Neurology
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According to the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD)-2, primary daily headaches unremitting from onset are classified as new daily-persistent headache (NDPH) only if migraine features are absent. When migraine features are present, classification is problematic. ⋯ Current International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD)-2 criteria exclude the majority of patients with primary headache unremitting from onset. The proposed criteria for revised new daily-persistent headache definition not excluding migraine features (NDPH-R) classify these patients into a relatively homogeneous group based on demographics, clinical features, and prognosis. Both new daily-persistent headache with too many migraine features for ICHD-2 and new daily-persistent headache meeting ICHD-2 criteria include patients in equal proportions that fall into the persisting, remitting, and relapsing-remitting subgroups. Our criteria for NDPH-R should be considered for inclusion in ICHD-3.
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Patients with acute neurologic symptoms may have other causes simulating ischemic stroke, called stroke mimics (SM), but they may also have averted strokes that do not appear as infarcts on neuroimaging, which we call neuroimaging-negative cerebral ischemia (NNCI). We determined the safety and outcome of IV thrombolysis within 3 hours of symptom onset in patients with SM and NNCI. ⋯ Our data support the safety of administering IV tissue plasminogen activator to patients with suspected acute cerebral ischemia within 3 hours of symptom onset, even when the diagnosis ultimately is found not to be stroke or imaging does not show an infarct.
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Improving our ability to predict the time of death after withdrawal of life-sustaining measures (WLSM) could have a significant impact on rates of organ donation after cardiac death and allocation of appropriate medical resources. We sought to determine which pre-WLSM clinical factors were associated with earlier time to death in patients with catastrophic neurologic disease. ⋯ Specific neurologic signs and respiratory measurements are associated with earlier death after withdrawal of life-sustaining measures in the neurologic intensive care unit. This subset of comatose patients with irreversible neurologic injury may be suitable for organ donation after cardiac death protocols. These attributes need validation in a prospective data set.
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Sedation for the imminently dying (SFTID) is a controversial practice that involves the provision of sedation to imminently dying patients with the intent of relieving their suffering when symptoms are refractory to other interventions. The goal of this research was to ascertain the opinions regarding SFTID that are held by neurologists who are interested in ethics and end-of-life care. ⋯ The overwhelming majority of neurologists surveyed endorse the concept that sedation for the imminently dying differs morally and legally from euthanasia and that it is an acceptable therapeutic option for some but not all patients who are imminently dying of a terminal illness.