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Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Department of Neurology

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Contributions Of Iranian Journal Of Medical Sciences (Ijms) During The Covid-19 Pandemic., A A Asadi-Pooya, Mohsen Farazdaghi, Marzieh Rostaminejad, Manica Negahdaripour Nov 2021

Contributions Of Iranian Journal Of Medical Sciences (Ijms) During The Covid-19 Pandemic., A A Asadi-Pooya, Mohsen Farazdaghi, Marzieh Rostaminejad, Manica Negahdaripour

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

No abstract provided.


Risk Factors Associated With Long Covid Syndrome: A Retrospective Study, A A Asadi-Pooya, Ali Akbari, Amir Emami, Mehrzad Lotfi, Mahtab Rostamihosseinkhani, Hamid Nemati, Zohreh Barzegar, Maryam Kabiri, Zahra Zeraatpisheh, Mohsen Farjoud-Kouhanjani, Anahita Jafari, Fateme Sasannia, Shayan Ashrafi, Masoume Nazeri, Sara Nasiri, Mina Shahisavandi Nov 2021

Risk Factors Associated With Long Covid Syndrome: A Retrospective Study, A A Asadi-Pooya, Ali Akbari, Amir Emami, Mehrzad Lotfi, Mahtab Rostamihosseinkhani, Hamid Nemati, Zohreh Barzegar, Maryam Kabiri, Zahra Zeraatpisheh, Mohsen Farjoud-Kouhanjani, Anahita Jafari, Fateme Sasannia, Shayan Ashrafi, Masoume Nazeri, Sara Nasiri, Mina Shahisavandi

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Background: Recently, people have recognized the post-acute phase symptoms of the COVID-19. We investigated the long-term symptoms associated with COVID-19, (Long COVID Syndrome), and the risk factors associated with it. Methods: This was a retrospective observational study. All the consecutive adult patients referred to the healthcare facilities anywhere in Fars province from 19 February 2020 until 20 November 2020 were included. All the patients had a confirmed COVID-19 diagnosis. In a phone call to the patients, at least three months after their discharge from the hospital, we obtained their current information. The IBM SPSS Statistics (version 25.0) was used. Pearson …


Gad Antibody-Spectrum Disorders: Progress In Clinical Phenotypes, Immunopathogenesis And Therapeutic Interventions., Popianna Tsiortou, Harry Alexopoulos, Marinos Dalakas Mar 2021

Gad Antibody-Spectrum Disorders: Progress In Clinical Phenotypes, Immunopathogenesis And Therapeutic Interventions., Popianna Tsiortou, Harry Alexopoulos, Marinos Dalakas

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), originally linked to stiff person syndrome (SPS), now denote the “GAD antibody-spectrum disorders” (GAD-SD) that also include autoimmune epilepsy, limbic encephalitis, cerebellar ataxia and nystagmus with overlapping symptomatology highlighting autoimmune neuronal excitability disorders. The reasons for the clinical heterogeneity among GAD-antibody associated syndromes remain still unsettled, implicating variable susceptibility of GABAergic neurons to anti-GAD or other still unidentified autoantibodies. Although anti-GAD antibody titers do not correlate with clinical severity, very high serum titers, often associated with intrathecal synthesis of anti-GAD-specific IgG, point to in-situ effects of GAD or related autoantibodies within the central nervous …


Can Early Treatment Of Twitcher Mice With High Dose Aavrh10-Galc Eliminate The Need For Bmt?, Mohammad Rafi, Paola Luzi, David A Wenger Feb 2021

Can Early Treatment Of Twitcher Mice With High Dose Aavrh10-Galc Eliminate The Need For Bmt?, Mohammad Rafi, Paola Luzi, David A Wenger

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Introduction: Krabbe disease (KD) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in the galactocerebrosidase (GALC) gene resulting in neuro-inflammation and defective myelination in the central and peripheral nervous systems. Most infantile patients present with clinical features before six months of age and die before two years of age. The only treatment available for pre-symptomatic or mildly affected individuals is hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). In the animal models, combining bone marrow transplantation (BMT) with gene therapy has shown the best results in disease outcome. In this study, we examine the outcome of gene therapy alone.

Methods: Twitcher (twi) mice …


Functional Seizures Are Not Less Important Than Epilepsy, A A Asadi-Pooya, Francesco Brigo, Benjamin Tolchin, Kette D. Valente Jan 2021

Functional Seizures Are Not Less Important Than Epilepsy, A A Asadi-Pooya, Francesco Brigo, Benjamin Tolchin, Kette D. Valente

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Functional seizures (FS) are frequently encountered in neurology clinics, often affect young adults, and have significant negative impacts on many aspects of a person's life. In the current narrative review, we searched the literature regarding some of the consequences of FS (i.e., psychiatric comorbidities, social consequences, costs that are associated with the condition, cognitive impairment in patients with FS, the quality of life of the people with FS, and the increased risk of mortality that is associated with FS). Evidence shows that FS have significant negative consequences, comparable in their magnitude to those affecting patients with epilepsy. The clinical and …


Conditions For Combining Gene Therapy With Bone Marrow Transplantation In Murine Krabbe Disease., Mohammad Rafi, Paola Luzi, David A Wenger Jan 2020

Conditions For Combining Gene Therapy With Bone Marrow Transplantation In Murine Krabbe Disease., Mohammad Rafi, Paola Luzi, David A Wenger

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

No abstract provided.


Advances In The Diagnosis, Immunopathogenesis And Therapies Of Igm-Anti-Mag Antibody-Mediated Neuropathies., Marinos Dalakas Jan 2018

Advances In The Diagnosis, Immunopathogenesis And Therapies Of Igm-Anti-Mag Antibody-Mediated Neuropathies., Marinos Dalakas

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Polyneuropathy with immunoglobulin M (IgM) monoclonal gammopathy is the most common paraproteinemic neuropathy, comprising a clinicopathologically and immunologically distinct entity. The clinical spectrum spans from distal paresthesias and mild gait imbalance to more severe sensory ataxia, with falls and a varying degree of distal sensorimotor deficits. In approximately 75% of patients, the monoclonal IgM immunoreacts with myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) and sulfoglucuronyl glycosphingolipid (SGPG), or other peripheral nerve glycolipids that serve as antigens. These antibodies are considered pathogenic because IgM and complement are deposited on the myelin sheath, splitting the myelin lamellae, while adoptive transfer of patients' IgM into susceptible host …


Induced Stem Cells As A Novel Multiple Sclerosis Therapy., Chong Xie, Yan-Qun Liu, Yang-Tai Guan, Guang-Xian Zhang May 2016

Induced Stem Cells As A Novel Multiple Sclerosis Therapy., Chong Xie, Yan-Qun Liu, Yang-Tai Guan, Guang-Xian Zhang

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Stem cell replacement is providing hope for many degenerative diseases that lack effective therapeutic methods including multiple sclerosis (MS), an inflammatory demyelinating disease of the central nervous system. Transplantation of neural stem cells or mesenchymal stem cells is a potential therapy for MS thanks to their capacity for cell repopulation as well as for their immunomodulatory and neurotrophic properties. Induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC), an emerging cell source in regenerative medicine, is also being tested for the treatment of MS. Remarkable improvement in mobility and robust remyelination have been observed after transplantation of iPSC-derived neural cells into demyelinated models. Direct …


Gray Matter Abnormalities In Temporal Lobe Epilepsy: Relationships With Resting-State Functional Connectivity And Episodic Memory Performance., Gaelle Eve Doucet, Xiaosong He, Michael R Sperling, Ashwini Sharan Md, Joseph I Tracy May 2016

Gray Matter Abnormalities In Temporal Lobe Epilepsy: Relationships With Resting-State Functional Connectivity And Episodic Memory Performance., Gaelle Eve Doucet, Xiaosong He, Michael R Sperling, Ashwini Sharan Md, Joseph I Tracy

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) affects multiple brain regions through evidence from both structural (gray matter; GM) and functional connectivity (FC) studies. We tested whether these structural abnormalities were associated with FC abnormalities, and assessed the ability of these measures to explain episodic memory impairments in this population. A resting-state and T1 sequences were acquired on 94 (45 with mesial temporal pathology) TLE patients and 50 controls, using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique. A voxel-based morphometry analysis was computed to determine the GM volume differences between groups (right, left TLE, controls). Resting-state FC between the abnormal GM volume regions was computed, …


Molecular Treatment Effects Of Alemtuzumab In Skeletal Muscles Of Patients With Ibm., Karsten Schmidt, Konstanze Kleinschnitz, Goran Rakocevic, Marinos Dalakas, Jens Schmidt Apr 2016

Molecular Treatment Effects Of Alemtuzumab In Skeletal Muscles Of Patients With Ibm., Karsten Schmidt, Konstanze Kleinschnitz, Goran Rakocevic, Marinos Dalakas, Jens Schmidt

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: Mechanisms of inflammation and protein accumulation are crucial in inclusion body myositis (IBM). Recent evidence demonstrated that intravenous immunoglobulin failed to suppress cell-stress mediators in IBM. Here we studied the molecular changes in skeletal muscle biopsies from patients with IBM before and after treatment with alemtuzumab.

METHODS: Relevant inflammatory and degeneration-associated markers were assessed by quantitative-PCR and immunohistochemistry in repeated muscle biopsy specimens from patients with IBM, which had been treated in a previously published uncontrolled proof-of-concept trial with alemtuzumab.

RESULTS: There were no significant changes of the mRNA expression levels of the pro-inflammatory chemokines CXCL-9, CCL-4, and the …


Neural Substrate Expansion For The Restoration Of Brain Function., H Isaac Chen, Dennis Jgamadze, Mijail Serruya, D Kacy Cullen, John A Wolf, Douglas H Smith Jan 2016

Neural Substrate Expansion For The Restoration Of Brain Function., H Isaac Chen, Dennis Jgamadze, Mijail Serruya, D Kacy Cullen, John A Wolf, Douglas H Smith

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Restoring neurological and cognitive function in individuals who have suffered brain damage is one of the principal objectives of modern translational neuroscience. Electrical stimulation approaches, such as deep-brain stimulation, have achieved the most clinical success, but they ultimately may be limited by the computational capacity of the residual cerebral circuitry. An alternative strategy is brain substrate expansion, in which the computational capacity of the brain is augmented through the addition of new processing units and the reconstitution of network connectivity. This latter approach has been explored to some degree using both biological and electronic means but thus far has not …


Sialylation Of Igg Fc Domain Impairs Complement-Dependent Cytotoxicity., Isaak Quast, Christian W Keller, Michael A Maurer, John P Giddens, Björn Tackenberg, Lai-Xi Wang, Christian Münz, Falk Nimmerjahn, Marinos Dalakas, Jan D Lünemann Nov 2015

Sialylation Of Igg Fc Domain Impairs Complement-Dependent Cytotoxicity., Isaak Quast, Christian W Keller, Michael A Maurer, John P Giddens, Björn Tackenberg, Lai-Xi Wang, Christian Münz, Falk Nimmerjahn, Marinos Dalakas, Jan D Lünemann

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

IgG molecules exert both pro- and antiinflammatory effector functions based on the composition of the fragment crystallizable (Fc) domain glycan. Sialylated IgG Fc domains have antiinflammatory properties that are attributed to their ability to increase the activation threshold of innate effector cells to immune complexes by stimulating the upregulation of the inhibitory Fcγ receptor IIB (FcγRIIB). Here, we report that IgG Fc sialylation of human monoclonal IgG1 molecules impairs their efficacy to induce complement-mediated cytotoxicity (CDC). Fc sialylation of a CD20-targeting antibody had no impact on antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity and did not change the affinity of the antibody for activating …


Fsd-C10: A More Promising Novel Rock Inhibitor Than Fasudil For Treatment Of Cns Autoimmunity., Yan-Le Xin, Jie-Zhong Yu, Xin-Wang Yang, Chun-Yun Liu, Yan-Hua Li, Ling Feng, Zhi Chai, Wan-Fang Yang, Qing Wang, Wei-Jia Jiang, Guang-Xian Zhang, Bao-Guo Xiao, Cun-Gen Ma Oct 2015

Fsd-C10: A More Promising Novel Rock Inhibitor Than Fasudil For Treatment Of Cns Autoimmunity., Yan-Le Xin, Jie-Zhong Yu, Xin-Wang Yang, Chun-Yun Liu, Yan-Hua Li, Ling Feng, Zhi Chai, Wan-Fang Yang, Qing Wang, Wei-Jia Jiang, Guang-Xian Zhang, Bao-Guo Xiao, Cun-Gen Ma

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Rho-Rho kinase (Rho-ROCK) triggers an intracellular signalling cascade that regulates cell survival, death, adhesion, migration, neurite outgrowth and retraction and influences the generation and development of several neurological disorders. Although Fasudil, a ROCK inhibitor, effectively suppressed encephalomyelitis (EAE), certain side effects may limit its clinical use. A novel and efficient ROCK inhibitor, FSD-C10, has been explored. In the present study, we present chemical synthesis and structure of FSD-C10, as well as the relationship between compound concentration and ROCK inhibition. We compared the inhibitory efficiency of ROCKI and ROCK II, the cell cytotoxicity, neurite outgrowth and dendritic formation, neurotrophic factors and …


Frontal Gray Matter Abnormalities Predict Seizure Outcome In Refractory Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Patients, Gaelle Eve Doucet, Xiaosong He, Michael R Sperling, Ashwini Sharan Md, Joseph I. Tracy Sep 2015

Frontal Gray Matter Abnormalities Predict Seizure Outcome In Refractory Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Patients, Gaelle Eve Doucet, Xiaosong He, Michael R Sperling, Ashwini Sharan Md, Joseph I. Tracy

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

This article has been peer reviewed. It was published in: NeuroImage: Clinical. Volume 9, 2015, Pages 458-466.

The published version is available at DOI: 10.1016/j.nicl.2015.09.006

Copyright © 2015 The Authors.


Predicting The Laterality Of Temporal Lobe Epilepsy From Pet, Mri, And Dti: A Multimodal Study., Dorian Pustina, Brian Avants, Michael R Sperling, Richard Gorniak, Xiaosong He, Gaelle Eve Doucet, Paul Barnett, Ms, Scott Mintzer, Ashwini Sharan Md, Joseph I Tracy Aug 2015

Predicting The Laterality Of Temporal Lobe Epilepsy From Pet, Mri, And Dti: A Multimodal Study., Dorian Pustina, Brian Avants, Michael R Sperling, Richard Gorniak, Xiaosong He, Gaelle Eve Doucet, Paul Barnett, Ms, Scott Mintzer, Ashwini Sharan Md, Joseph I Tracy

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Pre-surgical evaluation of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) relies on information obtained from multiple neuroimaging modalities. The relationship between modalities and their combined power in predicting the seizure focus is currently unknown. We investigated asymmetries from three different modalities, PET (glucose metabolism), MRI (cortical thickness), and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI; white matter anisotropy) in 28 left and 30 right TLE patients (LTLE and RTLE). Stepwise logistic regression models were built from each modality separately and from all three combined, while bootstrapped methods and split-sample validation verified the robustness of predictions. Among all multimodal asymmetries, three PET asymmetries formed the …


Inflammatory Muscle Diseases., Marinos C Dalakas Apr 2015

Inflammatory Muscle Diseases., Marinos C Dalakas

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

No abstract provided.


The Effects Of Test-Enhanced Learning On Long-Term Retention In Aan Annual Meeting Courses., Douglas P Larsen, Andrew C Butler, Wint Y Aung, John R Corboy, Deborah I Friedman, Michael R Sperling Feb 2015

The Effects Of Test-Enhanced Learning On Long-Term Retention In Aan Annual Meeting Courses., Douglas P Larsen, Andrew C Butler, Wint Y Aung, John R Corboy, Deborah I Friedman, Michael R Sperling

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

OBJECTIVE: We measured the long-term retention of knowledge gained through selected American Academy of Neurology annual meeting courses and compared the effects of repeated quizzing (known as test-enhanced learning) and repeated studying on that retention.

METHODS: Participants were recruited from 4 annual meeting courses. All participants took a pretest. This randomized, controlled trial utilized a within-subjects design in which each participant experienced 3 different postcourse activities with each activity performed on different material. Each key information point from the course was randomized in a counterbalanced fashion among participants to one of the 3 activities: repeated short-answer quizzing, repeated studying, and …


Comparison Of Temporal Lobe Epilepsy With Hippocampal Sclerosis And Temporal Lobe Epilepsies Due To Other Etiologies., A A Asadi-Pooya, Marziyeh Tajvarpour, Bahareh Vedadinezhad, Mehrdad Emami Jan 2015

Comparison Of Temporal Lobe Epilepsy With Hippocampal Sclerosis And Temporal Lobe Epilepsies Due To Other Etiologies., A A Asadi-Pooya, Marziyeh Tajvarpour, Bahareh Vedadinezhad, Mehrdad Emami

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: This study compares the clinical characteristics of patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis (mTLE-HS) with those who have temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) due to other etiologies.

METHODS: In this retrospective study all patients with a clinical diagnosis of TLE were recruited in a referral outpatient epilepsy clinic at Shiraz University of Medical Sciences from September 2008 to May 2013. We classified the patients with TLE as having mesial temporal sclerosis if they had clear signs of mesial temporal sclerosis and/or atrophy in their MRI and others who had any other MRI abnormality.

RESULTS: A total of …


Plumbing And Wiring: Atherosclerosis In Epilepsy., Scott Mintzer, Md Dec 2014

Plumbing And Wiring: Atherosclerosis In Epilepsy., Scott Mintzer, Md

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Over the long term, epilepsy is clearly associated with cognitive impairment. This has been demonstrated functionally, using neuropsychological testing, and reinforced by structural studies showing progressive atrophy in patients with chronic epilepsy 1-3. The prevailing explanation for this, of course, has been the direct and cumulative effects of seizures on the brain. The basic science literature is chock full of studies showing impairment of neuronal function after seizures, both acutely and chronically. And for those of us who see patients, the progressive memory complaints and clear-cut decline in function seen in those with drug-resistant epilepsy — particularly temporal lobe …


Regulation Of L1 Expression And Retrotransposition By Melatonin And Its Receptor: Implications For Cancer Risk Associated With Light Exposure At Night., Dawn Deharo, Kristine J Kines, Mark Sokolowski, Robert T Dauchy, Vincent A Streva, Steven M Hill, John P Hanifin, George Brainard, David E Blask, Victoria P Belancio Aug 2014

Regulation Of L1 Expression And Retrotransposition By Melatonin And Its Receptor: Implications For Cancer Risk Associated With Light Exposure At Night., Dawn Deharo, Kristine J Kines, Mark Sokolowski, Robert T Dauchy, Vincent A Streva, Steven M Hill, John P Hanifin, George Brainard, David E Blask, Victoria P Belancio

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Expression of long interspersed element-1 (L1) is upregulated in many human malignancies. L1 can introduce genomic instability via insertional mutagenesis and DNA double-strand breaks, both of which may promote cancer. Light exposure at night, a recently recognized carcinogen, is associated with an increased risk of cancer in shift workers. We report that melatonin receptor 1 inhibits mobilization of L1 in cultured cells through downregulation of L1 mRNA and ORF1 protein. The addition of melatonin receptor antagonists abolishes the MT1 effect on retrotransposition in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, melatonin-rich, but not melatonin-poor, human blood collected at different times during the circadian …


Converging Evidence For The Processing Costs Associated With Ambiguous Quantifier Comprehension., Corey T Mcmillan, Danielle Coleman, Robin Clark, Tsao-Wei Liang, Rachel G Gross, Murray Grossman Apr 2013

Converging Evidence For The Processing Costs Associated With Ambiguous Quantifier Comprehension., Corey T Mcmillan, Danielle Coleman, Robin Clark, Tsao-Wei Liang, Rachel G Gross, Murray Grossman

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Traditional neuroanatomic models of language comprehension have emphasized a core language network situated in peri-Sylvian cortex. More recent evidence appears to extend the neuroanatomic network beyond peri-Sylvian cortex to encompass other aspects of sentence processing. In this study, we evaluate the neuroanatomic basis for processing the ambiguity in doubly-quantified sentences. For example, a sentence like "All the dogs jumped in a lake" can be interpreted with a collective interpretation (e.g., several dogs jumping into a single lake) or a distributive interpretation (e.g., several dogs each jumping into a different lake). In Experiment 1, we used BOLD fMRI to investigate neuroanatomic …


The Stigma Of Migraine, William B. Young, Jung E. Park, Iris X. Tian, Joanna Kempner Jan 2013

The Stigma Of Migraine, William B. Young, Jung E. Park, Iris X. Tian, Joanna Kempner

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Background

People who have a disease often experience stigma, a socially and culturally embedded process through which individuals experience stereotyping, devaluation, and discrimination. Stigma has great impact on quality of life, behavior, and life chances. We do not know whether or not migraine is stigmatizing.

Methods

We studied 123 episodic migraine patients, 123 chronic migraine patients, and 62 epilepsy patients in a clinical setting to investigate the extent to which stigma attaches to migraine, using epilepsy as a comparison. We used the stigma scale for chronic illness, a 24-item questionnaire suitable for studying chronic neurologic diseases, and various disease impact …


Rituximab Induces Sustained Reduction Of Pathogenic B Cells In Patients With Peripheral Nervous System Autoimmunity., Michael A Maurer, Goran Rakocevic, Carol S Leung, Isaak Quast, Martin Lukačišin, Norbert Goebels, Christian Münz, Hedda Wardemann, Marinos Dalakas, Jan D Lünemann Apr 2012

Rituximab Induces Sustained Reduction Of Pathogenic B Cells In Patients With Peripheral Nervous System Autoimmunity., Michael A Maurer, Goran Rakocevic, Carol S Leung, Isaak Quast, Martin Lukačišin, Norbert Goebels, Christian Münz, Hedda Wardemann, Marinos Dalakas, Jan D Lünemann

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

The B cell-depleting IgG1 monoclonal antibody rituximab can persistently suppress disease progression in some patients with autoimmune diseases. However, the mechanism underlying these long-term beneficial effects has remained unclear. Here, we evaluated Ig gene usage in patients with anti-myelin-associated glycoprotein (anti-MAG) neuropathy, an autoimmune disease of the peripheral nervous system that is mediated by IgM autoantibodies binding to MAG antigen. Patients with anti-MAG neuropathy showed substantial clonal expansions of blood IgM memory B cells that recognized MAG antigen. The group of patients showing no clinical improvement after rituximab therapy were distinguished from clinical responders by a higher load of clonal …


Surgical Outcome In Pet-Positive, Mri-Negative Patients With Temporal Lobe Epilepsy, Carla Lopinto-Khoury, Michael R. Sperling, Christopher Skidmore, Maromi Nei, James Evans, Ashwini Sharan, Scott Mintzer Feb 2012

Surgical Outcome In Pet-Positive, Mri-Negative Patients With Temporal Lobe Epilepsy, Carla Lopinto-Khoury, Michael R. Sperling, Christopher Skidmore, Maromi Nei, James Evans, Ashwini Sharan, Scott Mintzer

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

PURPOSE:

Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission computed tomography (FDG-PET) hypometabolism is important for surgical planning in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), but its significance remains unclear in patients who do not have evidence of mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS) on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We examined surgical outcomes in a group of PET-positive, MRI-negative patients and compared them with those of patients with MTS.

METHODS:

We queried the Thomas Jefferson University Surgical Epilepsy Database for patients who underwent anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) from 1991 to 2009 and who had unilateral temporal PET hypometabolism without an epileptogenic lesion on MRI (PET+/MRI-). We compared …


Acetate Causes Alcohol Hangover Headache In Rats., Christina R Maxwell, Rebecca Jay Spangenberg, Jan B Hoek, Stephen D Silberstein, Michael L Oshinsky Dec 2010

Acetate Causes Alcohol Hangover Headache In Rats., Christina R Maxwell, Rebecca Jay Spangenberg, Jan B Hoek, Stephen D Silberstein, Michael L Oshinsky

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: The mechanism of veisalgia cephalgia or hangover headache is unknown. Despite a lack of mechanistic studies, there are a number of theories positing congeners, dehydration, or the ethanol metabolite acetaldehyde as causes of hangover headache.

METHODS: We used a chronic headache model to examine how pure ethanol produces increased sensitivity for nociceptive behaviors in normally hydrated rats.

RESULTS: Ethanol initially decreased sensitivity to mechanical stimuli on the face (analgesia), followed 4 to 6 hours later by inflammatory pain. Inhibiting alcohol dehydrogenase extended the analgesia whereas inhibiting aldehyde dehydrogenase decreased analgesia. Neither treatment had nociceptive effects. Direct administration of acetate …


Ms4a4b, A Cd20 Homologue In T Cells, Inhibits T Cell Propagation By Modulation Of Cell Cycle., Hui Xu, Yaping Yan, Mark S Williams, Gregory B Carey, Jingxian Yang, Hongmei Li, Guang-Xian Zhang, Abdolmohamad Rostami Nov 2010

Ms4a4b, A Cd20 Homologue In T Cells, Inhibits T Cell Propagation By Modulation Of Cell Cycle., Hui Xu, Yaping Yan, Mark S Williams, Gregory B Carey, Jingxian Yang, Hongmei Li, Guang-Xian Zhang, Abdolmohamad Rostami

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

MS4a4B, a CD20 homologue in T cells, is a novel member of the MS4A gene family in mice. The MS4A family includes CD20, FcεRIβ, HTm4 and at least 26 novel members that are characterized by their structural features: with four membrane-spanning domains, two extracellular domains and two cytoplasmic regions. CD20, FcεRIβ and HTm4 have been found to function in B cells, mast cells and hematopoietic cells respectively. However, little is known about the function of MS4a4B in T cell regulation. We demonstrate here that MS4a4B negatively regulates mouse T cell proliferation. MS4a4B is highly expressed in primary T cells, natural …


Combined Effects Of Hyperglycemic Conditions And Hiv-1 Nef: A Potential Model For Induced Hiv Neuropathogenesis., Edward A Acheampong, Cassandra Roschel, Muhammad Mukhtar, Alagarsamy Srinivasan, Mohammad Rafi, Roger J Pomerantz, Zahida Parveen Jan 2009

Combined Effects Of Hyperglycemic Conditions And Hiv-1 Nef: A Potential Model For Induced Hiv Neuropathogenesis., Edward A Acheampong, Cassandra Roschel, Muhammad Mukhtar, Alagarsamy Srinivasan, Mohammad Rafi, Roger J Pomerantz, Zahida Parveen

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

Hyperglycemic conditions associated with diabetes mellitus (DM) or with the use of antiretroviral therapy may increase the risk of central nervous system (CNS) disorders in HIV-1 infected patients. In support of this hypothesis, we investigated the combined effects of hyperglycemic conditions and HIV-1 accessory protein Nef on the CNS using both in vitro and in vivo models. Astrocytes, the most abundant glial cell type required for normal synaptic transmission and other functions were selected for our in vitro study. The results show that in vitro hyperglycemic conditions enhance the expression of proinflammatory cytokines including caspase-3, complement factor 3 (C3), and …


Involvement Of Beta-Chemokines In The Development Of Inflammatory Demyelination., Ileana Banisor, Thomas P Leist, Bernadette Kalman Feb 2005

Involvement Of Beta-Chemokines In The Development Of Inflammatory Demyelination., Ileana Banisor, Thomas P Leist, Bernadette Kalman

Department of Neurology Faculty Papers

The importance of beta-chemokines (or CC chemokine ligands - CCL) in the development of inflammatory lesions in the central nervous system of patients with multiple sclerosis and rodents with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis is strongly supported by descriptive studies and experimental models. Our recent genetic scans in families identified haplotypes in the genes of CCL2, CCL3 and CCL11-CCL8-CCL13 which showed association with multiple sclerosis. Complementing the genetic associations, we also detected a distinct regional expression regulation for CCL2, CCL7 and CCL8 in correlation with chronic inflammation in multiple sclerosis brains. These observations are in consensus with previous studies, and add new …