Prenatal supplementation with docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) does not result in improved cognitive, problem-solving, or language abilities for children at age 4, according to the results of a trial published in the May 7 issue of JAMA. Investigators conducted longer-term follow-up from a previous study in which pregnant women received 800 mg/day of DHA or placebo. In the initial study, the researchers found that average cognitive, language, and motor scores did not differ between children at 18 months of age. Approximately 92% of eligible families participated in the follow-up study. The DHA group included 313 participants, and the control group included 333 participants. The investigators found that measures of cognition, the ability to perform complex mental processing, language, and executive functioning (eg, memory, reasoning, and problem solving) did not differ significantly between groups at age 4.
The FDA has informed Acorda Therapeutics that it has completed its review of the company’s new drug application for Plumiaz (diazepam) nasal spray and that the application cannot be approved in its present form. The drug was developed for the treatment of people with epilepsy who experience cluster seizures. Acorda Therapeutics is developing a response to address the items outlined in the letter. Based on the requirements for approval outlined in the letter, the company does not expect Plumiaz to receive FDA approval in 2014. Plumiaz previously received orphan drug designation for the treatment of cluster seizures. [For related news, see page 9.]
Older people with memory and thinking problems who do not have dementia may have a lower risk of dying from cancer than people who have no memory and thinking problems, according to a study published April 22 in Neurology. Researchers studied 2,627 people age 65 and older who did not have dementia at baseline. Participants underwent tests of memory and thinking skills at baseline and at three years. Follow-up lasted for an average of approximately 13 years. During the study, 1,003 participants died. About 34% of deaths occurred among patients with the fastest decline in thinking skills. Approximately 21% of participants in the group with the fastest decline in thinking skills died of cancer, compared with 29% of participants in the other two groups.
A new technique may predict with 95% accuracy which patients with stroke will benefit from IV t-PA and which will have potentially lethal bleeding in the brain, according to a study published online ahead of print May 15 in Stroke. Researchers used a computer program that shows physicians the amount of gadolinium, injected during an MRI scan, that has leaked into the brain tissue from surrounding blood vessels. By quantifying this damage in 75 patients with stroke, the researchers identified a threshold for determining how much leakage was dangerous. They applied this threshold to the records for the 75 patients to determine how well it would predict who had had a brain hemorrhage and who had not. The new test correctly predicted the outcome with 95% accuracy.
Freezing of gait in patients with Parkinson’s disease may correlate with poor quality of life, disease severity, apathy, and exposure to antimuscarinics, according to a study published online ahead of print May 19 in JAMA Neurology. Investigators performed a cross-sectional survey of 672 patients with idiopathic Parkinson’s disease. Patients with freezing of gait were identified as those with a score of 1 or greater on item 14 of the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) in the on condition. Approximately 38% of patients reported freezing of gait during the on state, which was significantly related to lower quality of life scores. Freezing of gait was also correlated with longer disease duration, higher UPDRS parts II and III scores, apathy, and a higher levodopa equivalent daily dose.
Among college football players, concussion and years of football played may have a significant inverse relationship with hippocampal volume, according to research published May 14 in JAMA. Years of football experience also may correlate with slower reaction time. Investigators conducted a cross-sectional study of 25 college football players with a history of clinician-diagnosed concussion, 25 college football players without a history of concussion, and 25 nonfootball-playing, age-, sex-, and education-matched healthy controls. Players with and without a history of concussion had smaller hippocampal volumes, compared with healthy controls. Players with a history of concussion had smaller hippocampal volumes than players without concussion. In both athlete groups, investigators found a statistically significant inverse relationship between left hippocampal volume and number of years of football played.
Deficiencies in hyaluronan can lead to spontaneous epileptic seizures, according to research published April 30 in the Journal of Neuroscience. In a multicenter study, investigators examined the role of hyaluronan using mutant mice deficient in each of the three hyaluronan synthase genes (ie, Has1, Has2, Has3). The mutant mice were prone to epileptic seizures. In Has3(-/-) mice, this phenotype likely results from a reduction in the size of the brain extracellular space (ECS), said the researchers. Among the three Has knockout models, seizures were most prevalent in Has3(-/-) mice, which also had the greatest hyaluronan reduction in the hippocampus. The results provide the first direct evidence for the physiologic role of hyaluronan in the regulation of ECS volume, according to the investigators.