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Dive into the research topics where Aleksandra M. Pavlović is active.

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Featured researches published by Aleksandra M. Pavlović.


Cephalalgia | 2007

Medication overuse headache: clinical features predicting treatment outcome at 1-year follow-up.

Jasna Zidverc-Trajkovic; Tatjana Pekmezovic; Zagorka Jovanovic; Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Milija Mijajlovic; Aleksandra Radojicic; Nadezda Sternic

We present a prospective study of 240 patients with medication overuse headache (MOH) treated with drug withdrawal and prophylactic medications. At 1-year follow-up, 137 (57.1%) patients were without chronic headache and without medication overuse, eight (3.3%) patients did not improve after withdrawal and 95 (39.6%) relapsed developing recurrent overuse. Age at time of MOH diagnosis, regular use of benzodiazepines, frequency and Migraine Disability Assessment (MIDAS) score of chronic headache, age at onset of primary headache, frequency and MIDAS score of primary headache, ergotamine compound overuse and daily drug intake were significantly different between successfully and unsuccessfully treated patients. Multivariate analysis determined the frequency of primary headache disorder, ergotamine overuse and disability of chronic headache estimated by MIDAS as independent predictors of treatment efficacy at 1-year follow-up.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2016

Efficient neuroplasticity induction in chronic stroke patients by an associative brain-computer interface

Natalie Mrachacz-Kersting; Ning Jiang; Andrew James Thomas Stevenson; Imran Khan Niazi; Vladimir Kostic; Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Saša Radovanović; Milica Djuric-Jovicic; Federica Agosta; Kim Dremstrup; Dario Farina

Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) have the potential to improve functionality in chronic stoke patients when applied over a large number of sessions. Here we evaluated the effect and the underlying mechanisms of three BCI training sessions in a double-blind sham-controlled design. The applied BCI is based on Hebbian principles of associativity that hypothesize that neural assemblies activated in a correlated manner will strengthen synaptic connections. Twenty-two chronic stroke patients were divided into two training groups. Movement-related cortical potentials (MRCPs) were detected by electroencephalography during repetitions of foot dorsiflexion. Detection triggered a single electrical stimulation of the common peroneal nerve timed so that the resulting afferent volley arrived at the peak negative phase of the MRCP (BCIassociative group) or randomly (BCInonassociative group). Fugl-Meyer motor assessment (FM), 10-m walking speed, foot and hand tapping frequency, diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data, and the excitability of the corticospinal tract to the target muscle [tibialis anterior (TA)] were quantified. The TA motor evoked potential (MEP) increased significantly after the BCIassociative intervention, but not for the BCInonassociative group. FM scores (0.8 ± 0.46 point difference, P = 0.01), foot (but not finger) tapping frequency, and 10-m walking speed improved significantly for the BCIassociative group, indicating clinically relevant improvements. Corticospinal tract integrity on DTI did not correlate with clinical or physiological changes. For the BCI as applied here, the precise coupling between the brain command and the afferent signal was imperative for the behavioral, clinical, and neurophysiological changes reported. This association may become the driving principle for the design of BCI rehabilitation in the future. Indeed, no available BCIs can match this degree of functional improvement with such a short intervention.


BMC Medicine | 2017

Post-stroke dementia – a comprehensive review

Milija Mijajlovic; Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Michael Brainin; Wolf-Dieter Heiss; Terence J. Quinn; Hege Ihle-Hansen; Dirk M. Hermann; Einor Ben Assayag; Edo Richard; Alexander Thiel; Efrat Kliper; Yong Il Shin; Yun Hee Kim; Seong Hye Choi; San Jung; Yeong Bae Lee; Osman Sinanović; Deborah Levine; Ilana Schlesinger; Gillian Mead; Vuk Milošević; Didier Leys; Guri Hagberg; Marie Helene Ursin; Yvonne Teuschl; S.V. Prokopenko; Elena Mozheyko; Anna Bezdenezhnykh; Karl Matz; Vuk Aleksic

Post-stroke dementia (PSD) or post-stroke cognitive impairment (PSCI) may affect up to one third of stroke survivors. Various definitions of PSCI and PSD have been described. We propose PSD as a label for any dementia following stroke in temporal relation. Various tools are available to screen and assess cognition, with few PSD-specific instruments. Choice will depend on purpose of assessment, with differing instruments needed for brief screening (e.g., Montreal Cognitive Assessment) or diagnostic formulation (e.g., NINDS VCI battery). A comprehensive evaluation should include assessment of pre-stroke cognition (e.g., using Informant Questionnaire for Cognitive Decline in the Elderly), mood (e.g., using Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), and functional consequences of cognitive impairments (e.g., using modified Rankin Scale). A large number of biomarkers for PSD, including indicators for genetic polymorphisms, biomarkers in the cerebrospinal fluid and in the serum, inflammatory mediators, and peripheral microRNA profiles have been proposed. Currently, no specific biomarkers have been proven to robustly discriminate vulnerable patients (‘at risk brains’) from those with better prognosis or to discriminate Alzheimer’s disease dementia from PSD. Further, neuroimaging is an important diagnostic tool in PSD. The role of computerized tomography is limited to demonstrating type and location of the underlying primary lesion and indicating atrophy and severe white matter changes. Magnetic resonance imaging is the key neuroimaging modality and has high sensitivity and specificity for detecting pathological changes, including small vessel disease. Advanced multi-modal imaging includes diffusion tensor imaging for fiber tracking, by which changes in networks can be detected. Quantitative imaging of cerebral blood flow and metabolism by positron emission tomography can differentiate between vascular dementia and degenerative dementia and show the interaction between vascular and metabolic changes. Additionally, inflammatory changes after ischemia in the brain can be detected, which may play a role together with amyloid deposition in the development of PSD. Prevention of PSD can be achieved by prevention of stroke. As treatment strategies to inhibit the development and mitigate the course of PSD, lowering of blood pressure, statins, neuroprotective drugs, and anti-inflammatory agents have all been studied without convincing evidence of efficacy. Lifestyle interventions, physical activity, and cognitive training have been recently tested, but large controlled trials are still missing.


Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2005

Cerebral Small Vessel Disease in Pseudoxanthoma Elasticum: Three Cases

Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Jasna Zidverc-Trajkovic; Marija M. Milovic; Dragan M. Pavlović; Zagorka Jovanovic; Milija Mijajlovic; Mirjana Petrovic; Vladimir Kostic; Nada Sternic

BACKGROUND Cerebral small vessel disease is rarely described in association with pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE), a hereditary connective tissue disorder with skin, eye and vascular manifestations. This autosomally inherited elastic tissue disease has been attributed to mutations in the ABCC6 gene located on chromosome 16p13.1. Different stroke mechanisms are suggested in PXE patients, arterial hypertension and accelerated atherosclerosis being the leading ones. CASE DESCRIPTIONS Case 1: A 49-year-old man with history of mild hypertension presented with recurrent transient ischemic attacks. At the age of 42, evaluation for progressive visual loss and skin changes led to diagnosis of PXE. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) disclosed multiple lacunar infarctions and confluent periventricular white matter lesions (WML). Case 2: A 71-year-old woman with history of mild hypertension suffered right-sided stroke. Diagnosis of PXE was made at the age of 48 due to severe visual loss and skin changes. Brain MRI revealed multiple lacunar infarctions and subcortical ischemic leukoencephalopathy. Case 3: A 47-year-old woman with prominent skin changes and bilateral amblyopia developed right-sided weakness. Skin biopsy confirmed PXE. Several lacunar infarcts in deep white matter and pons were revealed on MRI. DISCUSSION We present three patients with clinical and histopathological features of PXE who presented with multiple lacunar strokes, two with extensive confluent WML. These cases illustrate that PXE is a rare but significant risk factor for small vessel disease and stroke in patients of all age groups. Occlusive small vessel disease and subsequent lacunar infarcts and WML represent important PXE manifestations.


Cerebrovascular Diseases | 2006

Flow Diversion in Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound Is Associated with Better Improvement in Patients with Acute Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion

Yo Sik Kim; John Stirling Meyer; Zsolt Garami; Carlos A. Molina; Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Andrei V. Alexandrov

Backgound: Flow diversion (FD) can occur with an acute middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion. FD is thought to represent the collateral blood flow to the occluded MCA territory, but it is unclear whether or not FD lessens the stroke severity or leads to improved outcome. Methods: Patients with a proximal MCA occlusion were selected from the CLOTBUST trial data bank. FD to the anterior or posterior cerebral artery was determined using transcranial Doppler ultrasound. Stroke severity and clinical improvement were measured using the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) scores. Results: We evaluated 47 patients with an isolated M1 MCA occlusion who received intravenous tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) within 3 h of symptom onset. FD was present in 83% of the patients. Median baseline NIHSS scores were 15.5 in the FD– group and 18 in the FD+ group (n.s.). Complete recanalization rates were 25 and 25.6% (n.s.). In 35 patients with a persistent occlusion, the average NIHSS score reduction was 22% (FD+) and 0.52% (FD–) during 90 min after t-PA bolus (p = 0.017), and 29 versus –25% during the first 24 h after the t-PA bolus, respectively (p = 0.01). Conclusions: In patients with persistent MCA occlusions after thrombolytic treatment, arterial blood flow diversion is associated with earlier and better neurological improvement. FD has protective effects on the ischemic brain tissue with persistent MCA occlusion.


Cephalalgia | 2005

Cluster headache and paroxysmal hemicrania: differential diagnosis

Jasna Zidverc-Trajkovic; Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Milija Mijajlovic; Zagorka Jovanovic; Nadezda Sternic; Vs Kostic

The utility of the differences between cluster headache (CH) and paroxysmal hemicrania (PH) is limited by the considerable overlap of their clinical characteristics. We compared 54 patients with CH and eight patients with PH in terms of demographic features, characteristics of headache attacks, associated autonomic features, temporal forms of disorders, and response to verapamil. According to our results, clinical features that distinguished CH and PH patients were: maximal pain localization, ocular in CH patients and extra-ocular in PH group; mean attack duration was longer and mean attack frequency was lower in CH patients in comparison with PH patients. Conjuctival injection was the only autonomic sign seen more frequently in CH patients. There were more CH patients with episodic and more PH patients with unremitting form of the disorder in examined groups. Although statistical analysis pointed out a significant difference between these clinical features, there was no clinical characteristic that exclusively belonged to one of these headache entities. Demographic characteristics (age, gender, social background), the other headache attack features (nocturnal attacks, interattack tenderness), the other autonomic signs, as well as the response to verapamil did not differ significantly between two groups.


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2010

Brain imaging in transient ischemic attack – redefining TIA

Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Christen D. Barras; Peter J. Hand; Brian M. Tress; Patricia Desmond; Stephen M. Davis

Transient ischemic attack (TIA) has recently been redefined to incorporate the latest clinical and neuroimaging information that has shed new light on TIA pathophysiology. Patients suffering from TIA are at a substantial risk of subsequent stroke, but quantifying this risk is difficult as TIA patients are a heterogeneous population and there are multiple TIA mimics. Clinical scores for prediction of stroke risk are principally based on patient history and potentially understate actual risk. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in particular diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) performed in the first days following TIA, reveals relevant focal ischemic abnormalities in 21-68% of patients. These lesions predict stroke recurrence, functional dependence and subsequent vascular events. Adding imaging information to clinical scores improves prediction of stroke risk following TIA. Alongside clinical judgement, use of MRI has the potential to change the management of TIA patients and is the imaging modality of choice for this condition.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2011

Increased total homocysteine level is associated with clinical status and severity of white matter changes in symptomatic patients with subcortical small vessel disease

Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Tatjana Pekmezovic; R. Obrenovic; Ivana Novakovic; Gordana Tomic; Milija Mijajlovic; N. Sternic

OBJECTIVE Elevated plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) is an independent risk factor for ischemic stroke and has been linked to cerebral small vessel disease (SVD), in particular. Controversy persists as to whether increased tHcy is associated with functional status and cognitive decline in these patients. METHODS Plasma tHcy, MTHFR polymorphism, vascular risk factors, functional and cognitive status and severity of lesions on MRI, assessed with the Age-Related White Matter Changes (ARWMC) visual grading scale, were analyzed in 95 patients with SVD and 41 healthy control subjects. RESULTS Plasma tHcy levels were higher in patients with SVD (14.4±5.0 μmol/L) compared to healthy SVD-free controls (8.9±3.9 μmol/L). In SVD patients, tHcy levels strongly correlated with cognitive status (age-adjusted risk 5.8, 95% CI 1.3-25.3, p=0.015), functional status (age-adjusted risk 3.2, 95% CI 1.2-8.8, p=0.022) and severity of MRI lesions (age-adjusted risk 1.2, 95% CI 1.1-1.4; p=0.004). Only total ARWMC score was independently associated with increased tHcy levels (OR 1.2, 95%CI 1.1-1.4, p=0.004). Independent predictors of WMC occurrence were tHcy levels (OR 1.2, 95%CI 1.1-1.3, p=0.003) and mRS score (OR 2.2, 95%CI 1.2-4.1, p=0.017). CONCLUSIONS In patients with cerebral SVD there is a positive association of increased plasma tHcy levels with clinical status and severity of WMC.


Journal of Neurology | 2013

Adult-onset autosomal dominant leukodystrophy without early autonomic dysfunctions linked to lamin B1 duplication: a phenotypic variant

Ana Potic; Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Graziella Uziel; Dusko Kozic; Jelena Ostojic; Attilio Rovelli; Nadezda Sternic; Mladen Bjelan; Elisa Sarto; Daniela Di Bella; Franco Taroni

The early presentation of autonomic dysfunctions at the disease onset has been considered the mandatory clinical feature in adult-onset autosomal dominant leukodystrophy, which is a rarely recognised leukodystrophy caused by duplication of the lamin B1 gene. We report the first family with adult-onset autosomal dominant leukodystrophy and lamin B1 duplication, without the distinguishing early-appearing autonomic dysfunctions. Subjects from three consecutive generations of a multi-generational Serbian family affected by adult-onset autosomal dominant leukodystrophy underwent clinical, biochemical, neurophysiological, neuroradiological, and genetic studies. The patients atypically exhibited late autonomic dysfunctions commencing at the disease end-stages in some. Genetic findings of lamin B1 duplication verified adult-onset autosomal dominant leukodystrophy, which was supported also by neuroimaging studies. Exclusively, proton magnetic spectroscopy of the brain revealed a possibility of neuro-axonal damage in the white matter lesions, while magnetic resonance imaging of the spinal cord excluded spinal myelin affection as a required finding in this leukodystrophy. The detection of lamin B1 duplication, even when autonomic dysfunctions do not precede the other symptoms of the disease, proves for the first time that lamin B1-duplicated adult-onset autosomal dominant leukodystrophy may have a phenotypic variant with delayed autonomic dysfunctions. Prior to this report, such a phenotype had been speculated to represent an entity different from lamin B1-duplicated leukodystrophy. Hereby we confirm the underlying role of lamin B1 duplication, regardless of the autonomic malfunction onset in this disorder. It is the only report on adult-onset autosomal dominant leukodystrophy from Southeastern Europe.


Cephalalgia | 2005

Vertebral Artery Vascular Loop in SUNCT and Concomitant Trigeminal Neuralgia. Case report

Jasna Zidverc-Trajkovic; Milija Mijajlovic; Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Zagorka Jovanovic; Nadezda Sternic

Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is the most important syndrome among the pain disorders involving the fifth cranial nerve. Although the underlying mechanism of TN remains partially unknown, the effects of direct stimulation by closely located blood vessels are the most common related abnormalities in TN (1). Short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache with conjunctival injection and tearing (SUNCT) represents a brief headache syndrome first described in 1989 (2). It has been grouped with other shortduration headache syndromes with prominent autonomic features under the general term of trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (TAC) (3). Coexistence of TAC and TN was described for cluster headache and paroxysmal hemicrania and they were accepted as separate entities by the new International Headache Society (IHS) classification (4). However, patients with overlapping SUNCT and TN have been described and, according to the IHS classification, these patients should receive separate diagnoses. We report a male patient who had 6-month history of simultaneous occurrence of two types of headaches: TN of the first branch and SUNCT. Neuroimaging studies revealed a ‘vascular loop’ of the right vertebral artery compressing the left trigeminal root zone entry. Both types of headaches were successfully treated with gabapentin, leaving the patient attack free during a follow-up of 8 months.

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N. Sternic

University of Belgrade

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