Arch Neurol Chicago
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Arch Neurol Chicago · Jun 1996
Detection of nontraumatic comatose patients with no benefit of intensive care treatment by recording of sensory evoked potentials.
To determine the predictive ability of sensory evoked potential recordings in nontraumatic comatose patients. To evaluate the hypothesis that patients with bilateral absent cortical responses ultimately die despite long-term intensive care treatment. ⋯ Recording of sensory evoked potentials identifies a subgroup of adult nontraumatic comatose patients with a mortality rate of 100% in our sample. In these patients, advanced intensive care treatment should be withdrawn to provide limited ICU resources for patients with higher probability of favorable outcome. We emphasize that these results are not applicable to comatose patients following closed head trauma and particularly not to children.
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Arch Neurol Chicago · Jun 1996
Biography Historical ArticleGilles de la Tourette and the discovery of Tourette syndrome. Includes a translation of his 1884 article.
In 1885, Gilles de la Tourette described 9 patients who suffered from a disorder characterized by involuntary movements, echolalia, echopraxia, coprolalia, and strange, uncontrollable sounds. In his article, Gilles de la Tourette presented some earlier descriptions of this disorder. To appreciate what first led Gilles de la Tourette to Tourette syndrome, however, it is necessary to turn to an article that he published a year earlier. ⋯ After describing these disorders, namely, "jumping" of Maine, latah of Malaysia, and miryachit of Siberia, he briefly mentioned a boy in Charcot's ward in Paris, France, who seemed to exhibit the same condition. In an addendum, he then said that other cases were now surfacing in Paris and that he would write an additional article describing these individuals. To achieve a more thorough understanding of the events that led Gilles de la Tourette to his 1885 description of the disorder that now bears his name, we herein present an English-language translation of his 1884 article along with a commentary.
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Arch Neurol Chicago · May 1996
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialCiticoline improves verbal memory in aging.
To test the verbal memory of older volunteers given citicoline. ⋯ Citicoline therapy improved verbal memory functioning in older individuals with relatively inefficient memories. Citicoline may prove effective in treating age-related cognitive decline that may be the precursor of dementia.
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Arch Neurol Chicago · May 1996
Comment Letter Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialAntihistaminics in idiopathic dystonia.