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Reply: Is postural tachycardia syndrome a psychogenic disorder?; Notes on establishing fear conditioning as causal in the postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome; Patients with POTS fear that data on abnormal haemodynamic physiology have been ignored; and 'Psychogenic' POTS: the NYU team misinterprets association as causation

Norcliffe-Kaufmann, Lucy; Palma, Jose Alberto; Kaufmann, Horacio
PMID: 36151960
ISSN: 1460-2156
CID: 5335842

Patient-Reported Symptoms in the Global Multiple System Atrophy Registry

Palma, Jose-Alberto; Krismer, Florian; Meissner, Wassilios G; Kuijpers, Mechteld; Millar-Vernetti, Patricio; Perez, Miguel A; Fanciulli, Alessandra; Norcliffe-Kaufmann, Lucy; Bower, Pam; Wenning, Gregor K; Kaufmann, Horacio
Background/UNASSIGNED:The Global Multiple System Atrophy Registry (GLOMSAR) was established in 2013. It is an online patient-reported contact registry open and free that relies on self-reported diagnosis by the patient or caregiver. Objectives/UNASSIGNED:To report the demographics of patients enrolled in GLOMSAR and the results of an ancillary online symptom questionnaire. Methods/UNASSIGNED:Patients enrolled in GLOMSAR were invited to complete a custom-designed online questionnaire about disease onset and symptom prevalence. Results/UNASSIGNED:At the time of writing, there were 1083 participants in GLOMSAR, of which 33% (365) completed the questionnaire. The onset and frequency of most symptoms was similar to those reported in the literature in physician-reported studies. Some were understudied or not typically associated with multiple system atrophy (MSA), including reduced female sexual sensation (55%), forgetfulness (60%), pseudobulbar affect (37%), olfactory changes (36%), and visual hallucinations (21%). Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:Patient-reported studies and ancillary online questionnaires are valid, underused research tools useful to advance our knowledge on understudied MSA features and highlight the patients' voice.
PMCID:9547130
PMID: 36247899
ISSN: 2330-1619
CID: 5360142

Views on Memory and Treatment of Cognitive Impairment in 17th-Century Spain: Juan Gutiérrez de Godoy's Work

Palma, Jose-Alberto; Palma, Fermin
Memory and its care were significant sociocultural and scientific topics in early modern Spain. While a major interest in memory was related to its rhetorical implications, medical treatises discussing memory, cognitive impairment, and its treatment began to appear in the 16th- and 17th-century. Among these treatises, Disputationes phylosophicæ ac medicæ super libros Aristotelis de memoria, et reminiscentia (Philosophical and medical arguments on Aristotle's "De memoria et reminiscentia"), published in 1629 by the physician Juan Gutiérrez de Godoy, is unique in that it is entirely devoted to the medical aspects of memory. While many of its concepts are now superseded, the treatise is valuable to understand the views on memory and cognitive impairment in 17th-century Spain and their sources, as Gutiérrez quoted many classical, medieval, and contemporary scholars and physicians. The book, written in Latin, is exclusively devoted to memory from a physiological and medical point of view, with chapters on the classification of memory loss, a description of its causes (including old age, something not widely recognized before), and several chapters on its prevention and treatment, with a fascinating emphasis on confectio anacardina, or anacardium, an intranasal concoction made with the "marking nut", the fruit of the Semecarpus anacardium tree (also known as Malacca bean), with alleged memory-enhancing properties. We review Gutiérrez's Disputationes phylosophicæ, putting it into the wider intellectual and social context in the Europe of its time, and discuss the relevance and purported neuropharmacological effects of anacardina.
PMID: 35794022
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 5280452

Multiple system atrophy

Poewe, Werner; Stankovic, Iva; Halliday, Glenda; Meissner, Wassilios G; Wenning, Gregor K; Pellecchia, Maria Teresa; Seppi, Klaus; Palma, Jose-Alberto; Kaufmann, Horacio
Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a rare neurodegenerative disease that is characterized by neuronal loss and gliosis in multiple areas of the central nervous system including striatonigral, olivopontocerebellar and central autonomic structures. Oligodendroglial cytoplasmic inclusions containing misfolded and aggregated α-synuclein are the histopathological hallmark of MSA. A firm clinical diagnosis requires the presence of autonomic dysfunction in combination with parkinsonism that responds poorly to levodopa and/or cerebellar ataxia. Clinical diagnostic accuracy is suboptimal in early disease because of phenotypic overlaps with Parkinson disease or other types of degenerative parkinsonism as well as with other cerebellar disorders. The symptomatic management of MSA requires a complex multimodal approach to compensate for autonomic failure, alleviate parkinsonism and cerebellar ataxia and associated disabilities. None of the available treatments significantly slows the aggressive course of MSA. Despite several failed trials in the past, a robust pipeline of putative disease-modifying agents, along with progress towards early diagnosis and the development of sensitive diagnostic and progression biomarkers for MSA, offer new hope for patients.
PMID: 36008429
ISSN: 2056-676x
CID: 5331772

Diagnosis and treatment of orthostatic hypotension

Wieling, Wouter; Kaufmann, Horacio; Claydon, Victoria E; van Wijnen, Veera K; Harms, Mark P M; Juraschek, Stephen P; Thijs, Roland D
Orthostatic hypotension is an unusually large decrease in blood pressure on standing that increases the risk of adverse outcomes even when asymptomatic. Improvements in haemodynamic profiling with continuous blood pressure measurements have uncovered four major subtypes: initial orthostatic hypotension, delayed blood pressure recovery, classic orthostatic hypotension, and delayed orthostatic hypotension. Clinical presentations are varied and range from cognitive slowing with hypotensive unawareness or unexplained falls to classic presyncope and syncope. Establishing whether symptoms are due to orthostatic hypotension requires careful history taking, a thorough physical examination, and supine and upright blood pressure measurements. Management and prognosis vary according to the underlying cause, with the main distinction being whether orthostatic hypotension is neurogenic or non-neurogenic. Neurogenic orthostatic hypotension might be the earliest clinical manifestation of Parkinson's disease or related synucleinopathies, and often coincides with supine hypertension. The emerging variety of clinical presentations advocates a stepwise, individualised, and primarily non-pharmacological approach to the management of orthostatic hypotension. Such an approach could include the cessation of blood pressure lowering drugs, adoption of lifestyle measures (eg, counterpressure manoeuvres), and treatment with pharmacological agents in selected cases.
PMID: 35841911
ISSN: 1474-4465
CID: 5278502

The Movement Disorder Society Criteria for the Diagnosis of Multiple System Atrophy

Wenning, Gregor K; Stankovic, Iva; Vignatelli, Luca; Fanciulli, Alessandra; Calandra-Buonaura, Giovanna; Seppi, Klaus; Palma, Jose-Alberto; Meissner, Wassilios G; Krismer, Florian; Berg, Daniela; Cortelli, Pietro; Freeman, Roy; Halliday, Glenda; Höglinger, Günter; Lang, Anthony; Ling, Helen; Litvan, Irene; Low, Phillip; Miki, Yasuo; Panicker, Jalesh; Pellecchia, Maria Teresa; Quinn, Niall; Sakakibara, Ryuji; Stamelou, Maria; Tolosa, Eduardo; Tsuji, Shoji; Warner, Tom; Poewe, Werner; Kaufmann, Horacio
BACKGROUND:The second consensus criteria for the diagnosis of multiple system atrophy (MSA) are widely recognized as the reference standard for clinical research, but lack sensitivity to diagnose the disease at early stages. OBJECTIVE:To develop novel Movement Disorder Society (MDS) criteria for MSA diagnosis using an evidence-based and consensus-based methodology. METHODS:We identified shortcomings of the second consensus criteria for MSA diagnosis and conducted a systematic literature review to answer predefined questions on clinical presentation and diagnostic tools relevant for MSA diagnosis. The criteria were developed and later optimized using two Delphi rounds within the MSA Criteria Revision Task Force, a survey for MDS membership, and a virtual Consensus Conference. RESULTS:The criteria for neuropathologically established MSA remain unchanged. For a clinical MSA diagnosis a new category of clinically established MSA is introduced, aiming for maximum specificity with acceptable sensitivity. A category of clinically probable MSA is defined to enhance sensitivity while maintaining specificity. A research category of possible prodromal MSA is designed to capture patients in the earliest stages when symptoms and signs are present, but do not meet the threshold for clinically established or clinically probable MSA. Brain magnetic resonance imaging markers suggestive of MSA are required for the diagnosis of clinically established MSA. The number of research biomarkers that support all clinical diagnostic categories will likely grow. CONCLUSIONS:This set of MDS MSA diagnostic criteria aims at improving the diagnostic accuracy, particularly in early disease stages. It requires validation in a prospective clinical and a clinicopathological study. © 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
PMID: 35445419
ISSN: 1531-8257
CID: 5206282

Movement disorder society criteria for the diagnosis of multiple system atrophy-what's new? [Editorial]

Lamotte, Guillaume; Kaufmann, Horacio
PMID: 35633428
ISSN: 1619-1560
CID: 5248112

mTOR Inhibition with Sirolimus in Multiple System Atrophy: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Futility Trial and 1-Year Biomarker Longitudinal Analysis

Palma, Jose-Alberto; Martinez, Jose; Millar Vernetti, Patricio; Ma, Thong; Perez, Miguel A; Zhong, Judy; Qian, Yingzhi; Dutta, Suman; Maina, Katherine N; Siddique, Ibrar; Bitan, Gal; Ades-Aron, Benjamin; Shepherd, Timothy M; Kang, Un J; Kaufmann, Horacio
BACKGROUND:Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease characterized by the aggregation of α-synuclein in glia and neurons. Sirolimus (rapamycin) is an mTOR inhibitor that promotes α-synuclein autophagy and reduces its associated neurotoxicity in preclinical models. OBJECTIVE:To investigate the efficacy and safety of sirolimus in patients with MSA using a futility design. We also analyzed 1-year biomarker trajectories in the trial participants. METHODS:Randomized, double-blind, parallel group, placebo-controlled clinical trial at the New York University of patients with probable MSA randomly assigned (3:1) to sirolimus (2-6 mg daily) for 48 weeks or placebo. Primary endpoint was change in the Unified MSA Rating Scale (UMSARS) total score from baseline to 48 weeks. (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03589976). RESULTS:The trial was stopped after a pre-planned interim analysis met futility criteria. Between August 15, 2018 and November 15, 2020, 54 participants were screened, and 47 enrolled and randomly assigned (35 sirolimus, 12 placebo). Of those randomized, 34 were included in the intention-to-treat analysis. There was no difference in change from baseline to week 48 between the sirolimus and placebo in UMSARS total score (mean difference, 2.66; 95% CI, -7.35-6.91; P = 0.648). There was no difference in UMSARS-1 and UMSARS-2 scores either. UMSARS scores changes were similar to those reported in natural history studies. Neuroimaging and blood biomarker results were similar in the sirolimus and placebo groups. Adverse events were more frequent with sirolimus. Analysis of 1-year biomarker trajectories in all participants showed that increases in blood neurofilament light chain (NfL) and reductions in whole brain volume correlated best with UMSARS progression. CONCLUSIONS:Sirolimus for 48 weeks was futile to slow the progression of MSA and had no effect on biomarkers compared to placebo. One-year change in blood NfL and whole brain atrophy are promising biomarkers of disease progression for future clinical trials. © 2022 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.
PMID: 35040506
ISSN: 1531-8257
CID: 5131432

The Clinical Autonomic Research journal 2021 and onward [Editorial]

Kaufmann, Horacio; Jordan, Jens
PMCID:8727978
PMID: 34985586
ISSN: 1619-1560
CID: 5107152

Stress and the baroreflex

Norcliffe-Kaufmann, Lucy
The stress response to emotions elicits the release of glucocorticoids from the adrenal cortex, epinephrine from the adrenal medulla, and norepinephrine from the sympathetic nerves. The baroreflex adapts to buffer these responses to ensure that perfusion to the organs meets the demands while maintaining blood pressure within a within a narrow range. While stressor-evoked autonomic cardiovascular responses may be adaptive for the short-term, the recurrent exaggerated cardiovascular stress reactions can be maladaptive in the long-term. Prolonged stress or loss of the baroreflex's buffering capacity can predispose episodes of heightened sympathetic activity during stress leading to hypertension, tachycardia, and ventricular wall motion abnormalities. This review discusses 1) how the baroreflex responds to acute and chronic stressors, 2) how lesions in the neuronal pathways of the baroreflex alter the ability to respond or counteract the stress response, and 3) the techniques to assess baroreflex sensitivity and stress responses. Evidence suggests that loss of baroreflex sensitivity may predispose heightened autonomic responses to stress and at least in part explain the association between stress, mortality and cardiovascular diseases.
PMID: 35086020
ISSN: 1872-7484
CID: 5137072