants rated their health status at baseline (as “good,” “fair,” or “poor”) and were followed for a median of 6.7 years for the incidence of dementia. During the follow-up period, 618 participants developed dementia, and risk of dementia was increased among participants with poor (hazard ratio, 1.70) or fair (hazard ratio, 1.34) self-rated health, compared with participants with good self-rated health. “Self-rated health could help raise awareness of medical doctors about a patient’s risk of dementia, especially in those without conditions indicative of potential cognitive impairment,” the investigators concluded.
Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) had a higher predictive value than fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI for detecting patients within the recommended time window for thrombolysis, according to a study that was published in the November issue of Lancet Neurology. Researchers analyzed the clinical and MRI data from patients with acute stroke who had undergone DWI and FLAIR imaging within 12 hours of symptom onset, and they determined that patients with an acute ischemic lesion detected with DWI but not with FLAIR imaging are likely to be within a time window for which thrombolysis is safe and effective. “DWI-FLAIR mismatch identified patients within four to five hours of symptom onset with 62% sensitivity, 78% specificity, 83% positive predictive value, and 54% negative predictive value,” the investigators stated. “These findings lend support to the use of DWI-FLAIR mismatch for selection of patients in a future randomized trial of thrombolysis in patients with unknown time of symptom onset.”
Older adults who were taking statins before sustaining moderate or severe head injury had improved survival and functional outcomes, according to the results of a study that was published in the October issue of the Journal of Trauma. “Of 523 eligible individuals, 117 (22%) used statins at the time of injury,” the investigators wrote. “Statin use was associated with a 76% lower adjusted risk of in-hospital death.” Patients who took the cholesterol-lowering drugs were also 13% more likely to have a good recovery at 12 months postinjury, compared with patients who did not use statins. However, individuals with cardiovascular comorbidities lose this benefit, the investigators noted. “Statins, as possible protective agents in head trauma, warrant further study,” the study authors concluded.
A neuron’s inability to secrete beta-amyloid (Aß) plays a major role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease, a finding that contradicts the dominant theory in Alzheimer’s disease pathology, according to a study in the October 26 Journal of Neuroscience. By studying neurons in Alzheimer’s disease–transgenic and wild-type mice, the investigators found that an increase in intracellular Aß occurred early in the beginning stages of the disease, and that this accumulation of Aß inside the neuron was caused by the neuron’s inability to properly secrete Aß. “We demonstrate that synaptic activity promotes an increase in the Aß-degrading protease neprilysin at the cell surface and a concomitant increase in colocalization with Aß42,” the investigators stated. “Remarkably, Alzheimer’s disease–transgenic but not wild-type neurons show reduced levels of neprilysin with time in culture. This impaired ability to secrete Ab and reduce intraneuronal Aß has important implications for the pathogenesis and treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.”
Long-term estrogen deprivation in aging rats is associated with a decrease in estrogen receptors in the brain, and with a loss of the hormone’s neuroprotective effects, according to a study that was published in the August 30 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers studied estrogen levels in middle-aged rats that had undergone long periods of estrogen deprivation and observed an enhanced interaction between estrogen receptors and the CHIP enzyme (a carboxyl terminus of Hsc70-interacting protein), which contributed to the decrease of estrogen receptors in the hippocampus. They also found that administration of 17b-estradiol (E2) replacement therapy shortly before, but not after, the drop in hormone levels prevented degradation of estrogen receptors in the brain, and preserved estrogen’s neuroprotective effects. “As a whole, the study provides support for a ‘critical period’ for E2 neuroprotection of the hippocampus and provides important insight into the mechanism underlying the critical period,” the researchers concluded.
Premature birth may increase the risk of epilepsy as an adult, according to a study published in the October 4 Neurology. Investigators observed rates of hospitalization for epilepsy and prescription of antiepileptic drugs during a four-year period in 630,090 adults (including 27,953 who were born preterm). “We found a strong association between preterm birth and epilepsy that increased by earlier gestational age,” the researchers stated. After adjusting for fetal growth and potential confounders, the investigators found that individuals who were born at 23 to 31 weeks were almost five times more likely to be hospitalized for epilepsy than those who were born full-term. The odds ratios for those born at 32 to 34 weeks and 35 to 36 weeks were 1.98 and 1.76, respectively. “These associations persisted after excluding individuals with cerebral palsy, inflammatory diseases of the CNS, cerebrovascular disease, and brain tumors,” the investigators noted.
The use of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) medications is not associated with an increased risk of serious cardiovascular events, as some adverse-event reports have suggested, according to a report published online November 1 in the New England Journal of Medicine. A group of researchers estimated the risk of serious cardiovascular events (sudden cardiac death, acute myocardial infarction, and stroke) among more than 1 million children and young adults (age range, 2 to 24). There were 81 cardiovascular events among the cohort members and seven serious cardiovascular events in current users. “Current users of ADHD drugs were not at increased risk for serious cardiovascular events (hazard ratio, 0.75),” the investigators reported. “Risk was not increased for any of the individual end points, or for current users as compared with former users (hazard ratio, 0.70).”
Researchers have identified several genetic variants that contribute to early stent thrombosis, as reported in the October 26 JAMA. Twenty-three genetic variants were examined in 15 different genes in a population of patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention. “Among the 23 genetic variants investigated in 15 different genes, the significant determinants of early stent thrombosis were CYP2C19 metabolic status (odds ratio, 1.99), ABCB1 3435 TT genotype (odds ratio, 2.16), and ITGB3 PLA2 carriage (odds ratio, 0.52),” the investigators reported. The researchers also found that certain nongenetic factors (including use of proton pump inhibitors and higher clopidogrel loading doses) were associated with early stent thrombosis. “Future studies are needed to validate the prognostic accuracy of these risk factors in prospective cohorts,” the investigators concluded.
Changes in the blurring of the cortical gray and white matter border were associated with lower verbal expression abilities, according to a study that was published in the October 26 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience. Healthy participants underwent MRI to determine their gray and white matter contrast (GWC), and they also completed measures of verbal expression and verbal working memory. The investigators found that blurring in the participants’ left hemisphere inferior frontal cortex and temporal pole was associated with reduced verbal expression abilities, and that reduced verbal working memory was associated with blurring in widespread left frontal and temporal cortices. “Such lateralized and focal results provide support for GWC as a measure of regional functional integrity and highlight its potential role in probing the neuroanatomic substrates of cognition in healthy and diseased populations,” the researchers concluded.
The FDA has approved ONFI (clobazam) for use as an adjunctive therapy for seizures that are associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome in patients who are two years and older. ONFI (Lundbeck, Inc; Deerfield, Illinois) is an oral antiepileptic drug and is a derivative of benzodiazepine. The drug will be available in 5-, 10-, and 20-mg tablets. The exact mechanism of action of clobazam is not fully understood, but it is thought to involve potentiation of GABA-ergic neurotransmission resulting from binding at the benzodiazepine site of the GABA A receptor. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of two multicenter controlled studies, including a phase 3 trial involving 238 patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome who experienced a significant reduction in the weekly frequency of drop seizures. The most common side effects of clobazam include sleepiness, fever, drooling, aggressive behavior, irritability, and lack of coordination.
People who rate their health as poor or fair may be significantly more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease or vascular dementia, compared with those who rate their health as good, according to a study that was published in the October 11 issue of Neurology. Study participants rated their health status at baseline (as “good,” “fair,” or “poor”) and were followed for a median of 6.7 years for the incidence of dementia. During the follow-up period, 618 participants developed dementia, and risk of dementia was increased among participants with poor (hazard ratio, 1.70) or fair (hazard ratio, 1.34) self-rated health, compared with participants with good self-rated health. “Self-rated health could help raise awareness of medical doctors about a patient’s risk of dementia, especially in those without conditions indicative of potential cognitive impairment,” the investigators concluded.
Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) had a higher predictive value than fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI for detecting patients within the recommended time window for thrombolysis, according to a study that was published in the November issue of Lancet Neurology. Researchers analyzed the clinical and MRI data from patients with acute stroke who had undergone DWI and FLAIR imaging within 12 hours of symptom onset, and they determined that patients with an acute ischemic lesion detected with DWI but not with FLAIR imaging are likely to be within a time window for which thrombolysis is safe and effective. “DWI-FLAIR mismatch identified patients within four to five hours of symptom onset with 62% sensitivity, 78% specificity, 83% positive predictive value, and 54% negative predictive value,” the investigators stated. “These findings lend support to the use of DWI-FLAIR mismatch for selection of patients in a future randomized trial of thrombolysis in patients with unknown time of symptom onset.”
Older adults who were taking statins before sustaining moderate or severe head injury had improved survival and functional outcomes, according to the results of a study that was published in the October issue of the Journal of Trauma. “Of 523 eligible individuals, 117 (22%) used statins at the time of injury,” the investigators wrote. “Statin use was associated with a 76% lower adjusted risk of in-hospital death.” Patients who took the cholesterol-lowering drugs were also 13% more likely to have a good recovery at 12 months postinjury, compared with patients who did not use statins. However, individuals with cardiovascular comorbidities lose this benefit, the investigators noted. “Statins, as possible protective agents in head trauma, warrant further study,” the study authors concluded.
A neuron’s inability to secrete beta-amyloid (Aß) plays a major role in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease, a finding that contradicts the dominant theory in Alzheimer’s disease pathology, according to a study in the October 26 Journal of Neuroscience. By studying neurons in Alzheimer’s disease–transgenic and wild-type mice, the investigators found that an increase in intracellular Aß occurred early in the beginning stages of the disease, and that this accumulation of Aß inside the neuron was caused by the neuron’s inability to properly secrete Aß. “We demonstrate that synaptic activity promotes an increase in the Aß-degrading protease neprilysin at the cell surface and a concomitant increase in colocalization with Aß42,” the investigators stated. “Remarkably, Alzheimer’s disease–transgenic but not wild-type neurons show reduced levels of neprilysin with time in culture. This impaired ability to secrete Ab and reduce intraneuronal Aß has important implications for the pathogenesis and treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.”
Long-term estrogen deprivation in aging rats is associated with a decrease in estrogen receptors in the brain, and with a loss of the hormone’s neuroprotective effects, according to a study that was published in the August 30 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers studied estrogen levels in middle-aged rats that had undergone long periods of estrogen deprivation and observed an enhanced interaction between estrogen receptors and the CHIP enzyme (a carboxyl terminus of Hsc70-interacting protein), which contributed to the decrease of estrogen receptors in the hippocampus. They also found that administration of 17b-estradiol (E2) replacement therapy shortly before, but not after, the drop in hormone levels prevented degradation of estrogen receptors in the brain, and preserved estrogen’s neuroprotective effects. “As a whole, the study provides support for a ‘critical period’ for E2 neuroprotection of the hippocampus and provides important insight into the mechanism underlying the critical period,” the researchers concluded.
News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information
Comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation may be effective for prevention of future stroke in patients who have had a transient ischemic stroke (TIA) or a mild, nondisabling stroke, according to a study published in the online September 22 Stroke. Researchers tested the effectiveness of the rehabilitation program, which integrates structured lifestyle interventions and medications, in 80 participants who had at least one vascular risk factor. After six months of intervention, the investigators reported favorable and significant changes in aerobic capacity, cholesterol levels, triglycerides, waist circumference, body mass index, and body weight. “Comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation is feasible and effective for secondary prevention after transient ischemic attack or mild, nondisabling stroke, offering a promising model for vascular protection across chronic disease entities,” the authors concluded.
Two separate teams of investigators have identified a new human genetic mutation that may be the most common cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Both studies appear in the online September 21 Neuron. Previous research has linked the 9p21 region of chromosome 9 with both ALS and FTD; using this theory, each research group performed a genetic analysis in patients with 9p21-associated ALS or FTD. Both groups discovered a large hexanucleotide repeat expansion in the C9ORF72 gene, which may accumulate as abnormal RNA foci inside neurons and promote disease pathogenesis and neurodegeneration. The investigators reported that this mutation may explain at least one-third of all familial cases of ALS and FTD, as well as some noninherited cases.
Depression is associated with a significant increase in fatal and ischemic stroke, but not hemorrhagic stroke, according to a study published in the September 21 JAMA. Investigators conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 28 prospective studies (8,478 cases of stroke) that reported risk estimates of stroke morbidity or mortality. Individuals with depression had a 45% higher risk for total stroke, 55% higher risk for fatal stroke, and 25% higher risk for ischemic stroke. The corresponding absolute risk differences were 106 cases for total stroke, 53 cases for ischemic stroke, and 22 cases for fatal stroke per 100,000 individuals per year. “Depression is associated with a significantly increased risk of stroke morbidity and mortality,” the investigators wrote. “More studies are needed to explore the underlying mechanisms and elucidate the causal pathways that link depression and stroke.”
Patients with refractory epilepsy who receive adjunctive treatment with antiepileptic drugs have nearly a seven times lower risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) compared to those that receive placebo treatments, according to a meta-analysis published September 19 online in Lancet Neurology. The researchers analyzed 33 deaths reported in a collection of randomized placebo-controlled trials involving patients with refractory epilepsy to determine if adjunctive antiepileptic drugs in efficacious doses lowered the incidence of sudden unexpected death. “Definite or probable SUDEP, all SUDEP, and all causes of death were significantly less frequent in the efficacious antiepileptic drug group than in the placebo group,” the researchers concluded. “This result provides evidence in favor of active treatment revision for patients with refractory epilepsy.”
Investigators have identified a strong bidirectional relationship between epilepsy and schizophrenia, according to a study appearing in the September 19 Epilepsia. The investigators analyzed the incidence and risk of developing epilepsy in a group of 5,195 patients with schizophrenia, as well as the incidence and risk of developing schizophrenia in a group of 11,527 patients with epilepsy; they then compared these results to healthy controls. “The incidence of epilepsy was higher in the schizophrenia cohort than in the nonschizophrenia cohort with an adjusted hazard ratio of 5.88,” the investigators reported. “The incidence of schizophrenia was higher in the epilepsy cohort than in the nonepilepsy comparison cohort with an adjusted hazard ratio of 7.65.” The researchers concluded that the two conditions may share a mutual susceptibility, but noted that further studies on the mechanisms for this relationship are necessary.
The Genesis implanted neurostimulation device (St. Jude Medical, Inc; St. Paul, Minnesota) has received European regulatory approval for the treatment of intractable chronic migraine. The peripheral nerve stimulation system delivers mild electrical pulses to the occipital nerves to help manage the pain and disability associated with this condition. Approval was achieved based on the results of a randomized, double-blind, controlled study of 157 patients with chronic migraine. After one year of peripheral nerve stimulation therapy, 65% of participants reported excellent or good pain relief, 68% expressed an improvement in their quality of life, and 67% were satisfied with the results of their procedure. The system developers hope that this approval will expand treatment options for patients who have exhausted all other treatment options for chronic migraine
Compared to civilians, veterans experience a greater delay in diagnosis of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES), according to a study published in the September 6 Neurology. “PNES are frequently encountered in epilepsy monitoring units and can result in significant long-term disability,” the investigators wrote. “We reviewed our experience with veterans undergoing seizure evaluation in the epilepsy monitoring units to determine the time delay to diagnosis of PNES, the frequency of PNES, and cumulative antiepileptic drug treatment.” They found that PNES were identified in 25% of veterans and 26% of civilians admitted to epilepsy monitoring units, and that the average delay from onset to diagnosis was about five years for veterans and one year for civilians. In addition, treatment with antiepileptic drugs was four times greater for veterans with PNES compared with civilians.
Rates of hospitalizations for ischemic stroke in adolescents and young adults increased up to 37% between 1995 and 2008, according to a study published in the September 2 online Annals of Neurology. Investigators analyzed discharge data for patients between the ages of 5 and 44 hospitalized for ischemic stroke, as well as information about comorbidites and stroke risk factors. The prevalence of hospitalizations increased among all age and gender groups, except females ages 5 to 14 years, the researchers reported. The most common coexisting conditions among the study population were hypertension, diabetes, obesity, lipid disorders, and tobacco use; these were increased among patients hospitalized with acute ischemic stroke. “Our results … accentuate the need for public health initiatives to reduce risk factors for stroke among adolescents and young adults,” the investigators concluded.
Researchers have identified a mutation in the sigma-1 receptor that is responsible for the development of juvenile amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The results of the study, appearing in the August 12 online Annals of Neurology, could lead to the development of potential therapeutic targets for the disease. “We performed homozygosity and direct sequencing to detect the genetic variant and tested the effect of this variant on a motor neuron-like cell line model expressing the wild-type or mutant gene,” the investigators explained. They identified a shared homozygosity region in persons with the disease; they also observed that cells expressing the mutant protein were less resistant to apoptosis induced by endoplasmic reticulum stress. “Sigma-1 receptors are known to have neuroprotective properties,” the authors concluded. “Our findings emphasize the role of sigma-1 receptors in motor neuron function and disease.”
Comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation may be effective for prevention of future stroke in patients who have had a transient ischemic stroke (TIA) or a mild, nondisabling stroke, according to a study published in the online September 22 Stroke. Researchers tested the effectiveness of the rehabilitation program, which integrates structured lifestyle interventions and medications, in 80 participants who had at least one vascular risk factor. After six months of intervention, the investigators reported favorable and significant changes in aerobic capacity, cholesterol levels, triglycerides, waist circumference, body mass index, and body weight. “Comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation is feasible and effective for secondary prevention after transient ischemic attack or mild, nondisabling stroke, offering a promising model for vascular protection across chronic disease entities,” the authors concluded.
Two separate teams of investigators have identified a new human genetic mutation that may be the most common cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Both studies appear in the online September 21 Neuron. Previous research has linked the 9p21 region of chromosome 9 with both ALS and FTD; using this theory, each research group performed a genetic analysis in patients with 9p21-associated ALS or FTD. Both groups discovered a large hexanucleotide repeat expansion in the C9ORF72 gene, which may accumulate as abnormal RNA foci inside neurons and promote disease pathogenesis and neurodegeneration. The investigators reported that this mutation may explain at least one-third of all familial cases of ALS and FTD, as well as some noninherited cases.
Depression is associated with a significant increase in fatal and ischemic stroke, but not hemorrhagic stroke, according to a study published in the September 21 JAMA. Investigators conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 28 prospective studies (8,478 cases of stroke) that reported risk estimates of stroke morbidity or mortality. Individuals with depression had a 45% higher risk for total stroke, 55% higher risk for fatal stroke, and 25% higher risk for ischemic stroke. The corresponding absolute risk differences were 106 cases for total stroke, 53 cases for ischemic stroke, and 22 cases for fatal stroke per 100,000 individuals per year. “Depression is associated with a significantly increased risk of stroke morbidity and mortality,” the investigators wrote. “More studies are needed to explore the underlying mechanisms and elucidate the causal pathways that link depression and stroke.”
Patients with refractory epilepsy who receive adjunctive treatment with antiepileptic drugs have nearly a seven times lower risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) compared to those that receive placebo treatments, according to a meta-analysis published September 19 online in Lancet Neurology. The researchers analyzed 33 deaths reported in a collection of randomized placebo-controlled trials involving patients with refractory epilepsy to determine if adjunctive antiepileptic drugs in efficacious doses lowered the incidence of sudden unexpected death. “Definite or probable SUDEP, all SUDEP, and all causes of death were significantly less frequent in the efficacious antiepileptic drug group than in the placebo group,” the researchers concluded. “This result provides evidence in favor of active treatment revision for patients with refractory epilepsy.”
Investigators have identified a strong bidirectional relationship between epilepsy and schizophrenia, according to a study appearing in the September 19 Epilepsia. The investigators analyzed the incidence and risk of developing epilepsy in a group of 5,195 patients with schizophrenia, as well as the incidence and risk of developing schizophrenia in a group of 11,527 patients with epilepsy; they then compared these results to healthy controls. “The incidence of epilepsy was higher in the schizophrenia cohort than in the nonschizophrenia cohort with an adjusted hazard ratio of 5.88,” the investigators reported. “The incidence of schizophrenia was higher in the epilepsy cohort than in the nonepilepsy comparison cohort with an adjusted hazard ratio of 7.65.” The researchers concluded that the two conditions may share a mutual susceptibility, but noted that further studies on the mechanisms for this relationship are necessary.
The Genesis implanted neurostimulation device (St. Jude Medical, Inc; St. Paul, Minnesota) has received European regulatory approval for the treatment of intractable chronic migraine. The peripheral nerve stimulation system delivers mild electrical pulses to the occipital nerves to help manage the pain and disability associated with this condition. Approval was achieved based on the results of a randomized, double-blind, controlled study of 157 patients with chronic migraine. After one year of peripheral nerve stimulation therapy, 65% of participants reported excellent or good pain relief, 68% expressed an improvement in their quality of life, and 67% were satisfied with the results of their procedure. The system developers hope that this approval will expand treatment options for patients who have exhausted all other treatment options for chronic migraine
Compared to civilians, veterans experience a greater delay in diagnosis of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES), according to a study published in the September 6 Neurology. “PNES are frequently encountered in epilepsy monitoring units and can result in significant long-term disability,” the investigators wrote. “We reviewed our experience with veterans undergoing seizure evaluation in the epilepsy monitoring units to determine the time delay to diagnosis of PNES, the frequency of PNES, and cumulative antiepileptic drug treatment.” They found that PNES were identified in 25% of veterans and 26% of civilians admitted to epilepsy monitoring units, and that the average delay from onset to diagnosis was about five years for veterans and one year for civilians. In addition, treatment with antiepileptic drugs was four times greater for veterans with PNES compared with civilians.
Rates of hospitalizations for ischemic stroke in adolescents and young adults increased up to 37% between 1995 and 2008, according to a study published in the September 2 online Annals of Neurology. Investigators analyzed discharge data for patients between the ages of 5 and 44 hospitalized for ischemic stroke, as well as information about comorbidites and stroke risk factors. The prevalence of hospitalizations increased among all age and gender groups, except females ages 5 to 14 years, the researchers reported. The most common coexisting conditions among the study population were hypertension, diabetes, obesity, lipid disorders, and tobacco use; these were increased among patients hospitalized with acute ischemic stroke. “Our results … accentuate the need for public health initiatives to reduce risk factors for stroke among adolescents and young adults,” the investigators concluded.
Researchers have identified a mutation in the sigma-1 receptor that is responsible for the development of juvenile amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The results of the study, appearing in the August 12 online Annals of Neurology, could lead to the development of potential therapeutic targets for the disease. “We performed homozygosity and direct sequencing to detect the genetic variant and tested the effect of this variant on a motor neuron-like cell line model expressing the wild-type or mutant gene,” the investigators explained. They identified a shared homozygosity region in persons with the disease; they also observed that cells expressing the mutant protein were less resistant to apoptosis induced by endoplasmic reticulum stress. “Sigma-1 receptors are known to have neuroprotective properties,” the authors concluded. “Our findings emphasize the role of sigma-1 receptors in motor neuron function and disease.”
Comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation may be effective for prevention of future stroke in patients who have had a transient ischemic stroke (TIA) or a mild, nondisabling stroke, according to a study published in the online September 22 Stroke. Researchers tested the effectiveness of the rehabilitation program, which integrates structured lifestyle interventions and medications, in 80 participants who had at least one vascular risk factor. After six months of intervention, the investigators reported favorable and significant changes in aerobic capacity, cholesterol levels, triglycerides, waist circumference, body mass index, and body weight. “Comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation is feasible and effective for secondary prevention after transient ischemic attack or mild, nondisabling stroke, offering a promising model for vascular protection across chronic disease entities,” the authors concluded.
Two separate teams of investigators have identified a new human genetic mutation that may be the most common cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Both studies appear in the online September 21 Neuron. Previous research has linked the 9p21 region of chromosome 9 with both ALS and FTD; using this theory, each research group performed a genetic analysis in patients with 9p21-associated ALS or FTD. Both groups discovered a large hexanucleotide repeat expansion in the C9ORF72 gene, which may accumulate as abnormal RNA foci inside neurons and promote disease pathogenesis and neurodegeneration. The investigators reported that this mutation may explain at least one-third of all familial cases of ALS and FTD, as well as some noninherited cases.
Depression is associated with a significant increase in fatal and ischemic stroke, but not hemorrhagic stroke, according to a study published in the September 21 JAMA. Investigators conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 28 prospective studies (8,478 cases of stroke) that reported risk estimates of stroke morbidity or mortality. Individuals with depression had a 45% higher risk for total stroke, 55% higher risk for fatal stroke, and 25% higher risk for ischemic stroke. The corresponding absolute risk differences were 106 cases for total stroke, 53 cases for ischemic stroke, and 22 cases for fatal stroke per 100,000 individuals per year. “Depression is associated with a significantly increased risk of stroke morbidity and mortality,” the investigators wrote. “More studies are needed to explore the underlying mechanisms and elucidate the causal pathways that link depression and stroke.”
Patients with refractory epilepsy who receive adjunctive treatment with antiepileptic drugs have nearly a seven times lower risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) compared to those that receive placebo treatments, according to a meta-analysis published September 19 online in Lancet Neurology. The researchers analyzed 33 deaths reported in a collection of randomized placebo-controlled trials involving patients with refractory epilepsy to determine if adjunctive antiepileptic drugs in efficacious doses lowered the incidence of sudden unexpected death. “Definite or probable SUDEP, all SUDEP, and all causes of death were significantly less frequent in the efficacious antiepileptic drug group than in the placebo group,” the researchers concluded. “This result provides evidence in favor of active treatment revision for patients with refractory epilepsy.”
Investigators have identified a strong bidirectional relationship between epilepsy and schizophrenia, according to a study appearing in the September 19 Epilepsia. The investigators analyzed the incidence and risk of developing epilepsy in a group of 5,195 patients with schizophrenia, as well as the incidence and risk of developing schizophrenia in a group of 11,527 patients with epilepsy; they then compared these results to healthy controls. “The incidence of epilepsy was higher in the schizophrenia cohort than in the nonschizophrenia cohort with an adjusted hazard ratio of 5.88,” the investigators reported. “The incidence of schizophrenia was higher in the epilepsy cohort than in the nonepilepsy comparison cohort with an adjusted hazard ratio of 7.65.” The researchers concluded that the two conditions may share a mutual susceptibility, but noted that further studies on the mechanisms for this relationship are necessary.
The Genesis implanted neurostimulation device (St. Jude Medical, Inc; St. Paul, Minnesota) has received European regulatory approval for the treatment of intractable chronic migraine. The peripheral nerve stimulation system delivers mild electrical pulses to the occipital nerves to help manage the pain and disability associated with this condition. Approval was achieved based on the results of a randomized, double-blind, controlled study of 157 patients with chronic migraine. After one year of peripheral nerve stimulation therapy, 65% of participants reported excellent or good pain relief, 68% expressed an improvement in their quality of life, and 67% were satisfied with the results of their procedure. The system developers hope that this approval will expand treatment options for patients who have exhausted all other treatment options for chronic migraine
Compared to civilians, veterans experience a greater delay in diagnosis of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES), according to a study published in the September 6 Neurology. “PNES are frequently encountered in epilepsy monitoring units and can result in significant long-term disability,” the investigators wrote. “We reviewed our experience with veterans undergoing seizure evaluation in the epilepsy monitoring units to determine the time delay to diagnosis of PNES, the frequency of PNES, and cumulative antiepileptic drug treatment.” They found that PNES were identified in 25% of veterans and 26% of civilians admitted to epilepsy monitoring units, and that the average delay from onset to diagnosis was about five years for veterans and one year for civilians. In addition, treatment with antiepileptic drugs was four times greater for veterans with PNES compared with civilians.
Rates of hospitalizations for ischemic stroke in adolescents and young adults increased up to 37% between 1995 and 2008, according to a study published in the September 2 online Annals of Neurology. Investigators analyzed discharge data for patients between the ages of 5 and 44 hospitalized for ischemic stroke, as well as information about comorbidites and stroke risk factors. The prevalence of hospitalizations increased among all age and gender groups, except females ages 5 to 14 years, the researchers reported. The most common coexisting conditions among the study population were hypertension, diabetes, obesity, lipid disorders, and tobacco use; these were increased among patients hospitalized with acute ischemic stroke. “Our results … accentuate the need for public health initiatives to reduce risk factors for stroke among adolescents and young adults,” the investigators concluded.
Researchers have identified a mutation in the sigma-1 receptor that is responsible for the development of juvenile amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The results of the study, appearing in the August 12 online Annals of Neurology, could lead to the development of potential therapeutic targets for the disease. “We performed homozygosity and direct sequencing to detect the genetic variant and tested the effect of this variant on a motor neuron-like cell line model expressing the wild-type or mutant gene,” the investigators explained. They identified a shared homozygosity region in persons with the disease; they also observed that cells expressing the mutant protein were less resistant to apoptosis induced by endoplasmic reticulum stress. “Sigma-1 receptors are known to have neuroprotective properties,” the authors concluded. “Our findings emphasize the role of sigma-1 receptors in motor neuron function and disease.”
News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information
Investigators have developed a simple test to identify people with asymptomatic carotid stenosis who have an increased risk of stroke, as reported in the August 17 online Neurology. “Two potential markers of high risk are echolucent plaque morphology on carotid ultrasound and embolic signals in the ipsilateral middle cerebral artery on transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD),” the authors wrote. To explore the predictive value of a composite score based on these two measures, the investigators recruited 435 participants with asymptomatic carotid stenosis and collected baseline ultrasound images and TCD data. “Plaque morphology assessed using a simple, and clinically applicable, visual rating scale predicts ipsilateral stroke risk in asymptomatic carotid stenosis,” the authors wrote. They also noted that the combination of both markers allows a greater prediction than either measure alone.
Researchers have identified a possible common cause of several forms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), according to a study published in the August 21 online Nature. Although some genetic mutations have been shown to cause certain forms of the disease, the causes of certain types of familial ALS and of the vast majority of sporadic ALS had been unknown. “Here, we show that mutations in the UBQLN2, which encodes the ubiquitin-like protein ubiquilin 2, cause dominantly inherited, chromosome-X-linked ALS, and ALS/dementia,” the investigators reported. They also performed functional analysis that showed that these mutations lead to impairment in protein degradation. “Therefore, our findings link abnormalities in ubiquilin 2 to defects in the protein degradation pathway, abnormal protein aggregation, and neurodegeneration, indicating a common pathogenic mechanism that can be exploited for therapeutic intervention,” the authors concluded.
Using computational approaches and drug and genomic information, scientists can predict new uses for existing medicines, according to two studies published online in the August 17 Science Translational Medicine. The practice, known as drug repositioning, was investigated in a study supported by the NIH. The researchers used a computer program that searched through possible drug-disease combinations (from a set of 164 established drug compounds and 100 diseases) to identify drug and disease combinations whose gene expression patterns essentially canceled each other out. In one specific case, topiramate, an anticonvulsant for the treatment of epilepsy, was found to be a potential therapeutic option for inflammatory bowel disease. “The application of established drug compounds to new therapeutic indications … offers several advantages over traditional drug development, including reduced development costs and shorter paths to approval,” the authors wrote. “This computational method provides a systematic approach for repositioning established drugs to treat a wide range of human diseases.”
Women with depression may have an increased risk of subsequent stroke, according to the results of a study published in the August 11 Stroke. A group of researchers followed-up more than 80,000 women (age range, 54 to 79) without a history of stroke from the Nurses’ Health Study to determine if depression was associated with stroke. Depressive symptoms were assessed at multiple time points, and antidepressant medication use and physician-diagnosed depression were recorded biennially. “During six years of follow-up, 1,033 incident strokes were documented,” the authors reported. “For each cycle, participants who reported current depression had an increased risk of stroke (hazard ratio, 1.41), whereas individuals who only had a history of depression were at nonsignificantly elevated risk (hazard ratio, 1.23), compared with women who never reported a diagnosis of depression or antidepressant medication use.”
According to a study published in the August 11 online JAMA, women with sleep-disordered breathing were more likely to develop dementia or cognitive impairment, compared with women without the disorder. “Sleep-disordered breathing (characterized by recurrent arousals from sleep and intermittent hypoxemia) is common among older adults,” the authors wrote. “However, it remains unclear whether sleep-disordered breathing precedes cognitive impairment in older adults.” To investigate this association and its potential mechanisms, the researchers conducted a prospective sleep and cognition study of 298 women without dementia who underwent polysomnography. “Compared with the 193 women without sleep-disordered breathing, the 105 women (35.2%) with sleep-disordered breathing were more likely to develop mild cognitive impairment or dementia (31.1% versus 44.8%),” they reported. “Measures of sleep fragmentation (arousal index and wake after sleep onset) or sleep duration (total sleep time) were not associated with risk of cognitive impairment.”
Older patients (ages 80 to 91) with Alzheimer’s disease experience less severe cognitive or brain changes than younger patients (ages 60 to 75) with the disease, according to a study published in the August 10 online Neurology. Researchers compared hippocampal volume and cortical gray matter thickness of 105 patients with Alzheimer’s disease and 125 healthy controls to determine if brain morphometric and cognitive profiles differed according to age. “Several cognitive domains (executive function, immediate memory, and attention/processing speed) were less abnormal in the very old with Alzheimer’s disease than in the young old with Alzheimer’s disease,” the investigators wrote. “Similarly, the very old with Alzheimer’s disease showed less severe cortical thinning than the young old with Alzheimer’s disease.” The authors noted that mild cases of Alzheimer’s disease in older people might go undetected due to these age-related differences in cognitive and morphometric changes.
Researchers have found new genetic variants associated with multiple sclerosis (MS), as reported in the August 10 Nature. “In a collaborative genome-wide association study involving 9,772 cases of European descent … we have replicated almost all of the previously suggested associations and identified at least a further 29 novel susceptibility loci,” the authors wrote. One-third of the genes they identified have previously been implicated in other autoimmune diseases, suggesting that the same general processes occur in more than one type of autoimmune disease; two of the genes were also involved in the metabolism of vitamin D, supporting the existence of a link between genetic and environmental risk factors. “Immunologically relevant genes are significantly overrepresented among those mapping close to the identified loci and particularly implicate T-helper-cell differentiation in the pathogenesis of MS,” the investigators concluded.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Botox (onabotulinumtoxinA) for injection for the treatment of urinary incontinence caused by detrusor overactivity in adults with neurologic conditions, including multiple sclerosis (MS) and spinal cord injury. The FDA’s approval was based on two phase III clinical trials in which onabotulinumtoxinA was administered to 691 patients with MS or spinal cord injury and urinary incontinence; when the drug was injected directly into the bladder muscle, episodes of urinary incontinence were significantly reduced. Researchers at Allergan, Inc (Irvine, California) believe the drug will benefit people who cannot tolerate an oral anticholinergic medication.
Patients with Parkinson’s disease who visit a neurologist are less likely to be placed in a nursing home, have a lower risk of hip fracture, and have a lower likelihood of death than those who do not receive care from a neurologist, according to a study published online in the August 10 online Neurology. Only 58% of patients visited a neurologist, and race and sex were significant demographic predictors for receiving treatment. “Women and minorities with Parkinson’s disease obtain specialist care less often than white men,” the researchers stated. “Neurologist care of patients with Parkinson’s disease may be associated with improved selected clinical outcomes and greater survival.”
A survey of graduating neurology residents reveals that 94% feel comfortable using t-PA, compared with 73% in a survey from 2000. The results of the survey were published online in the August 4 Stroke. The researchers sent a 12-item survey to neurology residents about their experience and confidence with assessment of patients with acute stroke and treatment with t-PA. Of 491 residents, 281 (58%) responded, with 95% reporting that they had personally administered t-PA and 98% reporting that they had been involved in post–t-PA care. “Neurology residents’ experience and comfort treating acute ischemic stroke with t-PA increased significantly between 2000 and 2010,” the authors concluded, “as did resident exposure to stroke teams and formal training in the NIH Stroke Scale.”
Hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and obesity during midlife are associated with an increased rate of progression of vascular brain injury, hippocampal atrophy, and decline in executive function later in life, researchers reported in the August 2 Neurology. “Our aim was to test the association of vascular risk factor exposure in midlife with progression of MRI markers of brain aging and measures of cognitive decline,” the investigators wrote. More than 1,300 people without dementia (mean age, 54) were enrolled in the study. After ten years, the researchers recorded changes in participants’ regional and total brain volume, memory recall, and performance on executive functioning tests. Hypertension and obesity in midlife were most greatly associated with diminished executive function; diabetes and smoking were associated with a more rapid increase in atrophy and decrease in brain volume. “Longitudinal changes in brain structure were significantly correlated with decline in memory and executive function,” the authors concluded.
Statins may lower the risk for future stroke in young adults who have already had an ischemic stroke, according to research published in the August 2 Neurology. Researchers investigated the effects of these cholesterol-lowering drugs in 215 patients (mean age, 39.1) who had an ischemic stroke of unknown etiology and categorized them into three groups based on statin use (never used, continuous use, or discontinuous use). “Seventy-two patients (33%) used a statin at some time during follow-up,” the researchers reported. “Twenty-nine (20%) events occurred among the 143 patients never on a statin, none among the 36 with continuous statin, and 4 (1%) among the 36 with discontinuous statin.” The risk of a second event was 77% lower for patients who had used a statin after first stroke.
Researchers believe they have found a better approach to diagnosing temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) using 7-Tesla MRI, according to a study in the July 11 online Radiology. The investigators performed 7-Tesla MRI on eight patients with TLE and 11 healthy controls. “All eight patients with TLE had hippocampal abnormalities on the epileptogenic side,” the researchers stated. “Hippocampal malrotation was observed in three patients with TLE and four control subjects.” Subsequent subregional analysis revealed that six patients with TLE had selective lateral Ammon horn atrophy, and one patient had diffuse Ammon horn and dentate gyrus atrophy. The authors concluded: “Ultrahigh-field-strength MRI permitted detection of selectively greater Ammon horn atrophy in patients with TLE and hippocampal sclerosis.”
Investigators have developed a simple test to identify people with asymptomatic carotid stenosis who have an increased risk of stroke, as reported in the August 17 online Neurology. “Two potential markers of high risk are echolucent plaque morphology on carotid ultrasound and embolic signals in the ipsilateral middle cerebral artery on transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD),” the authors wrote. To explore the predictive value of a composite score based on these two measures, the investigators recruited 435 participants with asymptomatic carotid stenosis and collected baseline ultrasound images and TCD data. “Plaque morphology assessed using a simple, and clinically applicable, visual rating scale predicts ipsilateral stroke risk in asymptomatic carotid stenosis,” the authors wrote. They also noted that the combination of both markers allows a greater prediction than either measure alone.
Researchers have identified a possible common cause of several forms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), according to a study published in the August 21 online Nature. Although some genetic mutations have been shown to cause certain forms of the disease, the causes of certain types of familial ALS and of the vast majority of sporadic ALS had been unknown. “Here, we show that mutations in the UBQLN2, which encodes the ubiquitin-like protein ubiquilin 2, cause dominantly inherited, chromosome-X-linked ALS, and ALS/dementia,” the investigators reported. They also performed functional analysis that showed that these mutations lead to impairment in protein degradation. “Therefore, our findings link abnormalities in ubiquilin 2 to defects in the protein degradation pathway, abnormal protein aggregation, and neurodegeneration, indicating a common pathogenic mechanism that can be exploited for therapeutic intervention,” the authors concluded.
Using computational approaches and drug and genomic information, scientists can predict new uses for existing medicines, according to two studies published online in the August 17 Science Translational Medicine. The practice, known as drug repositioning, was investigated in a study supported by the NIH. The researchers used a computer program that searched through possible drug-disease combinations (from a set of 164 established drug compounds and 100 diseases) to identify drug and disease combinations whose gene expression patterns essentially canceled each other out. In one specific case, topiramate, an anticonvulsant for the treatment of epilepsy, was found to be a potential therapeutic option for inflammatory bowel disease. “The application of established drug compounds to new therapeutic indications … offers several advantages over traditional drug development, including reduced development costs and shorter paths to approval,” the authors wrote. “This computational method provides a systematic approach for repositioning established drugs to treat a wide range of human diseases.”
Women with depression may have an increased risk of subsequent stroke, according to the results of a study published in the August 11 Stroke. A group of researchers followed-up more than 80,000 women (age range, 54 to 79) without a history of stroke from the Nurses’ Health Study to determine if depression was associated with stroke. Depressive symptoms were assessed at multiple time points, and antidepressant medication use and physician-diagnosed depression were recorded biennially. “During six years of follow-up, 1,033 incident strokes were documented,” the authors reported. “For each cycle, participants who reported current depression had an increased risk of stroke (hazard ratio, 1.41), whereas individuals who only had a history of depression were at nonsignificantly elevated risk (hazard ratio, 1.23), compared with women who never reported a diagnosis of depression or antidepressant medication use.”
According to a study published in the August 11 online JAMA, women with sleep-disordered breathing were more likely to develop dementia or cognitive impairment, compared with women without the disorder. “Sleep-disordered breathing (characterized by recurrent arousals from sleep and intermittent hypoxemia) is common among older adults,” the authors wrote. “However, it remains unclear whether sleep-disordered breathing precedes cognitive impairment in older adults.” To investigate this association and its potential mechanisms, the researchers conducted a prospective sleep and cognition study of 298 women without dementia who underwent polysomnography. “Compared with the 193 women without sleep-disordered breathing, the 105 women (35.2%) with sleep-disordered breathing were more likely to develop mild cognitive impairment or dementia (31.1% versus 44.8%),” they reported. “Measures of sleep fragmentation (arousal index and wake after sleep onset) or sleep duration (total sleep time) were not associated with risk of cognitive impairment.”
Older patients (ages 80 to 91) with Alzheimer’s disease experience less severe cognitive or brain changes than younger patients (ages 60 to 75) with the disease, according to a study published in the August 10 online Neurology. Researchers compared hippocampal volume and cortical gray matter thickness of 105 patients with Alzheimer’s disease and 125 healthy controls to determine if brain morphometric and cognitive profiles differed according to age. “Several cognitive domains (executive function, immediate memory, and attention/processing speed) were less abnormal in the very old with Alzheimer’s disease than in the young old with Alzheimer’s disease,” the investigators wrote. “Similarly, the very old with Alzheimer’s disease showed less severe cortical thinning than the young old with Alzheimer’s disease.” The authors noted that mild cases of Alzheimer’s disease in older people might go undetected due to these age-related differences in cognitive and morphometric changes.
Researchers have found new genetic variants associated with multiple sclerosis (MS), as reported in the August 10 Nature. “In a collaborative genome-wide association study involving 9,772 cases of European descent … we have replicated almost all of the previously suggested associations and identified at least a further 29 novel susceptibility loci,” the authors wrote. One-third of the genes they identified have previously been implicated in other autoimmune diseases, suggesting that the same general processes occur in more than one type of autoimmune disease; two of the genes were also involved in the metabolism of vitamin D, supporting the existence of a link between genetic and environmental risk factors. “Immunologically relevant genes are significantly overrepresented among those mapping close to the identified loci and particularly implicate T-helper-cell differentiation in the pathogenesis of MS,” the investigators concluded.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Botox (onabotulinumtoxinA) for injection for the treatment of urinary incontinence caused by detrusor overactivity in adults with neurologic conditions, including multiple sclerosis (MS) and spinal cord injury. The FDA’s approval was based on two phase III clinical trials in which onabotulinumtoxinA was administered to 691 patients with MS or spinal cord injury and urinary incontinence; when the drug was injected directly into the bladder muscle, episodes of urinary incontinence were significantly reduced. Researchers at Allergan, Inc (Irvine, California) believe the drug will benefit people who cannot tolerate an oral anticholinergic medication.
Patients with Parkinson’s disease who visit a neurologist are less likely to be placed in a nursing home, have a lower risk of hip fracture, and have a lower likelihood of death than those who do not receive care from a neurologist, according to a study published online in the August 10 online Neurology. Only 58% of patients visited a neurologist, and race and sex were significant demographic predictors for receiving treatment. “Women and minorities with Parkinson’s disease obtain specialist care less often than white men,” the researchers stated. “Neurologist care of patients with Parkinson’s disease may be associated with improved selected clinical outcomes and greater survival.”
A survey of graduating neurology residents reveals that 94% feel comfortable using t-PA, compared with 73% in a survey from 2000. The results of the survey were published online in the August 4 Stroke. The researchers sent a 12-item survey to neurology residents about their experience and confidence with assessment of patients with acute stroke and treatment with t-PA. Of 491 residents, 281 (58%) responded, with 95% reporting that they had personally administered t-PA and 98% reporting that they had been involved in post–t-PA care. “Neurology residents’ experience and comfort treating acute ischemic stroke with t-PA increased significantly between 2000 and 2010,” the authors concluded, “as did resident exposure to stroke teams and formal training in the NIH Stroke Scale.”
Hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and obesity during midlife are associated with an increased rate of progression of vascular brain injury, hippocampal atrophy, and decline in executive function later in life, researchers reported in the August 2 Neurology. “Our aim was to test the association of vascular risk factor exposure in midlife with progression of MRI markers of brain aging and measures of cognitive decline,” the investigators wrote. More than 1,300 people without dementia (mean age, 54) were enrolled in the study. After ten years, the researchers recorded changes in participants’ regional and total brain volume, memory recall, and performance on executive functioning tests. Hypertension and obesity in midlife were most greatly associated with diminished executive function; diabetes and smoking were associated with a more rapid increase in atrophy and decrease in brain volume. “Longitudinal changes in brain structure were significantly correlated with decline in memory and executive function,” the authors concluded.
Statins may lower the risk for future stroke in young adults who have already had an ischemic stroke, according to research published in the August 2 Neurology. Researchers investigated the effects of these cholesterol-lowering drugs in 215 patients (mean age, 39.1) who had an ischemic stroke of unknown etiology and categorized them into three groups based on statin use (never used, continuous use, or discontinuous use). “Seventy-two patients (33%) used a statin at some time during follow-up,” the researchers reported. “Twenty-nine (20%) events occurred among the 143 patients never on a statin, none among the 36 with continuous statin, and 4 (1%) among the 36 with discontinuous statin.” The risk of a second event was 77% lower for patients who had used a statin after first stroke.
Researchers believe they have found a better approach to diagnosing temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) using 7-Tesla MRI, according to a study in the July 11 online Radiology. The investigators performed 7-Tesla MRI on eight patients with TLE and 11 healthy controls. “All eight patients with TLE had hippocampal abnormalities on the epileptogenic side,” the researchers stated. “Hippocampal malrotation was observed in three patients with TLE and four control subjects.” Subsequent subregional analysis revealed that six patients with TLE had selective lateral Ammon horn atrophy, and one patient had diffuse Ammon horn and dentate gyrus atrophy. The authors concluded: “Ultrahigh-field-strength MRI permitted detection of selectively greater Ammon horn atrophy in patients with TLE and hippocampal sclerosis.”
Investigators have developed a simple test to identify people with asymptomatic carotid stenosis who have an increased risk of stroke, as reported in the August 17 online Neurology. “Two potential markers of high risk are echolucent plaque morphology on carotid ultrasound and embolic signals in the ipsilateral middle cerebral artery on transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD),” the authors wrote. To explore the predictive value of a composite score based on these two measures, the investigators recruited 435 participants with asymptomatic carotid stenosis and collected baseline ultrasound images and TCD data. “Plaque morphology assessed using a simple, and clinically applicable, visual rating scale predicts ipsilateral stroke risk in asymptomatic carotid stenosis,” the authors wrote. They also noted that the combination of both markers allows a greater prediction than either measure alone.
Researchers have identified a possible common cause of several forms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), according to a study published in the August 21 online Nature. Although some genetic mutations have been shown to cause certain forms of the disease, the causes of certain types of familial ALS and of the vast majority of sporadic ALS had been unknown. “Here, we show that mutations in the UBQLN2, which encodes the ubiquitin-like protein ubiquilin 2, cause dominantly inherited, chromosome-X-linked ALS, and ALS/dementia,” the investigators reported. They also performed functional analysis that showed that these mutations lead to impairment in protein degradation. “Therefore, our findings link abnormalities in ubiquilin 2 to defects in the protein degradation pathway, abnormal protein aggregation, and neurodegeneration, indicating a common pathogenic mechanism that can be exploited for therapeutic intervention,” the authors concluded.
Using computational approaches and drug and genomic information, scientists can predict new uses for existing medicines, according to two studies published online in the August 17 Science Translational Medicine. The practice, known as drug repositioning, was investigated in a study supported by the NIH. The researchers used a computer program that searched through possible drug-disease combinations (from a set of 164 established drug compounds and 100 diseases) to identify drug and disease combinations whose gene expression patterns essentially canceled each other out. In one specific case, topiramate, an anticonvulsant for the treatment of epilepsy, was found to be a potential therapeutic option for inflammatory bowel disease. “The application of established drug compounds to new therapeutic indications … offers several advantages over traditional drug development, including reduced development costs and shorter paths to approval,” the authors wrote. “This computational method provides a systematic approach for repositioning established drugs to treat a wide range of human diseases.”
Women with depression may have an increased risk of subsequent stroke, according to the results of a study published in the August 11 Stroke. A group of researchers followed-up more than 80,000 women (age range, 54 to 79) without a history of stroke from the Nurses’ Health Study to determine if depression was associated with stroke. Depressive symptoms were assessed at multiple time points, and antidepressant medication use and physician-diagnosed depression were recorded biennially. “During six years of follow-up, 1,033 incident strokes were documented,” the authors reported. “For each cycle, participants who reported current depression had an increased risk of stroke (hazard ratio, 1.41), whereas individuals who only had a history of depression were at nonsignificantly elevated risk (hazard ratio, 1.23), compared with women who never reported a diagnosis of depression or antidepressant medication use.”
According to a study published in the August 11 online JAMA, women with sleep-disordered breathing were more likely to develop dementia or cognitive impairment, compared with women without the disorder. “Sleep-disordered breathing (characterized by recurrent arousals from sleep and intermittent hypoxemia) is common among older adults,” the authors wrote. “However, it remains unclear whether sleep-disordered breathing precedes cognitive impairment in older adults.” To investigate this association and its potential mechanisms, the researchers conducted a prospective sleep and cognition study of 298 women without dementia who underwent polysomnography. “Compared with the 193 women without sleep-disordered breathing, the 105 women (35.2%) with sleep-disordered breathing were more likely to develop mild cognitive impairment or dementia (31.1% versus 44.8%),” they reported. “Measures of sleep fragmentation (arousal index and wake after sleep onset) or sleep duration (total sleep time) were not associated with risk of cognitive impairment.”
Older patients (ages 80 to 91) with Alzheimer’s disease experience less severe cognitive or brain changes than younger patients (ages 60 to 75) with the disease, according to a study published in the August 10 online Neurology. Researchers compared hippocampal volume and cortical gray matter thickness of 105 patients with Alzheimer’s disease and 125 healthy controls to determine if brain morphometric and cognitive profiles differed according to age. “Several cognitive domains (executive function, immediate memory, and attention/processing speed) were less abnormal in the very old with Alzheimer’s disease than in the young old with Alzheimer’s disease,” the investigators wrote. “Similarly, the very old with Alzheimer’s disease showed less severe cortical thinning than the young old with Alzheimer’s disease.” The authors noted that mild cases of Alzheimer’s disease in older people might go undetected due to these age-related differences in cognitive and morphometric changes.
Researchers have found new genetic variants associated with multiple sclerosis (MS), as reported in the August 10 Nature. “In a collaborative genome-wide association study involving 9,772 cases of European descent … we have replicated almost all of the previously suggested associations and identified at least a further 29 novel susceptibility loci,” the authors wrote. One-third of the genes they identified have previously been implicated in other autoimmune diseases, suggesting that the same general processes occur in more than one type of autoimmune disease; two of the genes were also involved in the metabolism of vitamin D, supporting the existence of a link between genetic and environmental risk factors. “Immunologically relevant genes are significantly overrepresented among those mapping close to the identified loci and particularly implicate T-helper-cell differentiation in the pathogenesis of MS,” the investigators concluded.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Botox (onabotulinumtoxinA) for injection for the treatment of urinary incontinence caused by detrusor overactivity in adults with neurologic conditions, including multiple sclerosis (MS) and spinal cord injury. The FDA’s approval was based on two phase III clinical trials in which onabotulinumtoxinA was administered to 691 patients with MS or spinal cord injury and urinary incontinence; when the drug was injected directly into the bladder muscle, episodes of urinary incontinence were significantly reduced. Researchers at Allergan, Inc (Irvine, California) believe the drug will benefit people who cannot tolerate an oral anticholinergic medication.
Patients with Parkinson’s disease who visit a neurologist are less likely to be placed in a nursing home, have a lower risk of hip fracture, and have a lower likelihood of death than those who do not receive care from a neurologist, according to a study published online in the August 10 online Neurology. Only 58% of patients visited a neurologist, and race and sex were significant demographic predictors for receiving treatment. “Women and minorities with Parkinson’s disease obtain specialist care less often than white men,” the researchers stated. “Neurologist care of patients with Parkinson’s disease may be associated with improved selected clinical outcomes and greater survival.”
A survey of graduating neurology residents reveals that 94% feel comfortable using t-PA, compared with 73% in a survey from 2000. The results of the survey were published online in the August 4 Stroke. The researchers sent a 12-item survey to neurology residents about their experience and confidence with assessment of patients with acute stroke and treatment with t-PA. Of 491 residents, 281 (58%) responded, with 95% reporting that they had personally administered t-PA and 98% reporting that they had been involved in post–t-PA care. “Neurology residents’ experience and comfort treating acute ischemic stroke with t-PA increased significantly between 2000 and 2010,” the authors concluded, “as did resident exposure to stroke teams and formal training in the NIH Stroke Scale.”
Hypertension, diabetes, smoking, and obesity during midlife are associated with an increased rate of progression of vascular brain injury, hippocampal atrophy, and decline in executive function later in life, researchers reported in the August 2 Neurology. “Our aim was to test the association of vascular risk factor exposure in midlife with progression of MRI markers of brain aging and measures of cognitive decline,” the investigators wrote. More than 1,300 people without dementia (mean age, 54) were enrolled in the study. After ten years, the researchers recorded changes in participants’ regional and total brain volume, memory recall, and performance on executive functioning tests. Hypertension and obesity in midlife were most greatly associated with diminished executive function; diabetes and smoking were associated with a more rapid increase in atrophy and decrease in brain volume. “Longitudinal changes in brain structure were significantly correlated with decline in memory and executive function,” the authors concluded.
Statins may lower the risk for future stroke in young adults who have already had an ischemic stroke, according to research published in the August 2 Neurology. Researchers investigated the effects of these cholesterol-lowering drugs in 215 patients (mean age, 39.1) who had an ischemic stroke of unknown etiology and categorized them into three groups based on statin use (never used, continuous use, or discontinuous use). “Seventy-two patients (33%) used a statin at some time during follow-up,” the researchers reported. “Twenty-nine (20%) events occurred among the 143 patients never on a statin, none among the 36 with continuous statin, and 4 (1%) among the 36 with discontinuous statin.” The risk of a second event was 77% lower for patients who had used a statin after first stroke.
Researchers believe they have found a better approach to diagnosing temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) using 7-Tesla MRI, according to a study in the July 11 online Radiology. The investigators performed 7-Tesla MRI on eight patients with TLE and 11 healthy controls. “All eight patients with TLE had hippocampal abnormalities on the epileptogenic side,” the researchers stated. “Hippocampal malrotation was observed in three patients with TLE and four control subjects.” Subsequent subregional analysis revealed that six patients with TLE had selective lateral Ammon horn atrophy, and one patient had diffuse Ammon horn and dentate gyrus atrophy. The authors concluded: “Ultrahigh-field-strength MRI permitted detection of selectively greater Ammon horn atrophy in patients with TLE and hippocampal sclerosis.”
News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information
Vascular conditions, including atherosclerosis, may play an important role in the development of cognitive impairment and dementia, according to a report published online in the July 21 Stroke. The authors used previously published guidelines and literature, as well as personal experience, to summarize existing evidence, indicate gaps in current knowledge, and formulate recommendations regarding vascular contributions to cognitive decline late in life. Observed vascular risk factors included atrial fibrillation, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hypercholesterolemia, all of which, the researchers noted, were also risk factors for stroke and Alzheimer’s disease. “The neuropathology of cognitive impairment later in life is often a mixture of Alzheimer’s disease and microvascular brain damage,” the authors wrote. “Detection and control of the traditional risk factors for stroke and cardiovascular disease may be effective in the prevention of vascular cognitive impairment, even in older people.”
Women with epilepsy experience greater seizure frequency during anovulatory cycles than during cycles when ovulation occurs, according to results of a study published July 14 online ahead of print in Epilepsia. Almost 300 women with epilepsy were enrolled in the study; 92 had completed both cycles during the study period. Their average daily seizure frequency, seizure type, and progesterone/estradiol serum level ratios were recorded. “Average daily seizure frequency was 29.5% greater for secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizures during anovulatory than during ovulatory cycles,” the researchers wrote. Frequency did not differ significantly for complex or simple partial seizures, or for all seizure types combined. “Because the proportional increases in secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizure frequency during anovulatory cycles correlate with the proportional increases in estradiol/progesterone serum level ratios, these findings support a possible role for reproductive steroids in [seizure] occurrence.”
Researchers have identified a new genetic risk factor for restless legs syndrome (RLS), as reported in the July 14 PLoS Genetics. The authors conducted a genome-wide association study of 922 patients with RLS, and compared the results with 1,526 controls. The researchers included 301,406 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the study, followed by a replication of 76 candidate SNPs in 3,935 patients and 5,754 controls. “We identified six RLS susceptibility loci of genome-wide significance, two of them novel: an intergenic region on chromosome 2p14 (rs6747972) and a locus on 16q12.1 (rs3104767) in a linkage disequilibrium block of 40 kb containing the 5´-end of TOX3 and the adjacent noncoding RNA BC034767,” the investigators reported. They concluded, “The physiologic role of TOX3 and BC034767 in the CNS and a possible involvement of these two genes in RLS pathogenesis remain to be established.”
Breastfeeding does not significantly provide protection against postpartum relapses in women with multiple sclerosis (MS), a finding that contradicts results from previous studies, researchers reported in the July 12 Neurology. The investigators prospectively followed up pregnancies in 298 women with MS and gathered data on breastfeeding; they monitored relapse rates for up to one year after delivery. “The time-dependent profile of the relapse rate before, during, and after pregnancy did not differ between patients who breastfed and patients who did not,” the authors reported. The only significant predictors of postpartum relapses were relapses before and during pregnancy. “Therefore, the reported association between breastfeeding and a lower risk of postpartum relapses may simply reflect different patient behavior, biased by the disease activity,” the investigators concluded.
Low bone density and osteoporosis commonly appear in the early stages of multiple sclerosis (MS), according to a study published in the July 12 Neurology. “If vitamin D exerts a major effect on MS risk,” the investigators hypothesized, “skeletal consequences of hypovitaminosis D could be apparent shortly after the onset of MS.” To test their hypothesis, the researchers measured the bone mineral density of 99 patients in the early stages of the disease with no or minor disability; these results were compared with the densities of 159 healthy controls. Half of the patients had either osteopenia or osteoporosis, compared with 37.1% of the controls. “[This finding is] compatible with shared etiologic or pathogenic factors in MS and osteoporosis, and calls for an active approach to optimize bone health in early stages of MS,” the authors concluded.
According to a study published in the July 12 online BMJ, there is no significant link between adjuvanted vaccines used during the 2009 swine flu pandemic and Guillain-Barré syndrome. The investigators performed a case-control study in five European countries of 104 patients with the syndrome and age-, sex-, and location-matched controls. The initial, unadjusted pooled risk estimate for all countries was 2.8, and case recruitment and vaccine coverage varied considerably between countries. “After adjustment for influenza-like illness/upper respiratory tract infection and seasonal influenza vaccination, receipt of pandemic influenza vaccine was not associated with an increased risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome,” the investigators reported. They did note, however, “the upper limit does not exclude a potential increase in risk up to 2.7-fold or three excess cases per one million vaccinated people.”
A team of researchers has found a genetic determinant of late-onset Parkinson’s disease, according to a study published in the July 9 issue of American Journal of Human Genetics. “To identify rare causal variants in late-onset Parkinson’s disease, we investigated an Austrian family with 16 affected individuals by exome sequencing,” the investigators explained. “We found a missense mutation, c.1858G>A, in the VPS35 gene in all seven affected family members who are alive.” Screening the entire VPS35 coding sequence in additional Parkinson’s disease cases and controls revealed six other missense variants; three were only present in patients, two were only present in controls, and one was present in both groups. The investigators also noted, “VPS35 is a component of the retromer complex and mediates retrograde transport between endosomes and the trans-Golgi network, and it has recently been found to be involved in Alzheimer’s disease.”
Researchers have found that African-American patients with ischemic stroke are significantly less likely to be treated with IV t-PA, due to delayed presentation and stroke severity, according to a study published in the June 30 online Stroke. The investigators performed a systematic chart review on patients admitted to seven Washington, DC–area hospitals; of 1,044 patients with ischemic stroke, 74% were black and 5% received t-PA. African-American patients were one-third less likely than white patients to receive IV t-PA, were less likely to present at the hospital within three hours of symptom onset, and were less likely to be eligible for t-PA treatment. African-American patients also had a greater rate of contraindications to t-PA treatment, including hypertension, recent stroke, or use of blood thinners.
People with a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI) are more likely to develop long-term neurodegeneration than those who have never experienced a brain injury, according to research appearing in the June 29 online Brain Pathology. Investigators examined postmortem brains from 39 survivors of a single TBI and 47 brains of uninjured, age-matched controls using immunochemistry and thioflavin-S staining. “Neurofibrillary tangles were exceptionally rare in young, uninjured controls, yet were abundant and widely distributed in approximately one-third of TBI cases,” the researchers reported. In addition, patients with TBI had a greater density of amyloid-beta plaques than controls. “These data demonstrate widespread neurofibrillary tangles and amyloid-beta plaque pathologies are present in a proportion of patients following a single TBI, suggesting that some individuals who experience a single TBI may develop long-term neuropathological changes akin to those found in neurodegenerative disease,” the authors concluded.
A group of researchers presented a new set of practice guidelines regarding genetic counseling, as reported in the June Genetics in Medicine. The guidelines, developed through a joint effort by the American College of Medical Genetics and the National Society of Genetic Counselors, seek to provide medical professionals with guidance in the complex area of genetic testing. “Despite its limited utility, patients express concern over their risk and, in some instances, request testing,” the authors wrote. “This practice guideline provides clinicians with a framework for assessing their patients’ genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease, identifying which individuals may benefit from genetic testing, and providing the key elements of genetic counseling for Alzheimer’s disease,” they concluded.
Regions important for cognitive and motor control are smaller in the brains of children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) than in typically developing children, researchers reported in the June 9 online Clinical Neuropsychologist. To understand the neurobiologic development of ADHD, the investigators examined high-resolution anatomic images of 13 children with ADHD and 13 controls (ages 4 to 5). “Children with ADHD showed significantly reduced caudate volumes bilaterally; in contrast there were no significant group differences in cortical volume or thickness in this range,” the authors observed. Left caudate volume was a significant predictor of hyperactive and impulsive symptom severity, but not inattention. “Anomalous basal ganglia, particularly caudate, development appears to play an important role among children presenting with early onset symptoms of ADHD,” the researchers concluded.
A diet low in saturated fat and simple carbohydrates may modulate the risk of developing dementia that precedes Alzheimer’s disease, researchers reported in the June Archives of Neurology. To compare the effects of different diets on insulin and lipid metabolism, CSF markers of Alzheimer’s disease, and cognition, the investigators randomized 20 healthy adults and 29 adults with amnestic mild cognitive impairment to either a high- or low-fat and glycemic index diet. In the cognitively impaired group, the “low” diet increased CSF amyloid-beta 42 concentrations; the opposite was true for healthy patients on this diet. For both groups, the “low” diet improved visual memory. “Diet may be a powerful environmental factor that modulates Alzheimer’s disease risk through its effects on CNS concentrations of amyloid-beta 42, lipoproteins, oxidative stress, and insulin,” the investigators concluded.
A study in the June Headache found that prophylactic medications and behavioral interventions for migraine are cost-competitive and cost-efficient options during the early phases of treatment. Researchers distributed surveys to physicians and behavioral specialists to gather data about costs of prototypical regimens for preventive pharmacologic treatment, clinic-based behavioral treatment, minimal contact behavioral treatment, and group behavioral treatment. During the initial months of treatment, pharmacologic treatment with inexpensive medications was the least costly option (
Vascular conditions, including atherosclerosis, may play an important role in the development of cognitive impairment and dementia, according to a report published online in the July 21 Stroke. The authors used previously published guidelines and literature, as well as personal experience, to summarize existing evidence, indicate gaps in current knowledge, and formulate recommendations regarding vascular contributions to cognitive decline late in life. Observed vascular risk factors included atrial fibrillation, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hypercholesterolemia, all of which, the researchers noted, were also risk factors for stroke and Alzheimer’s disease. “The neuropathology of cognitive impairment later in life is often a mixture of Alzheimer’s disease and microvascular brain damage,” the authors wrote. “Detection and control of the traditional risk factors for stroke and cardiovascular disease may be effective in the prevention of vascular cognitive impairment, even in older people.”
Women with epilepsy experience greater seizure frequency during anovulatory cycles than during cycles when ovulation occurs, according to results of a study published July 14 online ahead of print in Epilepsia. Almost 300 women with epilepsy were enrolled in the study; 92 had completed both cycles during the study period. Their average daily seizure frequency, seizure type, and progesterone/estradiol serum level ratios were recorded. “Average daily seizure frequency was 29.5% greater for secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizures during anovulatory than during ovulatory cycles,” the researchers wrote. Frequency did not differ significantly for complex or simple partial seizures, or for all seizure types combined. “Because the proportional increases in secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizure frequency during anovulatory cycles correlate with the proportional increases in estradiol/progesterone serum level ratios, these findings support a possible role for reproductive steroids in [seizure] occurrence.”
Researchers have identified a new genetic risk factor for restless legs syndrome (RLS), as reported in the July 14 PLoS Genetics. The authors conducted a genome-wide association study of 922 patients with RLS, and compared the results with 1,526 controls. The researchers included 301,406 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the study, followed by a replication of 76 candidate SNPs in 3,935 patients and 5,754 controls. “We identified six RLS susceptibility loci of genome-wide significance, two of them novel: an intergenic region on chromosome 2p14 (rs6747972) and a locus on 16q12.1 (rs3104767) in a linkage disequilibrium block of 40 kb containing the 5´-end of TOX3 and the adjacent noncoding RNA BC034767,” the investigators reported. They concluded, “The physiologic role of TOX3 and BC034767 in the CNS and a possible involvement of these two genes in RLS pathogenesis remain to be established.”
Breastfeeding does not significantly provide protection against postpartum relapses in women with multiple sclerosis (MS), a finding that contradicts results from previous studies, researchers reported in the July 12 Neurology. The investigators prospectively followed up pregnancies in 298 women with MS and gathered data on breastfeeding; they monitored relapse rates for up to one year after delivery. “The time-dependent profile of the relapse rate before, during, and after pregnancy did not differ between patients who breastfed and patients who did not,” the authors reported. The only significant predictors of postpartum relapses were relapses before and during pregnancy. “Therefore, the reported association between breastfeeding and a lower risk of postpartum relapses may simply reflect different patient behavior, biased by the disease activity,” the investigators concluded.
Low bone density and osteoporosis commonly appear in the early stages of multiple sclerosis (MS), according to a study published in the July 12 Neurology. “If vitamin D exerts a major effect on MS risk,” the investigators hypothesized, “skeletal consequences of hypovitaminosis D could be apparent shortly after the onset of MS.” To test their hypothesis, the researchers measured the bone mineral density of 99 patients in the early stages of the disease with no or minor disability; these results were compared with the densities of 159 healthy controls. Half of the patients had either osteopenia or osteoporosis, compared with 37.1% of the controls. “[This finding is] compatible with shared etiologic or pathogenic factors in MS and osteoporosis, and calls for an active approach to optimize bone health in early stages of MS,” the authors concluded.
According to a study published in the July 12 online BMJ, there is no significant link between adjuvanted vaccines used during the 2009 swine flu pandemic and Guillain-Barré syndrome. The investigators performed a case-control study in five European countries of 104 patients with the syndrome and age-, sex-, and location-matched controls. The initial, unadjusted pooled risk estimate for all countries was 2.8, and case recruitment and vaccine coverage varied considerably between countries. “After adjustment for influenza-like illness/upper respiratory tract infection and seasonal influenza vaccination, receipt of pandemic influenza vaccine was not associated with an increased risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome,” the investigators reported. They did note, however, “the upper limit does not exclude a potential increase in risk up to 2.7-fold or three excess cases per one million vaccinated people.”
A team of researchers has found a genetic determinant of late-onset Parkinson’s disease, according to a study published in the July 9 issue of American Journal of Human Genetics. “To identify rare causal variants in late-onset Parkinson’s disease, we investigated an Austrian family with 16 affected individuals by exome sequencing,” the investigators explained. “We found a missense mutation, c.1858G>A, in the VPS35 gene in all seven affected family members who are alive.” Screening the entire VPS35 coding sequence in additional Parkinson’s disease cases and controls revealed six other missense variants; three were only present in patients, two were only present in controls, and one was present in both groups. The investigators also noted, “VPS35 is a component of the retromer complex and mediates retrograde transport between endosomes and the trans-Golgi network, and it has recently been found to be involved in Alzheimer’s disease.”
Researchers have found that African-American patients with ischemic stroke are significantly less likely to be treated with IV t-PA, due to delayed presentation and stroke severity, according to a study published in the June 30 online Stroke. The investigators performed a systematic chart review on patients admitted to seven Washington, DC–area hospitals; of 1,044 patients with ischemic stroke, 74% were black and 5% received t-PA. African-American patients were one-third less likely than white patients to receive IV t-PA, were less likely to present at the hospital within three hours of symptom onset, and were less likely to be eligible for t-PA treatment. African-American patients also had a greater rate of contraindications to t-PA treatment, including hypertension, recent stroke, or use of blood thinners.
People with a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI) are more likely to develop long-term neurodegeneration than those who have never experienced a brain injury, according to research appearing in the June 29 online Brain Pathology. Investigators examined postmortem brains from 39 survivors of a single TBI and 47 brains of uninjured, age-matched controls using immunochemistry and thioflavin-S staining. “Neurofibrillary tangles were exceptionally rare in young, uninjured controls, yet were abundant and widely distributed in approximately one-third of TBI cases,” the researchers reported. In addition, patients with TBI had a greater density of amyloid-beta plaques than controls. “These data demonstrate widespread neurofibrillary tangles and amyloid-beta plaque pathologies are present in a proportion of patients following a single TBI, suggesting that some individuals who experience a single TBI may develop long-term neuropathological changes akin to those found in neurodegenerative disease,” the authors concluded.
A group of researchers presented a new set of practice guidelines regarding genetic counseling, as reported in the June Genetics in Medicine. The guidelines, developed through a joint effort by the American College of Medical Genetics and the National Society of Genetic Counselors, seek to provide medical professionals with guidance in the complex area of genetic testing. “Despite its limited utility, patients express concern over their risk and, in some instances, request testing,” the authors wrote. “This practice guideline provides clinicians with a framework for assessing their patients’ genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease, identifying which individuals may benefit from genetic testing, and providing the key elements of genetic counseling for Alzheimer’s disease,” they concluded.
Regions important for cognitive and motor control are smaller in the brains of children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) than in typically developing children, researchers reported in the June 9 online Clinical Neuropsychologist. To understand the neurobiologic development of ADHD, the investigators examined high-resolution anatomic images of 13 children with ADHD and 13 controls (ages 4 to 5). “Children with ADHD showed significantly reduced caudate volumes bilaterally; in contrast there were no significant group differences in cortical volume or thickness in this range,” the authors observed. Left caudate volume was a significant predictor of hyperactive and impulsive symptom severity, but not inattention. “Anomalous basal ganglia, particularly caudate, development appears to play an important role among children presenting with early onset symptoms of ADHD,” the researchers concluded.
A diet low in saturated fat and simple carbohydrates may modulate the risk of developing dementia that precedes Alzheimer’s disease, researchers reported in the June Archives of Neurology. To compare the effects of different diets on insulin and lipid metabolism, CSF markers of Alzheimer’s disease, and cognition, the investigators randomized 20 healthy adults and 29 adults with amnestic mild cognitive impairment to either a high- or low-fat and glycemic index diet. In the cognitively impaired group, the “low” diet increased CSF amyloid-beta 42 concentrations; the opposite was true for healthy patients on this diet. For both groups, the “low” diet improved visual memory. “Diet may be a powerful environmental factor that modulates Alzheimer’s disease risk through its effects on CNS concentrations of amyloid-beta 42, lipoproteins, oxidative stress, and insulin,” the investigators concluded.
A study in the June Headache found that prophylactic medications and behavioral interventions for migraine are cost-competitive and cost-efficient options during the early phases of treatment. Researchers distributed surveys to physicians and behavioral specialists to gather data about costs of prototypical regimens for preventive pharmacologic treatment, clinic-based behavioral treatment, minimal contact behavioral treatment, and group behavioral treatment. During the initial months of treatment, pharmacologic treatment with inexpensive medications was the least costly option (
Vascular conditions, including atherosclerosis, may play an important role in the development of cognitive impairment and dementia, according to a report published online in the July 21 Stroke. The authors used previously published guidelines and literature, as well as personal experience, to summarize existing evidence, indicate gaps in current knowledge, and formulate recommendations regarding vascular contributions to cognitive decline late in life. Observed vascular risk factors included atrial fibrillation, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hypercholesterolemia, all of which, the researchers noted, were also risk factors for stroke and Alzheimer’s disease. “The neuropathology of cognitive impairment later in life is often a mixture of Alzheimer’s disease and microvascular brain damage,” the authors wrote. “Detection and control of the traditional risk factors for stroke and cardiovascular disease may be effective in the prevention of vascular cognitive impairment, even in older people.”
Women with epilepsy experience greater seizure frequency during anovulatory cycles than during cycles when ovulation occurs, according to results of a study published July 14 online ahead of print in Epilepsia. Almost 300 women with epilepsy were enrolled in the study; 92 had completed both cycles during the study period. Their average daily seizure frequency, seizure type, and progesterone/estradiol serum level ratios were recorded. “Average daily seizure frequency was 29.5% greater for secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizures during anovulatory than during ovulatory cycles,” the researchers wrote. Frequency did not differ significantly for complex or simple partial seizures, or for all seizure types combined. “Because the proportional increases in secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizure frequency during anovulatory cycles correlate with the proportional increases in estradiol/progesterone serum level ratios, these findings support a possible role for reproductive steroids in [seizure] occurrence.”
Researchers have identified a new genetic risk factor for restless legs syndrome (RLS), as reported in the July 14 PLoS Genetics. The authors conducted a genome-wide association study of 922 patients with RLS, and compared the results with 1,526 controls. The researchers included 301,406 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the study, followed by a replication of 76 candidate SNPs in 3,935 patients and 5,754 controls. “We identified six RLS susceptibility loci of genome-wide significance, two of them novel: an intergenic region on chromosome 2p14 (rs6747972) and a locus on 16q12.1 (rs3104767) in a linkage disequilibrium block of 40 kb containing the 5´-end of TOX3 and the adjacent noncoding RNA BC034767,” the investigators reported. They concluded, “The physiologic role of TOX3 and BC034767 in the CNS and a possible involvement of these two genes in RLS pathogenesis remain to be established.”
Breastfeeding does not significantly provide protection against postpartum relapses in women with multiple sclerosis (MS), a finding that contradicts results from previous studies, researchers reported in the July 12 Neurology. The investigators prospectively followed up pregnancies in 298 women with MS and gathered data on breastfeeding; they monitored relapse rates for up to one year after delivery. “The time-dependent profile of the relapse rate before, during, and after pregnancy did not differ between patients who breastfed and patients who did not,” the authors reported. The only significant predictors of postpartum relapses were relapses before and during pregnancy. “Therefore, the reported association between breastfeeding and a lower risk of postpartum relapses may simply reflect different patient behavior, biased by the disease activity,” the investigators concluded.
Low bone density and osteoporosis commonly appear in the early stages of multiple sclerosis (MS), according to a study published in the July 12 Neurology. “If vitamin D exerts a major effect on MS risk,” the investigators hypothesized, “skeletal consequences of hypovitaminosis D could be apparent shortly after the onset of MS.” To test their hypothesis, the researchers measured the bone mineral density of 99 patients in the early stages of the disease with no or minor disability; these results were compared with the densities of 159 healthy controls. Half of the patients had either osteopenia or osteoporosis, compared with 37.1% of the controls. “[This finding is] compatible with shared etiologic or pathogenic factors in MS and osteoporosis, and calls for an active approach to optimize bone health in early stages of MS,” the authors concluded.
According to a study published in the July 12 online BMJ, there is no significant link between adjuvanted vaccines used during the 2009 swine flu pandemic and Guillain-Barré syndrome. The investigators performed a case-control study in five European countries of 104 patients with the syndrome and age-, sex-, and location-matched controls. The initial, unadjusted pooled risk estimate for all countries was 2.8, and case recruitment and vaccine coverage varied considerably between countries. “After adjustment for influenza-like illness/upper respiratory tract infection and seasonal influenza vaccination, receipt of pandemic influenza vaccine was not associated with an increased risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome,” the investigators reported. They did note, however, “the upper limit does not exclude a potential increase in risk up to 2.7-fold or three excess cases per one million vaccinated people.”
A team of researchers has found a genetic determinant of late-onset Parkinson’s disease, according to a study published in the July 9 issue of American Journal of Human Genetics. “To identify rare causal variants in late-onset Parkinson’s disease, we investigated an Austrian family with 16 affected individuals by exome sequencing,” the investigators explained. “We found a missense mutation, c.1858G>A, in the VPS35 gene in all seven affected family members who are alive.” Screening the entire VPS35 coding sequence in additional Parkinson’s disease cases and controls revealed six other missense variants; three were only present in patients, two were only present in controls, and one was present in both groups. The investigators also noted, “VPS35 is a component of the retromer complex and mediates retrograde transport between endosomes and the trans-Golgi network, and it has recently been found to be involved in Alzheimer’s disease.”
Researchers have found that African-American patients with ischemic stroke are significantly less likely to be treated with IV t-PA, due to delayed presentation and stroke severity, according to a study published in the June 30 online Stroke. The investigators performed a systematic chart review on patients admitted to seven Washington, DC–area hospitals; of 1,044 patients with ischemic stroke, 74% were black and 5% received t-PA. African-American patients were one-third less likely than white patients to receive IV t-PA, were less likely to present at the hospital within three hours of symptom onset, and were less likely to be eligible for t-PA treatment. African-American patients also had a greater rate of contraindications to t-PA treatment, including hypertension, recent stroke, or use of blood thinners.
People with a history of traumatic brain injury (TBI) are more likely to develop long-term neurodegeneration than those who have never experienced a brain injury, according to research appearing in the June 29 online Brain Pathology. Investigators examined postmortem brains from 39 survivors of a single TBI and 47 brains of uninjured, age-matched controls using immunochemistry and thioflavin-S staining. “Neurofibrillary tangles were exceptionally rare in young, uninjured controls, yet were abundant and widely distributed in approximately one-third of TBI cases,” the researchers reported. In addition, patients with TBI had a greater density of amyloid-beta plaques than controls. “These data demonstrate widespread neurofibrillary tangles and amyloid-beta plaque pathologies are present in a proportion of patients following a single TBI, suggesting that some individuals who experience a single TBI may develop long-term neuropathological changes akin to those found in neurodegenerative disease,” the authors concluded.
A group of researchers presented a new set of practice guidelines regarding genetic counseling, as reported in the June Genetics in Medicine. The guidelines, developed through a joint effort by the American College of Medical Genetics and the National Society of Genetic Counselors, seek to provide medical professionals with guidance in the complex area of genetic testing. “Despite its limited utility, patients express concern over their risk and, in some instances, request testing,” the authors wrote. “This practice guideline provides clinicians with a framework for assessing their patients’ genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease, identifying which individuals may benefit from genetic testing, and providing the key elements of genetic counseling for Alzheimer’s disease,” they concluded.
Regions important for cognitive and motor control are smaller in the brains of children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) than in typically developing children, researchers reported in the June 9 online Clinical Neuropsychologist. To understand the neurobiologic development of ADHD, the investigators examined high-resolution anatomic images of 13 children with ADHD and 13 controls (ages 4 to 5). “Children with ADHD showed significantly reduced caudate volumes bilaterally; in contrast there were no significant group differences in cortical volume or thickness in this range,” the authors observed. Left caudate volume was a significant predictor of hyperactive and impulsive symptom severity, but not inattention. “Anomalous basal ganglia, particularly caudate, development appears to play an important role among children presenting with early onset symptoms of ADHD,” the researchers concluded.
A diet low in saturated fat and simple carbohydrates may modulate the risk of developing dementia that precedes Alzheimer’s disease, researchers reported in the June Archives of Neurology. To compare the effects of different diets on insulin and lipid metabolism, CSF markers of Alzheimer’s disease, and cognition, the investigators randomized 20 healthy adults and 29 adults with amnestic mild cognitive impairment to either a high- or low-fat and glycemic index diet. In the cognitively impaired group, the “low” diet increased CSF amyloid-beta 42 concentrations; the opposite was true for healthy patients on this diet. For both groups, the “low” diet improved visual memory. “Diet may be a powerful environmental factor that modulates Alzheimer’s disease risk through its effects on CNS concentrations of amyloid-beta 42, lipoproteins, oxidative stress, and insulin,” the investigators concluded.
A study in the June Headache found that prophylactic medications and behavioral interventions for migraine are cost-competitive and cost-efficient options during the early phases of treatment. Researchers distributed surveys to physicians and behavioral specialists to gather data about costs of prototypical regimens for preventive pharmacologic treatment, clinic-based behavioral treatment, minimal contact behavioral treatment, and group behavioral treatment. During the initial months of treatment, pharmacologic treatment with inexpensive medications was the least costly option (
News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information
The release of stress hormones can lead to the production of abnormally phosphorylated tau protein, and eventually to memory loss, researchers reported. “Severity of cognitive deficits in Alzheimer’s disease correlates strongly with levels of hyperphosphorylated forms of the cytoskeletal protein tau,” the authors stated in the May 25 Journal of Neuroscience. “We thus examined whether stress, through the mediation of glucocorticoids, influences tau hyperphosphorylation, a critical and early event in the cascade of processes leading to Alzheimer’s disease pathology.” Results showed that chronic stress and hypersecretion of glucocorticoids induces abnormal hyperphosphorylation of tau in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, suggesting that they have a cumulative impact on the onset and progress of Alzheimer’s disease pathology.
Soluble amyloid proteins in the CSF of patients with mild cognitive impairment may be a potential biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease, according to research in the June 22 online Neurology. The investigators measured the concentrations of amyloid precursor protein, tau protein, and amyloid-beta 1-42 concentrations in the CSF of 58 patients with slight memory problems—21 of whom progressed to Alzheimer’s disease. Analysis of the samples revealed that the group that had progressed to Alzheimer’s disease had significantly higher concentrations of the soluble amyloid precursor proteins than those who reverted to normal and those who developed frontotemporal dementia. “These findings suggest that soluble amyloid precursor protein beta may be clinically useful, and superior to [amyloid-beta 1-42], in the early and differential diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease,” the authors concluded.
Weak synchronization between brain hemispheres may be an early biomarker for autism, according to the results of a study published in the June 23 issue of Neuron. “Autism is often described as a disorder of neuronal synchronization,” the authors wrote. “However, it is unknown how early in development synchronization abnormalities emerge and whether they are related to the development of early autistic behavioral symptoms.” The researchers conducted an imaging study and found that toddlers with autism exhibited significantly weaker interhemispheric synchronization in putative language areas than did toddlers without the condition. In addition, toddlers with a greater strength of synchronization had higher verbal ability and lower autism severity. “Disrupted cortical synchronization, therefore, appears to be a notable characteristic of autism neurophysiology that is evident at very early stages of autism development,” they concluded.
The FDA has approved Potiga (ezogabine) tablets as an adjunctive treatment of partial-onset seizures in adults with epilepsy. It is the first neuronal potassium channel opener developed for the treatment of epilepsy. Although its mechanism of action is not firmly established, it is believed that ezogabine may act as an anticonvulsant by reducing excitability through the stabilization of neuronal potassium channels in an ‘open’ position. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of three controlled clinical studies involving 1,239 patients with epilepsy that investigated the ability of ezogabine to reduce seizure frequency during the double-blind treatment phase. The most common adverse events were dizziness, somnolence, and fatigue; approximately 2% of patients in clinical trials also experienced urinary retention. Researchers at GlaxoSmithKline and Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc believe that ezogabine tablets will benefit patients whose epilepsy is uncontrolled with their current medications.
Prenatal exposure to certain antiepileptic drugs has a higher risk for major congenital malformations, according to results of a study published in the July issue of Lancet Neurology. The researchers monitored pregnant women with epilepsy who were exposed to monotherapy with different doses of carbamazepine, lamotrigine, valproic acid, or phenobarbital. A total of 230 pregnancies associated with major birth defects were observed during the first year after birth; there was also an increase in malformation rates as the dose increased for each drug. The lowest rates of malformation occurred in women who took less than 300 mg per day of lamotrigine or less than 400 mg per day of carbamazepine. All doses of valproic acid and phenobarbital monotherapies had significantly higher risks for birth defects. “The risk of major congenital malformations is influenced not only by type of antiepileptic drug, but also by dose and other variables, which should be taken into account in the management of epilepsy in women of childbearing potential,” the authors concluded.
Peripheral nerve stimulation delivered via an implanted medical device significantly reduces the number of days per month that patients have chronic migraine headache and pain, according to data presented at the 15th Annual International Headache Congress in Berlin. Investigators enrolled 157 patients with migraine to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the device; after 12 weeks, patients who received stimulation reported a 28% decrease in headache days per month. Sixty-seven percent also reported an improvement in their quality of life. “Many migraine patients have exhausted all current treatment options and often are disabled by the pain and frequency of migraine attacks,” the principal investigator stated. “Achieving a reduction in the number of days they suffer from headache and a significant improvement in their quality of life may be even more important than pain reduction alone.”
Researchers have identified three susceptibility loci for common migraine in the general population, according to a study published in the June 12 online Nature Genetics. In a population-based genome-wide analysis that included 5,122 patients with migraine and 18,108 patients without migraine, investigators found seven single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with migraine. Subsequent testing and meta-analysis confirmed that three replicating SNPs (re2651899, rs10166942, and rs11172113) were significantly associated with migraine. “The associations at r2651899 and rs10166942 were specific for migraine compared with nonmigraine headache,” the researchers reported. In addition, none of the three SNP associations was preferential for migraine with aura or without aura; there were also no associations specific for migraine features, suggesting that there is a shared pathophysiology among common types of migraine. “The three new loci identified in the present work provide hypotheses for immediate further exploration,” the authors concluded.
People who have had a herpes zoster attack may be at a higher risk for developing multiple sclerosis (MS) than people who have not had an occurrence of the virus, researchers reported in the June 7 online Journal of Infectious Diseases. “Varicella zoster virus has been proposed to be involved in the pathogenesis of MS,” the investigators wrote. In the study, they followed 315,550 patients with herpes zoster and 946,650 subjects without the virus for one year; they then calculated the one-year MS–free survival rate. “Of 1,262,200 sampled patients, 29 from the study group (.009%) and 24 from the control group (.003%) had MS during the one-year follow-up period,” the authors reported. The odds ratio of developing MS was 3.96 times greater for the study group than for the control group, supporting the notion that occurrence of the disease could be associated with herpes zoster attack.
A study published in the June 7 issue of Neurology found that patients with Parkinson’s disease have a significantly higher risk of having melanoma than do healthy controls. The researchers conducted a meta-analysis of 12 publications on melanoma and Parkinson’s disease; eight of the publications had fewer than 10 cases with both Parkinson’s disease and melanoma. The pooled odds ratio was 2.11 overall, 2.04 for men, and 1.52 for women. Melanoma occurrence was significantly higher after the diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, but not before Parkinson’s disease was diagnosed. After analyzing the data for nonmelanoma skin cancers, the researchers found no significant relationship. “Collective epidemiologic evidence supports an association of Parkinson’s disease with melanoma,” the authors concluded. “Further research is needed to examine the nature and mechanisms of this relationship.”
At-home physical training may be just as effective as locomotor training for improving the ability to walk in patients who have had a stroke, researchers reported in the May 26 New England Journal of Medicine. The investigators randomly assigned 408 participants with stroke to one of three training groups; one group received early locomotor training on a body weight–supported treadmill two months after stroke occurred, one group received the same training six months after stroke, and the third group completed an at-home exercise program guided by a physical therapist two months after stroke. At one year of training, 52% of all participants had increased functional walking ability. The researchers observed no significant differences in improvement between early or late locomotor training and home exercise. “All groups had similar improvements in walking speed, motor recovery, balance, functional status, and quality of life,” the authors noted.
High consumption of olive oil and high plasma oleic acid are associated with lower risk for stroke in older adults, according to the results of a study published in the June 15 online Neurology. To examine this relationship, the researchers looked at 7,625 older adults; in this sample, 148 incident strokes occurred. After adjusting for demographic and dietary variables and stroke risk factors, the investigators found that “compared to those who never used olive oil, those with intensive use had a 41% lower risk of stroke.” In a secondary sample, the researchers investigated the plasma oleic acid levels of 1,245 individuals (27 had incident stroke) and found that participants in the third tertile had a 73% reduction of stroke risk. “These results suggest a protective role for high olive oil consumption on the risk of stroke in older subjects,” the authors concluded.
The release of stress hormones can lead to the production of abnormally phosphorylated tau protein, and eventually to memory loss, researchers reported. “Severity of cognitive deficits in Alzheimer’s disease correlates strongly with levels of hyperphosphorylated forms of the cytoskeletal protein tau,” the authors stated in the May 25 Journal of Neuroscience. “We thus examined whether stress, through the mediation of glucocorticoids, influences tau hyperphosphorylation, a critical and early event in the cascade of processes leading to Alzheimer’s disease pathology.” Results showed that chronic stress and hypersecretion of glucocorticoids induces abnormal hyperphosphorylation of tau in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, suggesting that they have a cumulative impact on the onset and progress of Alzheimer’s disease pathology.
Soluble amyloid proteins in the CSF of patients with mild cognitive impairment may be a potential biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease, according to research in the June 22 online Neurology. The investigators measured the concentrations of amyloid precursor protein, tau protein, and amyloid-beta 1-42 concentrations in the CSF of 58 patients with slight memory problems—21 of whom progressed to Alzheimer’s disease. Analysis of the samples revealed that the group that had progressed to Alzheimer’s disease had significantly higher concentrations of the soluble amyloid precursor proteins than those who reverted to normal and those who developed frontotemporal dementia. “These findings suggest that soluble amyloid precursor protein beta may be clinically useful, and superior to [amyloid-beta 1-42], in the early and differential diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease,” the authors concluded.
Weak synchronization between brain hemispheres may be an early biomarker for autism, according to the results of a study published in the June 23 issue of Neuron. “Autism is often described as a disorder of neuronal synchronization,” the authors wrote. “However, it is unknown how early in development synchronization abnormalities emerge and whether they are related to the development of early autistic behavioral symptoms.” The researchers conducted an imaging study and found that toddlers with autism exhibited significantly weaker interhemispheric synchronization in putative language areas than did toddlers without the condition. In addition, toddlers with a greater strength of synchronization had higher verbal ability and lower autism severity. “Disrupted cortical synchronization, therefore, appears to be a notable characteristic of autism neurophysiology that is evident at very early stages of autism development,” they concluded.
The FDA has approved Potiga (ezogabine) tablets as an adjunctive treatment of partial-onset seizures in adults with epilepsy. It is the first neuronal potassium channel opener developed for the treatment of epilepsy. Although its mechanism of action is not firmly established, it is believed that ezogabine may act as an anticonvulsant by reducing excitability through the stabilization of neuronal potassium channels in an ‘open’ position. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of three controlled clinical studies involving 1,239 patients with epilepsy that investigated the ability of ezogabine to reduce seizure frequency during the double-blind treatment phase. The most common adverse events were dizziness, somnolence, and fatigue; approximately 2% of patients in clinical trials also experienced urinary retention. Researchers at GlaxoSmithKline and Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc believe that ezogabine tablets will benefit patients whose epilepsy is uncontrolled with their current medications.
Prenatal exposure to certain antiepileptic drugs has a higher risk for major congenital malformations, according to results of a study published in the July issue of Lancet Neurology. The researchers monitored pregnant women with epilepsy who were exposed to monotherapy with different doses of carbamazepine, lamotrigine, valproic acid, or phenobarbital. A total of 230 pregnancies associated with major birth defects were observed during the first year after birth; there was also an increase in malformation rates as the dose increased for each drug. The lowest rates of malformation occurred in women who took less than 300 mg per day of lamotrigine or less than 400 mg per day of carbamazepine. All doses of valproic acid and phenobarbital monotherapies had significantly higher risks for birth defects. “The risk of major congenital malformations is influenced not only by type of antiepileptic drug, but also by dose and other variables, which should be taken into account in the management of epilepsy in women of childbearing potential,” the authors concluded.
Peripheral nerve stimulation delivered via an implanted medical device significantly reduces the number of days per month that patients have chronic migraine headache and pain, according to data presented at the 15th Annual International Headache Congress in Berlin. Investigators enrolled 157 patients with migraine to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the device; after 12 weeks, patients who received stimulation reported a 28% decrease in headache days per month. Sixty-seven percent also reported an improvement in their quality of life. “Many migraine patients have exhausted all current treatment options and often are disabled by the pain and frequency of migraine attacks,” the principal investigator stated. “Achieving a reduction in the number of days they suffer from headache and a significant improvement in their quality of life may be even more important than pain reduction alone.”
Researchers have identified three susceptibility loci for common migraine in the general population, according to a study published in the June 12 online Nature Genetics. In a population-based genome-wide analysis that included 5,122 patients with migraine and 18,108 patients without migraine, investigators found seven single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with migraine. Subsequent testing and meta-analysis confirmed that three replicating SNPs (re2651899, rs10166942, and rs11172113) were significantly associated with migraine. “The associations at r2651899 and rs10166942 were specific for migraine compared with nonmigraine headache,” the researchers reported. In addition, none of the three SNP associations was preferential for migraine with aura or without aura; there were also no associations specific for migraine features, suggesting that there is a shared pathophysiology among common types of migraine. “The three new loci identified in the present work provide hypotheses for immediate further exploration,” the authors concluded.
People who have had a herpes zoster attack may be at a higher risk for developing multiple sclerosis (MS) than people who have not had an occurrence of the virus, researchers reported in the June 7 online Journal of Infectious Diseases. “Varicella zoster virus has been proposed to be involved in the pathogenesis of MS,” the investigators wrote. In the study, they followed 315,550 patients with herpes zoster and 946,650 subjects without the virus for one year; they then calculated the one-year MS–free survival rate. “Of 1,262,200 sampled patients, 29 from the study group (.009%) and 24 from the control group (.003%) had MS during the one-year follow-up period,” the authors reported. The odds ratio of developing MS was 3.96 times greater for the study group than for the control group, supporting the notion that occurrence of the disease could be associated with herpes zoster attack.
A study published in the June 7 issue of Neurology found that patients with Parkinson’s disease have a significantly higher risk of having melanoma than do healthy controls. The researchers conducted a meta-analysis of 12 publications on melanoma and Parkinson’s disease; eight of the publications had fewer than 10 cases with both Parkinson’s disease and melanoma. The pooled odds ratio was 2.11 overall, 2.04 for men, and 1.52 for women. Melanoma occurrence was significantly higher after the diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, but not before Parkinson’s disease was diagnosed. After analyzing the data for nonmelanoma skin cancers, the researchers found no significant relationship. “Collective epidemiologic evidence supports an association of Parkinson’s disease with melanoma,” the authors concluded. “Further research is needed to examine the nature and mechanisms of this relationship.”
At-home physical training may be just as effective as locomotor training for improving the ability to walk in patients who have had a stroke, researchers reported in the May 26 New England Journal of Medicine. The investigators randomly assigned 408 participants with stroke to one of three training groups; one group received early locomotor training on a body weight–supported treadmill two months after stroke occurred, one group received the same training six months after stroke, and the third group completed an at-home exercise program guided by a physical therapist two months after stroke. At one year of training, 52% of all participants had increased functional walking ability. The researchers observed no significant differences in improvement between early or late locomotor training and home exercise. “All groups had similar improvements in walking speed, motor recovery, balance, functional status, and quality of life,” the authors noted.
High consumption of olive oil and high plasma oleic acid are associated with lower risk for stroke in older adults, according to the results of a study published in the June 15 online Neurology. To examine this relationship, the researchers looked at 7,625 older adults; in this sample, 148 incident strokes occurred. After adjusting for demographic and dietary variables and stroke risk factors, the investigators found that “compared to those who never used olive oil, those with intensive use had a 41% lower risk of stroke.” In a secondary sample, the researchers investigated the plasma oleic acid levels of 1,245 individuals (27 had incident stroke) and found that participants in the third tertile had a 73% reduction of stroke risk. “These results suggest a protective role for high olive oil consumption on the risk of stroke in older subjects,” the authors concluded.
The release of stress hormones can lead to the production of abnormally phosphorylated tau protein, and eventually to memory loss, researchers reported. “Severity of cognitive deficits in Alzheimer’s disease correlates strongly with levels of hyperphosphorylated forms of the cytoskeletal protein tau,” the authors stated in the May 25 Journal of Neuroscience. “We thus examined whether stress, through the mediation of glucocorticoids, influences tau hyperphosphorylation, a critical and early event in the cascade of processes leading to Alzheimer’s disease pathology.” Results showed that chronic stress and hypersecretion of glucocorticoids induces abnormal hyperphosphorylation of tau in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, suggesting that they have a cumulative impact on the onset and progress of Alzheimer’s disease pathology.
Soluble amyloid proteins in the CSF of patients with mild cognitive impairment may be a potential biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease, according to research in the June 22 online Neurology. The investigators measured the concentrations of amyloid precursor protein, tau protein, and amyloid-beta 1-42 concentrations in the CSF of 58 patients with slight memory problems—21 of whom progressed to Alzheimer’s disease. Analysis of the samples revealed that the group that had progressed to Alzheimer’s disease had significantly higher concentrations of the soluble amyloid precursor proteins than those who reverted to normal and those who developed frontotemporal dementia. “These findings suggest that soluble amyloid precursor protein beta may be clinically useful, and superior to [amyloid-beta 1-42], in the early and differential diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease,” the authors concluded.
Weak synchronization between brain hemispheres may be an early biomarker for autism, according to the results of a study published in the June 23 issue of Neuron. “Autism is often described as a disorder of neuronal synchronization,” the authors wrote. “However, it is unknown how early in development synchronization abnormalities emerge and whether they are related to the development of early autistic behavioral symptoms.” The researchers conducted an imaging study and found that toddlers with autism exhibited significantly weaker interhemispheric synchronization in putative language areas than did toddlers without the condition. In addition, toddlers with a greater strength of synchronization had higher verbal ability and lower autism severity. “Disrupted cortical synchronization, therefore, appears to be a notable characteristic of autism neurophysiology that is evident at very early stages of autism development,” they concluded.
The FDA has approved Potiga (ezogabine) tablets as an adjunctive treatment of partial-onset seizures in adults with epilepsy. It is the first neuronal potassium channel opener developed for the treatment of epilepsy. Although its mechanism of action is not firmly established, it is believed that ezogabine may act as an anticonvulsant by reducing excitability through the stabilization of neuronal potassium channels in an ‘open’ position. The FDA’s approval was based on the results of three controlled clinical studies involving 1,239 patients with epilepsy that investigated the ability of ezogabine to reduce seizure frequency during the double-blind treatment phase. The most common adverse events were dizziness, somnolence, and fatigue; approximately 2% of patients in clinical trials also experienced urinary retention. Researchers at GlaxoSmithKline and Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc believe that ezogabine tablets will benefit patients whose epilepsy is uncontrolled with their current medications.
Prenatal exposure to certain antiepileptic drugs has a higher risk for major congenital malformations, according to results of a study published in the July issue of Lancet Neurology. The researchers monitored pregnant women with epilepsy who were exposed to monotherapy with different doses of carbamazepine, lamotrigine, valproic acid, or phenobarbital. A total of 230 pregnancies associated with major birth defects were observed during the first year after birth; there was also an increase in malformation rates as the dose increased for each drug. The lowest rates of malformation occurred in women who took less than 300 mg per day of lamotrigine or less than 400 mg per day of carbamazepine. All doses of valproic acid and phenobarbital monotherapies had significantly higher risks for birth defects. “The risk of major congenital malformations is influenced not only by type of antiepileptic drug, but also by dose and other variables, which should be taken into account in the management of epilepsy in women of childbearing potential,” the authors concluded.
Peripheral nerve stimulation delivered via an implanted medical device significantly reduces the number of days per month that patients have chronic migraine headache and pain, according to data presented at the 15th Annual International Headache Congress in Berlin. Investigators enrolled 157 patients with migraine to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the device; after 12 weeks, patients who received stimulation reported a 28% decrease in headache days per month. Sixty-seven percent also reported an improvement in their quality of life. “Many migraine patients have exhausted all current treatment options and often are disabled by the pain and frequency of migraine attacks,” the principal investigator stated. “Achieving a reduction in the number of days they suffer from headache and a significant improvement in their quality of life may be even more important than pain reduction alone.”
Researchers have identified three susceptibility loci for common migraine in the general population, according to a study published in the June 12 online Nature Genetics. In a population-based genome-wide analysis that included 5,122 patients with migraine and 18,108 patients without migraine, investigators found seven single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with migraine. Subsequent testing and meta-analysis confirmed that three replicating SNPs (re2651899, rs10166942, and rs11172113) were significantly associated with migraine. “The associations at r2651899 and rs10166942 were specific for migraine compared with nonmigraine headache,” the researchers reported. In addition, none of the three SNP associations was preferential for migraine with aura or without aura; there were also no associations specific for migraine features, suggesting that there is a shared pathophysiology among common types of migraine. “The three new loci identified in the present work provide hypotheses for immediate further exploration,” the authors concluded.
People who have had a herpes zoster attack may be at a higher risk for developing multiple sclerosis (MS) than people who have not had an occurrence of the virus, researchers reported in the June 7 online Journal of Infectious Diseases. “Varicella zoster virus has been proposed to be involved in the pathogenesis of MS,” the investigators wrote. In the study, they followed 315,550 patients with herpes zoster and 946,650 subjects without the virus for one year; they then calculated the one-year MS–free survival rate. “Of 1,262,200 sampled patients, 29 from the study group (.009%) and 24 from the control group (.003%) had MS during the one-year follow-up period,” the authors reported. The odds ratio of developing MS was 3.96 times greater for the study group than for the control group, supporting the notion that occurrence of the disease could be associated with herpes zoster attack.
A study published in the June 7 issue of Neurology found that patients with Parkinson’s disease have a significantly higher risk of having melanoma than do healthy controls. The researchers conducted a meta-analysis of 12 publications on melanoma and Parkinson’s disease; eight of the publications had fewer than 10 cases with both Parkinson’s disease and melanoma. The pooled odds ratio was 2.11 overall, 2.04 for men, and 1.52 for women. Melanoma occurrence was significantly higher after the diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, but not before Parkinson’s disease was diagnosed. After analyzing the data for nonmelanoma skin cancers, the researchers found no significant relationship. “Collective epidemiologic evidence supports an association of Parkinson’s disease with melanoma,” the authors concluded. “Further research is needed to examine the nature and mechanisms of this relationship.”
At-home physical training may be just as effective as locomotor training for improving the ability to walk in patients who have had a stroke, researchers reported in the May 26 New England Journal of Medicine. The investigators randomly assigned 408 participants with stroke to one of three training groups; one group received early locomotor training on a body weight–supported treadmill two months after stroke occurred, one group received the same training six months after stroke, and the third group completed an at-home exercise program guided by a physical therapist two months after stroke. At one year of training, 52% of all participants had increased functional walking ability. The researchers observed no significant differences in improvement between early or late locomotor training and home exercise. “All groups had similar improvements in walking speed, motor recovery, balance, functional status, and quality of life,” the authors noted.
High consumption of olive oil and high plasma oleic acid are associated with lower risk for stroke in older adults, according to the results of a study published in the June 15 online Neurology. To examine this relationship, the researchers looked at 7,625 older adults; in this sample, 148 incident strokes occurred. After adjusting for demographic and dietary variables and stroke risk factors, the investigators found that “compared to those who never used olive oil, those with intensive use had a 41% lower risk of stroke.” In a secondary sample, the researchers investigated the plasma oleic acid levels of 1,245 individuals (27 had incident stroke) and found that participants in the third tertile had a 73% reduction of stroke risk. “These results suggest a protective role for high olive oil consumption on the risk of stroke in older subjects,” the authors concluded.
News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information
One third of patients with pathologically confirmed early-onset Alzheimer’s disease presented with atypical symptoms, and 53% of patients with nonamnestic presentations were initially misdiagnosed, according to a study in the May 17 Neurology. Researchers conducted a retrospective review of clinical data from patients with confirmed early-onset Alzheimer’s disease to determine the frequency and types of incorrect diagnoses. The majority of these cases were diagnosed with other types of dementia, including pseudodementia with depression, semantic dementia, and primary progressive aphasia. “Early-onset Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis often represents a challenge because of the high frequency of atypical presentations,” the study authors wrote. More than one-third (37.5%) of patients presented with atypical symptoms other than memory problems; the most prevalent of these was behavioral/executive dysfunction.
Neuronal activity may be a potential mechanism for vulnerability to amyloid-β deposition in certain areas of the brain, researchers reported in the May 1 online Nature Neuroscience. The investigators examined endogenous neuronal activity in mice with Alzheimer’s disease and determined that this activity regulates the regional concentration of interstitial fluid amyloid-β, which drives local aggregation of amyloid-β. Using unilateral vibrissal stimulation in the contralateral barrel cortex, they found that activity increased interstitial fluid amyloid-β. Unilateral vibrissal deprivation decreased interstitial fluid amyloid-β deposition; long-term deprivation also decreased amyloid plaque formation and growth. “Our results suggest a mechanism to account for the vulnerability of specific brain regions to amyloid-β deposition in Alzheimer’s disease,” the authors concluded.
A newly confirmed genetic risk allele of the clusterin gene contributes to white matter degeneration in young adults and may increase the risk for Alzheimer’s disease later in life, according to results published in the May 4 Journal of Neuroscience. Investigators used diffusion-tensor MRI to scan the brains of 398 healthy young adults (mean age, 23.6) and to evaluate whether the C-allele clusterin risk variant was associated with lower white matter integrity. “Each C-allele copy of the clusterin variant was associated with lower fractional anisotropy—a widely accepted measure of white matter integrity—in multiple brain regions,” the authors wrote. These regions included the splenium of the corpus callosum, the fornix, cingulum, and superior and inferior longitudinal fasciculi in both brain hemispheres. “Young healthy carriers of the clusterin gene risk variant showed a distinct profile of lower white matter integrity that may increase vulnerability to developing Alzheimer’s disease later in life,” the researchers concluded.
A higher BMI may improve survival in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). As published in the May 23 online Muscle & Nerve, investigators aimed to determine whether cholesterol levels are an independent predictor of ALS survival. They measured cholesterol levels in 427 people with ALS from three clinical trial databases and found that the low-density and high-density lipoprotein level ratio did not decrease over time, even though BMI significantly declined. “After adjusting for BMI, forced vital capacity, and age, the lipid ratio was not associated with survival,” the investigators wrote. The highest survival rate, though, was found among patients with a BMI between 30 and 35, or mild obesity. “We found that dyslipidemia is not an independent predictor of survival in ALS,” the researchers concluded, whereas, “BMI is an independent prognostic factor for survival after adjusting for markers of disease severity.”
Patients with a history of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) should avoid using statins for prevention of ischemic cardiac and cerebrovascular disease, according to a study in the May Archives of Neurology. Statins are widely prescribed for disease prevention, the authors noted, and “although serious adverse effects are uncommon, results from a recent clinical trial suggested increased risk of ICH associated with statin use.” To determine if statin therapy should be avoided in patients with a baseline elevated risk of ICH, investigators evaluated the risks and benefits of the therapy in patients with prior ICH using clinical parameters such as hemorrhage location (deep or lobar). For survivors of ICH both with and without prior cardiovascular events, the benefits of statin therapy were not strong enough to offset the increased risk for hemorrhage recurrence.
Adverse changes in sleep duration are associated with poorer cognitive function in middle-aged adults, per a study in the May 1 Sleep. Researchers conducted cross-sectional studies of women and men (age range, 45 to 69) to examine the effect of changes in sleep duration on cognitive function. Participants’ cognitive function was assessed at baseline, and their sleep duration on an average weeknight was measured once at baseline and again an average of 5.4 years later. After adjustment for age, gender, education, and occupation, the authors reported that “firm evidence remained for an association between an increase from seven or eight hours sleep and lower cognitive function for all tests, except memory, and between a decrease from six or eight hours sleep and poorer reasoning, vocabulary, and Mini-Mental State Examination score.” These adverse changes in duration were equivalent to a four- to seven-year increase in age.
African Americans with multiple sclerosis (MS) have lower vitamin D levels than their healthy counterparts, according to a study published in the May 24 Neurology. Researchers conducted a cross-sectional study of 339 African-American patients with MS and 342 without MS to determine if vitamin D levels were associated with MS disease severity. Between 71% and 77% of all participants were vitamin D–deficient and 93% to 94% were vitamin D–insufficient, the authors reported. Overall, vitamin D levels were lower in patients with MS, but this was due to differences in climate and geography and did not have an impact on disease severity. “These results are consistent with observations in other populations that lower [vitamin D level] is associated with having MS,” the investigators concluded, “but also highlight the importance of climate and ancestry in determining vitamin D status.”
Protein-based human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and those derived from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) may be effective in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, according to a study in the May 16 Journal of Clinical Investigation. Results showed that neuronal precursors cells derived from hESCs and protein-based hiPSCs reversed disease when transplanted into the brains of rats modeling Parkinson’s disease. The researchers attempted to use neuronal cells derived from virus-based hiPSCs but were unable to do so because these virus-based cells exhibited apoptotic cell death. “[hiPSCs] are a potentially unlimited source of patient-specific cells for transplantation…. These data support the clinical potential of protein-based hiPSCs for personalized cell therapy of Parkinson’s disease,” the investigators concluded.
Women may have a greater risk than men for adverse events following certain stroke prevention procedures, as reported in the May 6 online Lancet Neurology. A total of 2,502 patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic stenosis were randomized to undergo carotid endarterectomy or carotid artery stenting. The rates of periprocedural stroke, myocardial infarction, and death were similar in men who underwent endarterectomy (4.9%) and stenting (4.3%). In women, however, a significant difference in rates of adverse events was observed—3.8% for endarterectomy versus 6.8% for stenting. “Periprocedural risk of events seems to be higher in women who have carotid artery stenting than those who have carotid endarterectomy, whereas there is little difference in men,” the authors concluded. “Additional data are needed to confirm whether this differential risk should be taken into account in decisions for treatment of carotid disease in women.”
About 14% of ischemic strokes presented at emergency departments are wake-up strokes, researchers reported in the May 10 Neurology. Wake-up strokes, according to the authors, cannot be distinguished from other types of stroke based on clinical features or outcome, making them difficult to treat with effective clot-busting therapies. The researchers analyzed data from patients presenting at emergency departments with ischemic stroke; they identified 1,854 ischemic stroke cases, 273 of which were wake-up strokes. “There were no differences between wake-up strokes and all other strokes with regard to clinical features or outcomes except for minor differences in age and baseline retrospective NIH Stroke Scale score,” the authors reported. “Of the wake-up strokes, at least 98 (35.9%) would have been eligible for thrombolysis if arrival time were not a factor.”
The annual rate of coronary artery bypass graft surgeries decreased 30% between 2001 and 2008, while rates of other percutaneous coronary interventions remained stable, according to an examination of national trends published in the May 4 JAMA. Investigators conducted a serial cross-sectional study to examine time trends of patients undergoing revascularization procedures, and determined that the annual surgery rate decreased from 1,742 to 1,081 per million adults in 2008. “Between 2001 and 2008, the number of hospitals … providing [coronary artery bypass graft surgery] increased by 12%, and the number of [percutaneous coronary interventions] hospitals increased by 26%,” the authors reported. They noted that new revascularization technologies, new clinical evidence from trials, and updated clinical guidelines may have affected the volume and distribution of coronary revascularizations.
Patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and refractory intracranial hypertension may benefit from decompressive craniectomy, but they may also experience unfavorable outcomes, according to a study in the April 21 New England Journal of Medicine. Researchers randomly assigned 155 adults with TBI and intracranial hypertension to undergo either bifrontotemporoparietal decompressive craniectomy or standard care. The results revealed that the standard-care group had higher levels of intracranial pressure and longer stays in the intensive care unit. “However, patients undergoing craniectomy had worse scores on the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale than those receiving standard care,” the authors noted. Patients with craniectomy were also more than twice as likely to experience an unfavorable outcome, including death, vegetative state, or severe disability.
One third of patients with pathologically confirmed early-onset Alzheimer’s disease presented with atypical symptoms, and 53% of patients with nonamnestic presentations were initially misdiagnosed, according to a study in the May 17 Neurology. Researchers conducted a retrospective review of clinical data from patients with confirmed early-onset Alzheimer’s disease to determine the frequency and types of incorrect diagnoses. The majority of these cases were diagnosed with other types of dementia, including pseudodementia with depression, semantic dementia, and primary progressive aphasia. “Early-onset Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis often represents a challenge because of the high frequency of atypical presentations,” the study authors wrote. More than one-third (37.5%) of patients presented with atypical symptoms other than memory problems; the most prevalent of these was behavioral/executive dysfunction.
Neuronal activity may be a potential mechanism for vulnerability to amyloid-β deposition in certain areas of the brain, researchers reported in the May 1 online Nature Neuroscience. The investigators examined endogenous neuronal activity in mice with Alzheimer’s disease and determined that this activity regulates the regional concentration of interstitial fluid amyloid-β, which drives local aggregation of amyloid-β. Using unilateral vibrissal stimulation in the contralateral barrel cortex, they found that activity increased interstitial fluid amyloid-β. Unilateral vibrissal deprivation decreased interstitial fluid amyloid-β deposition; long-term deprivation also decreased amyloid plaque formation and growth. “Our results suggest a mechanism to account for the vulnerability of specific brain regions to amyloid-β deposition in Alzheimer’s disease,” the authors concluded.
A newly confirmed genetic risk allele of the clusterin gene contributes to white matter degeneration in young adults and may increase the risk for Alzheimer’s disease later in life, according to results published in the May 4 Journal of Neuroscience. Investigators used diffusion-tensor MRI to scan the brains of 398 healthy young adults (mean age, 23.6) and to evaluate whether the C-allele clusterin risk variant was associated with lower white matter integrity. “Each C-allele copy of the clusterin variant was associated with lower fractional anisotropy—a widely accepted measure of white matter integrity—in multiple brain regions,” the authors wrote. These regions included the splenium of the corpus callosum, the fornix, cingulum, and superior and inferior longitudinal fasciculi in both brain hemispheres. “Young healthy carriers of the clusterin gene risk variant showed a distinct profile of lower white matter integrity that may increase vulnerability to developing Alzheimer’s disease later in life,” the researchers concluded.
A higher BMI may improve survival in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). As published in the May 23 online Muscle & Nerve, investigators aimed to determine whether cholesterol levels are an independent predictor of ALS survival. They measured cholesterol levels in 427 people with ALS from three clinical trial databases and found that the low-density and high-density lipoprotein level ratio did not decrease over time, even though BMI significantly declined. “After adjusting for BMI, forced vital capacity, and age, the lipid ratio was not associated with survival,” the investigators wrote. The highest survival rate, though, was found among patients with a BMI between 30 and 35, or mild obesity. “We found that dyslipidemia is not an independent predictor of survival in ALS,” the researchers concluded, whereas, “BMI is an independent prognostic factor for survival after adjusting for markers of disease severity.”
Patients with a history of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) should avoid using statins for prevention of ischemic cardiac and cerebrovascular disease, according to a study in the May Archives of Neurology. Statins are widely prescribed for disease prevention, the authors noted, and “although serious adverse effects are uncommon, results from a recent clinical trial suggested increased risk of ICH associated with statin use.” To determine if statin therapy should be avoided in patients with a baseline elevated risk of ICH, investigators evaluated the risks and benefits of the therapy in patients with prior ICH using clinical parameters such as hemorrhage location (deep or lobar). For survivors of ICH both with and without prior cardiovascular events, the benefits of statin therapy were not strong enough to offset the increased risk for hemorrhage recurrence.
Adverse changes in sleep duration are associated with poorer cognitive function in middle-aged adults, per a study in the May 1 Sleep. Researchers conducted cross-sectional studies of women and men (age range, 45 to 69) to examine the effect of changes in sleep duration on cognitive function. Participants’ cognitive function was assessed at baseline, and their sleep duration on an average weeknight was measured once at baseline and again an average of 5.4 years later. After adjustment for age, gender, education, and occupation, the authors reported that “firm evidence remained for an association between an increase from seven or eight hours sleep and lower cognitive function for all tests, except memory, and between a decrease from six or eight hours sleep and poorer reasoning, vocabulary, and Mini-Mental State Examination score.” These adverse changes in duration were equivalent to a four- to seven-year increase in age.
African Americans with multiple sclerosis (MS) have lower vitamin D levels than their healthy counterparts, according to a study published in the May 24 Neurology. Researchers conducted a cross-sectional study of 339 African-American patients with MS and 342 without MS to determine if vitamin D levels were associated with MS disease severity. Between 71% and 77% of all participants were vitamin D–deficient and 93% to 94% were vitamin D–insufficient, the authors reported. Overall, vitamin D levels were lower in patients with MS, but this was due to differences in climate and geography and did not have an impact on disease severity. “These results are consistent with observations in other populations that lower [vitamin D level] is associated with having MS,” the investigators concluded, “but also highlight the importance of climate and ancestry in determining vitamin D status.”
Protein-based human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and those derived from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) may be effective in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, according to a study in the May 16 Journal of Clinical Investigation. Results showed that neuronal precursors cells derived from hESCs and protein-based hiPSCs reversed disease when transplanted into the brains of rats modeling Parkinson’s disease. The researchers attempted to use neuronal cells derived from virus-based hiPSCs but were unable to do so because these virus-based cells exhibited apoptotic cell death. “[hiPSCs] are a potentially unlimited source of patient-specific cells for transplantation…. These data support the clinical potential of protein-based hiPSCs for personalized cell therapy of Parkinson’s disease,” the investigators concluded.
Women may have a greater risk than men for adverse events following certain stroke prevention procedures, as reported in the May 6 online Lancet Neurology. A total of 2,502 patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic stenosis were randomized to undergo carotid endarterectomy or carotid artery stenting. The rates of periprocedural stroke, myocardial infarction, and death were similar in men who underwent endarterectomy (4.9%) and stenting (4.3%). In women, however, a significant difference in rates of adverse events was observed—3.8% for endarterectomy versus 6.8% for stenting. “Periprocedural risk of events seems to be higher in women who have carotid artery stenting than those who have carotid endarterectomy, whereas there is little difference in men,” the authors concluded. “Additional data are needed to confirm whether this differential risk should be taken into account in decisions for treatment of carotid disease in women.”
About 14% of ischemic strokes presented at emergency departments are wake-up strokes, researchers reported in the May 10 Neurology. Wake-up strokes, according to the authors, cannot be distinguished from other types of stroke based on clinical features or outcome, making them difficult to treat with effective clot-busting therapies. The researchers analyzed data from patients presenting at emergency departments with ischemic stroke; they identified 1,854 ischemic stroke cases, 273 of which were wake-up strokes. “There were no differences between wake-up strokes and all other strokes with regard to clinical features or outcomes except for minor differences in age and baseline retrospective NIH Stroke Scale score,” the authors reported. “Of the wake-up strokes, at least 98 (35.9%) would have been eligible for thrombolysis if arrival time were not a factor.”
The annual rate of coronary artery bypass graft surgeries decreased 30% between 2001 and 2008, while rates of other percutaneous coronary interventions remained stable, according to an examination of national trends published in the May 4 JAMA. Investigators conducted a serial cross-sectional study to examine time trends of patients undergoing revascularization procedures, and determined that the annual surgery rate decreased from 1,742 to 1,081 per million adults in 2008. “Between 2001 and 2008, the number of hospitals … providing [coronary artery bypass graft surgery] increased by 12%, and the number of [percutaneous coronary interventions] hospitals increased by 26%,” the authors reported. They noted that new revascularization technologies, new clinical evidence from trials, and updated clinical guidelines may have affected the volume and distribution of coronary revascularizations.
Patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and refractory intracranial hypertension may benefit from decompressive craniectomy, but they may also experience unfavorable outcomes, according to a study in the April 21 New England Journal of Medicine. Researchers randomly assigned 155 adults with TBI and intracranial hypertension to undergo either bifrontotemporoparietal decompressive craniectomy or standard care. The results revealed that the standard-care group had higher levels of intracranial pressure and longer stays in the intensive care unit. “However, patients undergoing craniectomy had worse scores on the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale than those receiving standard care,” the authors noted. Patients with craniectomy were also more than twice as likely to experience an unfavorable outcome, including death, vegetative state, or severe disability.
One third of patients with pathologically confirmed early-onset Alzheimer’s disease presented with atypical symptoms, and 53% of patients with nonamnestic presentations were initially misdiagnosed, according to a study in the May 17 Neurology. Researchers conducted a retrospective review of clinical data from patients with confirmed early-onset Alzheimer’s disease to determine the frequency and types of incorrect diagnoses. The majority of these cases were diagnosed with other types of dementia, including pseudodementia with depression, semantic dementia, and primary progressive aphasia. “Early-onset Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis often represents a challenge because of the high frequency of atypical presentations,” the study authors wrote. More than one-third (37.5%) of patients presented with atypical symptoms other than memory problems; the most prevalent of these was behavioral/executive dysfunction.
Neuronal activity may be a potential mechanism for vulnerability to amyloid-β deposition in certain areas of the brain, researchers reported in the May 1 online Nature Neuroscience. The investigators examined endogenous neuronal activity in mice with Alzheimer’s disease and determined that this activity regulates the regional concentration of interstitial fluid amyloid-β, which drives local aggregation of amyloid-β. Using unilateral vibrissal stimulation in the contralateral barrel cortex, they found that activity increased interstitial fluid amyloid-β. Unilateral vibrissal deprivation decreased interstitial fluid amyloid-β deposition; long-term deprivation also decreased amyloid plaque formation and growth. “Our results suggest a mechanism to account for the vulnerability of specific brain regions to amyloid-β deposition in Alzheimer’s disease,” the authors concluded.
A newly confirmed genetic risk allele of the clusterin gene contributes to white matter degeneration in young adults and may increase the risk for Alzheimer’s disease later in life, according to results published in the May 4 Journal of Neuroscience. Investigators used diffusion-tensor MRI to scan the brains of 398 healthy young adults (mean age, 23.6) and to evaluate whether the C-allele clusterin risk variant was associated with lower white matter integrity. “Each C-allele copy of the clusterin variant was associated with lower fractional anisotropy—a widely accepted measure of white matter integrity—in multiple brain regions,” the authors wrote. These regions included the splenium of the corpus callosum, the fornix, cingulum, and superior and inferior longitudinal fasciculi in both brain hemispheres. “Young healthy carriers of the clusterin gene risk variant showed a distinct profile of lower white matter integrity that may increase vulnerability to developing Alzheimer’s disease later in life,” the researchers concluded.
A higher BMI may improve survival in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). As published in the May 23 online Muscle & Nerve, investigators aimed to determine whether cholesterol levels are an independent predictor of ALS survival. They measured cholesterol levels in 427 people with ALS from three clinical trial databases and found that the low-density and high-density lipoprotein level ratio did not decrease over time, even though BMI significantly declined. “After adjusting for BMI, forced vital capacity, and age, the lipid ratio was not associated with survival,” the investigators wrote. The highest survival rate, though, was found among patients with a BMI between 30 and 35, or mild obesity. “We found that dyslipidemia is not an independent predictor of survival in ALS,” the researchers concluded, whereas, “BMI is an independent prognostic factor for survival after adjusting for markers of disease severity.”
Patients with a history of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) should avoid using statins for prevention of ischemic cardiac and cerebrovascular disease, according to a study in the May Archives of Neurology. Statins are widely prescribed for disease prevention, the authors noted, and “although serious adverse effects are uncommon, results from a recent clinical trial suggested increased risk of ICH associated with statin use.” To determine if statin therapy should be avoided in patients with a baseline elevated risk of ICH, investigators evaluated the risks and benefits of the therapy in patients with prior ICH using clinical parameters such as hemorrhage location (deep or lobar). For survivors of ICH both with and without prior cardiovascular events, the benefits of statin therapy were not strong enough to offset the increased risk for hemorrhage recurrence.
Adverse changes in sleep duration are associated with poorer cognitive function in middle-aged adults, per a study in the May 1 Sleep. Researchers conducted cross-sectional studies of women and men (age range, 45 to 69) to examine the effect of changes in sleep duration on cognitive function. Participants’ cognitive function was assessed at baseline, and their sleep duration on an average weeknight was measured once at baseline and again an average of 5.4 years later. After adjustment for age, gender, education, and occupation, the authors reported that “firm evidence remained for an association between an increase from seven or eight hours sleep and lower cognitive function for all tests, except memory, and between a decrease from six or eight hours sleep and poorer reasoning, vocabulary, and Mini-Mental State Examination score.” These adverse changes in duration were equivalent to a four- to seven-year increase in age.
African Americans with multiple sclerosis (MS) have lower vitamin D levels than their healthy counterparts, according to a study published in the May 24 Neurology. Researchers conducted a cross-sectional study of 339 African-American patients with MS and 342 without MS to determine if vitamin D levels were associated with MS disease severity. Between 71% and 77% of all participants were vitamin D–deficient and 93% to 94% were vitamin D–insufficient, the authors reported. Overall, vitamin D levels were lower in patients with MS, but this was due to differences in climate and geography and did not have an impact on disease severity. “These results are consistent with observations in other populations that lower [vitamin D level] is associated with having MS,” the investigators concluded, “but also highlight the importance of climate and ancestry in determining vitamin D status.”
Protein-based human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and those derived from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) may be effective in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, according to a study in the May 16 Journal of Clinical Investigation. Results showed that neuronal precursors cells derived from hESCs and protein-based hiPSCs reversed disease when transplanted into the brains of rats modeling Parkinson’s disease. The researchers attempted to use neuronal cells derived from virus-based hiPSCs but were unable to do so because these virus-based cells exhibited apoptotic cell death. “[hiPSCs] are a potentially unlimited source of patient-specific cells for transplantation…. These data support the clinical potential of protein-based hiPSCs for personalized cell therapy of Parkinson’s disease,” the investigators concluded.
Women may have a greater risk than men for adverse events following certain stroke prevention procedures, as reported in the May 6 online Lancet Neurology. A total of 2,502 patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic stenosis were randomized to undergo carotid endarterectomy or carotid artery stenting. The rates of periprocedural stroke, myocardial infarction, and death were similar in men who underwent endarterectomy (4.9%) and stenting (4.3%). In women, however, a significant difference in rates of adverse events was observed—3.8% for endarterectomy versus 6.8% for stenting. “Periprocedural risk of events seems to be higher in women who have carotid artery stenting than those who have carotid endarterectomy, whereas there is little difference in men,” the authors concluded. “Additional data are needed to confirm whether this differential risk should be taken into account in decisions for treatment of carotid disease in women.”
About 14% of ischemic strokes presented at emergency departments are wake-up strokes, researchers reported in the May 10 Neurology. Wake-up strokes, according to the authors, cannot be distinguished from other types of stroke based on clinical features or outcome, making them difficult to treat with effective clot-busting therapies. The researchers analyzed data from patients presenting at emergency departments with ischemic stroke; they identified 1,854 ischemic stroke cases, 273 of which were wake-up strokes. “There were no differences between wake-up strokes and all other strokes with regard to clinical features or outcomes except for minor differences in age and baseline retrospective NIH Stroke Scale score,” the authors reported. “Of the wake-up strokes, at least 98 (35.9%) would have been eligible for thrombolysis if arrival time were not a factor.”
The annual rate of coronary artery bypass graft surgeries decreased 30% between 2001 and 2008, while rates of other percutaneous coronary interventions remained stable, according to an examination of national trends published in the May 4 JAMA. Investigators conducted a serial cross-sectional study to examine time trends of patients undergoing revascularization procedures, and determined that the annual surgery rate decreased from 1,742 to 1,081 per million adults in 2008. “Between 2001 and 2008, the number of hospitals … providing [coronary artery bypass graft surgery] increased by 12%, and the number of [percutaneous coronary interventions] hospitals increased by 26%,” the authors reported. They noted that new revascularization technologies, new clinical evidence from trials, and updated clinical guidelines may have affected the volume and distribution of coronary revascularizations.
Patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and refractory intracranial hypertension may benefit from decompressive craniectomy, but they may also experience unfavorable outcomes, according to a study in the April 21 New England Journal of Medicine. Researchers randomly assigned 155 adults with TBI and intracranial hypertension to undergo either bifrontotemporoparietal decompressive craniectomy or standard care. The results revealed that the standard-care group had higher levels of intracranial pressure and longer stays in the intensive care unit. “However, patients undergoing craniectomy had worse scores on the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale than those receiving standard care,” the authors noted. Patients with craniectomy were also more than twice as likely to experience an unfavorable outcome, including death, vegetative state, or severe disability.
News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information
Researchers determined that MRI imaging may predict which persons with cognitive impairment will progress to Alzheimer’s disease in a report published in the April 6 online Radiology. Baseline MRI was obtained for 164 individuals with late-onset Alzheimer’s disease, 317 with mild cognitive impairment, and 203 healthy controls. The investigators then used MRI to measure the thickness and amount of atrophy in the cerebral cortex. “Individualized risk estimates from baseline MRI examinations indicated that the one-year risk of conversion to Alzheimer’s disease ranged from 3% to 40%,” the researchers reported. “Relative to the risk of conversion to Alzheimer’s disease conferred by the clinical diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment alone, MRI measures yield substantially more informative patient-specific risk estimates. Such predictive prognostic information will be critical if disease-modifying therapies become available.”
Cotinine, a compound derived from tobacco, reduced brain plaques associated with dementia and memory loss, according to a study published in the online February 14 Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. A group of investigators studied the effects of cotinine on b-amyloid plaque aggregation in the brains of mice with Alzheimer’s disease. Mice treated with the compound performed better than untreated mice on tasks measuring working memory and thinking skills; long-term treatment also appeared to prevent spatial memory impairment. Overall, the treated mice showed a 26% reduction in amyloid plaque deposits. “Cotinine, the main metabolite of nicotine, has a long half-life and does not have cardiovascular or addictive side effects in humans,” the authors wrote. “The good safety profile in humans and its beneficial effects suggest that cotinine may be an excellent therapeutic candidate for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.”
A study published in the April 13 online Neurology provides evidence that treating certain vascular risk factors helps lower the risk for conversion from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s disease. Investigators assessed memory and thinking skills of 837 patients with mild cognitive impairment and then reassessed them five years later; 414 participants had at least one vascular risk factor at baseline. “At the end of follow-up 298 subjects converted to Alzheimer’s disease dementia, while 352 remained with mild cognitive impairment,” the investigators reported. “Treatment of individual vascular risk factors including hypertension, diabetes, and hypercholesterolemia was associated with the reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease conversion.” The findings of the study are observational, the authors concluded, but they suggest that active intervention and treatment of certain risk factors might reduce progression to Alzheimer’s disease.
Researchers have identified mutations of the synapsin 1 gene as a possible common genetic cause for both epilepsy and autism. Their study, published online in the April 12 Human Molecular Genetics, involved members of a large French-Canadian family who had autism spectrum disorders or epilepsy. The severe Q555X mutation appeared in all family members with epilepsy, and in all those who had an autism spectrum disorder. In addition, other mutations in synapsin 1 (A51G, A550T, and T567A) were found in 1% and 3.5% of a separate cohort of French-Canadian individuals with autism and epilepsy, respectively. “These results demonstrate that [synapsin 1] is a novel predisposing gene to [autism spectrum disorders], in addition to epilepsy,” the authors concluded. “[The results also] strengthen the hypothesis that a disturbance of synaptic homeostasis underlies the pathogenesis of both diseases.”
Men who reported chronic ecstasy (MDMA) use were more likely to develop structural brain damage than those who did not use ecstasy, according to a study that was published in the March 28 online Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry. Using MRI, researchers measured the hippocampal volume of 10 male ecstasy users (average age, 21.3), compared with seven age- and gender-matched subjects who did not use ecstasy. The hippocampal volume of ecstasy users was 10.5% smaller than those of nonusing peers; the overall proportion of gray matter was 4.6% smaller, suggesting that the drug’s effects are not limited to the hippocampus. “These data provide preliminary evidence that ecstasy users may be prone to incurring hippocampal damage,” the authors wrote, adding: “Hippocampal atrophy is a hallmark for disease of progressive cognitive impairment in older patients, such as Alzheimer’s disease.”
In a study published in the March 28 online Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, researchers reported that epileptic seizures carry a subsequent risk for brain tumor. “Our study suggests that tumor as an underlying cause for epilepsy may not become apparent for several years after onset, and indicates a need for ongoing vigilance,” the authors stated. In the retrospective cohort study, the investigators examined data regarding individuals with first-time epilepsy admissions and determined that, compared with patients admitted for other common and minor disorders, patients with epilepsy were almost 20 times more likely to develop cerebral tumor. The risk for developing malignant tumors was more than twice the risk for developing benign tumors. “The risk was highest for those aged 15 to 44 years at initial admission for epilepsy,” the authors reported. “The risk of cerebral tumor was still raised several years after initial admission for epilepsy.”
A novel gene transfer vector, NP2, is safe and well tolerated for the treatment of intractable pain, researchers reported in the April 11 online Annals of Neurology. Investigators conducted a multicenter, dose-escalation, phase I clinical trial of intradermal NP2 injection in 10 subjects with persistent pain caused by cancer, despite treatment with morphine or other analgesic. Participants who received the low dose of NP2 reported no substantive change in pain; patients in the middle and high dose cohorts reported pain relief. “There were no placebo controls in this relatively small study,” the authors concluded. “But the dose-responsive analgesic effects suggest that NP2 may be effective in reducing pain and warrants further clinical investigation.”
The FDA has approved DaTscan (ioflupane I 123 injection) for detecting dopamine transporters in the brains of adults with suspected Parkinsonian syndromes. The radiopharmaceutical agent is intended for use with single photon emission CT imaging to evaluate neurodegenerative movement disorders. The injection may be used as an adjunct to other diagnostic evaluation tools to distinguish between essential tremor and tremor due to Parkinson’s disease, as ioflupane I 123 injection alone cannot differentiate between different types of parkinsonian syndromes. The FDA’s approval was based on two phase III clinical trials in which the drug was used to evaluate dopamine transporter distribution in the brains of adult patients. As a new diagnostic adjunct to clinical assessments, ioflupane I 123 can potentially help physicians select the appropriate treatments for patients with movement disorders.
Persons who are regularly exposed to welding fumes may be at an increased risk for brain damage, specifically in the same areas affected by Parkinson’s disease, researchers reported in the April 12 Neurology. “Welding exposes workers to manganese fumes, but it is unclear if this exposure damages dopaminergic neurons,” the authors stated. “The purpose of this study [was] to determine whether welding exposure is associated with damage to nigrostriatal neurons.” Using PET imaging on 20 welders with no parkinsonian symptoms, 20 individuals with symptoms, and 20 healthy controls, the investigators determined that asymptomatic welders had higher manganese levels in the blood and an average 11.7% reduction in dopamine in certain brain regions. The pattern of reduction seen in welders, however, was distinct from the dysfunction pattern found in symptomatic Parkinson’s disease.
The FDA has approved Nuedexta (dextromethorphan hydrobromide and quinidine sulfate) for the treatment of pseudobulbar affect. The new therapy will help patients manage pseudobulbar affect that occurs secondary to multiple sclerosis (MS), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), traumatic brain injury, stroke, Parkinson’s disease, and other neurologic diseases. Nuedexta combines dextromethorphan hydrobromide and quinidine sulfate, a metabolic inhibitor that enables therapeutic dextromethorphan concentrations. These components act on NMDA receptors and sigma-1 in the brain, but the mechanism by which it exerts therapeutic effects in patients with pseudobulbar affect is unknown. The drug was tested in patients with ALS and MS and reduced involuntary laughing and crying episodes compared with placebo.
Virtual reality may be an effective adjunctive therapy for patients experiencing upper arm motor deficits following stroke, according to a study published in the May Stroke. Researchers analyzed seven observational studies and five randomized trials that investigated the effects of virtual reality and video game technology on stroke patients’ upper arm strength and function. Among the observational studies, there was a 14.7% improvement in motor impairment and a 20.1% improvement in motor function; in the randomized trials, patients had an almost five times higher chance of improvement in motor function, compared with those who received traditional therapy. The researchers concluded, “Virtual reality and video game applications are novel and potentially useful technologies that can be combined with conventional rehabilitation for upper arm improvement after stroke.”
Investigators found that surgical revascularization can restore lost brain tissue in patients with cerebrovascular disease that impairs blood flow to the brain, as reported in the online April 14 Stroke. Twenty-nine patients who had undergone vascularization were included in the study. All patients had pre- and postsurgery studies of cerebrovascular reactivity using MRI, and cortical thickness in regions corresponding to steal physiology were measured. “At an average of 11 months after surgery, cortical thickness increased in every successfully revascularized hemisphere,” the authors stated. “Mean cortical thickness in the revascularized regions increased by 5.1%.” The investigators’ goal was to halt further loss of brain tissue due to strokes, “so it was remarkable to see the loss was actually reversed,” they commented.
Researchers determined that MRI imaging may predict which persons with cognitive impairment will progress to Alzheimer’s disease in a report published in the April 6 online Radiology. Baseline MRI was obtained for 164 individuals with late-onset Alzheimer’s disease, 317 with mild cognitive impairment, and 203 healthy controls. The investigators then used MRI to measure the thickness and amount of atrophy in the cerebral cortex. “Individualized risk estimates from baseline MRI examinations indicated that the one-year risk of conversion to Alzheimer’s disease ranged from 3% to 40%,” the researchers reported. “Relative to the risk of conversion to Alzheimer’s disease conferred by the clinical diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment alone, MRI measures yield substantially more informative patient-specific risk estimates. Such predictive prognostic information will be critical if disease-modifying therapies become available.”
Cotinine, a compound derived from tobacco, reduced brain plaques associated with dementia and memory loss, according to a study published in the online February 14 Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. A group of investigators studied the effects of cotinine on b-amyloid plaque aggregation in the brains of mice with Alzheimer’s disease. Mice treated with the compound performed better than untreated mice on tasks measuring working memory and thinking skills; long-term treatment also appeared to prevent spatial memory impairment. Overall, the treated mice showed a 26% reduction in amyloid plaque deposits. “Cotinine, the main metabolite of nicotine, has a long half-life and does not have cardiovascular or addictive side effects in humans,” the authors wrote. “The good safety profile in humans and its beneficial effects suggest that cotinine may be an excellent therapeutic candidate for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.”
A study published in the April 13 online Neurology provides evidence that treating certain vascular risk factors helps lower the risk for conversion from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s disease. Investigators assessed memory and thinking skills of 837 patients with mild cognitive impairment and then reassessed them five years later; 414 participants had at least one vascular risk factor at baseline. “At the end of follow-up 298 subjects converted to Alzheimer’s disease dementia, while 352 remained with mild cognitive impairment,” the investigators reported. “Treatment of individual vascular risk factors including hypertension, diabetes, and hypercholesterolemia was associated with the reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease conversion.” The findings of the study are observational, the authors concluded, but they suggest that active intervention and treatment of certain risk factors might reduce progression to Alzheimer’s disease.
Researchers have identified mutations of the synapsin 1 gene as a possible common genetic cause for both epilepsy and autism. Their study, published online in the April 12 Human Molecular Genetics, involved members of a large French-Canadian family who had autism spectrum disorders or epilepsy. The severe Q555X mutation appeared in all family members with epilepsy, and in all those who had an autism spectrum disorder. In addition, other mutations in synapsin 1 (A51G, A550T, and T567A) were found in 1% and 3.5% of a separate cohort of French-Canadian individuals with autism and epilepsy, respectively. “These results demonstrate that [synapsin 1] is a novel predisposing gene to [autism spectrum disorders], in addition to epilepsy,” the authors concluded. “[The results also] strengthen the hypothesis that a disturbance of synaptic homeostasis underlies the pathogenesis of both diseases.”
Men who reported chronic ecstasy (MDMA) use were more likely to develop structural brain damage than those who did not use ecstasy, according to a study that was published in the March 28 online Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry. Using MRI, researchers measured the hippocampal volume of 10 male ecstasy users (average age, 21.3), compared with seven age- and gender-matched subjects who did not use ecstasy. The hippocampal volume of ecstasy users was 10.5% smaller than those of nonusing peers; the overall proportion of gray matter was 4.6% smaller, suggesting that the drug’s effects are not limited to the hippocampus. “These data provide preliminary evidence that ecstasy users may be prone to incurring hippocampal damage,” the authors wrote, adding: “Hippocampal atrophy is a hallmark for disease of progressive cognitive impairment in older patients, such as Alzheimer’s disease.”
In a study published in the March 28 online Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, researchers reported that epileptic seizures carry a subsequent risk for brain tumor. “Our study suggests that tumor as an underlying cause for epilepsy may not become apparent for several years after onset, and indicates a need for ongoing vigilance,” the authors stated. In the retrospective cohort study, the investigators examined data regarding individuals with first-time epilepsy admissions and determined that, compared with patients admitted for other common and minor disorders, patients with epilepsy were almost 20 times more likely to develop cerebral tumor. The risk for developing malignant tumors was more than twice the risk for developing benign tumors. “The risk was highest for those aged 15 to 44 years at initial admission for epilepsy,” the authors reported. “The risk of cerebral tumor was still raised several years after initial admission for epilepsy.”
A novel gene transfer vector, NP2, is safe and well tolerated for the treatment of intractable pain, researchers reported in the April 11 online Annals of Neurology. Investigators conducted a multicenter, dose-escalation, phase I clinical trial of intradermal NP2 injection in 10 subjects with persistent pain caused by cancer, despite treatment with morphine or other analgesic. Participants who received the low dose of NP2 reported no substantive change in pain; patients in the middle and high dose cohorts reported pain relief. “There were no placebo controls in this relatively small study,” the authors concluded. “But the dose-responsive analgesic effects suggest that NP2 may be effective in reducing pain and warrants further clinical investigation.”
The FDA has approved DaTscan (ioflupane I 123 injection) for detecting dopamine transporters in the brains of adults with suspected Parkinsonian syndromes. The radiopharmaceutical agent is intended for use with single photon emission CT imaging to evaluate neurodegenerative movement disorders. The injection may be used as an adjunct to other diagnostic evaluation tools to distinguish between essential tremor and tremor due to Parkinson’s disease, as ioflupane I 123 injection alone cannot differentiate between different types of parkinsonian syndromes. The FDA’s approval was based on two phase III clinical trials in which the drug was used to evaluate dopamine transporter distribution in the brains of adult patients. As a new diagnostic adjunct to clinical assessments, ioflupane I 123 can potentially help physicians select the appropriate treatments for patients with movement disorders.
Persons who are regularly exposed to welding fumes may be at an increased risk for brain damage, specifically in the same areas affected by Parkinson’s disease, researchers reported in the April 12 Neurology. “Welding exposes workers to manganese fumes, but it is unclear if this exposure damages dopaminergic neurons,” the authors stated. “The purpose of this study [was] to determine whether welding exposure is associated with damage to nigrostriatal neurons.” Using PET imaging on 20 welders with no parkinsonian symptoms, 20 individuals with symptoms, and 20 healthy controls, the investigators determined that asymptomatic welders had higher manganese levels in the blood and an average 11.7% reduction in dopamine in certain brain regions. The pattern of reduction seen in welders, however, was distinct from the dysfunction pattern found in symptomatic Parkinson’s disease.
The FDA has approved Nuedexta (dextromethorphan hydrobromide and quinidine sulfate) for the treatment of pseudobulbar affect. The new therapy will help patients manage pseudobulbar affect that occurs secondary to multiple sclerosis (MS), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), traumatic brain injury, stroke, Parkinson’s disease, and other neurologic diseases. Nuedexta combines dextromethorphan hydrobromide and quinidine sulfate, a metabolic inhibitor that enables therapeutic dextromethorphan concentrations. These components act on NMDA receptors and sigma-1 in the brain, but the mechanism by which it exerts therapeutic effects in patients with pseudobulbar affect is unknown. The drug was tested in patients with ALS and MS and reduced involuntary laughing and crying episodes compared with placebo.
Virtual reality may be an effective adjunctive therapy for patients experiencing upper arm motor deficits following stroke, according to a study published in the May Stroke. Researchers analyzed seven observational studies and five randomized trials that investigated the effects of virtual reality and video game technology on stroke patients’ upper arm strength and function. Among the observational studies, there was a 14.7% improvement in motor impairment and a 20.1% improvement in motor function; in the randomized trials, patients had an almost five times higher chance of improvement in motor function, compared with those who received traditional therapy. The researchers concluded, “Virtual reality and video game applications are novel and potentially useful technologies that can be combined with conventional rehabilitation for upper arm improvement after stroke.”
Investigators found that surgical revascularization can restore lost brain tissue in patients with cerebrovascular disease that impairs blood flow to the brain, as reported in the online April 14 Stroke. Twenty-nine patients who had undergone vascularization were included in the study. All patients had pre- and postsurgery studies of cerebrovascular reactivity using MRI, and cortical thickness in regions corresponding to steal physiology were measured. “At an average of 11 months after surgery, cortical thickness increased in every successfully revascularized hemisphere,” the authors stated. “Mean cortical thickness in the revascularized regions increased by 5.1%.” The investigators’ goal was to halt further loss of brain tissue due to strokes, “so it was remarkable to see the loss was actually reversed,” they commented.
Researchers determined that MRI imaging may predict which persons with cognitive impairment will progress to Alzheimer’s disease in a report published in the April 6 online Radiology. Baseline MRI was obtained for 164 individuals with late-onset Alzheimer’s disease, 317 with mild cognitive impairment, and 203 healthy controls. The investigators then used MRI to measure the thickness and amount of atrophy in the cerebral cortex. “Individualized risk estimates from baseline MRI examinations indicated that the one-year risk of conversion to Alzheimer’s disease ranged from 3% to 40%,” the researchers reported. “Relative to the risk of conversion to Alzheimer’s disease conferred by the clinical diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment alone, MRI measures yield substantially more informative patient-specific risk estimates. Such predictive prognostic information will be critical if disease-modifying therapies become available.”
Cotinine, a compound derived from tobacco, reduced brain plaques associated with dementia and memory loss, according to a study published in the online February 14 Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. A group of investigators studied the effects of cotinine on b-amyloid plaque aggregation in the brains of mice with Alzheimer’s disease. Mice treated with the compound performed better than untreated mice on tasks measuring working memory and thinking skills; long-term treatment also appeared to prevent spatial memory impairment. Overall, the treated mice showed a 26% reduction in amyloid plaque deposits. “Cotinine, the main metabolite of nicotine, has a long half-life and does not have cardiovascular or addictive side effects in humans,” the authors wrote. “The good safety profile in humans and its beneficial effects suggest that cotinine may be an excellent therapeutic candidate for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.”
A study published in the April 13 online Neurology provides evidence that treating certain vascular risk factors helps lower the risk for conversion from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s disease. Investigators assessed memory and thinking skills of 837 patients with mild cognitive impairment and then reassessed them five years later; 414 participants had at least one vascular risk factor at baseline. “At the end of follow-up 298 subjects converted to Alzheimer’s disease dementia, while 352 remained with mild cognitive impairment,” the investigators reported. “Treatment of individual vascular risk factors including hypertension, diabetes, and hypercholesterolemia was associated with the reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease conversion.” The findings of the study are observational, the authors concluded, but they suggest that active intervention and treatment of certain risk factors might reduce progression to Alzheimer’s disease.
Researchers have identified mutations of the synapsin 1 gene as a possible common genetic cause for both epilepsy and autism. Their study, published online in the April 12 Human Molecular Genetics, involved members of a large French-Canadian family who had autism spectrum disorders or epilepsy. The severe Q555X mutation appeared in all family members with epilepsy, and in all those who had an autism spectrum disorder. In addition, other mutations in synapsin 1 (A51G, A550T, and T567A) were found in 1% and 3.5% of a separate cohort of French-Canadian individuals with autism and epilepsy, respectively. “These results demonstrate that [synapsin 1] is a novel predisposing gene to [autism spectrum disorders], in addition to epilepsy,” the authors concluded. “[The results also] strengthen the hypothesis that a disturbance of synaptic homeostasis underlies the pathogenesis of both diseases.”
Men who reported chronic ecstasy (MDMA) use were more likely to develop structural brain damage than those who did not use ecstasy, according to a study that was published in the March 28 online Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry. Using MRI, researchers measured the hippocampal volume of 10 male ecstasy users (average age, 21.3), compared with seven age- and gender-matched subjects who did not use ecstasy. The hippocampal volume of ecstasy users was 10.5% smaller than those of nonusing peers; the overall proportion of gray matter was 4.6% smaller, suggesting that the drug’s effects are not limited to the hippocampus. “These data provide preliminary evidence that ecstasy users may be prone to incurring hippocampal damage,” the authors wrote, adding: “Hippocampal atrophy is a hallmark for disease of progressive cognitive impairment in older patients, such as Alzheimer’s disease.”
In a study published in the March 28 online Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, researchers reported that epileptic seizures carry a subsequent risk for brain tumor. “Our study suggests that tumor as an underlying cause for epilepsy may not become apparent for several years after onset, and indicates a need for ongoing vigilance,” the authors stated. In the retrospective cohort study, the investigators examined data regarding individuals with first-time epilepsy admissions and determined that, compared with patients admitted for other common and minor disorders, patients with epilepsy were almost 20 times more likely to develop cerebral tumor. The risk for developing malignant tumors was more than twice the risk for developing benign tumors. “The risk was highest for those aged 15 to 44 years at initial admission for epilepsy,” the authors reported. “The risk of cerebral tumor was still raised several years after initial admission for epilepsy.”
A novel gene transfer vector, NP2, is safe and well tolerated for the treatment of intractable pain, researchers reported in the April 11 online Annals of Neurology. Investigators conducted a multicenter, dose-escalation, phase I clinical trial of intradermal NP2 injection in 10 subjects with persistent pain caused by cancer, despite treatment with morphine or other analgesic. Participants who received the low dose of NP2 reported no substantive change in pain; patients in the middle and high dose cohorts reported pain relief. “There were no placebo controls in this relatively small study,” the authors concluded. “But the dose-responsive analgesic effects suggest that NP2 may be effective in reducing pain and warrants further clinical investigation.”
The FDA has approved DaTscan (ioflupane I 123 injection) for detecting dopamine transporters in the brains of adults with suspected Parkinsonian syndromes. The radiopharmaceutical agent is intended for use with single photon emission CT imaging to evaluate neurodegenerative movement disorders. The injection may be used as an adjunct to other diagnostic evaluation tools to distinguish between essential tremor and tremor due to Parkinson’s disease, as ioflupane I 123 injection alone cannot differentiate between different types of parkinsonian syndromes. The FDA’s approval was based on two phase III clinical trials in which the drug was used to evaluate dopamine transporter distribution in the brains of adult patients. As a new diagnostic adjunct to clinical assessments, ioflupane I 123 can potentially help physicians select the appropriate treatments for patients with movement disorders.
Persons who are regularly exposed to welding fumes may be at an increased risk for brain damage, specifically in the same areas affected by Parkinson’s disease, researchers reported in the April 12 Neurology. “Welding exposes workers to manganese fumes, but it is unclear if this exposure damages dopaminergic neurons,” the authors stated. “The purpose of this study [was] to determine whether welding exposure is associated with damage to nigrostriatal neurons.” Using PET imaging on 20 welders with no parkinsonian symptoms, 20 individuals with symptoms, and 20 healthy controls, the investigators determined that asymptomatic welders had higher manganese levels in the blood and an average 11.7% reduction in dopamine in certain brain regions. The pattern of reduction seen in welders, however, was distinct from the dysfunction pattern found in symptomatic Parkinson’s disease.
The FDA has approved Nuedexta (dextromethorphan hydrobromide and quinidine sulfate) for the treatment of pseudobulbar affect. The new therapy will help patients manage pseudobulbar affect that occurs secondary to multiple sclerosis (MS), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), traumatic brain injury, stroke, Parkinson’s disease, and other neurologic diseases. Nuedexta combines dextromethorphan hydrobromide and quinidine sulfate, a metabolic inhibitor that enables therapeutic dextromethorphan concentrations. These components act on NMDA receptors and sigma-1 in the brain, but the mechanism by which it exerts therapeutic effects in patients with pseudobulbar affect is unknown. The drug was tested in patients with ALS and MS and reduced involuntary laughing and crying episodes compared with placebo.
Virtual reality may be an effective adjunctive therapy for patients experiencing upper arm motor deficits following stroke, according to a study published in the May Stroke. Researchers analyzed seven observational studies and five randomized trials that investigated the effects of virtual reality and video game technology on stroke patients’ upper arm strength and function. Among the observational studies, there was a 14.7% improvement in motor impairment and a 20.1% improvement in motor function; in the randomized trials, patients had an almost five times higher chance of improvement in motor function, compared with those who received traditional therapy. The researchers concluded, “Virtual reality and video game applications are novel and potentially useful technologies that can be combined with conventional rehabilitation for upper arm improvement after stroke.”
Investigators found that surgical revascularization can restore lost brain tissue in patients with cerebrovascular disease that impairs blood flow to the brain, as reported in the online April 14 Stroke. Twenty-nine patients who had undergone vascularization were included in the study. All patients had pre- and postsurgery studies of cerebrovascular reactivity using MRI, and cortical thickness in regions corresponding to steal physiology were measured. “At an average of 11 months after surgery, cortical thickness increased in every successfully revascularized hemisphere,” the authors stated. “Mean cortical thickness in the revascularized regions increased by 5.1%.” The investigators’ goal was to halt further loss of brain tissue due to strokes, “so it was remarkable to see the loss was actually reversed,” they commented.