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Synaptic dysfunction plays an important role in the early stage of frontotemporal dementia (FTD), and there are differences in the pattern of synaptic damage in different genotypes. GRN gene mutations are rare in the Chinese population, and there are no reports of synaptic damage patterns in GRN mutations or semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA). The synaptic injury characteristics of a patient with svPPA harboring GRN gene mutations, which was characterized by decreased synaptic density in the left frontal, temporal, parietal lobe and contralateral cerebellum were reported in this article. The underlying mechanism of synaptic dysfunction involved in the disease process, and potential targets for future clinical interventions were indicated.
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Objective:To analyze the clinical features of 6 patients with spontaneous intracranial hypotension caused by high-flow spinal cerebrospinal fluid leaks.Methods:The clinical characteristics, auxiliary examinations, treatment, and outcomes in 6 patients of spontaneous intracranial hypotension caused by high-flow spinal cerebrospinal fluid leaks enrolled in the Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University from February 2021 to April 2022 were retrospectively reviewed.Results:All the 6 patients had orthostatic headaches. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed dural enhancement and brain sagging and magnetic resonance myelography showed longitudinal extradural collection in all the patients. The high-flow spinal cerebrospinal fluid leaks were demonstrated in upper thoracic segments by the dynamic myelography. The headache disappeared after conservative treatment in 2 patients and treatment with targeted epidural blood patch in 4 patients.Conclusions:The diagnosis of spontaneous intracranial hypotension caused by high-flow spinal cerebrospinal fluid leaks with typical orthostatic headache and brain magnetic resonance imaging and myelography findings is not difficult. However, the localization of the site of high-flow spinal cerebrospinal fluid leaks in spontaneous intracranial hypotension depends on the dynamic myelography. Targeted epidural blood patch is effective, but conservative treatment does not always work.
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Objective:To summarize the clinical features, radiological characteristics, therapy, and outcome of patients with spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH).Methods:The general information, clinical manifestations, auxiliary examinations, treatment, and outcomes in consecutive patients of SIH hospitalized in the Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University from November 2018 to October 2022 were analyzed.Results:A total of 118 patients with a female-to-male ratio of 5∶4 were included and the ages were 17.00-71.00[39.00(34.00,46.75)]years with a preponderance in the age of 30-49 years. Almost all patients had orthostatic headaches (117/118, 99.2%), accompanied by nausea (90/118, 76.3%), vomiting (70/118, 59.3%), neck stiffness (88/118, 74.6%), tinnitus (57/118, 48.3%), and ear fullness (57/118, 48.3%). Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed dural enhancement (97/113, 85.8%), enlarged venous sinus (88/113, 77.9%), subdural fluid collection (46/113, 40.7%), decreased suprasellar cistern (86/113, 76.1%), effacement of the prepontine cistern (86/113, 76.1%), diminished mamillopontine distance (80/113, 70.8%). The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks were detected in 90.7% (107/118) of the patients by magnetic resonance myelography but 54.3% (25/46) and 52.6% (20/38) by CT myelography and magnetic resonance myelography with gadolinium. Lumber puncture found CSF pressure<60 mmH 2O (1 mmH 2O=0.009 8 kPa) in 18.4% (19/103) of patients, increased CSF red blood cell counts in 50.6% (44/87) of patients, CSF pleocytosis in 44.8% (39/87) of patients, increased CSF protein concentrations in 57.5% (50/87) of patients. The headache completely disappeared after conservative treatment in 24.6% (31/118) of patients and after a single targeted epidural blood patch in 89.7% (78/87) of patients. A rebound headache after epidural blood patch treatment occurred in 66.0% (58/87) of patients. Conclusions:The patients with SIH almost manifested with orthostatic headache, and brain MRI and magnetic resonance myelography were suggested in those patients instead of CSF pressure by lumber puncture. Targeted epidural blood patch was effective and safe in SIH patients.
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Spontaneous intracranial hypotension can frequently result in several complications including subdural hygroma, subdural hematoma and cerebral venous thrombosis, but coma rarely. A case of spontaneous intracranial hypotension presented with orthostatic headaches was described. He experienced somnolence, disorientation, incontinence, and then coma, though received conservative treatment. Brain imaging demonstrated acute-on-chronic subdural hematoma, magnetic resonance myelography using heavily T 2-weighted fast spin-echo pulse sequences showed spinal longitudinal extradural collection, and magnetic resonance myelography with intrathecal gadolinium revealed cerebrospinal fluid leak at the level of T 6, T 7. The patient recovered consciousness after surgical evacuation of the hematoma, and the headache disappeared after a targeted epidural blood patch. The hematoma resolved 2 months later and the patient kept free from headache during follow-up.
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Objective:To summarize and analyze the clinical data of Chinese patients with colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R)-related leukoencephalopathy, and clarify the phenotypic and genetic characteristics of Chinese patients.Methods:Medical history of patients with CSF1R-related leukoencephalopathy diagnosed from April 1, 2018 to January 31, 2021 in the department of neurology of 22 hospitals in China was collected, and scores of Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Montreal Cognitive Assessment Scale (MoCA), magnetic resonance severity scale were evaluated. Group comparison was performed between male and female patients.Results:A total of 62 patients were included, and the male-female ratio was 1∶1.95. The age of onset was (40.35±8.42) years. Cognitive impairment (82.3%, 51/62) and motor symptoms (77.4%,48/62) were the most common symptoms. The MMSE and MoCA scores were 18.79±7.16 and 13.96±7.23, respectively, and the scores of two scales in male patients (22.06±5.31 and 18.08±5.60) were significantly higher than those in females (15.53±7.41 , t=2.954, P=0.006; 10.15±6.26, t=3.328 , P=0.003). The most common radiographic feature was bilateral asymmetric white matter changes (100.0%), and the magnetic resonance imaging severity scale score was 27.42±11.40, while the white matter lesion score of females (22.94±8.39) was significantly higher than that of males (17.62±8.74 , t=-2.221, P<0.05). A total of 36 CSF1R gene mutations were found in this study, among which c.2381T>C/p.I794T was the hotspot mutation that carried by 17.9% (10/56) of the probands. Conclusions:The core phenotypic characteristics of CSF1R-related leukoencephalopathy in China are progressive motor and cognitive impairment, with bilateral asymmetrical white matter changes. In addition, there exist gender differences clinically, with severer cognitive impairment and imaging changes in female patients. Thirty-six CSF1R gene mutations were found in this study, and c.2381T>C/p. I794T was the hotspot mutation.
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Objective:To explore the value of metagenomics next generation sequencing of cerebrospinal fluid in the diagnosis test of the pathogen of neurobrucellosis.Methods:Medical records of neurobrucellosis patients who were admitted to Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University from May 2017 to February 2021 were reviewed. Seven patients who underwent cerebrospinal fluid metagenomics next generation sequencing were enrolled. Their clinical characteristics, cerebrospinal fluid results, serological and pathogenic results were analyzed.Results:Among the seven neurobrucellosis patients, including five males and two females, the age was from 21 to 49 [38 (24, 47)] years. Three patients had a history of exposure to cattle and sheep. The duration from onset to diagnosis was 2 to 30 [12 (5, 18)] months. The main neurological manifestations were headache for seven patients, loss of hearing for three patients, paralysis for four patients and urinary and fecal dysfunction for four patients. The blood tests showed that the rose bengal test was positive in three of seven patients, Brucella serum agglutination test was positive in four of six patients, and the blood culture was negative in four patients. The cerebrospinal fluid tests showed that rose bengal test was positive in one of five patients, Brucella serum agglutination test was positive in two of four patients, and the cerebrospinal fluid culture was positive in two of five patients. Cerebrospinal fluid metagenomics next generation sequencing was positive for Brucella in five patients.Conclusions:Comparing with the cerebrospinal fluid Brucella serum agglutination test and cerebrospinal fluid culture, cerebrospinal fluid metagenomics next generation sequencing is sensitive to the diagnosis of neurobrucellosis. It is recommended to perform cerebrospinal fluid metagenomics next generation sequencing in patients with clinically suspected neurobrucellosis or central nervous system infections of which the pathogen cannot be confirmed.
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Objective To improve the clinician's recognition of Gerstmann-Str(a)ussler-Scheinker syndrome (GSS).Methods The detailed clinical information,neuropsychological examination,cerebrospinal fluid examination,imaging characteristics,electroencephalogram examination and gene detection were analyzed in a case of GSS similar to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in symptomatology.The differences between the two different prion diseases were compared in combination with the literature review.Results The patient is a 62-year-old woman,with cerebellar ataxia as the first symptom,followed by rapid dementia,accompanied by pyramidal and extrapyramidal signs.Magnetic resonance imaging showed hyper-intense signal in diffusion weighted imaging in caudatum and cortical ribboning,and protein 14-3-3was negative.PRNP gene analysis showed P102L gene mutation.Conclusions The typical clinical manifestation of GSS is hereditary ataxia followed by cognitive decline of varying severity.Detection of PRNP plays an important role in the diagnosis of GSS.
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Objective:To explore the clinical and genetic features in a case of fatal familial insomnia (FFI).Methods:A case of 39 years old woman diagnosed as progressive supranuclear palsy based on the preliminary manifestation of imbalance and frequent falls was reported. The clinical features, imaging characteristics, electroencephalogram and polysomnography of the patient were analyzed, and the blood samples from the patient were collected for the sequencing of prion protein (PRNP) gene.Results:This patient is a middle-aged woman, whose clinical manifestations were posture instability and retropulsion, rapid progressive dementia and dysarthria, sleep-related dyspnea and laryngeal stridor, with autonomic symptoms of hypertension, sweating, tachycardia and irregular breathing. The results of PRNP gene sequencing revealed that the mutation of gene D178N/129M was detected.Conclusions:Laryngeal stridor plays an important role in the diagnosis of FFI. Posture instability and retropulsion are relatively rare in the FFI clinical symptom spectrum. Here, a case of FFI presenting with posture instability and retropulsion during the early stage with Met/Met at the polymorphic codon 129 is reported in China.
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Objective@#To improve the clinician′s recognition of Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker syndrome (GSS).@*Methods@#The detailed clinical information, neuropsychological examination, cerebrospinal fluid examination, imaging characteristics, electroencephalogram examination and gene detection were analyzed in a case of GSS similar to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in symptomatology. The differences between the two different prion diseases were compared in combination with the literature review.@*Results@#The patient is a 62-year-old woman, with cerebellar ataxia as the first symptom, followed by rapid dementia, accompanied by pyramidal and extrapyramidal signs. Magnetic resonance imaging showed hyper-intense signal in diffusion weighted imaging in caudatum and cortical ribboning, and protein 14-3-3 was negative. PRNP gene analysis showed P102L gene mutation.@*Conclusions@#The typical clinical manifestation of GSS is hereditary ataxia followed by cognitive decline of varying severity. Detection of PRNP plays an important role in the diagnosis of GSS.
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Objective To investigate the clinical features,polysomnography,imaging examination,genetic analysis and laboratory examination of eight patients with familial fatal insomnia (FFI).Methods The clinical data,neuropsychological examination,results of cerebrospinal fluid analysis,imaging examination and polysomnography of eight patients with FFI in Xuanwu Hospital,Capital Medical University from 2009 to 2018 were retrospectively analyzed and summarized.Results Among the eight FFI patients,there were 3 males and 5 females,the onset age being (49.8+14.3) years (19 to 64 years) and the course of disease being eight to 18 months.D178N mutation in the PRNP gene of chromosome 20 and 129 amino acid polymorphisms of M/M were found in genetic examination in all the eight patients,of which five patients had family history.All the patients had sleep disorders,sleep-related involuntary movement,sleep-related dyspnea,laryngeal stridor.All the patients showed rapid progressive dementia with or without symptoms or signs of psychosis,ataxia,pyramidal and extrapyramidal.All the eight patients had progressive sympathetic symptoms,including hypertension,sweating,tachycardia,irregular breathing,and dysarthria.Cerebrospinal fluid 14-3-3 protein was found positive in one patient,and negative in seven patients.Electroencephalograph showed diffuse slow wave and non periodic synchronous discharge.Single-photon emission computed tomography or 18F fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography showed decreased thalamic glucose metabolism in three patients.Seven patients showed decreased total sleep time,sleep awakening cycle disorder,especially the reduction or loss of rapid eye movement,laryngeal stridor and involuntary movement in polysomnography.Conclusions FFI is characterized by sleep disorder,sleep-related involuntary movement,dyspnea,laryngosis,rapid progressive dementia and sympathetic symptoms.The family history,polysomnography and positron emission tomography are helpful for the diagnosis of FFI.PRNP gene detection can confirm the diagnosis of FFI.
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Objective To explore the clinical and neuroimaging features in a Chinese family with hereditary diffuse leukoencephalopathy with neuroaxonal spheroids (HDLS) caused by mutation of the colony stimulating factor 1 receptor gene (CSF1R). Methods The proband and another patient from a HDLS pedigree were assessed respectively through standardized clinical evaluation (medical history inquiry, physical examination),neuropsychology assessment,MRI,genetic sequencing, as well as brain PET imaging with carbon11-labelled Pittsburgh compound-B(11C-PIB). Results A HDLS pedigree with three patients was recruited to this study. Apathy, memory decline, slow behavior were the first symptoms for two of the patients. Being bedridden, urinary incontinence and epilepsy were developed at the later stage. A missense mutation c. 2381T>C(p. I794T) in exon 18 of the CSF1R gene of chromosome 5 was identified in the proband. The brain DWI illustrated multiple patchy high signal in periventricular white matter and centrum semiovale which was characterized by persistence, and the corpus callosum was affected in the early stage. Conclusion The multiple patchy high signal with persistence in periventricular white matter and centrum semiovale of DWI is helpful for the early diagnosis of HDLS.
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Objective To explore the clinical and neuroimaging features of a frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 ( FTDP-17 ) pedigree caused by mutation of microtubule-associated protein tau ( MAPT) gene.Methods The proband and one patient from a FTDP-17 pedigree were assessed through standardized clinical evaluation , neuropsychology assessment , video-electroencephalogrom ,MRI, genetic sequencing , as well as 18 F fludeoxyglucose ( FDG) SPECT for brain metabolism and 11 C 2β-carbomethoxy-3β-( 4-fluoro ) tropane ( CFT ) PET for dopamine transporter ( DAT ) distribution, respectively.Results A FTDP pedigree with 15 patients (6 still alive) was recruited to this study.The proband and one affected patient were genotyped and confirmed as MAPT c .1788T>G mutation. Parkinsonism was the first symptom for both two patients . Personality, speech changes and dementia accompanied with brain atrophy were developed at the later stage in one patient .The 18 F FDG SPECT studies illustrated asymmetric hypometabolism of the temporal , frontal lobes and basal ganglia in two patients . Regarding to the 11 C CFT PET, one affected patient showed asymmetric decreased uptake of tracer in basal ganglia regions.Conclusions FTDP-17 can display a confusingly broad clinical phenotype , with the parkinsonism as the first symptom . Brain glucose metabolism and DAT distribution could be potential biomarkers in early diagnosis of FTDP-17.
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This cross-sectional, non-interventional, observational study evaluated depression in patients in China who presented to a general neurologist with chronic, medically unexplained, painful physical symptoms. Of the 402 patients enrolled, 197 patients (49.0%) met the criteria for a current major depressive episode (MDE+ group), as assessed using module A of the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview, and 205 patients (51.0%) did not (MDE- group). The mean pain severity visual analogue scale (VAS) score was signifi cantly higher in the MDE+ group than the MDE- group (65.3 vs 55.6 mm; p<0.001). The mean depression severity score, as assessed using the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), was 8.4 units (95% CI: 7.3 to 9.5) higher in the MDE+ group than the MDE- group (mean PHQ-9 total score: 14.8 vs 6.4). Anxiety and perceived health state were signifi cantly worse, on average, in the MDE+ group (mean Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale anxiety subscale score 10.7 vs 5.9 units; mean EuroQoL-5 Dimensions VAS score 56.4 vs 67.7 mm; each p<0.001). Only 14.2% of patients had received treatment for depression during the past 3 months. These results suggest depression was common and may have been under-treated in this group of Chinese patients with chronic, medically unexplained painful physical symptoms.
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Objective:To determine the relationship between serum resistin levels and carotid intima media(IMT)thickness in patients with essential hypertension. Methods:This study consisted of 272 patients with essential hypertension. The patients were divided into three groups according to their serum resistin levels. Group 1,n=91,serum resistin level 1.233-3.701 ng/ml;Group 2,n=91,serum resistin level 3.728-8.777 ng/ml;and Group 3,n=90,serum resistin level 8.809-28.658 ng/ml. Results:The carotid IMT and maximum carotid IMT of Group 3 were the highest in three groups.(P<0.05).As shown in multivariate analysis for factors affecting carotid IMT,serum resistin level(β=0.220,t=5.793,P=0.000)was independently associated with the carotid IMT after controlling the age,blood glucose,uric acid,low-density lipoprotein cholesterol,systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure. Serum resistin level(β=0.189,t=4.733,P=0.000)was independently associated with the maximum carotid IMT after controlling the age,blood glucose,body mass index,diastolic blood pressure,diabetes mellitus,high sensitivity C reactive protein,total cholesterol and triglyceride. Conclusion:Serum resistin was independently associated with the increased carotid IMT in essential hypertension patients.
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Objective To investigate the span and frequency of physical symptoms of panic attack in patients with panic disorder.Methods Panic symptoms presented at the time of panic attacks were assessed and categorized in forty-eight consecutive outpatients with panic disorder during August 2000 to November 2002.Results Palpitations (44/48,91.7%), shortness of breath (36/48,75.0%), sweating (34/48,70.8%), feel suffocated (33/48,68.8%), faint (31/48,64.6%), dizziness (27/48,56.3%) and fear of dying (27/48,56.3%) were the most frequent symptoms reported by the patients with panic disorder. If categorized according to system, the most frequent symptoms were presented in cardiovascular, neurological, respiratory and autonomic nervous systems of patients with panic disorder.Conclusions Physical symptoms varies when panic attack occurs. Panic disorder was often misdiagnosed and underdiagnosed because of wide and non-specific spectrum of physical symptoms.