14 results on '"Herwig, Carton"'
Search Results
2. HTLV-I negative tropical spastic paraparesis: a scientific challenge Paraparesia espástica tropical HTLV-I negativa: um desafio científico
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Carlos Mauricio De Castro-Costa, Herwig Carton, and Terezinha J. T. Santos
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mielopatias de causa desconhecida ,PET ,soro-negativo ,PCR ,myelopathies of unknown etiology ,TSP ,HTLV-I ,seronegative ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
We reviewed the historical, clinical and etiological aspects of the progressive chronic spastic myelopathies of unknown etiology, disserting on the clinical similarities between HTLV-I seropositive and seronegative tropical spastic paraparesis (TSP), as well as focusing on the PCR studies of the seronegative TSP.Fazemos uma revisão dos aspectos históricos, clínicos e etiológicos das mielopatias espásticas crônicas progressivas de causa desconhecida, dissertando sobre as semelhanças clínicas entre a paraparesia espástica tropical (PET) soro-positiva e soro-negativa para HTLV-I, focalizando também os estudos sobre PCR na PET soro-negativa.
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- 2001
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3. Paraparesia espástica tropical nos trópicos e Brasil: análise histórica
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Carlos Maurício de Castro-Costa, Herwig Carton, Patrick Goubau, Eberval Gadelha de Figueiredo, and Silvyo David A. Giffoni
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paraparesia espástica tropical ,HTLV-I ,evolução histórica ,perspectivas ,Brasil ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
A paraparesia espástica tropical (PET) é mielopatia crônica, observada predominantemente nos trópicos, recentemente descoberta ser de origem retroviral (HTLV-I). O objetivo deste estudo foi delinear a evolução histórica da sua descrição, denominações e referências etiológicas. A análise histórica revelou que essa condição teve diferentes denominações e a descoberta de sua etiologia retroviral em parte dos casos abriu diversas linhas de investigações e interesse epidemiológico, nos trópicos e no Brasil.
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- 1994
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4. Improvement of health-related quality of life in relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis patients after 2 years of treatment with intramuscular interferon-beta-1a
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Peter Joseph, Jongen, Christian, Sindic, Herwig, Carton, Cees, Zwanikken, Wim, Lemmens, George, Borm, de Diego, and Faculty of Arts and Philosophy
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Neurology ,Adolescent ,Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test ,health status ,Neuroinformatics [DCN 3] ,Interferon-beta/therapeutic use ,Injections, Intramuscular ,Disability Evaluation ,Outcome Assessment (Health Care) ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,Adjuvants, Immunologic ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Young adult ,Quality Of Life ,Aged ,Expanded Disability Status Scale ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Interferon beta-1a ,Interferon-beta ,Middle Aged ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting/drug therapy ,Adjuvants, Immunologic/therapeutic use ,medicine.disease ,Europe ,Multiple sclerosis functional composite ,Evaluation of complex medical interventions [NCEBP 2] ,Injections, Intramuscular/methods ,Physical therapy ,Regression Analysis ,young adult ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 88123.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) In patients with relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS), the effect of interferon-beta (INFb) on health-related quality of life (HR-QoL) is not firmly documented. The objective of this study is to assess HR-QoL during 2 years of treatment with intramuscular INFb and its correlation with disability. In 36 neurological practices in the Netherlands (17), Belgium (16), United Kingdom (2) and Luxemburg (1), 284 RRMS patients were treated with intramuscular INFb-1a. Physical and mental domains of HR-QoL were measured by the MS54 Quality of Life (MS54QoL) questionnaire, and disability was assessed by the Multiple Sclerosis Functional Composite (MSFC) (Timed 25-Foot Walk Test [Timed 25-FWT], 9 Hole Peg Test [9-HPT], Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test [PASAT]) at baseline and at months 3, 6, 12, 18 and 24. Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score was assessed at baseline and month 24. Pearson's correlation coefficients were determined and predefined factors were analyzed for relation to HR-QoL after baseline by stepwise regression analyses on physical and mental scores. 204 patients (71.8%) completed 2 years of treatment. Mean values for MS54QoL increased from 56.6 to 61.0 for physical (p < 0.05) and from 57.2 to 61.1 for mental domain (p = 0.07). Correlations between physical domain and MSFC was -0.40 (p < 0.05), and between mental domain and MSFC -0.24 (p < 0.05). MSFC and EDSS did not change. Increase of physical MS54QoL was associated with lower age, lower EDSS, less time for Timed 25-FWT, and higher PASAT score at baseline. Increase of mental MS54QoL was associated with higher PASAT and lower EDSS. Patients who discontinued INFb had lower physical or mental HR-QoL at baseline. In RRMS patients, 2 years of treatment with intramuscular INFb-1a is associated with an increase in HR-QoL, especially in younger patients with low disability. 01 april 2010
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- 2009
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5. Neuropathology of two Brazilian autopsied cases of tropical spastic paraparesis / HTLV-I associated myelopathy (TSP/HAM) of long evolution
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Francisco Ursino da Silva Neto, Herwig Carton, Patrick Goubau, Márcia Valéria Pitombeira Ferreira, Carlos Maurício de Castro-Costa, Terezinha de Jesus Teixeira Santos, René Dom, UCL - (SLuc) Service de microbiologie, and UCL - MD/MIGE - Département de microbiologie, d'immunologie et de génétique
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Cerebellum ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,neuropathological findings ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Neuropathology ,Grey matter ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,medula espinhal ,Tropical spastic paraparesis ,Humans ,Medicine ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Hyaline ,achados neuropatólogicos ,business.industry ,Brain ,spinal cord ,Spinal cord ,medicine.disease ,Paraparesis, Tropical Spastic ,rare inflammatory infiltration ,infiltração inflamatória rara ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,TSP/HAM long evolution ,Neurology ,Gliosis ,PET/MAH longa evolução ,Nerve Degeneration ,Htlv i associated myelopathy ,Female ,Autopsy ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,RC321-571 - Abstract
We report on a neuropathological analysis of two cases of TSP/HAM originating from Brazil. These two cases had, respectively, an evolution of 13 and 40 years. The main neuropathological findings consisted of spinal cord atrophy, mainly the lower thoracic cord, diffuse degeneration of the white and grey matter, rare foci of mononuclear and perivascular cuffs, and hyaline hardening of arteriolae. The supraspinal structures were normal, excepting for a slight gliosis in the cerebellum. An analysis on the long evolutive cases as described in the literature is outlined in this study. Relatamos a análise neuropatológica de dois casos de PET/MAH originários do Brasil. Estes dois casos tinham, respectivamente, uma evolução de 13 e 40 anos. O principais achados neuropatológicos consistiam de atrofia da medula espinhal, principalmente da medula torácica baixa, degeneração difusa das substâncias branca e cinzenta, raros focos de infiltrado mononuclear e perivascular, e endurecimento hialínico das arteriolae. As estruturas supra-espinhais eram normais, exceto por uma ligeira gliose do cerebelo. Uma análise dos casos de longa evolução descritos na literatura é salientada neste estudo.
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- 2002
6. Proposal for diagnostic criteria of tropical spastic paraparesis/HTLV-I-associated myelopathy (TSP/HAM)
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Herwig Carton, Eduardo Gotuzzo, Eduardo L. M. Da Silva, Ricardo Ishak, Carlos Maurício de Castro-Costa, Silvia M. Montano, Joel Oger, William W. Hall, Edward L. Murphy, Osvaldo Massaiti Takayanagui, Marzia P. Sohler, Sônia M. B. De Paula, Graham P. Taylor, Márcio M. Barreto, Luis C. Rovirosa, João G. R. Ribas, Carlos Remondegui, and Abelardo Q.C. Araújo
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Adult ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Immunology ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurological disorder ,Serology ,Paraparesis ,immune system diseases ,Virology ,Tropical spastic paraparesis ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Paresis ,business.industry ,Deltaretrovirus Antibodies ,virus diseases ,HTLV 1-associated myelopathy ,medicine.disease ,Paraparesis, Tropical Spastic ,Surgery ,nervous system diseases ,Tropical Spastic ,Infectious Diseases ,Htlv i associated myelopathy ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
After the first description of TSP/HAM in 1985 and the elaboration of WHO's diagnostic criteria in 1988, the experience of the professionals in this field has increased so that a critical reappraisal of these diagnostic guidelines was considered timely. Brazilian neurologists and observers from other countries met recently to discuss and propose a modified model for diagnosing TSP/HAM with levels of ascertainment as definite, probable, and possible, according to myelopathic symptoms, serological findings, and/or detection of HTLV-I DNA and exclusion of other disorders.
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- 2006
7. Polymorphisms in the interleukin-4 and IL-4 receptor genes and multiple sclerosis: a study in Spanish-Basque, Northern Irish and Belgian populations
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M. Mendibe, An Goris, G V McDonnell, Stanley Hawkins, Iraide Alloza, Koen Vandenbroeck, Alfredo Antigüedad, Bénédicte Dubois, Colin A. Graham, V. Suppiah, Herwig Carton, A. G. Droogan, and Shirley Heggarty
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Adult ,Male ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Immunology ,Population ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Polymorphism (computer science) ,Genotype ,Genetics ,medicine ,SNP ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Allele ,education ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,education.field_of_study ,Genetic heterogeneity ,Multiple sclerosis ,Haplotype ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Receptors, Interleukin-4 ,Europe ,Female ,Interleukin-4 - Abstract
Cytokine gene polymorphisms are known to influence susceptibility and disease course of many autoimmune diseases. Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic autoimmune disease of the central nervous system white matter characterized by inflammation, demyelination and axonal damage. We analysed both the well-known intronic variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) and +33 C/T single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) in the IL-4 gene, as well as the functional Q551R SNP in the IL4-R gene in a cohort of three distinct populations comprising sporadic cases and controls from the northern Spanish Basque Country and Northern Ireland, as well as family trios from Belgium. The IL-4 +33 TT genotype was decreased in primary progressive (PP) versus relapsing-remitting (RR) patients in the Northern Irish population (OR = 0.14; 95% CI = 0.018-1.09). Two-marker haplotype distribution of the VNTR and +33 C/T SNP in PP patients differed from that seen in RR patients in Northern Ireland (P = 0.03). The R allele of the Q551R SNP was significantly under-transmitted in the Belgian trio families (P = 0.003), although this effect was not seen in the Northern Irish and Basque data sets. We did not identify IL-4-IL4-R gene-gene interaction in determining susceptibility or clinical parameters of MS. Disease or genetic heterogeneity or both may be responsible for the observed lack of reproduction in different populations. Our data reinforce recent findings for a role of IL4-R in susceptibility to MS.
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- 2005
8. Neuropathology of human and experimental TSP/HAM: a critical review
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Carlos Maurício de Castro, Costa, René, Dom, Herwig, Carton, Terezinha de Jesus Teixeira, Santos, and Maria José, Andrada-Serpa
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Neurons ,Disease Models, Animal ,Spinal Cord ,Macrophages ,Neural Pathways ,Animals ,Humans ,Peripheral Nerves ,Nerve Fibers, Myelinated ,Paraparesis, Tropical Spastic - Abstract
Tropical Spastic Paraparesis/HTLV-1 Associated Myelopathy (TSP/HAM) is clinically characterized by chronic insidious spastic paraparesis associated with variable sensory impairment and sphincter symptoms. Neuropathological studies of this condition are based on a few autopsied cases, and on experimental animal models. However, divergent aspects exist between human and experimental animal neuropathology of TSP/HAM, namely, the site of lesions in the spinal cord, the involvement of peripheral nerves and roots, the nature of histological abnormalities, and the cellular reactions. Moreover, unanswered questions as to the preferential site of spinal affection, the temporal inflammatory picture, the selective damage of the corticospinal tract, the sparing of lower motor neurons, the inconsistent affection of sensory tracts, and the involvement of the brain, are outlined. A long-term, chronological, correlated clinical and neuropathological study in HAM experimental animals is suggested.
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- 2002
9. Utilisation and cost of professional care and assistance according to disability of patients with multiple sclerosis in Flanders (Belgium)
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Jozef Pacolet, Robert Vlietinck, Herwig Carton, Ruth J. F. Loos, and Katia Versieck
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Gerontology ,District nurse ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Population ,Pharmacy ,Indirect costs ,Ambulatory care ,Belgium ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,Activities of Daily Living ,Correspondence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,education ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Public health ,Health Care Costs ,Health Services ,Middle Aged ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Family medicine ,Health Care Surveys ,Surgery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business - Abstract
Objectives—To assess the utilisation of medical services and social (community) assistance in patients with multiple sclerosis of diVerent disability and to calculate the direct healthcare costs to society. Methods—(1) One hundred and eighty four patients with multiple sclerosis were classified into four grades of disability according to a simplified Kurzke disability status scale. (2) Patients were interviewed with a structured questionnaire containing questions on their sociodemographic status, the use of inpatient and outpatient medical services and pharmaceutical products during the previous year, the use of social assistance, and the purchase of prosthetics and charges for house adaptations during the previous five years. (3) Data were also prospectively collected by means of four week diary annotations of all medical and social acts and their duration. Results—After correction for the disability distribution the yearly costs for the 5500 patients with multiple sclerosis in Flanders was estimated to be ECU 13 106 000 for ambulatory care including rehabilitation and district nursing and ECU 3 234 000 for pharmaceutical products. To these direct medical costs ECU 3 491 000 for social assistance and ECU 4 938 000 for prosthetics and adaptations should be added. The yearly costs for admissions to hospital including permanent residence in an institution and pharmacy was ECU 26 581 000 . Home nursing and long term or permanent residence in an institution of the most severely disabled, 17% of the multiple sclerosis population, are responsible for 50% of the total direct healthcare costs and care for the 6.5% institutionalised patients accounts for 23%. Direct costs for medical care and social assistance for patients with multiple sclerosis, who account for about 0.1 % of the total population, amounts to 1% of the total healthcare budget in Flanders. Conclusion—This information on utilisation of medical services and social assistance can be used for good healthcare planning and cost eVectiveness studies. (J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1998;64:444‐450)
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- 1998
10. Risks of multiple sclerosis in relatives of patients in Flanders, Belgium
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Robert Vlietinck, Ruth J. F. Loos, J. Debruyne, J. De Keyser, I M Yee, Herwig Carton, L. Truyen, R Medaer, A D Sadovnick, Marie B. D'hooghe, Gerontology, Clinical sciences, Neuroprotection & Neuromodulation, Neurology, and University of Groningen
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Proband ,Male ,Middle Age ,Belgium ,Recurrence ,Epidemiology ,Ethnicity ,Medicine ,Child ,Netherlands ,Likelihood Functions ,Netherlands/ethnology ,Middle Aged ,PREVALENCE ,Pedigree ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,TWINS ,familial multiple sclerosis ,language ,Female ,Disease Susceptibility ,Risk assessment ,recurrence risk ,Human ,Research Article ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Canada ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Age adjustment ,Canada/epidemiology ,Ethnic Groups ,Risk Assessment ,Age Distribution ,Confidence Intervals ,Humans ,First-degree relatives ,Belgium/epidemiology ,Multiple Sclerosis/ethnology/*genetics ,Aged ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Middle age ,language.human_language ,Flemish ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Objectives - To calculate age adjusted risks for multiple sclerosis in relatives of Flemish patients with multiple sclerosis. Methods - Lifetime risks were calculated using the maximum likelihood approach. Results - Vital information was obtained on 674 probands with multiple sclerosis in Flanders and a total of their 26 225 first, second, and third degree relatives. Full medical information to allow documentation of multiple sclerosis status was available for 21 351 (81.4%) relatives. The age adjusted risk for parents was 1.61 (SEM 0.35)%, for siblings 2.10 (SE 0.36)%, and for children 1.71 (SEM 0.70)%. For aunts and uncles, the risk was 0.66 (SEM 0.13)%. Conclusions - The risk for first degree relatives of patients with multiple sclerosis in Flanders is increased 10-fold to 12-fold; for second degree relatives, it is increased threefold. This information can be used for risk counselling in families and provides additional support for the role of more than one locus contributing to the susceptibility of multiple sclerosis.
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- 1997
11. Epidemic spastic paraparesis in Bandundu (Zaire)
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Herwig Carton, Kabeya, Alfons Billiau, K Maertens, Odio, and K Kayembe
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Disease ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Paraplegia ,Konzo ,business.industry ,Outbreak ,Spastic paraparesis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Muscle Spasticity ,Child, Preschool ,Democratic Republic of the Congo ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Research Article ,Infectious agent - Abstract
Epidemiological findings of twenty sporadic cases of epidemic spastic paraparesis (buka-buka) in three areas of Bandundu (Zaire) are reported. These findings suggest the involvement of an infectious agent and do not support the hypothesis of a dietary cyanide intoxication, which has been advanced to explain the outbreak of a very similar disease (Mantakassa) in Mozambique.
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- 1986
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12. Poliomyelitis In An Airline Pilot And The Need For Vaccina Tion Of Travellers
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H Taelman, Herwig Carton, P. Goubau, E. Druyts-Voets, and Jan Desmyter
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Male ,Travel ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,business.industry ,Poliovirus ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Senegal ,Airline pilot ,Surgery ,Poliomyelitis ,Serology ,Vaccination ,Poliovirus Vaccine, Inactivated ,Concomitant ,Aerospace Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,business - Abstract
SummaryA Belgian airline pilot had paraplegic poliomyelitis in 1986, after infection in Dakar (Senegal) with wild-type poliovirus 1 which was isolated from his stools 6 weeks after onset. Serology available from day 25 showed the concomitant rise of type 2, but no longer of type 1 antibodies.Exercise to fight off early symptoms probably aggravated severity; residual sequelae are serious. The patient had probably never been vaccinated. The case stresses the need for (re) vaccination of travellers to endemic areas. For this purpose, there is now a choice between live oral and killed injectable polio vaccines.
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- 1987
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13. Painful muscle spasms complicating algodystrophy: central or peripheral disease?
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Herwig Carton, H. Adriaensen, Wim Robberecht, and J Van Hees
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Spasm ,Withdrawal reflex ,Urinary incontinence ,Electromyography ,Electroencephalography ,Achilles tendinitis ,Tonic (physiology) ,Atrophy ,medicine ,Humans ,Peripheral Nerves ,Cerebral Cortex ,Leg ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Muscles ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,medicine.disease ,Pathophysiology ,Surgery ,body regions ,Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,stomatognathic diseases ,Urinary Incontinence ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
A 21 year old female patient developed Sudeck's atrophy of the right foot secondary to a chronic Achilles tendinitis. The condition was complicated by the occurrence of painful muscle spasms in the right leg and incontinence of urine. The spasms had characteristics of both a tonic ambulatory foot response and a spinal flexor reflex. The movements disappeared during sleep. Regional anaesthesia of the right leg made the spasms disappear both in and outside the region of anaesthesia. Backaveraging of the EEG showed the involuntary spasms to be preceded by a cortical potential similar to a readiness potential, indicating a cortical potential similar to a readiness potential, indicating a cortical component in the pathophysiology of the muscle spasms complicating Sudeck's atrophy.
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- 1988
14. Controlled safety study of a hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier, DCLHb, in acute ischemic stroke
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Annemarie D. Wijnhoud, Peter J. Koudstaal, Markku Kaste, Robert J. Przybelski, Ritu Saxena, Herwig Carton, Kathleen N. Stern, Werner Hacke, and Neurology
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Male ,Ischemia ,Blood Pressure ,Brain Ischemia ,Hemoglobins ,Route of administration ,Blood Substitutes ,Humans ,Medicine ,Single-Blind Method ,Adverse effect ,Stroke ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Aspirin ,business.industry ,Vascular disease ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Pulmonary edema ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Treatment Outcome ,Blood pressure ,Anesthesia ,Acute Disease ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
Background and Purpose —Diaspirin cross-linked hemoglobin (DCLHb) is a purified, cell-free human hemoglobin solution. In animal stroke models its use led to a significant reduction in the extent of brain injury. The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the safety of DCLHb in patients with acute ischemic stroke. Methods —DCLHb or saline was administered to 85 patients with acute ischemic stroke in the anterior circulation, within 18 hours of onset of symptoms, in a multicenter, randomized, single-blind, dose-finding, controlled safety trial, consisting of 3 parts: 12 doses of 25, 50, and 100 mg/kg DCLHb over 72 hours. Results —DCLHb caused a rapid rise in mean arterial blood pressure. The pressor effect was not accompanied by complications or excessive need for antihypertensive treatment. Two patients in the 100 mg/kg group had adverse events that were possibly drug related: one suffered fatal brain and pulmonary edema, the other transient renal and pancreatic insufficiency. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that a severe stroke at baseline and treatment with DCLHb (OR, 4.0; CI, 1.4 to 12.0) were independent predictors of a worse outcome (Rankin Scale score of 3 to 6) at 3 months. Conclusions —Outcome scale scores were worse in the DCLHb group, and more serious adverse events and deaths occurred in DCLHb-treated patients than in control patients. We recommend that additional safety studies be performed, preferably with a second generation, genetically engineered hemoglobin.
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