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Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by abnormal aggregation of hyperphosphorylated 4R-tau in cortical and subcortical areas of the brain. It is associated with various clinical phenotypes, such as the characteristic clinical phenotype corticobasal syndrome (CBS), which manifests with asymmetric akinetic–rigid, poorly levodopa-responsive parkinsonism, and cerebral cortical dysfunction. Other associated phenotypes are progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) syndrome, frontotemporal dementia, Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-like dementia, and non-fluent/agrammatic variant of primary progressive aphasia. Precise use of terminology is critical for a common understanding in discussions of clinical phenotype, attempted clinical diagnosis of CBD with its many presenting phenotypes, and accurate pathologic diagnosis (which can only be made neuropathologically). Diagnosis of probable or possible CBS and the other CBD-associated syndromes is based on the presence of certain clinical features. Pathologic and neuroimaging findings and currently available biological markers are discussed. Treatment for CBD and CBS is symptomatic and supportive at present.
Medicines routinely funded for use in Wales undergo health technology appraisal by the All Wales Medicines Strategy Group (AWMSG) or the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). This includes pediatric license extensions (PLE) notwithstanding any existing advice in adults. A review of the PLE process was conducted with the aim of providing faster access to children’s medicines in Wales.
Methods
Data were collected for PLE appraisals of medicines previously approved for adults by the AWMSG or NICE that subsequently went through the original PLE process between January 2010 and December 2020, or a simplified PLE process between January 2021 and March 2023. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and a two-tailed t-test (unequal variance) to test the null hypothesis that the difference between the two means was zero. An alpha of less than 0.05 was considered significant. Feedback was obtained from relevant stakeholders including the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (Wales) and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health.
Results
The AWMSG issued positive recommendations for all PLE appraisals included in the data collected, and these were endorsed by the Welsh Government. Appraisals that went through the original PLE process (n=56) took a mean 229.8 days (standard deviation 55.6), whereas those that went through the simplified PLE process (n=15) took a mean 102.6 days (standard deviation 48.1; p < 0.0001). The rapid access to children’s medicines was welcomed by the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health.
Conclusions
Review of the 2020 and 2023 PLE processes facilitated faster access to clinically effective and cost-effective medicines for children in Wales. In March 2023, the AWMSG and the Welsh Government reviewed these results and agreed that because all PLE medicines were approved for use within Wales irrespective of the process used, the AWMSG would no longer be required to routinely appraise PLEs.
Previous studies in rodents suggest that mismatch between fetal and postnatal nutrition predisposes individuals to metabolic diseases. We hypothesized that in nonhuman primates (NHP), fetal programming of maternal undernutrition (MUN) persists postnatally with a dietary mismatch altering metabolic molecular systems that precede standard clinical measures. We used unbiased molecular approaches to examine response to a high fat, high-carbohydrate diet plus sugar drink (HFCS) challenge in NHP juvenile offspring of MUN pregnancies compared with controls (CON). Pregnant baboons were fed ad libitum (CON) or 30% calorie reduction from 0.16 gestation through lactation; weaned offspring were fed chow ad libitum. MUN offspring were growth restricted at birth. Liver, omental fat, and skeletal muscle gene expression, and liver glycogen, muscle mitochondria, and fat cell size were quantified. Before challenge, MUN offspring had lower body mass index (BMI) and liver glycogen, and consumed more sugar drink than CON. After HFCS challenge, MUN and CON BMIs were similar. Molecular analyses showed HFCS response differences between CON and MUN for muscle and liver, including hepatic splicing and unfolded protein response. Altered liver signaling pathways and glycogen content between MUN and CON at baseline indicate in utero programming persists in MUN juveniles. MUN catchup growth during consumption of HFCS suggests increased risk of obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Greater sugar drink consumption in MUN demonstrates altered appetitive drive due to programming. Differences in blood leptin, liver glycogen, and tissue-specific molecular response to HFCS suggest MUN significantly impacts juvenile offspring ability to manage an energy rich diet.
Mucolipidosis type IV (MLIV) is a rare, progressive lysosomal storage disorder characterized by severe intellectual disability, delayed motor milestones and ophthalmologic abnormalities. MLIV is an autosomal recessive disease caused by mutations in the MCOLN1 gene, encoding mucolipin-1 which is responsible for maintaining lysosomal function.
Objectives and Methods:
Here, we report a family of four Iranian siblings with cognitive decline, progressive visual and pyramidal disturbances, and abnormal movements manifested by severe oromandibular dystonia and parkinsonism. MRI scans of the brain demonstrated signal abnormalities in the white matter and thinning of the corpus callosum.
Results and Conclusions:
Whole-exome sequencing identified a novel homozygous variant, c.362C > T:p. Thr121Met in the MCOLN1 gene consistent with a diagnosis of MLIV. The presentation of MLIV may overlap with a variety of other neurological diseases, and genetic analysis is an important strategy to clarify the diagnosis. This is an important point that clinicians should be familiar with. The novel variant c.362C > T:p. Thr121Met herein described may be related to a comparatively older age at onset. Our study also expands the clinical spectrum of MLIV associated with the MCOLN1 variants and introduces a novel likely pathogenic variant for testing in MLIV cases that remain unresolved.
Regulating war has long been a concern of the international community. From the Hague Conventions to the Geneva Conventions and the multiple treaties and related institutions that have emerged in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, efforts to mitigate the horrors of war have focused on regulating weapons, defining combatants, and ensuring access to the battlefield for humanitarians. But regulation and legal codes alone cannot be the end point of an engaged ethical response to new weapons developments. This short essay reviews some of the existing ethical works on lethal autonomous weapon systems (LAWS), highlighting how rule- and consequence-based accounts fail to provide adequate guidance for how to deal with them. I propose a virtue-based account, which I link up with an Aristotelian framework, for how the international community might better address these weapons systems.
Functional movement disorder (FMD), the motor-dominant subtype of functional neurological disorder, is a complex neuropsychiatric condition. Patients with FMD also manifest non-motor symptoms. Given that patients with FMD are diagnosed based on motor phenotype, the contribution of non-motor features to the neuropsychiatric syndrome is not well characterized. The objective of this hypothesis-generating study was to explore potential novel, neuropsychiatric FMD phenotypes by combining movement disorder presentations with non-motor comorbidities including somatic symptoms, psychiatric diagnoses, and psychological traits.
Methods
This retrospective chart review evaluated 158 consecutive patients with a diagnosis of FMD who underwent deep phenotyping across neurological and psychiatric domains. Demographic, clinical, and self-report features were analyzed. A data-driven approach using cluster analysis was performed to detect patterns when combining the movement disorder presentation with somatic symptoms, psychiatric diagnoses, and psychological factors. These new neuropsychiatric FMD phenotypes were then tested using logistic regression models.
Results
Distinct neuropsychiatric FMD phenotypes emerged when stratifying by episodic vs. constant motor symptoms. Episodic FMD was associated with hyperkinetic movements, hyperarousal, anxiety, and history of trauma. In contrast, constant FMD was associated with weakness, gait disorders, fixed dystonia, activity avoidance, and low self-agency. Pain, fatigue, somatic preoccupation, and health anxiety were common across all phenotypes.
Conclusion
This study found patterns spanning the neurological-psychiatric interface that indicate that FMD is part of a broader neuropsychiatric syndrome. Adopting a transdisciplinary view of illness reveals readily identifiable clinical factors that are relevant for the development and maintenance of FMD.
To describe the development and initial experience of a clinical research program in progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) and corticobasal syndrome (CBS) in Canada: The Rossy PSP Centre, to share the data acquisition tools adopted, and to report preliminary results.
Methods:
Extensive demographic and longitudinal clinical information is collected every 6 months using standardized forms. Biofluids are collected for biobanking and genetic analysis, and many patients are enrolled in neuroimaging research protocols. Brain donation is an important component of the program, and standardized processing protocols have been established, including very short death to autopsy times in patients undergoing medical assistance in dying.
Results:
Between Oct 2019 and Dec 2021, 132 patients were screened, 91 fulfilling criteria for PSP and 19 for CBS; age 71 years; 41% female; duration 5 years, age-of-onset 66 years. The most common symptoms at onset were postural instability and falls (45%), cognitive-behavioral changes (22%), and Parkinsonism (9%). The predominant clinical phenotype was Richardson syndrome (82%). Levodopa and amantadine resulted in partial and short-lasting benefit.
Conclusions:
The Rossy PSP Centre has been established to advance clinical and basic research in PSP and related tauopathies. The extent of the clinical data collected permits deep phenotyping of patients and allows for future clinical and basic research. Preliminary results showed expected distribution of phenotypes, demographics, and response to symptomatic treatments in our cohort. Longitudinal data will provide insight into the early diagnosis and management of PSP. Future steps include enrollment of patients in earlier stages, development of biomarkers, and fast-tracking well-characterized patients into clinical trials.
To characterize Parkinson’s disease (PD) symptoms based on the presence, onset time, and severity of rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) and their association with impulse control disorders (ICD).
Background:
RBD is a frequent non-motor symptom in PD, usually described as prodromal. The severity of RBD according to the start time and its relationship with ICD in PD needs further clarification.
Methods:
A survey-based study was performed to determine the presence of RBD symptoms, their severity, and the temporal relationship with the PD onset. The survey included RBD1Q, the Mayo Sleep, and the RBDQ-HK questionnaires and questions about clinical characteristics, including ICD. Only PD patients with care partners spending night hours in the same room were included.
Results:
410 PD patients were included: 206 with RBD (50.2%) and 204 non-RBD (49.8%). The PD-RBD patients were younger and their daily levodopa dose was higher than the non-RBD group. Most of these patients developed RBD symptoms after the onset of clinical PD were younger at motor symptom onset and had higher scores in the hallucinations and psychosis subsection of MDS-UPDRS-I. RBD group had a more severe non-motor phenotype, including more ICD than those without RBD, mainly due to higher compulsive eating.
Conclusions:
In our study, most patients recognized RBD symptoms after the onset of the PD motor symptoms and the clinical features of PD with and without RBD were distinctive, supporting the hypothesis that PD-RBD might represent a variant pattern of neurodegeneration.
In his recently published book Praxis, Friedrich Kratochwil argues that action should be at the centre of our investigations in International Relations (IR). In making that claim, he positions himself against two theoretical starting points: (1) the agent is simply a vessel for structural factors, so ‘causes’ matter more than ‘reasons’; and (2) there is no real agency because of the instability of the subject. One might argue that he is locating a middle ground between positivism (position 1) and post-structuralism (position 2). He does this through an overview of a wide range of themes at the intersection of international politics and international law.
In any work that seeks to recover a praxis-based approach, Aristotle is an obvious figure; indeed, Kratochwil’s subtitle to the book (On Acting and Knowing) comes directly from Aristotle’s two categories of virtues, the practical and the theoretical (Aristotle, 1941: 952). Aristotle has long been in the background and sometimes foreground of Kratochwil’s work. In Praxis, Kratochwil invokes Aristotle a number of times. At the same time, he critiques Aristotle for what Kratochwil argues is the former’s overly theoretical focus at the expense of practical politics. Instead, in Praxis, Kratochwil finds more benefit in the work of David Hume, about whom he has written previously (Kratochwil, 2011a [1981]).
In this chapter, I argue that Aristotle is more beneficial than Kratochwil makes him out to be for understanding the practical dimensions of international law and politics. In particular, I argue that Aristotle provides an alternative understanding of the rule of law and how it relates to the wider international political order, one that differs both from Kratochwil and from contemporary international law. As Kratochwil notes, Aristotle became a reference point for many in the early modern and modern periods in support of a law-governed polity. In recent years, this invocation of the rule of law has become a mantra for advocates of global governance, one that has lost any connection to the political context within which the rule of law might function.
What rules govern the conduct of warfare? Do state and non-state actors conduct themselves in accordance with rules? These are long-standing questions in the study and practice of war. There are, however, some underlying questions that may also be worthy of investigation. How stable are those rules? What foundations do they have? Even more provocatively, are rules the best way to govern the conduct of warfare? Many areas of public life are conducted in terms of rules, yet rules and rule following can become fetishized. Judith Skhlar’s famous critique of law and international criminal law introduced the idea of ‘legalism’, or the use of rules and laws to cover over ideological or political conflicts. Rules guide us through complex situations; at the same time, rules can constrain and limit our ability to respond when those situations change or when a rule simply does not work. In fact, rules can even generate their own forms of violence, especially when yoked to ideas like the national interest.
Nicholas Rengger did not address rules directly in his scholarship. Instead, the idea of rules and law formed a backdrop to many of his critical interventions in world politics. From his studies of order to just war, Rengger engaged with and contested the idea that law and rules alone could structure our political lives. At the same time, as I will argue in this chapter, Rengger did not set aside rules in their entirety, for he understood the necessity of rules in both domestic and international political order more broadly. Instead, Rengger argued for a more casuistic approach to political life. Drawn from ancient and medieval moral and political theory, this idea highlights the importance of the contexts within which rules operate. Rules and laws still play a role, but they cannot be seen as the only way to approach political conflict. As such, the focus of this chapter will be on Rengger as a reluctant rule follower.
The chapter will use Rengger’s writing on just war and violence to orient the argument. The first section sets out his understanding of rules and their relation to political order. Following this, and building upon it, the next section explores his reading of the Just War tradition as found in his book Just War and International Order.
This study tests two sets of competing hypotheses about the relationship between trait reactivity to positive and negative stimuli (i.e., motivational reactivity), moral stances on social principles (i.e., social morality), and political ideology. The classic view contends that a specific political ideology or social morality results from a specific motivational reactivity pattern, whereas the dynamic coordination account suggests that trait motivational reactivity modulates an individual’s political ideology and social morality as a result of the majority political beliefs in their immediate social context. A survey using subjects recruited from a liberal-leaning social context was conducted to test these hypotheses. Results support the dynamic coordination account. Reactivity to negativity (indexed by defensive system activation scores) is associated with the adoption of the dominant social morality and political ideology. Reactivity to positivity (indexed by appetitive system activation scores) is associated with the adoption of nondominant social moral and political stances.
This article argues that this special section reveals a practical global constitutionalism, or one that integrates a liberal constitutional set of ideas with the histories and practices of Asian states.
Prolonged remission of dystonia occurs rarely; however, well-documented cases are lacking. We report the clinical characteristics and course of four patients with botulinum toxin (BoNT)-associated prolonged remission of idiopathic cervical dystonia. Mean age at onset was 40 years. All had a relatively short duration of symptoms (mean 10.3 months), and with remission occurring after ≤ 3 treatments with BoNT. At last examination, the remission duration was 2–5 years. In the two cases that subsequently relapsed after 4–5 years, there was an altered phenomenology and worsened severity than at the onset. Recognizing this rare phenomenon has valuable clinical implications.
The international legal and institutional structure around climate change ascertains that the responsibility to react to the phenomena lies predominantly with states. Although states play a vital part in addressing climate change, these structural constrains leaves limited room for alternative actors to take action to react to the problem. This chapter proposes looking at responsibility in world affairs as a political concept; a political concept that reconstitutes norms, practices, and actions in a manner that advances new ways to mitigate climate change. Drawing on Hannah Arendt’s conceptualisation of political responsibility, and the activism of non-state and substate within the UNFCCC, we suggest that political responsibility gives agency and space for different actors within the international community to engage in practices that help advance the climate change agenda. This, we further suggest, constructs a common community in which various actors undertake political action in order to influence policymaking.
Functional neurological disorder (FND) is a complex neuropsychiatric syndrome with many phenotypes that are commonly encountered in clinical practice. Despite the heterogeneity of FND, the rate of misidentification is consistently low. For the more common motor subtypes, there are clear positive clinical, electrophysiological, and rarely imaging criteria that can establish the diagnosis in the traditional sense. For nonmotor subtypes, the characterization may be less clear. Here, we argue that the current diagnostic criteria are not reflective of the current shared neuropsychiatric understanding of FND, and, as a result, provide an incomplete picture of the diagnosis. We propose a three-step diagnostic triad for FND, in which the traditional neurological diagnosis is only the first element. Other steps include psychiatric/psychological formulation, integration, and follow-up. We advocate that this diagnostic approach should be the shared responsibility of neurology and mental health professionals. Finally, a research agenda is proposed to address the missing factors in the field.