75 results match your criteria: "Geneva University Medical Center[Affiliation]"
Eur J Neurol
January 2025
Division of Intensive Care, Department or Anesthesiology, Pharmacology, Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, University Hospital of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Background: Outcome prediction in Status epilepticus (SE) aids in clinical decision-making, yet existing scores have limitations due to SE heterogeneity. Serum albumin is emerging as a readily available prognostic biomarker in various clinical conditions. This study evaluates hypoalbuminemia in predicting short- and long-term mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrit Care Med
November 2024
Division of Intensive Care, Department or Anaesthesiology, Pharmacology, Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine Geneva University Hospitals, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
Objectives: Continuous electroencephalogram (cEEG) monitoring is recommended for status epilepticus (SE) management in ICU but is still underused due to resource limitations and inconclusive evidence regarding its impact on outcome. Furthermore, the term "continuous monitoring" often implies continuous recording with variable intermittent review. The establishment of a dedicated ICU-electroencephalogram unit may fill this gap, allowing cEEG with nearly real-time review and multidisciplinary management collaboration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Spine
January 2024
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Thessaly Medical School, Larissa, Greece.
Brain Spine
November 2023
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Division of Neurosurgery, Geneva University Medical Center, Geneva, Switzerland.
Introduction: Artificial Intelligence tools are being introduced in almost every field of human life, including medical sciences and medical education, among scepticism and enthusiasm.
Research Question: to assess how a generative language tool (Generative Pretrained Transformer 3.5, ChatGPT) performs at both generating questions and answering a neurosurgical residents' written exam.
Cortex
November 2023
Department of Neurosurgery, Geneva University Medical Center & Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland. Electronic address:
Personality changes following neurosurgical procedures remain poorly understood and pose a major concern for patients, rendering a strong need for predictive biomarkers. Here we report a case of a female patient in her 40s who underwent resection of a large sagittal sinus meningioma with bilateral extension, including resection and ligation of the superior sagittal sinus, that resulted in borderline personality disorder. Importantly, we captured clinically-observed personality changes in a series of experiments assessing self-other voice discrimination, one of the experimental markers for self-consciousness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRadiol Case Rep
August 2023
Division of Nuclear Medicine, Diagnostic Department, Geneva University Medical Center, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva University Hospitals, University of Geneva, Rue Gabrielle-Perret-Gentil 4, CH-1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
Phosphaturic mesenchymal tumor is a rare tumor characterized by paraneoplastic osteomalacia. The diagnosis is often delayed because of nonspecific symptoms and difficulty to localize the tumor. In this study we report a case of PMT of the left femur detected by Ga-68-DOTATATE PET-CT with radiological features mimicking osteoid osteoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuro Oncol
July 2023
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Division of Neurosurgery, Cambridge, UK.
Background: This study assessed the international variation in surgical neuro-oncology practice and 30-day outcomes of patients who had surgery for an intracranial tumor during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: We prospectively included adults aged ≥18 years who underwent surgery for a malignant or benign intracranial tumor across 55 international hospitals from 26 countries. Each participating hospital recorded cases for 3 consecutive months from the start of the pandemic.
Genes (Basel)
December 2021
Interfaculty Institute of Microbiology and Infection Medicine, University of Tübingen, 72076 Tubingen, Germany.
encodes 16 two-component systems (TCSs) that enable the bacteria to sense and respond to changing environmental conditions. Considering the function of these TCSs in bacterial survival and their potential role as drug targets, it is important to understand the exact mechanisms underlying signal perception. The differences between the sensing of appropriate signals and the transcriptional activation of the TCS system are often not well described, and the signaling mechanisms are only partially understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStroke
February 2022
UMC Utrecht Brain Center, Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery (C.C.M.Z, L.A.M., G.J.E.R., Y.M.R.), University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Background And Purpose: In previous studies, women had a higher risk of rupture of intracranial aneurysms than men, but female sex was not an independent risk factor. This may be explained by a higher prevalence of patient- or aneurysm-related risk factors for rupture in women than in men or by insufficient power of previous studies. We assessed sex differences in rupture rate taking into account other patient- and aneurysm-related risk factors for aneurysmal rupture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancers (Basel)
November 2021
Translational Research Centre in Onco-Hematology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
The treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) remains a challenge especially among the elderly. The Bcl-2 inhibitor venetoclax recently showed significant survival benefits in AML patients when combined to low-dose cytarabine or azacitidine. Bcl-2 inhibition initiate mitochondrial apoptosis, but also respiration and cellular ATP production in AML.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neurochir (Wien)
May 2021
Laboratory of Neurocognitive Science, Center for Neuroprosthetics and Brain Mind Institute, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL), Geneva, Switzerland.
Surgical treatment of tumors, epileptic foci or of vascular origin, requires a detailed individual pre-surgical workup and intra-operative surveillance of brain functions to minimize the risk of post-surgical neurological deficits and decline of quality of life. Most attention is attributed to language, motor functions, and perception. However, higher cognitive functions such as social cognition, personality, and the sense of self may be affected by brain surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeizure
March 2021
Department of Neurosurgery, Geneva University Medical Center & Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland.
Background: Alien hand syndrome (AHS) is a disabling condition in which one hand behaves in a way that the person finds "alien". This feeling of alienation is related to the occurrence of movements of the respective hand performed without or against conscious intention. Most information on AHS stems from single case observations in patients with frontal, callosal, or parietal brain damage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol
February 2021
Institute of Mountain Emergency Medicine, EURAC Research, Bolzano, Italy.
Key Points: Acclimatization to hypoxia leads to a reduction in plasma volume (PV) that restores arterial O content. Findings from studies investigating the mechanisms underlying this PV contraction have been controversial, possibly as experimental conditions were inadequately controlled. We examined the mechanisms underlying the PV contraction evoked by 4 days of exposure to hypobaric hypoxia (HH) in 11 healthy lowlanders, while strictly controlling water intake, diet, temperature and physical activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet Neurol
August 2020
Department of Neurosurgery, Geneva University Medical Center and Faculty of Medicine, 1205 Geneva, Switzerland.
Acta Neurochir (Wien)
September 2020
Department of Neurosurgery, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli, Rome, Italy.
Background: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2 or Covid-19), which began as an epidemic in China and spread globally as a pandemic, has necessitated resource management to meet emergency needs of Covid-19 patients and other emergent cases. We have conducted a survey to analyze caseload and measures to adapt indications for a perception of crisis.
Methods: We constructed a questionnaire to survey a snapshot of neurosurgical activity, resources, and indications during 1 week with usual activity in December 2019 and 1 week during SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in March 2020.
Neurochirurgie
December 2019
Neurosurgery Division, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva University Medical Center, Geneva, Switzerland.
Background: Intracranial arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are rare lesions that can be congenital or acquired in early childhood, with fatal outcome in approximately 30% of cases. De novo formation during adulthood without established predisposing vascular pathology or previous brain insult is even less frequent.
Case Description: We present a case of de novo brain AVM in an alcoholic Child-B cirrhosis setting.
Neurosurg Focus
July 2019
4Neuroradiologie, SwissNeuroInstitute, Klinik Hirslanden, Zürich, Switzerland.
The disease resulting in the formation, growth, and rupture of intracranial aneurysms is complex. Research is accumulating evidence that the disease is driven by many different factors, some constant and others variable over time. Combinations of factors may induce specific biophysical reactions at different stages of the disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld Neurosurg
May 2019
School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Background: To study improvements in outcomes after surgery for intracranial meningiomas.
Methods: We performed a longitudinal observational study comparing 1469 patients operated on for intracranial meningioma in 4 consecutive time frames (1990-1994, 1995-1999, 2000-2004, and 2005-2010).
Results: Median age at surgery was 58.
Neurol Neurochir Pol
June 2019
Department of Neurosurgery, Cantonal Hospital St. Gallen, St. Gallen, Switzerland; Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany. Electronic address:
Introduction: Several imaging modalities are under investigation to unravel the pathophysiological mystery of delayed performance deficits in patients after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Although both imaging and neuropsychological studies have been conducted, only few data on longitudinal correlations of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI) and extensive neuropsychological testing exist.
Methods: MRI with T1- and T2-weighted, SWI and DTI sequences at baseline and 12 months of 30 mTBI patients were compared with 20 healthy controls.
Front Immunol
September 2019
Department of Pediatrics, Geneva Children's Hospital, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland.
Lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) are often caused by () and can be recurrent in 8% of children older than 2 years of age. is recognized by pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs) of the innate immune system, in particular toll-like receptors (TLRs) 2 and 4. To assess whether a defect somewhere along this TLR signaling pathway increases susceptibility to recurrent pneumococcal LRTI, we conducted a prospective case-control study with 88 healthy individuals and 45 children with recurrent LRTI aged 2-5 years old.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
February 2019
Division of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland.
Multiple factors, namely amyloid, tau, inflammation, metabolic, and perfusion changes, contribute to the cascade of neurodegeneration and functional decline occurring in Alzheimer's disease (AD). These molecular and cellular processes and related functional and morphological changes can be visualized in vivo by two imaging modalities, namely positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). These imaging biomarkers are now part of the diagnostic algorithm and of particular interest for patient stratification and targeted drug development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSchizophr Bull
January 2019
Department of Psychology or Neurobiology, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
Brain imaging has revealed that the CA1 subregion of the hippocampus is hyperactive in prodromal and diagnosed patients with schizophrenia (SCZ), and that glutamate is a driver of this hyperactivity. Strikingly, mice deficient in the glutamate synthetic enzyme glutaminase have CA1 hypoactivity and a SCZ-resilience profile, implicating glutamate-metabolizing enzymes. To address this further, we examined mice with a brain-wide deficit in the glutamate-metabolizing enzyme glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), encoded by Glud1, which should lead to glutamate excess due to reduced glutamate metabolism in astrocytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetologia
March 2018
Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Cisanello University Hospital, University of Pisa, Via Paradisa 2, 56126, Pisa, Italy.
Aims/hypothesis: Pancreatic islet beta cell failure causes type 2 diabetes in humans. To identify transcriptomic changes in type 2 diabetic islets, the Innovative Medicines Initiative for Diabetes: Improving beta-cell function and identification of diagnostic biomarkers for treatment monitoring in Diabetes (IMIDIA) consortium ( www.imidia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosurg Rev
January 2018
Department of Neurosurgery, Faculty of Medicine, Geneva University Medical Center, Geneva, Switzerland.
Hemispherotomy is an established surgical technique to cure or palliate selected, mostly young patients suffering from refractory epilepsy. However, a few patients continue to have seizures despite the surgical hemispherical disconnection. We present a case series of patients who underwent redo hemispherotomy after a first unsuccessful hemispherical disconnection and provide a roadmap for subsequent workup and treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep
January 2017
Laboratories of Neuroimmunology, Neuroscience Research Center, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Lausanne University Hospital, Chemin des Boveresses 155, 1066 Epalinges, Switzerland; Department of Pathology and Immunology, Geneva University Medical Center, Rue Michel-Servet 1, 1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland; Division of Neurology, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Lausanne University Hospital, Rue du Bugnon 46, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland. Electronic address:
The interaction between oxysterols and the G protein-coupled receptor Epstein-Barr virus-induced gene 2 (EBI2) fine-tunes immune cell migration, a mechanism efficiently targeted by several disease-modifying treatments developed to treat multiple sclerosis (MS), such as natalizumab. We previously showed that memory CD4 T lymphocytes migrate specifically in response to 7α,25-dihydroxycholesterol (7α,25-OHC) via EBI2 in the MS murine model experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. However, the EBI2 expression profile in human lymphocytes in both healthy and MS donors is unknown.
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