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Anterior temporal lobectomy for older adults with mesial temporal sclerosis

Moura, Lidia M V R; Eskandar, Emad N; Hassan, Mursal; Salinas, Joel; Cole, Andrew J; Hoch, Daniel B; Cash, Sydney S; Hsu, John
OBJECTIVE:To compare postoperative seizure-free survival between older and younger adults. METHODS:A retrospective cohort of 107 temporal lobe epilepsy patients with a diagnosis of mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS) received anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) between 1993 and 2014. We divided the lower three quartiles (younger) and top quartile (older, all 47+ years) of patients, then reviewed patient registry and electronic medical records to determine time to first self-reported seizure after ATL, the primary outcome (mean=3.5years of follow-up, SD=3.6). We also assessed Engel classifications, intraoperative and postoperative treatment complications, and social disability. We used Cox proportional hazard models to assess the association between individual traits and time of seizure recurrence. RESULTS:During follow-up, 35/107 (32.7%) patients had post-operative seizure(s). After adjustment for potential confounders there were no significant differences in the probability of post-operative seizures between the older and younger groups, though we had limited precision (hazard ratio of 0.67 [0.28-1.59]), (p=0.36). There were more treatment complications and disability in older patients (18% vs. 1.3% for any complications, 84.62% vs. 58.23% for driving disability, and 84.6% vs. 60.7% for work disability, p<0.05). CONCLUSION:Older patients appear to have more complications after ATL, compared with younger patients. Age, however, does not appear to have a large independent association with seizure recurrence.
PMID: 27760412
ISSN: 1872-6844
CID: 4347282

Happiness, health, and mortality [Comment]

Kubzansky, Laura D; Kim, Eric S; Salinas, Joel; Huffman, Jeff C; Kawachi, Ichiro
PMID: 27397787
ISSN: 1474-547x
CID: 4347272

An International Standard Set of Patient-Centered Outcome Measures After Stroke

Salinas, Joel; Sprinkhuizen, Sara M; Ackerson, Teri; Bernhardt, Julie; Davie, Charlie; George, Mary G; Gething, Stephanie; Kelly, Adam G; Lindsay, Patrice; Liu, Liping; Martins, Sheila C O; Morgan, Louise; Norrving, Bo; Ribbers, Gerard M; Silver, Frank L; Smith, Eric E; Williams, Linda S; Schwamm, Lee H
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Value-based health care aims to bring together patients and health systems to maximize the ratio of quality over cost. To enable assessment of healthcare value in stroke management, an international standard set of patient-centered stroke outcome measures was defined for use in a variety of healthcare settings. METHODS:A modified Delphi process was implemented with an international expert panel representing patients, advocates, and clinical specialists in stroke outcomes, stroke registers, global health, epidemiology, and rehabilitation to reach consensus on the preferred outcome measures, included populations, and baseline risk adjustment variables. RESULTS:Patients presenting to a hospital with ischemic stroke or intracerebral hemorrhage were selected as the target population for these recommendations, with the inclusion of transient ischemic attacks optional. Outcome categories recommended for assessment were survival and disease control, acute complications, and patient-reported outcomes. Patient-reported outcomes proposed for assessment at 90 days were pain, mood, feeding, selfcare, mobility, communication, cognitive functioning, social participation, ability to return to usual activities, and health-related quality of life, with mobility, feeding, selfcare, and communication also collected at discharge. One instrument was able to collect most patient-reported subdomains (9/16, 56%). Minimum data collection for risk adjustment included patient demographics, premorbid functioning, stroke type and severity, vascular and systemic risk factors, and specific treatment/care-related factors. CONCLUSIONS:A consensus stroke measure Standard Set was developed as a simple, pragmatic method to increase the value of stroke care. The set should be validated in practice when used for monitoring and comparisons across different care settings.
PMID: 26604251
ISSN: 1524-4628
CID: 4347252

Factors Associated With New-Onset Depression After Stroke

Salinas, Joel; Beiser, Alexa; Himali, Jayandra J; Rosand, Jonathan; Seshadri, Sudha; Dunn, Erin C
To better identify stroke survivors at risk for depression who may benefit from early prevention through targeted strategies in the acute-subacute poststroke period, we examined 118 Framingham Heart Study stroke survivors with longitudinal prestroke depression assessments. Among those who developed poststroke depression, most lacked a history of depressive symptoms 5 years prior to their stroke. Sex (female), advanced age, and prestroke factors (smoking and functional dependence) were associated with new-onset depression poststroke. These findings suggest fully characterizing and accounting for prestroke factors, including psychosocial and behavioral determinants, may inform the predictive modeling needed to determine whether targeted preventive trials early in stroke recovery will improve stroke outcomes.
PMCID:5474200
PMID: 27056020
ISSN: 1545-7222
CID: 4347262

Clinical Reasoning: A 56-year-old man with cognitive impairment and difficulty tying his necktie [Case Report]

Baker, Jessica M; Salinas, Joel; Berkowitz, Aaron L
PMCID:4617166
PMID: 26459946
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 4347242

The value of a weekly newsletter in neurology

Brizzi, Kate; Wang, Nancy; Batra, Ayush; Salinas, Joel; Samuels, Martin A
PMID: 25476169
ISSN: 1474-7766
CID: 4347232

Autonomy and the "demanding encounter" in clinical neurology

Salinas, Joel; Courtwright, Andrew
We describe a case of psychogenic nonepileptic seizures as an example of what has been called the demanding encounter in clinical neurology. Patients in these encounters are more likely to see themselves as informed consumers who expect to receive requested diagnostic tests and treatments from health care providers, potentially creating a conflict over treatment goals and appropriate limit setting. Demanding encounters are associated with physician burnout and patient dissatisfaction. We survey some of the ethical frameworks introduced to navigate this type of encounter. We argue that physicians are obligated to identify the underlying beliefs that are leading to requests for unnecessary testing and treatment and that, by addressing these beliefs, providers have the best chance of establishing a respectful, meaningful therapeutic relationship with their patients.
PMCID:5764445
PMID: 29443191
ISSN: 2163-0402
CID: 4347332

Sex differences in parietal lobe structure and development

Salinas, Joel; Mills, Elizabeth D; Conrad, Amy L; Koscik, Timothy; Andreasen, Nancy C; Nopoulos, Peg
Structural magnetic resonance imaging studies provide evidence for sex differences in the human brain. Differences in surface area and the proportion of gray to white matter volume are observed, in particular in the parietal lobe. To our knowledge, no studies have examined sex differences in parietal lobe structure in younger populations or in the context of development. The present study evaluated sex differences in the structure of the parietal lobe in children aged 7 to 17 years. In addition, by adding a cohort of previously studied adults aged 18 to 50 years, sex differences in parietal lobe structure were examined across the age span of 7 to 50 years. Compared with the adult sample, the younger sample showed that the ratio of parietal lobe cortex to white matter was greater in female brains, but no sex differences in surface area. When examining the effects of age, surface area exhibited a significant sex-age interaction. In male brains, there was essentially no decrease in surfaces area over time, whereas in female brains, there was a significant decrease in surface area over time. These findings support the notion of structural sex differences in the parietal lobe, not only in the context of cross-sectional assessment but also in terms of differences in developmental trajectories.
PMCID:3326392
PMID: 22333522
ISSN: 1878-7398
CID: 4347222