Background and PurposeThe most common strategy for treating patients with acute ischemic stroke is thrombolytic therapy, though only a few patients receive benefits because of the narrow time window. Inflammation occurring in the central nervous system (CNS) in association with ischemia is caused by immune cells including monocytes and involved in lesion expansion. If the specific roles of monocyte subsets in stroke can be revealed, they may become an effective target for new treatment strategies.MethodsWe performed immunological examinations of 36 consecutive ischemic stroke patients within 2 days of onset and compared the results with 24 age-matched patients with degenerative disorders. The stroke patients were repeatedly tested for the proportions of monocyte subsets in blood, and serum levels of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines immediately after admission, on days 3-7 and 12-16 after stroke onset, and on the day of discharge. In addition, immunological measurements were analyzed for relationships to stroke subtypes and complications, including progressive infarction (PI) and stroke-associated infection (SAI).ResultsMonocyte count was significantly increased from 0–16 days after stroke as compared to the controls (p<0.05). CD14highCD16- classical and CD14highCD16+ intermediate monocytes were significantly increased from 0-7 and 3-16 days after stroke, respectively (p<0.05), whereas CD14 dimCD16high non-classical monocytes were decreased from 0–7 days (p<0.05). Cardioembolic infarction was associated with a persistent increase in intermediate monocytes. Furthermore, intermediate monocytes were significantly increased in patients with PI (p<0.05), while non-classical monocytes were decreased in those with SAI (p<0.05). IL-17A levels were positively correlated with monocyte count (r=0.485, p=0.012) as well as the percentage of non-classical monocytes (r=0.423, p=0.028), and negatively with that of classical monocytes (r=-0.51, p=0.007) during days 12-16.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that CD14highCD16+ intermediate monocytes have a role in CNS tissue damage during acute and subacute phases in ischemic stroke especially in relation to cardioembolism.
Chorea-acanthocytosis (ChAc) is a hereditary disease characterized by involuntary movements and amyotrophy with elevation of serum creatine kinase. Although skeletal muscle involvement in ChAc has been suggested, the mechanism remains unclear. To investigate chorein abnormalities of the skeletal muscles of ChAc patients with an apparently heterozygous VPS13A mutation compared with those of other hereditary choreic diseases, we performed histological and immunohistochemical studies of the skeletal muscles from 3 ChAc, 1 Huntington's disease (HD), 1 McLeod syndrome (MLS), and 1 normal control (NC) with 2 originally generated anti-chorein antibodies. Chorein immunoreactivities in HD, MLS, and NC were found linearly along the sarcolemma and appeared as speckles in the sarcoplasma, but those in ChAc were uneven and discontinuous along the sarcolemmas and increased in the sarcoplasma especially in type I fibers. This histological observation suggests chorein abnormalities of skeletal muscles might be associated with primary involvement of skeletal muscles in this disorder.
A 78-year-old woman noticed that people's eyes and the right nasal foramens located in her left visual field looked smaller than those observed in the right. The woman reported no change in shape regarding facial outlines or scenic objects. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed an acute infarction of the right side of the splenium of the corpus callosum. Close examination revealed that her metamorphopsia affected the left side of her visual field, especially influencing facial components, particularly the eye. The woman had similar reactions to photographs of several kinds of animals, realistic portraits of humans, and caricatured humans. Meanwhile, presentings caricature human face at a 90° rotation elicited metamorphopsia in eyebrows located on the left side of a picture, but not the eyes. She also reported a change of shape or color tone for geometric objects. The patient's only symptom was metamorphopsia, and she did not show any other neurological defects such as callosal disconnection syndrome. Furthermore, objects that were affected by the patient's metamorphopsia (e.g. facial component especially the eye, and simple geometric figures) may be easy images to use in order to detect this type of distorted vision.
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