Rev Neurol France
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Pain may be a presenting symptom of Parkinson's disease or may occur during the motor fluctuation stages of the disease. The complexity and pathophysiology of pain in Parkinson's disease still remains poorly understood. ⋯ Painful syndromes are found in two thirds of patients with Parkinson's disease, with mainly pain of muscular origin, followed by osteoarticular and neurogenic painful syndromes, a quarter of the patients experience pain in early phases of the disease and a third in relation with motor fluctuations.
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Review
[Recent advances in pathogenic concepts and therapeutic strategies in Rasmussen's encephalitis].
Rasmussen's encephalitis (RE) is a rare inflammatory brain disease mainly affecting children and characterised by intractable epilepsy involving a single hemisphere that undergoes progressive atrophy. RE is characterized by refractory focal seizures, often associated with epilepsia partialis continua, progressive unilateral motor defect, slow EEG activity over the entire contralateral hemisphere, with focal white matter hyperintensity and insular cortical atrophy on neuroimaging. Surgical exclusion of the affected hemisphere is the only treatment that interrupts progression of the disease. ⋯ Based on these concepts, different therapeutic strategies have been pursued, such as antiviral agents, plasmapheresis, immuno-adsorption, immunosuppression or immunomodulation with intravenous immunoglobulins. However, due to the lack of large studies, to date there is no established therapeutic strategy for this devastating condition. In this review, we give an overview of the current state of immunopathogenic concepts for Rasmussen's encephalitis and discuss the different therapeutic options for future perspectives.
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An increasing number of studies are focusing on the anatomo-functional organisation of number processing and some cognitive models have been recently developed. Nevertheless, relationships between areas implicated in number processing, and language areas and circuits remain unclear. Recently, Dehaene and Cohen, in their "triple-code model of number processing", (Dehaene and Cohen, 1995) distinguished two alternative number representation and processing systems: one depending on verbal processes, the other representing a quantity manipulation. ⋯ On the other hand, only one patient committed syntactic errors, misunderstanding the decimal size and the structure of the number. We considered lexical errors as verbal errors, and syntactic errors as semantic errors, affecting the notion of quantity. We tried to explain verbal disturbances as well as lexical errors as a consequence of lesion of the left-hemispheric perisylvian areas, while syntactic errors as a consequence of impairment of the intraparietal region.