Publications by authors named "Sakis Lambrianides"

This case report describes a patient in her late 60s, previously diagnosed with Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome who presented with difficulty walking. A year prior to her presentation she had a fall which made her notice a painless foot drop on the right. Her right leg was profoundly hypertrophied compared with the left, and a port-wine stain was present on the lateral side, extending from the hip to the mid-shin.

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Introduction: Combined central and peripheral demyelination (CCPD) is a term used to describe a rare condition involving demyelinating lesions of both the central and the peripheral nervous system. Its etiology remains unclear, and a pathogenic role of cell-mediated and/or humoral immunity has been proposed. A number of patients with CCPD are positive to antineurofascin (anti-NF), antigalactocerebroside, and antilactosylseramide antibodies.

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The co-existence of myasthenia gravis and other inflammatory myopathies has been reported in the literature before, but no clinical cases involving inclusion body myositis have been reported. We report a case of a 67-year-old patient who presented with dysphagia, exhibiting the typical electrophysiological features of postsynaptic neuromuscular junction defect with positive muscle acetylcholine receptor antibodies, consistent with the diagnosis of myasthenia gravis. Nevertheless, response to acetylcholinesterase inhibitors and immunomodulatory treatment was unexpectedly poor.

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Background And Purpose: Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) is a debilitating disease of the central nervous system caused by the ubiquitous polyomavirus JC (JCV) in immunocompromised hosts. In recent years, a new subpopulation of patients at risk for PML has emerged, due to the growing use of immunomodulatory or immunosuppressive therapies in autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS). The anti-JCV antibody index is used as a stratification tool in assessing the risk of developing PML.

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Psoriasis is a relatively common immune-mediated chronic inflammatory skin disease. It is well known that interferon-beta, a drug used in the management of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, could exacerbate or induce de novo psoriasis. There is limited evidence in the literature based only on case reports that natalizumab could induce or aggravate psoriasis.

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