Publications by authors named "Josef Spatt"

Article Synopsis
  • The ε4 allele is linked to cognitive decline in Parkinson's disease but has little impact on motor and nonmotor symptoms.
  • In a study of 7,616 individuals, ε4 was only modestly associated with lower cognitive scores and lost significance when accounting for other factors like depression and physical activity.
  • Overall, depression, nonmotor symptoms, and physical activity have a more substantial impact on cognitive impairment in Parkinson's patients than the presence of the ε4 allele.
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  • Multidisciplinary inpatient rehabilitation (MIR) for people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) significantly reduced lower limb spasticity and improved strength and mobility after a 4-week program.
  • After MIR, participants who used the MS-Spasticity App for self-training showed sustained improvement in spasticity, while those using a paper-based method experienced worsening symptoms.
  • The app also resulted in better adherence to the self-training program, with a completion rate of 95% compared to 72% for the paper method.
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Objective: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) impacts stroke recovery and outcome negatively. Although its identification and treatment are part of the current stroke guidelines, standard management with positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy is not routinely performed and adherence rates are very low. The purpose of this study was to determine whether PAP adherence can be improved by a PAP training strategy during in-hospital rehabilitation combined with a telemedicine monitoring system after discharge.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study explores the feasibility of using basic tablet gestures (like clicking and double-clicking) in stroke rehabilitation, focusing on factors that impact successful performance.* -
  • Conducted with 129 participants at a rehabilitation center in Austria, the study found that 69.2% could perform gestures with at least one hand, but only a small percentage could do so with a paretic hand.* -
  • Results suggest that while many stroke patients can use tablets, complex gestures like double-clicking and zooming pose challenges, indicating a need for simpler app designs in rehabilitation contexts.*
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Article Synopsis
  • Feasibility and Acceptability
  • : The study assessed the feasibility of home sleep apnea testing (HSAT) among stroke patients in a neurorehabilitation center, finding that 92% of recordings met acceptable quality standards as part of the HOPES study.
  • Accuracy Comparison
  • : It compared the results of HSAT to polysomnography (PSG) for diagnosing moderate obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in 33 patients, showing a strong correlation and an acceptable mean difference in metrics (REI vs. AHI) and agreement in measurements.
  • Recommendations
  • : The results indicate that HSAT is both feasible and accurately diagnoses OSA in stroke patients, leading to the suggestion that it
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Introduction: Meta-analyses report that more than 50% of patients who had a stroke suffer from moderate to severe sleep apnoea (SA), with adherence rates to positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy of only 30%. The primary objective of this study is to determine whether PAP adherence in patients who had a stroke with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) can be improved by a PAP training strategy during inhospital rehabilitation combined with a telemedicine monitoring system after discharge. Further objectives are (1) to compare the validity of a non-attended level-III polygraphy with that of a level-II polysomnography (PSG) in the diagnosis of SA, (2) to compare the validity of an apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI) yielded by the PAP device with that obtained during PSG, (3) to determine changes in nocturnal systolic blood pressure (BP) due to PAP therapy with the pulse transit time (PTT) method and (4) to assess the impact of telemonitored PAP therapy on neurorehabilitation outcome parameters.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to evaluate the general public's knowledge and attitudes towards epilepsy in Austria, focusing on factors that contribute to negative perceptions.
  • Researchers surveyed 2,128 Austrian adults and found that almost 10% held negative views about people with epilepsy, influenced by factors such as gender, socioeconomic status, and misconceptions about the condition.
  • The findings suggest that targeted information campaigns that address myths and promote personal relationships with individuals with epilepsy could help improve societal attitudes.
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Arnold Pick (1851-1924) provided the first description of the neurodegenerative disease associated with his name; but his importance to the field of neuroscience goes far beyond this eponymous gift. His view that the process of dementia should be seen as a mosaic of circumscribed neuropsychological deficits and not as a diffuse degradation of mental abilities is essential for progress in a cognitive neuropsychological approach to the study of dementias.

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To investigate the nature of the apraxia in corticobasal degeneration (CBD) five patients with CBD and five matched controls were compared on tests of: i) meaningless and symbolic gesture production, ii) a battery of semantic tasks based on 20 everyday items (involving naming and picture-picture matching according to semantic attributes, matching gestures-to-objects, object usage from name and with the real object) and iii) a novel tool test of mechanical problem solving. All five patients showed severe impairment in the production of meaningless and symbolic gestures from command, and by imitation, and were also impaired when using real objects. Deficits were not, however, restricted to action production: four were unable to match gestures to objects and all five showed impairment in the selection and usage of novel tools in the mechanical problem solving task.

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Déjà vu: possible parahippocampal mechanisms.

J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci

May 2002

Déjà vu experiences are common in normal subjects. In addition, they are established symptoms of temporal lobe seizures. The author argues that the phenomenon is the result of faulty and isolated activity of a recognition memory system that consists of the parahippocampal gyrus and its neocortical connections.

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