368 research outputs found

    Aggression Toward Others Misdiagnosed as Primary Tics

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    Background: Tics describe a wide range of sudden and repetitive behaviors. Their multifaceted clinical features may resemble other explosive behaviors, including repetitive episodes of aggression toward others (allo-aggression) reported by subjects without tics. Here, we document 3 exemplary cases that help disentangle allo-aggressive behaviors from tics. Cases: We report 3 cases who presented with an array of complex repetitive behaviors, most notably allo-aggression (eg, sudden kicking, hitting, slapping and biting others, or pushing someone off a bike), which were misdiagnosed as primary tics. In all cases, additional symptoms, such as blackouts, feeling of being controlled by different personalities, or being empowered by repetitive behaviors, and examination pointed toward different neuropsychiatric diagnoses. Conclusions: Repetitive allo-aggressive behaviors are not part of the range of motor manifestations of tics. This observation not only has important medico-legal implications but is also relevant for the overall perception of Tourette syndrome and other primary tic disorders

    Average power and burst analysis revealed complementary information on drug-related changes of motor performance in Parkinson's disease

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    In patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), suppression of beta and increase in gamma oscillations in the subthalamic nucleus (STN) have been associated with both levodopa treatment and motor functions. Recent results suggest that modulation of the temporal dynamics of theses oscillations (bursting activity) might contain more information about pathological states and behaviour than their average power. Here we directly compared the information provided by power and burst analyses about the drug-related changes in STN activities and their impact on motor performance within PD patients. STN local field potential (LFP) signals were recorded from externalized patients performing self-paced movements ON and OFF levodopa. When normalised across medication states, both power and burst analyses showed an increase in low-beta oscillations in the dopamine-depleted state during rest. When normalised within-medication state, both analyses revealed that levodopa increased movement-related modulation in the alpha and low-gamma bands, with higher gamma activity around movement predicting faster reaches. Finally, burst analyses helped to reveal opposite drug-related changes in low- and high-beta frequency bands, and identified additional within-patient relationships between high-beta bursting and movement performance. Our findings suggest that although power and burst analyses share a lot in common they also provide complementary information on how STN-LFP activity is associated with motor performance, and how levodopa treatment may modify these relationships in a way that helps explain drug-related changes in motor performance. Different ways of normalisation in the power analysis can reveal different information. Similarly, the burst analysis is sensitive to how the threshold is defined - either for separate medication conditions separately, or across pooled conditions. In addition, the burst interpretation has far-reaching implications about the nature of neural oscillations - whether the oscillations happen as isolated burst-events or are they sustained phenomena with dynamic amplitude variations? This can be different for different frequency bands, and different for different medication states even for the same frequency band

    Motor and non-motor improvements following short-term multidisciplinary day-clinic care in Parkinson's disease

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    Background: Inpatient as well as outpatient care does often not meet PD-patients' individual needs. Introduction: Day-clinic concepts encompassing a multidisciplinary team as well as therapy adjustments accompanying everyday demands aim at filling this gap. Methods: This is a retrospective study on short-term effects of a 3 week multidisciplinary rehabilitation program in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) embedded in a specialized movement disorder day-clinic. We analyzed short-term outcome of motor and non-motor symptoms (NMS) in 143 PD-patients (mean age 65.3 +/- 11.9 years; Hoehn-and-Yahr-score 2.6 +/- 0.7) after 3 weeks with 7.4 +/- 1.8 active days of interdisciplinary day-care treatment. Participants attended the day-clinic in groups of five patients at a time. Improvements were evaluated by comparison of standardized physical therapy assessments, disease specific scores for motor symptoms (MDS-UPDRS III), mood (BDI), quality of life (PDQ39, SF36), sleep (PDSS, ESS), impulsiveness (QUIP), apathy (SAS), cognition (MMST), as well as change in medication before and directly after the intervention. Results: MDS-UPDRS motor score improved significantly by 22.9 +/- 21.5% (p < 0.001) and was accompanied by a significant reduction of imbalance, immobility, and weakness ranging between 6% and 17% in standardized physical therapy tests. In addition, all disease-specific non-motor scales improved significantly. Conclusions: A multidisciplinary day-clinic approach can support benefit on motor, non-motor symptoms and QoL in PD-patients. Given the increase in PD incidence and prevalence as well as the significant treatment effects shown here, more day-clinic treatment opportunities ought to be implemented to improve PD treatment adapted to everyday challenges while still reducing costs to the health care system

    Supramolecular exo-functionalized palladium cages: fluorescent properties and biological activity

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    Metallosupramolecular systems are promising new tools for pharmaceutical applications. Thus, novel self-assembled Pd(II) coordination cages were synthesized which were exo-functionalized with naphthalene or anthracene groups with the aim to image their fate in cells. The cages were also investigated for their anticancer properties in human lung and ovarian cancer cell lines in vitro. While the observed cytotoxic effects hold promise and the cages resulted to be more effective than cisplatin in both cell lines, fluorescence emission properties were scarce. Therefore, using TD-DFT calculations, fluorescence quenching observed in the naphthalene-based system could be ascribed to a lower probability of a HOMO–LUMO excitation and an emission wavelength outside the visible region. Overall, the reported Pd2L4 cages provide new insights into the chemical–physical properties of this family of supramolecular coordination complexes whose understanding is necessary to achieve their applications in various fields

    Plötzlich weg! : Sensibler Umgang mit unerwarteten Todesfällen und Trauer bei Jugendlichen in der Institution Schule

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    Quantitative Forschungsarbeit mittels Befragung von Schulsozialarbeiter:innen und Schüler:innen der Klassenstufen 8 bis 10 an mittelsächsischen Oberschulen zur Ermittlung des Bedarfs und Erstellung eines Faltblattes für den sensiblen Umgang bei plötzlich eingetretenen Todesfällen im näheren Lebensumfeld der Schüler:innen und Hilfe zur Trauerbewältigung in der Institution Schule

    Effects of subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation on emotional working memory capacity and mood in patients with Parkinson's disease

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    Background: In Parkinson’s disease (PD), cognitive symptoms and mood changes may be even more distressing for the patient than motor symptoms. Objective: Our aim was to determine the effects of bilateral subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) on working memory (WM) and mood. Methods: Sixteen patients with PD were assessed with STN-DBS switched on (DBS-ON) and with dopaminergic treatment (Med-ON) compared to switched off (DBS-OFF) and without dopaminergic treatment (Med-OFF). The primary outcome measures were a Visual Analog Mood Scale (VAMS) and an emotional 2-back WM task at 12 months after DBS in the optimal DBS-ON/Med-ON setting compared to DBS-OFF/Med-OFF. Results: Comparison of DBS-OFF/Med-OFF to DBS-ON/Med-ON revealed a significant increase in alertness (meanoff/off =51.59±24.54; meanon/on =72.75; P=0.016) and contentedness (meanoff/off =38.73±24.41; meanon/on =79.01±17.66; P=0.001, n=16), and a trend for reduction in sedation (P=0.060), which was related to stimulation as shown in a subgroup of seven patients. The N-back task revealed a significant increase in accuracy with DBS-ON/Med-ON compared to DBS-OFF/Med- OFF (82.0% vs 76.0%, respectively) (P=0.044), regardless of stimulus valence. Conclusion: In line with previous studies, we found that patients rated themselves subjectively as more alert, content, and less sedated during short- term DBS-ON. Accuracy in the WM task increased with the combination of DBS and medication, possibly related to higher alertness of the patients. Our results add to the currently mixed results described for DBS on WM and suggest that there are no deleterious DBS effects on this specific cognitive domain

    the influence of auditory feedback and deep brain stimulation

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    Unintentional timing deviations during musical performance can be conceived of as timing errors. However, recent research on humanizing computer-generated music has demonstrated that timing fluctuations that exhibit long-range temporal correlations (LRTC) are preferred by human listeners. This preference can be accounted for by the ubiquitous presence of LRTC in human tapping and rhythmic performances. Interestingly, the manifestation of LRTC in tapping behavior seems to be driven in a subject-specific manner by the LRTC properties of resting-state background cortical oscillatory activity. In this framework, the current study aimed to investigate whether propagation of timing deviations during the skilled, memorized piano performance (without metronome) of 17 professional pianists exhibits LRTC and whether the structure of the correlations is influenced by the presence or absence of auditory feedback. As an additional goal, we set out to investigate the influence of altering the dynamics along the cortico-basal-ganglia-thalamo-cortical network via deep brain stimulation (DBS) on the LRTC properties of musical performance. Specifically, we investigated temporal deviations during the skilled piano performance of a non-professional pianist who was treated with subthalamic-deep brain stimulation (STN-DBS) due to severe Parkinson's disease, with predominant tremor affecting his right upper extremity. In the tremor-affected right hand, the timing fluctuations of the performance exhibited random correlations with DBS OFF. By contrast, DBS restored long- range dependency in the temporal fluctuations, corresponding with the general motor improvement on DBS. Overall, the present investigations demonstrate the presence of LRTC in skilled piano performances, indicating that unintentional temporal deviations are correlated over a wide range of time scales. This phenomenon is stable after removal of the auditory feedback, but is altered by STN-DBS, which suggests that cortico-basal ganglia-thalamocortical circuits play a role in the modulation of the serial correlations of timing fluctuations exhibited in skilled musical performance

    Long-term effects of pallidal deep brain stimulation in tardive dystonia: a follow-up of 5–14 years

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    Introduction: Pallidal DBS is an established treatment for severe isolated dystonia. However, its use in disabling and treatment-refractory tardive syndromes (TS) including tardive dyskinesia and tardive dystonia (TD) is less well investigated and long-term data remain sparse. This observational study evaluates long-term effects of deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the globus pallidus internus (GPi) in patients with medically refractory TS. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed a cohort of seven TD patients with bilateral GPi-DBS. Involuntary movements, dystonia and disability were rated at long-term follow-up (LT-FU) after a mean of 122 +/- 33.2 SD months (range 63-171 months) and compared to baseline (BL), short-term (ST-FU; mean 6 +/- 2.0 SD months) and 4-year follow-up (4y-FU; mean 45 +/- 12.3 SD months) using the Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale (AIMS) and the Burke-Fahn-Marsden Dystonia Rating Scale (BFMDRS), respectively. Quality of life and mood were evaluated using the SF36 and Beck Depression Index (BDI) questionnaires, respectively. Results: At LT-FU patients had improved by 73% +/- 14.2 SD in involuntary movements and 90% +/- 1.0 SD in dystonia. Mood had improved significantly whereas quality of life remained unchanged compared to baseline. No serious long-lasting stimulation-related adverse events (AEs) were observed. Three patients of this cohort presented without active stimulation and ongoing symptom relief at long-term follow-up after 3-10 years of continuous DBS. Conclusion: Pallidal DBS is a safe and effective long-term TD treatment. Even more interesting, three of our patients could stop stimulation after several years of DBS without serious relapse. Larger studies need to explore the phenomenon of ongoing symptom relief after DBS cessation
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