Dr. Tzurei Chen Publishes Chapters on Neurologic and Geriatric Physical Therapy – Pacific University

Dr. Tzurei Chen recently collaborated with Dr. Kevin Chui to publish two chapters in two textbooks frequently adopted in entry-level physical therapy education and used in clinical practice. Both textbooks are also used by physical therapists as preparatory resources for American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties exams. The first chapter is on proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation for select patient populations including those with neurologic dysfunction, amputation, and chronic low back pain. The second chapter is on impaired joint mobility for older adults and addresses all of the elements of patient/client management. Both chapters incorporate the most recent evidence to inform clinical-decision making.

References:

Chen T, Chui K. Proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation. In Martin S, Kessler M, eds. "Neurologic Interventions for Physical Therapy." St. Louis, MO: Saunders; 2020: 294-347.

Chui K, Yen SC, Chen T, Christiansen C. Impaired joint mobility in older adults. In Avers D, Wong R, eds. "Gucciones Geriatric Physical Therapy." St. Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2020: 344-364.

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Dr. Tzurei Chen Publishes Chapters on Neurologic and Geriatric Physical Therapy - Pacific University

Scotland allocates 500,000 for treatment of neurological conditions – Health Europa

The investment, which totals 492,535, will be directed specifically towards initiatives which focus on delivering treatment in partnership with the NHS and the third sector; and forms part of the governments 4.5m five-year action plan to ensure patients living anywhere in Scotland can access personalised neurological care and support.

The Neurological care and support: framework for action 2020-2025 programme sets out the governments vision for improving the quality of life of adult patients with neurological conditions by raising the standard and availability of care and treatment which they are able to access; as well as by sourcing and distributing information and support around living with neurological issues.

Joe FitzPatrick, Scotlands Minister for Public Health, said: Around one million people in Scotland live with a neurological condition ranging from common conditions such as migraines to life-limiting illnesses such as motor neurone disease (MND). We recognise the scale, variety and context of neurological conditions and how distressing they can be for the person with the condition and their family and the framework for action aims to support those responsible for providing care and support to people affected. This latest round of funding will ensure this vital work not only continues but is strengthened despite the challenges faced during the pandemic.

One recipient of the new funding is the PSP Association (PSPA), a charity which offers information and support to people affected by progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and corticobasal degeneration (CBD). PSPA CEO Andrew Symons said: Neurological Care and Support Framework Funding will allow us to map provision for PSP and CBD in Scotland, simultaneously highlighting the information and support that we can offer from PSPA. This will contribute to the aim of earlier diagnosis of these rare conditions and reduce the time spent by people in the wrong part of the system with the result they can benefit from the provisions of the Framework as soon as their disease is recognised.

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Scotland allocates 500,000 for treatment of neurological conditions - Health Europa

Dartmouth-Hitchcock neurologist named Tech Professional of Year – New Hampshire Business Review

TechWomen/TechGirls honor recognizes her work in epilepsy treatment

D-H neurologist Barbara Jobst was named 2020 Tech Professional of the Year by the NH Tech Alliance.

Dartmouth-Hitchcock neurologist Dr. Barbara Jobst has been named the 2020 Tech Professional of the Year at the NH Tech Alliances fifth annual TechWomen/TechGirls awards luncheon, which was held virtually earlier this month.

The annual award acknowledges the accomplishments of New Hampshire women who contribute to help advance STEM education and professional STEM advancements for women throughout the state.

Jobst, co-director of the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Epilepsy Center at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, is the section chief for adult neurology and vice chair of the Neurology Department at DHMC. She is also the Louis and Ruth Frank Endowed Professor of Neurosciences at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth.

Jobst is a clinician-investigator who applies advanced technology to benefit patients and has trained many students, residents, fellows and junior faculty in using technology to advance medicine. She and her team have participated in multiple multicenter trials involving brain stimulation and she has studied the interaction of memory and epilepsy.

Her work has included improving memory with deep brain stimulation as well as developing and implementing a cognitive-behavioral program for memory problems in epilepsy.

I am honored to be recognized by the NH Tech Alliance, and applaud their efforts to illuminate the work of women in STEM fields and in promoting STEM opportunities to girls and young women throughout the state, Jobst said.

Originally from Germany, Jobst attended Dartmouth Medical School (now known as the Geisel School of Medicine) for four months in 1992 as a medical exchange student. She returned to the United States in 1996 as a medical resident at DHMC after earning her medical degree, and has been with D-H ever since.

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New Studies, New Perspectives on the Neurologic Effects of… : Neurology Today – LWW Journals

Article In Brief

Two new research studies focus on the neurologic issues that present in patients with COVID-19: One proposes that the disease that starts in the respiratory tract brings on coagulopathy and stroke risk, while the other asserts that, so far, the neurologic effects of the virus does not appear to involve direct invasion of the central nervous system.

Two new studies attempt to bring into focus neurological issues that present in patients with COVID-19: One proposes that the disease that starts in the respiratory tract brings on coagulopathy and stroke risk, and another asserts that, so far, the virus' neurologic effects do not appear to involve direct invasion of the central nervous system (CNS).

The studies represent two of the latest publications in the expanding literature on the virus and its neurological manifestations, which reflect an updated understanding that COVID-19 is not merely a respiratory phenomenon.

In an August 10 online report in the Journal of Neuroimaging, the authors proposed a cascade of events they say could be taking place in COVID-19 patients after the virus escapes the respiratory system and gets into the bloodstream, a process they say points to the potential for specific modes of therapy tailored to different steps in the cascade.

The authorstwo of whom are associated with a company that has developed a tool that, once approved, could be used to treat the type of patients they describesay that after the virus enters the alveolus of the lung, it causes inflammation that damages the thin membrane between the alveolus and the adjacent lung capillary, or the blood-air barrier.

Then a potentially disastrous string of events begins, first with the development of endothelial dysfunction. This happens, they say, in one of two ways: Either the virus enters endothelial cells directly, or damaging angiotensin II accumulates because their usual docks, angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptors, become occupied by the virus, which has a high affinity for the receptors. The angiotensin II leads to oxidative stress and oxidation of the typically circular Beta2glycoprotein1 (B2GP1) but becomes unwound into a J shape.

At that point, the authors posit, there is an opening on B2GP1 for antiphospholipid antibody complexes, associated with thrombotic tendencies, to form. The lack of non-oxidized B2GP1 to competitively bind von Willebrand Factor leads to platelet adhesion and platelet attachment to sub-endothelial collagen, and then to platelet activation and aggregation in the setting of the thrombosis-friendly antiphospholipid antibodies. In the worst cases, the resulting clots lead to pulmonary emboli or stroke from large vessel occlusion.

Vallabh Janardhan, MD, the paper's lead author and a stroke and interventional neurologist at the Medical Center of Plano, said that a proper understanding of the process points to opportunities to intervene therapeuticallywith antiplatelet, antithrombotic, and antifibrinolytic therapy, and if necessary, with clot-removal devices.

In some cases, you don't have all day to dissolve the clothalf the brain will die, he said. So you need to go pull out the clot with clot-removal devices and initiate blood thinners, so it doesn't re-clot.

With his brother Vikram Janardhan, he co-founded Insera Therapeutics, which has developed a clot-removal system using intermittent or cyclicalrather than continuoussuction designed to be gentler on the vessel and for better removal of clots.

We believe, yes, there was a lot of attention towards ventilators early onthat's because we didn't connect the dots at that time, Vikram Janardhan said. Now that we're connecting the dots, there are other therapeutics that are a better fit in reducing mortality than an exclusive concern on the number of ventilators.

Insera's device is approved in Europe but not the United States and is not yet commercially launched.

We fully anticipate and hope the vaccines will be out and available before our therapy is ready worldwide, Vikram Janardhan said.

The other paper, which was published in the August 19 issue of Cell, conveys the broad scope of the neurological manifestations seen in COVID-19 patients.

Neurological abnormalities have been described in 30 percent of patients. But the most frequent neurological problemsespecially malaise, dizziness, and headachetend to be confined to non-specific abnormalities in patients experiencing mild COVID-19, said lead author Constantino Iadecola, MD, director of the Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell. Among those with more severe diseases requiring hospitalization, neurological manifestations are more severewith ischemic stroke and encephalopathy, for example, Dr. Iadecola said.

While serious neurological complications have been reported in patients with otherwise mild COVID-19, the most severe complications occur in critically ill patients and are associated with significantly higher mortality, he said.

COVID-19 is a much more aggressive disease, he said, noting that to date, no convincing evidence shows that the virus directly infiltrates neurons.

There's no evidence that this is a neurotropic virus, he said. In the case of the loss of smell, he said, some cells in the nasal cavity, such as epithelial cells, might become infected, but there is no definitive evidence that the nerves themselves are invaded.

Most of the neurological problems seen in COVID-19 patients, he said, result from systemic effects on the virus, Dr. Iadecola said.

He cautioned, though, that the data that has been published so far has mostly come from the most serious cases.

We're not going to know maybe until a year from now when you look at the population as a whole, the real mortality, the real incidence of neurological manifestations, and the most prevalent neurological manifestations, he said. Because now we know only the patient who gets very, very sick and goes to the hospital and may be intubated.

The most pressing research questions remaining, he said, include whether neurological manifestations of COVID-19 reflect brain invasion, whether the brain contributes to immune dysregulation and respiratory failure, and the long-term neurological consequences of the virus.

He urged centers treating COVID-19 patients to establish systems to track patients longitudinally.

The mortality from the COVID-19 virus may not be extremely high, he said, but a lot of people are getting infected. Evidence from other viral infections suggests that even if you have a mild infection .... there could be long-term neuropsychiatric effects that range from anxiety, PTSD, and depression, to cognitive impairment.

The message for clinicians, he said, is to be aware that the major complications that come from this are most likely due to whatever is going on elsewhere in the body, especially the hypercoagulable state and hypoxia. That's what the evidence so far suggests. They've got to pay almost more attention to what goes on outside the brain because most likely what goes on in the brain may be a reflection of that. And then pay attention to the sequelaewhatever it is going to be coming up in the next several months.

Be very attentive to the patients, he continued. Ask general questionsabout their mood, sleep pattern, appetite, social life, and whether they've gone back to work, he suggested.

As the acute phase resolves, quality of life is going to be paramount, Dr. Costantino said.

Adnan I. Qureshi, MD, FAAN, professor of clinical neurology at the University of Minnesota, who has studied COVID-19, said there are two main ways the virus can affect the CNS. One is a direct effect by the virus or inflammation affecting neuronal cells and the blood-brain barrier. These patients can get encephalitis or have demyelination, but it's unclear whether there is any treatment except for a therapy that can suppress the excessive inflammation, such as IL-6 inhibitors.

The second is through blood-clotting mechanisms, he said.

Some large studies, including one of ours, [published in July in the International Journal of Stroke], has shown that patients who develop ischemic stroke with COVID-19 are at risk due to older age and high prevalence of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hyperlipidemia. Therefore, these patients have other cardiovascular risk factors for ischemic stroke. COVID-19 may simply be a precipitant like other respiratory and systemic infections.

Important pending questions, Dr. Qureshi said, include how to best manage neurological patients, since focusing on neurological aspects alone might not be enough; the effect of remdesivir and convalescent serum; the role of anticoagulation in those with stroke risk; and the length of time stroke risk lasts after the infection.

Drs. Vallabh and Vikram Janardhan report receiving grants from the National Science Foundation and Insera Therapeutics. Dr. Vallabh Janardhan has also received grants from the Society of Vascular and Interventional Neurology. In addition, he and his brother, Dr. Vikram Janardhan, have 20 patents pending with the US Patent and Trademark Office and more than 65 patents in the US and worldwide issue.

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New Studies, New Perspectives on the Neurologic Effects of... : Neurology Today - LWW Journals

Brain-Computer Interfaces Move Forward at the Speed of Musk : Neurology Today – LWW Journals

Article In Brief

A brain-computer interface (BCI), developed by a company tied with Elon Musk, offers an innovative new technology to move the field forward. But independent experts said some of the claims about what that technology can potentially do are somewhat hyperbolic at this stage. Other efforts around BCI are also featured.

It's going to blow your mind, said Elon Musk, the billionaire founder and CEO of Tesla, SpaceX and Neuralink. Speaking via a webcast on August 28, Musk introduced the latest developments, or at least made the latest claims, regarding Neuralink's brain-computer interface (BCI), a computer-based system that measures and analyzes brain activity and then converts signals into commands that are relayed to output devices that carry out the desired action.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), he announced, had given the company a Breakthrough Devices Designation, and good progress, he said, was being made toward clinical trials.

As evidence of that progress, Musk presented what he called the Little Pigs demo. Three pigs in the webcast looked equally healthy, but one of them had been implanted with a device that was wirelessly transmitting neural spikes from the snout area of its brain as it rooted around in a pen.

There's a lot of function that this device could do related to monitoring your health and warning you about a possible heart attack or stroke, and convenience features like playing music, Musk said. It's sort of like if your phone went in your brain.

He predicted that, one day, you will be able to save and replay memories...Over time we could actually give someone super vision. You could have ultraviolet or infrared, or seeing radar, and actually have superhuman vision.

Alas, none of those capabilities has ever been demonstrated by Musk's company or, for that matter, by any scientist or company. Neurologists and neuroscientists who have been laboring in the field for over a decade seek not to endow healthy humans with superpowers, but to help people with neurodegenerative diseases, strokes or traumatic injuries to regain speech and motor functions. Despite that disconnect, however, leaders in the field told Neurology Today that they are impressed by the legitimate progress Neuralink appears to have made.

The company's implantable device, they say, is doing things that none of their own devices have yet achieved: It communicates to a nearby computer wirelessly, rather than through wires; its low-powered battery, also recharges wirelessly, lasts up to a day; it bristles with over a thousand electrodes, compared to a few hundred in traditional arrays; and rather than attaching those electrodes to inflexible shanks, the Neuralink device uses flexible threads so delicate they are implanted by a robotic sewing machine.

If indeed they have made a device that can detect a thousand channels with good fidelity, and it can scan through this wireless technology, that is an important development, said Karunesh Ganguly, MD, PhD, associate professor of neurology at the University of California, San Francisco. At some point, you want to see it peer reviewed to know that what they're identifying as a neuron is actually a neuron. But they do seem to be pushing the technology ahead.

More evidence of progress in the BCI field came with a September 7 report by Dr. Ganguly's group in Nature Biotechnology. Unlike other approaches for invasive BCIs, his plug and play system based on electrocorticography (ECoG) has permitted an individual with tetraplegia to maintain control of a computer cursor without daily recalibration and retraining.

While he and other scientists in the BCI field expressed some skepticism about some of the claims made by Neurolink and Musk, they told Neurology Today they appreciate the interest that Neuralink is bringing to the field.

It will be really important, as these technologies become available, hopefully over the next few years, for neurologists to become familiar with how BCI can help the patients they see in their daily practice, said Leigh Hochberg, MD, PhD, FAAN, professor of engineering at Brown University, senior lecturer in neurology at Harvard Medical School, and director of the Center for Neurotechnology and Neurorecovery at Massachusetts General Hospital.

As a neurologist, I am completely focused on developing and testing technology that will help patients I see who have paralyzing disorders to maintain or regain their ability to move and speak.

Companies like Neuralink, he said, are essential to achieving that goal.

At the end of the day, neither universities nor academic medical centers make the final marketed and supported medical devices that become available to patients outside of clinical trials, Dr. Hochberg said. That is always done by a company. The engagement of companies in this field will ultimately benefit our patients.

Although Neuralink has not published a description of its technology in peer-reviewed scientific literature, and neither Musk nor any of the scientists working for him responded to requests for interviews, some detailed descriptions have appeared on the preprint server bioRxiv.

In March of 2019, Philip Sabes, PhD, of the University of California, San Francisco (and a founding team leader at Neuralink) was the lead author of a paper describing the sewing machine his group had developed with funding by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).

The fixed, rigid metal arrays used since the 1950s to penetrate the brain, the paper noted, disturbs the vasculature and attracts immune cells. Thinner, more flexible probes, however, would not be stiff enough to insert into the brain directly. Dr. Sabes' solution was to design a system that works like a sewing machine, with stiff needle-like injectors that implant polymer probes with the aid of a neurosurgical robot.

Each of the system's 96 polymer threads, the paper stated, holds 32 electrodes, for a total of 3,072 electrodes. We developed miniaturized custom electronics that allow us to stream full broadband electrophysiology data simultaneously from all these electrodes. We packaged this system for long-term implantation and developed custom online spike detection software that can detect action potentials with low latency.

Five months later, in August of 2019, Musk was listed as the first author of another preprint on bioRxiv that described Sabes' sewing machine as part of Neuralink's BCI platform. We have built arrays of small and flexible electrode threads, Musk's paper stated, with as many as 3,072 electrodes per array distributed across 96 threads.

As described by Musk in his webcast in August, implantation of the company's device will require removal of what he called a coin-sized piece of skull by its robot. Then the device replaces the portion of skull that we removed.

Technological advances already made and anticipated from the Neuralink effort are remarkable and will serve the neuroengineering community well, Lee E. Miller, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Neuroscience at the Feinberg School of Medicine of Northwestern University, said. This scale of private investment of financial and intellectual effort is unprecedented in our field. He added, however, that the company needs to demonstrate that its device is doing what it claims to be doing.

They showed these rasters of brain activity on the webcast, with cool bloopy sounds, he said. For peer review, I would insist on seeing the actual signals they recorded. Although there is no reason to believe it to be the case, they could be recording movement artifacts.

My hunch is that it will not be as expensive as deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's disease, which costs tens of thousands of dollars. But it's going to be more expensive than, say, LASEK surgery.

DR. LEE MILLER

When I was first approached about working on brain-machine interfaces, I thought, This is crazy. But we went farther than we could have reasonably hoped to do. That's why I'm not completely closed to the wildest claims Musk makes. It's not insane that maybe one day we can replay memories.

DR. SLIMAN BENSMAIA

Dr. Miller also took issue with Musk's prediction that a BCI device could eventually cost as little as a few thousand dollars. That's not going to happen any time soon, Dr. Miller said. My hunch is that it will not be as expensive as deep brain stimulation for Parkinson's disease, which costs tens of thousands of dollars. But it's going to be more expensive than, say, LASEK surgery.

He also disagreed with Musk's over-the-top claims about recording and replaying memories.

There's a lot of science in the realm of memory, he said, including Wilder Penfield's decades-old work that appeared to show existing memories being triggered by electrical stimulation of the brain's temporal lobes during neurosurgery.

That's a far cry, however, from suggesting it would ever be possible to record from a particular memory and play it back, Dr. Miller continued. While short-term, working memory very likely is based on reverberating neural activity and amenable to the intriguing hippocampus memory prosthesis that Ted Berger has been working on, long-term memories almost certainly require protein synthesis and structural changes to neurons that couldn't even be recorded, let alone played back. That's pure science fiction, and to suggest otherwise sets up all sorts of false expectations.

Sliman Bensmaia, PhD, the James and Karen Frank Family Professor of Organismal Biology and Anatomy at the University of Chicago, runs a laboratory there devoted to research in somatosensory neuroscience and prosthetics. Earlier this year, before COVID-19 restrictions began, he visited the Neuralink offices and gave a talk.

There's a team of really great people working there, and the device they have come up with is really remarkable, Dr. Bensmaia said. The device that I work with, that almost everyone works with, the only device that has been used in humans so far, is the Utah array, made of metal microelectrodes. It's like a mini bed of nails that you press into the brain. Of course the brain doesn't like that, and the electrodes don't last. So the fact that Neuralink has these thin, flexible fibers should cause much less damage. And they have a lot more electrical contacts. The question is how robust and stable it will be. Will it last for decades? But it's pretty cool. It's way further along now than it was just six months ago when I visited them.

Despite all that, Dr. Bensmaia added, Then there is Musk and the way he talks about it. Some of the stuff he says is outrageous. It might be possible to achieve some of the things he's talking about one day, but it won't happen for a very long time.

Even so, he said, the progress made in the field in recent years is already beyond anything he thought possible in such a short time.

I participated in DARPA's Revolutionizing Prosthetics program, he said. When I was first approached about working on brain-machine interfaces, I thought, This is crazy. But we went farther than we could have reasonably hoped to do. That's why I'm not completely closed to the wildest claims Musk makes. It's not insane that maybe one day we can replay memories.

In fact, a 2018 paper published in the Journal of Neural Engineering described a study involving epilepsy patients with surgically implanted electrodes near the hippocampus whose electrical spikes were recorded and analyzed while they performed a memorization task. When scientists stimulated the CA1 region by playing back the sequence of neural firing made when the subjects correctly remembered a preliminary set of memorizing tasks, their performance on subsequent memorization tasks improved by 35 percent.)

Dr. Hochberg leads the BrainGate consortium, which includes researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital, Brown University, the Providence VA Medical Center, Stanford University and Case Western Reserve.

Over the past few years, in our published research, the participants in our trial who had very little or no movement of their arm or hand have been able to control an unmodified tablet computer for email, for texting, for controlling their music players, Dr. Hochberg said.

I used to say it would take decades before a BCI is available to people outside of research trials that could offer a true clinical benefit. I now think we are just a few years away. Right now these systems often require the oversight or engagement of a trained technician to start the system and calibrate it at the beginning of each day. We need it to work 24 hours a day, seven days a week, in the absence of any technical oversight. On all those merits, we are on track to achieve that goal with a flexible, powerful and reliable system.

Because Mass General has a clinical research support agreement with Neuralink, Dr. Hochberg said he should not speak specifically about the company. But, he said, I'm excited by the entrants of multiple companies to the BCI field. The engagement of companies will ultimately benefit our patients who have neurological disease or injury.

As for those neurologists who remain leery of a field in which companies like Neuralink are publishing accounts of apparent gains in preprints posted without peer review, a University of Toronto fellow said, essentially, this is a sign of things to come in this burgeoning world of technology.

What we are seeing is a shift to Silicon Valley-style neurotechnology companies that attract venture capital and a lot of talent quickly, said Graeme Moffat, PhD, a former managing editor of Frontiers in Neuroscience who now also runs a company developing non-invasive brain imaging devices.

The pace of iteration in fields that adopt this approachseveral new electronics designs every year and regular software updatesis too fast for journal review cycles. We'll see papers on the long term effects of new BCIs on the brain, but the peer-reviewed scholarly literature is just unsuited to reflecting the rapid innovation in devices like those that Neuralink is building.

Dr. Ganguly has received a one-time consulting fee from Lightside Medical, a medical incubator company. Dr. Stavisky is a scientific advisor to Vorso Corporation and Broad Mind Inc. and has equity in both companies. Dr. Angle owns stock and is employed by Paradromics. Drs. Miller, Bensmaia, and Moffat had no disclosures.

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Brain-Computer Interfaces Move Forward at the Speed of Musk : Neurology Today - LWW Journals

Free sessions on legal and financial issues for those with neurological conditions – Norton Healthcare

The 2020 Neuroscience Expo will host a morning of free online sessions with legal and financial advisers, tailored exclusively to those dealing with a neurological condition and their caregivers.

Living a happy, fulfilling life goes beyond exceptional medical care. It includes caring for the whole person and their day-to-day struggles.

This Norton Neuroscience Institute event gives individuals living with a neurological condition and their family, caregivers, support care providers and others a way to collect valuable information.

Friday, Oct. 23, 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

This years Norton Neuroscience Institute conference will be livestreamed, but space is limited.

Register Today

This years track for legal and financial resources features the following sessions:

Learn how to create a life care plan for you or a loved one.

Jefferey Yussman and Gordon Homes

Living with a disability can be challenging and requires planning for future needs. Youll learn ways you can financially prepare for the future.

Jefferey Yussman and Gordon Homes

If you wanted to know about the importance of having your affairs in order, this presentation will outline the various legal documents that would ensure your peace of mind.

Victor E. Tackett Jr.

Is it time to apply for disability? Where do I begin? Learn the latest on Social Security disability applications and the process of filing a disability claim.

Sam Schad

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Free sessions on legal and financial issues for those with neurological conditions - Norton Healthcare

A Grand Initiative to Improve Coma Care in Disorders of… : Neurology Today – LWW Journals

Article In Brief

The Society of Neurocritical Care has launched a new campaign to encourage research that enables clinicians to better understand not only acute coma but also disorders of consciousness broadly, including patients with altered consciousness. Efforts will also focus on better understanding the anatomical and physiological commonalities across disorders.

In response to huge gaps in the way patients in a coma with disorders of consciousness (DoC) are treated, the Scientific Advisory Council of the Neurocritical Care Society (NCS) has initiated an ambitious initiative, the Curing Coma Campaign, to identify critical areas of research and treatment protocols.

The campaign, described in an August paper in Neurocritical Care, identified three major pillarsthe identification of endotypes, development of biomarkers, and initiation of proof-of-concept trialsas essential to a grand effort that NCS leaders are likening to a moonshot. The campaign aims to jump start research but also to expand the curing coma community to ensure broad participation of clinicians, scientists, and patient advocates with the goal of developing treatments to improve the outcome of patients.

The way we treat coma and disorders of consciousness has not been sufficient, and there are huge gaps in our understanding and in the way, we are caring for patients, said J. Claude Hemphill, MD, FAAN, professor of neurology at the University of California, San Francisco, a lead author of the paper.

We know this is not going to be easy. It's a grand challenge, and it will not be quick. We have set out a ten-year scientific road map recognizing that advances will come incrementally over time.

Dr. Hemphill emphasized that the campaign is aimed at better understanding not only acute coma but also disorders of consciousness broadly, encompassing patients with altered consciousness that may be less complete than coma. And the campaign aims to move beyond the traditional focus on disease-specific DoCcardiac arrest, traumatic brain injury, brainstem stroketo better understand the anatomical and physiological commonalities across disorders.

We have had a lot of failed clinical trials in neurocritical care using a one-size-fits-all approach, Dr. Hemphill said. Instead of saying, `let's study this treatment or clinical approach for this disease-related DoC,' we need to step back and try to understand the fundamental underpinning of all DoC.

Toward that end, The Curing Coma Campaign Scientific Advisory Committee met for the first time in person during the NCS Annual Meeting in Vancouver in October 2019, where the council outlined three overarching, interrelated areas of research necessary to move the field forward: 1) endotypingdeveloping a better understanding of the different types of coma, 2) biomarkersevaluating current tools and their shortcomings in understanding coma and its prognosis, and developing new biomarkers that accurately determine DOC endotypes, and 3) proof-of-concept clinical trialsidentifying early interventional studies to evaluate new treatment protocols and inform clinical trial design.

Dr. Hemphill said the campaign grew out of a 2017 strategic planning meeting of the NCS looking at what they referred to as blue-ocean endeavorsthose research and treatment areas that are under-investigated but which are high-priority because they cut across all of the disorders treated by neurocritical care experts.

It was very clear that the biggest problem we face in neurocritical care is the care of coma and DoC, he said. We deliberately framed the campaign as a grand challenge that would galvanize people across the field to come together and participate.

Dr. Hemphill said the Curing Coma Campaign is not restricted to researchers but actively solicits the participation of the entire community of clinicians, hospitals and health systemsas well as patients and familiesinvolved in neurocritical care. He noted that in September, the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke sponsored a two-day virtual symposium on neurocritical care of DOC. Additionally, NCS is sponsoring World Coma Day on March 22, 2021. He urged researchers, clinicians, and families to visit the Curing Coma Campaign website: https://www.curingcoma.org/home.

The campaign is also sponsoring a survey of clinicians involved in neurocritical carehttps://www.curingcoma.org/research/come-togetherdesigned to inform the coma scientific community about current prevailing concepts of coma and assess the spectrum of practice variability.

In order for the campaign to be successful, it requires a fundamental change in the understanding of coma, and for this, we need to leverage the wider community to participate, Dr. Hemphill told Neurology Today.

He said the ambitiousness of the campaign goals reflects an urgency felt by families and clinicians when a patient with DOC is in the neurocritical care unit: Will they wake up? Can they wake up? What can be done to help them wake up?

The gaps in understating of coma result often in a self-fulfilling prophesy of poor outcomes. There is probably not a single neurocritical care provider who doesn't have a dramatic story of a patient who they thought would never wake up, but after aggressive treatment recovered and did, he said. The problem is that currently, it is very challenging to identify at the time who those patients are going to be.

Experts who reviewed the paper for Neurology Today said the campaign is extraordinary in its visionand long overdue. We are not good at neuro-prognostication, said Gunjan Parikh, MD, associate medical director of the division of neurocritical care and emergency neurology at the University of Maryland.

Care withdrawal based on inadequate data persists, he said. Diagnostic error and misclassification of coma recovery potential in the ICU phase of care remain alarmingly high. Clinical consensus by the medical team after review of imprecise testing remains the primary means by which DoC diagnosis is made.

Dr. Parikh added that the agenda of the campaign is realistic and attainable but will require NCS to partner with public and private organizations already involved in the ongoing NIH BRAIN Initiative. Mapping the brain circuitry underlying consciousness is far more complex and open-ended than mapping the genome, he said. Localized neural circuits can involve one million cells in a complex, recursive network; however, consciousness is an emergent property of a more complex, distributed network of interconnected neural circuitry.

Shraddha Mainali, MD, assistant professor of clinical neurology at Ohio State University, said she believes the goal is ambitious, but not impossible. The authors have rightly pointed out the existing barriers in advancing coma science, she said.

Existing clinical classification of disorders of consciousness does not address distinctions based on underlying biological/pathophysiological mechanisms or functional/anatomical integrity of neural pathways necessary to maintain consciousness, Dr. Mainali added.

We lack biomarkers that can accurately assess severity, functional integrity and related connectivity (or lack thereof) of neural networks. Of the available tools to detect biomarkers, several are not easily available and are difficult to administer in the acute ICU setting. Such limitations in biomarkers and endotyping of individual patients have made it difficult to develop clinical trials in the acute phase of the disease.

Dr. Mainali added that there is wide variability in management, including practice regarding the withdrawal of care of patients with DOC, which accounts for a large proportion of deaths in this population.

The lack of precise biomarkers and prognostic models has led to such variability, as individual treating teams are obligated to come up with their own best estimate of disease severity and prognosis.

Dr. Parikh said a necessary first step is more widespread adoption of validated behavioral assessments in the acute phase. Sufficient behavioral sampling with serial examination after maximal arousal and accounting for all ICU confounders is paramount for progress, he said. Collaboration between intensivists, rehab specialists and physical therapists during the acute ICU phase is key for tracking the progress of arousal potential, whether in the neuro ICU, cardiothoracic ICU or medical ICU.

What are the implications for individual clinicians? A working understanding of bedside decision-support tools leveraging computational workflows that continuously improve coma recovery prediction models, based on real-time ICU data streams in individual patients, will become routine and a part of the competency assessment of future trainees, Dr. Parikh said.

Dr. Hemphill said he is hopeful that the complete net cast by the Curing Coma Campaign will ultimately make this moonshot successful. Some of the advances are going to be from scientific advances, but others from the community coming together and thinking about how to improve care right now with this patientbeing careful about prognostication and targeting aggressive therapies. Advances will also come from educating clinicians about the ability of patients to recover and families about what is and is not possible.

Drs. Hemphill, Parikh, and Mainali had no relevant disclosures.

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A Grand Initiative to Improve Coma Care in Disorders of... : Neurology Today - LWW Journals

So Many Migraine Therapies, So Many Decisions: Here’s How… : Neurology Today – LWW Journals

Article In Brief

Therapy options for patients with migraines have expanded over the past couple of years, with several new drug classes specific to the disorder. Leading migraine experts discuss how they decide to choose one therapy over another.

Treatment options for migraine have expanded considerably over the past two years, with several new classes of targeted, migraine-specific drugs coming to the market.

The expansion of therapies for acute migraine and migraine prevention is welcome news for migraine sufferers, many of whom do not get adequate relief despite trying multiple treatments.

For neurologists and others who treat migraine patients, the new options may provide a clearer rationale for how to approach treatment because, until recently, most of the drugs used for migraine were developed for other conditions such as epilepsy. The newer medications are designed to target pathophysiologic pathways involved in the migraine process in the hope of achieving better pain relief with fewer side effects.

For our patients with migraine, we often have to say, I am going to give you this medicine that was originally created to help seizures (or blood pressure, or depression), and it is going to help your headache, said Rebecca E. Wells, MD, MPH, associate professor of neurology and founder and director of the Comprehensive Headache Program at Wake Forest Baptist Health.

With the new drugs, she now can tell patients how the drug is different and how it targets the pathophysiology of how migraine is working in their brain.

Among the newer class of preventive drugs generating excitement are calcitonin gene-related peptide (CRGP) inhibitors, monoclonal antibodies that block a pathway involved in the migraine process.

There are over 30 million people (in the US) with migraine, and yet only about 40 percent of them get adequate treatment, said Jessica Ailani, MD, FAAN, director of Medstar Georgetown Headache Center and professor of clinical neurology at Medstar Georgetown University Hospital.

She and other migraine experts say the newer migraine drugs aren't a panacea for all patients and don't render obsolete the older, less expensive migraine therapies that work well for many people. But they hope that a broader range of treatments will lead to more people being effectively treated and sticking with their medicines because of fewer side effects.

We are definitely seeing more patients come back to the practice we haven't seen in a while, said Dr. Ailani. Some patients come in saying, I hear there is something new.

Erenumab (Aimovig), fremanezumab (Ajovy), and galcanezumab (Emgality) are humanized monoclonal antibodies that block CGRP by either binding to the CGRP receptor (erenumab) or binding to the CGRP ligand (fremanezumab and galcanezumab).

The injectables are administered every one to three months, depending on the drug. Erenumab carries a warning of possible hypersensitivity reactions, and the drug can also cause severe constipation. Galcanezumab is also approved for cluster headaches.

Epitenezumab (Vyepti), which works by binding to the CGRP ligand, is the first approved intravenous treatment for migraine prevention. It is administered via IV infusion at a clinic every three months. Because the drug was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in February just as the pandemic was taking off in the US, doctors say they have minimal experience in prescribing it.

The clinical trial results submitted to the FDA vary for each of the CGRP therapies, though in general, they are effective for about 50 to 60 percent of patients, Dr. Ailani said. While longer-term effects are not known with the newer migraine drugs, CGRPs come with very few side effects from what we can tell, and they are much better tolerated by patients, she said.

Ubrogepant (Ubrelvy) is the first in a class of oral medications called gepants, a small molecule CGRP receptor antagonist. Ubrogepant was approved in December 2019 for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura. Unlike triptans, the drug works without constricting blood vessels, which means it could be an attractive alternative choice for patients with a history or risk of cardiovascular disease or stroke, Dr. Ailani said.

Rimegepant (Nurtec), another drug in the gepant classa dissolvable tabletwas approved by the FDA in February for acute treatment of migraine. Like ubrogepant, the drug does not constrict blood vessels and likewise could be useful for migraine patients with a history of high blood pressure or stroke, Dr. Ailani said.

Rimegepant has a long half-life of 11 hours and is prescribed once as needed for migraine, Dr. Ailani said. Both of the gepants are processed through the liver and have specific interactions with certain medications, so this is important to take into account when prescribing, she said.

Lasmiditan (Reyvow), the first medication in a new class of migraine drugs called ditans, is approved for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura. Ditans do not cause vasoconstriction, so this drug can be an option for patients with vascular disease who need migraine-specific treatment, Dr. Alaini said.

The drug, which is a serotonin (5-HT)1F receptor agonist, can cause dizziness and sedation, and patients are warned not to drive or operate machinery within eight hours of taking it, even if they feel alert. The drug is a controlled substance.

Dr. Ailani said triptans are still her go-to generics for acute migraine because they are cheaper than the new drugs, and insurance companies cover them. They also have a known track record. She said that typically insurance companies require that patients fail two triptans before switching to a gepant.

Kathleen B. Digre, MD, FAAN, distinguished professor of neurology at the University of Utah, said that even with the bigger tool chest doctors now have to work with, the basic principles of migraine management should remain key to every patient encounter.

The first guiding principle is always make a right diagnosis, Dr. Digre said. That means a careful history and exam to make sure I know what the patient has. Then I look for comorbidities, things that run with migraine, like poor sleep, depression and anxiety, obesity, things that can make migraine worse, she said.

It's also essential to understand patients' expectations, she added. If I am going to talk with them about treatment options, I need to know where they are in their own minds. Are they willing to try a medication, or do they want to consider neuromodulation or do they want a healthy lifestyle approach? They are not going to take something just because you said so, Dr. Digre said.

She said many patients have tried every drug in the book, and may have mistakenly fallen into the category of being a non-responder because they were not on an effective dose of a medicine or only took it on and off as symptoms flared or subsided. Some have experienced intolerable side-effects.

They might have thrown out drugs that might have helped, just because they didn't take them long enough or at the correct dosage, she said.

Dr. Digre said she tends to start treatment with older drugs such as triptans for acute migraine and antihypertensives, tricyclics, or anticonvulsants for prevention because of their known track record and availability in inexpensive generic forms. She said her practice often faces pushback from insurers to pay for the costlier newer drugs.

I try to practice cost-effective medicine, and I am always thinking of cost to the patient and cost to the system, she said. If patients fail two or three classes of generic medications, I am going to advocate for them to get a new CGRP monoclonal therapy.

Randolph W. Evans, MD, FAAN, clinical professor of neurology at Baylor College of Medicine, said there has long been an unmet need for migraine drugs.

We are picking up many of the patients who were formally non- responders, he said, noting that the new medications are also more tolerable for many of our patients.

But even with the new lineup of drugs, there is nothing close to 100 percent for prevention. We still have people who don't respond, and that is the big mystery, he said.

Dr. Evans conducts industry-sponsored educational sessions for primary care doctors on the new migraine therapies, and he said they feel comfortable using the new medications. One limitation in explaining the pros and cons of the various drugs is that we don't have head-to-head studies (of the new migraine drugs) so many times we are driven by insurance coverage, when picking a treatment, Dr. Evans said.

Dr. Evans said the new drugs might prove effective in combined therapy for prevention, in the same way, that older medications are used in combination.

We have been combining Botox with a (CGRP) monoclonal antibody and finding additional efficacy in those who are partial responders to one, he said. There have also been favorable anecdotal reports of rimegepant used in combination with a CGRP monoclonal antibody, he said.

Dr. Wells, of Wake Forest, said that with the broader array of drugs to now choose from, patient education is more important than ever. She said it is hard to thoroughly discuss the many options during the time allotted for a clinical visit, and the similar-sounding names of drugs can be confusing for patients.

In 2018, when the CGRP medications first came on the market, she initiated separate patient education sessions to introduce patients to their possible treatment choices before their appointments. The sessions were at first held in person, but to increase access and availability, they are now available online.

Surveys before and after the sessions showed that not only were they helpful for improving patient understanding of the new medications, the online format was also as effective as the in-person sessions, Dr. Wells said. She said the separate educational sessions help improve clinic flow.

Dr. Wells said the overall message that she tries to convey to patients, no matter their ultimate treatment choice, is that migraine is a complex neurologic disease and it's not something that is just in their head.

Deborah I. Friedman, MD, MPH, FAAN, professor of neurology and ophthalmology at UT Southwestern Medical Center, said the ability to take migraine prevention medicine with a monthly or quarterly injection or instead of daily oral medication is a welcome switch for some patients.

We know the adherence rate for oral medications, both preventive and acute, is very poor, she said. Eighty percent of people who get a prescription for a migraine drug are not on it at the end of the year.

But Dr. Friedman said that one of the things she's gleaned from her clinical practice is that even though migraine therapy overall has benefited from the addition of the CGRPs, patience is still required.

When these drugs first came out, there was a mistaken impression that they would work very quickly for everyone, she said. While many patients do report a decline in headache in the first three months, as was shown in clinical testing, one of the things we've learned is that you have to give patients a five to six-month trial to make sure they have time to respond.

Dr. Digre had no relevant disclosures. Dr. Ailani has received honoraria from- Allergan/Abbvie, Biohaven, Axsome, Lundbeck, Amgen, Eli Lilly, Teva, Impel, Satsuma, and Revance. Dr. Friedman serves on the advisory board of Allergan, BioBiohaven Pharmaceuticals, Eli Lilly, Impel, Invex, Lundbeck, Merck, Revance, Teva, Theranica, and Zosano. She has received grant support from Allergan and Merck. Dr. Evans has received fees for serving on the speakers' bureau for Allergan, Amgen, Biohaven, Eli Lilly, Novartis, and Teva.

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Expanding access to the world’s top medical minds – MIT News

Earlier this year, a little girl was struggling with a neurological condition that caused her to have 20 to 30 seizures a day. Her parents were working with a neurologist on a treatment plan, but they wanted a second opinion. Rather than trying to find a far-away, top-rated neurologist to get an appointment with, they used the services of InfiniteMD, a company that virtually connects patients and their families with some of the top medical specialists in the world.

Through the service, a leading pediatric neurologist reviewed a summary of the girls medical records and advised a different medication. Today, the girl is nearly seizure-free and is being weaned off some of her previous treatments. The parents report their daughter is now regaining the ability to eat soft food and is laughing and kicking playfully during bath times.

The breakthrough shows the power of broadening access to the worlds leading medical minds. Thats what InfiniteMD has been doing for the last four years, often with dramatic results.

The company combines a network of top physicians with a platform that pairs patients with specialists, organizes patient files for review, and facilitates connections via video chats or written reports. The consultations can help patients with treatment plans, diagnoses, test results, and more.

Second opinions and expert consults are inherently complex, InfiniteMD co-founder and Chief Operating Officer Christopher Lee PhD 18 says. Someone has a serious diagnosis or disease, then they have 30 minutes or 60 minutes to share everything about their care with a world-leading expert. In order for [the specialist] to be brought onto the same page and create a valuable interaction, there are a million moving parts that need to come together.

Today, nearly 5 million people have access to InfiniteMDs platform, primarily through their employers. The company says that over 70 percent of its consultations lead to a revised treatment plan, and more than a fifth of consultations lead to a revised or corrected diagnosis.

As Covid-19 has increased the demand for telehealth services, InfiniteMDs team has taken steps to bolster its offerings in hopes of further improving access to the worlds top physicians. In August, the company agreed to be acquired by ConsumerMedical, a large organization that helps guide patients through the health care system, among other patient advocacy work.

Right now, we basically say to patients, for example, You shouldnt get this surgery, you should do physical therapy instead, InfiniteMD co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Babak Movassaghi MBA 14 says. But then what? Where should patients go? ConsumerMedical has an algorithm to connect you with the right doctor. They can make an appointment for you, and follow up with you, so [the acquisition] just made sense.

A problem thats personal

Movassaghi had an unconventional path to entrepreneurship, having first enjoyed a 13-year football career in NFL Europe before studying theoretical physics as a graduate student in his home country of Germany. After earning his PhD in medical physics from the University of Utrecht in 2005, he began a career in the health care industry. But a passion for entrepreneurship brought him to MIT, first to participate in the MIT Sloan School of Managements Entrepreneurial Development Program (EDP) in 2011, then as part of the Sloan Fellows program two years later.

While Movassaghi was at Sloan, Lee was beginning his PhD in the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology. The two students decided to team up for an MIT Hacking Medicine event, and went on to pursue various startup ideas throughout their time at MIT.

In 2015, Movassaghis close relative in Europe was diagnosed with cancer. He asked for their medical records, translated them from German to English, and had a contact at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute take a look. The experience sparked an idea that resonated with both founders.

We have immigrant backgrounds, and weve both been lucky to be educated, and weve both been very keen to playing a role for our family and extended family as health care advocates, says Lee, who studied biomedical engineering before coming to MIT. We realized this isnt just a problem that affects us, it affects everyone around the world.

Working on the idea as part of MITs Healthcare Ventures course, the founders pieced together existing services like Zoom to make a prototype. They also brought on a third co-founder, Harvard Medical School trained physician Liz Kwo, who was crucial in building the companys early network of physicians. Kwo initially served as CEO but left the company in 2018.

Although the founders initially focused on helping international patients, they began expanding access to their service in the U.S. through partnerships with large employers and health insurers.

Today about 80 percent of InfiniteMDs cases come from the U.S. The companys network of more than 2,400 medical specialists were chosen based on their affiliations with leading hospitals, their experience, and research publications.

InfiniteMDs software condenses disparate patient medical records into two-page summaries for doctors that can include things like MRIs and ultrasound images. The company can also facilitate collaboration between experts in different medical fields to handle complex cases.

When it comes to connecting patients and doctors, InfiniteMD can schedule live video consultations or, depending on patient preference, the two sides can communicate via asynchronous video snippets or messaging.

Overall, the company has focused on streamlining the telemedicine experience for patients and doctors without losing the value of expert consultations.

For the patients, it couldnt be more simple: Its basically, Hi, I have this, these are my questions, Lee says. On the back end, we have all these different roles for different people to allow thousands of these cases to be managed. Physicians also want it to be super simple. Theyre like patients they barely remember their log-ins. So we made an interface thats also super easy for the physicians.

Making every medical expert local

Movassaghi says InfiniteMDs services have helped people avoid thousands of unnecessary surgeries in the U.S. over the years. One woman, a former Olympic skier, was scheduled to have her leg amputated before a second opinion facilitated by InfiniteMD led to a less life-altering procedure. Today the woman sends the founders pictures of herself hiking.

Covid-19 has changed things dramatically for InfiniteMD as more people prefer virtual consultations instead of hospital visits. With the ConsumerMedical acquisition, the founders, who will be joining the larger company, say they can move from a point solution to a part of a larger service to help patients get the most out of the health care system.

With Covid-19, weve proven a lot of things are possible from home, and so theres going to be an increase in virtual offerings, Lee says. Everything from physical therapy to wellness to simple checkups, all of these are headed in the direction of virtual. The beautiful thing about InfiniteMD is were agnostic in terms of what information is delivered. Were really in the information business, so all of those offerings can be slotted into the IMD platform easily.

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Expanding access to the world's top medical minds - MIT News

The impact of COVID-19 on mental, neurological and substance use services – PAHO/WHO – Pan American Health Organization

Overview

This WHO report of a survey completed by 130 countries during the period June-August 2020 provides information about the extent of disruption to mental, neurological and substance use services due to COVID-19, the types of services that have been disrupted, and how countries are adapting to overcome these challenges.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified mental health as an integral component of the COVID-19 response. Its rapid assessment of service delivery for mental, neurological and substance use (MNS) disorders during the COVID-19 pandemic, on which this report is based, is the first attempt to measure the impact of the pandemic on such services at a global level. The data were collected through a web-based survey completed by mental health focal points at ministries of health between June and August 2020. The questionnaire covered the existence and funding of mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) plans, the presence and composition of MHPSS coordination platforms, the degree of continuation and causes of disruption of different MNS services, the approaches used to overcome these disruptions, and surveillance mechanisms and research on MNS data.

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The impact of COVID-19 on mental, neurological and substance use services - PAHO/WHO - Pan American Health Organization

CSF UCH-L1 Biomarker Predictive of Long-Term Disease Progression in MS – Neurology Advisor

The following article is part of conference coverage from the 8th Joint American Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS) and European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) MSVirtual2020 event. Neurology Advisors staff will be reporting breaking news associated with research conducted by leading experts in neurology. .

Baseline levels of the biomarker ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCH-L1) measured in cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) are predictive of long-term multiple sclerosis (MS) progression, according to study results presented at the 8th Joint American Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ACTRIMS) and European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis (ECTRIMS) MSVirtual2020 event, held September 11-13, 2020.

The development of increasingly powerful MS treatments has highlighted the need for prognostic biomarkers. The investigators of this prospective cohort study sought to compare the long-term prognostic value of 4 proteins found in paired serum and CSF samples collected following MS diagnosis. Study researchers identified 67 patients who had serum collected within 5 years of their first MS symptom onset and with over 15 years of routine clinical follow-up. Using digital immunoassay, Neurofilament light Chain (NfL), Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein (GFAP), Tau, and UCH-L1 levels were measured in serum and CSF samples from participants with MS and matched controls. Study outcomes of biomarker performance evaluated by the researchers consisted of conversion to progressive MS phenotype and achieving greater than or equal to 4 on the Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS).

In 3 of 4 candidate markers, baseline CSF levels were higher in participants with MS compared with controls: NfL (624 vs 277 pg/mL, respectively; P =.0001), GFAP (6900 vs 694 pg/mL, respectively; P <.0001), and Tau (15.4 vs 8.12 pg/mL, respectively; P =.0001). There was no such difference in UCH-L1 levels. In serum samples, differences between MS and control groups, although less noticeable, were found in baseline measures of NfL (10.1 vs 7.3 pg/mL, respectively; P =.0037) and GFAP (68 vs 51 pg/mL, respectively; P =.0011), but not in Tau or UCH-L1 marker levels. In receiver operating characteristic curve analyses, UCH-L1 levels in CSF samples were most predictive of developing an EDSS greater than or equal to 4 after 15 years of follow-up (AUC, 0.72; P =.003), followed by NfL levels in serum (AUC, 0.70; P=.012) and GFAP levels in CSF (AUC, 0.66; P =.03). UCH-L1 levels in CSF were also most predictive of developing a progressive MS phenotype (AUC, 0.69; P =.0097), followed by GFAP levels in CSF (AUC, 0.66; P =.024) and NfL levels in serum (AUC, 0.64; P =.057). Levels of GFAP, Tau, and UCH-L1 in serum samples, as well as Tau levels in CSF samples, were not predictive of a progressive MS phenotype nor an EDSS score of greater than or equal to 4.

Study researchers concluded that baseline CSF UCH-L1 marker levels were associated with long-term outcomes in MS and that this biomarker was more predictive of EDSS worsening and conversion to a progressive phenotype than well-established markers NfL and GFAP.

Visit Neurology Advisors conference section for continuous coverage from the ACTRIMS/ECTRIMS MSVirtual2020 Forum.

Reference

Thebault S, Abdoli M, Fereshtehnejad S, Tessier D, Tabard-Cossa V, Freedman M. Comparison of serum and CSF fluid biomarkers for predicting long term disease progression in MS. Poster presented at: 8th Joint American Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis and European Committee for Treatment and Research in Multiple Sclerosis MSVirtual2020 event; September 11-13, 2020; Abstract P0051.

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CSF UCH-L1 Biomarker Predictive of Long-Term Disease Progression in MS - Neurology Advisor

Outstanding Growth of Neurological Biomarkers Market Trends by Countries, Type and Application | Thermo Fisher, Merck, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Roche -…

The market research report on the Global Neurological Biomarkers market has been carefully curated after studying and observing various factors that determine the growth such as environmental, economic, social, technological and political status of the regions mentioned. Thorough analysis of the data regarding revenue, production, and manufacturers gives out a clear picture of the global scenario of the Neurological Biomarkers market. The data will also help key players and new entrants understand the potential of investments in the Global Neurological Biomarkers Market.

The major vendors covered: Thermo Fisher, Merck, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Roche, QIAGEN, Athena Diagnostics, Myriad RBM, Cisbio Bioassays, Wuxi APP, BGI, Aepodia, Genewiz, Proteome Sciences

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By Type: Proteomics, Genomics, Imaging, Bioinformatics, Others

By Application: Diagnostics, Drug Discovery, Personalized Medicine, Others

The key regions covered in the Neurological Biomarkers market report are: North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, Middle East and Africa.

It also covers key regions (countries), viz, U.S., Canada, Germany, France, U.K., Italy, Russia, China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia, Taiwan, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Vietnam, Mexico, Brazil, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, U.A.E, etc.

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1.It provides valuable insights into the Global Neurological Biomarkers Market.2.Provides information for the years 2020-2026.Important factors related to the market are mentioned.3.Technological advancements, government regulations, and recent developments are highlighted.4.Advertising and marketing strategies, market trends, and analysis are studied in this report.5.Growth analysis and predictions until the year 2026.6.Statistical analysis of the key players in the market is highlighted.7.Extensively researched market overview.

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1.Presenting the current products being sold regionally.2.Looking at technologyin the market and in terms of development.3.Tracing out the improvements that companies are engineering and where these improvements may load within the market.4.Studying how close the industry is responding to the new products in the Global Neurological Biomarkers market.

Important Questions answered in this report are:

1.What was the market size from 2015-2020?2.What will be the market forecast till 2026 and what will be the market forecast in the current year?3.Which segment or region will drive the market growth and why?4.What are the key sustainable strategies adopted by the market players?5.How will the drivers, barriers and challenges affect the market scenario in the coming years?

Other features of the report:

1.Gives a thorough analysis of the key strategies with focus on the corporate structure, R&D methods, localization strategies, production capabilities, sales and performance in various companies.2.Provides valuable insights of the product portfolio, including product planning, development and positioning.3.Analyses the role of key market players and their partnerships, mergers and acquisitions.

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Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis With Key Players, Applications, Trends And Forecasts To 2026 – The Daily Chronicle

IndustryGrowthInsights, the fastest growing market research company, has published a report on the Interventional Neurology Devices market. This market report provides a holistic scope of the market which includes future supply and demand scenarios, changing market trends, high growth opportunities, and in-depth analysis of the future market prospects. The report covers the competitive data analysis of the emerging and prominent players of the market. Along with this, it provides comprehensive data analysis on the risk factors, challenges, and possible new market avenues.

The report has been prepared with the help of a robust research methodology to cover the market in a detailed manner. To publish a top-notch Global Interventional Neurology Devices Market report, the market report has undergone extensive primary and secondary research. The dedicated research team conducted interviews with the delegated industry experts to lay out a complete overview of the market. This market research report covers the product pricing factors, revenue drivers, and growth. Furthermore, it can possibly assist the new entrants and even the existing industry players to tailor a strategic business strategy for their products.

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Impact of COVID-19 to the Interventional Neurology Devices Report

This coronavirus outbreak has led various industry players to change business strategies and innovate their products. Moreover, it has created lucrative opportunities and few fallbacks that has revamped the overall industry. This report has integrated the data influenced by the COVID-19 effect and provided granular analysis on what market segments would play a crucial role in the growth of the Interventional Neurology Devices market. It also includes insights into the successful strategies implemented by the leading players to stay ahead in the competition.

The market research team has been closely monitoring the market since 2015 and has covered the wide spectrum of the market to provide insightful data for the forecast period 2020-2027. IndustryGrowthInsights has provided crucial data in a graphical representation with the help of tables, bar graphs, pie charts, histograms, and infographics. To give a detailed analysis of the market, the market segments have been fragmented into sub-segments. The segments drivers, challenges, and restraints are also considered which is vital for the market growth. Besides this, it also covers the impacts of government regulation policies and regulations on the market.

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5 Reasons to Choose IndustryGrowthInsights to Buy This Market Report

Market Segmentation Covered in the Report

By Product Type

by ProductsCarotid Artery Angioplasty and StentingCarotid Artery StentsEmbolic Protection SystemsBalloon Occlusion DevicesAneurysm Coiling and Embolization DevicesFlow Diversion DevicesLiquid Embolic DevicesEmbolic coilsMicr-Support DevicesMicrocathetersby TechniquesAngioplasty & StentingNeurothrombectomyPre-operative Tumor EmbolizationVertebroplastyStroke Therapy

By Applications

Arteriovenous Malformation and FistulasCerebral AneurysmsSchemic StrokesIntracranial Atherosclerotic Disease

By Regional Analysis

Asia Pacific: China, Japan, India, and Rest of Asia PacificEurope: Germany, the UK, France, and Rest of EuropeNorth America: The US, Mexico, and CanadaLatin America: Brazil and Rest of Latin AmericaMiddle East & Africa: GCC Countries and Rest of Middle East & Africa

Competitive Landscape

The major players of the Interventional Neurology Devices market are:

AbbottDePuy SynthesMedtronicStrykerTerumoAcandisBayerBoston ScientificBiosensors InternationalevonosMerit Medical SystemsMicroPort ScientificNeurosignPenumbraSpiegelbergSurtex Instruments

*Note: Additional companies detailed analysis can be added in the report.

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Table of Content of the Report

Executive Summary

Assumptions and Acronyms Used

Research Methodology

Interventional Neurology Devices Market Overview

Global Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast by Type

Global Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast by Application

Global Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast by Sales Channel

Global Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast by Region

North America Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast

Latin America Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast

Europe Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast

Asia Pacific Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast

Asia Pacific Interventional Neurology Devices Market Size and Volume Forecast by Application

Middle East & Africa Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis and Forecast

Competition Landscape

About the company

IndustryGrowthInsights is the largest aggregator of the market research report in the industry with more than 800 global clients. The company has extensively invested in the research analysts training and programs to keep the analyst tapped with the best industry standards and provide the clients with the utmost experience. Our dedicated team has been collaborating with industry experts to give out the precise data and figures related to the industry. It conducts primary research, secondary research, and consumer surveys to provide an in-depth analysis of the market. The market research firm has worked in several business verticals and has been successful to earn high credentials over time.

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Interventional Neurology Devices Market Analysis With Key Players, Applications, Trends And Forecasts To 2026 - The Daily Chronicle

Cortical Thickness and Plasma Proteins Correlate with… : Neurology Today – LWW Journals

Article In Brief

Workers at the site of the 9-11 World Trade Center (WTC) attacks in 2001 showed a reduction in cortical thickness among cognitively impaired responders both with and without post-traumatic stress disorder. Another investigation identified proteins in plasma that can differentiate between those with only post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), only with mild cognitive impairment, and those with both conditions.

Two large related studies of workers at the site of the 9-11 World Trade Center (WTC) attacks in 2001 showed distinct brain changes and levels of proteins in plasma in those who were cognitively impaired years later. Both studies were described at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference held virtually in July.

In one study, the largest neuroimaging study of the workers to date, researchers observed reduced cortical thickness. The reduction in cortical thickness was observed in cognitively impaired responders both with and without post-traumatic stress disorder, said the study author Sean Clouston, PhD, associate professor of public health at Stony Brook Medicine.

And a second related study involving proteomic analysis of WTC respondersconducted by a group led by Benjamin Luft, MD, director of the Stony Brook World Trade Center Wellness Programidentified proteins in plasma that can differentiate between those with only post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), those only with mild cognitive impairment, and those with both conditions.

Studies have suggested that inhalation of fine particulate matter, such as that at the WTC site, could cause neurodegeneration. No studies had used neuroimaging to assess these responders, but they are at more risk of cognitive impairment than the general population.

In the imaging study, researchers conducted T1-MPRAGE, a kind of MRI on 99 responders, 51 of whom were cognitively unimpaired and 48 who were impairedand calculated cortical thickness in 34 regions of interest.

The gray matter volume for those who were cognitively impaired was 603 cubic centimeters, compared with 629 cubic centimeters for the cognitively unimpaired (p=0.03). Whole-brain average cortical thickness was 2.41 mm among the impaired, compared with 2.48 among the unimpaired (p=0.0003). No differences were found in average cortical thickness when researchers compared PTSD to non-PTSD groups. Significant reductions in cortical thickness were found in 23 of the 34 regions analyzed.

Researchers also compared cortical thickness to the norms seen in the published literature. They found significant reductions among those who were cognitively unimpaired in seven of the regions, with the greatest reductions in the entorhinal cortex. In impaired responders, significant reductions in thickness were in 14 of the 34 regions.

Our healthy World Trade Center responders may also be in the earlier stages of disease in some cases, Dr. Clouston said in his presentation.

In the proteomics study, researchers analyzed plasma from 181 responders34 with PTSD and mild cognitive impairment (MCI), 39 with only PTSD, 27 with only MCI, and 81 controls with neither one. They identified 16 proteins that were associated with PTSD and MCI together, 20 associated with PTSD alone, and 24 associated with MCI alone.

Those associated with both disorders together included Neurocan core protein, Brevican core protein, Cathepsin S, and othersall of which have known correlates in the Alzheimer's and psychiatricand in particular, schizophreniaresearch field, Dr. Clouston said.

The researchers also created a multi-protein composite risk score that was reasonably accurate, identifying PTSD-MCI, PTSD alone, and MCI alone. The areas under the curve for those scores were 0.84, 0.77, and 0.83, respectively.

To our knowledge, the current study was the largest to profile a targeted set of proteins involved in the neurobiologic processes, Dr. Clouston said. The significant associations across these three case-group analyses suggested that shared biological mechanisms may be involved in the two disorders. If findings from the multi-protein composite score are replicated in independent samples, it has the potential to add a new tool to help classify both post-traumatic stress disorder and mild cognitive impairment.

Charles Hall, PhD, professor of epidemiology and public health at Albert Einstein College of Medicine who has studied the neurologic effects of WTC responders, said the findings represent a significant step forward. Up until now, researchers had found cognitive impairment effects that were strongly associated with PTSD. Still, the question remained whether this link was an artifact of the neuropsychological instruments used to assess patients.

These studies are important in that they show that there may be a biological substrate to this, he said. These are not large studies, it's going to require a lot more work, but this certainly should motivate more work.

Much research has been done over the past several years on associations between air pollution and cognition. Still, it has tended to rely on regional ambient air quality measurements that are not very good at quantifying individual levels of exposure, Dr. Hall said. Although the World Trade Center exposure to particulate matter is a much larger exposure than most people would ever see in a lifetime, these findings should encourage researchers to continue that line of research.

Here we have a huge exposure that is showing not just effect on cognition, but a biological substrate for some of the impairment, he said. So as far as the general population is concerned, I think this should stimulate more research in general population cohorts on the effect of particulate matter, with better exposure measures.

Dr. Hall and colleagues recently had a paper accepted to the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health that found that PTSD symptoms mediated the association between WTC exposure and subjective cognitive concerns. In contrast, the Stony Brook findings on cortical thickness found reductions both in those with and without PTSD.

Dr. Hall said the difference might be attributable to the way PTSD was treated in the studies. In his research, PTSD symptoms were considered along a continuum, while in the Stony Brook study, participants were either considered to have PTSD or they weren't.

Marcia Ratner, PhD, a behavioral neuroscientist and toxicologist who studies the neurological effects of occupational exposures, said the studies report interesting results which need to be replicated.

She said there are many potential confounders that were not controlled for in the studies, including comorbid medical conditions and medications taken. She added that PTSD alters levels of neuroactive steroids that can influence memory function. Furthermore, she said, mild cognitive impairment and dementia are stressful, and elevated cortisol levels have been associated with dementia.

A major limitation of this study is that the findings were not related to serum concentrations of cortisol, she said. An important question, she said, is how many patients had received treatment for their symptoms and how many were nave. After breaking groups down by disorder, the sample sizes are small, she added.

In short, she said, the findings from these two studies are interesting, but more work is needed to fully elucidate the relationships between PTSD and CI in this population.

Drs. Clouston, Luft, Hall, and Ratner had no relevant disclosures.

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Cortical Thickness and Plasma Proteins Correlate with... : Neurology Today - LWW Journals

Cortical Plasticity Charted by fMRI and TMS Shows… : Neurology Today – LWW Journals

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A case report, involving a 49-year-old nurse who had lost her left, non-dominant arm below the elbow and underwent allotransplantation, uses both fMRI and transcranial magnetic stimulation to highlight how the brain works to restore cortical representation on a once amputated limb after a hand transplant.

A new paper sheds light on how the brain works to restore cortical representation of a previously amputated limb after a hand transplant.

The study, published online ahead of print in Neurology on August 13, is the first to combine fMRI and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to examine the neurophysiological changes in the somatosensory and primary motor cortices before and after surgery to transplant a human hand.

Prior to the surgery, cortical areas that had once represented the patient's hand were usurped by the biceps. Within a few months of the transplant surgery, howeverand before any restoration of functional capability was evidentthe study found that those cortical regions resumed representation of the hand. Moreover, cortical inhibition levels, which had been low prior to the transplant, gradually approached normal during the months following it.

The restoration of lost inhibition after [a] hand transplant is a sign of functional recovery after transplant, the paper concluded. The finding that cortical plastic changes occurred at early stages suggest that it may drive recovery and is an important factor in successful recovery of function in the transplanted hand.

The paper was coauthored by neurologists and surgeons at the University of Toronto, where the procedure was performed, as well as at the University of Michigan and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

Reduction of cortical inhibition appears to be critical to enabling the plasticity necessary for the brain to shift somatosensory regions, said the senior author of the study Robert Chen, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Toronto and senior scientist at the Krembil Research Institute.

We assume this is a method of the brain to spread representation into the area not being used, Dr. Chen said.

Neuroscientists and surgeons who have previously led studies of cortical changes following hand transplantation said they welcomed the new findings, although some expressed disappointment at the brevity of the report.

I don't believe anyone has previously described imaging of the brain before and after the transplant, said Jon Kaas, PhD, the Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Chair and Distinguished Centennial Professor of Psychology at Vanderbilt University. But, he added, They're so brief about it. It would be much more interesting if they had elaborated more.

The case report involved a 49-year-old nurse who had lost her left, non-dominant arm below the elbow in an automobile accident in 2005. She underwent allotransplantation on January 7, 2016.

Dr. Chen and colleagues conducted a longitudinal study to evaluate cortical plastic changes beginning four months before and up to six months after the surgery. They performed somatosensory mapping using fMRI with electrical cutaneous over the upper arm and thumb. They also conducted TMS mapping to evaluate the changes in motor cortical representation.

The fMRI mapping showed that representation for [the] upper arm on the transplant side was located anterior-laterally compared to the intact side before surgery and moved posterior-medially at 6 months after surgery while that for the intact side was stable over time.

The resting motor threshold stimulus intensity for the biceps, the authors reported, were higher than those for abductor pollicis brevis muscle in the intact arm while the measurements for biceps muscle on the transplant side were similar to those for the intact abductor pollicis brevis muscle before surgery and gradually increased after surgery.

TMS of the biceps muscle on the transplant side showed that it was at a more anterior-lateral location before surgery and moved gradually in the posterior-medial direction after surgery, the study found.

The inhibition between hemispheres was absent before surgery but gradually increased afterward, the paper reported, from the symmetric position of motor hotspots for intact muscle on the transplant side (mirrored point) to the intact side. Short-interval intracortical inhibition on the transplant side was likewise absent before surgery and increased gradually after.

The restoration of lost interhemispheric interaction after surgery suggest that pyramidal neurons mediating transcallosal and corticospinal projections undergo plastic changes in a similar manner although the two groups of neurons located in different cortical layers, the paper concluded. Our finding that cortical inhibition was decreased in the amputated state was consistent with the opinion that gamma-aminobutyric-acid mediated cortical inhibitory circuit acts as a gate keeper in the induction of cortical plasticity.

The short length of the paper, Dr. Chen said, was due to the journal's length limit for the single case report; supplementary information is available at http://bit.ly/corticalSUP.

Steven McCabe, MD, one of the surgeons who performed the transplant, told Neurology Today that the patient has regained substantial use of the hand.

She has good motor recovery with grade 5/5 wrist extension and flexion, Dr. McCabe stated in an email. She has full finger flexion with the exception of the index which has reduced flexion of the metacarpophalangeal joint. She has full finger extension with no claw deformity. She has some sensory recovery with the ability to accurately localize light touch to each digit but no two-point discrimination.

His group is planning to write up a formal five-year report, Dr. McCabe added.

Decades of research have established the brain's plasticity in response to loss or restoration of limbs, first in animals and then in humans. In the 1980s, Dr. Kaas coauthored pioneering papers describing somatosensory reorganization in the non-human primate brain in response to the repair of peripheral nerves which had previously been severed.

In 2009, French researchers published one of the first papers to describe the restoration of hand-muscle representations in the human motor cortex following a hand allograft. A 2014 paper in Nature Communications reported that somatosensory reorganization following spinal cord injury is due not to cortical mechanisms but to changes at the level of the brainstem nuclei.

This new case report supports the growing body of literature on the ability of the brain to reverse plastic reorganization years later, said the senior author of the 2014 paper, Neeraj Jain, PhD, professor and director of the National Brain Research Centre in Manesar, India.

Vilayanur S. Ramachandran MD, PhD, professor of psychology and neurosciences and director of the Center for Brain and Cognition at the University of California, San Diego, said the new paper demonstrates yet again that there are no fixed connections in the brain.

The old model of the brain is fatally flawed, Dr. Ramachandran said. It was once generally assumed that the brain is made of highly specialized, task-specific autonomous modules arranged in a serial hierarchy starting from the sensory modules to the motor output. But in the last two decades it has become clear that we are dealing not with static maps but with dynamic, fluctuating mosaics of neural activitymore like a termite mound than a computer.

William Gaetz, PhD, research associate professor of radiology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, said the new paper was the first to establish a baseline of neural organization prior to the surgery.

That's the nicest part of the study, that they had a baseline and then followed up after, said Dr. Gaetz, who was the first author of a 2018 paper describing cortical reorganization following bilateral hand transplant in a child. It is an impressive demonstration of large-scale reorganization, and particularly interesting to see from someone in their late forties.

Dr. Gaetz expressed concern, however, about the risk-benefit ratio of performing an allotransplant on the non-dominant hand of a person who was not previously on anti-rejection drugs. The child described in his 2018 paper had lost both hands due to sepsis and was already on anti-rejection drugs following a kidney transplant.

You have to balance any benefit with the costs, which are not trivial, Dr. Gaetz said. Immunosuppressive drugs increase the risk of cancer and infection. And we know that transplanted organs tend to degrade after a decade or so. This recipient will likely outlive her transplant. She had been living with full function of her right, dominant hand, and so we have to think about the ethical justification of performing a procedure that may not significantly improve quality of life for this patient.

Dr. Chen said that the patient had been deeply troubled by the loss of her hand, was fully informed of all the risks, and is now very happy with the results. Press reports published six months after the surgery was performed quoted her as saying the surgery had made her feel whole again.

Dr. Chen has received honorarium from Allergen, Merz, and Ipsen. Drs. Gaetz, Kaas, and Jain had no relevant disclosures.

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UB researcher co-chairs international panel that revised, expanded guidance for caring for patients with myasthenia gravis – UB Now: News and views…

A UB researcher recently co-led a panel of 16 international experts on myasthenia gravis (MG) to revise and expand recommendations for managing the disease. Their paper was published in the journal Neurology on Nov. 3.

Gil I. Wolfe, Irvin and Rosemary Smith Chair of the Department of Neurology in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB and president of UBMD Neurology, served as co-chair of the panel. He also co-chaired the same panel in 2016 when the guidelines were originally developed.

The new guidance for clinicians is based on the latest evidence in the literature. This updated formal consensus guidance provides recommendations to clinicians caring for MG patients worldwide.

Some wealthy countries have established their own guidelines, but most of the world cannot do that, Wolfe says.The international panel, using the UCLA/RAND Appropriateness Methodology to achieve a formal consensus, hopes to fill that void, providing a treatment/management framework for health care providers, industry, insurers and the patient community.

MG is a rare autoimmune disease affecting neuromuscular function. As many as 60,000 Americans have been diagnosed with MG, and its incidence is increasing as a result of improved diagnostic techniques and an aging population. Symptoms of MG include droopy eyelids; blurred or double vision; difficulty speaking, swallowing and breathing; and muscle weakness.

One of the main revisions to the recommendations encourages thymectomy (surgical removal of the thymus gland) in the largest subpopulation of MG patients. This change is based on a clinical trial for which Wolfe was the principal investigator. Results of that trial were published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2016 and in The Lancet Neurology in 2019.

A new recommendation was also developed for the use of eculizimab, a complement inhibitor that is the first FDA-approved immunotherapy for MG.

The panel also revised recommendations for the use of rituximab and methotrexate, as well as for early immunosuppression in ocular MG and MG associated with immune checkpoint inhibitor treatment.

In addition, there are some warnings in the recommendations pertaining to worsening MG clinical status in regard to certain therapies that have been touted for use in COVID-19, Wolfe says.

A list of panel participants and their institutions is available in the paper.

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UB researcher co-chairs international panel that revised, expanded guidance for caring for patients with myasthenia gravis - UB Now: News and views...

Interventional Neurology Device Market 2021 Industry Scenario, Strategies, Growth Factors And Forecast 2025 | Medtronic, Johnson and Johnson, Terumo…

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Global Minimally Invasive Neurology Device Market Is Anticipated To Witness Major Revenue Uplift During The Forecast Period 2020-2026| Reportspedia -…

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Explained: Coronavirus impact on our brain what research says on types of damage, whos more vulnerable – The Indian Express

By: Explained Desk | New Delhi | Updated: October 14, 2020 7:24:43 pmResearchers also conclude that encephalopathy (a broad term used for diseases that alter brain structure and function) was found to be associated with increased mortality and morbidity. (Photo: AP)

Two recent studies have explored the neurological effects of COVID-19 on patients. While a research published in the journal Neurology has pointed out the various neurological manifestations, another published in the Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology says that neurologic manifestations were present in nearly a third of the COVID-19 patients studied.

What does the new research tell us?

The first study, published in Neurology, was conducted across 11 hospitals and included 64 patients, out of which 43 were men and 21 were women. The median age of the patients was 66. Out of these, the MRIs of 36 patients (54 per cent) were considered abnormal and ischemic strokes, (27 per cent), leptomeningeal enhancement (17 per cent) and encephalitis (13 per cent) were the most common neuroimaging findings.

Confusion was the most common neurologic manifestation experienced by 53 per cent of the patients, followed by impaired consciousness (39 per cent), presence of clinical signs of corticospinal tract involvement (31 per cent), agitation (31 per cent) and headache (16 per cent).

Significantly, half of the patients considered for this study had acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), while 11 per cent died.

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The second study examined neurological manifestations in over 509 patients in a hospital network in Chicago, Illinois. This study found neurological manifestations in 215 patients (42.2 per cent) at the onset of the disease, in 319 patients (62.7 per cent) at hospitalisation, and at any time during the course of the disease in 419 patients (82.3 per cent).

As per the study, the most frequent neurologic manifestations were myalgias (44.8 per cent), headaches (37.7 per cent), encephalopathy (31.8 per cent), dizziness (29.7 per cent), dysgeusia (15.9 per cent), and anosmia (11.4 per cent). Further, the researchers found that strokes and movement disorders were uncommon among this cohort of patients, while 26.3 per cent of the patients required mechanical ventilation.

Significantly, researchers say that independent risk factors for developing neurological manifestations include severe COVID-19 and younger age.

Also in Explained | Should you get yourself tested for Covid-19 just to rule it out?

So what does this mean?

The findings from the first study imply that patients with COVID-19 can develop a wide range of neurologic manifestations, which may be associated with severe and fatal complications such as stroke and encephalitis.

On the other hand, the findings from the second study imply that neurologic manifestations occur in most hospitalised COVID-19 patients. Researchers also conclude that encephalopathy (a broad term used for diseases that alter brain structure and function) was found to be associated with increased mortality and morbidity, independent of disease severity.

As per a report in The New York Times, only 32 per cent of the patients with altered mental function in the second study were able to handle routine daily activities like cooking and paying bills.

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Explained: Coronavirus impact on our brain what research says on types of damage, whos more vulnerable - The Indian Express