Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has caused millions of infections to date and has led to a worldwide pandemic. Most patients had a complete recovery from the acute infection, however, a large number of the affected individuals experienced symptoms that persisted more than 3 months after diagnosis. These symptoms most commonly include fatigue, memory difficulties, brain fog, dyspnea, cough, and other less common ones such as headache, chest pain, paresthesias, mood changes, muscle pain, and weakness, skin rashes, and cardiac, endocrine, renal and hepatic manifestations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurol Neurochir Pol
March 2024
Aim Of The Study: This study presents cases of recurrent cerebrospinal fluid-venous fistulas (CVFs) de novo at a different spinal level following successful treatment of initial CVFs. The aim was to highlight this rarely described phenomenon and report the clinical and imaging features after initial treatment, providing insights into the dynamics of recurrent CVFs.
Clinical Rationale For The Study: Understanding the course of CVFs post-treatment is crucial for optimising patient management, especially when symptoms persist or recur.
Front Neurol
December 2023
Headache is a frequent symptom among patients with hypermobility spectrum disorders. This mini review focuses specifically on a challenging aspect of headache evaluation in all patients, but especially those with hypermobility - the orthostatic headache. While the differential for an orthostatic headache is overall limited, patients with hypermobility disorders have risk factors for all of the most commonly encountered orthostatic headache disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Objectives: Variants in the gene have been associated with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). We aimed to replicate these findings, identify additional variants, and further define the clinical phenotype associated with variants.
Methods: We determined the prevalence of variants by whole-genome sequencing (WGS) in 94 patients with NPH.
Neurol Neurochir Pol
May 2023
Introduction: We aimed to define the prevalence of objective cognitive impairment in a group of chronic migraineurs, and to define how migraineurs with cognitive impairment differed from those without impairment, and in doing so to compare cognitive impairment in chronic migraine to another chronic headache-related disorder already associated with cognitive impairment (i.e. pseudotumor cerebri syndrome).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerebrospinal fluid-venous fistula is increasingly recognized as a cause of spontaneous intracranial hypotension.1 Transvenous embolization is emerging as an efficacious minimally invasive treatment.2-4 The procedure aims to embolize paraspinal and foraminal veins draining the fistula; however, complete embolization may be challenging as numerous small venous tributaries at the foraminal venous plexus, including dorsal muscular branches, may serve as additional routes of cerebrospinal fluid egress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims Of The Study: We aimed to define the cognitive burden of the largest pseudotumor cerebri syndrome (PTCS) population to date, compare objective to subjective cognitive dysfunction, and determine clinical predictors of cognitive dysfunction amongst an array of previously unstudied factors.
Clinical Rationale: Patients with PTCS commonly report cognitive dysfunction, a factor associated with poor quality of life. It is not definitively known whether cognitive impairment is present in these patients, and what features of the syndrome predict impairment.