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Although several studies have demonstrated benefits of interferon beta in relapsing-remitting MS, effects in other forms of the disease have not been fully examined. Panitch et al. report the North American study of interferon beta-1b in secondary progressive MS, which showed no effect of treatment on the primary endpointprogression of disability. However, treatment significantly decreased relapses, active MRI lesions, and accumulation of disease burden of MRIs.
see page 1788
Kappos et al. examined possible reasons why these results differed from another large controlled study of the same agent and nearly identical design. In a combined analysis they found an overall risk reduction for confirmed disease progression by about 20% and explored characteristics that would allow identifying responders. At least one relapse and change in EDSS by >1 point in the 2 years prior to study entry were the only predictors of a positive treatment response that were consistently identified in both studies.
see page 1779
In the accompanying editorial, Cohen and Antel discuss the implications of these studies. These include well-known cautions against comparing across studies and new hypotheses about the role of inflammatory and degenerative processes in MS progression.
see page 1768
IMPA2 haplotype associated with febrile seizures
Nakayama et al. identified a novel febrile seizure (FS) locus on chromosome 18p11.2 in a genome-wide linkage screen of 48 Japanese nuclear families with FS. Subsequent genetic association analysis suggested that variants in IMPA2 (myo-inositol monophosphatase 2), a gene in the 18p linkage region, may confer susceptibility to FS.
see page 1803
In the accompanying editorial, Winawer and Hesdorffer review the epidemiology of FS and evidence for a genetic contribution to FS susceptibility. They describe the five chromosomal regions implicated by genetic linkage studies to harbor FS susceptibility genes (FEB1-FEB5), as well as genes responsible for syndromes with heterogenous phenotypes that include FS, such as GEFS+ and SMEI. Most genes implicated in human idiopathic seizure disorders have been ion channel and receptor genes. The IMPA2 candidate suggests a novel mechanism for seizure susceptibility.
see page 1770
Brain reorganization from cortical malformations
A magnetoencephalographic study by Burneo et al. found evidence of brain reorganization with respect to malformations of cortical development. Reorganization was specific to dysplastic and not simple migration disturbances unless the malformation involved large areas of absent cortical development. In these cases, complete transhemispheric reorganization was evident.
see page 1818
Magnetoencephalography (MEG): Reorganization of language-specific cortex
Pataraia et al. examined brain activation profiles for receptive language function in 21 patients with left hemisphere lesions and 23 patients with left mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTS). Results indicated an increased probability for interhemispheric reorganization of the brain mechanism for receptive language function in MTS patients. Space-occupying lesions were primarily associated with atypical location of the language-specific cortex within the dominant (left) hemisphere.
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see page 1825
The editorial by Shih and Cohen that accompanies these articles notes that it is firmly established that the adult CNS is capable of adaptive changes and substantial cortical reorganization leading to recovery of function. Mechanisms include dendritic growth, synaptogenesis, changes in synaptic efficiency (i.e., long-term potentiation or depression), and reorganizational changes in body part representations. Cortical plasticity can be enhanced by interventions such as training protocols, pharmacologic interventions, and possibly brain stimulation. MEG can detect an area of cortical activation and accurately track the subsequent activation of functionally connected cortical regions over time. However, before one ascribes too much significance to MEG activation maps, we need to better understand the specific functional role of activated regions, their contribution to task performance or function recovery, and their significance in terms of the activity (excitatory vs inhibitory).
see page 1772
Reversible lesions in the splenium
Tada et al. reported 15 patients with a reversible lesion in the splenium of the corpus callosum. Homogenously reduced diffusion was observed in 7/7 patients who had DWI. The clinical features were similar: altered consciousness in all with seizures in at least 7 patients. Complete clinical recovery occurred within a month and the MRI lesion resolved.
see page 1854
Cholesterol associated stroke risk varies in subgroups
This case-control study by Tirschwell and N.L. Smith found that higher total and lower HDL cholesterol levels were associated with increased risk of ischemic stroke, especially for large artery and lacunar subtypes. These associations appear more important in young patients, those with low HDL, non-diabetics, and those without atrial fibrillation. The lowest levels of total cholesterol were associated with an increased risk of hemorrhagic stroke.
see page 1868
Being overweight and brain atrophy
Gustafson et al. provide further evidence that being overweight through mid- and late-life is not good for brain health in women. Higher body mass index was shown to be related to the occurrence of temporal lobe atrophy over a 32-year follow-up period.
see page 1876
Blood patch in spontaneous intracranial hypotension
Berroir et al. showed that spontaneous intracranial hypotension with typical orthostatic headache can be diagnosed without performing lumbar puncture or identifying a cerebrospinal fluid leak and can be cured by early epidural blood patch in 77% of patients.
see page 1950
Sirolimus: Less neurotoxicity
The calcineurin inhibitors cyclosporin and tacrolimus often have major neurotoxicity. Maramattom and Wijdicks reviewed over 200 transplant recipients treated with sirolimus. Neurotoxicity was not encountered.
see page 1958
Cortical myoclonus and MECP2 gene
Leuzzi et al. provide evidence for the cortical origin of myoclonus in a male with MECP2 gene alteration. The lack of cortical hyperexcitability suggests a severe derangement of transcortical synaptic connectivity.
see page 1968
Frequency-specific mal de debarquement
Richard F. Lewis found that mal de debarquementa feeling of persistent movement that follows passive motioncan reflect aberrant adaptation depending on the dynamics of the preceding movement.
see page 1983
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