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PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. e0259019
Author(s):  
Iris Berent ◽  
Melanie Platt

Despite advances in its scientific understanding, dyslexia is still associated with rampant public misconceptions. Here, we trace these misconceptions to the interaction between two intuitive psychological principles: Dualism and Essentialism. We hypothesize that people essentialize dyslexia symptoms that they anchor in the body. Experiment 1 shows that, when dyslexia is associated with visual confusions (b/d reversals)—symptoms that are naturally viewed as embodied (in the eyes), laypeople consider dyslexia as more severe, immutable, biological, and heritable, compared to when dyslexia is linked to difficulties with phonological decoding (a symptom seen as less strongly embodied). Experiments 2–3 show that the embodiment of symptoms plays a causal role in promoting essentialist thinking. Experiment 2 shows that, when participants are provided evidence that the symptoms of dyslexia are embodied (i.e., they “show up” in a brain scan), people are more likely to consider dyslexia as heritable compared to when the same symptoms are diagnosed behaviorally (without any explicit evidence for the body). Finally, Experiment 3 shows that reasoning about the severity of dyslexia symptoms can be modulated by manipulating people’s attitudes about the mind/body links, generally. These results show how public attitudes towards psychological disorders arise from the very principles that make the mind tick.


2021 ◽  
pp. 102257
Author(s):  
Daniele Ravi ◽  
Stefano B. Blumberg ◽  
Silvia Ingala ◽  
Frederik Barkhof ◽  
Daniel C. Alexander ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

PLoS Medicine ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. e1003761
Author(s):  
Fiona E. Lecky ◽  
Olubukola Otesile ◽  
Carl Marincowitz ◽  
Marek Majdan ◽  
Daan Nieboer ◽  
...  

Background Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an important global public health burden, where those injured by high-energy transfer (e.g., road traffic collisions) are assumed to have more severe injury and are prioritised by emergency medical service trauma triage tools. However recent studies suggest an increasing TBI disease burden in older people injured through low-energy falls. We aimed to assess the prevalence of low-energy falls among patients presenting to hospital with TBI, and to compare their characteristics, care pathways, and outcomes to TBI caused by high-energy trauma. Methods and findings We conducted a comparative cohort study utilising the CENTER-TBI (Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in TBI) Registry, which recorded patient demographics, injury, care pathway, and acute care outcome data in 56 acute trauma receiving hospitals across 18 countries (17 countries in Europe and Israel). Patients presenting with TBI and indications for computed tomography (CT) brain scan between 2014 to 2018 were purposively sampled. The main study outcomes were (i) the prevalence of low-energy falls causing TBI within the overall cohort and (ii) comparisons of TBI patients injured by low-energy falls to TBI patients injured by high-energy transfer—in terms of demographic and injury characteristics, care pathways, and hospital mortality. In total, 22,782 eligible patients were enrolled, and study outcomes were analysed for 21,681 TBI patients with known injury mechanism; 40% (95% CI 39% to 41%) (8,622/21,681) of patients with TBI were injured by low-energy falls. Compared to 13,059 patients injured by high-energy transfer (HE cohort), the those injured through low-energy falls (LE cohort) were older (LE cohort, median 74 [IQR 56 to 84] years, versus HE cohort, median 42 [IQR 25 to 60] years; p < 0.001), more often female (LE cohort, 50% [95% CI 48% to 51%], versus HE cohort, 32% [95% CI 31% to 34%]; p < 0.001), more frequently taking pre-injury anticoagulants or/and platelet aggregation inhibitors (LE cohort, 44% [95% CI 42% to 45%], versus HE cohort, 13% [95% CI 11% to 14%]; p < 0.001), and less often presenting with moderately or severely impaired conscious level (LE cohort, 7.8% [95% CI 5.6% to 9.8%], versus HE cohort, 10% [95% CI 8.7% to 12%]; p < 0.001), but had similar in-hospital mortality (LE cohort, 6.3% [95% CI 4.2% to 8.3%], versus HE cohort, 7.0% [95% CI 5.3% to 8.6%]; p = 0.83). The CT brain scan traumatic abnormality rate was 3% lower in the LE cohort (LE cohort, 29% [95% CI 27% to 31%], versus HE cohort, 32% [95% CI 31% to 34%]; p < 0.001); individuals in the LE cohort were 50% less likely to receive critical care (LE cohort, 12% [95% CI 9.5% to 13%], versus HE cohort, 24% [95% CI 23% to 26%]; p < 0.001) or emergency interventions (LE cohort, 7.5% [95% CI 5.4% to 9.5%], versus HE cohort, 13% [95% CI 12% to 15%]; p < 0.001) than patients injured by high-energy transfer. The purposive sampling strategy and censorship of patient outcomes beyond hospital discharge are the main study limitations. Conclusions We observed that patients sustaining TBI from low-energy falls are an important component of the TBI disease burden and a distinct demographic cohort; further, our findings suggest that energy transfer may not predict intracranial injury or acute care mortality in patients with TBI presenting to hospital. This suggests that factors beyond energy transfer level may be more relevant to prehospital and emergency department TBI triage in older people. A specific focus to improve prevention and care for patients sustaining TBI from low-energy falls is required.


2021 ◽  
pp. practneurol-2021-003058
Author(s):  
Rhea YY Tan ◽  
Anna M Drazyk ◽  
Kathryn Urankar ◽  
Clare Bailey ◽  
Stefan Gräf ◽  
...  

A 44-year-old Caucasian man presented with seizures and cognitive impairment. He had marked retinal drusen, and MR brain scan showed features of cerebral small vessel disease; he was diagnosed with a leukoencephalopathy of uncertain cause. He died at the age of 46 years and postmortem brain examination showed widespread small vessel changes described as a vasculopathy of unknown cause. Seven years postmortem, whole-genome sequencing identified a homozygous nonsense HTRA1 mutation (p.Arg302Ter), giving a retrospective diagnosis of cerebral autosomal recessive arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed DA ◽  
◽  
Onka B ◽  
Choayb S ◽  
En-Nafaa I ◽  
...  

An 80-year-old man with chronic hypertension was admitted to the emergency department with consciousness disorders. The evolution was marked by a rapid worsening of his neurological condition. The patient was intubated and ventilated. The biological check-up revealed a blood glucose level of 0.2g/l. A brain scan was performed which was without abnormality. Two days after the normalization of the blood sugar level, the patient presented a late awakening. A brain MRI was performed which showed bilateral fronto-parietal laminar cortical areas in T2, Flair and diffusion hypersignal, T1 iso signal, and no hyposignal on T2 gradient echo sequence (Figure 1). The diagnostic of Cortical Laminar Necrosis was retained.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
M. Tien Yu Song ◽  
A. Ralitera ◽  
C. U. Rasolofoson ◽  
J. S. Bemora ◽  
E. C. Rasolonjatovo ◽  
...  

Primary dural lymphoma is a rare pathology, it is part of the malignant lymphoma of the central nervous system and it can reach the extradural or subdural space. We report a case of a little boy of three years and two months admitted to the Department of Neurosurgery CHU JRA for multiple swellings in the scalp associated with an altered general condition. The CT scan revealed a multiple extra-axial expansive process with retro-orbital extension responsible for an important exophthalmos as well as at the scalp level. Anatomopathological examination of the dura mater biopsy revealed a malignant non-Hodgkin's small cell lymphoma. The patient underwent chemotherapy of 05 sessions and the evolution was marked by the persistence of the symptoms. The post chemotherapy brain scan showed considerable extension of the lesions. The next step would be radiotherapy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristiina Rannikmäe ◽  
Honghan Wu ◽  
Steven Tominey ◽  
William Whiteley ◽  
Naomi Allen ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Better phenotyping of routinely collected coded data would be useful for research and health improvement. For example, the precision of coded data for hemorrhagic stroke (intracerebral hemorrhage [ICH] and subarachnoid hemorrhage [SAH]) may be as poor as < 50%. This work aimed to investigate the feasibility and added value of automated methods applied to clinical radiology reports to improve stroke subtyping. Methods From a sub-population of 17,249 Scottish UK Biobank participants, we ascertained those with an incident stroke code in hospital, death record or primary care administrative data by September 2015, and ≥ 1 clinical brain scan report. We used a combination of natural language processing and clinical knowledge inference on brain scan reports to assign a stroke subtype (ischemic vs ICH vs SAH) for each participant and assessed performance by precision and recall at entity and patient levels. Results Of 225 participants with an incident stroke code, 207 had a relevant brain scan report and were included in this study. Entity level precision and recall ranged from 78 to 100%. Automated methods showed precision and recall at patient level that were very good for ICH (both 89%), good for SAH (both 82%), but, as expected, lower for ischemic stroke (73%, and 64%, respectively), suggesting coded data remains the preferred method for identifying the latter stroke subtype. Conclusions Our automated method applied to radiology reports provides a feasible, scalable and accurate solution to improve disease subtyping when used in conjunction with administrative coded health data. Future research should validate these findings in a different population setting.


Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 845
Author(s):  
Maria de Fatima Viana Vasco Aragao ◽  
Mariana de Carvalho Leal ◽  
Pedro Henrique Pereira Andrade ◽  
Ocelio Queiroga Cartaxo Filho ◽  
Lucas Vasco Aragao ◽  
...  

Patients with COVID-19 can require radiological examination, with chest CT being more frequent than neuro-imaging. The objective is to identify epidemiological, clinical and radiological factors considered as predictors of neurological involvement in patients with COVID-19 assessed by neuroimaging and to describe the neuroimaging findings. This retrospective study was performed with 232 consecutive confirmed COVID-19 patients, from two radiological units, which were divided into two groups: (1) those who underwent a brain CT/MRI scan (n = 35) versus (2) those who did not undergo the brain CT/MRI scan, but underwent only chest CT (n = 197). There was a statistically significant difference with associations regarding the COVID-19 brain scan group for: admission to ICU, greater severity of lung injuries, the use of a mechanical ventilator and sepsis. Statistical tendency was found for chronic renal failure and systemic arterial hypertension. Forty-percent of COVID-19 patients from the brain scan group were abnormal on brain CT and/or brain MRI (22.9% of the cases with bleeding or microbleeding, 8.6% with restricted diffusion lesions). One ischemic stroke case was associated with irregularity at the M1 segment of the right middle cerebral artery. There was a case of left facial nerve palsy with enhancement of the left geniculate ganglia. An analysis of the olfactory bulbs was possible in 12 brain MRIs and 100% had enhancement and/or microbleeding. In conclusion, a more severe COVID-19 disease from ICU, a more severe form of lung disease, the use of mechanical ventilator and sepsis were associated to the COVID-19 patients with neurological involvement who had undergone brain scans. Microvascular phenomenon was a frequent finding in the brain and olfactory bulbs evaluated by neuroimaging.


SLEEP ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. A248-A248
Author(s):  
Wendy Edlund ◽  
Suresh Kotagal

Abstract Introduction Moebius syndrome (MBS) is a rare disorder characterized by failure of development of the 6th and 7th cranial nerve nuclei located in the pons. Though the congenital lesion abuts the pontine tegmentum, sleep architecture has not been evaluated in MBS. Methods We report the clinical features of three children with MBS, and discuss implications for “developmental” RBD. Results Three clinically and MRI brain scan-confirmed MBS children, age 0.5 to 16 years, mean 8.5 ± 6.3 years, were evaluated for disrupted sleep, with repetitive crying (1/3), yelling (2/3), agitation in sleep (2/3), and injuring a co-sleeping sibling (1/3); 3/3 had REM sleep without atonia while 2/3 had RBD. REM sleep was reduced in all three: 21.7% in the infant (reference REM percentage value in infancy is about 40%), 11.4% in subject 2 and 3% in subject 3. Treatment with clonazepam (patients 2 and 3) or melatonin (patient 1) had variable results. Conclusion Children with Moebius syndrome have both quantitative (reduced percentage) and qualitative abnormalities of REM sleep (RSWA/RBD). The association of MBS with RSWA/RBD suggests more extensive involvement than published in literature, with extension into the sub-laterodorsal pontine tegmentum and “REM-off” neurons. Moebius syndrome might serve as a model for study of “developmental” REM sleep behavior disorder. Support (if any):


Author(s):  
Allan Hugh Cole

Through personal narrative, this chapter details the author’s experience of first becoming aware that something was not right with his body. This experience leads to visiting his primary care doctor who tells him that she is concerned about the possibility of his having Parkinson’s disease and then refers the author to a neurologist who is a movement disorder specialist. He is examined by this neurologist, who says, “What worries me is that I think you are in the early stages of Parkinson’s disease,” but who wants the author to have a brain scan that will confirm the clinical diagnosis given his young age and subtle symptoms. The author leaves his office, drives home, and informs his wife that this doctor thinks he have Parkinson’s disease. Here begins his new life as a person with Parkinson’s (PwP).


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