Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:gonzaa13

in-biosketch:true

Total Results:

79


Skin Biopsy Detection of Phosphorylated α-Synuclein in Patients With Synucleinopathies

Gibbons, Christopher H; Levine, Todd; Adler, Charles; Bellaire, Bailey; Wang, Ningshan; Stohl, Jade; Agarwal, Pinky; Aldridge, Georgina M; Barboi, Alexandru; Evidente, Virgilio G H; Galasko, Douglas; Geschwind, Michael D; Gonzalez-Duarte, Alejandra; Gil, Ramon; Gudesblatt, Mark; Isaacson, Stuart H; Kaufmann, Horacio; Khemani, Pravin; Kumar, Rajeev; Lamotte, Guillaume; Liu, Andy J; McFarland, Nikolaus R; Miglis, Mitchell; Reynolds, Adam; Sahagian, Gregory A; Saint-Hillaire, Marie-Helene; Schwartzbard, Julie B; Singer, Wolfgang; Soileau, Michael J; Vernino, Steven; Yerstein, Oleg; Freeman, Roy
IMPORTANCE/UNASSIGNED:Finding a reliable diagnostic biomarker for the disorders collectively known as synucleinopathies (Parkinson disease [PD], dementia with Lewy bodies [DLB], multiple system atrophy [MSA], and pure autonomic failure [PAF]) is an urgent unmet need. Immunohistochemical detection of cutaneous phosphorylated α-synuclein may be a sensitive and specific clinical test for the diagnosis of synucleinopathies. OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To evaluate the positivity rate of cutaneous α-synuclein deposition in patients with PD, DLB, MSA, and PAF. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS/UNASSIGNED:This blinded, 30-site, cross-sectional study of academic and community-based neurology practices conducted from February 2021 through March 2023 included patients aged 40 to 99 years with a clinical diagnosis of PD, DLB, MSA, or PAF based on clinical consensus criteria and confirmed by an expert review panel and control participants aged 40 to 99 years with no history of examination findings or symptoms suggestive of a synucleinopathy or neurodegenerative disease. All participants completed detailed neurologic examinations and disease-specific questionnaires and underwent skin biopsy for detection of phosphorylated α-synuclein. An expert review panel blinded to pathologic data determined the final participant diagnosis. EXPOSURE/UNASSIGNED:Skin biopsy for detection of phosphorylated α-synuclein. MAIN OUTCOMES/UNASSIGNED:Rates of detection of cutaneous α-synuclein in patients with PD, MSA, DLB, and PAF and controls without synucleinopathy. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:Of 428 enrolled participants, 343 were included in the primary analysis (mean [SD] age, 69.5 [9.1] years; 175 [51.0%] male); 223 met the consensus criteria for a synucleinopathy and 120 met criteria as controls after expert panel review. The proportions of individuals with cutaneous phosphorylated α-synuclein detected by skin biopsy were 92.7% (89 of 96) with PD, 98.2% (54 of 55) with MSA, 96.0% (48 of 50) with DLB, and 100% (22 of 22) with PAF; 3.3% (4 of 120) of controls had cutaneous phosphorylated α-synuclein detected. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE/UNASSIGNED:In this cross-sectional study, a high proportion of individuals meeting clinical consensus criteria for PD, DLB, MSA, and PAF had phosphorylated α-synuclein detected by skin biopsy. Further research is needed in unselected clinical populations to externally validate the findings and fully characterize the potential role of skin biopsy detection of phosphorylated α-synuclein in clinical care.
PMCID:10955354
PMID: 38506839
ISSN: 1538-3598
CID: 5640572

Diagnosis and treatment of hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis with polyneuropathy in the United States: Recommendations from a panel of experts

Karam, Chafic; Mauermann, Michelle L; Gonzalez-Duarte, Alejandra; Kaku, Michelle C; Ajroud-Driss, Senda; Brannagan, Thomas H; Polydefkis, Michael
Hereditary transthyretin (ATTRv; v for variant) amyloidosis is a rare, multisystem, progressive, and fatal disease in which polyneuropathy is a cardinal manifestation. Due to a lack of United States (US)-specific guidance on ATTRv amyloidosis with polyneuropathy, a panel of US-based expert clinicians convened to address identification, monitoring, and treatment of this disease. ATTRv amyloidosis with polyneuropathy should be suspected in unexplained progressive neuropathy, especially if associated with systemic symptoms or family history. The diagnosis is confirmed through genetic testing, biopsy, or cardiac technetium-based scintigraphy. Treatment should be initiated as soon as possible after diagnosis, with gene-silencing therapeutics recommended as a first-line option. Consensus is lacking on what represents "disease progression" during treatment; however, the aggressive natural history of this disease should be considered when evaluating the effectiveness of any therapy.
PMID: 38174864
ISSN: 1097-4598
CID: 5633122

Diagnosis and treatment of hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis with polyneuropathy in the United States: Recommendations from a panel of experts

Karam, Chafic; Mauermann, Michelle L.; Gonzalez-Duarte, Alejandra; Kaku, Michelle C.; Ajroud-Driss, Senda; Brannagan, Thomas H.; Polydefkis, Michael
Hereditary transthyretin (ATTRv; v for variant) amyloidosis is a rare, multisystem, progressive, and fatal disease in which polyneuropathy is a cardinal manifestation. Due to a lack of United States (US)-specific guidance on ATTRv amyloidosis with polyneuropathy, a panel of US-based expert clinicians convened to address identification, monitoring, and treatment of this disease. ATTRv amyloidosis with polyneuropathy should be suspected in unexplained progressive neuropathy, especially if associated with systemic symptoms or family history. The diagnosis is confirmed through genetic testing, biopsy, or cardiac technetium-based scintigraphy. Treatment should be initiated as soon as possible after diagnosis, with gene-silencing therapeutics recommended as a first-line option. Consensus is lacking on what represents "disease progression" during treatment; however, the aggressive natural history of this disease should be considered when evaluating the effectiveness of any therapy.
SCOPUS:85181244883
ISSN: 0148-639x
CID: 5630342

Meropenem-Induced Facial Myoclonus [Case Report]

Millar Vernetti, Patricio; Dalamo, Kaia; Khan, Zenith; Gonzalez-Duarte, Alejandra; Frucht, Steven; Kaufmann, Horacio
PMCID:10448627
PMID: 37636233
ISSN: 2330-1619
CID: 5618502

Global & Community Health: Implementation of and Patient Satisfaction With the First Neurologic Telemedicine Program in Mexico During COVID-19

Domínguez-Moreno, Rogelio; García-Grimshaw, Miguel; Chávez-Martínez, Oswaldo Alan; Rebolledo-García, Daniel; Diestel-Bautista, Jarumi Crystal; Michel-Chávez, Anaclara; Calderón-Martínez, Juan Andrés; Tristán-Samaniego, Dioselina Panamá; Vigueras-Hernández, Alma; Estrada-Rodríguez, Humberto; Vega-Boada, Felipe Arturo; Dávila-Maldonado, Luis; Tanimoto-Licona, Miguel Ángel; Cantú-Brito, Carlos; González-Duarte, Alejandra
PMID: 34045275
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 4930672

Neurological manifestations temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection in pediatric patients in Mexico

Sánchez-Morales, Areli Estela; Urrutia-Osorio, Marta; Camacho-Mendoza, Esteban; Rosales-Pedraza, Gustavo; Dávila-Maldonado, Luis; González-Duarte, Alejandra; Herrera-Mora, Patricia; Ruiz-García, Matilde
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To describe the temporal association of specific acute neurological symptoms in pediatric patients with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection between May and August 2020. METHODS:We performed a recollection of all the clinical and laboratory data of patients having acute neurological symptoms temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection at a third-level referral hospital in Mexico City (Instituto Nacional de Pediatría). Patients in an age group of 0-17 years with acute neurological signs (including ascending weakness with areflexia, diminished visual acuity, encephalopathy, ataxia, stroke, or weakness with plasma creatinine kinase (CK) elevation) were evaluated. RESULTS:Out of 23 patients with neurological manifestations, 10 (43%) had a confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. Among the infected patients, 5 (50%) were males aged 2-16 years old (median age 11.8 years old). Four (40%) patients confirmed a close contact with a relative positive for SARS-CoV-2, while 6 (60%) cases had a history of SARS-CoV-2-related symptoms over the previous 2 weeks. The following diagnoses were established: 3 cases of GBS, 2 of ON, 2 of AIS, one of myositis with rhabdomyolysis, one ACA, and one of anti-NMDA-R encephalitis. CONCLUSIONS:Neurological manifestations temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection were noticed in the pediatric population even without respiratory symptoms. In this study, 2 of 6 symptomatic patients had mild respiratory symptoms and 4 had unspecific symptoms. During this pandemic, SARS-CoV-2 infection should be considered as etiology in patients with acute neurological symptoms, with or without previous respiratory manifestations, particularly in teenagers.
PMCID:7943407
PMID: 33751228
ISSN: 1433-0350
CID: 4930652

Amyloid A amyloidosis secondary to immunoglobulin G4-related disease [Case Report]

Wisniowski-Yáñez, Andrea; Zavala-García, Gerardo; Hernández-Molina, Gabriela; González-Duarte, Alejandra; Delgado-de la Mora, Jesús; Ángeles-Ángeles, Arturo; Martín-Nares, Eduardo
PMID: 33040142
ISSN: 1462-0332
CID: 4930572

Long-term safety and efficacy of patisiran for hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis with polyneuropathy: 12-month results of an open-label extension study

Adams, David; Polydefkis, Michael; González-Duarte, Alejandra; Wixner, Jonas; Kristen, Arnt V; Schmidt, Hartmut H; Berk, John L; Losada López, Inés Asunción; Dispenzieri, Angela; Quan, Dianna; Conceição, Isabel M; Slama, Michel S; Gillmore, Julian D; Kyriakides, Theodoros; Ajroud-Driss, Senda; Waddington-Cruz, Márcia; Mezei, Michelle M; Planté-Bordeneuve, Violaine; Attarian, Shahram; Mauricio, Elizabeth; Brannagan, Thomas H; Ueda, Mitsuharu; Aldinc, Emre; Wang, Jing Jing; White, Matthew T; Vest, John; Berber, Erhan; Sweetser, Marianne T; Coelho, Teresa
BACKGROUND:Hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis is a rare, inherited, progressive disease caused by mutations in the transthyretin (TTR) gene. We assessed the safety and efficacy of long-term treatment with patisiran, an RNA interference therapeutic that inhibits TTR production, in patients with hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis with polyneuropathy. METHODS:This multicentre, open-label extension (OLE) trial enrolled patients at 43 hospitals or clinical centres in 19 countries as of Sept 24, 2018. Patients were eligible if they had completed the phase 3 APOLLO or phase 2 OLE parent studies and tolerated the study drug. Eligible patients from APOLLO (patisiran and placebo groups) and the phase 2 OLE (patisiran group) studies enrolled in this global OLE trial and received patisiran 0·3 mg/kg by intravenous infusion every 3 weeks with plans to continue to do so for up to 5 years. Efficacy assessments included measures of polyneuropathy (modified Neuropathy Impairment Score +7 [mNIS+7]), quality of life, autonomic symptoms, nutritional status, disability, ambulation status, motor function, and cardiac stress, with analysis by study groups (APOLLO-placebo, APOLLO-patisiran, phase 2 OLE patisiran) based on allocation in the parent trial. The global OLE is ongoing with no new enrolment, and current findings are based on the interim analysis of the patients who had completed 12-month efficacy assessments as of the data cutoff. Safety analyses included all patients who received one or more dose of patisiran up to the data cutoff. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02510261. FINDINGS:Between July 13, 2015, and Aug 21, 2017, of 212 eligible patients, 211 were enrolled: 137 patients from the APOLLO-patisiran group, 49 from the APOLLO-placebo group, and 25 from the phase 2 OLE patisiran group. At the data cutoff on Sept 24, 2018, 126 (92%) of 137 patients from the APOLLO-patisiran group, 38 (78%) of 49 from the APOLLO-placebo group, and 25 (100%) of 25 from the phase 2 OLE patisiran group had completed 12-month assessments. At 12 months, improvements in mNIS+7 with patisiran were sustained from parent study baseline with treatment in the global OLE (APOLLO-patisiran mean change -4·0, 95 % CI -7·7 to -0·3; phase 2 OLE patisiran -4·7, -11·9 to 2·4). Mean mNIS+7 score improved from global OLE enrolment in the APOLLO-placebo group (mean change from global OLE enrolment -1·4, 95% CI -6·2 to 3·5). Overall, 204 (97%) of 211 patients reported adverse events, 82 (39%) reported serious adverse events, and there were 23 (11%) deaths. Serious adverse events were more frequent in the APOLLO-placebo group (28 [57%] of 49) than in the APOLLO-patisiran (48 [35%] of 137) or phase 2 OLE patisiran (six [24%] of 25) groups. The most common treatment-related adverse event was mild or moderate infusion-related reactions. The frequency of deaths in the global OLE was higher in the APOLLO-placebo group (13 [27%] of 49), who had a higher disease burden than the APOLLO-patisiran (ten [7%] of 137) and phase 2 OLE patisiran (0 of 25) groups. INTERPRETATION:In this interim 12-month analysis of the ongoing global OLE study, patisiran appeared to maintain efficacy with an acceptable safety profile in patients with hereditary transthyretin-mediated amyloidosis with polyneuropathy. Continued long-term follow-up will be important for the overall assessment of safety and efficacy with patisiran. FUNDING:Alnylam Pharmaceuticals.
PMID: 33212063
ISSN: 1474-4465
CID: 4930612

Neurologic manifestations in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 in Mexico City

Flores-Silva, Fernando Daniel; García-Grimshaw, Miguel; Valdés-Ferrer, Sergio Iván; Vigueras-Hernández, Alma Poema; Domínguez-Moreno, Rogelio; Tristán-Samaniego, Dioselina Panamá; Michel-Chávez, Anaclara; González-Duarte, Alejandra; Vega-Boada, Felipe A; Reyes-Melo, Isael; Jiménez-Ruiz, Amado; Chávez-Martínez, Oswaldo Alan; Rebolledo-García, Daniel; Marché-Fernández, Osvaldo Alexis; Sánchez-Torres, Samantha; García-Ramos, Guillermo; Cantú-Brito, Carlos; Chiquete, Erwin
BACKGROUND:The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a systemic entity that frequently implies neurologic features at presentation and complications during the disease course. We aimed to describe the characteristics and predictors for developing in-hospital neurologic manifestations in a large cohort of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 in Mexico City. METHODS:We analyzed records from consecutive adult patients hospitalized from March 15 to June 30, 2020, with moderate to severe COVID-19 confirmed by reverse transcription real-time polymerase chain reaction (rtRT-PCR) for the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Neurologic syndromes were actively searched by a standardized structured questionnaire and physical examination, confirmed by neuroimaging, neurophysiology of laboratory analyses, as applicable. RESULTS:We studied 1,072 cases (65% men, mean age 53.2±13 years), 71 patients had pre-existing neurologic diseases (diabetic neuropathy: 17, epilepsy: 15, history of ischemic stroke: eight, migraine: six, multiple sclerosis: one, Parkinson disease: one), and 163 (15.2%) developed a new neurologic complication. Headache (41.7%), myalgia (38.5%), dysgeusia (8%), and anosmia (7%) were the most common neurologic symptoms at hospital presentation. Delirium (13.1%), objective limb weakness (5.1%), and delayed recovery of mental status after sedation withdrawal (2.5%), were the most common new neurologic syndromes. Age, headache at presentation, preexisting neurologic disease, invasive mechanical ventilation, and neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio ≥9 were independent predictors of new in-hospital neurologic complications. CONCLUSIONS:Even after excluding initial clinical features and pre-existing comorbidities, new neurologic complications in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 are frequent and can be predicted from clinical information at hospital admission.
PMCID:8031187
PMID: 33831042
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 4930662

COVID-19-related diffuse posthypoxic leukoencephalopathy and microbleeds masquerades as acute necrotizing encephalopathy

Tristán-Samaniego, Dioselina Panamá; Chiquete, Erwin; Treviño-Frenk, Irene; Rubalcava-Ortega, Johnatan; Higuera-Calleja, Jesús Antonio; Romero-Sánchez, Griselda; Espinoza-Alvarado, Lissett; Barrera-Vargas, Ana; Flores-Silva, Fernando; González-Duarte, Alejandra; Vega-Boada, Felipe; Cantú-Brito, Carlos
BACKGROUND/UNASSIGNED:The complications of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the clinical entity caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), are not limited to the respiratory system. Leukoencephalopathy with microbleeds is increasingly seen in patients with COVID-19. New information is needed to delineate better the clinical implications of this infectious disease. CASE REPORT/UNASSIGNED:A 46-year-old man with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) with severe COVID-19. After transfer to the general wards, the patient was noted drowsy, disorientated, with slow thinking and speech. A brain MRI showed bilateral symmetrical hyperintense lesions in the deep and subcortical whiter matter, involving the splenium of the corpus callosum, as well as multiple microhemorrhages implicating the splenium and subcortical white matter. No contrast-enhanced lesions were observed in brain CT or MRI. CSF analysis showed no abnormalities, including a negative rtRT-PCR for SARS-CoV-2. An outpatient follow-up visit showed near-complete clinical recovery and resolution of the hyperintense lesions on MRI, without microbleeds change. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:We present the case of a survivor of severe COVID-19 who presented diffuse posthypoxic leukoencephalopathy, and microbleeds masquerading as acute necrotizing encephalopathy. We postulate that this kind of cerebral vasogenic edema with microbleeds could be the consequence of hypoxia, inflammation, the prothrombotic state and medical interventions such as mechanical ventilation and anticoagulation.
PMID: 33332158
ISSN: 1563-5279
CID: 4930622