Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology
-
Management of medication overuse headache (MOH) requires abrupt suspension of overused drugs either alone or in association with a detoxification protocol to prevent withdrawal. However, there is no consensus about which suspension strategy is the most effective. Moreover, reliable data about the possible mid-term effect of detoxification are not available. ⋯ At day 5, 82% of our patients were headache-free; moreover, 48% of the patients did not take any painkiller during the 5-day treatment. Three months after, the intervention group showed a greater reduction of monthly headache days (9.4 vs 3.0) and drugs (19.7 vs 6.5), a greater rate of patients with a ≥ 50% reduction of monthly headaches (p = 0.019) and symptomatic drug consumption (p = 0.000), than the control group. The methylprednisolone and diazepam detoxification protocol reduced headache attacks and drug assumption immediately and in the first 3 months after the intervention, concurring to improve the effect of a new prophylactic therapy.
-
Simple febrile seizures are generally benign, but during the seizure, elevated levels of glutamate and high levels of oxygen use due to the high metabolic brain activity result in oxidative stress. However, the relationship between febrile seizures and oxidative stress remains unclear. In this study, we investigated thiol/disulfide homeostasis as a new oxidative stress parameter in patients with simple febrile seizures. ⋯ The sensitivities of both disulfide/native thiol and disulfide/total thiol ratios were high for simple febrile seizures. Simple febrile seizures may cause impairment in favor of disulfide bonds in thiol/disulfide homeostasis. Overall, these changes may contribute to neuronal cell damage after simple febrile seizures.
-
The aim of our study is to understand neuropathic pain's social, psychological, and biological effects on the patients. All of the patients who were diagnosed with neuropathic pain (NP) by a neurologist were invited to participate in the study. The diagnoses were made based on the patients' history and symptoms and the results of their neurological examinations. ⋯ The most important result of this clinical study was that the biopsychosocial approach would be appropriate to understand and treat NP. The biopsychosocial approach to pain addresses psychological, sociocultural factors, and biomedical/physiological aspects. We wanted to draw attention to NP's psychological, emotional and sociocultural characteristics to show that the NP treatment can be applied within this framework.