The aim of this study was to examine the long-term effects of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection on a cohort of patients admitted with acute viral hepatitis from 1971 through 1975. The availability of stored sera from this time enabled testing to identify those who were anti-HCV-positive on admission. Sixteen percent (n ؍ 238) of the cohort tested anti-HCV-positive. The unexposed group was selected from those who were anti-HCVnegative. Systematic approaches were used to locate the cohort and health outcomes assessed by a study-specific questionnaire and clinical, serological, virological, and biochemical assessment. Complete follow-up was achieved on 98 anti-HCV-positive individuals and 201 negatives. Injecting drug use (IDU) was the presumed route of infection. At a mean of 25 years' followup, 54% of the anti-HCV-positive group had evidence of chronic HCV infection (both anti-HCV-and HCV-RNA-positive); the remainder were HCV-RNA-negative. Sixty-nine percent of those chronically infected had elevated serum alanine transaminase (ALT) levels, but only 8% had progressed to overt cirrhosis, and no cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were identified. In summary, anti-HCV-positive subjects were 8 times more likely to have died from suicide or drug overdose than from HCVrelated disease. Anti-HCV-positive study subjects were at increased risk of liver-related pathology after 25 years' follow-up, but few had progressed to overt cirrhotic liver disease. Excess mortality in this group was not the result of liver disease. This suggests that the natural history of community-acquired HCV may be more benign than previously thought. (HEPATOLOGY 2000;32:582-587.)
Long-term outcomes confirm that it is both safe and effective to perform STN DBS under general anesthesia. As part of patient choice, this option should be offered to all DBS candidates with advanced Parkinson disease to enable more of these patients to undergo this beneficial surgery.
The identification of those skill sets required for deployment is in keeping with the General Medical Council's current drive towards credentialing consultants, by which a consultant surgeon's capabilities in particular practice areas would be defined. Limited opportunities currently exist for trainees and consultants to gain experience in the management of traumatic head, face, neck and eye injuries seen in a kinetic combat environment. Predeployment training requires that the surgical techniques described in this paper are covered and should form the curriculum of future military-specific surgical fellowships. Relevant continued professional development will be necessary to maintain required clinical competency.
Memory impairment is a common, disabling effect of traumatic brain injury. In healthy individuals, successful memory encoding is associated with activation of the dorsal attention network as well as suppression of the default mode network. Here, in traumatic brain injury patients we examined whether: (i) impairments in memory encoding are associated with abnormal brain activation in these networks; (ii) whether changes in this brain activity predict subsequent memory retrieval; and (iii) whether abnormal white matter integrity underpinning functional networks is associated with impaired subsequent memory. Thirty-five patients with moderate-severe traumatic brain injury aged 23–65 years (74% males) in the post-acute/chronic phase after injury and 16 healthy control subjects underwent functional MRI during performance of an abstract image memory encoding task. Diffusion tensor imaging was used to assess structural abnormalities across patient groups compared to 28 age-matched healthy controls. Successful memory encoding across all participants was associated with activation of the dorsal attention network, the ventral visual stream and medial temporal lobes. Decreased activation was seen in the default mode network. Patients with preserved episodic memory demonstrated increased activation in areas of the dorsal attention network. Patients with impaired memory showed increased left anterior prefrontal activity. White matter microstructure underpinning connectivity between core nodes of the encoding networks was significantly reduced in patients with memory impairment. Our results show for the first time that patients with impaired episodic memory show abnormal activation of key nodes within the dorsal attention network and regions regulating default mode network activity during encoding. Successful encoding was associated with an opposite direction of signal change between patients with and without memory impairment, suggesting that memory encoding mechanisms could be fundamentally altered in this population. We demonstrate a clear relationship between functional networks activated during encoding and underlying abnormalities within the structural connectome in patients with memory impairment. We suggest that encoding failures in this group are likely due to failed control of goal-directed attentional resources.
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