Publications by authors named "Hans H Jung"

The possible authorisation of new monoclonal antibody therapies for Alzheimer's disease poses challenges for healthcare systems worldwide. In this paper, the Swiss Memory Clinics association (SMC) analyses the available resources and identifies potential health care shortages. Overcoming potential bottlenecks is a challenge that requires action at various levels.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the relationship between infections or vaccinations and the onset of neuralgic amyotrophy (NA), a condition causing nerve pain and weakness.
  • Conducted across multiple centers, the research involved matching NA patients with healthy controls while collecting clinical data and biological samples, focusing on prior infections and vaccinations.
  • Results showed that 38.6% of NA cases had an identified immune trigger (either an infection or vaccination), with significant associations found between certain viral infections and the severity of the condition.
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XK disease is a very rare, multi-system disease, which can present with a wide spectrum of symptoms. This disorder can also be identified pre-symptomatically with the incidental detection of serological abnormalities when typing erythrocytes in peripheral blood, or on other routine laboratory testing. Increasing awareness of this disorder and improved access to genetic testing are resulting in increasing identification of affected patients and families.

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Introduction: We present a systematic review of phenotypes of McLeod syndrome (MLS) and a case of a 73-year-old female carrier of the genetic alteration leading to MLS with the typical progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) phenotype.

Methods: To facilitate clinical reasoning and enable targeted diagnosis, we conducted a systematic review of the papers describing symptomatic cases of confirmed McLeod syndrome. This review follows the PRISMA 2020 statement: an updated guideline for reporting systematic reviews (Page et al in Syst Rev 10(1):89, 2021).

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Aims Of The Study: Systemic amyloidoses are rare protein-folding diseases with heterogeneous, often nonspecific clinical presentations. To better understand systemic amyloidoses and to apply state-of-the-art diagnostic pathways and treatment, the interdisciplinary Amyloidosis Network was founded in 2013 at University Hospital Zurich. In this respect, a registry was implemented to study the characteristics and life expectancy of patients with amyloidosis within the area covered by the network.

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Study Objectives: Wearable devices that monitor sleep stages and heart rate offer the potential for longitudinal sleep monitoring in patients with neurodegenerative diseases. Sleep quality reduces with disease progression in Huntington's disease (HD). However, the involuntary movements characteristic of HD may affect the accuracy of wrist-worn devices.

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Nephropathic cystinosis is a rare autosomal recessive storage disorder caused by CTNS gene mutations, leading to autophagy-lysosomal pathway impairment and cystine crystals accumulation. Neurologic involvement is highly variable and includes both neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative disturbances, as well as focal neurologic deficits. By presenting longitudinal data of a 28-year-old patient with a large infratentorial lesion, we summarized the pathology, clinical and imaging features of neurological involvement in cystinosis patients.

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The two very rare neurodegenerative diseases historically known as the "neuroacanthocytosis syndromes" are due to mutations of either or These are phenotypically similar disorders that affect primarily the basal ganglia and hence result in involuntary abnormal movements as well as neuropsychiatric and cognitive alterations. There are other shared features such as abnormalities of red cell membranes which result in acanthocytes, whose relationship to neurodegeneration is not yet known. Recent insights into the functions of these two proteins suggest dysfunction of lipid processing and trafficking at the subcellular level and may provide a mechanism for neuronal dysfunction and death, and potentially a target for therapeutic interventions.

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Introduction: Choreiform movement disorders are characterized by involuntary, rapid, irregular, and unpredictable movements of the limbs, face, neck, and trunk. These movements often initially go unnoticed by the affected individuals and may blend together with seemingly intended, random motions. Choreiform movements can occur both at rest and during voluntary movements.

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The COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on the Swiss health care system, affecting especially vulnerable people, such as patients suffering from dementia. The purpose of this study was to investigate the challenges experienced by dementia patients, their carers, and clinicians during the pandemic in Switzerland. An online survey was sent to all memory clinics in the German speaking part of Switzerland.

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Cobalt intoxication is a rare complication of joint arthroplasty with a metal-on-metal prothesis or metal implants after broken ceramic implants. Patients with metal components should be monitored closely for complications. The awareness for the wide range of clinical pictures of this cobalt intoxication should be increased.

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Background: Cardiac troponin (cTn) T and cTnI are considered cardiac specific and equivalent in the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction. Previous studies suggested rare skeletal myopathies as a noncardiac source of cTnT. We aimed to confirm the reliability/cardiac specificity of cTnT in patients with various skeletal muscle disorders (SMDs).

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Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive disorder causing progressive proximal muscular, respiratory, and bulbar weakness. We present outcome data on motor function, ventilation, nutrition, and language development of SMA patients treated with nusinersen in Switzerland. This multicenter, observational study included 44 patients.

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Transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR amyloidosis) is a disease caused by deposition of transthyretin fibrils in organs and tissues, which causes their dysfunction. The clinical heterogeneity of ATTR amyloidosis and the variable presentation of symptoms at early disease stages, historically meant treatment delays. Diagnostic tools and therapy options of ATTR amyloidosis have markedly improved in recent years.

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Smarter Medicine in Headache Care - presentation and discussion of 5 recommendations An unequivocal headache diagnosis cannot always be made. The lack of diagnostic tests able to prove primary headaches often prompts physicians to perform unnecessary examinations to reduce their uncertainty. When setting out the therapeutic strategy, again, insecurity often leads to mendable choices.

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Introduction: In patients with ulnar neuropathy at the elbow (UNE) the precise determination of the site of lesion is important for subsequent differential diagnostic considerations and therapeutic management. Due to a paucity of comparable data, to better define the role of different diagnostic tests, we performed the first prospective study comparing the diagnostic accuracy of short segment nerve stimulation, nerve ultrasonography, MR neurography (MRN), and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in patients with UNE.

Methods: UNE was clinically diagnosed in 17 patients with 18 affected elbows.

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Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disease characterized by impaired neuromuscular signaling due to autoantibodies targeting the acetylcholine receptor. Although its auto-antigens and effector mechanisms are well defined, the cellular and molecular drivers underpinning MG remain elusive. Here, we employed high-dimensional single-cell mass and spectral cytometry of blood and thymus samples from MG patients in combination with supervised and unsupervised machine-learning tools to gain insight into the immune dysregulation underlying MG.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to examine the long-term effects of bimagrumab over two years in patients with sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM), following an initial core study.
  • Participants continued receiving bimagrumab or a placebo every four weeks, with the main outcomes being changes in the 6-minute walk distance and safety.
  • Results showed that all treatment groups experienced a decline in mobility over time, with high rates of adverse events; however, bimagrumab did not result in significant clinical benefits, leading to the early termination of the extension study.
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Systemic amyloidosis is a heterogeneous group of diseases associated with protein misfolding into insoluble beta-sheet rich structures that deposit extracellularly in different organs, eventually compromising their function. There are more than 30 different proteins, known to be amyloidogenic with “light chain” (AL)-amyloidosis being the most common type, followed by transthyretin (ATTR)-, and amyloid protein A (AA)-amyloidosis. Systemic amyloidosis is a rare disease with an incidence of around 10 patients in 1 million inhabitants.

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Background: Migraine is a multifactorial neurovascular disorder, which affects about 12% of the general population. In episodic migraine, the visual cortex revealed abnormal processing, most likely due to decreased preactivation level. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is able to modify cortical excitability and might result in an alleviation of migraine occurrence if used repetitively.

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Myotonic Dystrophy Type 1 (DM1) is the most frequent hereditary, adult-onset muscular dystrophy. Nevertheless, DM1-associated cognitive-motor impairments have not been fully characterized so far. This study aimed at profiling cognitive and locomotor dysfunctions in these patients.

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Skeletal muscle capillarization is a determining factor in gas and metabolite exchange, while its impairments may contribute to the development of sarcopenia. Studies on the potential of resistance training (RT) to induce angiogenesis in older muscles have been inconclusive, and effects of sequential endurance training (ET) and RT on capillarization are unknown. Healthy older men (66.

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