5 Interesting Neurology Studies
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 Published On Apr 10, 2024

New insights into long COVID, a rare disorder, and anticoagulation in atrial fibrillation are among the topics discussed by Christoph Diener in his roundup of recent studies in neurology.
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/...

-- TRANSCRIPT --
Dear colleagues, I'm Christoph Diener from the medical faculty of University Duisburg-Essen in Germany. Today I would like to tell you about five interesting studies that were published in January 2024.

Long COVID
I would like to start with long COVID. There is an ongoing discussion about whether this condition — which means symptoms like dizziness, vertigo, fatigue, headache, and cognitive impairment that persist for more than 6 months — is either a consequence of the infection, functional symptoms, psychosomatic disease, or a depression.

There is an important paper that came out in Science. The group investigated 39 controls and 113 patients who had COVID-19. At 6 months, 40 of them had long COVID. The researchers repeatedly measured more than 6500 proteins in serum. The patients with long COVID had a significant increase in complement activation, which persisted even beyond 6 months. These patients also showed increased tissue lesion markers in the blood and activation of the endothelium.

Also, they had increased platelet activation and autoantibodies with increased anti-cytomegalovirus and anti-Epstein-Barr virus immunoglobulins. These are very strong indicators that COVID-19 leads to long-term changes in our immune system, and different activations of complement factors could explain the variety of symptoms that these patients display. Whether this has consequences for treatment is unclear at the moment.

Parkinson's Classification
Let me come to another issue, which is the future treatment of Parkinson's disease, covered in a paper in The Lancet Neurology. I think you are all aware that once patients display symptoms like rigidity, bradykinesia, or tremor, it's most probably too late for neuroprotective therapy because 70% of the dopaminergic neurons are already dead.

The authors propose a new biological diagnosis of the disease in the preclinical state. This early preclinical diagnosis has three components. One is to show the presence of synuclein either in skin biopsy or in serum. The second is proof of neurodegeneration either by MRI or by PET imaging. The third involves genetic markers.

On top of this, we know that we have preclinical manifestations of Parkinson's disease, like REM sleep disorders, autonomic disturbances, and cognitive impairment. With this new classification, we should be able to identify the preclinical phase of Parkinson's disease and include these patients in future trials for neuroprotection.

Niemann-Pick Disease
My third study, in The New England Journal of Medicine, deals with Niemann-Pick disease type C. This is a rare autosomal recessive disorder that involves impaired lysosomal storage. This disease, which manifests usually in childhood, goes along with systemic, psychiatric, and neurologic abnormalities, and in particular, ataxia. Until now, there has been only one therapy, with miglustat, which has many side effects.

The group of authors found a new therapeutic approach with N-acetyl-L-leucine, which primarily increases mitochondrial energy production. This was a small, placebo-controlled, crossover trial with 2 x 12 weeks of treatment. This new compound showed efficacy and was very well tolerated. This shows that we definitely need long-term studies with this new, well-tolerated drug in this rare disease.

Anticoagulation in Subclinical AF
My fourth study comes from the stroke-prevention field. This is a study that was published in The New England Journal of Medicine. I think you are aware of subclinical atrial fibrillation. These are high-frequency episodes in ECG, usually identified by pacemakers or ECG monitoring systems. The international ARTESIA study included more than 4000 patients randomized either to apixaban 5 mg twice daily or aspirin 81 mg.

After 3.5 years, the investigators showed a small but significant decrease in the rate of stroke, with a relative risk reduction of 37%, but also, unfortunately, a significantly increased risk for major bleeding with apixaban. This means that we need a careful discussion with the patient, the family, and the GP to decide whether these patients should be anticoagulated or not.

Transcript in its entirety can be found by clicking here:
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/...

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