12 results on '"Doubal, Fergus N."'
Search Results
2. Neuropsychiatric symptoms as a sign of small vessel disease progression in cognitive impairment
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Clancy, Una, Ramirez, Joel, Chappell, Francesca M., Doubal, Fergus N., Wardlaw, Joanna M., and Black, Sandra E.
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- 2022
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3. Imaging neurovascular, endothelial and structural integrity in preparation to treat small vessel diseases. The INVESTIGATE-SVDs study protocol. Part of the SVDs@Target project
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Blair, Gordon W., Stringer, Michael S., Thrippleton, Michael J., Chappell, Francesca M., Shuler, Kirsten, Hamilton, Iona, Garcia, Daniela Jaime, Doubal, Fergus N., Kopczak, Anna, Duering, Marco, Ingrisch, Michael, Kerkhofs, Danielle, Staals, Julie, van den Brink, Hilde, Arts, Tine, Backes, Walter H, van Oostenbrugge, Robert, Biessels, Geert Jan, Dichgans, Martin, and Wardlaw, Joanna M.
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- 2021
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4. Zooming in on cerebral small vessel function in small vessel diseases with 7T MRI: Rationale and design of the “ZOOM@SVDs” study
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van den Brink, Hilde, Kopczak, Anna, Arts, Tine, Onkenhout, Laurien, Siero, Jeroen C.W., Zwanenburg, Jaco J.M., Duering, Marco, Blair, Gordon W., Doubal, Fergus N., Stringer, Michael S., Thrippleton, Michael J., Kuijf, Hugo J., de Luca, Alberto, Hendrikse, Jeroen, Wardlaw, Joanna M., Dichgans, Martin, and Biessels, Geert Jan
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- 2021
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5. Potential recruitment into a clinical trial of vascular secondary prevention medications in cerebral small vessel disease, based on concomitant medication use
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Morrison, Edward, Lyall, Donald M, Pell, Jill P., Mackay, Daniel F., Doubal, Fergus N., Wardlaw, Joanna M., Quinn, Terence, and Makin, Stephen
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- 2021
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6. Small Vessel Disease and Dietary Salt Intake: Cross-Sectional Study and Systematic Review.
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Makin, Stephen D.J., Mubki, Ghaida F., Doubal, Fergus N., Shuler, Kirsten, Staals, Julie, Dennis, Martin S., and Wardlaw, Joanna M.
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Background: Higher dietary salt intake increases the risk of stroke and may increase white matter hyperintensity (WMH) volume. We hypothesized that a long-term higher salt intake may be associated with other features of small vessel disease (SVD).Methods: We recruited consecutive patients with mild stroke presenting to the Lothian regional stroke service. We performed brain magnetic resonance imaging, obtained a basic dietary salt history, and measured the urinary sodium/creatinine ratio. We also carried out a systematic review to put the study in the context of other studies in the field.Results: We recruited 250 patients, 112 with lacunar stroke and 138 with cortical stroke, with a median age of 67.5 years. After adjustment for risk factors, including age and hypertension, patients who had not reduced their salt intake in the long term were more likely to have lacunar stroke (odds ratio [OR], 1.90; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.10-3.29), lacune(s) (OR, 2.06; 95% CI, 1.09-3.99), microbleed(s) (OR, 3.4; 95% CI, 1.54, 8.21), severe WMHs (OR, 2.45; 95% CI 1.34-4.57), and worse SVD scores (OR, 2.17; 95% CI, 1.22-3.9). There was limited association between SVD and current salt intake or urinary sodium/creatinine ratio. Our systematic review found no previously published studies of dietary salt and SVD.Conclusion: The association between dietary salt and background SVD is a promising indication of a potential neglected contributory factor for SVD. These results should be replicated in larger, long-term studies using the recognized gold-standard measures of dietary sodium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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7. Reporting "specific abilities" after major stroke to better describe prognosis.
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Visvanathan, Akila, Whiteley, William, Mead, Gillian, Lawton, Julia, Doubal, Fergus N, and Dennis, Martin
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Introduction: If health professionals are to involve major stroke patients and their families in making decisions about treatments, they need to describe prognosis in terms that are easily understood. We suggest that referring to "specific abilities", such as ability to be independent, walk, talk, eat normally, be continent, live without severe pain, live without major anxiety or depression and to live at home may be more easily understood than terms such as disabled based on the modified Rankin scale (mRs).Objective: We aimed to describe the "specific abilities" and quality of life of patients in each mRs level at six months after major stroke.Patients and Methods: A longitudinal cohort study of patients admitted to hospital with major stroke with follow up at six months.Results: We recruited 403 patients, mean age 77.5yrs. The number (%) in each mRs level at six months was 0 (no problems): 8(2%), 1: 45(11.2%), 2: 7(1.7%), 3: 149(37.1%), 4: 46(11.4%), 5: 36(9.0%) and 6(dead) 111(27.6%). Patients within each mRs level varied with respect to their "specific abilities" and quality of life. For example, of the 36(9%) patients with mRs 5, 30(83%) could talk, 14(39%) were continent, 33(92%) were not in severe pain, 22(61%) did not have major anxiety/depression and 5(14%) could live at home. Their median utility (derived from HRQoL) was -0.08 (range -0.35 to 0.43).Discussion and Conclusions: Describing prognosis with the mRs does not convey the variation in specific abilities and HRQoL amongst patients with major stroke. Therefore, describing prognosis in terms of "specific abilities" may be more appropriate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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8. Neuroimaging standards for research into small vessel disease—advances since 2013.
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Duering, Marco, Biessels, Geert Jan, Brodtmann, Amy, Chen, Christopher, Cordonnier, Charlotte, de Leeuw, Frank-Erik, Debette, Stéphanie, Frayne, Richard, Jouvent, Eric, Rost, Natalia S, ter Telgte, Annemieke, Al-Shahi Salman, Rustam, Backes, Walter H, Bae, Hee-Joon, Brown, Rosalind, Chabriat, Hugues, De Luca, Alberto, deCarli, Charles, Dewenter, Anna, and Doubal, Fergus N
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CEREBRAL small vessel diseases , *RESEARCH vessels , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *BRAIN imaging , *COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is common during ageing and can present as stroke, cognitive decline, neurobehavioural symptoms, or functional impairment. SVD frequently coexists with neurodegenerative disease, and can exacerbate cognitive and other symptoms and affect activities of daily living. Standards for Reporting Vascular Changes on Neuroimaging 1 (STRIVE-1) categorised and standardised the diverse features of SVD that are visible on structural MRI. Since then, new information on these established SVD markers and novel MRI sequences and imaging features have emerged. As the effect of combined SVD imaging features becomes clearer, a key role for quantitative imaging biomarkers to determine sub-visible tissue damage, subtle abnormalities visible at high-field strength MRI, and lesion-symptom patterns, is also apparent. Together with rapidly emerging machine learning methods, these metrics can more comprehensively capture the effect of SVD on the brain than the structural MRI features alone and serve as intermediary outcomes in clinical trials and future routine practice. Using a similar approach to that adopted in STRIVE-1, we updated the guidance on neuroimaging of vascular changes in studies of ageing and neurodegeneration to create STRIVE-2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Relationship between inferior frontal sulcal hyperintensities on brain MRI, ageing and cerebral small vessel disease.
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Zhang, Jun-Fang, Lim, Hwee Fang, Chappell, Francesca M., Clancy, Una, Wiseman, Stewart, Valdés-Hernández, Maria C., Garcia, Daniela Jaime, Bastin, Mark E., Doubal, Fergus N., Hewins, Will, Cox, Simon R., Maniega, Susana Muñoz, Thrippleton, Michael, Stringer, Michael, Jardine, Charlotte, McIntyre, Donna, Barclay, Gayle, Hamilton, Iona, Kesseler, Lucy, and Murphy, Madeleine
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CEREBRAL small vessel diseases , *AGING , *CRIBRIFORM plate , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *STROKE - Abstract
• Raised signal in CSF on FLAIR may indicate raised CSF protein or debris. • Inferior frontal sulcal hyperintensities (IFSH) were associated with ageing. • IFSH were associated with PVS score in centrum semiovale in stroke patients. Raised signal in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) may indicate raised CSF protein or debris and is seen in inferior frontal sulci on routine MRI. To explore its clinical relevance, we assessed the association of inferior frontal sulcal hyperintensities (IFSH) on FLAIR with demographics, risk factors, and small vessel disease markers in three cohorts (healthy volunteers, n=44; mild stroke patients, n=105; older community-dwelling participants from Lothian birth cohort 1936, n=101). We collected detailed clinical data, scanned all subjects on the same 3T MRI scanner and 3-dimensional FLAIR sequence and developed a scale to rate IFSH. In adjusted analyses, the IFSH score increased with age (per 10-year increase; OR 1.69; 95% CI, 1.42-2.02), and perivascular spaces score in centrum semiovale in stroke patients (OR 1.73; 95% CI, 1.13-2.69). Since glymphatic CSF clearance declines with age and drains partially via the cribriform plate to the nasal lymphatics, IFSH on 3T MRI may be a non-invasive biomarker of altered CSF clearance and justifies further research in larger, more diverse samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. Lateral thinking - Interocular symmetry and asymmetry in neurovascular patterning, in health and disease.
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Cameron, James R., Megaw, Roly D., Tatham, Andrew J., McGrory, Sarah, MacGillivray, Thomas J., Doubal, Fergus N., Wardlaw, Joanna M., Trucco, Emanuele, Chandran, Siddharthan, and Dhillon, Baljean
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EYE examination , *BIOMETRIC eye scanning systems , *NEUROVASCULAR diseases , *RETINAL imaging , *DIAGNOSIS , *THERAPEUTICS , *RETINAL disease diagnosis , *NEURONS , *OPTIC nerve , *RETINA , *OPTICAL coherence tomography - Abstract
No biological system or structure is likely to be perfectly symmetrical, or have identical right and left forms. This review explores the evidence for eye and visual pathway asymmetry, in health and in disease, and attempts to provide guidance for those studying the structure and function of the visual system, where recognition of symmetry or asymmetry may be essential. The principal question with regards to asymmetry is not 'are the eyes the same?', for some degree of asymmetry is pervasive, but 'when are they importantly different?'. Knowing if right and left eyes are 'importantly different' could have significant consequences for deciding whether right or left eyes are included in an analysis or for examining the association between a phenotype and ocular parameter. The presence of significant asymmetry would also have important implications for the design of normative databases of retinal and optic nerve metrics. In this review, we highlight not only the universal presence of asymmetry, but provide evidence that some elements of the visual system are inherently more asymmetric than others, pointing to the need for improved normative data to explain sources of asymmetry and their impact on determining associations with genetic, environmental or health-related factors and ultimately in clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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11. Use of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI to measure subtle blood–brain barrier abnormalities
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Armitage, Paul A., Farrall, Andrew J., Carpenter, Trevor K., Doubal, Fergus N., and Wardlaw, Joanna M.
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BLOOD-brain barrier disorders , *INTRACRANIAL tumors , *MULTIPLE sclerosis , *DIAGNOSIS of neurological disorders , *TISSUES , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Abstract: There is growing interest in investigating the role of subtle changes in blood–brain barrier (BBB) function in common neurological disorders and the possible use of imaging techniques to assess these abnormalities. Some studies have used dynamic contrast-enhanced MR imaging (DCE-MRI) and these have demonstrated much smaller signal changes than obtained from more traditional applications of the technique, such as in intracranial tumors and multiple sclerosis. In this work, preliminary results are presented from a DCE-MRI study of patients with mild stroke classified according to the extent of visible underlying white matter abnormalities. These data are used to estimate typical signal enhancement profiles in different tissue types and by degrees of white matter abnormality. The effect of scanner noise, drift and different intrinsic tissue properties on signal enhancement data is also investigated and the likely implications for interpreting the enhancement profiles are discussed. No significant differences in average signal enhancement or contrast agent concentration were observed between patients with different degrees of white matter abnormality, although there was a trend towards greater signal enhancement with more abnormal white matter. Furthermore, the results suggest that many of the factors considered introduce uncertainty of a similar magnitude to expected effect sizes, making it unclear whether differences in signal enhancement are truly reflective of an underlying BBB abnormality or due to an unrelated effect. As the ultimate aim is to achieve a reliable quantification of BBB function in subtle disorders, this study highlights the factors which may influence signal enhancement and suggests that further work is required to address the challenging problems of quantifying contrast agent concentration in healthy and diseased living human tissue and of establishing a suitable model to enable quantification of relevant physiological parameters. Meanwhile, it is essential that future studies use an appropriate control group to minimize these influences. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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12. Visual Neglect Following Stroke: Current Concepts and Future Focus
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Ting, Darren S.J., Pollock, Alex, Dutton, Gordon N., Doubal, Fergus N., Ting, Daniel S.W., Thompson, Michelle, and Dhillon, Baljean
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UNILATERAL neglect , *CEREBROVASCULAR disease , *EYE diseases , *EYE examination , *CEREBRAL dominance , *MEDICAL rehabilitation - Abstract
Abstract: Visual neglect is a common, yet frequently overlooked, neurological disorder following stroke characterized by a deficit in attention and appreciation of stimuli on the contralesional side of the body. It has a profound functional impact on affected individuals. A assessment and management of this condition are hindered, however, by the lack of professional awareness and clinical guidelines. Recent evidence suggests that the underlying deficit in visual attention is due to a disrupted internalized representation of the outer world rather than a disorder of sensory inputs. Dysfunction of the cortical domains and white-matter tracts, as well as inter-hemispheric imbalance, have been implicated in the various manifestations of visual neglect. Optimal diagnosis requires careful history-taking from the patient, family, and friends, in addition to clinical assessment with the line bisection test, the star cancellation test, and the Catherine Bergego Scale. Early recognition and prompt rehabilitation employing a multidisciplinary approach is desirable. Although no treatment has been definitively shown to be of benefit, those with promise include prism adaptation, visual scanning therapy, and virtual reality–based techniques. Further high quality research to seek optimum short- and long-term rehabilitative strategies for visual neglect is required. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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