cover image European Journal of Neurology

European Journal of Neurology

2013 - Volume 20
Issue 1 | January 2013

Letter to the Editor

First mutation in the nuclear localization signal sequence of spastin protein identified in a patient with hereditary spastic paraplegia

Letter to the Editor

Man‐in‐the‐barrel syndrome due to Klippel–Feil deformity

Letter to the Editor

Subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord presenting with pseudoathetosis of the upper limbs

EFNS/MDS‐ES Guidelines/CME Article

Background

A Task Force was convened by the EFNS/MDS‐ES Scientist Panel on Parkinson's disease (PD) and other movement disorders to systemically review relevant publications on the diagnosis of PD.

Methods

Following the EFNS instruction for the preparation of neurological diagnostic guidelines, recommendation levels have been generated for diagnostic criteria and investigations.

Results

For the clinical diagnosis, we recommend the use of the Queen Square Brain Bank criteria (Level B). Genetic testing for specific mutations is recommended on an individual basis (Level B), taking into account specific features (i.e. family history and age of onset). We recommend olfactory testing to differentiate PD from other parkinsonian disorders including recessive forms (Level A). Screening for pre‐motor PD with olfactory testing requires additional tests due to limited specificity. Drug challenge tests are not recommended for the diagnosis in de novo parkinsonian patients. There is an insufficient evidence to support their role in the differential diagnosis between PD and other parkinsonian syndromes. We recommend an assessment of cognition and a screening for REM sleep behaviour disorder, psychotic manifestations and severe depression in the initial evaluation of suspected PD cases (Level A). Transcranial sonography is recommended for the differentiation of PD from atypical and secondary parkinsonian disorders (Level A), for the early diagnosis of PD and in the detection of subjects at risk for PD (Level A), although the technique is so far not universally used and requires some expertise. Because specificity of TCS for the development of PD is limited, TCS should be used in conjunction with other screening tests. Conventional magnetic resonance imaging and diffusion‐weighted imaging at 1.5 T are recommended as neuroimaging tools that can support a diagnosis of multiple system atrophy (MSA) or progressive supranuclear palsy versus PD on the basis of regional atrophy and signal change as well as diffusivity patterns (Level A). DaTscan SPECT is registered in Europe and the United States for the differential diagnosis between degenerative parkinsonisms and essential tremor (Level A). More specifically, DaTscan is indicated in the presence of significant diagnostic uncertainty such as parkinsonism associated with neuroleptic exposure and atypical tremor manifestations such as isolated unilateral postural tremor. Studies of [I]MIBG/SPECT cardiac uptake may be used to identify patients with PD versus controls and MSA patients (Level A). All other SPECT imaging studies do not fulfil registration standards and cannot be recommended for routine clinical use. At the moment, no conclusion can be drawn as to diagnostic efficacy of autonomic function tests, neurophysiological tests and positron emission tomography imaging in PD.

Conclusions

The diagnosis of PD is still largely based on the correct identification of its clinical features. Selected investigations (genetic, olfactory, and neuroimaging studies) have an ancillary role in confirming the diagnosis, and some of them could be possibly used in the near future to identify subjects in a pre‐symptomatic phase of the disease.

List of Active Reviewers (2011–2012)

List of Active Reviewers (2011–2012)

Miscellaneous

Calendar

SHORT COMMUNICATION

Abstract

Optic nerve involvement is frequent in mitochondrial disease, and retinal abnormalities are described in Parkinson’s disease (PD).

SHORT COMMUNICATION

Abstract

Transcranial direct current stimulation (TDCS) is a potential tool to improve motor deficits in chronic stroke patients. Safety and efficacy of this procedure in acute stroke patients have not yet been addressed.

Original Articles

Abstract

In chronic diseases including Parkinson’s disease (PD), complex pharmacotherapy dosing schedules are reported to reduce adherence, perhaps leading to less‐effective symptom control and, in PD, more erratic stimulation of dopamine receptors. However, blinded clinical‐trial designs preclude direct comparisons of adherence to various schedules.

SHORT COMMUNICATION

Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the prevalence and clinical characteristics of taste disorders in patients with myasthenia gravis (MG).

Short Communication

Background and purpose

Uric acid (UA) is thought to have an antioxidant effect on the central nervous system and may also prevent cerebral damage induced by oxidative stress. Our study aimed to investigate whether patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) had lower serum UA concentrations than controls and whether UA concentration was related to clinical parameters of the disease.

Methods

We included 161 patients with PD and 178 controls from southern Spain. UA concentration was compared between these two groups. Clinical parameters including severity of the disease were related to serum UA.

Results

Patients with PD showed statistically significant lower serum UA concentrations than controls. Serum UA concentration was lower in patients with PD in severe stages (4 and 5) than in those in moderate stage (2) according to the modified Hoehn and Yahr scale. Other clinical parameters were not related to serum UA concentration, except for levodopa equivalent daily dose that was associated with lower serum UA concentration in men.

Conclusions

Our study produced consistent findings that UA might have a protective effect against PD and could influence its clinical progression.

Editorial

Abstract

Click to view the accompanying paper in this issue.

Review Article

Background and purpose

Despite a high prevalence of post‐stroke cognitive impairment, therapeutic possibilities are still limited. Stroke and dementia share the same cluster of modifiable risk factors. Thus, lifestyle interventions and strict adherence to medication may not only decrease the risk of recurrent stroke but also the risk of post‐stroke cognitive decline.

Methods

We performed a systematic literature search for randomized clinical trials (RCTs) targeting modifiable risk factors for the prevention of cognitive decline following stroke.

Results

We identified 25 non‐pharmacological interventions and eight multiple risk factor interventions in stroke patients using cognition as outcome measure. None of the published trials investigated interventions aimed at the prevention of post‐stroke cognitive decline. However, a number of ongoing trials aim at risk factor reduction and include measures on cognition.

Conclusion

Evidence for risk factor modification for the prevention of cognitive decline after stroke is scarce and comes mainly from observational studies. There is a need for more RCTs targeting the prevention of post‐stroke dementia using lifestyle interventions and a multiple risk factor approach.

Original Article

Background and purpose

We aimed to evaluate the association between 25‐hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels and both clinical severity at admission and outcome at discharge in stroke patients.

Methods

From February 2010 to December 2010, consecutive stroke patients admitted to the Department of Neurology of Dijon, France, were identified. Clinical information was collected. Serum concentration of 25(OH)D was measured at baseline. Stroke severity was assessed at admission using the NIHSS score. Functional impairment was evaluated at discharge using the modified Rankin scale (m‐Rankin). Multivariate analyses were performed using logistic regression models.

Results

Of the 386 recorded patients, serum 25(OH)D levels were obtained in 382 (median value = 35.1 nM; IQR = 21–57.8). At admission, 208 patients had a NIHSS ≤5, with a higher mean 25(OH)D level than that observed in patients with moderate‐to‐high severity (45.9 vs. 38.6 nM,  < 0.001). In multivariate analyses, a 25(OH)D level in the lowest tertile (<25.7 nM) was a predictor of a NIHSS ≥6 (OR = 1.67; 95% CI = 1.05–2.68;  = 0.03). The mean 25(OH)D level was lower in patients with moderate‐to‐severe handicap at discharge (m‐Rankin 3–6) than in patients with no or mild handicap (35.0 vs. 47.5 nM,  < 0.001). In multivariate analyses, the lowest tertile of 25(OH)D level (<25.7 nM) was associated with a higher risk of moderate‐to‐severe handicap (OR = 2.06; 95% CI = 1.06–3.94;  = 0.03).

Conclusion

A low serum 25(OH)D level is a predictor of both severity at admission and poor early functional outcome in stroke patients. The underlying mechanisms of these associations remain to be investigated.

Original Article

Background

Measurement of anti‐GM1 IgM antibodies in multifocal motor neuropathy (MMN) sera is confounded by relatively low sensitivity that limits clinical usefulness. Combinatorial assay methods, in which antibodies react to heteromeric complexes of two or more glycolipids, are being increasingly applied to this area of diagnostic testing.

Methods

A newly developed combinatorial glycoarray able to identify antibodies to 45 different heteromeric glycolipid complexes and their 10 individual glycolipid components was applied to a randomly selected population of 33 MMN cases and 57 normal or disease controls. Comparison with an enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was conducted for selected single glycolipids and their complexes.

Results

By ELISA, 22/33 MMN cases had detectable anti‐GM1 IgM antibodies, whereas 19/33 MMN samples were positive for anti‐GM1 antibodies by glycoarray. Analysis of variance () revealed that of the 55 possible single glycolipids and their 1:1 complexes, antibodies to the GM1:galactocerebroside (GM1:GalC) complex were most significantly associated with MMN, returning 33/33 MMN samples as positive by glycoarray and 29/33 positive by ELISA. Regression analysis revealed a high correlation in absolute values between ELISA and glycoarray. Receiver operator characteristic analysis revealed insignificantly different diagnostic performance between the two methods. However, the glycoarray appeared to offer slightly improved sensitivity by identifying antibodies in four ELISA‐negative samples.

Conclusions

The use of combinatorial glycoarray or ELISA increased the diagnostic sensitivity of anti‐glycolipid antibody testing in this cohort of MMN cases, without significantly affecting specificity, and may be a useful assay modification for routine clinical screening.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Intracranial haemorrhage in neurosarcoidosis (NS‐ICH) is rare, poorly understood and the diagnosis of NS may not be immediately apparent.

Methods

The clinical features of three new NS‐ICH cases are described including new neuropathological findings and collated with cases from a systematic literature review.

Results

(i) A 41‐year‐old man with headaches, hypoandrogenism and encephalopathy developed a cerebellar haemorrhage. He had neuropathological confirmation of NS with biopsy‐proven angiocentric granulomata and venous disruption. He responded to immunosuppressive therapy. (ii) A 41‐year‐old man with no history of hypertension was found unconscious. A subsequently fatal pontine haemorrhage was diagnosed. Liver biopsy revealed sarcoid granulomas. (iii) A 36‐year‐old man with raised intracranial pressure headaches presented with a seizure and a frontal haemorrhage. Hilar lymph node biopsy confirmed sarcoidosis, and he was treated successfully. Twelve other published cases were identified and collated with our cases. Average age was 36 years and M:F = 2.3:1; 46% presented with neurological symptoms and 31% had CNS‐isolated disease. Immediate symptoms of ICH were acute/worsening headache or seizures (60%). ICH was supratentorial (62%), infratentorial (31%) or subarachnoid (7%). Forty percent had definite NS, 53% probable NS and 7% possible NS (Zajicek criteria). Antigranulomatous/immunosuppressive therapy regimens varied and 31% died.

Conclusions

This series expands our knowledge of the pathology of NS‐ICH, which may be of arterial or venous origin. One‐third have isolated NS. Clinicians should consider NS in young‐onset ICH because early aggressive antigranulomatous therapy may improve outcome.

Original Article

Background and purpose

To determine the value of health‐related quality of life (HRQOL) in predicting progression of disability in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) over a period of 2 years.

Methods

Patients with MS were recruited in 13 outpatient clinics in Madrid, Spain. Baseline HRQOL was quantified using the Functional Assessment of MS (FAMS) and disability with Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status (EDSS). A clinical meaningful deterioration of disability was defined as an increased of ≥1 point in baseline EDSS scores of ≤5.5 and an increase of ≥0.5 point in baseline EDSS scores of ≥6.0. We dichotomized the change in disability according to clinical meaningful deterioration (dependent variable) and performed a logistic regression analysis with the tertiles of the FAMS scores (the upper tertile [high HRQOL] was the reference) as independent variable, adjusting by socio‐demographic and clinical variables.

Results

Out of 371 enrolled patients, 61 patients with MS dropped out during the 2‐year follow‐up. Of the remaining 310, 94 (30.3%) had clinical meaningful deterioration of disability. The odds of clinical meaningful deterioration of disability were higher as HRQOL decreased with a significant dose‐dependent effect. Adjusted odds ratios were 2.61 [95% confidence interval (CI) 95% = 1.12–6.09], [middle tertile vs. upper tertile (reference)]; and 3.27 (95% CI = 1.31–8.18), (lower tertile vs. upper tertile).

Conclusions

The identification of those patients with MS with poor HRQOL may be important in assessing the risk of future disability progression. Clearly, impaired HRQOL should be one of the primary concerns amongst clinicians who provide treatment to patients affected by MS.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Multiple sclerosis (MS) patients discontinuing natalizumab are at risk of rebound of disease activity.

Methods

In the present multi‐center, open‐label, non‐randomized, prospective, pilot study, we tested whether treatment with glatiramer acetate (GA) is safe and effective after natalizumab in MS patients. The study was performed at academic tertiary medical centers. Forty active relapsing–remitting MS patients who never failed GA therapy and who discontinued natalizumab after 12–18 months of therapy were enrolled. GA was initiated 4 weeks after the last dose of natalizumab.

Results

62.5% of patients were relapse‐free 12 months after GA initiation. Annualized relapse rate and time to relapse were significantly lower than before natalizumab. Notably, the frequency of relapses was significantly lower amongst those patients who had experienced ≤2 relapses the year before initiation of natalizumab therapy, compared with patients who had had three or more relapses. No evidence of rebound was observed in magnetic resonance imaging scans. Furthermore, Expanded Disability Status Scale and Multiple Sclerosis Functional Composite were stable in our patients, again suggesting that 12 months of post‐natalizumab–GA therapy is not associated with clinical deterioration.

Conclusions

Following discontinuation of natalizumab, 12 months of therapy with GA is safe and well tolerated in MS patients. GA can reduce the risk of early reactivation/rebound of disease activity in this setting.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Migraine is the most important cause of headache leading to a decrease in the quality of life in children and adolescents. The prevalence of episodic (EM) and chronic migraine (CM) increases with increasing age, which especially focused in recent years.

Methods

To evaluate the prevalence and determinants of migraine in children and adolescents, we performed this school‐based epidemiological study. First part of the study was performed in 2001 that included 5562 children. Second part of the study was performed in 2007 in adolescents including 1155 young. After the main reports published, we made a new analysis in the database that focused on migraine.

Results

Totally, 10.4% of the children, predominantly the girls, received the diagnosis of migraine when they grew older (1.7% CM, 8.6% EM). CM frequency increased with increasing ages (doubled at 12 years,  = 0.035). The significant risk factors for having CM were found to be age, gender, and father and sibling headache histories. Most of the clinical characteristics of migraine are far from classical knowledge in children with CM.

Conclusions

Our results showed that CM is an important cause of headache in both children and adolescents with some defining headache characteristics and risk factors concentrated in different age‐groups.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Screening batteries to narrow down a target‐at‐risk population are essential for trials testing neuroprotective compounds aiming to delay or prevent onset of Parkinson's disease (PD).

Methods

The PRIPS study focuses on early detection of incident PD in 1847 at baseline PD‐free subjects, and assessed age, male gender, positive family history, hyposmia, subtle motor impairment and enlarged substantia nigra hyperechogenicity (SN+).

Results

After 3 years follow‐up 11 subjects had developed PD. In this analysis of the secondary outcome parameters, sensitivity and specificity of baseline markers for incident PD were calculated in 1352 subjects with complete datasets (10 PD patients). The best approach for prediction of incident PD comprised three steps: (i) prescreening for age, (ii) primary screening for positive family history and/or hyposmia, and (iii) secondary screening for SN+.

Conclusion

With this approach, one out of 16 positively screened participants developed PD compared to one out of 135 in the original cohort. This corresponds to a sensitivity of 80.0%, a specificity of 90.6% and a positive predictive value of 6.1%. These values are higher than for any single screening instrument but still too low for a feasible and cost‐effective screening strategy which might require longer follow‐up intervals and application of additional instruments.

Editorial

Abstract

Click to view the accompanying paper in this issue.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Hyperglycemia (HG) is associated with infarct volume expansion in acute ischaemic stroke patients. However, collateral circulation can sustain the ischaemic penumbra and limit the growth of infarct volume. The aim of this study was to determine whether the association between HG and infarct volume expansion is dependent on collateral circulation.

Methods

We performed a retrospective analysis of 93 acute ischaemic stroke patients with internal carotid artery or middle cerebral artery occlusion within 24 h of onset were retrospectively studied. HG was diagnosed in patients with an admitting blood glucose value ≥140 mg/dl. Angiographic collateral grade 0–1 was designated as poor collateral circulation and grade 2–4 as good collateral circulation. Infarct volume was measured at admission and at again within 7 days using diffusion‐weighted magnetic resonance images.

Results

Among 34 patients with poor collateral grade, the change in infarct volume was significantly greater in the HG group than in the non‐HG group (106.0 ml vs. 22.7 ml,  = 0.002). Among the 59 patients with good collateral circulation, the change in infarct volume was greater in the HG group than in the non‐HG group (53.3 ml vs. 10.9 ml,  = 0.047). Multiple regression analysis indicated that admission HG ( = 0.004), baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score ( = 0.018), and poor collateral circulation ( = 0.040) were independently associated with infarct volume expansion.

Conclusions

Infarct volume expansion was greater in individuals with HG on admission regardless of collateral circulation status.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is amongst the most important etiologies of ischaemic stroke. In a population‐based stroke registry, we tested the hypothesis of low adherence to current guidelines as a main cause of high rates of AF‐associated stroke.

Methods

Within the Ludwigshafen Stroke Study (LuSSt), a prospective ongoing population‐based stroke register, we analyzed all patients with a first‐ever ischaemic stroke (FEIS) owing to AF in 2006 and 2007. We determined whether AF was diagnosed before stroke and assessed pre‐stroke CHADS and CHADS‐VASc scores.

Results

In total, 187 of 626 patients with FEIS suffered from cardioembolic stroke owing to AF, which was newly diagnosed in 57 (31%) patients. Retrospective pre‐stroke risk stratification according to CHADS score indicated low/intermediate risk in 34 patients (18%) and high risk (CHADS ≥ 2) in 153 patients (82%). Application of CHADS‐VASc score reduced number of patients at low/intermediate risk (CHADS‐VASc score 0–1) to five patients (2.7%). In patients with a CHADS score ≥ 2 and known AF ( = 106) before stroke, 38 (36%) were on treatment with vitamin K antagonists on admission whilst only in 16 patients (15%) treatment was in therapeutic range.

Conclusions

Our study strongly supports the hypothesis that underuse of oral anticoagulants in high‐risk patients importantly contributes to AF‐associated stroke. CHADS‐VASc score appears to be a more valuable risk stratification tool than CHADS score. Preventive measures should focus on optimizing pre‐stroke detection of AF and better implementation of present AF‐guidelines with respect to anticoagulation therapy.

Original Article

Background and purpose

More evidence is needed to forward our understanding of the key determinants of poor outcome after mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI). A large, prospective, national cohort of patients was studied to analyse the effect of head CT scan pathology on the outcome.

Methods

One‐thousand two‐hundred and sixty‐two patients with MTBI (Glasgow Coma Scale score 15) at 39 emergency departments completed a study protocol including acute head CT scan examination and follow‐up by the Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire and the Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE) at 3 months after MTBI. Binary logistic regression was used for the assessment of prediction ability.

Results

In 751 men (60%) and 511 women (40%), with a mean age of 30 years (median 21, range 6–94), we observed relevant or suspect relevant pathologic findings on acute CT scan in 52 patients (4%). Patients aged below 30 years reported better outcome both with respect to symptoms and GOSE as compared to patients in older age groups. Men reported better outcome than women as regards symptoms (OR 0.64, CI 0.49–0.85 for ≥3 symptoms) and global function (OR 0.60, CI 0.39–0.92 for GOSE 1–6).

Conclusions

Pathology on acute CT scan examination had no effect on self‐reported symptoms or global function at 3 months after MTBI. Female gender and older age predicted a less favourable outcome. The findings support the view that other factors than brain injury deserve attention to minimize long‐term complaints after MTBI.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Treatment with topiramate (TPM) is known to negatively affect executive functions and verbal fluency in particular. However, judgments of cognitive side effects under TPM rarely consider clinical conditions and possible effects of epilepsy, treatment, and drug load.

Methods

This retrospective cross‐sectional study in large cohorts of patients with epilepsy evaluated the impact of TPM mono‐ and polytherapy on verbal fluency. To isolate TPM‐induced effects from those of epilepsy and antiepileptic medication in general, verbal fluency under TPM ( = 421) was compared to the performance of a matched sample of patients with an antiepileptic medication other than TPM ( = 351), untreated patients ( = 108), and healthy controls ( = 100).

Results

Impaired verbal fluency performance was seen in 77% of the patients treated with TPM. Compared to healthy controls, verbal fluency in untreated patients was reduced by 22%, under monotherapy without TPM by 31% and under TPM monotherapy by 45%. With and without TPM, verbal fluency performance linearly decreased with each additional drug in polytherapy. On each level, performance under TPM was 21–28% worse than in the respective condition without TPM. Unimpaired performance under TPM was primarily associated with lower dose, higher education, and a later onset of epilepsy.

Conclusions

The majority of patients under TPM shows reduced verbal fluency. However, when taking the cumulative negative effects of epilepsy, and the concomitant drug regimen into account, TPM is associated with a 21–28% poorer performance as compared with other drugs. Additionally, the data indicate an impact of dose and reserve capacity on the occurrence of impairments.

Original Article

Background and purpose

The autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix‐Saguenay (ARSACS) is an early‐onset neurodegenerative disorder caused by mutations in the gene. The disease, first described in Canadian families from Québec, is characterized by cerebellar ataxia, pyramidal tract involvement and peripheral neuropathy.

Methods

Analysis of gene allowed the identification of 14 patients with ARSACS from 13 unrelated Italian families. Clinical phenotype, gene mutations and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings were analysed.

Results

We found 16 novel gene mutations, including a large in‐frame deletion. The age at onset was in infancy, but one patient presented the first symptoms at age 32. Progression of the disease was variable, and increased muscle tone was mostly recognized in later stages. Structural MRI showed atrophy of the superior cerebellar vermis, a bulky pons exhibiting T2‐hypointense stripes, identified as the corticospinal tract (CST), thinning of the corpus callosum and a rim of T2‐hyperintensity around the thalami in 100% of cases. The presence of iron or other paramagnetic substances was excluded. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) revealed grossly over‐represented transverse pontine fibres (TPF), which prevented reconstruction of the CST at this level (100% of cases). In all patients, significant microstructural alterations were found in the supratentorial white matter of forceps, cingulum and superior longitudinal fasciculus.

Conclusions

Our findings further enlarge the genetic spectrum of mutations and widen the study of clinical phenotype. MRI characteristics indicate that pontine changes and supratentorial abnormalities are diagnostic. The over‐representation of TPF on DTI suggests a developmental component in the pathogenesis of the disease.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Detecting paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (pAF) soon after acute cerebral ischaemia has a major impact on secondary stroke prevention. Recently, the STAF score, a composite of clinical and instrumental findings, was introduced to identify stroke patients at risk of pAF. We aimed to validate this score in an independent study population.

Methods

Consecutive patients admitted to our stroke unit with acute ischaemic stroke were prospectively enrolled. The diagnostic work‐up included neuroimaging, neuroultrasound, baseline 12‐channel electrocardiogram (ECG), 24‐h Holter ECG, continuous ECG monitoring, and echocardiography. Presence of AF was documented according to the medical history of each patient and after review of 12‐lead ECG, 24‐h Holter ECG, or continuous ECG monitoring performed during the stay on the ward. Additionally, a telephone follow‐up visit was conducted for each patient after 3 months to inquire about newly diagnosed AF. Items for each patient–age, baseline NIHSS, left atrial dilatation, and stroke etiology according to the TOAST criteria – were assessed to calculate the STAF score.

Results

Overall, 584 patients were enrolled in our analysis. AF was documented in 183 (31.3%) patients. In multivariable analysis, age, NIHSS, left atrial dilatation, and absence of vascular etiology were independent predictors for AF. The logistic AF‐prediction model of the STAF score revealed fair classification accuracy in receiver operating characteristic curve analysis with an area under the curve of 0.84. STAF scores of ≥5 had a sensitivity of 79% and a specificity of 74% for predicting AF.

Conclusion

The value of the STAF score for predicting the risk of pAF in stroke patients is limited.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Post‐stroke immunodepression has been related to brain lesion size but not a specific lesion location. Here, we studied the influence of lesion location within middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory on parameters related to activation of sympathetic adrenomedullar pathway, immunodepression, and associated infection.

Methods

We analyzed clinical, brain imaging, and laboratory data of 384 patients (174 women; mean age 70.8 ± 12.9 years) consecutively admitted to the stroke unit no later than 24 h after onset of acute ischaemic stroke involving the MCA territory.

Results

Patients with lesion affecting >33% of MCA territory had increased serum metanephrine and normetanephrine levels, elevated neutrophil counts but decreased eosinophil, helper T lymphocyte, and cytotoxic T lymphocyte counts compared to patients with lesion in <33% of MCA territory. Patients with large infarctions had increased frequency of infections within 14 days after stroke, especially chest infections ( < 0.001). Considering only patients with non‐lacunar infarction in <33% of MCA territory, those with insular lesion had significantly higher normetanephrine levels, higher neutrophil but lower eosinophil and helper T lymphocyte counts than those with non‐insular lesion, despite similar lesion diameters. This coincided with an increased frequency of chest infections ( < 0.01) in patients with insular lesion. Whilst patients with right insular lesion showed decreased heart rate variability, lesion laterality had no impact on laboratory findings or infection frequency.

Conclusion

These findings suggest a specific role of insular lesion in the pathogenesis of stroke‐induced sympathetic hyperactivation and immunodepression. Neuroimaging studies applying lesion volume calculation techniques are warranted to confirm these findings.

Original Article

Background and purpose

To examine the frequencies and clinical characteristics of fallers and non‐fallers at different stages of Parkinson's disease (PD).

Methods

The sample consisted of 232 patients in an unselected cross‐sectional cohort of patients with PD, 207 newly diagnosed and drug naive patients and 175 controls. The examinations included the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS), Hoehn and Yahr, Schwab and England, and Mini‐Mental State Examination. According to item 13 of the UPDRS, the participants were classified as fallers, rare‐fallers and non‐fallers.

Results

In the cross‐sectional study cohort, 19% of the patients were classified as fallers and 25% as rare‐fallers. Higher scores on activity of daily living (UPDRS ADL score) and motor complications (UPDRS complication of therapy score) were significantly and independently associated with falling. In the cohort of newly diagnosed patients with PD 2% were classified as fallers and 15% as rare‐fallers. In the age‐ and sex‐matched control group, none were fallers, and only 2% were rare‐fallers. Patients with tremor‐dominated PD subtype in both study populations did not fall.

Conclusions

Falls are a markedly increasing problem in patients with PD as the disease progresses. Healthcare workers should ask patients about falling, and specially focus on patients with motor complications or postural instability and gait disability‐dominated subtype of parkinsonism.

Original Article

Background and purpose

For Parkinson's disease (PD), an extended‐release (ER) pramipexole formulation taken once daily, has shown efficacy, safety, and tolerability resembling those of immediate‐release (IR) pramipexole taken three times daily. The present study assessed, in advanced PD, the success of an overnight switch from adjunctive IR to ER.

Methods

Levodopa users experiencing motor fluctuations were randomized to adjunctive double‐blind (DB) placebo, IR, or ER. Amongst completers of ≥18 weeks, ER recipients were kept on DB ER, whilst IR recipients were switched overnight to DB ER at unchanged daily dosage. After a DB week, switch success was assessed. During the next 5 weeks, all patients underwent ER titration to optimal open‐label maintenance dosage.

Results

One week post‐switch, 86.2% of 123 IR‐to‐ER and 83.8% of 105 ER‐to‐ER patients had ≤15% (or ≤3‐point, for pre‐switch scores ≤20) increase on UPDRS Parts II + III, and 77.9% (of 122) and 70.2% (of 104) had ≤1‐h increase in daily OFF‐time. At 32 weeks, the groups showed comparable improvements from DB baseline (pramipexole inception), including, on UPDRS II + III, adjusted mean (SE) changes of −14.8 (1.5) for IR‐to‐ER and −13.3 (1.6) for ER‐to‐ER. Rates of premature discontinuation owing to adverse events were 6.5% for IR‐to‐ER and 4.9% for ER‐to‐ER.

Conclusions

By OFF‐time and UPDRS criteria, majorities of patients with advanced PD were successfully switched overnight from pramipexole IR to ER at unchanged daily dosage. During subsequent maintenance, pramipexole showed sustained efficacy, safety, and tolerability, regardless of formulation (IR or ER) in the preceding DB trial.

Original Article

Background and purpose

To evaluate the incidence and predictors of ischaemic recurrent stroke and the adverse events of antithrombotic therapy in patients with first intra‐ or extracranial vertebral artery dissection (VAD) who were treated with aspirin or oral anticoagulation (OA).

Methods

A 21‐year database of consecutive patients with confirmed diagnoses of VAD ( = 110, 63% men; mean age 37.9 ± 8.5 years) without intracerebral hemorrhage and who were treated with aspirin or OA were analyzed retrospectively. In all cases, the admission diagnosis was ischaemic stroke. Three groups were defined according to the site of the dissection: (i) extracranial, (ii) intracranial, and (iii) intra‐/extracranial. Clinical follow‐up was obtained by neurologic examination. Outcome measures were (i) recurrent ischaemic events (ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack) and (ii) intra‐ and extracranial major bleeding.

Results

No difference in age, smoking, or hypertension was found between patients treated with OA ( = 49) and those treated with aspirin ( = 50). Extracranial artery dissection (49%) had preponderance over intracranial (27%) or intra‐/extracranial (23%) location. During the follow‐up, recurrent ischaemic events were rare (one case). There were no bleeding complications. The treatment that was used did not influence the functional outcome or recanalization. A good functional outcome (modified Rankin score ≤ 2) was observed in 82 patients.

Conclusions

Although this was a non‐randomized study, our data suggest that the frequency of recurrent ischaemic stroke in patients with intra‐ or extracranial VAD is low and most likely independent of the type of antithrombotic treatment.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Computed tomographic‐angiography (CT‐A) is becoming more accepted in detecting intracranial circulatory arrest in brain death (BD). An international consensus about the use and the parameters of this technique is currently not established. We examined intracranial contrast enhancement in CT‐A after clinically confirmed BD, compared the results with electroencephalography (EEG) and Transcranial Doppler Ultrasonography (TCD) findings and developed a commonly applicable CT‐A protocol.

Methods

Prospective, monocentric study between April 2008 and October 2011. EEG, TCD and CT‐A were performed in 63 patients aged between 18 and 88 years (mean, 55 years) who fulfilled clinical criteria of BD. Evaluation of opacification of cerebral vascular territories in CT‐A was performed in arterial as well as in venous scanning series by a neuroradiologist and a neurointensivist/neurosurgeon together.

Results

CT‐A demonstrated a 95% sensitivity in detecting intracranial circulatory arrest when analysing arterial scanning series. We never observed venous blood return in internal cerebral veins. In three cases, BD confirmation by EEG failed because of artefacts. Confirmation of BD by TCD failed in two cases because of absent temporal window. In three cases, TCD demonstrated residual blood flow.

Conclusion

CT‐A is easily accessible in almost every hospital, offers a high spatio‐temporal resolution, is operator independent and inexpensive. The results of CT‐A are comparable to other established brain perfusion techniques in BD. An international consensus should be established to ascertain consistent parameters similar to fixed guidelines for other ancillary procedures to determine BD in order to prevent different scanning and evaluation protocols for detecting intracranial circulatory arrest.

Original Article

Background

Patients presenting with sudden severe headache may have a subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). After a normal head computer tomography (CT), a lumbar puncture is routinely performed to rule out SAH. Photospectrometry is then used to detect bilirubin in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Photospectrometric analysis of CSF reaches a high sensitivity, but a low specificity for SAH. This low specificity necessitates extensive additional research to rule out cerebral aneurysm accompanied by high costs and risk of complications.

Objective

The objective of this study was to retrospectively evaluate two different CSF interpretation methods using photospectrometry in patients presenting with acute headache. The first of these is the Leiden method, an iterative model using a standard calculation. The second is the UK NEQAS guideline, which uses the original spectrum in combination with a decision tree. Our goal was to obtain retrospective data on patients screened with both methods to improve specificity of CSF research.

Results

We included 361 patients in this study; 47 of these had a raised bilirubin concentration in the CSF according to the Leiden method. In only nine of these 47 patients was an aneurysm found; in the other patients the Leiden test was positive for other reasons (viral meningitis, hyperbilirubinaemia, etc.). Of the 47 patients with raised bilirubin, 24 could be re‐evaluated using the UK NEQAS. Of these 24 patients, five had an aneurysm. No aneurysms were found in patients with a negative result according to the UK NEQAS guideline.

Conclusion

Our data show that a raised bilirubin calculated using the Leiden method seems to have a lower specificity than the UK NEQAS guideline. For practical reasons, it seems advantageous to use the Leiden method as a screening method and use the UK NEQAS guideline if a positive result is found.

Original Article

Background and purpose

Chemotherapy‐induced peripheral neuropathy is a major adverse effect of oxaliplatin (OXL) treatment. Whereas neurophysiologic study is commonly used to assess the occurrence and severity of polyneuropathies, ultrasound (US) analysis of the peripheral nerves, an emerging technique in the study of peripheral nerve diseases, has never been used in chemotherapy‐induced peripheral neuropathy.

Patients and methods

Fifteen patients (four women; 11 men; mean age, 60.1 ± 10.6 years; median, 62; range, 37–75) with colorectal cancer treated with OXL‐based treatment have been clinically and neurophysiologically evaluated before and after OXL therapy. At the end of chemotherapy, all patients underwent also nerve US study at four limbs, and the findings correlated with clinical and neurophysiologic measures.

Results

Clinical and neurophysiological evaluation showed that 13 of 15 (86.7%) patients developed sensory axonal neuropathy, 10 of whom severe (two or more sensory nerve action potential amplitude absent and the other amplitudes decreased of ≥50%). Nerve US did not reveal decreased cross‐sectional area (CSA), a reported finding in axonal neuropathies. Instead increased CSA at entrapment sites (median nerve at wrist and ulnar nerve at elbow) was found in 09/15 (60%) of patients.

Discussion

Sensory axonal neuropathy is a very common complication of OXL therapy, affecting almost 90% of patients. US findings of enlargement of median and ulnar nerves, mostly at entrapment sites, in patients with no history or symptoms of neuropathies at recruitment, and no neurophysiologic evidence of entrapment, may be expression of increased, OXL‐induced, nerve susceptibility to mechanical damage. An ongoing prospective study will help clarify these findings.

EFNS/MDS‐ES Guidelines

Objective

To summarize the 2010 EFNS/MDS‐ES evidence‐based treatment recommendations for the management of Parkinson's disease (PD). This summary includes the treatment recommendations for early and late PD.

Methods

For the 2010 publication, a literature search was undertaken for articles published up to September 2009. For this summary, an additional literature search was undertaken up to December 2010. Classification of scientific evidence and the rating of recommendations were made according to the EFNS guidance. In cases where there was insufficient scientific evidence, a consensus statement (‘good practice point’) is made.

Results and Conclusions

For each clinical indication, a list of therapeutic interventions is provided, including classification of evidence.