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Longer term benefit of dual antiplatelet therapy in stroke/TIA

 

The Clopidogrel in High-risk patients with Acute Non-disabling Cerebrovascular Events (CHANCE) trial demonstrated that the addition of clopidogrel to low-dose ASA in Chinese patients with acute minor stroke or transient ischemic attack provided better protection against subsequent stroke compared to ASA alone (Wang et al. N Engl J Med 2013;369:11-19).

Subjects in that study (n=5,170) were randomized within 24 hours of minor ischemic stroke/high-risk TIA to ASA 75 mg/day x 90 days, or ASA 75 mg/day x 21 days + clopidogrel at a loading dose of 300 mg, followed by 75 mg/day x 90 days. All subjects received ASA at a dose determined by the clinician (75-300 mg) on day 1. The rate of subsequent stroke at 90 days was 8.2% in the ASA-clopidogrel group versus 11.7% in the ASA alone group (hazard ratio 0.68). The rate of moderate/severe hemorrhage (0.3%) and hemorrhagic stroke (0.3%) were the same with the two regimens. Read More

EDSS change an unreliable measure of progression

 

The current methods used to estimate disability progression in clinical trials may be overestimating true disability by up to 30%, according to an MSBase analysis (Kalincik et al. Brain 2015;138(Pt 11):3287-3298). Read More

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Novel CSF biomarkers being investigated in AD

 

Preliminary studies suggest that visinin-like protein 1 (VILIP-1) may be useful as a biomarker of neuronal injury in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. VILIP-1 is one of a class of neuronal calcium sensor proteins regulating calcium ion homeostasis. It has been shown to affect intracellular neuronal signalling involved in synaptic plasticity, and may be associated with calcium-mediated neuronal injury. Thus, VILIP-1 provides a link between calcium-mediated neurotoxicity and pathological changes in AD (Groblewska et al. J Alzheimers Dis 2015;47:17-32). Read More

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Brain volume loss associated with cognitive decline in MS

 

The rate of brain volume loss (BVL) from neurodegeneration and axonal loss is estimated to be two-fold higher in MS patients compared to age-matched healthy controls, and is an important determinant of cognitive dysfunction, according to the results of a new meta-analysis. Read More

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