The identification of subjects carrying the HLA-B*1502 allele and the avoidance of carbamazepine therapy in these subjects was strongly associated with a decrease in the incidence of carbamazepine-induced SJS-TEN. (Funded by the National Science Council of Taiwan and the Taiwan Drug Relief Foundation.).
Objective: The glymphatic system cleans amyloid and tau proteins from the brain in animal studies of Alzheimer disease (AD). However, there is no direct evidence showing this in humans. Methods: Participants (n = 50, 62.6 AE 5.4 years old, 36 women) with AD and normal controls underwent amyloid positron emission tomography (PET), tau PET, structural T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, and neuropsychological evaluation. Whole-brain glymphatic activity was measured by diffusion tensor image analysis along the perivascular space (DTI-ALPS). Results: ALPS-indexes showed negative correlations with deposition of amyloid and tau on PET images and positive correlations with cognitive scores even after adjusting for age, sex, years of education, and APOE4 genotype covariates in multiple AD-related brain regions (all p < 0.05). Mediation analysis showed that ALPS-index acted as a significant mediator between regional standardized uptake value ratios of amyloid and tau images and cognitive dysfunction even after correcting for multiple covariates in AD-related brain regions. These regions are responsible for attention, memory, and executive function, which are vulnerable to sleep deprivation. Interpretation: Glymphatic system activity may act as a significant mediator in AD-related cognitive dysfunction even after adjusting for multiple covariates and gray matter volumes. ALPS-index may provide useful disease progression or treatment biomarkers for patients with AD as an indicator of modulation of glymphatic activity.
The systemic administration of anti-nerve growth factor (NGF) antibodies can prevent local sensory hypersensitivity and block nociceptive fibers from sprouting into denervated adult rat skin. However, in the case of chronic constriction injury (CCI) in a rat, there is evidence that NGF reverses some effects of axotomy and alleviates thermal hyperalgesia. It is with this in mind that we investigated the influence of local anti-NGF and NGF on neuropathic pain and collateral sprouting caused by CCI. In our study, we looked at the effects to the ligated nerves after 30 consecutive days of local injections of anti-NGF and NGF. A high-dose of anti-NGF (1800 ng) was found to eradicate heat and cold hyperalgesia during postoperative days 16-28 and from days 8 to 34 after CCI, respectively. Our results show that a low-dose anti-NGF (18 ng) only mildly alleviates heat hyperalgesia but not cold hyperalgesia. There is evidence that a rebound phenomenon occurs for a short period of time after the anti-NGF injections cease. Results show that anti-NGF injections, whether in a high or low dose, significantly reduces the severity of autotomy or prevents the spread of collateral sprouting from the saphenous nerve into the sciatic innervation territory. In contrast, when a NGF (0.75 ng/g body weight) was applied to the ligated nerve immediately after the ligation, heat and cold hyperalgesia were eradicated during postoperative days 4-68 and from days 4 to 28, respectively. The results show that the effect of anti-NGF is delayed at the onset, is short in duration, and is dependent on the dosage. However, anti-NGF but not NGF blocked collateral sprouting and decreased the severity of autotomy, suggesting that anti-NGF may be a better potential alternative analgesic for the treatment of neuropathic pain in humans. The different initiation times to abolish thermal hyperalgesia by anti-NGF (delayed onset) and NGF (early onset) suggests that alterations in neurotrophic factors contribute to the development of behavioral hyperalgesia via a complex mechanism in CCI rats.
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