Introduction: Poststroke spasticity (PSS) affects up to 40% of patients who had a stroke. Botulinum neurotoxin type A (BoNT-A) has been shown to improve spasticity, but the optimal timing of its application remains unclear. While several predictors of upper limb PSS are known, their utility in clinical practice in relation to BoNT-A treatment has yet to be fully elucidated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is characterized by phenotypical heterogeneity, partly resulting from demographic and environmental risk factors. Socio-economic factors and the characteristics of local MS facilities might also play a part.
Methods: This study included patients with a confirmed MS diagnosis enrolled in the Italian MS and Related Disorders Register in 2000-2021.
In patients treated with botulinum toxin-A (BoNT-A), toxin-directed antibody formation was related to the dosage and frequency of injections, leading to the empirical adoption of minimum time intervals between injections of 3months or longer. However, recent data suggest that low immunogenicity of current BoNT-A preparations could allow more frequent injections. Our hypothesis is that a short time interval between injections may be safe and effective in reducing upper limb spasticity and related disability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Polyneuropathy leads to postural instability and an increased risk of falling. We investigated how impaired motor impairment and proprioceptive input due to neuropathy influences postural strategies.
Methods: Platformless bisegmental posturography data were recorded in healthy subjects and patients with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP).
Phasic alertness represents the ability to increase response readiness to a target following an external warning stimulus. Specific networks in the frontal and parietal regions appear to be involved in the alert state. In this study, we examined the role of the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) during the attentional processing of a stimulus using a cued double-choice reaction time task.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStability and mobility in functional motor activities depend on a precise regulation of phasic and tonic muscular activity that is carried out automatically, without conscious awareness. The sensorimotor control of posture involves a complex integration of multisensory inputs that results in a final motor adjustment process. All or some of the components of this system may be dysfunctional in Parkinsonian patients, rendering postural instability one of the most disabling features of Parkinson's disease (PD).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Purpose: Alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC) is a rare neurological disease characterized by recurrent paroxysmal attacks of hemiplegia. The aim of the study was to assess the recovery cycle of the somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) in a group of AHC patients.
Methods: Seven AHC patients and 10 control age-matched subjects (CS) were recruited.
We describe a 58-year-old woman who underwent hysteroscopic myomectomy to treat a large submucosal leiomyoma. A hypotonic glycine solution was instilled to distend the uterus. At one hour after the distending medium infusion started for hysteroscopic resection an electrolytic imbalance developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a 43-year-old patient who experienced visual loss 4 years after beginning antiepileptic therapy with topiramate. Ophthalmological and neurological examinations led to a preliminary diagnosis of bilateral toxic optic neuritis. Mitochondrial genome sequence analysis detected a Leber hereditary optic neuropathy 11778G>A mutation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: In this study we investigated the effect of polarity-related differences in short-duration very low-intensity galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS), not perceived by the subject, by evaluating the minimal postural sway responses in healthy people. We also verified its possible usefulness as a differential diagnostic tool in patients with postural instability disturbances related to polyneuropathy or peripheral vertigo.
Methods: We applied bimastoid opposite polarity direct current GVS (0.
Objective: To assess visual perception in 40 patients suffering from migraine with aura (MA), 40 patients suffering from migraine without aura (MO), and 40 controls.
Background: Visual perception abnormalities are a common feature in both MA and MO.
Methods: We performed luminance and color central perimetry.
Six patients with alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC) underwent motor evoked potentials (MEPs), somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) and blink reflex recording. No SEP abnormality was found. As for MEP recording, central conduction time did not differ between patients studied during either interictal or ictal phase, and normal subjects, suggesting that the pyramidal system function is spared.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough migraine is characterised by an abnormal cortical excitability level, whether the central nervous system is hyper- or hypo-excitable in migraine still remains an unsolved problem. The aim of our study was to compare the somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) recovery cycle, a marker of the somatosensory system's excitability, in a group of 15 children suffering from migraine without aura (MO) (mean age 11.7+/-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To detect mild visual field impairment in asymptomatic glaucoma suspect patients.
Methods: Color perception within the visual field was tested with customized color video perimetry. The key features of the system were stimuli color desaturation, low-level luminance and equiluminant gray background.
Although topiramate, one of the newer drugs used in treating epilepsy, is effective in reducing seizure frequency and has a wide spectrum of action, it often induces intolerable adverse effects, predominantly related to the central nervous system. Information that would help document adverse reactions early, thus allowing topiramate doses to be adjusted during the drug titration and maintenance phases, could be obtained from electroencephalogram (EEG) studies. We studied the clinical effects and EEG changes induced by topiramate in patients with refractory partial epilepsy receiving the drug as add-on therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Neuropharmacol
October 2001
In patients with epilepsy the older antiepileptic drugs induce distinct electroencephalographic changes and may also alter visual function. Although the effects of the newer antiepileptic drugs on the electroencephalogram remain less clear, long-term treatment with vigabatrin (VGB) has been reported to induce severe and permanent visual impairment. Our aim in this study was to investigate the effects of a single oral dose of VGB and carbamazepine (CBZ) on visual function in normal healthy volunteers randomly assigned to three groups according to a single-blind, placebo-controlled design.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry
January 2001
Objectives: To compare the degree of visual evoked potential (VEP) delay to stimulation of central, nasal, and temporal regions of the macula in optic neuritis, to determine whether the differential involvement of parvocellular and magnocellular fibre types suggested by other studies is governed by retinotopic factors.
Methods: VEPs were recorded to reversal of 40' checks in the central (4 degrees radius) and the left and right surrounding regions of the visual field (as far as 10 degrees vertical and 14 degrees horizontal) in 30 patients recently recovered from the acute stage of optic neuritis, and in 17 age matched controls.
Results: In the control group, VEP latencies were similar to stimulation of the central and temporal regions of the macula, marginally shorter from the nasal region.
A relationship between glaucoma and migraine has been hypothesized by some authors, but not confirmed by others. We studied the prevalence and features of migraine and ocular pain in 460 "glaucoma suspect" patients (with ocular hypertension, but without optic disc and visual field abnormalities) and 460 controls. A higher prevalence of migraine was found in patients (13%), particularly in women (17%), than in controls (7%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring detailed visual function testing, pattern-reversal visual evoked potentials (VEP), generated by different spatial frequencies (3 c/d, 1 c/d and 0.6 c/d) and visual contrasts (100% and 10%) were recorded in 21 adolescent and young adult phenylketonuric (PKU) patients (11 females and 10 males; mean age 14.8 years, range 9-22.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColor visual field analysis has proven highly sensitive for early visual impairments diagnosis in MS, yet it has never attained widespread popularity usually because the procedure is difficult to standardize, the devices are costly, and the test is fatiguing. We propose a computerized procedure running on standard PC, cost effective, clonable, and easy handled. Two hundred and sixty-four colored patches subtending 1 degree angle vision, with selected hues and low saturation levels are sequentially and randomly displayed on gray equiluminous background of the PC screen subtending 24 degrees x 40 degrees angle of vision.
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