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person:berica01
Transcranial electrical and magnetic stimulation
Beric A
PMID: 8279314
ISSN: 0091-3952
CID: 13328
Function of the conus medullaris and cauda equina in the early period following spinal cord injury and the relationship to recovery of detrusor function
Beric, A; Light, J K
A total of 26 patients with an early suprasacral spinal cord injury underwent comprehensive neurourological evaluation to determine if there was any correlation between the return of detrusor function and neural function of the sacral cord. In addition, the incidence of a subclinical sacral neural dysfunction early after spinal cord injury was assessed. Lumbosacral evoked potentials to tibial nerve stimulation were used to assess the sensory root and cord gray matter of the L5 to S2 segments, while urodynamic evaluation was performed to assess detrusor function. Of those patients with normal lumbosacral evoked potentials 82% recovered detrusor contractility as opposed to 66% with abnormal evoked potentials. Four patients (23.5%) had persistent detrusor areflexia when studied 9 to 20 months following the acute injury. The potential problems attempting to correlate the neurophysiological and urodynamic studies are multiple and are extensively discussed. Despite these potential problems the return of detrusor function correlated well with associated normal lumbosacral evoked potentials suggesting that this test can be used in the early phase following spinal cord injury to predict return of bladder function, since it is independent of the level of spinal cord excitability. Of the patients studied 38% had coexistence of an occult lumbosacral dysfunction. This rate is higher than that found in the chronic stabilized spinal cord injury population (20.5%), since the cases in our study may represent a more severe lesion.
PMID: 1433618
ISSN: 0022-5347
CID: 3888482
Facilitation of motor evoked potentials by somatosensory afferent stimulation
Deletis V; Schild JH; Beric A; Dimitrijevic MR
The effect of an electrically induced peripheral afferent volley upon electrical and magnetic motor evoked potentials (MEPs) from muscles of the upper and lower extremities was studied in 16 healthy volunteers. A standard conditioning-test (C-T) paradigm was employed whereby the test stimulus (transcranial electric or magnetic) was applied at random time intervals, from 10 msec prior to 90 msec after the conditioning stimulus (peripheral nerve stimulus). MEP amplitude facilitation was observed for the majority of the upper extremity muscles tested at two distinct periods, one occurring at short, and the other at long C-T intervals. This bimodal trend of MEP facilitation was found to be equally as prominent in the lower extremity muscles tested. The period of short C-T interval facilitation is consistent with modifications in the spinal excitability of the segmental motoneuron pool. On the other hand, the period of long C-T interval facilitation is suggested to be due to alterations in excitability of the motor cortex as a result of the arrival of the orthodromic sensory volley. Although most pronounced in muscles innervated by the nerve to which the conditioning stimulus was applied, this bimodal facilitatory effect was also observed in adjacent muscles not innervated by the stimulated nerve. Qualitatively, the conditioned MEPs from the upper and lower extremities responded similarly to both electrical and magnetic trans-cranial stimulation. In addition, our study demonstrates that the C-T paradigm has potential for use in the assessment of spinal and cortical sensorimotor integration by providing quantitative information which cannot be obtained through isolated assessment of sensory and/or motor pathways.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
PMID: 1385090
ISSN: 0013-4694
CID: 13423
VENTROPOSTEROLATERAL MEDIAL PALLIDOTOMY IN THE TREATMENT OF PARKINSONS-DISEASE [Meeting Abstract]
FAZZINI, E; DOGALI, M; BERIC, A; EIDELBERG, D; GIANUTSOS, J; KAY, T; NEWMAN, B; LOFTUS, S; SAMELSON, D; LAITINEN, L
ISI:A1992JH16200208
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 741872
Effects of intrathecal baclofen on lumbosacral and cortical somatosensory evoked potentials [Case Report]
Kofler, M; Donovan, W H; Loubser, P G; Beric, A
We analyzed lumbosacral and cortical somatosensory evoked potentials in three spinal cord injury patients undergoing evaluation of intrathecal baclofen infusion for management of spasticity. The cauda equina propagating root wave (R wave) and conus medullaris postsynaptic responses (S and P waves) were analyzed before and during baclofen infusion. Baclofen abolished the concomitantly recorded H-reflex and markedly suppressed the P wave amplitude and area. The S wave amplitude and area were suppressed to a lesser degree. In contrast, there were no significant changes in cortical somatosensory evoked potentials.
PMID: 1565243
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 559322
Sensory abnormalities and dysaesthesias in the anterior spinal artery syndrome [Case Report]
Triggs, W J; Beric, A
We present three patients with a nontraumatic cervical anterior spinal artery syndrome, two of whom developed painful burning dysaesthesias below the level of spinal cord lesion, refractory to opiate, anticonvulsant and tricyclic antidepressant therapy. Quantitative sensory testing and neurophysiological assessment showed absence of pain and temperature sensation below the level of the lesion, with preservation of light touch, vibratory and position sensibilities and cortical somatosensory evoked potentials in all three patients. Dysaesthesias in both affected patients were exacerbated by somatosensory input attributed to intact posterior column function. Posterior column electrical stimulation worsened the dysaesthesias in one affected patient, and was ineffective in the other. Both patients affected with dysaesthesias showed significant improvement in motor function and developed clinical spasticity, while the third patient developed neither dysaesthesias nor spasticity, but remained flaccid without motor improvement, suggesting a more complete lesion of anterolateral spinal pathways. These cases illustrate that lesions of the anterolateral spinal cord may lead to the development of dysaesthesias, perhaps related in part to selective neospinothalamic deafferentation and preservation of the posterior columns.
PMID: 1559153
ISSN: 0006-8950
CID: 559312
Experiences with multiple subpial cortical transections for the control of intractable epilepsy in exquisite cortex
Dogali, M.; Devinsky, O.; Luciano, D.; Perrine, K.; Beric, A.
BCI:BCI199344077082
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 741882
Pain in spinal cord injury with occult caudal lesions
Beric, A; Dimitrijevic, MR; Light, JK
SCOPUS:0026600533
ISSN: 0939-6365
CID: 565092
Electrically evoked long loop responses (LLR): normative data for upper and lower extremities
Deletis V; Beric A
Long loop responses can be obtained repeatedly in all neurologically healthy subjects with low variability of onset and peak latencies. Long loop responses showed characteristic features separate from microreflexes of Bickford. Normative data will help us to elucidate the characteristic alterations of these reflexes in different pathologies which involve somatosensory pyramidal and extrapyramidal systems
PMID: 2606069
ISSN: 0301-150x
CID: 45723
Peripheral afferents of H-reflex and long latency responses [Meeting Abstract]
Deletis V; Beric A; Dimitrijevic MR
ORIGINAL:0005251
ISSN: n/a
CID: 55899