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Dive into the research topics where John Winer is active.

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Featured researches published by John Winer.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1999

Antiganglioside antibodies in Guillain-Barré syndrome after a recent cytomegalovirus infection

Azadeh Khalili-Shirazi; N. A. Gregson; Ian Gray; Jeremy Rees; John Winer; Richard Hughes

OBJECTIVE To study the association between anti-ganglioside antibody responses and Guillan-Barré syndrome (GBS) after a recent cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection. METHODS Enzyme linked immunosorbant assay (ELISA) was undertaken on serum samples from 14 patients with GBS with recent cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection (CMV+GBS) and 12 without (CMV-GBS), 17 patients with other neurological diseases (OND), 11 patients with a recent CMV infection but without neurological involvement, 11 patients with recent Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection but without neurological involvement, and 20 normal control (NC) subjects. RESULTS IgM antibodies were found at 1:100 serum dilution to gangliosides GM2 (six of 14 patients), GM1 (four of 14), GD1a (three of 14) and GD1b (two of 14) in the serum samples of the CMV+GBS patients, but not in those of any of the CMV-GBS patients. IgM antibodies were also found to gangliosides GM1, GD1a, and GD1b in one of 11 OND patients, to ganglioside GM1 in one of 11 non- neurological CMV patients, and to ganglioside GD1b in one of 20 NC subjects. Some patients with EBV infection had IgM antibodies to gangliosides GM1 (five of 11), GM2 (three of 11), and GD1a (two of 11). However, the antibodies to ganglioside GM2 had a low titre, none being positive at 1:200 dilution, whereas five of the CMV+GBS serum samples remained positive at this dilution. CONCLUSION Antibodies to ganglioside GM2 are often associated with GBS after CMV infection, but their relevance is not known. It is unlikely that CMV infection and anti-ganglioside GM2 antibodies are solely responsible and an additional factor is required to elicit GBS.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2014

Titin founder mutation is a common cause of myofibrillar myopathy with early respiratory failure

Gerald Pfeffer; Rita Barresi; Ian Wilson; Steven A. Hardy; Helen Griffin; J. Hudson; Hannah R Elliott; Aravind V Ramesh; Aleksandar Radunovic; John Winer; Sujit Vaidya; Ashok Raman; Mark Busby; Maria Elena Farrugia; Alec Ming; Chris Everett; Hedley C. A. Emsley; Rita Horvath; Volker Straub; Kate Bushby; Hanns Lochmüller; Patrick F. Chinnery; A. Sarkozy

Objective Titin gene (TTN) mutations have been described in eight families with hereditary myopathy with early respiratory failure (HMERF). Some of the original patients had features resembling myofibrillar myopathy (MFM), arguing that TTN mutations could be a much more common cause of inherited muscle disease, especially in presence of early respiratory involvement. Methods We studied 127 undiagnosed patients with clinical presentation compatible with MFM. Sanger sequencing for the two previously described TTN mutations in HMERF (p.C30071R in the 119th fibronectin-3 (FN3) domain, and p.R32450W in the kinase domain) was performed in all patients. Patients with mutations had detailed review of their clinical records, muscle MRI findings and muscle pathology. Results We identified five new families with the p.C30071R mutation who were clinically similar to previously reported cases, and muscle pathology demonstrated diagnostic features of MFM. Two further families had novel variants in the 119th FN3 domain (p.P30091L and p.N30145K). No patients were identified with mutations at position p.32450. Conclusions Mutations in TTN are a cause of MFM, and titinopathy is more common than previously thought. The finding of the p.C30071R mutation in 3.9% of our study population is likely due to a British founder effect. The occurrence of novel FN3 domain variants, although still of uncertain pathogenicity, suggests that other mutations in this domain may cause MFM, and that the disease is likely to be globally distributed. We suggest that HMERF due to mutations in the TTN gene be nosologically classified as MFM-titinopathy.


Human Mutation | 2014

Mutation update and genotype-phenotype correlations of novel and previously described mutations in TPM2 and TPM3 causing congenital myopathies.

M. Marttila; Vilma-Lotta Lehtokari; Steven B. Marston; Tuula A. Nyman; Christine Barnerias; Alan H. Beggs; Enrico Bertini; OÖzge Ceyhan-Birsoy; Pascal Cintas; Marion Gerard; Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier; Jacob S. Hogue; Cheryl Longman; Bruno Eymard; Moshe Frydman; Peter B. Kang; Lars Klinge; Hanna Kolski; Hans Lochmüller; Laurent Magy; Véronique Manel; Michèle Mayer; Eugenio Mercuri; Kathryn N. North; Sylviane Peudenier-Robert; Helena Pihko; Frank J. Probst; Ricardo Reisin; Willie Stewart; A.L. Taratuto

Mutations affecting skeletal muscle isoforms of the tropomyosin genes may cause nemaline myopathy, cap myopathy, core‐rod myopathy, congenital fiber‐type disproportion, distal arthrogryposes, and Escobar syndrome. We correlate the clinical picture of these diseases with novel (19) and previously reported (31) mutations of the TPM2 and TPM3 genes. Included are altogether 93 families: 53 with TPM2 mutations and 40 with TPM3 mutations. Thirty distinct pathogenic variants of TPM2 and 20 of TPM3 have been published or listed in the Leiden Open Variant Database (http://www.dmd.nl/). Most are heterozygous changes associated with autosomal‐dominant disease. Patients with TPM2 mutations tended to present with milder symptoms than those with TPM3 mutations, DA being present only in the TPM2 group. Previous studies have shown that five of the mutations in TPM2 and one in TPM3 cause increased Ca2+ sensitivity resulting in a hypercontractile molecular phenotype. Patients with hypercontractile phenotype more often had contractures of the limb joints (18/19) and jaw (6/19) than those with nonhypercontractile ones (2/22 and 1/22), whereas patients with the non‐hypercontractile molecular phenotype more often (19/22) had axial contractures than the hypercontractile group (7/19). Our in silico predictions show that most mutations affect tropomyosin–actin association or tropomyosin head‐to‐tail binding.


Human Mutation | 2013

ANO5 gene analysis in a large cohort of patients with anoctaminopathy: confirmation of male prevalence and high occurrence of the common exon 5 gene mutation

A. Sarkozy; Debbie Hicks; J. Hudson; S. Laval; Rita Barresi; David Hilton-Jones; Marcus Deschauer; Elizabeth Harris; Laura E. Rufibach; Esther Hwang; Rumaisa Bashir; Maggie C. Walter; Sabine Krause; Peter Van den Bergh; Isabel Illa; Isabelle Pénisson-Besnier; Liesbeth De Waele; Doug M. Turnbull; M. Guglieri; Bertold Schrank; Benedikt Schoser; Jürgen Seeger; Herbert Schreiber; Dieter Gläser; Michelle Eagle; Geraldine Bailey; Richard Walters; Cheryl Longman; Fiona Norwood; John Winer

Limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2L or anoctaminopathy is a condition mainly characterized by adult onset proximal lower limb muscular weakness and raised CK values, due to recessive ANO5 gene mutations. An exon 5 founder mutation (c.191dupA) has been identified in most of the British and German LGMD2L patients so far reported. We aimed to further investigate the prevalence and spectrum of ANO5 gene mutations and related clinical phenotypes, by screening 205 undiagnosed patients referred to our molecular service with a clinical suspicion of anoctaminopathy. A total of 42 unrelated patients had two ANO5 mutations (21%), whereas 14 carried a single change. We identified 34 pathogenic changes, 15 of which are novel. The c.191dupA mutation represents 61% of mutated alleles and appears to be less prevalent in non‐Northern European populations. Retrospective clinical analysis corroborates the prevalently proximal lower limb phenotype, the male predominance and absence of major cardiac or respiratory involvement. Identification of cases with isolated hyperCKaemia and very late symptomatic male and female subjects confirms the extension of the phenotypic spectrum of the disease. Anoctaminopathy appears to be one of the most common adult muscular dystrophies in Northern Europe, with a prevalence of about 20%–25% in unselected undiagnosed cases.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2000

Limbic encephalitis and antibodies to Ma2: a paraneoplastic presentation of breast cancer

Ian Sutton; John Winer; David Rowlands; Josep Dalmau

A patient with atypical medullary breast cancer is described who presented with symptoms of limbic encephalitis. The patients serum and CSF contained antibodies that reacted with the nervous system and the tumour. These antibodies recognised Ma2, a neuronal protein related to paraneoplastic limbic and brainstem encephalitis in men with testicular tumours. This report highlights the importance of testing for paraneoplastic antineuronal antibodies in cases of unexplained limbic encephalitis and suggests screening for breast cancer in women with antibodies predominantly directed to Ma2.


BMJ | 2008

Guillain-Barré syndrome

John Winer

#### Summary points Guillain-Barre syndrome is a peripheral neuropathy that causes acute neuromuscular failure. Misdiagnosis is common and can be fatal because of the high frequency of respiratory failure, which contributes to the 10% mortality seen in prospective studies.1 Our understanding of the wide spectrum of the disease and its pathogenesis has increased enormously in recent years. Several high quality randomised controlled trials have established the effectiveness of early treatment. #### Sources and selection criteria I prepared this review by searching Cochrane reviews, Medline, PubMed, and my personal archive of references. I downloaded and assessed all references that dealt with Guillain-Barre syndrome and its subtypes—acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, acute motor axonal neuropathy, and acute motor and sensory axonal neuropathy. The clinical spectrum of Guillain-Barre syndrome is varied—at least three different types have been identified. In Europe and North America about 95% of cases are acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy and the other 5% are acute axonal motor disorder and acute sensory and motor axonal neuropathy.2 The frequency of these axonal neuropathies varies throughout the world, and in Asia and South America they make up about 30% of the syndrome.3 The closely related Miller Fisher syndrome is thought to be an inflammatory neuropathy that affects the cranial nerves to the eye muscles in particular, and it is characterised by ophthalmoplegia, accompanied by areflexia and ataxia but not weakness.4 Some cases of acute …


BMJ | 2010

Open letter to prime minister David Cameron and health secretary Andrew Lansley

David Nicholl; David Hilton-Jones; Jacqueline Palace; Sam Richmond; Sarah Finlayson; John Winer; A I Weir; Paul Maddison; Nick Fletcher; Jon Sussman; Nick Silver; John Nixon; Dimitri M. Kullmann; Nicholas D. Embleton; David Beeson; Maria Elena Farrugia; Marguerite Hill; Christopher J McDermott; Gareth Llewelyn; J. V. Leonard; Michael Morris

Neurologists and paediatricians call for action on “massive” rises in the prices of orphan drugs


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005

Paraneoplastic neurological antibodies: a laboratory experience.

Abid Karim; Richard G. Hughes; John Winer; Adrian C. Williams; Arthur R. Bradwell

Abstract: Antineuronal antibodies are associated with rare paraneoplastic neurological syndromes, and their identification alerts clinicians to examine for the presence of a tumor. Presented here is laboratory experience (prevalence, difficulties, and procedures) and several interesting but inconclusive results. A total of 1045 samples were screened over a 2‐year period; 91 showed a degree of binding of antibodies to the cerebellum, and 22 of these 91 were confirmed, by Western blot, to have specific antineuronal antibodies. Thirteen of 22 were Hu‐positive, and 6 of these also had antinuclear antibodies. Six were Yo‐positive, 2 had anti‐Ma antibodies, and 1 was Tr‐positive. An additional 27 of 91 patients had cerebellar antibodies giving recognized staining patterns (Hu, Yo, and Ma). However, Western blot did not confirm these specificities, and hence they were reported as atypical. Six of 27 of these patients had neoplasms; 3 of the 6 gave nucleolar patterns (not Ma). Two appeared similar to Yo, and 1 similar to Hu. Antineuronal antibodies are rare, and in the absence of a specific etiology patients should be examined further for the possible presence of an underlying tumor. Methodical classification of the antibodies must be conducted to avoid incorrect reporting. Further criteria on the typing/reporting of atypical results may aid diagnosis of paraneoplastic neurological syndromes.


Rheumatology | 2015

Second-line agents in myositis: 1-year factorial trial of additional immunosuppression in patients who have partially responded to steroids

Fowzia Ibrahim; Ernest Choy; Patrick Gordon; Caroline J Doré; Alan Hakim; George D. Kitas; David A. Isenberg; Bridget Griffiths; Bryan Lecky; Kuntal Chakravarty; John Winer; Katalin Dankó; Robert G. Cooper; Beverley White-Alao; David Scott

Objective. Ciclosporin and MTX are used in idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (DM and PM) when patients incompletely respond to glucocorticoids. Their effectiveness is unproved in randomized controlled trials (RCTs). We evaluated their benefits in a placebo-controlled factorial RCT. Methods. A 56-week multicentre factorial-design double-blind placebo-controlled RCT compared steroids alone, MTX (15–25 mg weekly) plus steroids, ciclosporin (1–5 mg/kg/day) plus steroids and all three treatments. It enrolled adults with myositis (by Bohan and Peter criteria) with active disease receiving corticosteroids. Results. A total of 359 patients were screened and 58 randomized. Of the latter, 37 patients completed 12 months of treatment, 7 were lost to follow-up and 14 discontinued treatment. Patients completing 12 months of treatment showed significant improvement (P < 0.001 on paired t-tests) in manual muscle testing (14% change), walking time (22% change) and function (9% change). Intention to treat and completer analyses indicated that ciclosporin monotherapy, MTX monotherapy and ciclosporin/MTX combination therapy showed no significant treatment effects in comparison with placebo. Conclusion. Neither MTX nor ciclosporin (by themselves or in combination) improved clinical features in myositis patients who had incompletely responded to glucocorticoids. Trial Registration: International Standard Randomized Controlled Trial Number Register; http://www.controlled-trials.com/; ISRCTN40085050


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2014

Two recurrent mutations are associated with GNE myopathy in the North of Britain

Amina Chaouch; Kathryn M Brennan; Judith N Hudson; Cheryl Longman; John McConville; Patrick J. Morrison; Maria Elena Farrugia; Richard Petty; Willie Stewart; Fiona Norwood; Rita Horvath; Patrick F. Chinnery; Donald Costigan; John Winer; Tuomo Polvikoski; Estelle Healy; Anna Sarkozy; Teresinha Evangelista; Oksana Pogoryelova; Michelle Eagle; Kate Bushby; Volker Straub; Hanns Lochmüller

Objective GNE myopathy is a rare recessive myopathy associated with inclusion bodies on muscle biopsy. The clinical phenotype is associated with distal muscle weakness with quadriceps sparing. Most of the current information on GNE myopathy has been obtained through studies of Jewish and Japanese patient cohorts carrying founder mutations in the GNE gene. However, little is known about GNE myopathy in Europe where the prevalence is thought to be very low. Methods Patients were referred through the National Specialist Commissioning Team service for limb-girdle muscular dystrophies at Newcastle (UK). All patients harbouring mutations in the GNE gene were recruited for our study. Detailed clinical and genetic data as well as muscle MRIs and muscle biopsies were reviewed. Results We identified 26 patients harbouring mutations in the GNE gene. Two previously reported mutations (c.1985C>T, p.Ala662Val and c.1225G>T, p.Asp409Tyr) were prevalent in the Scottish, Northern Irish and Northern English populations; with 90% of these patients carrying at least one of the two mutations. Clinically, we confirmed the homogenous pattern of selective quadriceps sparing but noted additional features like asymmetry of weakness at disease onset. Conclusions GNE myopathy is an important diagnosis to consider in patients presenting with distal leg muscle weakness. We report, for the first time, two common mutations in the north of Britain and highlight the broader spectrum of clinical phenotypes. We also propose that the prevalence of GNE myopathy may be underestimated due to the frequent absence of rimmed vacuoles in the muscle biopsy.

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Cheryl Longman

Southern General Hospital

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David Nicholl

University of Birmingham

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Richard Hughes

University College London

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Ian Sutton

Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham

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