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Dive into the research topics where Juha T. Korpelainen is active.

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Featured researches published by Juha T. Korpelainen.


Stroke | 1999

Poststroke Depression Correlates With Cognitive Impairment and Neurological Deficits

M.-L. Kauhanen; Juha T. Korpelainen; Pirkko Hiltunen; E. Brusin; H. Mononen; R. Määttä; Pentti Nieminen; K. A. Sotaniemi; Vilho V. Myllylä

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The prevalence of poststroke depression is known to be high, but the knowledge of its neuropsychological correlates is limited. This 12-month prospective study was designed to evaluate the natural history of poststroke depression and to study its neuropsychological, clinical, and functional associates. METHODS We studied a series of 106 consecutive patients (46 women and 60 men, mean age 65.8 years) with acute first-ever ischemic stroke. The patients underwent a neurological, psychiatric, and neuropsychological examination at 3 and 12 months after the stroke. The psychiatric diagnosis of depression was based on DSM-III-R-criteria. RESULTS Depression was diagnosed in 53% of the patients at 3 months and in 42% of the patients at 12 months after the stroke. The prevalence of major depression was 9% at 3 months and 16% at 12 months. There was an association between poststroke depression and cognitive impairment; the domains most likely to be defective in stroke-related depression were memory (P=0.022), nonverbal problem solving (P=0.039), and attention and psychomotor speed (P=0.020). The presence of dysphasia increased the risk of major depression. The depressive patients were more dependent in ADL and had more severe impairment and handicap than the nondepressive patients. CONCLUSIONS More than half of the patients suffer from depression after stroke, and the frequency of major depression seems to increase during the first year. In addition to dysphasia, poststroke depression is correlated with other cognitive deficits. We emphasize the importance of psychiatric evaluation of stroke patients.


Stroke | 1999

Sexual Functioning Among Stroke Patients and Their Spouses

Juha T. Korpelainen; Pentti Nieminen; Vilho V. Myllylä

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The aim of this study was to assess effects of stroke on sexual functioning of stroke patients and their spouses and to study the associations of clinical and psychosocial factors with poststroke changes in sexual functions. METHODS One hundred ninety-two stroke patients and 94 spouses participating in stroke adjustment courses sponsored by the Finnish Stroke and Aphasia Federation completed a self-administered questionnaire concerning their prestroke and poststroke sexual functions and habits. The main outcome measures were (1) libido, (2) coital frequency, (3) sexual arousal, including erectile and orgastic ability and vaginal lubrication, and (4) sexual satisfaction. RESULTS A majority of the stroke patients reported a marked decline in all the measured sexual functions, ie, libido, coital frequency, erectile and orgastic ability, and vaginal lubrication, as well as in their sexual satisfaction. The most important explanatory factors for these changes were the general attitude toward sexuality (odds ratio [OR] range, 7.4 to 21.9; logistic regression analysis), fear of impotence (OR, 6.1), inability to discuss sexuality (OR range, 6.8 to 18.5), unwillingness to participate in sexual activity (OR range, 3.1 to 5. 4), and the degree of functional disability (OR range, 3.2 to 5.0). The spouses also reported a significant decline in their libido, sexual activity, and sexual satisfaction as a consequence of stroke. CONCLUSIONS Sexual dysfunction and dissatisfaction with sexual life are common in both male and female stroke patients and in their spouses. Psychological and social factors seem to exert a strong impact on sexual functioning and the quality of sexual life after stroke.


Stroke | 1996

Abnormal Heart Rate Variability as a Manifestation of Autonomic Dysfunction in Hemispheric Brain Infarction

Juha T. Korpelainen; K. A. Sotaniemi; Heikki V. Huikuri; Vilho V. Myllylä

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Abnormal heart rate variability is related to prognostically unfavorable ventricular arrhythmias and sudden arrhythmic death in coronary artery disease. Short-term electrocardiographic (ECG) recordings have shown similar abnormalities of heart rate variability in patients with acute stroke. However, there is no information regarding the clinical significance of these abnormalities and of heart rate variability in long-term ECG recordings in stroke. METHODS In this prospective study, we analyzed the time domain and frequency domain measures of heart rate variability from 24-hour ECG recordings in 31 consecutive patients with hemispheric brain infarction in the acute phase and at 1 and 6 months after the infarction and in 31 age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects. RESULTS All the measured components of heart rate variability, ie, standard deviation of RR intervals (P < .001), total power (P < .0001), very-low-frequency power (P < .0001), low-frequency power (P < .001), and high-frequency power (P < .05), were significantly lower than those of the control subjects in both the acute phase and 1 and 6 months later. Impaired heart rate variability correlated with the severity of neurological deficits and disability. In five patients with increased intracranial pressure due to large brain infarction, no relevant spectral components were found. CONCLUSIONS Hemispheric brain infarction seems to cause significant long-lasting damage to the cardiovascular autonomic regulatory system manifested as abnormalities of heart rate variability. Distorted heart rate variability in the acute phase of stroke may be prognostically unfavorable.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2002

Heart rate dynamics in refractory and well controlled temporal lobe epilepsy

Hanna Ansakorpi; Juha T. Korpelainen; Heikki V. Huikuri; U Tolonen; Vilho V. Myllylä; Jouko I. T. Isojärvi

Objectives: Disorders of cardiovascular and other autonomic nervous system functions are often found in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Cardiovascular dysregulation in TLE has previously been quantified assessing traditional time and frequency domain measures of heart rate (HR) variability from short term ECG recordings. However, new complexity and fractal measures of HR variability based on non-linear dynamics and fractals (“chaos theory”) may disclose certain patterns of HR dynamics that cannot be detected using only conventional measures. Methods: In addition to the traditional spectral and non-spectral components of HR variability, fractal correlation properties, approximate entropy (ApEn) of RR interval dynamics, and the slope of the power law relation were measured from 24 hour ambulatory ECG recordings to evaluate interictal autonomic cardiovascular regulatory function in 19 patients with refractory TLE, 25 patients with well controlled TLE, and in 34 healthy age and sex matched control subjects. Results: The traditional time and frequency domain measures were lower in patients with TLE than in controls (p<0.05). In addition, the power law slope (p<0.005) and ApEn (p<0.05) were also reduced in TLE patients. Furthermore, ApEn was smaller in patients with refractory TLE than in patients with well-controlled TLE ( p<0.01), whereas the long term fractal correlation value α2 was lower in patients with well controlled TLE (p<0.05). An altered HR variation was not associated with any particular AED regimen. Conclusions: In addition to reduced overall HR variability, the long term fractal organisation and complexity of HR dynamics seem to be altered in TLE. These abnormalities in HR behaviour may partly contribute to the occurrence of adverse cardiovascular events, such as life threatening arrhythmias in patients with TLE.


Stroke | 2005

Natriuretic Peptides and Mortality After Stroke

Anne Mäkikallio; T.H. Mäkikallio; Juha T. Korpelainen; Olli Vuolteenaho; J.M. Tapanainen; K. Ylitalo; K. A. Sotaniemi; Heikki V. Huikuri; Vilho V. Myllylä

Background and Purpose— Measurement of natriuretic peptides provides prognostic information in various patient populations. The prognostic value of natriuretic peptides among patients with acute stroke is not known, although elevated peptide levels have been observed. Methods— A series of 51 patients (mean age, 68±11years) with first-ever ischemic stroke underwent a comprehensive clinical examination and measurements of plasma atrial natriuretic peptides (N-ANP) and brain natriuretic peptides (N-BNP) in the acute phase of stroke. The patients were followed-up for 44±21 months. Risk factors for all-cause mortality were assessed. Control populations, matched for gender and age, consisted of 51 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and 25 healthy subjects. Results— Plasma concentrations of N-ANP (mean±SD, 988±993 pmol/L) and N-BNP (751±1608 pmol/L) in the stroke patients were at the same level as those in the AMI patients (NS for both), but significantly higher than those of the healthy subjects (358±103 pmol/L, P<0.001 and 54±26 pmol/L, P<0.01, respectively). Elevated levels of N-ANP and N-BNP predicted mortality after stroke (risk ratio [RR] 4.3, P<0.01 and RR 3.9, P<0.01, respectively) and after AMI (P<0.05), and remained independent predictors of death after stroke even after adjustment for age, diabetes, coronary artery disease, and medication (RR 3.9, P<0.05 and RR 3.7, P<0.05, respectively). Conclusion— Plasma levels of natriuretic peptides are elevated in the acute phase of stroke and predict poststroke mortality.


Epilepsia | 2000

Interictal Cardiovascular Autonomic Responses in Patients with Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

Hanna Ansakorpi; Juha T. Korpelainen; Kalervo Suominen; Uolevi Tolonen; Vilho V. Myllylä; Jouko I. T. Isojärvi

Summary: Purpose: To measure interictal cardiovascular autonomic functions in patients with either refractory or well‐controlled temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE).


Stroke | 1994

Cardiovascular autonomic reflexes in brain infarction.

Juha T. Korpelainen; K. A. Sotaniemi; Kalervo Suominen; Uolevi Tolonen; Vilho V. Myllylä

Background and Purpose Increased sympathetic activity is associated with cardiovascular complications in stroke, but the role of the parasympathetic nervous system has not been carefully outlined. In the present study our purpose was to assess quantitatively autonomic cardiovascular disturbances in brain infarction by measuring cardiovascular autonomic reflexes. Methods We studied the autonomic regulation of cardiovascular functions prospectively in 40 patients with brain infarction (acute phase, 1 month, and 6 months) and in 55 healthy control subjects by recording heart rate and blood pressure responses to normal and deep breathing, the Valsalva maneuver, tilting, and isometric work. Results In the acute phase, heart rate responses to normal breathing, deep breathing, the Valsalva maneuver, and tilting were significantly (P<.05) impaired in both hemispheric and brain stem infarctions, thus indicating hypofunction of the parasympathetic nervous system. At 1 month heart rate responses to normal breathing (brain stem, P<.05), the Valsalva maneuver (brain stem, P<.01), and tilting (hemispheric, P<.05) were still significantly lower than those of the control subjects, but at 6 months significant suppression of the response was found only in tilting (hemispheric, P<.05). Conclusions These findings suggest that in addition to the previously well‐established sympathetic hyperfunction, brain infarction also seems to cause parasympathetic hypofunction, which may be involved in cardiovascular and other known manifestations of autonomic failure associated with stroke. (Stroke. 1994;25:787‐792.)


Clinical Autonomic Research | 1999

Autonomic nervous system disorders in stroke.

Juha T. Korpelainen; K. A. Sotaniemi; Vilho V. Myllylä

Disturbances of the autonomic nervous system are common in patients with various cerebrovascular diseases. They are attributed to damage of the central autonomic network, particularly in the frontoparietal cortical areas and in the brain stem, or to a disruption of the autonomic pathways descending from the hypothalamus via the mesencephalon, pons, and medulla to the spinal cord. The most common clinical problems include abnormalities in heart rate and blood pressure regulation, reflecting cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction, and asymmetric sweating with cold hemiplegic limbs, reflecting changes in the sudomotor and vasomotor regulatory systems. Bladder and bowel dysfunction and impotence are also frequent complaints after stroke, but the present knowledge concerning their prevalence and clinical significance is still limited. Cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction, which is mainly related to increased sympathetic activity, is most evident in the acute phase of stroke, whereas other autonomic disorders, such as abnormal sweating, are long-standing or even irreversible. In addition to the well-established sympathetic hyperfunction, abnormalities of the parasympathetic nervous system may also contribute to the autonomic imbalance after stroke. Reliable recognition of autonomic dysfunction using quantitative analysis methods is important, because these disturbances are not only subjectively disabling and uncomfortable, but they may also be prognostically unfavorable. Moreover, quantitative measurements also form the ground for successive treatment of various stroke-related autonomic disorders.Disturbances of the autonomic nervous system are common in patients with various cerebrovascular diseases. They are attributed to damage of the central autonomic network, particularly in the frontoparietal cortical areas and in the brain stem, or to a disruption of the autonomic pathways descending from the hypothalamus via the mesencephalon, pons, and medulla to the spinal cord. The most common clinical problems include abnormalities in heart rate and blood pressure regulation, reflecting cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction, and asymmetric sweating with cold hemiplegic limbs, reflecting changes in the sudomotor and vasomotor regulatory systems. Bladder and bowel dysfunction and impotence are also frequent complaints after stroke, but the present knowledge concerning their prevalence and clinical significance is still limited. Cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction, which is mainly related to increased sympathetic activity, is most evident in the acute phase of stroke, whereas other autonomic disorders, such as abnormal sweating, are long-standing or even irreversible. In addition to the well-established sympathetic hyperfunction, abnormalities of the parasympathetic nervous system may also contribute to the autonomic imbalance after stroke. Reliable recognition of autonomic dysfunction using quantitative analysis methods is important, because these disturbances are not only subjectively disabling and uncomfortable, but they may also be prognostically unfavorable. Moreover, quantitative measurements also form the ground for successive treatment of various stroke-related autonomic disorders.


Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 1998

Sexual dysfunction in stroke patients

Juha T. Korpelainen; M.-L. Kauhanen; H. Kemola; U. Malinen; Vilho V. Myllylä

Objectives – A marked decline in sexual activity has been reported in stroke patients. Little information, however, is available on clinical correlates of sexual dysfunction, changes in the sexual life of spouses of stroke patients, and abnormalities of nocturnal penile erections. Material and methods – In this prospective 6‐month follow‐up study, we assessed the impact of stroke on libido, sexual arousal, coital frequency and satisfaction with sexual life in 50 stroke patients (38 men, 12 women, aged 32 to 65 years) and in their spouses. We also measured nocturnal penile erections of the male patients using a strain gauge attached around the penis. Results – All the analyzed aspects of sexuality, i.e., libido, coital frequency, erection, ejaculation, vaginal lubrication, orgasm and satisfaction with sexual life, were commonly decreased as a consequence of stroke both in the patients and in their spouses. Fourteen (28%) patients at 2 months post‐stroke and 6 (14%) patients at 6 months had ceased having sexual intercourse. Nocturnal erections at 2 months post‐stroke were normal in 17 (45%) of the 38 male patients and impaired in 21 (55%) patients, but all of the patients had some nocturnal erections. Sexual dysfunction correlated significantly (P <0.05) with the presence of the sensory hemisyndrome. Conclusions – Sexual dysfunction and dissatisfaction with sexual life seems to be common both in male and female stroke patients and in their spouses. Decreased libido, sexual arousal and satisfaction are related particularly to the presence of the hemisensory syndrome. The etiology for sexual dysfunction after stroke is multifactorial including both organic and psychosocial factors.


Osteoporosis International | 2003

Lifestyle factors are associated with osteoporosis in lean women but not in normal and overweight women: a population-based cohort study of 1222 women.

Raija Korpelainen; Juha T. Korpelainen; Jorma Heikkinen; Kalervo Väänänen; Sirkka Keinänen-Kiukaanniemi

Abstract The aim of the present population-based cohort study was to evaluate the contribution of lifelong lifestyle factors to calcaneal and distal forearm bone mass in elderly women. We studied 1222 of the 1689 eligible home-dwelling women aged 70–73 years. Lifelong occupational and leisure time physical activity, calcium intake, smoking, alcohol intake and medical history were obtained by a self-completed questionnaire. Main outcome measures were broadband ultrasound attenuation (BUA) of the calcaneus and bone mineral density (BMD) of the radius measured once in 1997–1998. The women with BMI ≤ 25.1 kg m2 had lower BUA (p < 0.0001) and radial BMD values (p < 0.0001) than women with higher BMI. Lifestyle factors associated with BUA in the leanest women were: low physical activity at work (RR 0.4; 95% confidence interval 0.2 to 0.8), low habitual exercise at the ages 30 years , 50 years and currently (RR 1.5; 1.0 to 2.4; RR 1.5; 1.1 to 2.6; RR 1.7; 1.1 to 2.7), poor mobility (RR 1.9; 1.2 to 3.0), coffee intake ≥ 5 cups/day (RR 1.7; 1.1 to 2.7), type 2 diabetes (RR 0.3; 0.1 to 0.9) and hypertension (RR 0.5; 0.3 to 0.8). Type 2 diabetes protected lean women from lower distal and ultradistal radial bone density (RR 0.3; 0.1 to 0.8; RR 0.1; 0.1 to 0.5). The selected lifestyle factors were not associated with lowered calcaneal or radial bone density in the higher categories of BMI. In conclusion, risk factors for lower calcaneal and radial bone density appear to be different among lean and normal/obese women. Lifelong recreational physical activity, low physical activity at work, type 2 diabetes and hypertension seem to be associated with increased bone density, while high coffee intake may increase the risk of lower bone density in lean elderly women. These factors are potentially modifiable, and intervention studies targeted at this risk category of women are needed.

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