Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

Department/Unit:Neurology

Total Results:

24309


Bridging the diagnostic gap: Expanding dementia care navigation for timely diagnosis

Carriere, Lucille; Minyo, Morgan; Bass, David; Possin, Katherine L; Samper-Ternent, Rafael; Salinas, Joel; Deaner, Nicole
Over half of dementia cases remain undiagnosed, with persistent disparities across racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups. Dementia care navigation (DCN) has demonstrated value in post-diagnosis settings. If implemented earlier, DCN could address diagnostic delays and care gaps. We define the diagnostic window as the period from initial symptom awareness through diagnosis and early care planning. Drawing on deliberations from the Alzheimer's Association Dementia Care Navigation Roundtable, we present a pre-diagnosis DCN framework organized across six domains and describe navigator roles across three phases: pre-evaluation, diagnostic assessment, and immediate post-diagnosis and transition. We address special considerations, including people without a care partner and those with unmet care needs. The framework complements federal initiatives such as the Guiding an Improved Dementia Experience (GUIDE) Model and the National Alzheimer's Project Act and identifies existing reimbursement pathways for pre-diagnostic navigation activities. Generating evidence to refine these models across diverse settings will be essential to inform policy action and system-level integration.
PMCID:13284736
PMID: 42324989
ISSN: 1552-5279
CID: 6055152

A Phase-2 Open-Label Trial of Cannabidiol to Treat Core and Associated Symptoms of Autism in Children and Adolescents Without Intellectual Disability

Lawson, Jacqueline; Robinson, Lauren; Conlon, Greta R; Shalev, Rebecca A; Cervantes, Paige E; Yoncheva, Yuliya; Hirsch, Glenn S; Troxel, Andrea B; Friedman, Daniel; Devinsky, Orrin; Castellanos, Francisco Xavier
OBJECTIVE:To evaluate cannabidiol (CBD) in pediatric patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), fluent verbal language and an estimated full-scale IQ of 80 or above. BACKGROUND:Preliminary evidence suggests CBD may ameliorate challenges associated with ASD. Whether CBD benefits pediatric ASD without accompanying intellectual or language impairment remains unknown. METHODS:, 100 mg/mL) at 3, 6, or 9 mg/kg/day using a Bayesian optimal interval dosing design. The primary endpoint was the CBD dose associated with the highest response rate (i.e., Clinical Global Impression Scale-Improvement [CGI-I] score = 1 or 2) on a target symptom domain designated individually based on informant report, standardized scales, and clinical observation. Secondary endpoints were effect sizes of changes from baseline in measures assessing ASD core and associated symptoms, and global functioning. Adverse events (AEs) were assessed weekly. Plasma CBD levels and clinical labs were obtained at the final visit. RESULTS:= 1.36, 95% CI [0.78-1.93]).Of 222 reported AEs, 27 unique AEs were considered treatment-related. Most AEs (93%) were mild and expected (82%); none was severe. The most frequent related AEs were increased salivation (30%), increased sleep duration (39%), sleepiness/sedation (26%), increased dream activity (35%), and polyuria (22%). Vital signs, physical exams, weight, liver function tests, and complete blood counts were unaffected. CBD plasma levels did not correlate with response. CONCLUSIONS:In this preliminary study, CBD was well tolerated; AEs were mild-moderate. Mean SRS2-T and subscores decreased significantly with large effect sizes, shifting from the severe to the moderate range. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION/BACKGROUND:ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT03900923.
PMID: 42204954
ISSN: 1557-8992
CID: 6055082

Dynamic Angiography Demonstrating Discogenic Bow Hunter Syndrome

Sharashidze, Vera; Shapiro, Maksim; Nossek, Erez; Ruffino, Luca; Raz, Eytan
PMID: 42330130
ISSN: 1524-4628
CID: 6055332

Research priorities for advancing mental health in elite sport: a companion to the IOC consensus statement on mental health in elite athletes

Kroshus-Havril, Emily; Reardon, Claudia L; Gouttebarge, Vincent; Aron, Cindy Miller; Bahr, Roald; Blauwet, Cheri; Castaldelli-Maia, João Mauricio; Cheng, Camille; Currie, Alan; Derevensky, Jeffrey Lee; Edwards, Carla; Fussek, Sarah; Gorczynski, Paul; Grandner, Michael A; Han, Doug Hyun; Hitchcock, Mary E; Lu, Frank; Massey, Andrew; McDuff, David; Mountjoy, Margo; Purcell, Rosemary; Putukian, Margot; Rice, Simon M; Sloan, Scott; Soligard, Torbjørn; Sundgot-Borgen, Jorunn Kaiander; Swartz, Leslie; Thornton, Jane S; Tshube, Tshepang; Hainline, Brian
PMID: 42331600
ISSN: 1473-0480
CID: 6055412

Optic nerve involvement in multiple sclerosis diagnosis - Authors' reply [Letter]

Saidha, Shiv; Green, Ari J; Balcer, Laura; Calabresi, Peter A; ,
PMID: 42309078
ISSN: 1474-4465
CID: 6049942

IL-6 Receptor Blockade as Rescue Therapy in Acute Attacks of MOGAD and AQP4+NMOSD

Vilaseca, Andreu; Bilodeau, Philippe-Antoine; Lotan, Itay; Hellmann, Mark; Jiang, Mulan; Chen, John J; Pittock, Sean J; Levy, Michael; Flanagan, Eoin P; Kister, Ilya
PMCID:13270297
PMID: 42295768
ISSN: 2168-6157
CID: 6049452

Substance use patterns in elite athletes: a scoping review of alcohol, performance-enhancing drugs and other psychoactive substances

Castaldelli-Maia, João Mauricio; Ayalla Rodrigues, André; Mannes, Zachary L; Smith, Alexander; Liebrenz, Michael; Gouttebarge, Vincent; Hainline, Brian; Reardon, Claudia L; McDuff, David
OBJECTIVE:To systematically map and synthesise the scientific literature on substance use patterns among elite athletes, encompassing recreational substances, performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) and polysubstance use. DESIGN/METHODS:This study was a scoping review conducted in accordance with the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodological framework and reported following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines. The review protocol was prospectively registered on the Open Science Framework. DATA SOURCES/METHODS:A comprehensive search was conducted in PubMed/MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Scopus and SportDiscus from inception to March 2025. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA FOR SELECTING STUDIES/METHODS:Eligible studies were peer-reviewed original research articles examining substance use, misuse or substance use disorders among elite athletes, including collegiate, professional, Olympic, Paralympic or national-level competitors. Both recreational substances (eg, alcohol, cannabis, nicotine, prescription drugs) and PEDs were included. RESULTS:From 3292 unique records screened, 119 studies met inclusion criteria. Alcohol was the most extensively studied substance, particularly among National Collegiate Athletic Association collegiate athletes, with consistent evidence of heavy consumption in certain sports, especially those with strong social and team-based norms. PED studies revealed marked sport-specific patterns, largely informed by anti-doping surveillance data, but offered limited insight into psychosocial mechanisms. Research on other substances and polysubstance use was heterogeneous, fragmented, and methodologically variable. Across all domains, the literature was dominated by cross-sectional designs, self-reported data and Western populations. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The existing evidence base demonstrates substantial substance-related vulnerability among elite athletes but is characterised by significant conceptual, methodological and geographical gaps. Future research should prioritise longitudinal and theory-driven designs, broader representation of professional and non-Western athletes, integration of mental health frameworks and rigorous evaluation of prevention and intervention strategies. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER/BACKGROUND:The review protocol was prospectively registered on the Open Science Framework (OSF) (DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/3PJDN) on 8 January 2025.
PMID: 42309781
ISSN: 1473-0480
CID: 6050012

Safety and efficacy of staged, bilateral magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound pallidothalamic tractotomy for motor complications of Parkinson's disease: a prospective, multicentre, single-arm trial

Dalvi, Arif; Eisenberg, Howard M; Wu, Peihan; Zucker, Lloyd; Chang, Wei Chieh; Sarva, Harini; Fishman, Paul S; Buch, Vivek P; Matarazzo, Michele; Del Alamo, Marta; Rodriguez-Oroz, Maria Cruz; González-Quarante, Lain Hermes; Sani, Sepehr; Ghanouni, Pejman; Patel, Neepa; Pourfar, Michael; Mogilner, Alon; Obeso, Jose A; Kaplitt, Michael G
BACKGROUND:Parkinson's disease management is often complicated by motor fluctuations and dyskinesia. Although deep brain stimulation addresses these symptoms, its use is limited by invasiveness, potential device failure, and the need for ongoing maintenance. Magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) provides incisionless, image-guided ablation as an alternative. However, the benefits and harms of staged, bilateral MRgFUS pallidothalamic tractotomy have not been evaluated systematically in prospective multicentre studies. METHODS:In this prospective, multicentre, single-arm study, adults with idiopathic, levodopa-responsive Parkinson's disease and motor complications (Movement Disorders Society Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale [MDS-UPDRS] part IV item 4.2 or 4.4 score ≥2) were enrolled at nine investigational centres (six in the USA, two in Spain, and one in Taiwan). Participants underwent unilateral MRgFUS pallidothalamic tractotomy to the symptom-dominant side. Contralateral pallidothalamic tractotomy followed a minimum of 6 months later for participants meeting prespecified criteria. The primary efficacy endpoint was percent change from baseline to 3 months after the second procedure in the summed MDS-UPDRS part III off-medication upper and lower extremity (ULE) motor scores. Safety outcomes were incidence, severity, and persistence of treatment-related adverse events in the 12 months after each procedure. Safety and efficacy of unilateral treatment were evaluated in the unilateral intention-to-treat (ITT) and safety populations, defined as all patients receiving one or more sonications during the first procedure. The primary outcome and safety of bilateral treatment were evaluated in the bilateral modified ITT (mITT) and safety populations, which required one or more sonications during the second procedure, a baseline motor assessment, and at least one post-bilateral motor assessment. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04728295 and is active, not recruiting. FINDINGS/RESULTS:Between July 12, 2021, and Nov 1, 2023, 54 patients received unilateral treatment and 40 proceeded to bilateral treatment (63 [67%] were male and 31 [33%] were female) and were included in the primary analysis; 36 completed 12-month follow-up after the second procedure. Median bilateral ULE motor scores decreased from 33·0 points (IQR 28·0-40·5) at baseline to 21·0 points (15·0-25·5) at month 3 post-bilateral treatment, a median within-patient change of 10·5 points (5·7-20·0), representing a 32% (18-52) improvement (p<0·0001). Benefits became apparent within 1 month of the first procedure and lasted through to 12 months after the second procedure. Treatment-related adverse events occurred in 21 (39%) of 54 patients after unilateral treatment; one (2%) had a persistent moderate adverse event at 6 months. After bilateral treatment, 22 (55%) of 40 patients had treatment-related adverse events; ten (25%) had persistent moderate or severe adverse events at 12 months, mainly affecting speech, gait, and balance. One (3%) patient developed severe persistent anarthria. INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:Unilateral MRgFUS pallidothalamic tractotomy demonstrated safety and efficacy for Parkinson's disease motor complications; however, bilateral treatment offered small motor gains while increasing persistent moderate or severe adverse events. Post-bilateral treatment complications in speech, gait, and balance are consistent with historical data for bilateral ablative procedures for movement disorders. Although unilateral MRgFUS pallidothalamic tractotomy was beneficial in our study, bilateral procedures demand rigorous patient selection and counselling regarding cumulative risks. FUNDING/BACKGROUND:Insightec.
PMID: 42309086
ISSN: 1474-4465
CID: 6049952

Multimodal mapping of balance dysfunction in Parkinson's disease: a consensus roadmap for research and intervention

Shaikh, Aasef G; Antoniades, Chrystalina; Arshad, Qadeer; Bhatia, Kailash; Bloem, Bastiaan; Bohnen, Nicolass; Carpenter, Mark G; D'Cruz, Nicholas; Doumas, Mihalis; Factor, Stewart A; Fasano, Alfonso; Gulberti, Alessandro; Hausdorf, Jeffrey; Kaski, Diego; Mancini, Martina; Pandey, Sanjay; Paquette, Caroline; Rucker, Janet; Seemungal, Barry; Virmani, Tuhin; Weerdesteyn, Vivian; Young, William; Bronstein, Adolfo M
PURPOSE OF REVIEW/OBJECTIVE:Balance depends on accurate perception of self-motion and verticality and on multisensory integration for stance, and gait. In Parkinson's disease, balance is commonly impaired and variably affected by treatment. Although vestibular and multisensory contributions are increasingly recognized, progress is limited by fragmented evidence, inconsistent methods, and artifact-prone measures. We provide a consensus roadmap across four domains - video-oculography/vHIT, VEMPs, posturography, and perceptual paradigms - to improve clinical translation of balance research in Parkinson's disease. RECENT FINDINGS/RESULTS:An interdisciplinary taskforce conducted a comprehensive literature review and a modified Delphi process (≥80% agreement), using virtual meetings, surveys, and an in-person consensus session. Oculography/vHIT shows largely preserved aVOR in Parkinson's disease but is vulnerable to Parkinson's disease specific artifacts, requiring standardization. VEMPs relate to brainstem and non-motor features but are limited by EMG-dependent confounds. Posturography reveals impaired multisensory integration with visual dependence and cholinergic contributions; reactive-capacity measures outperform sway alone. Perceptual paradigms show task-specific distortions and increased variability linked to axial/postural syndromes. SUMMARY/CONCLUSIONS:This consensus offers a practical roadmap, de-emphasize aVOR/vHIT as primary unsteadiness outcomes; use VEMPs as ancillary measures; prioritize posturography probing adaptability and reactive stepping; integrate wearables and neurochemical imaging; and adopt consortium-level minimum datasets to enable reproducible, phenotype-aware advances in Parkinson's disease balance research.
PMID: 42307076
ISSN: 1473-6551
CID: 6049842

The Current Scope of Pain Medicine Fellowships: A Cross-Sectional Survey Study of Trainees, Directors, and Employers on Shaping Future Leaders

Yener, Ugur; Pritzlaff, Scott G; Schatman, Micheal E; Naeimi, Tahereh; Argoff, Charles E; Ahadian, Farshad; Rosenquist, Ellen W K; Hunter, Corey W; Emerick, Trent D; Ciftci, Hatice Begum; Kaye, Alan D; Eshraghi, Yashar; Pak, Daniel J; Kim, Soo Yeon; Deer, Timothy R; Shaparin, Naum; Gritsenko, Karina; Kaufman, Andrew G; Kim, Chong H; Staats, Peter S; Guirguis, Maged; Caldwell, William; Furnish, Timothy; Bautista, Alexander; Mehta, Neel; Skae, Catherine C; Sehgal, Nalini; Kohan, Lynn R; Anitescu, Magdalena; Wahezi, Sayed E
INTRODUCTION/UNASSIGNED:Since the establishment of Pain Medicine (PM) as an ACGME-recognized subspecialty in 1992, the field has undergone significant transformation. These changes brought increasing diversity in applicants` primary specialties, and the introduction of a myriad of emerging treatment paradigms. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the expectations, experiences, and perspectives of three target groups-PM trainees, program directors (PDs), and employers-to guide the evolution of PM education. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:This study employed an integrated survey approach to comprehensively evaluate PM fellowship training. Surveys were distributed through professional societies, verified forums, and direct outreach over separate 3-month periods in 2023 for PD and trainee surveys and in 2024 for the employer survey. A total of 518 respondents across PDs, employers, and trainees completed surveys; overall response rate was indeterminable due to unknown denominators, while the PD survey response rate was 69.0%. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:The survey findings highlighted both shared and unique perspectives among the stakeholder groups. Trainees emphasized procedural volume and diversity as critical motivators for fellowship selection. Despite this focus, 70% of trainees expressed reluctance toward extending their fellowship duration, with 50% of trainees favored private practice. PDs acknowledged variability in training quality and emphasized the importance of supplemental workshops to address procedural gaps. Vast majority of PDs supported extending the fellowship duration to mitigate reliance on industry-led supplemental education. Employers underscored significant deficiencies in graduates' preparedness for independent practice, with only 7% considering fellows adequately trained under the current model. Across all groups, there was a consensus on the need for curriculum standardization and enhanced training to align with the growing complexity of PM. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:This study suggests that the one-year fellowship can be re-evaluated for adequacy in preparing physicians for independent practice, particularly in advanced procedures. Alternative training pathways offer additional exposure but vary in structure and oversight.
PMCID:13264306
PMID: 42294364
ISSN: 1178-7090
CID: 6049382