Neurology
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Both estrogen and progesterone influence seizure activity in women with epilepsy, with estrogen generally demonstrating proconvulsant and progesterone anticonvulsant effects. Women with epilepsy exhibit a variety of endocrine disturbances, probably due to a combination of factors, including the epilepsy syndrome and the effect of interictal and ictal epileptic discharges in the brain. The direct effects of some antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) further increase this risk, apparently related to a specific drug's effect on hepatic microsomal enzymes of the cytochrome P-450 system. ⋯ Special considerations in women of childbearing age include decreased compliance and disease prevention. Although adequate seizure control is the critical requirement of an AED, the potential for interactions with hormonal contraception and the increased risk for endocrine disturbances caused by drugs that alter hepatic microsomal enzymes suggest additional potential advantages for AED treatment that does not affect these enzymes. Both the constellation of physicians treating women with epilepsy and the patients themselves have a poor understanding of the spectrum of reproductive health issues involved, and increased awareness is needed to improve patient management.
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Previous studies have shown that HIV-infected children have abnormal cerebral metabolites, measured by proton MR spectroscopy (1H MRS), but the stability of these measurements over time has not been described in HIV-infected children. The authors recently reported a study of cerebral metabolites in 20 HIV-infected children (6 to 16 years of age); the current study followed 12 of these children (10.0 years +/- 3.7 years) and repeated the MR spectroscopy at 24.1 +/- 3.7 weeks and 42.2 +/- 3.5 weeks following the entry time with repeated neuropsychological testing. ⋯ In a clinically and neurologically stable group of HIV-infected children, cerebral metabolites were stable over a 10-month time period, suggesting that it is possible to assess changes in cerebral metabolites as a measure of cerebral health, but longer follow-up in a larger sample is needed.
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Comparative Study
Predictors for malignant middle cerebral artery infarctions: a postmortem analysis.
Early detection of malignant infarction of the middle cerebral artery (MI-MCA) is important because of possible treatment by hemicraniectomy. ⋯ Typical pathologic pattern for development of malignant infarction of the middle cerebral artery is a carotid occlusion with abnormal ipsilateral circle of Willis in a young patient who had a first-ever large hemispheric stroke including the superficial territory with possibly a slight predominance of female sex.
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Multicenter Study
Haptoglobin and the development of cerebral artery vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Vasospasm is a prolonged constriction of a cerebral artery that is induced by hemoglobin after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). The subarachnoid blood clot also contains the protein haptoglobin, which acts to neutralize hemoglobin. Because the haptoglobin alpha gene is dimorphic, a person can expresses only one of three types of haptoglobin (alpha1-alpha1, alpha1-alpha2, or alpha2-alpha2) depending on the alpha subunit genes he or she inherits. Each of these three haptoglobin types has different antihemoglobin activities; therefore, haptoglobin may influence the development of vasospasm differently in various patients with SAH. ⋯ Haptoglobins containing the alpha2 subunit seem to be associated with a higher rate of vasospasm than is haptoglobin alpha1-alpha1.