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94 A Case Study Using Serial Neuropsychological Assessments to Understand the Effects of Recurrent Intracerebral Hemorrhages in an Individual with Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy
- Brittany N. Newman, Diana L. Kolcz
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 194-195
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Objective:
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is one of the most frequent causes of non-traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). ICH recurrence risk is significantly higher in patients with CAA than for those without the condition, and CAA is a risk factor for the development of dementia, particularly Alzheimer’s disease. There is a growing body of research describing neuropsychological impairment observed in patients with CAA. Among patients with a history of CAA-related ICH, the most commonly identified cognitive impairments include attention, processing speed, executive functioning, and episodic memory. However, little is known about potential additive or synergistic effects of each CAA-related lesion (such as recurrent ICHs) on cognitive functioning.
Participants and Methods:We present a case of a 74-year-old female with sporadic CAA, who had recurrent ICHs involving the left occipitoparietal lobe, left frontoparietal lobe, right occipital lobe, and left frontal lobe. She experienced residual visual impairment and probable Charles Bonnet Syndrome. Her clinical presentation and cognitive functioning were tracked with an inpatient neuropsychological evaluation completed after each ICH occurrence within the past year, as well as an outpatient neuropsychological evaluation completed approximately 3-months post-discharge from her most recent hospital admission. Record review, including clinical notes, lab tests, and imaging results supplement her performance on serial inpatient and outpatient neuropsychological evaluations.
Results:Data from three inpatient neuropsychological screenings and one lengthier outpatient evaluation are presented. With each inpatient evaluation, her profile demonstrated further cognitive decline involving visuospatial skills, semantic fluency, and episodic memory. In fact, results from her last inpatient screening raised concern for an underlying cortical degenerative process. In contrast, her follow-up outpatient evaluation, after three separate ICH events within one year, demonstrated an isolated set-shifting impairment, with intact performance across all other domains, which ruled out the prior suspicion of a cortical process.
Conclusions:While specific domains of cognition are more vulnerable in CAA, it is difficult to identify a specific and expected cognitive pattern given the extensive number of varied neurological insults patients typically develop throughout the disease course. This case demonstrates the wide range effects of repeated ICH, as well as the contrast between the acute effects of new lesions and the lasting effects of these lesions on cognitive ability after a period of recovery and stabilization. Given that our service was able to perform neuropsychological assessment in the acute phase of each ICH and in the subacute phase after a period of stabilization, this case adds to the literature by providing an example of the additive or synergistic effects of each CAA-related lesion over time.
44 A Case Study of Non-Alcoholic Wernicke’s Encephalopathy in a Young Man with Intractable Vomiting
- Elise C Taverna, Brittany N Newman, Kristin E Slyne
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 917-918
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Objective:
Wernicke’s encephalopathy (WE) is an acute neurological condition caused by thiamine deficiency. The typical presentation is characterized by a triad of oculomotor abnormalities, gait ataxia, and altered mental status, though patients rarely present with all three symptoms. WE is a serious medical condition that is associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality if left untreated. It is most commonly seen in patients with severe alcohol use disorder; however, it has also been found in patients with thiamine deficiency due to other causes of malnutrition such as prolonged starvation, hyperemesis, dialysis, cancer, and geriatric surgery. Despite growing research demonstrating WE in non-alcoholic populations, it is frequently misdiagnosed in patients without an extensive alcohol-use history, particularly when they do not present with the typical clinical triad of symptoms. Thus, more knowledge about non-alcoholic WE is needed to improve diagnostic accuracy.
Participants and Methods:We present a case of a 26-year-old male with an unremarkable alcohol use history, who was diagnosed with WE following a 6-week period of excessive nausea and vomiting of unclear etiology. He presented to the ED three times prior to his diagnosis, and was treated with intravenous hydration, Zofran, and Pepcid. He presented to the ED for the fourth time with altered mental status and gait ataxia and was diagnosed with WE based on MRI findings. He was admitted and treated with high doses of IV thiamine and folate. His clinical course was tracked over time via outpatient neurology examinations, and his cognitive functioning was assessed with an outpatient neuropsychological evaluation approximately six months post-discharge. Record review, including clinical notes, lab tests, and imaging results supplement his outpatient neuropsychological evaluation performance.
Results:Data from a comprehensive outpatient neuropsychological evaluation approximately six months after WE diagnosis is presented. His cognitive profile was characterized by impaired performance on measures of verbal fluency and memory, including encoding and retention of verbal and visual information (with minimal benefit from cueing). Given these impairments and continued functional declines related to cognitive deficits, he met criteria for a Major Neurocognitive Disorder. These results demonstrate persistent cognitive deficits beyond the acute WE period.
Conclusions:WE is a serious neurological condition that can have lasting cognitive effects if left untreated. This case demonstrates persistent cognitive impairments six months after WE diagnosis in a young patient with an unremarkable alcohol history. These findings highlight the necessity of increased diagnostic efficiency of WE in non-alcoholic patients, as immediate thiamine treatment is essential to the recovery process. Neuropsychological functioning at a longer interval will be useful in further elucidating cognitive prognosis as well as providing quality of life recommendations.
Neuropsychological Functioning in Preterm-Born Twins and Singletons at Preschool Age
- Sarah Raz, Jamie C. Piercy, Andrew M. Heitzer, Brittany N. Peters, Julie Bapp Newman, Angela K. DeBastos, Noa Ofen, Beau Batton, Daniel G. Batton
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 22 / Issue 9 / October 2016
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 24 October 2016, pp. 865-877
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Objectives: A limited body of research is available on the relationships between multiplicity of birth and neuropsychological functioning in preterm children who were conceived in the age of assisted reproductive technology and served by the modern neonatal intensive care unit. Our chief objective was to evaluate whether, after adjustment for sociodemographic factors and perinatal complications, twin birth accounted for a unique portion of developmental outcome variance in children born at-risk in the surfactant era. Methods: We compared the neuropsychological functioning of 77 twins and 144 singletons born preterm (<34 gestational weeks) and served by William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, MI. Children were evaluated at preschool age, using standardized tests of memory, language, perceptual, and motor abilities. Results: Multiple regression analyses, adjusting for sociodemographic and perinatal variables, revealed no differences on memory or motor indices between preterm twins and their singleton counterparts. In contrast, performance of language and visual processing tasks was significantly lower in twins despite reduced perinatal risk in comparison to singletons. Effect sizes ranged from .33 to .38 standard deviations for global language and visual processing ability indices, respectively. No significant group by sex interactions were observed, and comparison of first-, or second-born twins with singletons yielded medium effect sizes (Cohen’s d=.56 and .40, respectively). Conclusions: The modest twin disadvantage on language and visual processing tasks at preschool-age could not be readily attributable to socioeconomic or perinatal variables. The possibility of biological or social twinning-related phenomena as mechanisms underlying the observed performance gaps are discussed. (JINS, 2016, 22, 865–877)
Physical Growth in the Neonatal Intensive-Care Unit and Neuropsychological Performance at Preschool Age in very Preterm-Born Singletons
- Sarah Raz, Angela K. DeBastos, Julie Bapp Newman, Brittany N. Peters, Andrew M. Heitzer, Jamie C. Piercy, Daniel G. Batton
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 21 / Issue 2 / February 2015
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 05 March 2015, pp. 126-136
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We studied the associations between early postnatal growth gains and neuropsychological outcome in very preterm-born children. Specifically, we wished to establish whether relationships exist between gains in head circumference (relative to gains in body-weight or length), from birth to hospital discharge, and intellectual, language, or motor, performance at preschool age. We used data from 127 preschoolers, born <33 weeks, all graduates of the William Beaumont Hospital Neonatal Intensive-Care Unit (NICU) in Royal Oak, MI. Cognitive, motor, and language outcomes were evaluated using the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scales of Intelligence-Revised, Peabody Developmental Scales – 2nd Edition, and the Preschool Language Scale – 3rd Edition, respectively. Differences between Z-scores at birth and hospital discharge, calculated for three anthropometric measures (head circumference, weight, length), were variables of interest in separate simultaneous multiple regression procedures. We statistically adjusted for sex, socioeconomic status, birth weight, length of hospitalization, perinatal complications, and intrauterine growth. Examination of the relationships between anthropometric indices and outcome measures revealed a significant association between NICU head growth and global intelligence, with the Z-difference score for head circumference accounting for a unique portion of the variance in global intelligence (ηp2 =.04). Early postnatal head growth is significantly associated with neuropsychological outcome in very preterm-born preschoolers. To conclude, despite its relative brevity, NICU stay, often overlapping with the end of 2nd and with the 3rd trimester of pregnancy, appears to be a sensitive developmental period for brain substrates underlying neuropsychological functions. (JINS, 2015, 21, 126–136)