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- Würzburg Fabry Center for Interdisciplinary Therapy (FAZIT), University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany (1)
A high load of white matter lesions and enlarged basilar arteries have been shown in selected patients with Fabry disease, a disorder associated with an increased stroke risk. We studied a large cohort of patients with Fabry disease to differentially investigate white matter lesion load and cerebral artery diameters. We retrospectively analyzed cranial magnetic resonance imaging scans of 87 consecutive Fabry patients, 20 patients with ischemic stroke, and 36 controls. We determined the white matter lesion load applying the Fazekas score on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery sequences and measured the diameters of cerebral arteries on 3D-reconstructions of the time-of-flight-MR-angiography scans. Data of different Fabry patient subgroups (males – females; normal – impaired renal function) were compared with data of patients with stroke and controls. A history of stroke or transient ischemic attacks was present in 4/30 males (13%) and 5/57 (9%) females with Fabry disease, all in the anterior circulation. Only one man with Fabry disease showed confluent cerebral white matter lesions in the Fazekas score assessment (1%). Male Fabry patients had a larger basilar artery (p<0.01) and posterior cerebral artery diameter (p<0.05) compared to male controls. This was independent of disease severity as measured by renal function and did not lead to changes in arterial blood flow properties. A basilar artery diameter of >3.2 mm distinguished between men with Fabry disease and controls (sensitivity: 87%, specificity: 86%, p<0.001), but not from stroke patients. Enlarged arterial diameters of the posterior circulation are present only in men with Fabry disease independent of disease severity.
Objective: We investigated cerebral opioid receptor binding potential in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) using positron-emission-tomography (PET) and correlated our results with patients’ systemic interleukin-4 (IL-4) gene expression.
Methods: In this pilot study, seven FMS patients (1 man, 6 women) agreed to participate in experimental PET scans. All patients underwent neurological examination, were investigated with questionnaires for pain, depression, and FMS symptoms. Additionally, blood for IL-4 gene expression analysis was withdrawn at two time points with a median latency of 1.3 years. Patients were investigated in a PET scanner using the opioid receptor ligand F-18-fluoro-ethyl-diprenorphine ([18F]FEDPN) and results were compared with laboratory normative values.
Results: Neurological examination was normal in all FMS patients. Reduced opioid receptor binding was found in mid cingulate cortex compared to healthy controls (p < 0.005). Interestingly, three patients with high systemic IL-4 gene expression had increased opioid receptor binding in the fronto-basal cortex compared to those with low IL-4 gene expression (p < 0.005).
Conclusion: Our data give further evidence for a reduction in cortical opioid receptor availability in FMS patients as another potential central nervous system contributor to pain in FMS.
Fabry disease is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder due to impaired activity of alpha-galactosidase A with intracellular accumulation of globotriaosylceramide. Associated small fiber pathology leads to characteristic pain in Fabry disease. We systematically assessed sensory system, physical activity, metabolic parameters, and morphology of male and female mice with alpha-galactosidase A deficiency (Fabry ko) from 2 to 27 months of age and compared results with those of age- and gender-matched wild-type littermates of C57Bl/6J background. Results From the age of two months, male and female Fabry mice showed mechanical hypersensitivity (p < 0.001 each) compared to wild-type littermates. Young Fabry ko mice of both genders were hypersensitive to heat stimulation (p < 0.01) and developed heat hyposensitivity with aging (p < 0.05), while cold hyposensitivity was present constantly in young (p < 0.01) and old (p < 0.05) Fabry ko mice compared to wild-type littermates. Stride angle increased only in male Fabry ko mice with aging (p < 0.01) in comparison to wild-type littermates. Except for young female mice, male (p < 0.05) and female (p < 0.01) Fabry ko mice had a higher body weight than wild-type littermates. Old male Fabry ko mice were physically less active than their wild-type littermates (p < 0.05), had lower chow intake (p < 0.001), and lost more weight (p < 0.001) in a one-week treadmill experiment than wild-type littermates. Also, Fabry ko mice showed spontaneous pain protective behavior and developed orofacial dysmorphism resembling patients with Fabry disease.
Conclusions. Mice with alpha-galactosidase A deficiency show age-dependent and distinct deficits of the sensory system. alpha-galactosidase A-deficient mice seem to model human Fabry disease and may be helpful when studying the pathophysiology of Fabry-associated pain.
Background: To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis on cytokine levels in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS). Methods: Through December 2010 we systematically reviewed the databases PubMed, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO and screened the reference lists of 22 review articles for suitable original articles. Original articles investigating cytokines in patients with FMS were included. Data were extracted by two independent authors. Differences of the cytokine levels of FMS patients and controls were summarized by standardized mean differences (SMD) using a random effects model. Study quality was assessed applying methodological scores: modified Center of Evidence Based Medicine, Newcastle-Ottawa-Scale, and Würzburg Methodological Quality Score. Results: Twenty-five articles were included investigating 1255 FMS patients and 800 healthy controls. Data of 13/25 studies entered meta-analysis. The overall methodological quality of studies was low. The results of the majority of studies were not comparable because methods, investigated material, and investigated target cytokines differed. Systematic review of the selected 25 articles revealed that FMS patients had higher serum levels of interleukin (IL)-1 receptor antagonist, IL-6, and IL-8, and higher plasma levels of IL-8. Meta-analysis of eligible studies showed that FMS patients had higher plasma IL-6 levels compared to controls (SMD = -0.34 [-0.64, -0.03] 95% CI; p = 0.03). The majority of investigated cytokines were not different between patients and controls. Conclusions: The pathophysiological role of cytokines in FMS is still unclear. Studies of higher quality and with higher numbers of subjects are needed.
In der vorliegenden Studie wurden QST, QSART, Hautbiopsien und Fragebögen
genutzt, um die Beteiligung kleiner Nervenfasern bei verschiedenen Formen der
Immunneuropathien zu untersuchen. Wir konnten hierbei eine signifikante
Beeinträchtigung der thermischen Reizleitung bei CIDP- und MADSAM-Patient/-innen
nachweisen sowie eine signifikant reduzierte Schweißproduktion am distalen
Unterschenkel bei MADSAM-Patient/-innen. Diese Ergebnisse belegen in allen drei
Untergruppen der immunvermittelten Neuropathien eine Beteiligung kleiner auch
unmyelinisierter Nervenfasertypen. MADSAM- und CIDP-Patient/-innen wiesen in der
QST ein ähnliches Schädigungsmuster auf. Dagegen unterschieden sie sich signifikant
in der QSART. Diese Ergebnisse können als weiterer Hinweis auf unterschiedliche
zugrundeliegende Pathomechanismen verstanden werden. MMN-Patient/-innen wiesen
insgesamt die geringste Small-Fiber-Beteiligung in den quantitativen Testungen auf.
Auch lagen bei MMN-Patient/-innen durchschnittlich die geringsten Schmerz-Scores und
autonomen Symptome vor. Es zeigten sich wenig signifikante Unterschiede zwischen
seropositiven und seronegativen Neuropathie-Patient/-innen. Diese jedoch bestätigten
unsere Hypothese einer etwas geringeren Small-Fiber-Beteiligung bei seropositiven
Patient/-innen. Bei der Vielzahl an unterschiedlichen Pathomechanismen innerhalb der
immunvermittelten Neuropathien erscheinen weitere Subklassifizierungen für eine
optimale Diagnosestellung und Therapie unabdingbar. Diese Arbeit konnte mit den oben
genannten Untersuchungen einen weiteren Beitrag zur Identifikation von klinischen und
quantitativen Unterschieden innerhalb dieser großen Erkrankungsgruppe leisten.
Künftige, größere Studien dieser Art können möglicherweise hier nur als Tendenzen
gesehene Erkenntnisse belegen und sollten durch zusätzliche Informationen wie
Korrelation zu Krankheitsdauer, Therapie, Laborchemie und elektrophysiologischen
Untersuchen weitere interessante Erkenntnisse liefern.
Introduction/Aims
Schwann cell clusters have been described at the murine dermis-epidermis border. We quantified dermal Schwann cells in the skin of patients with small-fiber neuropathy (SFN) compared with healthy controls to correlate with the clinical phenotype.
Methods
Skin punch biopsies from the lower legs of 28 patients with SFN (11 men, 17 women; median age, 54 [range, 19-73] years) and 9 healthy controls (five men, four women, median age, 34 [range, 25-69] years) were immunoreacted for S100 calcium-binding protein B as a Schwann cell marker, protein-gene product 9.5 as a pan-neuronal marker, and CD207 as a Langerhans cell marker. Intraepidermal nerve fiber density (IENFD) and subepidermal Schwann cell counts were determined.
Results
Skin samples of patients with SFN showed lower IENFD (P < .05), fewer Schwann cells per millimeter (P < .01), and fewer Schwann cell clusters per millimeter (P < .05) than controls. When comparing SFN patients with reduced (n = 13; median age, 53 [range, 19-73] years) and normal distal (n = 15, median age, 54 [range, 43-68] years) IENFD, the number of solitary Schwann cells per millimeter (p < .01) and subepidermal nerve fibers associated with Schwann cell branches (P < .05) were lower in patients with reduced IENFD. All three parameters correlated positively with distal IENFD (P < .05 to P < .01), whereas no correlation was found between Schwann cell counts and clinical pain characteristics.
Discussion
Our data raise questions about the mechanisms underlying the interdependence of dermal Schwann cells and skin innervation in SFN. The temporal course and functional impact of Schwann cell presence and kinetics need further investigation.
Ischemia-reperfusion injury (I/R injury) is a common complication in ischemic stroke (IS) treatment, which is characterized by a paradoxical perpetuation of tissue damage despite the successful re-establishment of vascular perfusion. This phenomenon is known to be facilitated by the detrimental interplay of platelets and inflammatory cells at the vascular interface. However, the spatio-temporal and molecular mechanisms underlying these cellular interactions and their contribution to infarct progression are still incompletely understood. Therefore, this study intended to clarify the temporal mechanisms of infarct growth after cerebral vessel recanalization. The data presented here could show that infarct progression is driven by early blood-brain-barrier perturbation and is independent of secondary thrombus formation. Since previous studies unravelled the secretion of platelet granules as a molecular mechanism of how platelets contribute to I/R injury, special emphasis was placed on the role of platelet granule secretion in the process of barrier dysfunction. By combining an in vitro approach with a murine IS model, it could be shown that platelet α-granules exerted endothelial-damaging properties, whereas their absence (NBEAL2-deficiency) translated into improved microvascular integrity. Hence, targeting platelet α-granules might serve as a novel treatment option to reduce vascular integrity loss and diminish infarct growth despite recanalization.
Recent evidence revealed that pathomechanisms underlying I/R injury are already instrumental during large vessel occlusion. This indicates that penumbral tissue loss under occlusion and I/R injury during reperfusion share an intertwined relationship. In accordance with this notion, human observational data disclosed the presence of a neutrophil dominated immune response and local platelet activation and secretion, by the detection of the main components of platelet α-granules, within the secluded vasculature of IS patients. These initial observations of immune cells and platelets could be further expanded within this thesis by flow cytometric analysis of local ischemic blood samples. Phenotyping of immune cells disclosed a yet unknown shift in the lymphocyte population towards CD4+ T cells and additionally corroborated the concept of an immediate intravascular immune response that is dominated by granulocytes. Furthermore, this thesis provides first-time evidence for the increased appearance of platelet-leukocyte-aggregates within the secluded human vasculature. Thus, interfering with immune cells and/or platelets already under occlusion might serve as a potential strategy to diminish infarct expansion and ameliorate clinical outcome after IS.
Ziel dieser Studie war es, zu untersuchen, ob dendritische Zellen eine Rolle beim ischämischen Schlaganfall spielen. Zur Beantwortung dieser Fragestellung wurde ein Mausmodell gewählt, in dem es nach Administration von Diphterietoxin zur selektiven Depletion CD11c positiver Zellen kommt (C.FVB-Tg(Itgax-DTR/EGFP)57Lan/J). Hierbei wird der Diphterietoxinrezeptor unter dem CD11c Promotor (ITGAX) exprimiert. Aufgrund der Wiederherstellung dendritischer Zellen nach ca. 24 Stunden waren wiederholte Applikationen von Diphterietoxin notwendig. Die Zusammensetzung anderer Immunzellen wurde dabei im Wesentlichen nicht geändert.
Für eine Schlaganfallinduktion wurde eine tMCAO (transient middle cerebral artery occlusion) durchgeführt. Hierbei wird durch Okklusion der A. cerebri media mittels Verschlussfilament für 30 oder 60 Minuten ein Schlaganfall im Mediastromgebiet induziert.
Es wurden unterschiedliche Verschlusszeiten, Zeitpunkte und Depletionsraten untersucht. In keinem der Versuchsansätze kam es zu einer signifikanten Veränderung des Schlaganfallvolumens nach Depletion CD11c positiver Zellen.
Mittels quantitativer real-time PCR wurde die Expression unterschiedlicher Zytokine nach tMCAO und CD11c-Depletion untersucht. An Tag 1 nach Schlaganfallinduktion und hoher Depletionsrate ergab sich eine Verminderung der Expression von IL-1β und IL-6, während an Tag 3 und niedriger Depletionsrate die Expression dieser Zytokine nach CD11c-Depletion zunahm. Grund hierfür könnte die Expression dieser Zytokine durch andere Zellen des Immunsystems, wie etwa neutrophile Granulozyten oder Mikroglia/Makrophagen sein, die möglicherweise einer regulatorischen Funktion durch die Interaktion von Dendritischen Zellen und regulatorischen T-Zellen unterliegen. Weitere experimentelle Ansätze sind notwendig, um diese Fragestellung beantworten zu können.
TGF-β zeigte durchgehend in allen Versuchsanordnungen eine verminderte Expression nach der Depletion dendritischer Zellen. Es ist naheliegend, dass dieses neuroprotektiv-regulatorische Zytokin direkt einer Produktion durch dendritische Zellen oder von nachfolgend aktivierten T-Zellen unterliegt.
In immunhistochemischen Studien konnte des Weiteren keine Änderung des Immigrationsverhaltens von CD11b+ Zellen ins Gehirn gesehen werden.
Diese Studie unterliegt jedoch einigen Limitationen. So stellte sich im Laufe der Experimente heraus, dass die wiederholte Applikation von Diphterietoxin zu einer erhöhten Mortalität der Versuchstiere führte. Nach Fertigstellung der Experimente erschien hierzu eine Publikation, welche die wiederholte Administration von DTX und die Entwicklung einer Myokarditis im gewählten Mausmodell in Zusammenhang brachte.
Background:
Clinical reasoning in Neurology is based on general associations which help to deduce the site of the lesion. However, even “golden principles” may occasionally be deceptive. Here, we describe the case of subacute flaccid tetraparesis due to motor cortical lesions. To our knowledge, this is the first report to include an impressive illustration of nearly symmetric motor cortical involvement of encephalitis on brain MRI.
Case presentation:
A 51 year old immunocompromized man developed a high-grade pure motor flaccid tetraparesis over few days. Based on clinical presentation, critical illness polyneuromyopathy was suspected. However, brain MRI revealed symmetrical hyperintensities strictly limited to the subcortical precentral gyrus. An encephalitis, possibly due to CMV infection, turned out to be the most likely cause.
Conclusion:
While recognition of basic clinical patterns is indispensable in neurological reasoning, awareness of central conditions mimicking peripheral nervous disease may be crucial to detect unsuspected, potentially treatable conditions.
Background: Compensation of brain injury in multiple sclerosis (MS) may in part work through mechanisms involving neuronal plasticity on local and interregional scales. Mechanisms limiting excessive neuronal activity may have special significance for retention and (re-)acquisition of lost motor skills in brain injury. However, previous neurophysiological studies of plasticity in MS have investigated only excitability enhancing plasticity and results from neuroimaging are ambiguous. Thus, the aim of this study was to probe long-term depression-like central motor plasticity utilizing continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS), a non-invasive brain stimulation protocol. Because cTBS also may trigger behavioral effects through local interference with neuronal circuits, this approach also permitted investigating the functional role of the primary motor cortex (M1) in force control in patients with MS. Methods: We used cTBS and force recordings to examine long-term depression-like central motor plasticity and behavioral consequences of a M1 lesion in 14 patients with stable mild-to-moderate MS (median EDSS 1.5, range 0 to 3.5) and 14 age-matched healthy controls. cTBS consisted of bursts (50 Hz) of three subthreshold biphasic magnetic stimuli repeated at 5 Hz for 40 s over the hand area of the left M1. Corticospinal excitability was probed via motor-evoked potentials (MEP) in the abductor pollicis brevis muscle over M1 before and after cTBS. Force production performance was assessed in an isometric right thumb abduction task by recording the number of hits into a predefined force window. Results: cTBS reduced MEP amplitudes in the contralateral abductor pollicis brevis muscle to a comparable extent in control subjects (69 ± 22% of baseline amplitude, p < 0.001) and in MS patients (69 ± 18%, p < 0.001). In contrast, postcTBS force production performance was only impaired in controls (2.2 ± 2.8, p = 0.011), but not in MS patients (2.0 ± 4.4, p = 0.108). The decline in force production performance following cTBS correlated with corticomuscular latencies (CML) in MS patients, but did not correlate with MEP amplitude reduction in patients or controls. Conclusions: Long-term depression-like plasticity remains largely intact in mild-to-moderate MS. Increasing brain injury may render the neuronal networks less responsive toward lesion-induction by cTBS.