98 research outputs found

    認知症患者のバランス障害に対する前庭刺激効果の解明および臨床応用

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    科学研究費助成事業 研究成果報告書:基盤研究(C)2014-2017課題番号 : 2646090

    Epidemiologic and Clinical Characteristics of Optic Neuritis in Japan

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    Purpose:To elucidate the clinical and epidemiologic characteristics of optic neuritis in Japan.Design:Multicenter cross-sectional, observational cohort study.Participants:A total of 531 cases of unilateral or bilateral noninfectious optic neuritis identified in 33 institutions nationwide in Japan.Methods:Serum samples from patients with optic neuritis were tested for anti–aquaporin-4 antibodies (AQP4-Abs) and anti–myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies (MOG-Abs) using a cell-based assay and were correlated with the clinical findings.Main Outcome Measures:Antibody positivity, clinical and radiologic characteristics, and visual outcome.Results:Among 531 cases of optic neuritis, 12% were AQP4-Ab positive, 10% were MOG-Ab positive, 77% were negative for both antibodies (double-negative), and 1 case was positive for both antibodies. Pretreatment visual acuity (VA) worsened to more than a median 1.0 logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution (logMAR) in all groups. After steroid pulse therapy (combined with plasmapheresis in 32% of patients in AQP4-Ab–positive group), median VA improved to 0.4 logMAR in the AQP4-Ab–positive group, 0 logMAR in the MOG-Ab–positive group, and 0.1 logMAR in the double-negative group. The AQP4-Ab–positive group showed a high proportion of females, exhibited diverse visual field abnormalities, and demonstrated concurrent spinal cord lesions on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in 22% of the patients. In the MOG-Ab–positive group, although posttreatment visual outcome was good, the rates of optic disc swelling and pain with eye movement were significantly higher than those in the AQP4-Ab–positive and double-negative groups. However, most cases showed isolated optic neuritis lesions on MRI. In the double-negative group, 4% of the patients had multiple sclerosis. Multivariate logistic regression analysis of all participants identified age and presence of antibodies (MOG-Ab and AQP4-Ab) as significant factors affecting visual outcome.Conclusions:The present large-scale cohort study revealed the clinicoepidemiologic features of noninfectious optic neuritis in Japan. Anti–aquaporin-4 antibody–positive optic neuritis has poor visual outcome. In contrast, MOG-Ab positive cases manifested severe clinical findings of optic neuritis before treatment, but few showed concurrent lesions in sites other than the optic nerve and generally showed good treatment response with favorable visual outcome. These findings indicate that autoantibody measurement is useful for prompt diagnosis and proper management of optic neuritis that tends to become refractory

    Abnormal Saccadic Intrusions with Alzheimer\u27s Disease in Darkness

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    Background: Classified as saccadic intrusions, Square-Wave Jerks (SWJs) have been observed during Visual Fixation (VF) in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). However, the pathological significance of this phenomenon remains unclear.Objective: The present study analyzed the characteristics of SWJs in patients with AD with their eyes open in the dark without VF.Methods: Fifteen patients with AD and 15 healthy age- and sex-matched controls were investigated and compared. Saccadic intrusions with and without VF were detected as SWJs and measured using an electronystagmogram.Results: No significant difference in the frequency of SWJs was observed between control and AD groups with VF, but significantly more SWJs were observed in the AD group than in the control group in the absence of VF (p0.55) in the AD group.Conclusion: SWJs without VF may have pathological significance in AD. In healthy individuals, SWJs are generated by VF and suppressed without VF. Conversely, in AD, SWJs are generated rather than suppressed in the absence of VF. These pathognomonic SWJs without VF also appear to be correlated with higher-order dysfunction, reflecting AD-related cortical damage. These findings suggest that pathological SWJs without VF observed in AD derive from cortical damage and may constitute an important marker of a higher-order function

    Downbeat nystagmus associated with damage to the medial longitudinal fasciculus of the pons: A vestibular balance control mechanism via the lower brainstem paramedian tract neurons

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    The paramedian tract (PMT) neurons, a group of neurons associated with eye movement that project into the cerebellar flocculus, are present in or near the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) in the paramedian region of the lower brainstem. A 66-year-old man with multiple sclerosis in whom downbeat nystagmus appeared along with right MLF syndrome due to a unilateral pontomedullary lesion is described. In light of these findings, a possible schema for the vestibular balance control mechanism circuit of the PMT neurons via the flocculus is presented. Damage to the PMT neurons impaired the elective inhibitory control mechanism of the anterior semicircular canal neural pathway by the flocculus. This resulted in the appearance of anterior semicircular canal-dominant vestibular imbalance and the formation of downbeat nystagmus.From the pathogenesis of this vertical vestibular nystagmus, the action of the PMT neurons in the vestibular eye movement neuronal pathway to maintain vestibular balance was conjectured to be as follows. PMT neurons transmit vestibular information from the anterior semicircular canals to the cerebellum, forming a cerebellum/brainstem feedback loop. Vestibular information from that loop is integrated in the cerebellum, inhibiting only the anterior semicircular canal neuronal pathway via the flocculus and controlling vestibular balance

    Downbeat nystagmus due to a paramedian medullary lesion

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    Cell groups of the paramedian tract, which are located in the paramedian region of the lower brainstem, are eye-movement-related neurons that project to the cerebellar flocculus. Their inactivation produces downbeat nystagmus, which resembles eye movement disorders resulting from lesions of the cerebellar flocculus in animal experiments. Therefore, paramedian tract cells are assumed to fulfill an important function in ocular movement control, such as gaze-holding and maintaining vestibular balance. This paper presents a 50-year-old female who manifested downbeat nystagmus due to damage to the paramedian tract cells caused by a localized ischemic lesion in the medulla oblongata. We found that a paramedian medullary lesion-induced nystagmus, similar to that observed following floccular lesions, clearly indicates that a subgroup of paramedian tract cells projecting to the flocculus was impaired. This finding has important implications in considering a brainstem–cerebellar feedback loop involved in vestibulo-oculomotor controls, such as vestibular balance. Although there have been a few reports of downbeat nystagmus caused by lesions in the midline region of the lower brainstem, to our knowledge none report the occurrence of nystagmus due to a strictly localized medullar lesion, such as the one described here

    Open-label clinical trial of bezafibrate treatment in patients with fatty acid oxidation disorders in Japan

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    IntroductionFatty acid oxidation disorders (FAODs) are rare diseases caused by defects in mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation (FAO) enzymes. While the efficacy of bezafibrate, a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor agonist, on the in vitro FAO capacity has been reported, the in vivo efficacy remains controversial. Therefore, we conducted a clinical trial of bezafibrate in Japanese patients with FAODs.Materials and methodsThis trial was an open-label, non-randomized, and multicenter study of bezafibrate treatment in 6 patients with very long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (VLCAD) deficiency and 2 patients with carnitine palmitoyltransferase-II (CPT-2) deficiency (median age, 8.2 years; ranging from 5.8 to 26.4 years). Bezafibrate was administered for 6 months following a 6-month observation period. The primary endpoint was the frequency of myopathic attacks, and the secondary endpoints were serum acylcarnitines (ACs, C14:1 or C16 + C18:1), creatine kinase (CK) levels, degree of muscle pain (VAS; visual analog scale) during myopathic attacks, and quality of life (QOL; evaluated using validated questionnaires).ResultsThe frequency of myopathic attacks after bezafibrate administration decreased in 3 patients, increased in 3, and did not change in 2. The CK, AC, and VAS values during attacks could be estimated in only three or four patients, but a half of the patients did not experience attacks before or after treatment. Changes in CK, AC, and VAS values varied across individuals. In contrast, three components of QOL, namely, physical functioning, role limitation due to physical problems (role physical), and social functioning, were significantly elevated. No adverse drug reactions were observed.ConclusionIn this study, the frequency of myopathic attacks and CK, AC, and VAS values during the attacks could not be evaluated due to several limitations, such as a small trial population. Our findings indicate that bezafibrate improves the QOL of patients with FAODs, but its efficacy must be examined in future investigations

    Upbeat nystagmus is a useful sign in the regional diagnosis of trigeminal nerve disorder with multiple sclerosis

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    Trigeminal nerve disorder is an important .neurological sign that is often seen with multiple sclerosis (MS). We investigated eye movements in three MS patients with trigeminal disorder due to pontine lesions near the trigeminal root entry zone (REZ).Upbeat nystagmus was observed in all MS patients with trigeminal REZ lesions. We conjecture that trigeminal nerve disorder and upbeat nystagmus appeared due to simultaneous damage to both the trigeminal nerve and the vestibulo-ocular reflex pathway.If upbeat nystagmus appears in MS patients exhibiting a trigeminal nerve disorder, such as trigeminal neuralgia, and paralysis, pontine lesions near the trigeminal REZ should be considered. Upbeat nystagmus can be understood as a useful sign for the clinical regional diagnosis of trigeminal nerve disorder

    Enlargement of the brachial plexus on magnetic resonance imaging: a novel finding in adult-onset Krabbe disease

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    Adult-onset Krabbe disease is an autosomal recessive degenerative leukodystrophy that presents with bilateral corticospinal tract involvement on MRI. Although peripheral nerve involvement is a known manifestation of Krabbe disease, MRI findings of peripheral nerve abnormalities are limited to the cranial nerves and spinal nerve roots. In this case report, we discuss two cases of adult-onset Krabbe disease with brachial plexus enlargement on MRI. Adult-onset Krabbe disease should be included in the differential diagnoses when brachial plexus enlargement and white matter lesions involving corticospinal tracts present simultaneously

    Residual central nervous system damage due to organoarsenic poisoning

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    BackgroundDrinking well water contaminated with the organoarsenic compound diphenylarsinic acid (DPAA) causes central nervous system (CNS) disorders that improve within several years after last drinking such water. Subjective symptoms such as lightheadedness and dizziness appear to persist, however, suggesting CNS damage. We evaluated CNS damage due to DPAA by detecting abnormal eye movements.MethodsSubjects comprised 29 victims of exposure to DPAA in whom this substance had been detected in the nails. Investigations were performed more than 3 years following cessation of DPAA exposure. Abnormal eye movements were monitored using electronystagmography. We analysed unpaired t-test between exposure subjects who exhibited upbeat nystagmus and those who did not. Upbeat nystagmus parameters were measured, and mean values were calculated. Associations between the properties of upbeat nystagmus and maximum concentrations of DPAA among DPAA exposure were also investigated.ResultsUpbeat nystagmus was common among exposure victims, occurring in 23 of 29 subjects (79.0%). The subjects with upbeat nystagmus had significantly higher ratio than those without upbeat nystagmus in the points of subjective symptoms and DPAA concentration of drinking water (p < 0.01). The slow-phase amplitude of upbeat nystagmus enlarged with increasing DPAA concentrations, showing a significant positive correlation (p < 0.05). These findings suggest that the level of exposure to DPAA affects the properties of nystagmus. High-frequency pathological square-wave jerks (SWJ) were seen in 14 of 29 patients (48.0%), and mean SWJ frequency was 112.4 ± 16.7/min.ConclusionsDetection of abnormal ocular movements may be useful in evaluating residual/persistent/chronic CNS damage due to organoarsenic poisoning
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