25 research outputs found

    Long-term outcome of subthalamic nucleus DBS in Parkinson's disease: from the advanced phase towards the late stage of the disease?

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    Deep Brain Stimulation of the Subthalamic Nucleus (STN-DBS) is an effective treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD), but only few studies investigated its long-term efficacy. Furthermore, little is known about the role of PD-subtype on STN-DBS long-term outcome

    Understanding Factors Associated With Psychomotor Subtypes of Delirium in Older Inpatients With Dementia

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    Operationalizing mild cognitive impairment criteria in small vessel disease: The VMCI-Tuscany Study

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    Introduction Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) prodromic of vascular dementia is expected to have a multidomain profile. Methods In a sample of cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) patients, we assessed MCI subtypes distributions according to different operationalization of Winblad criteria and compared the neuroimaging features of single versus multidomain MCI. We applied three MCI diagnostic scenarios in which the cutoffs for objective impairment and the number of considered neuropsychological tests varied. Results Passing from a liberal to more conservative diagnostic scenarios, of 153 patients, 5% were no longer classified as MCI, amnestic multidomain frequency decreased, and nonamnestic single domain increased. Considering neuroimaging features, severe medial temporal lobe atrophy was more frequent in multidomain compared with single domain. Discussion Operationalizing MCI criteria changes the relative frequency of MCI subtypes. Nonamnestic single domain MCI may be a previously nonrecognized type of MCI associated with SVD

    Spinal cord stimulation may improve gait and cognition in hereditary spastic paraplegia with mental retardation: a case report

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    Background Hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) include various sporadic and hereditary neurodegenerative disorders, characterized by progressive spasticity and weakness of lower limbs, possibly associated to additional features. Case presentation We report a male HPS patient in his 40 s, showing mental retardation associated with language impairment, dysarthria, and increased urinary frequency. Three months after treatment with electric chronic high-frequency cervical spinal cord stimulation (HF-SCS), he showed an amelioration of motor symptoms (lower limbs spasticity and gait), dysarthria, cognitive functioning (language and constructive praxic abilities), and urinary symptoms (decreased urinary frequency). Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) showed a postoperative increase of cerebral perfusion in right frontal cortex and temporal cortex bilaterally. Conclusion In our patient, HF-SCS might have induced an activation of ascending neural pathways, resulting in changes in activity in various cortical areas (including sensory-motor cortical areas), which may give rise to a modulation of activity in spared descending motor pathways and in neural networks involved in cognitive functions, including language. Although further studies in patients with HPS are needed to clarify whether HF-SCS can be a suitable treatment option in HSP, our observation suggests that HF-SCS, a minimally invasive neurosurgical procedure, might induce beneficial effects of on various symptoms of such orphan disease

    BACE inhibitors in clinical development for the treatment of Alzheimer\u2019s disease

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    Introduction: The amyloid hypothesis of Alzheimer\u2019s disease (AD) affirms that brain accumulation of amyloid-\u3b2 (A\u3b2) oligomers and soluble aggregates represent the major pathological event of the disease. Several anti-A\u3b2 small organic molecules, monoclonal antibodies and antigens were developed to interfere with A\u3b2 production and clearance, including \u3b2\u2013site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme (BACE) inhibitors, blocking the first enzymatic step of A\u3b2 formation. All these approaches, including BACE inhibitors, have failed in large randomized clinical trials (RCTs) in mild-to-moderate AD, but further studies are now being carried out in patients at early AD stages and in asymptomatic subjects at risk of developing AD. Areas covered: The paper provides a comprehensive review of BACE inhibitors for AD treatment, focusing on the most advanced compounds in Phase III RCTs. Expert commentary: BACE inhibitors inhibited robustly, and dose-dependently, A\u3b2 formation in cerebrospinal fluid of AD patients, but without cognitive, clinical, or functional benefit in large RCTs. BACE inhibition may be not sufficient to decrease brain A\u3b2 plaques and aggregates. Indeed, several BACE inhibitors were found to be poorly tolerated and some of them failed also in patients with prodromal AD. This may indicate that blocking the formation of nascent A\u3b2 is not useful in AD

    Pharmacotherapy for the treatment of depression in patients with alzheimer’s disease: a treatment-resistant depressive disorder

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    Introduction: Pharmacotherapy for the treatment of depressive disorders in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) represents a clinical challenge. pharmacological options are often attempted after a period of watchful waiting (8–12 weeks). monoaminergic antidepressant drugs have shown only modest or null clinical benefits, maybe because the etiology of depressive symptoms in ad patients is fundamentally different from that of nondemented subjects. Areas covered: The following article looks at the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor sertraline, which is one of the most frequently studied antidepressant medications in randomized controlled trials (RCTs). It also discusses many other pharmacological approaches that have proven to be inadequate (antipsychotics, acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, anticonvulsants, hormone replacement therapy) and new drug classes (mainly affecting glutamate transmission) that are being studied for treating depression in AD. It also gives discussion to the phase II RCT on the alternative drug S47445 and the potential effect on cognition of the multimodal antidepressant vortioxetine in older depressed patients. Finally, it discusses the N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonist ketamine. Expert opinion: The present RCT methodologies are too disparate to draw firm conclusions. Future studies are required to identify effective and multimodal pharmacological treatments that efficiently treat depression in AD. Genotyping may boost antidepressant treatment success

    Late-onset depression is associated to age-related central auditory processing disorder in an older population in Southern Italy

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    The association between late-life depression (LLD) and age-related hearing loss (ARHL) was suggested by preliminary studies, but reliance on LLD subtypes may introduce significant bias. We examined the association between ARHL and LLD according to the age of onset (early-onset depression (EOD) and late-onset depression (LOD)). We investigated the association between ARHL and LLD diagnosed according to the Semi-structured Clinical Diagnostic Interview for DSM-IV-TR in 1749 Italian community-dwelling older subjects from the population-based GreatAGE Study, Southern Italy. Peripheral ARHL was assessed as a pure tone average (PTA) threshold > 40 dB hearing level in the better ear- and age-related CAPD as a score of < 50% to the Synthetic Sentences Identification with Ipsilateral Competitive Message (SSI-ICM) test. LLD amounted at 10.29% of the sample, subdivided in LOD (6.21%) and EOD (4.08%). Age-related CAPD tended to be higher in LOD (28.91%) than in EOD (19.05%). After accounting for covariates, LOD was tendentially associated to age-related CAPD, but not to peripheral ARHL. This trend was confirmed by the linear models in which LOD was significantly associated to worsen SSI-ICM percentages (odds ratio 2.38, 95% confidence interval 1.32-4.30, p = 0.004), but not to PTA values. In a fully adjusted model of LOD, the effect of the association between CAPD and LOD was explained by social dysfunction. LLD was not associated to peripheral ARHL. Age-related CAPD was associated to LOD, a form of depression with cognitive dysfunction hallmark. The ARHL assessment may be an important opportunity to prevent depressive disorders in later life, particularly for LOD
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