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1.
Farm Hosp ; 2024 May 13.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38744562

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To analyze the response to retreatment in patients with chronic/episodic migraine who discontinued therapy with erenumab/fremanezumab after one year of treatment. METHODS: Observational, retrospective, single-center, multidisciplinary study in patients with chronic/episodic migraine who received therapy with erenumab/fremanezumab for at least one year and discontinued it after achieving an adequate response (optimization). The evaluation of the response after retreatment included the following variables: migraine days per month, MIDAS and HIT-6 scales at the beginning of retreatment and 3 months later. The response was evaluated in different subgroups (episodic/chronic, erenumab/fremanezumab and time until retreatment). RESULTS: 48 patients were included. 70.8% (n=34) required retreatment with mAb, with a median of 3.9 (2.9-6.4) months until reintroduction. Clinical response after retreatment was achieved in 67.6% (n=23) of patients. No statistically significant differences were found in the analyzed subgroups. CONCLUSION: Interruption of treatment with erenumab/fremanezumab for chronic/episodic migraine produces a clinical worsening of the disease requiring retreatment in most cases, approximately after 4 months. Two out of three patients respond positively after restarting monoclonal therapy. This response does not appear to be related to the type of migraine, the specific monoclonal antibody prescribed, or the time to retreatment.

2.
Farm Hosp ; 2024 Mar 08.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38461112

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To analyze the response to retreatment in patients with chronic/episodic migraine who discontinued therapy with erenumab/fremanezumab after 1 year of treatment. METHODS: Observational, retrospective, single-center, multidisciplinary study in patients with chronic/episodic migraine who received therapy with erenumab/fremanezumab for at least 1 year and discontinued it after achieving an adequate response (optimization). The evaluation of the response after retreatment included the following variables: DMM, MIDAS, and HIT-6 scales at the beginning of retreatment and 3 months later. The response was evaluated in different subgroups (episodic/chronic, erenumab/fremanezumab, and time until retreatment). RESULTS: 48 patients were included. 70.8% (n=34) required retreatment with mAb, with a median of 3.9 (2.9-6.4) months until reintroduction. Clinical response after retreatment was achieved in 67.6% (n=23) of patients. No statistically significant differences were found in the analyzed subgroups. CONCLUSION: Interruption of treatment with erenumab/fremanezumab for chronic/episodic migraine produces a clinical worsening of the disease requiring retreatment in most cases, approximately after 4 months. Two out of three patients respond positively after restarting monoclonal therapy. This response does not appear to be related to the type of migraine, the specific monoclonal antibody prescribed, or the time to retreatment.

3.
J Neurol Sci ; 434: 120122, 2022 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34979370

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess the frequency of symptomatic structural lesions and the diagnostic yield of conventional brain MRI in cluster headache (CH). BACKGROUND: In contrast to migraine, brain MRI is recommended in patients with CH to exclude potential mimics. The prevalence of symptomatic CH is not known. METHODS: We retrospectively analysed in detail the brain MRIs of patients diagnosed as CH in 3 Neurology Services in Spain and reviewed their clinical history. Clinical diagnoses were reassessed based on the ICHD-3 criteria. RESULTS: We included 130 patients: 113 (86.9%) were male; mean age at diagnosis being 41.4 years (range 7-82). Forty-nine (37.7%) showed some abnormal MRI finding. Only in two cases potential symptomatic lesions were found: one trigeminal schwannoma and one craneopharyngioma, but both presented atypical features (facial hypoesthesia on examination and episodes of prolonged duration that had progressed to continuous refractory pain without specific pattern, respectively) and therefore did not fulfil the ICHD-3 CH criteria. The remaining abnormal MRI findings were: white matter lesions (24 patients; 18.4%), sinus inflammatory changes (13; 10.0%), small arachnoid cysts (5; 3.8%), empty sella turca (3; 2.3%), and other unspecific findings (8; 6.2%). All of them were not symptomatic based on neuroimaging characteristics, clinical course and response to treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Brain MRI in patients who meet ICHD-3 CH criteria, with no atypical clinical features, does not show any clinically-relevant findings, suggesting that these criteria are highly predictive of its primary origin and that systematic MRI is not useful for the diagnosis of typical CH.


Subject(s)
Cluster Headache , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Child , Cluster Headache/diagnostic imaging , Hospitals , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Neuroimaging , Retrospective Studies , Spain/epidemiology , Young Adult
6.
Muscle Nerve ; 44(4): 587-9, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21922471

ABSTRACT

The diagnosis of Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD) is suggested by the combination of musculoskeletal weakness and wasting, joint contractures, and cardiac disease. Herein we report a patient in whom an ischemic stroke prompted the diagnosis of EDMD. A mutation in the LMNA gene (c.266G>T, p.Arg89Leu) was found. It had been reported previously exclusively with isolated cardiac disease, thus reinforcing the high phenotypic heterogeneity of laminopathies.


Subject(s)
Lamin Type A/genetics , Muscular Dystrophy, Emery-Dreifuss/genetics , Stroke/complications , Adult , Humans , Male , Muscular Dystrophy, Emery-Dreifuss/physiopathology , Mutation , Myocardial Ischemia/complications , Stroke/etiology
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