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1.
Prague Med Rep ; 124(4): 421-434, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38069647

ABSTRACT

To evaluate the retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness and choroidal thickness (CT) in Parkinson disease (PD) patients. A comparative cross-sectional, hospital-based study. 39 PD and 39 controls were recruited, who were gender and age matched. Subjects that fulfilled the inclusion criteria underwent optical coherence tomography for evaluation of RNFL thickness and choroidal thickness (CT). There was significant reduction of RNFL thickness in average (adjusted mean 88.87 µm vs. 94.82 µm, P=0.001), superior (adjusted mean 110.08 µm vs. 119.10 µm, P=0.002) and temporal (adjusted mean 63.77 µm vs. 70.36 µm, P=0.004) in PD compared to controls. The central subfoveal CT was significantly thinner in PD compared to controls (adjusted mean 271.13 µm vs. 285.10 µm, P=0.003). In PD group, there was significant weak negative correlation between the duration of PD with average RNFL thickness (r=-0.354, P=0.027), moderate negative correlation between the duration of PD with central subfoveal CT (r=-0.493, P=0.001), and weak negative correlation between the stage of PD with central subfoveal CT (r=-0.380, P=0.017). PD group had significant thinner average, superior and temporal RNFL thickness and CT compared to controls.


Subject(s)
Parkinson Disease , Humans , Parkinson Disease/complications , Cross-Sectional Studies , Nerve Fibers , Retina , Choroid
2.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 8117, 2019 05 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31148550

ABSTRACT

There is a lack of evidence that either conventional observational rating scale or biomechanical system is a better tremor assessment tool. This work focuses on comparing a biomechanical system and the Movement Disorder Society-sponsored revision of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale in terms of test-retest reliability. The Parkinson's disease tremors were quantified by biomechanical system in joint angular displacement and predicted rating, as well as assessed by three raters using observational ratings. Qualitative comparisons of the validity and function are made also. The observational rating captures the overall severity of body parts, whereas the biomechanical system provides motion- and joint-specific tremor severity. The tremor readings of the biomechanical system were previously validated against encoders' readings and doctors' ratings; the observational ratings were validated with previous ratings on assessing the disease and combined motor symptoms rather than on tremor specifically. Analyses show that the predicted rating is significantly more reliable than the average clinical ratings by three raters. The comparison work removes some of the inconsistent impressions of the tools and serves as guideline for selecting a tool that can improve tremor assessment. Nevertheless, further work is required to consider more variabilities that influence the overall judgement.


Subject(s)
Parkinson Disease/diagnosis , Symptom Assessment/standards , Tremor/diagnosis , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Algorithms , Biomechanical Phenomena , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Movement , Reproducibility of Results , Sample Size , Severity of Illness Index , Software
3.
BMJ Case Rep ; 20182018 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30361450

ABSTRACT

Acute bacterial meningitis is not an uncommon central nervous system infection. In severe cases, it can be associated with various neurological or systemic complications. However, acute spinal cord dysfunction rarely occurs. We report a case of bacterial meningitis complicated with spinal cord infarction despite adequate treatment with antibiotics and corticosteroid therapy. He had residual paraplegia and was fully dependent in the activity of daily living.


Subject(s)
Central Nervous System Bacterial Infections/diagnosis , Meningitis, Bacterial/diagnosis , Spinal Cord Ischemia/microbiology , Spinal Cord/blood supply , Acute Disease , Adult , Central Nervous System Bacterial Infections/drug therapy , Humans , Infarction/microbiology , Male , Meningitis, Bacterial/drug therapy , Paraplegia/microbiology , Syndrome , Treatment Outcome , Urinary Bladder Diseases/microbiology
4.
IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng ; 26(2): 460-467, 2018 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29432113

ABSTRACT

Despite the advancement of the tremor assessment systems, the current technology still lacks a method that can objectively characterize tremors in relative segmental movements. This paper presents a measurement system, which quantifies multi-degrees-of-freedom coupled relative motions of hand-arm tremor, in terms of joint angular displacement. In-laboratory validity and reliability tests of the system algorithm to provide joint angular displacement was carried out by using the two-degrees-of-freedom tremor simulator with incremental rotary encoder systems installed. The statistical analyses show that the developed system has high validity results and comparable reliability performances using the rotary encoder system as the reference. In the clinical trials, the system was tested on 38 Parkinson's disease patients. The system readings were correlated with the observational tremor ratings of six trained medical doctors. The moderate to very high clinical correlations of the system readings in measuring rest, postural and task-specific tremors add merits to the degree of readiness of the developed tremor measurement system in a routine clinical setting and/or intervention trial for tremor amelioration.


Subject(s)
Arm/physiopathology , Hand/physiopathology , Tremor/diagnosis , Aged , Algorithms , Biomechanical Phenomena , Computer Simulation , Female , Humans , Joints/physiopathology , Male , Middle Aged , Motion , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Reproducibility of Results , Tremor/physiopathology
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