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1.
Eur J Neurol ; 28(2): 401-410, 2021 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33065757

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Cognitive impairment is a common sequel of recent small subcortical infarction (RSSI) and might be negatively affected by preexisting cerebral small vessel disease (SVD). We investigated whether the course of cognitive function in patients with RSSI is influenced by the severity of white matter hyperintensities (WMH), an important imaging feature of SVD. METHODS: Patients with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-proven single RSSI were tested neuropsychologically concerning global cognition, processing speed, attention, and set-shifting. Deep and periventricular WMH severity was assessed using the Fazekas scale, and total WMH lesion volume was calculated from T1-weighted MRI images. We compared baseline function and course of cognition 15 months after the acute event in patients with absent, mild, and moderate-to-severe WMH. RESULTS: The study cohort comprised 82 RSSI patients (mean age: 61 ± 10 years, 23% female). At baseline, 40% had cognitive impairment (1.5 standard deviations below standardized mean), and deficits persisted in one-third of the sample after 15 months. After age correction, there were no significant differences in set-shifting between WMH groups at baseline. However, although patients without WMH (deep: p < 0.001, periventricular: p = 0.067) or only mild WMH (deep: p = 0.098, periventricular: p = 0.001) improved in set-shifting after 15 months, there was no improvement in patients with moderate-to-severe WMH (deep: p = 0.980, periventricular: p = 0.816). Baseline total WMH volume (p = 0.002) was the only significant predictor for attention 15 months poststroke. CONCLUSIONS: This longitudinal study demonstrates that preexisting moderate-to-severe WMH negatively affect the restoration of cognitive function after RSSI, suggesting limited functional reserve in patients with preexisting SVD.


Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases , Cognitive Dysfunction , Stroke , White Matter , Aged , Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases/complications , Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Cognition , Cognitive Dysfunction/diagnostic imaging , Cognitive Dysfunction/etiology , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Stroke/complications , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , White Matter/diagnostic imaging
3.
Eur J Neurol ; 26(5): 727-732, 2019 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30489673

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Information on the prevalence and course of post-stroke cognitive impairment in young stroke patients is limited. The aim was to assess a consecutive sample of acute young ischaemic stroke patients (18-55 years) for the presence and development of neuropsychological deficits. METHODS: Patients prospectively underwent a comprehensive clinical and cognitive assessment, examining general cognitive function, processing speed, attention, flexibility/executive function and word fluency within the first 3 weeks after hospital admission (median assessment at day 6) and at a 3 months' follow-up (FU). Cognitive dysfunction was defined in comparison to age-standardized published norms. RESULTS: At baseline (N = 114), deficits were highly prevalent in processing speed (56.0%), flexibility/executive function (49.5%), attention (46.4%) and general cognitive function (42.1%). These frequencies were comparable for those with FU assessment (N = 87). In most domains, cognitive performance improved within 3 months, except for word fluency. However, in about one-third of patients, cognitive deficits (as defined by 1.5 standard deviations below the standardized mean) were still present 3 months after stroke. At FU, 44.0% were impaired in the domain flexibility/executive function, 35.0% in processing speed and 30.0% in attention. CONCLUSIONS: The high prevalence of cognitive deficits in acute young patients with ischaemic stroke highlights the importance of early post-stroke cognitive assessment to capture a patient's dysfunction in a comprehensive manner and to offer adequate rehabilitation. The role of factors which promote neuropsychological deficits needs further exploration.


Brain Ischemia/epidemiology , Brain Ischemia/psychology , Cognitive Dysfunction/epidemiology , Cognitive Dysfunction/psychology , Stroke/epidemiology , Stroke/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Attention , Brain Ischemia/complications , Cognition , Cognitive Dysfunction/complications , Disease Progression , Executive Function , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Neuropsychological Tests , Prevalence , Prospective Studies , Speech , Stroke/complications , Young Adult
4.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 38(3): 500-506, 2017 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27979793

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Gait disturbances in the elderly are disabling and a major public health issue but are poorly understood. In this multimodal MR imaging study, we used 2 voxel-based analysis methods to assess the voxelwise relationship of magnetization transfer ratio and white matter hyperintensity location with gait velocity in older adults. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We assessed 230 community-dwelling participants of the Austrian Stroke Prevention Family Study. Every participant underwent 3T MR imaging, including magnetization transfer imaging. Voxel-based magnetization transfer ratio-symptom mapping correlated the white matter magnetization transfer ratio of each voxel with gait velocity. To assess a possible relationship between white matter hyperintensity location and gait velocity, we applied voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping. RESULTS: We found a significant association between the magnetization transfer ratio within the forceps minor and gait velocity (ß = 0.134; 95% CI, 0.011-0.258; P = .033), independent of demographics, general physical performance, vascular risk factors, and brain volume. White matter hyperintensities did not significantly change this association. CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides new evidence for the importance of magnetization transfer ratio changes in gait disturbances at an older age, particularly in the forceps minor. The histopathologic basis of these findings is yet to be determined.


Brain/pathology , Gait Disorders, Neurologic/pathology , Adult , Aged , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Female , Gait/physiology , Gait Disorders, Neurologic/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Middle Aged
6.
Br J Dermatol ; 175(4): 721-7, 2016 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27062385

BACKGROUND: We have encountered repeated cases of recessive lethal generalized severe (Herlitz-type) junctional epidermolysis bullosa (JEB gen sev) in infants born to Hungarian Roma parents residing in a small region of Hungary. OBJECTIVES: To identify the disease-causing mutation and to investigate the genetic background of its unique carrier group. METHODS: The LAMB3 gene was analysed in peripheral-blood genomic DNA samples, and the pathological consequences of the lethal defect were confirmed by cutaneous LAMB3cDNA sequencing. A median joining haplotype network within the Y chromosome H1a-M82 haplogroup of individuals from the community was constructed, and LAMB3 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) patterns were also determined. RESULTS: An unconventional intronic splice-site mutation (LAMB3, c.1133-22G>A) was identified. Thirty of 64 voluntarily screened Roma from the closed community carried the mutation, but none of the 306 Roma from other regions of the country did. The age of the mutation was estimated to be 548 ± 222 years. Within the last year, more patients with JEB gen sev carrying the same unusual mutation have been identified in three unrelated families, all immigrants from the Balkans. Two were compound heterozygous newborns, in Germany and Italy, and one homozygous newborn died in France. Only the French family recognized their Roma background. LAMB3SNP haplotyping confirmed the link between the apparently unrelated Hungarian, German and Italian male cases, but could not verify the same background in the female newborn from France. CONCLUSIONS: The estimated age of the mutation corresponds to the time period when Roma were wandering in the Balkans.


Cell Adhesion Molecules/genetics , Epidermolysis Bullosa, Junctional/genetics , Founder Effect , Mutation/genetics , Roma/genetics , Amino Acid Substitution/genetics , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Emigration and Immigration , Epidermolysis Bullosa, Junctional/ethnology , Female , France/ethnology , Genome, Human , Germany/ethnology , Haplotypes/genetics , Humans , Hungary/ethnology , Infant , Italy/ethnology , Male , Phylogeography , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics , RNA/genetics , RNA Splice Sites/genetics , Kalinin
7.
Mult Scler ; 22(3): 340-6, 2016 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26163072

BACKGROUND: The extent and clinical significance of brain volume changes in different phases of multiple sclerosis (MS) is still under discussion. OBJECTIVE: To determine the rate of global and compartmental brain volume changes in patients with a clinically-isolated syndrome (CIS) compared to patients with definite MS, by long-term follow-up and as a predictor of conversion to MS in a routine clinical setting. METHODS: We investigated 120 patients (63 CIS and 57 MS) at baseline and after a mean follow-up period of 43 months, including detailed clinical examination and 3-Tesla magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Our imaging analyses comprised the normalized brain volume (NBV), cortical grey matter (cGMV) and white matter (WMV) volumes using SIENA/X, the percentage of brain volume change (PBVC) using SIENA and the change in the volume of the thalami (TV) and basal ganglia (BGV). We also determined the amount and change of T2-lesion load (T2-LL). RESULTS: At baseline, all the brain volume metrics, except cGMV, were significantly lower; and the T2-LL was significantly higher, in patients with MS rather than CIS. During the follow-up, only the PBVC was higher in MS (p = 0.008) and this difference was driven by converters from CIS to MS. Quartiles of PBVC did not allow us to predict conversion to MS, but were associated with the degree of disability. CONCLUSIONS: PBVC is the most sensitive marker of progressing atrophy and a higher PBVC was generally associated with more active disease; however, it did not serve to predict the course of MS on an individual basis, in this study.


Brain/pathology , Demyelinating Diseases/pathology , Multiple Sclerosis/pathology , Adult , Atrophy/pathology , Disease Progression , Female , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male
9.
Dtsch Z Verdau Stoffwechselkr ; 43(3): 130-6, 1983.
Article De | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6884261

On 2200 autopsy cases was investigated if patients after cholecystectomy or with cholelithiasis show a higher rate of colorectal cancer than those with normal gall bladder. Thereby was found that 7,6% of the cases with previously cholecystectomy and 7,0% of these with cholelithiasis had large bowel cancer, but only 2,9% of the dead without these findings. These differences were highly significant. In cases with state after gall bladder removing the significance was only given during the first four years post operation. Furthermore the connections were modified by age and sex. The results suggest that not a previously cholecystectomy seems to increase the danger of cancer in the colorectal area, but that the high risk factor could be connected with cholelithiasis.


Cholecystectomy/adverse effects , Cholelithiasis/complications , Colonic Neoplasms/epidemiology , Rectal Neoplasms/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Colonic Neoplasms/etiology , Female , Germany, East , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Rectal Neoplasms/etiology , Sex Factors
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