cover image European Journal of Neurology

European Journal of Neurology

1998 - Volume 5
Issue 1 | January 1998

Editorial

European Journal of Neurology: five years already

Special Section

Neuroimaging in Europe—the present and the future

Special Section

Abstract

Thanks to an ever increasing array of sophisticated techniques, neuroimaging has become an integral part of clinical neurology and a major tool in the neurosciences. Because, undoubtedly, the role of neuroimaging will grow even further, a Task‐force on Neuroimaging was created by the EFNS in June 1996 to assess how academic neurology in Europe should adapt to such rapid changes. The present report summarizes the conclusions reached by this task‐force. After a brief survey of the current optimal use and potential developments of neuroimaging in academic neurology, a set of recommendations and guidelines are proposed, which can be summarized as follows:

Research Papers

Abstract

This study was designed to assess whether enforcement of new health policy regulations in Italy limiting fully paid hospital stay to 60 days has actually caused a decrease in rehabilitation outcomes of stroke patients. Final sample included 370 out of 398 consecutive patients hospitalized between 1993 and 1996 for first stroke sequelae. Rehabilitation results were compared between subgroups of patients admitted before and after new Italian regulations. Length of stay was significantly ( < 0.001) shorter in 1996 than in previous years. However, between 1993 and 1996 a significant ( < 0.05) decrease in effectiveness on mobility and a significant ( < 0.05) increase in “low responders” on both daily living activities and mobility was observed. Moreover, in 1995–96 the precocious discharge of patients compromised stabilization of recovery with subsequent functional worsening. After discharge, outpatient rehabilitation treatment was able to conserve achieved mobility status, but not functional status on daily living activities. We suggest revising the present regulation for medical rehabilitation services to one based on FRGs (functional related groups), so that the appropriate treatment can be carried out for each patient.

Research Papers

Abstract

Epidemiological studies on the relationship between stroke occurrence and the seasons in different countries produced inconsistent results and little is known about these associations in a general population. We report a population‐based study of 214 patients with first‐ever ischemic stroke (IS, data for 1992) and 64 patients with first‐ever subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) registered in the 25–74 years old population of Oktiabrsky District of Novosibirsk, Russia in 1982–92. IS and SAH incidence in four seasons (winter, spring, summer, autumn) was evaluated by means of a chi‐square test. Poisson regression analysis was used to compute the rate ratios (RRs) and corresponding confidence intervals (CIs) for the occurrence ofIS and SAH in winter, spring, and autumn compared with summer. Seasonal variations in the occurrence of IS were significant for the group of young men (25–64 years) and the group of older women (65–74 years) only. The age and sex adjusted RR of the occurrence of IS in winter was 49% greater than in summer (95%CI 1–119%). When men and women were analyzed separately and the rates were adjusted for age, a significantly higher risk of IS was found only in men (RR = 2.48; 95% CI 1.27–4.83) in spring compared with summer. No seasonality was observed for the occurrence of SAH in both men and women. Our findings indicate that there is a significantly greater incidence of ischemic stroke during winter in Siberia, Russia, whereas the incidence of SAH does not show a seasonal variation.

Research Papers

Abstract

Our study was undertaken to investigate whether beta2‐glycoprotein I (GPI) is relevant for enhancing anticardiolipin antibody (aCL) binding in stroke patients, in particular view of vascular risk factors and recurrence of previous cerebral ischemic events. One‐hundred and twenty‐one sera from patients with ischemic stroke and 154 control sera from patients with non‐ischemic neurological disorders (= 43) and healthy subjects (= 111) were included in the study. All sera were tested for either GPI‐independent aCL and GPI‐dependent aCL. GPI‐independent aCL were detected in two (1.7%) stroke patients. When GPI was added to the assay system, 13 (10.8%) sera were positive. Of the 43 sera in the neurological control group one was positive for both GPI‐independent aCL and GPI‐dependent aCL. Multiple linear regression in the stroke group revealed that GPI‐dependent aCL are marginally associated with sex, prior TIA/strokes and embolism. More importantly, GPI‐dependent aCL were significantly more frequent in stroke patients with a history of prior TIA/strokes compared with patients with a first ischemic stroke (= 0.029).

Research Papers

Abstract

We reviewed the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) database of the Dent Neurologic Institute to study the abnormal findings in myelitis. We identified 22 patients, and compared non‐MS‐related acute transverse myelitis (ATM, = 9), to myelitis associated with multiple sclerosis (MS‐myelitis, = 13). The ATM patients were significantly older than MS patients at the time of the myelitis diagnosis (mean age 46 vs 35, < 0.05). ATM appeared as a “longitudinal myelitis”, with fusiform cord expansion on ‐weighted images and intramedullary increased signal on ‐weighted images, each involving multiple spinal levels (mean = 7–8). However, MS‐myelitis lesions appeared focal, involving significantly fewer spinal levels (mean = 1–2, < 0.001), although the lesions were equally likely to expand the cord. Four (42%) of the ATM lesions showed abnormal, variable enhancement, whereas none of the MS myelitis lesions enhanced. Cranial MRI was more likely to be normal in ATM (78%) than in MS‐myelitis patients (15%, < 0.001). Although readily distinguishable from lesions due to MS, the various etiologies for ATM, including post‐infectious (= 2), post‐vaccination (= 3), and idiopathic (= 4) were indistinguishable on MRI. The MRI findings of an extensively lesioned, swollen cord, suspicious for an intramedullary tumor and providing a temptation for a biopsy, may reflect a non‐neoplastic inflammatory disorder.

Research Papers

Abstract

Neurologic involvement has been reported in Behçet's disease (BD) with prevalence rates of 4–49%. Involvement of the central nervous system (CNS) usually follows systemic manifestations of BD by months to years, but as the initial future in only 5% of cases. The variance of the prevalence rates of neurologic involvement in BD raises the possibility of subclinical neurologic involvement. For the purpose of explaining the variance in the prevalence rates, 20 patients with BD, but without neurological symptoms and signs, were investigated by using cerebral single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) which seems to be more convenient for BD than other scanners. A control group of patients with various diseases that were not expected to influence the cerebral blood flow was included. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were performed in cases in which abnormal SPECT findings were obtained. Decreased and asymmetrical tracer uptakes were detected in 35% of patients with BD. MRI scans were normal in these patients. We concluded that functional imaging using SPECT may detect abnormalities at an initial stage prior to their progression to morphological damage detectable by MRI, and this imaging modality can be used even in cases which show no neurologic symptom to indicate the subclinical neurologic involvement.

Research Papers

Abstract

The quantitative assessment of abnormalities on brain MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) in multiple sclerosis (MS) provides a widely used endpoint in monitoring treatment efficacy. Semi‐automated intensity thresholding (global thresholding) is an established method of lesion segmentation, but it is limited by the heavy dependence of derived volumes on the chosen intensity threshold. Inconsistency in threshold choice substantially contributes to its suboptimal reproducibility. A potential improvement to global thresholding is to utilize the histogram matching algorithm to correct for variations in scanner sensitivity. This study evaluated whether or not a single intensity threshold could then be applied across multiple histogram matched images. Eight MS patients were scanned at baseline and after nine months. After nonuniformity correction, the histogram matching correction was applied, reducing the mean absolute percentage variation in normal appearing white matter signal intensity from 15.2 to 3.8% for baseline scans and from 11.9 to 2.1% across serial studies. Lesion volumes were measured with the global threshold technique using a single threshold selected from one scan. A local thresholding technique (contouring) was also performed as a gold standard measure. Agreement between techniques for baseline lesion volumes was only moderate with an intra‐class correlation coefficient (ICC) of 0.46 and there was little agreement for change in lesion volume (ICC = 0.17), reflecting inconsistencies in the volume of non‐lesion regions included by the threshold. Agreement was improved by deleting non‐lesion regions, but this was time consuming and less reproducible than contouring method. At present, the contour technique remains a more appropriate method for lesion load quantification.

Research Papers

Abstract

Patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) experience cognitive disorders which can occur early in the course of the disease. The present study tried to investigate attention abilities of MS patients at the early stage of the disease. Three attention modalities (sustained, simple and complex focused attention) were evaluated. The results show that MS patients at the early stage of the disease presented attentional dysfunction only when the cognitive load of the attention task was high and when controlled information processing was required. This suggests that MS patients probably suffer from a processing resources deficit without modification of the attentional mechanisms.

Research Papers

Abstract

The aim of the present study was to evaluate the striatum's involvement in verbal awareness (semantic processing and supra‐modal attention) in normals and children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Our previous finding of striatal hypoperfusion in ADHD at rest, supports our prediction that the striatum will also show reduced activation in response to tasks requiring verbal awareness.

Research Papers

Abstract

In 15 patients (median age 33 years; range 17–74 years) suffering from acute pneumococcal (10 cases) and meningococcal (five cases) meningitis, cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) was measured in the M– segment of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) by transcranial Doppler sonography, and cerebral perfusion changes were evaluated by ‐Tchexamethylpropylene amine oxime single photon emission computed tomography (HMPAO SPECT). The objective of the study was to test whether increased CBFV during the acute phase of purulent meningitis reflects hyperemia, and to evaluate focal perfusion abnormalities and their correlation to CBFV changes.

Research Papers

Abstract

We investigated the influence of ovulatory and anovulatory menstrual cycles on seizure occurrence in female patients with complex partial seizures. We prospectively documented seizures in relation to menstrual cycles (defined by measurement of basal body temperature and progesterone serum concentrations) in 39 female patients. One hundred and thirty‐two cycles of 35 patients entered final analysis. Only eight patients had anovulatory cycles, in 18 patients all cycles were ovulatory. In the remaining nine patients anovulatory as well as ovulatory cycles were documented. In ovulatory cycles the mean frequency of seizures during the days of menstruation was significantly higher as compared to the periovulatory or the luteal phase of the cycles. During anovulatory cycles seizure frequency was significantly lower during menstruation than in the remaining days of the cycles. Since progesterone is known to exhibit anticonvulsant effects, seizure occurrence during menstruation seems to be related to ovulatory cycles, possibly due to the premenstrual decrease of progesterone. Therapeutic recommendations for the treatment of seizures related to the menstrual cycle (catamenial seizures) include the administration of hormones, as progesterone (recommended especially for women with catamenial epilepsy who have a documented inadequate luteal phase) or the suppression of the menstrual hormonal cycle by synthetic gonadotropin releasing hormone analogs.

Research Papers

Abstract

Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) and brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) were recorded in 10 patients with myotonic dystrophy and in 20 sex and age‐matched healthy controls. In all patients a brain MRI examination was also performed. In our results, the significantly longer absolute peak latencies of the SEPs and the abnormal increasing of the later components of the BAEPs suggest an involvement of the afferent sensory and central auditory pathways. Brain MRI showed white matter hyperintense lesions (WMHL) in eight patients (80%). No correlations were found between individual abnormal electrophysiological parameters or severity of WMHL and age, age at onset, disease duration or muscular impairment. The total number (SEP + BAEP) of electrophysiological abnormalities significantly correlated with muscular impairment ( < 0.05) and MRI changes ( < 0.05), suggesting a strict pathogenetic linkage between muscular and nervous system alterations in this disease.

Case Reports

Abstract

Two patients presented with acute severe occipital headache, neck pain, nausea, vomiting and blurred vision. In both patients angiograms of the posterior circulation showed focal narrowing of the basilar artery, thus basilar artery dissection was considered. Urgent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was unavailable. On the basis of additional angiography of the anterior circulation and control angiograms after 4 and 6 weeks, primary cerebral angiitis was the most probable diagnosis. Treatment with corticosteroids resulted in rapid clinical and angiographic improvement. We conclude that, when MR techniques are unavailable or inconclusive, presumption of basilar dissection on the base of clinical features, Doppler studies, Duplex scanning and angiography of the vertebro‐basilar system should be confirmed by additional carotid angiography in order to exclude diffuse cerebral angiitis.

Case Reports

Abstract

A 77‐year‐old woman presented with rapidly ascending sensory ataxia. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed extensive involvement of the dorsal columns of the spinal cord. Hematological data were normal despite severe cobalamin deficiency. The contribution of magnetic resonance imaging in subacute degeneration of the spinal cord is discussed.

Case Reports

Abstract

Cocaine abuse is a well known cause of cerebrovascular complications. An inflammatory vasculopathy hypothesis has been proposed, but the medical literature has only reported a few pathological confirmations. We report a case with a biopsy demonstrating cerebral inflammatory vascular changes that are associated with cocaine abuse. A 21‐year‐old male, a twice weekly cocaine abuser, developed encephalopathy, apraxia and left hemiparesis with hemisensory loss during the first week after his last cocaine intake; postural tremor and dystonia appeared later. Laboratory data were unrevealing. Cerebral angiography showed a lack of vascularization in the left precentral and central arterial groups. A corticomeningeal cerebral biopsy demonstrated perivascular cell collection and transmural lymphomonocytic infiltration of the small cortical vessels. All symptoms improved with corticosteroid treatment, but 4 years later, the patient returned with a worsening of his encephalopathy and a severe memory impairment, emotional lability and apraxia. A cerebral magnetic resonance image (MRI) showed subcortical and periventricular lesions suggesting ischemic damage in small‐size vessel areas as well as cortical atrophy. This new case supports the existence of an encephalopathy associated with vascular inflammatory changes in a cocaine abuser, although more clinical and experimental data are necessary to define its physiopathology.

Case Reports

Abstract

Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes in patients with Hodgkin's disease are rare findings. Subacute, paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration or autonomic dysfunctions were described before. In some of these cases, autoantibodies against central or peripheral nervous system structures were found in serum and CSF. We present a 30‐year‐old white male who developed a progredient, clinical and electrophysiological distal sensomotoric neuropathy. Six months after the beginning of the neurological disturbances, Hodgkin's disease (Stadium III BE) was diagnosed. Other reasons for neuropathy, such as direct impairment of the peripheral nervous system by tumor masses or drug‐induced neuropathy, were excluded. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis showed a mild pleocytosis, elevated total protein (9.8 g/I) and identical oligoclonal bands in serum and CSF. Blood–CSF barrier damage was detected by Reiber formula. Indirect immunofluorescence and western blot analysis demonstrated an autoantibody against peripheral and central nervous system structures in serum and CSF. Although the autoantibody responded to a 38–40 kDa‐protein in western blot and showed nuclear staining of myenteric plexus and Purkinje cell nuclei in the immunofluorescence test, this antibody was shown to be not identical to anti‐Hu. An intrathecal synthesis of the antineuronal antibody was detected by antibody specificity index. Tumor therapy, plasmapheresis and treatment with intravenous immunoglobulins did not improve the neuropathy. According to our knowledge this is the first case of antineuronal antibody‐associated sensomotoric neuropathy in Hodgkin's disease.

Case Reports

Abstract

Limb shaking is a form of carotid transient ischemic attack caused by hemodynamic ischemia not usually triggered by orthostatic hypotension. We report a patient who presented with limb shaking during episodes of severe arterial hypotension in the setting of multiple system atrophy. Extreme orthostatic hypotension may result in limb shaking even in absence of relevant arterial occlusive disease.