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Research Career Development. 外科部 神經外科 李明陽 醫師. 住院醫師時期. Join intracerebral hemorrhage, canine & sheep cervical spine studies. 感謝張冠諒老師及李宜堅主任的指導. Results. 主治醫師時期. 國立中醫藥研究所 University of Massachusetts, Worcester Harvard Medical School, Brigham & Women’s Hospital. 國立中醫藥研究所. 蕭永基 老師.
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Research Career Development 外科部 神經外科 李明陽 醫師
住院醫師時期 • Join intracerebral hemorrhage, canine & sheep cervical spine studies
主治醫師時期 • 國立中醫藥研究所 • University of Massachusetts, Worcester • Harvard Medical School, Brigham & Women’s Hospital
國立中醫藥研究所 蕭永基 老師
University of Massachusetts, Worcester Lawrence J. Hayward • Hyperkalemic Periodic Paralysis: a Muscle Ion Channel Disorder
Methods in Neuroscience • Cell Attached Clamp Technique • Whole Cell Patch Clamp Technique
UMass Medical School Professor Wins Nobel Prize Dr. Craig Mello and colleague Dr. Andrew Fire of Stanford honored for 1998 discovery of RNAi WORCESTER, Mass.-The Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet today awarded The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 2006 to the University of Massachusetts Medical School'sCraig C. Mello, PhD, and his colleague Andrew Fire, PhD, of Stanford University, for their discoveries related to RNA interference. In 1998, Drs. Mello and Fire, then of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, published research findings in Nature that demonstrated that a particular form of ribonucleic acid or RNA-the cellular material responsible for the transmission of genetic information-can silence targeted genes. This RNAi process offers astounding potential for understanding and manipulating the cellular basis of human disease, and RNAi is now the state-of-the-art method by which scientists can "knock out" the expression of specific genes to thus define the biological functions of those genes. Just as important has been the finding that RNAi is a normal process of genetic regulation that takes place during development, opening a new window on developmental gene regulation.
Harvard Medical SchoolBrigham &Women’s Hospital Peter M. Black Rona S. Carroll
Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus (NPH) • First described in 1965 by Hakim and Adams • Clinical triad of symptoms: - gait disturbance - dementia - incontinence • Image: communicating hydrocephalus • Potentially reversible by shunting: symptoms < 2 yrs J Neurol Sci 2:307–327, 1965
Etiology of NPH • Idiopathic: ~ 8.7%, elderly > 60 y/o, worse response to shunting (30–50%) • Secondary: younger age, better response to shunting (50–70%) - head injury, trauma - subarachnoid hemorrhage - meningitis - previous neurosurgery
Prevalence of INPH • Roughly 7,000,000 cases of dementia, of which 350,000 are most likely due to NPH • approximately 11,500 have been treated, leaving a large number of patients who have a potentially treatable cause of dementia, but have not been treated • NPH is the only potentially treatable cause of dementia
Clinical Triad • Gait disturbance: short-stepped, magnet, broad based gait • Dementia: Attention, psychomotor speed, verbal fluency, executive function and memory impairment • Urinary impairment: frequency and urgency, Urodynamic testing demonstrates bladder hyperactivity
Japanese Guideline for Management of INPH • Masatsune Ishikawa, Etsuro Mori et. al., Neurol Med Chir Suppl (Tokyo) 48, 2008 • Diagnostic levels: possible, probable and definite • CSF tap test as an important diagnostic test • Programmable valves recommended used in the shunt operation
Treatment • Medication: No definitive evidence exists that medication can successfully treat INPH. • Surgery: Shunting the CSF remains the main treatment modality.
Treatment • NPH is the only common form of dementia that is reversible • Drug therapy is ineffective • Programmable shunt technology more effective to NPH, non-invasive adjustment optimize the outcome • Early intervention yields improved outcomes