Bendlin, Barbara B
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Given current lack of therapies for dementia, there is substantial interest in identifying potentially modifiable risk factors. Clarifying the potential of these factors to mitigate risk as well as determining the mechanisms that link these factors to dementia is expected to lead to new approaches for both preventing and treating neurodegenerative ...
Scarmeas, Nikolaos
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Dietary intervention is an enticing approach in the fight against cognitive impairment. Nutritional supplements and dietetic counseling are relatively easy and benign interventions, but research has not yet yielded irrefutable evidence as to their clinical utility. Heterogeneity in the results of available clinical studies, as well as methodologica...
Jessen, Frank
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Within aging societies, the number of individuals suffering from Alzheimer disease (AD) is constistently increasing. This is paralleled by intense research aimed at improving treatment options and potentially even fostering effective prevention. The discussion on relevant outcomes of such interventions is ongoing. Here, different types of currently...
Nave, Klaus-Armin
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Myelin is made by highly specialized glial cells and enables fast axonal impulse propagation. Recent studies show that oligodendrocytes in the central nervous system are, in addition to myelination, required for the integrity and survival of axons, independent of the presence or absence of myelin itself. The underlying mechanism of this support is ...
Gurwitz, David
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Alzheimer disease (AD) is the major epidemic of the 21st century, its prevalence rising along with improved human longevity. Early AD diagnosis is key to successful treatment, as currently available therapeutics only allow small benefits for diagnosed AD patients. By contrast, future therapeutics, including those already in preclinical or clinical ...
Garcia-Cazorla, Angela
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Inborn errors of metabolism (IEMs) are particularly frequent as diseases of the nervous system. In the pediatric neurologic presentations of IEMs neurodevelopment is constantly disturbed and in fact, as far as biochemistry is involved, any kind of monogenic disease can become an IEM. Clinical features are very diverse and may present as a neurodeve...
Kanzaria, Amar
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Adults presenting to maxillofacial surgery services are at high risk of psychological morbidity. This study examined the prevalence of depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety, drug and alcohol use, and appearance-related distress among maxillofacial trauma outpatients over medium-term follow-up. It also explored socio-demographic...
Thibaut, Florence
Published in
Dialogues in clinical neuroscience
Central nervous system disorders are traditionally dichotomized between early-onset neurodevelopmental and late-onset neurodegenerative diseases. Yet, there are commonalities in the mechanisms operating in both neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases.
Dioquino, Carissa Paz C.
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
Wilson disease is a rare genetic disease causing pathologic deposition of copper in the liver, brain, cornea, kidney, and cardiac muscles. Presented are two cases of neurologic Wilson disease with progressive movement disorder and Kayser-Fleischer rings with low serum copper, low ceruloplasmin, and increased 24-hour urine copper against a backgroun...
Cardoso, Carlos
Published in
Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
The development of the cerebral cortex requires complex sequential processes that have to be precisely orchestrated. The localization and timing of neuronal progenitor proliferation and of neuronal migration define the identity, laminar positioning, and specific connectivity of each single cortical neuron. Alterations at any step of this organized ...