Lancet neurology
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Genomics now has an increasingly important role in neurology clinics. Regarding the epilepsies, innovations centred around technology, analytics, and collaboration have led to remarkable progress in gene discovery and have revealed the diverse array of genetic mechanisms and neurobiological pathways that contribute to these disorders. ⋯ Genetic epilepsy diagnoses now directly affect clinical care, and their importance will only increase as new targeted treatments continue to emerge. At the same time, new genetic insights challenge us to move from a deterministic view of genetic changes to a more nuanced appreciation of genetic risk within complex neurobiological systems that give rise to epilepsy.
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Hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) describes a heterogeneous group of genetic neurodegenerative diseases characterised by progressive spasticity of the lower limbs. The pathogenic mechanism, associated clinical features, and imaging abnormalities vary substantially according to the affected gene and differentiating HSP from other genetic diseases associated with spasticity can be challenging. Next generation sequencing-based gene panels are now widely available but have limitations and a molecular diagnosis is not made in most suspected cases. Symptomatic management continues to evolve but with a greater understanding of the pathophysiological basis of individual HSP subtypes there are emerging opportunities to provide targeted molecular therapies and personalised medicine.
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Traumatic spinal cord injury occurs when an external physical impact damages the spinal cord and leads to permanent neurological dysfunction and disability, and it is associated with a high socioeconomic burden. Conventional MRI plays a crucial role in the diagnostic workup as it reveals extrinsic compression of the spinal cord and disruption of the discoligamentous complex. Additionally, it can reveal macrostructural evidence of primary intramedullary damage such as haemorrhage, oedema, post-traumatic cystic cavities, and tissue bridges. ⋯ Both conventional MRI and quantitative MRI metrics, obtained early after spinal cord injury, are predictive of clinical outcome. Thus, neuroimaging biomarkers could serve as surrogate endpoints for more efficient future trials targeting acute and chronic spinal cord injury. The adoption of neuroimaging biomarkers in centres for spinal cord injury might lead to personalised patient care.
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Review Case Reports
An update on anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis for neurologists and psychiatrists: mechanisms and models.
The identification of anti-NMDA receptor (NMDAR) encephalitis about 12 years ago made it possible to recognise that some patients with rapidly progressive psychiatric symptoms or cognitive impairment, seizures, abnormal movements, or coma of unknown cause, had an autoimmune disease. In this disease, autoantibodies serve as a diagnostic marker and alter NMDAR-related synaptic transmission. At symptom onset, distinguishing the disease from a primary psychiatric disorder is challenging. ⋯ About 80% of patients improve with immunotherapy and, if needed, tumour removal, but the recovery is slow. Animal models have started to reveal the complexity of the underlying pathogenic mechanisms and will lead to novel treatments beyond immunotherapy. Future studies should aim at identifying prognostic biomarkers and treatments that accelerate recovery.