Publications by authors named "Julie Kurek"

Introduction: Providers can evaluate patients who sustain trauma during outdoor activities by using the extended focused assessment with sonography for trauma (FAST) and the limited knee ultrasound. Remote tele-mentored ultrasound (RTMUS) can help minimally trained providers in the wilderness if they have difficulty obtaining a view or have questions about the interpretation of an image. The goal of our study was to determine the feasibility of using RTMUS to teach the FAST exam and knee ultrasound exam to ultrasound-naive medical students during a wilderness medicine outdoor activity.

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Article Synopsis
  • Parkinson's disease (PD) is linked to notable gastrointestinal symptoms, particularly constipation, and this study explores the interaction between gut and brain functions in PD.
  • Researchers used sensory and motor assessments, comparing data from 25 PD patients with constipation and 20 healthy individuals to identify differences in neuronal signaling related to bowel function.
  • The findings indicate that PD is associated with significant gut-brain axis dysfunction, where prolonged nerve signaling correlates with the severity of constipation and altered rectal sensation in PD patients.
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Purpose Of Review: Chronic constipation is a common, nonmotor, and prodromal symptom in Parkinson's disease (PD). Its underlying neuropathology may provide pathophysiological insight into PD. Here, we critically review what is currently known about the neuroanatomical and brain-gut interactions, and the origin and progression of Lewy pathology (LP) at three levels-brain/brainstem, spinal cord, and enteric nervous system.

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Background: Medication-induced tremor (MIT) is common in clinical practice and there are many medications/drugs that can cause or exacerbate tremors. MIT typically occurs by enhancement of physiological tremor (EPT), but not all drugs cause tremor in this way. In this manuscript, we review how some common examples of MIT have informed us about the pathophysiology of tremor.

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Delusional infestation (DI), a form of psychosis, has rarely been reported in patients with Parkinson disease (PD). The clinical presentation and successful treatment of DI is illustrated through 5 cases. Each patient developed DI during treatment for moderate to advanced Parkinson's disease, and only 2 had cognitive impairment.

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