Neurology
-
fMRI language tasks reliably identify language areas in presurgical epilepsy patients, but activation using single paradigms may disagree with the intracarotid amobarbital test (IAT). ⋯ A panel of fMRI language paradigms may be more accurate for evaluating partial epilepsy patients than a single task. A panel of tasks reduces the likelihood of nondiagnostic findings, improves interrater reliability, and helps confirm language laterality.
-
Visual hallucinations (VHs) occur frequently in Parkinson's disease (PD). VHs occur more frequently in elderly patients with longer duration of illness, cognitive impairment, and sleep disturbances. ⋯ In some patients, VHs may represent intrusion of REM sleep-related imagery into wakefulness. Improving REM sleep abnormalities in PD (e.g., stimulants, anticholinesterase inhibitors) is one strategy now being tested to improve VHs in PD.
-
Case Reports
Idiopathic pure sudomotor failure: anhidrosis due to deficits in cholinergic transmission.
Acquired idiopathic generalized anhidrosis (AIGA) represents a heterogeneous clinical syndrome including sudomotor neuropathy and failure of the sweat glands. However, most AIGA cases comprise idiopathic pure sudomotor failure (IPSF), a distinct subgroup without sudomotor neuropathy or sweat gland failure. ⋯ The lesions in IPSF may be in the muscarinic cholinergic receptors of sweat glands. Allergic mechanisms are probably involved in its pathophysiology.
-
Dementia is common post stroke, but the potential role of early cognitive impairment and APOE epsilon4 as risk factors is unclear. ⋯ In older stroke patients with early cognitive impairment, the presence of an APOE epsilon4 allele is associated with greater progression of cognitive decline. This has implications for interventions aimed at the secondary prevention of dementia in stroke patients.
-
The authors evaluated how history of concussion affects symptom reporting prior to and after sustaining a concussion. At baseline, athletes with a positive concussion history reported more current symptomatology than athletes who had never been concussed. At 2 hours postinjury, concussed athletes with a history of previous concussion (PC) reported fewer symptoms than concussed athletes with no previous concussion history (NPC). By 1 week postinjury, however, PC athletes reported more symptoms than NPC athletes.