Publications by authors named "Peter Critchley"

Objective: To assess the effectiveness and safety of a novel management pathway in the obstetric population presenting to a pain medicine clinic with persistent headache after accidental dural puncture (PHADP).

Background: Accidental dural puncture (ADP) can result in headaches that persist for months to years. These headaches can be a therapeutic challenge, often cause severe disability, and management pathway remains obscure.

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Background: Clinical presentation of spontaneous intracranial hypotension headache (SIHH) has similarities with postdural puncture headache (PDPH). Recommended treatment for both conditions is an epidural blood patch. Successful outcomes following greater occipital nerve blocks have been reported in the management of PDPH.

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We report anti-N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor encephalitis in two patients with autism and intellectual disability presenting with neuropsychiatric symptoms of catatonia and neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Case reports such as these help raise awareness of this clinical issue. By paving the way for earlier diagnoses they ultimately maximise the potential for curative treatments and prevention of long-term complications.

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An 88-year-old woman with a background of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) and presented with unilateral ptosis and dull facial pains for 1 month. Examination revealed a complete right-sided ptosis and pupillary dilation. Vision in her right eye was limited to light perception.

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Autosomal recessive hereditary spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum (HSP-TCC) maps to the SPG11 locus in the majority of cases. Mutations in the KIAA1840 gene, encoding spatacsin, have been shown to underlie SPG11-linked HSP-TCC. The aim of this study was to perform candidate gene analysis in HSP-TCC subjects from Asian families and to characterize disruption of spatacsin function during zebrafish development.

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Neomembranes composed of either bovine brain lipid that contains sialoglycolipids or egg yolk lecithin that does not, were formed on an HPA sensor chip and used to study the binding of influenza A virus in real time by surface plasmon resonance. Virus bound only to the bovine brain lipid membrane. This was confirmed by an 84% reduction in virus binding after treatment of the neomembrane with neuraminidase.

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In the first part of this study fragmentation patterns from a range of dextran oligomers (containing 4-20 anhydroglucose units) were compared in three different methods of analysis coupled with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation (MALDI) mass spectrometry. Collision-induced-dissociation (CID), prompt in-source decay (ISD) and post-source decay (PSD) all caused cleavage of the glycosidic bonds. Both CID and to a lesser extent ISD caused further cleavage of pyranose rings of the individual sugar residues.

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Glycosidase catalysed hydrolysis of glycolipids non-covalently attached to C(n) microspheres proceeds to completion for appropriate glycolipid-microsphere combinations in contrast with hydrolysis of covalently immobilised analogues which in all cases studied stops significantly short of complete hydrolysis.

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A key molecular event in prion diseases is the conversion of the normal cellular form of the prion protein (PrPC) to an aberrant form known as the scrapie isoform, PrPSc. Under normal physiological conditions PrPC is attached to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane via a GPI-anchor. It has been proposed that a direct interaction between PrP and lipid membranes could be involved in the conversion of PrPC to its disease-associated corrupted conformation, PrPSc.

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Thiolactosyl lipids designed for carbohydrate-protein binding studies have been synthesised. One representative was selected for binding studies with a plant lectin RCA120, the agglutinin from Ricinus communis. The interactions were measured quantitatively in real time using a BIAcore surface plasmon resonance instrument.

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Mutations in the parkin gene, PARK2, are a common cause of parkinsonism in familial as well as isolated cases with an age of onset <40 years and should be considered in the diagnostic work up of young-onset parkinsonism. We report a detailed clinical evaluation of a personal series of 24 patients with mutations in the parkin gene. The clinical presentation of most cases was broadly comparable to that of previous descriptions of autosomal recessive early-onset or juvenile parkinsonism and young-onset Parkinson's disease and also had similarities with phenotypes of dopa-responsive dystonia.

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Application of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) to the analysis of dextran and dextrin derivatives, specifically glucose saccharides, by time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry has been reported. MALDI-TOF analysis was carried out on alpha-, beta- and gamma-cyclodextrin, two O-methylated-beta-cyclodextrins of differing degrees of substitution (DS) and dextrans (a linear glucose saccharide), as pure and doped solutions and as mixtures of two or more of these. Doping was carried out with trace amounts of inorganic salts.

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Background And Objectives: Severe phantom limb pain after surgical amputation affects 50% to 67% of patients and is difficult to treat. Gabapentin is effective in several syndromes of neuropathic pain. Therefore, we evaluated its analgesic efficacy in phantom limb pain.

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Several unnatural N-acyl neuraminic acids (N-propionyl, N-hexanoyl, N-benzoyl, N-trifluoroacetyl, N-chloroacetyl, N-difluoroacetyl) were prepared enzymatically using immobilised sialic acid aldolase. N-Trifluoroacetyl-, N-chloroacetyl- and N-difluoroacetyl neuraminic acids were shown to enhance up to 10-fold the rate of association of influenza virus A to a sialoglycolipid neomembrane by surface plasmon resonance, and were found to act as weak inhibitors (K(iapp) 0.45-2.

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