Ida Sarova-Pinhas
Sheba Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Ida Sarova-Pinhas.
Stroke | 1997
Yair Lampl; Gideon Fleminger; Ronit Gilad; Ronit Galron; Ida Sarova-Pinhas; Mordechai Sokolovsky
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Endothelin 1 (ET-1), a highly potent endogenous vasoactive peptide, exerts a sustained vasoconstrictive effect on cerebral vessels. Elevation of ET-1 in plasma has been reported 1 to 3 days after ischemic stroke. Since we assumed that a much faster and more intense response may be observed in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and since an increase in concentration of ET-1 in the CSF may cause constriction of cerebral vessels and eventually influence the neurological outcome, we measured ET-1 values in the CSF within 18 hours of stroke onset and compared the values with those in the plasma. METHODS Twenty-six consecutive patients with acute stroke were clinically evaluated according to the modified Matthew Scale and underwent two repeat CT scans. Within 5 to 18 hours of stroke onset, lumbar puncture and blood samples were concomitantly obtained and tested; ET-1 levels in CSF and plasma of these patients were analyzed by radioimmunoassay and compared with the levels of a control group of patients with no neurological disease. RESULTS The mean CSF concentration of ET-1 in the CSF of stroke patients was 16.06 +/- 4.9 pg/mL, compared with 5.51 +/- 1.47 pg/mL in the control group (P < .001). It was significantly higher in cortical infarcts (mean, 17.7 +/- 4.1 pg/mL) than in subcortical lesions (mean, 10.77 +/- 4.1 pg/mL) (P < .001) and significantly correlated with the volume of the lesion (P = .003). The correlation between ET-1 levels in the CSF and the Matthew Scale score was less significant (P = .05). Plasma ET-1 level was not elevated in any group. CONCLUSIONS ET-1 is found to be significantly elevated in the CSF of stroke patients during the 18 hours after stroke. No elevation was demonstrated in plasma at this time period. ET-1 may be used as an additional indicator of ischemic vascular events in the early diagnosis of stroke. The dissimilarity between the CSF and plasma ET-1 concentrations may lead also to an hypothesis that there is a vasoconstrictive effect on the cerebral vessels or a neuronal effect caused by ET-1 in the mechanism of the progression of brain ischemia.
Muscle & Nerve | 2000
Anat Achiron; Yoram Barak; Shmuel Miron; Ida Sarova-Pinhas
Failure to induce and maintain remission in severe exacerbations of myasthenia gravis (MG), despite optimal care, is a common problem. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of high‐dose intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) therapy in an open‐label study of 10 patients with severe generalized myasthenia and an acute deterioration unresponsive to conventional therapy including high‐dose corticosteroids, cyclosporine, and azathioprine. Intravenous Ig at a loading dose of 400 mg/kg was administered daily for 5 consecutive days, with maintenance IVIg treatment at a dose of 400 mg/kg, once every 6 weeks. Significant improvement occurred in all patients, beginning at 6 ± 2 days of treatment as measured by the Osserman scale, fatigue variables, muscle strength, and respiratory function tests. No side effects were observed during induction of remission. Further IVIg treatments were highly efficacious in maintaining the remission. The severity of the disease decreased by 2.5 ± 0.8 grades of the Osserman scale over a period of 1 year (P <0.001), in parallel with reduction of immunosuppressive therapy as well as a decrease in acetylcholine receptor antibody titers (P < 0.01). Intravenous Ig therapy seems to be highly potent for inducing rapid improvement in refractory myasthenia during acute deterioration as well as for maintaining remission.
Journal of Neurology | 1998
Yair Lampl; Diklah Geva; Ronit Gilad; Yehiel Eshel; L. Ronen; Ida Sarova-Pinhas
Abstract Magnesium has been reported to have a dilatatory effect on cerebral arteries. Reduction of extracellular Mg+2 has been shown to be directy correlated with the intensity of cerebral spasm. A neuroprotective effect of magnesium in stroke has also been hypothesized. The aim of our study was to examine the Mg+2 levels in serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in the early stage of stroke and to evaluate the correlation between Mg+2 levels and the development of neurological deficits. Between 1986 and 1994, 96 patients who had a stroke of 24- to 48-h duration were enrolled in the study. Serum and CSF levels of magnesium were checked on admission, 24–48 h after the onset of stroke. Using a neurological score, the neurological deficit was assessed on the 1st day, 1 and 4 weeks later. Computed tomography (CT) was performed after 1 week, and the volume and location of infarction were calculated and measured. Statistical analysis was performed for cortical and subcortical patients separately, using Spearman correlation and multiple linear and logistic regression analyses. Significant correlation was found between CSF Mg+2 and the size of the infarct (P < 0.0001). There was no correlation between serum Mg+2 and CSF Mg+2 levels. Regression analysis demonstrated an increase in the values of the Mathew Neurological Score with higher CSF Mg+2 levels. This association remained true after other factors such as age, associated heart disease, diabetes and infarction size had been taken into account by the regression model. The results confirm that there is a relationship between a low Mg+2 concentration in CSF during the first 48 h after onset of ischaemic stroke and the intensity of the neurological deficit. The therapeutic consequence of this finding may have some importance.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1994
Anat Achiron; R Gilad; Raanan Margalit; U Gabbay; Ida Sarova-Pinhas; Irun R. Cohen; Eldad Melamed; Lider O; S Noy; I Ziv
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a central nervous system demyelinating disease of implicated autoimmune aetiology. The effect was evaluated of intravenous gammaglobulin (IVIg), a successful therapy in various autoimmune diseases, in relapsing-remitting MS patients treated for three years. IVIg treatment significantly reduced the number and severity of acute exacerbations and resulted in a lesser neurological disability. There were no significant short or long-term adverse effects to IVIg treatment. To clarify the putative therapeutic effects of IVIg, this treatment was examined in the animal model of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in the rat. IVIg suppressed active EAE in relation to disease severity and duration, despite the presence of T-cell reactivity to specific antigens, while the treatment had no effect on passive EAE induced by adoptive transfer of myelin basic protein specific CD4 + T-cells. It is concluded that IVIg treatment may be a promising treatment in relapsing-remitting MS as it can alter the natural course of the disease.
Pediatric Drugs | 2001
Orit Pinhas-Hamiel; Ida Sarova-Pinhas; Anat Achiron
The presentation of multiple sclerosis (MS) in childhood has traditionally been thought to be rare. However, more paediatric cases are now being reported, as a result of progress in diagnostic techniques with the use of sensitive imaging modalities of the brain and spinal cord.Management from an early age and the availability of new treatment options have changed the outcome of paediatric MS. Drugs currently available for treatment, such as β-interferons, copolymer-1 and intravenous immunoglobulin G, have been found to reduce relapse rate, disease severity and progression to disability in adults, but have not been investigated in children and adolescents.The overall outcome of MS in children is apparently no worse than in adults and the disease may even be less aggressive in children. In juvenile MS, disease progression does not appear to be related to age of onset, severity of neurological involvement or mono/polysymptomatic involvement at presentation.The potential to treat MS has significantly changed the prognosis. Early diagnosis is important, as early treatment can prevent or delay the development of disability.
European Neurology | 1977
Ida Sarova-Pinhas; T. Siegal; J. Turgman; Jackson Braham
Two patients with dermatomyositis were treated with methotrexate, given intravenously. They were unresponsive to corticosteroids. The patients were bedridden and paralysed and one seemed to be in the terminal phase of the disease. The response to courses of methotrexate treatment was satisfactory and sustained over a 2-year follow-up period; muscle enzyme studies indicate that the muscle disease is no longer active. Although steroid therapy alone may be effective, its usefulness is unpredictable and may lead to dependence and undesirable side effects. Our experience with these two patients suggests that a combination of the two drugs may be justified as initial treatment in severe cases.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1990
Yair Lampl; Y Paniri; Y Eshel; Ida Sarova-Pinhas
This study examined the isoenzymatic pattern of LDH in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) as well as the ratio between the five fractions of LDH among patients with various brain tumours, carcinomatous meningitis and control groups. LDH 1/LDH 2 less than 1 was found significant for carcinomatous meningitis (p less than 0.001) and brain metastases (p less than 0.001). LDH 1/LDH 2 ratio was found to be significantly lower in carcinomatous meningitis than in brain metastases (p less than 0.05). No LDH 1/LDH 2 ratios smaller than 1 were found in the other groups. The LDH 1/LDH 2 ratio smaller than 1 was found in the early stage of carcinomatous meningitis without other evidences of the involvement of the leptomeninges. Examination of LDH 1/LDH 2 can be found as an adjunctive method to identify brain metastases and carcinomatous meningitis at the initial stage.
International Journal of Psychiatry in Clinical Practice | 1999
Yoram Barak; U Gabbay; R Glad; Ida Sarova-Pinhas; Anat Achiron
Multiple sclerosis (MS) patients often suffer from abnormalities of mood including euphoria, depression, anxiety, pathological laughing and crying (PLC), and psychoses. We assessed neuropsychological functions (NF) as secondary outcome measures in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) patients treated by intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg). Forty RR-MS patients (mean age 34.5±2.4; M : F=8: 32) were randomized to receive either IVIg or placebo in a double-blind trial for 2 years. NF evaluation at baseline, 1 and 2 years included the Goldberg Anxiety and Depression scales, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale, the Beck Depression Inventory, and the Mini-Mental State Examination. Baseline anxiety, depression and general psychopathology scores were similar for the IVIg and placebo groups. At 1 and 2 years, anxiety, depression and general psychopathology had decreased similarly in both groups compared with baseline. No significant cognitive changes were observed in either group. In the IVIg group PLC emerged in one patient and one patient developed clinically overt depression necessitating antidepressant treatment. In the placebo group, two patients developed a hypomanic episode, and PLC emerged in two patients. IVIg treatment is safe, according to psychiatric outcome measures, and these measures should be routinely used in RR-MS drug trials.
European Neurology | 1980
Menachem Sadeh; Abraham Ohry; Ida Sarova-Pinhas; Jackson Braham
A case is reported of a 46-year old male who has been suffering from recurrent episodes of quadriplegia, characteristic of hypokalemic periodic paralysis, for 28 years. During this period he has developed typical signs and symptoms of multiple sclerosis. The association of hypokalemic periodic paralysis and multiple sclerosis is extremely unusual.
Journal of Neurology | 1972
Yochanan Goldhammer; Ida Sarova-Pinhas; Jackson Braham
SummaryA case of parathion poisoning in a young man is described; unusual features were coma persisting for 2 months till death, hemiplegia and gross papilledema associated with edema of the brain.ZusammenfassungDie Parathion-Vergiftung eines jungen Mannes wird beschrieben; ungewöhnliche Begleiterscheinungen waren zweimonatiges, bis zum Tode anhaltendes Koma, Hemiplegie und ausgeprägte Stauungspapillen verbunden mit Gehirnödem.