Publications by authors named "Kata Eklics"

Background And Aim: White matter hyperintensities (WMHs), presented on T2-weighted or fluid-attenuated inversion recovery magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences, are lesions in the human brain that can be observed in both migraine and multiple sclerosis (MS).

Methods: Seventeen migraine patients and 15 patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis with WMHs, and 17 healthy subjects age-and sex-matched to the migraine group were prospectively enrolled and underwent conventional and advanced MRI studies with diffusion-and perfusion-weighted imaging and single voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

Results: In both disease groups, elevated T2 relaxation time, apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values, and decreased -acetyl-aspartate levels were found in the intralesional white matter compared to the contralateral normal-appearing white matter (NAWM), while there was no difference between the hemispheres of the control subjects.

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Medical education and communication training has been undergoing substantial changes recently in our globalized environment. Multidisciplinary simulation-based methods worldwide focus on improving effective clinical skills including history taking, physical examination, diagnostic skills, critical thinking, therapeutic skills, and others via interactions between medical students, trainees, and patients. Recently, Hungary has joined such global trends.

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Background And Aim: Brainstem descending modulatory circuits have been postulated to be involved in migraine. Differences in brainstem volume between migraineurs and healthy controls have been demonstrated in previous research, nevertheless, the effect of migraine aura on brainstem volume is still uncertain. The aim of this study was to investigate the brainstem volume in migraineurs and examine the effect of migraine aura on brainstem volume.

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Article Synopsis
  • * MRI scans of 161 female migraineurs and 40 healthy controls revealed that migraineurs with WMLs had smaller volumes in the right thalamus and hippocampus, while those without aura had larger volumes in certain hippocampal regions.
  • * The results suggest that WMLs affect brain volume in migraine patients and that factors like aura presence and attack frequency correlate with specific changes in hippocampal volume, highlighting the need for effective migraine treatments to minimize brain volume loss.
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Cow's milk protein allergy is one of the most common pediatric food allergies. It poses a significant socioeconomic burden in industrialized countries and has a profound effect on the quality of life of affected individuals and their families. Diverse immunologic pathways can lead to the clinical symptoms of cow's milk protein allergy; some of the pathomechanisms are known in detail, but others need further elucidation.

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Introduction: The most prevalent food allergy in younger children is cow's milk protein allergy (CMPA), a hypersensitivity reaction to cow's milk protein and its most common clinical manifestation is allergic colitis. The goal of our recent study was to assess somatic symptoms of CMPA and to prospectively observe the effects of a dairy elimination diet using objective parameters and questionnaires.

Methods: The County Hospital in Szekszárd, Hungary, investigated children aged 1 to 18 who had clinical signs that might indicate CMPA.

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Endurance training-induced changes in left ventricular diastolic function and right ventricular parameters have been investigated extensively in adolescent athletes. Our aim was to examine the parameters for adolescent athletes (n=121, 15.1±1.

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