Antonio Escartín
Autonomous University of Barcelona
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Featured researches published by Antonio Escartín.
European Neurology | 1994
Gabriel Mendoza; Joan Martí-Fàbregas; Jaime Kulisevsky; Antonio Escartín
Myelopathy is a rare complication of chronic liver disease associated with extensive portal-systemic shunt of blood. Its main clinical feature is a spastic paraparesis without sensory or sphincteric impairment. We describe 3 patients who presented hepatic myelopathy following the performance of a portacaval shunt.
Epileptic Disorders | 2008
Mariana López-Góngora; Alejandro Martínez-Domeño; Carmen García; Antonio Escartín
PURPOSE The purpose of the study was to assess changes in cognitive functions and quality of life in patients with epilepsy over one year of treatment with levetiracetam (LEV) as add-on therapy. METHODS Thirty-two patients (16 women; 16 men) who received LEV as an add-on treatment were included, and 27 completed the one-year follow-up period. Extensive neuropsychological assessments, together with a quality-of-life questionnaire were administered at baseline and at one, three, six and twelve months after beginning the add-on treatment. Patients received LEV starting with 500 mg/day in the first week, increasing by a further 500 mg/day per week until a target dose of 2 000 mg/day was reached by the end of the first month. RESULTS At the one-year follow-up, a significant improvement was observed in measurements of prospective memory, working memory, motor functions, verbal fluency, attention and quality of life. Performance for neuropsychological and quality-of-life tests was not affected by external variables such as seizure reduction or changes in previous anti-epileptic treatment. Slight changes between patients were observed, but these were not clinically significant.The limited sample size and the lack of a control group should be mentioned as limitations of the study. No control group was evaluated as in our clinical practice it was difficult to establish a comparable group of patients. Changes in the different variables were assessed by comparing baseline information with follow-up results.Despite the study limitations, we consider that the one-year treatment period provides valuable information regarding the drugs long-term effects in this setting. CONCLUSIONS Results of the present study suggest that long-term LEV treatment as add-on therapy does not interfere with cognitive function and improves quality of life.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Mariana López-Góngora; Antonio Escartín; Saül Martínez-Horta; Ramón Fernández-Bobadilla; Luis Querol; Sergio Romero; Miquel Àngel Mañanas; Jordi Riba
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic central nervous system disorder characterized by white matter inflammation, demyelination and neurodegeneration. Although cognitive dysfunction is a common manifestation, it may go unnoticed in recently-diagnosed patients. Prior studies suggest MS patients develop compensatory mechanisms potentially involving enhanced performance monitoring. Here we assessed the performance monitoring system in early-stage MS patients using the error-related negativity (ERN), an event-related brain potential (ERP) observed following behavioral errors. Twenty-seven early-stage MS patients and 31 controls were neuropsychologically assessed. Electroencephalography recordings were obtained while participants performed: a) a stop task and b) an auditory oddball task. Behavior and ERP measures were assessed. No differences in performance were found between groups in most neuropsychological tests or in behavior or ERP components in the auditory oddball task. However, the amplitude of the ERN associated with stop errors in the stop task was significantly higher in patients. ERN amplitude correlated positively with scores on the Expanded Disability Status Scale and the Multiple Sclerosis Severity Score, and negatively with the time since last relapse. Patients showed higher neuronal recruitment in tasks involving performance monitoring. Results suggest the development of compensatory brain mechanisms in early-stage MS and reflect the sensitivity of the ERN to detect these changes.
BMC Neurology | 2013
Delicias Muñoz; Antonio Escartín; Dolores Dapena; Francisco Coret; Dionisio Fernández-Uría; Domingo Pérez; Bonaventura Casanova; Cristina Guijarro-Castro; Elvira Munteis; María del-Campo Amigo; Robustiano Pego; Carmen Calles; César García-Rey; Nuria Monsalve; David Sánchez-Matienzo
BackgroundThis study aimed to correlate body mass index or biomarkers with the frequency of common adverse events (AEs) with subcutaneous IFN β-1a during treatment titration in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis previously naïve to IFN β.MethodsEighty-four patients (66.3% females) were followed up during 8 weeks, 25.3% were overweight and 14.5% were obese.ResultsBiomarkers steadily increased during all study period by 45.3% for β2-microglobulin, 262.8% for olygoadenylate synthetase-1, and 92.8% for neopterin. Overall AE reporting did not vary with the dose or treatment duration.ConclusionsBMI was not predictive of increased risk for AEs. Biomarkers did not discriminate on the frequency of any AE either.
European Neurology | 2004
Armando Estévez-González; Carmen García-Sánchez; Anunciación Boltes; Pilar Otermín; Montserrat Baiget; Antonio Escartín; Elisabeth del Rio; Alex Gironell; Jaime Kulisevsky
To investigate the association between APOE-Ε4 allele and memory phenotype in the preclinical stage of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We compared an extensive preclinical memory profile at the baseline evaluation of 2 AD genotype groups: APOE-Ε4 allele carriers and patients with APOE-Ε3 homozygosity. Baseline memory performance was carried out at least 2 years (interval of 27.7 ± 4 months) before AD diagnosis was established, and analysis included different modalities of working memory (visuoperceptive, visuospatial, digit span and processing speed), of declarative memory (recent, verbal learning, prospective and semantic) and of nondeclarative memory (procedural, incidental and priming). We found no significant differences: memory performance was similar in both genotype groups. The presence of the APOE-Ε4 allele does not seem to be sufficient to cause a distinctive preclinical memory phenotype in AD patients.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Miquel Navas-Madroñal; Ana Valero-Mut; María José Martínez-Zapata; Manuel Javier Simón-Talero; Sebastián Figueroa; Nuria Vidal-Fernández; Mariana López-Góngora; Antonio Escartín; Luis Querol
Introduction Antibodies targeting the inward-rectifying potassium channel KIR4.1 have been associated with multiple sclerosis (MS) but studies using diverse techniques have failed to replicate this association. The detection of these antibodies is challenging; KIR4.1 glycosylation patterns and the use of diverse technical approaches may account for the disparity of results. We aimed to replicate the association using three different approaches to overcome the technical limitations of a single technique. We also performed a systematic review to examine the association of anti-KIR4.1 antibodies with MS. Methods Serum samples from patients with MS (n = 108) and controls (n = 77) were tested for the presence of anti-KIR4.1 antibodies using three methods: 1) by ELISA with the low-glycosylated fraction of recombinant KIR4.1 purified from transfected HEK293 cells according to original protocols; 2) by immunocytochemistry using KIR4.1-transfected HEK293 cells; and 3) by immunocytochemistry using the KIR4.1.-transfected MO3.13 oligodendrocyte cell line. We developed a systematic review and meta-analysis of the association of anti-KIR4.1 antibodies with MS according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Results We did not detect anti-KIR4.1 antibodies in the MS patients or in controls using ELISA. Neither did we detect any significant reactivity against the antigen on the cell surface using the KIR4.1-transfected HEK293 cells or the KIR4.1-transfected MO3.13 cells. We included 13 prospective controlled studies in the systematic review. Only three studies showed a positive association between anti-KIR4.1 and MS. Clinical and statistical heterogeneity between studies precluded meta-analysis of their results. Conclusion We found no association between anti-KIR4.1 antibody positivity and MS. Although this lack of replication may be due to technical limitations, evidence from our study and others is mounting against the role of KIR4.1 as a relevant MS autoantigen.
JAMA Neurology | 1999
Berta Pascual-Sedano; Alejandro Iranzo; Joan Martí-Fàbregas; Pere Domingo; Antonio Escartín; Montserrat Fuster; Josep L. Barrio; Maria A. Sambeat
BMC Neurology | 2015
Mariana López-Góngora; Luis Querol; Antonio Escartín
Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2015
Wendy Waldman Zadeh; Antonio Escartín; William Byrnes; Frank Tennigkeit; Simon Borghs; Ting Li; Peter Dedeken; Marc De Backer
JAMA Neurology | 1998
Jaime Kulisevsky; Marcelo L. Berthier; Asunción Avila; Alexandre Gironell; Antonio Escartín