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Dive into the research topics where C M Ellis is active.

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Featured researches published by C M Ellis.


Neurology | 2001

Volumetric analysis reveals corticospinal tract degeneration and extramotor involvement in ALS

C M Ellis; John Suckling; Edson Amaro; Edward T. Bullmore; Andrew Simmons; S.C.R. Williams; P N Leigh

Background: Pathologic changes in the motor cortex and corticospinal tracts in ALS may be reflected by abnormal signal intensities on conventional MRI. The sensitivity of these changes in detecting underlying pathology remains unclear. Method: The authors used automated image analysis to quantify volumes of cerebral gray and white matter in 16 patients with ALS (eight limb onset, eight bulbar onset) and eight normal controls. Previously they had demonstrated a reduction in N-acetyl aspartate/creatine + phosphocreatine (NAA/[Cr + PCr]) measured by 1H-MRS in the subcortical white matter in the motor cortex region in the patients with bulbar-onset ALS. To determine whether this resulted from axonal degeneration, they also compared gray and white matter volumes in the patients with limb- and bulbar-onset ALS. Results: There were no differences in the total brain volumes of gray or white matter for the three subject groups (p > 0.23). Comparison of the total ALS group and controls revealed localized deficits in gray matter volume centered on Brodmann areas 8, 9, and 10 bilaterally. Comparison of the patients with limb- and bulbar-onset ALS revealed deficits in the white matter volume in the bulbar-onset group, extending bilaterally from the precentral gyrus into the internal capsule and brainstem, consistent with the course of the corticospinal tract. There was no loss in gray matter volume in the precentral gyri. Conclusions: The loss of gray matter in the frontal regions (total ALS group) provides further support that ALS is a multisystem disorder. In addition, there is in vivo evidence of axonal degeneration in the subcortical white matter in the motor region in patients with bulbar-onset ALS. This is consistent with a “dying back” process affecting cortical motoneurons in bulbar-onset ALS.


Neurology | 2009

Natural history and clinical features of the flail arm and flail leg ALS variants

Lokesh Wijesekera; S. Mathers; P. Talman; C. Galtrey; Michael H Parkinson; Jeban Ganesalingam; Emma Willey; Mary-Ann Ampong; C M Ellis; Christopher Shaw; Ammar Al-Chalabi; P N Leigh

Objective: We sought to define the significance of brachial amyotrophic diplegia (flail arm syndrome [FA]) and the pseudopolyneuritic variant (flail leg syndrome [FL]) of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS; motor neuron disease). Methods: We analyzed survival in clinic cohorts in London, UK (1,188 cases), and Melbourne, Australia (432 cases). Survival from disease onset was analyzed using the Kaplan- Meier method and Cox proportional hazards model. Results: In the London cohort, the FA syndrome represented 11% and the FL syndrome 6% of the sample. Median survival was 35 months for limb onset and 27 months for bulbar onset ALS, whereas this was 61 months for FA syndrome (p < 0.001) and 69 months for FL syndrome (p < 0.001). Five-year survival in this cohort was 8.8% for bulbar onset, 20% for limb onset, 52% for FA syndrome, and 64% for FL syndrome. The ratio of men to women was 4:1 in the FA group compared to 2:1 in other limb onset cases. Excluding lower motor neuron FA and FL cases, progressive muscular atrophy comprised 4% of the sample and had a prognosis similar to typical limb onset ALS. In the Melbourne cohort, median survival for limb onset ALS was 31 months, bulbar onset 27 months, FA syndrome 66 months (p < 0.001), and FL syndrome 71 months (p = 0.001). Conclusions: The flail arm (FA) and flail leg (FL) syndromes had significantly better survival than typical amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) or progressive muscular atrophy cases that were not classified as FA or FL. Our findings underline the clinical and prognostic importance of the FA and FL variants of ALS.


Neurology | 1998

A proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic study in ALS: Correlation with clinical findings

C M Ellis; Andrew Simmons; Caroline Andrews; J M Dawson; Steven Williams; P N Leigh

Objective: To evaluate neuronal dysfunction in the motor region subcortical white matter in ALS using volumetric localized proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS). Methods: Sixteen patients with El Escorial definite, probable, or possible ALS and eight healthy age-matched control subjects were studied. The ALS patients were divided into those with limb onset (n = 8) and those with bulbar onset (n = 8). Measurements of the metabolic ratios N-acetylaspartate (NAA)/creatine and phosphocreatine (Cr+PCr), NAA/choline (Cho), and Cho/(Cr+PCr) were correlated with clinical assessments. Results: We found no differences in the metabolic peak area ratios in the motor region when comparing the total ALS group and the control subjects. However, correlations were found between the NAA/(Cr+PCr) ratio and the El Escorial category (p = 0.03), the ALS severity scale (p = 0.01), and the Medical Research Council score (p = 0.06). No correlations were found between the NAA/(Cr+PCr) ratio and the Ashworth Spasticity Scale, reflex score, or disease duration (p > 0.16). Bulbar-onset patients had a lower NAA/(Cr+PCr) ratio in the motor region compared with limb-onset patients (p = 0.03). Conclusion: In vivo 1H-MRS of the subcortical white matter in the motor region is unlikely to be sensitive enough to detect early disease changes in ALS because there is considerable overlap between the metabolic peak area ratios from patients with ALS and normal control subjects. However, changes in the NAA/(Cr+PCr) metabolic peak area ratios correlate with clinical measures of disease severity, and this measure may be useful in monitoring disease progression.


Lancet Neurology | 2014

Analysis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis as a multistep process: a population-based modelling study

Ammar Al-Chalabi; Andrea Calvo; Adriano Chiò; Shuna Colville; C M Ellis; Orla Hardiman; Mark Heverin; R S Howard; Mark H. B. Huisman; Noa Keren; P. Nigel Leigh; Letizia Mazzini; Gabriele Mora; Richard W. Orrell; James Rooney; Kirsten M. Scott; William Scotton; Meinie Seelen; Christopher Shaw; Katie Sidle; Robert Swingler; Miho Tsuda; Jan H. Veldink; Anne E. Visser; Leonard H. van den Berg; Neil Pearce

Summary Background Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis shares characteristics with some cancers, such as onset being more common in later life, progression usually being rapid, the disease affecting a particular cell type, and showing complex inheritance. We used a model originally applied to cancer epidemiology to investigate the hypothesis that amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a multistep process. Methods We generated incidence data by age and sex from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis population registers in Ireland (registration dates 1995–2012), the Netherlands (2006–12), Italy (1995–2004), Scotland (1989–98), and England (2002–09), and calculated age and sex-adjusted incidences for each register. We regressed the log of age-specific incidence against the log of age with least squares regression. We did the analyses within each register, and also did a combined analysis, adjusting for register. Findings We identified 6274 cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis from a catchment population of about 34 million people. We noted a linear relationship between log incidence and log age in all five registers: England r2=0·95, Ireland r2=0·99, Italy r2=0·95, the Netherlands r2=0·99, and Scotland r2=0·97; overall r2=0·99. All five registers gave similar estimates of the linear slope ranging from 4·5 to 5·1, with overlapping confidence intervals. The combination of all five registers gave an overall slope of 4·8 (95% CI 4·5–5·0), with similar estimates for men (4·6, 4·3–4·9) and women (5·0, 4·5–5·5). Interpretation A linear relationship between the log incidence and log age of onset of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is consistent with a multistage model of disease. The slope estimate suggests that amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a six-step process. Identification of these steps could lead to preventive and therapeutic avenues. Funding UK Medical Research Council; UK Economic and Social Research Council; Ireland Health Research Board; The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMw); the Ministry of Health and Ministry of Education, University, and Research in Italy; the Motor Neurone Disease Association of England, Wales, and Northern Ireland; and the European Commission (Seventh Framework Programme).


Journal of Sleep Research | 1996

Melatonin and insomnia

C M Ellis; Gilbert Lemmens; Parkes Jd

The hypnotic action of melatonin 5 mg p.o. was explored in 15 subjects with psychophysiological insomnia in a double‐blind controlled self‐report questionnaire study. Melatonin or placebo was taken at 20.00 hours for a 1‐week period in random order. Effects on sleep and wakefulness were monitored by visual analogue scale and structured interview. Bedtime, sleep onset time, estimated total sleep and wake time, as well as self‐rated sleep quality, were not altered by melatonin, and estimates of next‐day function did not change. The period of melatonin treatment was retrospectively correctly identified by 8 of 15 subjects. Despite unchanged ratings of night sleep quality on the last night of each treatment, 7 of 15 subjects reported that sleep had subjectively improved to a minor extent in the week of active treatment. Side‐effects attributed to melatonin included headache and an odd taste in the mouth. These data indicate that melatonin is probably of no clinical value in the management of psychophysiological insomnia.


Neurology | 1997

Changes in putamen N-acetylaspartate and choline ratios in untreated and levodopa-treated Parkinson's disease: A proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy study

C M Ellis; Gilbert Lemmens; Steven Williams; Andrew Simmons; J. Dawson; P.N. Leigh; K.R. Chaudhuri

We have carried out single-voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy centered on the putamen both ipsilateral and contralateral to the worst affected side in nine subjects with drug naive idiopathic Parkinsons disease(IPD); seven chronically levodopa-treated dyskinetic IPD subjects; and 11 age-matched healthy controls. Measurements of N-acetylaspartate(NAA)/choline (Cho), NAA/(Creatine + Phosphocreatine) (Cr+PCr), and Cho/(Cr+PCr) were made. We found a significant reduction in NAA/Cho ratios from the putamen contralateral to the most affected side in the drug-naive group (p = 0.009), but not the levodopa-treated IPD groups compared with controls. There were no significant differences in NAA/(Cr+PCr) or Cho/(Cr+PCr) ratios. In untreated IPD, reduced putaminal NAA/Cho ratios may reflect loss of nigrostriatal dopamine terminals or alternatively indicate a functional abnormality of striatal putaminal neurons, such as membrane dysfunction due to striatal deafferentation. This study suggests that NAA/Cho ratios may be affected by L-dopa therapy and this may provide a reversible marker of neuronal dysfunction in the striatum.


Lancet Neurology | 2013

Lithium in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (LiCALS): a phase 3 multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Karen E. Morrison; S Dhariwal; R Hornabrook; L Savage; David J. Burn; Tien Kheng Khoo; Joanna Kelly; C L Murphy; Ammar Al-Chalabi; Andrew Dougherty; P N Leigh; Lokesh Wijesekera; Marie Thornhill; C M Ellis; K O'Hanlon; Jay Panicker; L Pate; P Ray; L Wyatt; Carolyn Young; L Copeland; John Ealing; H Hamdalla; I Leroi; Caroline Murphy; F O'Keeffe; E Oughton; L Partington; P Paterson; David Rog

Summary Background Lithium has neuroprotective effects in cell and animal models of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and a small pilot study in patients with ALS showed a significant effect of lithium on survival. We aimed to assess whether lithium improves survival in patients with ALS. Methods The lithium carbonate in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (LiCALS) trial is a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of oral lithium taken daily for 18 months in patients with ALS. Patients aged at least 18 years who had ALS according to the revised El Escorial criteria, had disease duration between 6 and 36 months, and were taking riluzole were recruited from ten centres in the UK. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either lithium or matched placebo tablets. Randomisation was via an online system done at the level of the individual by block randomisation with randomly varying block sizes, stratified by study centre and site of disease onset (limb or bulbar). All patients and assessing study personnel were masked to treatment assignment. The primary endpoint was the rate of survival at 18 months and was analysed by intention to treat. This study is registered with Eudract, number 2008-006891-31. Findings Between May 26, 2009, and Nov 10, 2011, 243 patients were screened, 214 of whom were randomly assigned to receive lithium (107 patients) or placebo (107 patients). Two patients discontinued treatment and one died before the target therapeutic lithium concentration could be achieved. 63 (59%) of 107 patients in the placebo group and 54 (50%) of 107 patients in the lithium group were alive at 18 months. The survival functions did not differ significantly between groups (Mantel-Cox log-rank χ2 on 1 df=1·64; p=0·20). After adjusting for study centre and site of onset using logistic regression, the relative odds of survival at 18 months (lithium vs placebo) was 0·71 (95% CI 0·40–1·24). 56 patients in the placebo group and 61 in the lithium group had at least one serious adverse event. Interpretation We found no evidence of benefit of lithium on survival in patients with ALS, but nor were there safety concerns, which had been identified in previous studies with less conventional designs. This finding emphasises the importance of pursuing adequately powered trials with clear endpoints when testing new treatments. Funding The Motor Neurone Disease Association of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1999

Use of human intravenous immunoglobulin in lower motor neuron syndromes

C M Ellis; Leary S; Payan J; Christopher Shaw; M T M Hu; O'Brien M; P N Leigh

OBJECTIVE To determine whether patients with the clinical phenotype of multifocal motor neuropathy but without the electrophysiological criteria for conduction block would respond to intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg). METHODS Ten patients were selected with a slowly progressive, asymmetric, lower motor neuron disorder, and were treated prospectively with IVIg at a dose of 2g/kg over 5 days. All subjects had neurophysiological testing to look for evidence of conduction block before treatment. Muscle strength was assessed by MRC grades and hand held myometry, measuring pinch and grip strength. A 20% increase in both pinch and grip myometry was considered a positive response. RESULTS In no patient was conduction block detected. Four of the 10 patients showed a positive response to IVIg, with the best response occurring in two patients who presented with weakness but without severe muscle wasting. Three of the four responders have continued to receive IVIg for a mean period of 17 months (range 15–24 months), with continued effect. The response to IVIg was not related to the presence of anti-GM1 antiganglioside antibodies, but responders had a selective pattern of muscle weakness and normal (>90% predicted) vital capacity. CONCLUSION The findings suggest that a course of IVIg should be considered in patients with the clinical phenotype of multifocal motor neuropathy but without neurophysiological evidence of conduction block.


Journal of Sleep Research | 1999

Functional magnetic resonance imaging neuroactivation studies in normal subjects and subjects with the narcoleptic syndrome. Actions of modafinil

C M Ellis; C Monk; Andrew Simmons; G M Lemmens; Steven Williams; Michael Brammer; Edward T. Bullmore; J D Parkes

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) can be used to detect regional brain responses to changes in sensory stimuli. We have used fMRI to determine the amount of visual and auditory cortical activation in 12 normal subjects and 12 subjects with the narcoleptic syndrome, using a multiplexed visual and auditory stimulation paradigm. In both normal and narcoleptic subjects, mean cortical activation levels during the presentation of periodic visual and auditory stimulation showed no appreciable differences with either age or sex. Normal subjects showed higher levels of visual activation at 10:00 hours than 15:00 hours, with a reverse pattern in narcoleptic subjects (P=0.007). The group differences in spatial extent of cortical activation between control and narcoleptic subjects were small and statistically insignificant. The alerting action, and imaging response, to a single oral dose of the sleep‐preventing drug modafinil 400 mg were then determined and compared with placebo in both the 12 normal (8 given modafinil, 4 placebo) and 12 narcoleptic subjects (8 modafinil, 4 placebo). Modafinil caused an increase in self‐reported levels of alertness in 7 of 8 narcoleptic subjects, but there was no significant difference between mean pretreatment and post‐treatment activation levels as determined by fMRI for either normal or narcoleptic syndrome subjects given modafinil. However, in the modafinil‐treated group of 8 normal and 8 narcoleptic subjects, there was a clock time independent correlation between the initial level of activation as determined by the pretreatment scan and the post‐treatment change in activation (visual, P=0.002; and auditory, P=0.001). No correlation was observed in placebo‐treated subjects (P=0.99 and 0.77, respectively).


Academic Radiology | 2013

Diagnostic accuracy of diffusion tensor imaging in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: A systematic review and individual patient data meta-analysis

Bradley R. Foerster; Ben A. Dwamena; Myria Petrou; Ruth C. Carlos; Brian C. Callaghan; Christina L. Churchill; Mona A. Mohamed; Claudia Bartels; Michael Benatar; Laura Bonzano; Olga Ciccarelli; Mirco Cosottini; C M Ellis; Hannelore Ehrenreich; Nicola Filippini; Mizuki Ito; Sanjay Kalra; Elias R. Melhem; Timothy Pyra; Luca Roccatagliata; Joe Senda; Gen Sobue; Martin Turner; Eva L. Feldman; Martin G. Pomper

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES There have been a large number of case-control studies using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The objective of this study was to perform an individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis for the estimation of the diagnostic accuracy measures of DTI in the diagnosis of ALS using corticospinal tract data. MATERIALS AND METHODS MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and Cochrane databases (1966-April 2011) were searched. Studies were included if they used DTI region of interest or tractography techniques to compare mean cerebral corticospinal tract fractional anisotropy values between ALS subjects and healthy controls. Corresponding authors from the identified articles were contacted to collect individual patient data. IPD meta-analysis and meta-regression were performed using Stata. Meta-regression covariate analysis included age, gender, disease duration, and Revised Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Functional Rating Scale scores. RESULTS Of 30 identified studies, 11 corresponding authors provided IPD and 221 ALS patients and 187 healthy control subjects were available for study. Pooled area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was 0.75 (95% CI: 0.66-0.83), pooled sensitivity was 0.68 (95% CI: 0.62-0.75), and pooled specificity was 0.73 (95% CI: 0.66-0.80). Meta-regression showed no significant differences in pooled AUC for each of the covariates. There was moderate to high heterogeneity of pooled AUC estimates. Study quality was generally high. Data from 19 of the 30 eligible studies were not ascertained, raising possibility of selection bias. CONCLUSION Using corticospinal tract individual patient data, the diagnostic accuracy of DTI appears to lack sufficient discrimination in isolation. Additional research efforts and a multimodal approach that also includes ALS mimics will be required to make neuroimaging a critical component in the workup of ALS.

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P N Leigh

Brighton and Sussex Medical School

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P. Nigel Leigh

Brighton and Sussex Medical School

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Peter Leigh

University of Cambridge

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