News Roundup

News Roundup: New and Noteworthy Information


 

African Americans with multiple sclerosis (MS) have lower vitamin D levels than their healthy counterparts, according to a study published in the May 24 Neurology. Researchers conducted a cross-sectional study of 339 African-American patients with MS and 342 without MS to determine if vitamin D levels were associated with MS disease severity. Between 71% and 77% of all participants were vitamin D–deficient and 93% to 94% were vitamin D–insufficient, the authors reported. Overall, vitamin D levels were lower in patients with MS, but this was due to differences in climate and geography and did not have an impact on disease severity. “These results are consistent with observations in other populations that lower [vitamin D level] is associated with having MS,” the investigators concluded, “but also highlight the importance of climate and ancestry in determining vitamin D status.”

Protein-based human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and those derived from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) may be effective in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, according to a study in the May 16 Journal of Clinical Investigation. Results showed that neuronal precursors cells derived from hESCs and protein-based hiPSCs reversed disease when transplanted into the brains of rats modeling Parkinson’s disease. The researchers attempted to use neuronal cells derived from virus-based hiPSCs but were unable to do so because these virus-based cells exhibited apoptotic cell death. “[hiPSCs] are a potentially unlimited source of patient-specific cells for transplantation…. These data support the clinical potential of protein-based hiPSCs for personalized cell therapy of Parkinson’s disease,” the investigators concluded.

Women may have a greater risk than men for adverse events following certain stroke prevention procedures, as reported in the May 6 online Lancet Neurology. A total of 2,502 patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic stenosis were randomized to undergo carotid endarterectomy or carotid artery stenting. The rates of periprocedural stroke, myocardial infarction, and death were similar in men who underwent endarterectomy (4.9%) and stenting (4.3%). In women, however, a significant difference in rates of adverse events was observed—3.8% for endarterectomy versus 6.8% for stenting. “Periprocedural risk of events seems to be higher in women who have carotid artery stenting than those who have carotid endarterectomy, whereas there is little difference in men,” the authors concluded. “Additional data are needed to confirm whether this differential risk should be taken into account in decisions for treatment of carotid disease in women.”

About 14% of ischemic strokes presented at emergency departments are wake-up strokes, researchers reported in the May 10 Neurology. Wake-up strokes, according to the authors, cannot be distinguished from other types of stroke based on clinical features or outcome, making them difficult to treat with effective clot-busting therapies. The researchers analyzed data from patients presenting at emergency departments with ischemic stroke; they identified 1,854 ischemic stroke cases, 273 of which were wake-up strokes. “There were no differences between wake-up strokes and all other strokes with regard to clinical features or outcomes except for minor differences in age and baseline retrospective NIH Stroke Scale score,” the authors reported. “Of the wake-up strokes, at least 98 (35.9%) would have been eligible for thrombolysis if arrival time were not a factor.”

The annual rate of coronary artery bypass graft surgeries decreased 30% between 2001 and 2008, while rates of other percutaneous coronary interventions remained stable, according to an examination of national trends published in the May 4 JAMA. Investigators conducted a serial cross-sectional study to examine time trends of patients undergoing revascularization procedures, and determined that the annual surgery rate decreased from 1,742 to 1,081 per million adults in 2008. “Between 2001 and 2008, the number of hospitals … providing [coronary artery bypass graft surgery] increased by 12%, and the number of [percutaneous coronary interventions] hospitals increased by 26%,” the authors reported. They noted that new revascularization technologies, new clinical evidence from trials, and updated clinical guidelines may have affected the volume and distribution of coronary revascularizations.

Patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and refractory intracranial hypertension may benefit from decompressive craniectomy, but they may also experience unfavorable outcomes, according to a study in the April 21 New England Journal of Medicine. Researchers randomly assigned 155 adults with TBI and intracranial hypertension to undergo either bifrontotemporoparietal decompressive craniectomy or standard care. The results revealed that the standard-care group had higher levels of intracranial pressure and longer stays in the intensive care unit. “However, patients undergoing craniectomy had worse scores on the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale than those receiving standard care,” the authors noted. Patients with craniectomy were also more than twice as likely to experience an unfavorable outcome, including death, vegetative state, or severe disability.

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