Ferris, Margaret

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Current opinions and practices in post-stroke movement disorders: Survey of movement disorders society members

Rodriguez-Porcel, Federico; Sarva, Harini; Joutsa, Juho; Falup-Pecurariu, Cristian; Wagle Shukla, Aparna; Mehanna, Raja; Śmiłowska, Katarzyna; Lanza, Giuseppe; Filipović, Saša; Shalash, Ali; Ferris, Margaret; Jankovic, Joseph; Espay, Alberto J.; Pandey, Sanjay

(Elsevier, 2024)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Rodriguez-Porcel, Federico
AU  - Sarva, Harini
AU  - Joutsa, Juho
AU  - Falup-Pecurariu, Cristian
AU  - Wagle Shukla, Aparna
AU  - Mehanna, Raja
AU  - Śmiłowska, Katarzyna
AU  - Lanza, Giuseppe
AU  - Filipović, Saša
AU  - Shalash, Ali
AU  - Ferris, Margaret
AU  - Jankovic, Joseph
AU  - Espay, Alberto J.
AU  - Pandey, Sanjay
PY  - 2024
UR  - http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1459
AB  - Background: Post-stroke movement disorders (PSMD) encompass a wide array of presentations, which vary in mode of onset, phenomenology, response to treatment, and natural history. There are no evidence-based guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of PSMD. Objectives: To survey current opinions and practices on the diagnosis and treatment of PSMD. Methods: A survey was developed by the PSMD Study Group, commissioned by the International Parkinson's and Movement Disorders Society (MDS). The survey, distributed to all members, yielded a total of 529 responses, 395 (74.7%) of which came from clinicians with experience with PSMD. Results: Parkinsonism (68%), hemiballismus/hemichorea (61%), tremor (58%), and dystonia (54%) were by far the most commonly endorsed presentation of PSMD, although this varied by region. Basal ganglia stroke (76% of responders), symptoms contralateral to stroke (75%), and a temporal relationship (59%) were considered important factors for the diagnosis of PSMD. Oral medication use depended on the phenomenology of the PSMD. Almost 50% of respondents considered deep brain stimulation and ablative surgeries as options for treatment. The lack of guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment was considered the most important gap to address. Conclusions: Regionally varying opinions and practices on PSMD highlight gaps in (and mistranslation of) epidemiologic and therapeutic knowledge. Multicenter registries and prospective community-based studies are needed for the creation of evidence-based guidelines to inform the diagnosis and treatment of patients with PSMD.
PB  - Elsevier
T2  - Journal of the Neurological Sciences
T2  - Journal of the Neurological Sciences
T1  - Current opinions and practices in post-stroke movement disorders: Survey of movement disorders society members
SP  - 122925
VL  - 458
DO  - 10.1016/j.jns.2024.122925
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Rodriguez-Porcel, Federico and Sarva, Harini and Joutsa, Juho and Falup-Pecurariu, Cristian and Wagle Shukla, Aparna and Mehanna, Raja and Śmiłowska, Katarzyna and Lanza, Giuseppe and Filipović, Saša and Shalash, Ali and Ferris, Margaret and Jankovic, Joseph and Espay, Alberto J. and Pandey, Sanjay",
year = "2024",
abstract = "Background: Post-stroke movement disorders (PSMD) encompass a wide array of presentations, which vary in mode of onset, phenomenology, response to treatment, and natural history. There are no evidence-based guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of PSMD. Objectives: To survey current opinions and practices on the diagnosis and treatment of PSMD. Methods: A survey was developed by the PSMD Study Group, commissioned by the International Parkinson's and Movement Disorders Society (MDS). The survey, distributed to all members, yielded a total of 529 responses, 395 (74.7%) of which came from clinicians with experience with PSMD. Results: Parkinsonism (68%), hemiballismus/hemichorea (61%), tremor (58%), and dystonia (54%) were by far the most commonly endorsed presentation of PSMD, although this varied by region. Basal ganglia stroke (76% of responders), symptoms contralateral to stroke (75%), and a temporal relationship (59%) were considered important factors for the diagnosis of PSMD. Oral medication use depended on the phenomenology of the PSMD. Almost 50% of respondents considered deep brain stimulation and ablative surgeries as options for treatment. The lack of guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment was considered the most important gap to address. Conclusions: Regionally varying opinions and practices on PSMD highlight gaps in (and mistranslation of) epidemiologic and therapeutic knowledge. Multicenter registries and prospective community-based studies are needed for the creation of evidence-based guidelines to inform the diagnosis and treatment of patients with PSMD.",
publisher = "Elsevier",
journal = "Journal of the Neurological Sciences, Journal of the Neurological Sciences",
title = "Current opinions and practices in post-stroke movement disorders: Survey of movement disorders society members",
pages = "122925",
volume = "458",
doi = "10.1016/j.jns.2024.122925"
}
Rodriguez-Porcel, F., Sarva, H., Joutsa, J., Falup-Pecurariu, C., Wagle Shukla, A., Mehanna, R., Śmiłowska, K., Lanza, G., Filipović, S., Shalash, A., Ferris, M., Jankovic, J., Espay, A. J.,& Pandey, S.. (2024). Current opinions and practices in post-stroke movement disorders: Survey of movement disorders society members. in Journal of the Neurological Sciences
Elsevier., 458, 122925.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2024.122925
Rodriguez-Porcel F, Sarva H, Joutsa J, Falup-Pecurariu C, Wagle Shukla A, Mehanna R, Śmiłowska K, Lanza G, Filipović S, Shalash A, Ferris M, Jankovic J, Espay AJ, Pandey S. Current opinions and practices in post-stroke movement disorders: Survey of movement disorders society members. in Journal of the Neurological Sciences. 2024;458:122925.
doi:10.1016/j.jns.2024.122925 .
Rodriguez-Porcel, Federico, Sarva, Harini, Joutsa, Juho, Falup-Pecurariu, Cristian, Wagle Shukla, Aparna, Mehanna, Raja, Śmiłowska, Katarzyna, Lanza, Giuseppe, Filipović, Saša, Shalash, Ali, Ferris, Margaret, Jankovic, Joseph, Espay, Alberto J., Pandey, Sanjay, "Current opinions and practices in post-stroke movement disorders: Survey of movement disorders society members" in Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 458 (2024):122925,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2024.122925 . .
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