8 research outputs found

    Status epilepticus after gastric bypass surgery

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    Bariatric procedures are increasingly performed world-wide. They potentially have severe consequences for the nervous system. We report the case of a 39-year-old female who presented with status epilepticus after gastric bypass surgery. A diagnosis of multiple nutrient and vitamin deficiencies was made and she received vitamin supplementation with a good clinical response.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Crossed Cerebellar Diaschisis Worsens the Clinical Presentation in Acute Large Vessel Occlusion.

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    Initial NIHSS in anterior large vessel occlusion (LVO) correlates partially with the hypoperfusion volume. We aimed at assessing the contribution of crossed cerebellar diaschisis (CCD) from the hypoperfused territory on LVO initial clinical deficit.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Case report: Serious unexpected vascular events in two patients with lymphocytic variant hypereosinophilic syndrome.

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    Lymphocytic-variant hypereosinophilic syndrome (L-HES) is a form of reactive hypereosinophilia, most commonly associated with interleukin-5 over-production by clonal, most commonly CD3-CD4+CD2hiCD5hiCD45RO+ T-cells. Patients often present with predominant cutaneous and soft-tissue manifestations, while cardiovascular involvement is uncommon.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Datasheet1_Case report: Serious unexpected vascular events in two patients with lymphocytic variant hypereosinophilic syndrome.pdf

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    BackgroundLymphocytic-variant hypereosinophilic syndrome (L-HES) is a form of reactive hypereosinophilia, most commonly associated with interleukin-5 over-production by clonal, most commonly CD3−CD4+CD2hiCD5hiCD45RO+ T-cells. Patients often present with predominant cutaneous and soft-tissue manifestations, while cardiovascular involvement is uncommon.MethodsWe reviewed the medical files of two L-HES patients followed in our center who developed serious vascular complications and performed a literature review for similar cases.ResultsPatient 1, a 52-year-old female, presented with an ischemic stroke secondary to left middle cerebral artery dissection after 10 years of indolent L-HES. Blood eosinophilia was controlled with oral corticosteroids (OCS), but OCS-tapering attempts with hydroxyurea and pegylated interferon failed, prompting the introduction of mepolizumab with rapid normalization. Patient 2, a 62-year-old female, had been asymptomatic for 10 years without treatment when a NSTEMI occurred, due to coronary artery occlusion secondary to a large cauliflower-aneurysm of the proximal aorta and aneurysmal dilatation of several coronary arteries, requiring semi-urgent surgical management. Aortic wall staining for eosinophil major basic protein showed eosinophils in the adventitia. Blood eosinophilia was controlled with OCS.ConclusionsPatients with apparently clinically benign L-HES may develop arterial complications, consisting in dissection and/or aneurysm dilatation of medium-to-large vessels with serious consequences. The value of performing regular vascular imaging and monitoring during follow-up has yet to be determined.</p

    Datasheet1_Case report: Serious unexpected vascular events in two patients with lymphocytic variant hypereosinophilic syndrome.pdf

    No full text
    BackgroundLymphocytic-variant hypereosinophilic syndrome (L-HES) is a form of reactive hypereosinophilia, most commonly associated with interleukin-5 over-production by clonal, most commonly CD3−CD4+CD2hiCD5hiCD45RO+ T-cells. Patients often present with predominant cutaneous and soft-tissue manifestations, while cardiovascular involvement is uncommon.MethodsWe reviewed the medical files of two L-HES patients followed in our center who developed serious vascular complications and performed a literature review for similar cases.ResultsPatient 1, a 52-year-old female, presented with an ischemic stroke secondary to left middle cerebral artery dissection after 10 years of indolent L-HES. Blood eosinophilia was controlled with oral corticosteroids (OCS), but OCS-tapering attempts with hydroxyurea and pegylated interferon failed, prompting the introduction of mepolizumab with rapid normalization. Patient 2, a 62-year-old female, had been asymptomatic for 10 years without treatment when a NSTEMI occurred, due to coronary artery occlusion secondary to a large cauliflower-aneurysm of the proximal aorta and aneurysmal dilatation of several coronary arteries, requiring semi-urgent surgical management. Aortic wall staining for eosinophil major basic protein showed eosinophils in the adventitia. Blood eosinophilia was controlled with OCS.ConclusionsPatients with apparently clinically benign L-HES may develop arterial complications, consisting in dissection and/or aneurysm dilatation of medium-to-large vessels with serious consequences. The value of performing regular vascular imaging and monitoring during follow-up has yet to be determined.</p

    Brain Tissue Oxygenation-Guided Therapy and Outcome in Traumatic Brain Injury: A Single-Center Matched Cohort Study

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    Brain tissue oxygenation (PbtO2)-guided therapy can improve the neurological outcome of traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients. With several Phase-III ongoing studies, most of the existing evidence is based on before-after cohort studies and a phase-II randomized trial. The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of PbtO2-guided therapy in a single-center cohort. We performed a retrospective analysis of consecutive severe TBI patients admitted to our center who received either intracranial pressure (ICP) guided therapy (from January 2012 to February 2016) or ICP/PbtO2-guided therapy (February 2017 to December 2019). A genetic matching was performed based on covariates including demographics, comorbidities, and severity scores on admission. Intracranial hypertension (IH) was defined as ICP &gt; 20 mmHg for at least 5 min. Brain hypoxia (BH) was defined as PbtO2 &lt; 20 mmHg for at least 10 min. IH and BH were targeted by specific interventions. Mann&ndash;Whitney U and Fisher&rsquo;s exact tests were used to assess differences between groups. A total of 35 patients were matched in both groups: significant differences in the occurrence of IH (ICP 85.7% vs. ICP/PbtO2 45.7%, p &lt; 0.01), ICU length of stay [6 (3&ndash;13) vs. 16 (9&ndash;25) days, p &lt; 0.01] and Glasgow Coma Scale at ICU discharge [10 (5&ndash;14) vs. 13 (11&ndash;15), p = 0.036] were found. No significant differences in ICU mortality and Glasgow Outcome Scales at 3 months were observed. This study suggests that the role of ICP/PbtO2-guided therapy should await further confirmation in well-conducted large phase III studies

    Brain Tissue Oxygenation-Guided Therapy and Outcome in Traumatic Brain Injury: A Single-Center Matched Cohort Study.

    No full text
    Brain tissue oxygenation (PbtO2)-guided therapy can improve the neurological outcome of traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients. With several Phase-III ongoing studies, most of the existing evidence is based on before-after cohort studies and a phase-II randomized trial. The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of PbtO2-guided therapy in a single-center cohort. We performed a retrospective analysis of consecutive severe TBI patients admitted to our center who received either intracranial pressure (ICP) guided therapy (from January 2012 to February 2016) or ICP/PbtO2-guided therapy (February 2017 to December 2019). A genetic matching was performed based on covariates including demographics, comorbidities, and severity scores on admission. Intracranial hypertension (IH) was defined as ICP > 20 mmHg for at least 5 min. Brain hypoxia (BH) was defined as PbtO2 < 20 mmHg for at least 10 min. IH and BH were targeted by specific interventions. Mann−Whitney U and Fisher’s exact tests were used to assess differences between groups. A total of 35 patients were matched in both groups: significant differences in the occurrence of IH (ICP 85.7% vs. ICP/PbtO2 45.7%, p < 0.01), ICU length of stay [6 (3−13) vs. 16 (9−25) days, p < 0.01] and Glasgow Coma Scale at ICU discharge [10 (5−14) vs. 13 (11−15), p = 0.036] were found. No significant differences in ICU mortality and Glasgow Outcome Scales at 3 months were observed. This study suggests that the role of ICP/PbtO2-guided therapy should await further confirmation in well-conducted large phase III studies.0SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe

    Neura: a specialized large language model solution in neurology

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    Large language models’ (LLM) ability in natural language processing holds promise for diverse applications, yet their deployment in fields such as neurology faces domain-specific challenges. Hence, we introduce Neura: a scalable, explainable solution to specialize LLM. Blindly evaluated on a select set of five complex clinical cases compared to a cohort of 13 neurologists, Neura achieved normalized scores of 86.17% overall, 85% for differential diagnoses, and 88.24% for final diagnoses (55.11%, 46.15%, and 70.93% for neurologists) with rapid response times of 28.8 and 19 seconds (9 minutes and 37.2 seconds and 8 minutes and 51 seconds for neurologists) while consistently providing relevant, accurately cited information. These findings support the emerging role of LLM-driven applications to articulate human-acquired and integrated data with a vast corpus of knowledge, augmenting human experiential reasoning for clinical and research purposes
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