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Dive into the research topics where Peter Høgh is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Høgh.


Neurology | 2001

A gender difference in the association between APOE genotype and age-related cognitive decline

E. L. Mortensen; Peter Høgh

Objective: To determine whether the APOE ε4 allele is associated with age-related intellectual decline in a community-dwelling sample of Danes. Methods: A sample of 189 subjects who did not have dementia was tested with the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) at the ages of 50 and 80 years. Of these subjects, 163 (84 women and 79 men) completed all WAIS subtests at both assessments and 139 completed the digit symbol and block design subtests at the ages of 50, 60, 70, and 80 years. Results: Cognitive decline from the age of 50 to the age of 80 years was substantial and larger for the performance subtests than for the verbal subtests (the declines were 18.40 for the performance IQ and 8.39 for the verbal IQ). APOE genotype was unrelated to the observed WAIS results of the 80-year assessment, but there was a significant interaction between APOE genotype and sex for decline scores in the performance IQ and three performance subtests (digit symbol, block design, and object assembly). In women, 26 ε4 carriers showed larger decline than 58 noncarriers, whereas there was no significant relation between APOE genotype and cognitive decline in men. The association in women between APOE genotype and cognitive decline was significant only for decline in the decade from age 70 to age 80 years. The interaction between sex and APOE genotype remained significant when education was included as a covariate. Conclusion: The APOE ε4 allele is associated with normal age-related decline in cognitive functions in women only. This finding may be supportive of recent evidence suggesting sex differences in APOE-associated risk for AD. Thus, the sex difference in the risk of sporadic AD may partly be explained by a sex-specific impact of the APOE ε4 allele on age-related cognitive decline.


Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders | 2007

Validity of Dementia Diagnoses in the Danish Hospital Registers

Thien Kieu Thi Phung; Birgitte Bo Andersen; Peter Høgh; Lars Vedel Kessing; Preben Bo Mortensen; Gunhild Waldemar

Background:The validity of dementia diagnoses in the Danish nationwide hospital registers was evaluated to determine the value of these registers in epidemiological research about dementia. Methods: Two hundred patients were randomly selected from 4,682 patients registered for the first time with a dementia diagnosis in the last 6 months of 2003. The patients’ medical journals were reviewed to evaluate if they fulfilled ICD-10 and/or DSM-IV criteria for dementia and specific dementia subtypes. The patients who were still alive in 2006 were invited to an interview. Results: One hundred and ninety-seven journals were available for review and 51 patients were interviewed. A registered diagnosis of dementia was found to be correct in 169 (85.8%) cases. Regarding dementia subtypes, the degree of agreement between the registers and the results of the validating process was low with a kappa of 0.36 (95% CI 0.24–0.48). Conclusion: The validity of dementia syndrome in the Danish hospital registers was high and allows for epidemiological studies about dementia. Alzheimer’s disease, although underregistered, also had a good validity once the diagnosis was registered. In general, other ICD-10 dementia subtypes in the registers had a low validity and are less suitable for epidemiological research.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2002

Potentially reversible conditions in 1000 consecutive memory clinic patients

Anne-Mette Hejl; Peter Høgh; Gunhild Waldemar

Objectives: To investigate the prevalence and classification of potentially reversible conditions in a prospective memory clinic cohort of younger and elderly patients with cognitive symptoms. Patients: 1000 consecutive patients referred during a period of 54 months to a university hospital multidisciplinary memory clinic based in neurology. Methods: All patients were referred for diagnostic evaluation and treatment of cognitive symptoms. The multidisciplinary staff prospectively established a standardised consensus report for each patient based on the results of clinical and ancillary investigations with classification of cognitive profile, primary underlying cause, and concomitant conditions. Results: The mean age of the patients was 66.1 years (range 17–98) and 43% met diagnostic criteria for dementia. A potentially reversible primary aetiology for cognitive symptoms was identified in 19% and a potentially reversible concomitant condition in 23% of all patients. In the subgroup of patients with dementia, 4% had a potentially reversible primary aetiology. Careful clinical examination, routine laboratory tests, and cranial computed tomography identified most of these conditions. Conclusions: Reversible conditions are most often encountered in patients with mild cognitive disturbances. Although treatment may not always result in full reversal of cognitive symptoms, potentially reversible conditions should be identified in the diagnostic evaluation of the patient.


Neurology | 2006

APOE epsilon variation in multiple sclerosis susceptibility and disease severity: some answers.

R. M. Burwick; Patricia P. Ramsay; Jonathan L. Haines; Stephen L. Hauser; Jorge R. Oksenberg; Margaret A. Pericak-Vance; S. Schmidt; Alastair Compston; Stephen Sawcer; R. Cittadella; Giovanni Savettieri; A. Quattrone; Chris H. Polman; Bernard M. J. Uitdehaag; J. N P Zwemmer; C. P. Hawkins; William Ollier; S. Weatherby; Christian Enzinger; Franz Fazekas; Helena Schmidt; Reinhold Schmidt; Jan Hillert; Thomas Masterman; Peter Høgh; Masaaki Niino; Seiji Kikuchi; Patrícia Maciel; Mónica Santos; Maria Edite Rio

Background: Previous studies have examined the role of APOE variation in multiple sclerosis (MS), but have lacked the statistical power to detect modest genetic influences on risk and disease severity. The meta- and pooled analyses presented here utilize the largest collection, to date, of MS cases, controls, and families genotyped for the APOE epsilon polymorphism. Methods: Studies of MS and APOE were identified by searches of PubMed, Biosis, Web of Science, Cochrane Review, and Embase. When possible, authors were contacted for individual genotype data. Meta-analyses of MS case-control data and family-based analyses were performed to assess the association of APOE epsilon genotype with disease risk. Pooled analyses of MS cases were also performed to assess the influence of APOE epsilon genotype on disease severity. Results: A total of 22 studies (3,299 MS cases and 2,532 controls) were available for meta-analysis. No effect of ε2 or ε4 status on MS risk was observed (summary OR 1.14, 95% CI 0.96–1.34 and OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.78–1.01). Results obtained from analyses of APOE genotypes in 1,279 MS families were also negative (p = 0.61). Finally, results from pooled analyses of 4,048 MS cases also argue strongly that APOE epsilon status does not distinguish a relapsing-remitting from primary progressive disease course, or influence disease severity, as measured by the Expanded Disability Status Scale and disease duration. Conclusion: Overall, these findings do not support a role for APOE in multiple sclerosis, and underscore the importance of using large sample sizes to detect modest genetic effects, particularly in studies of genotype-phenotype relationships.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1995

Heterogeneous cerebral glucose metabolism in normal pressure hydrocephalus.

E Tedeschi; S G Hasselbalch; Gunhild Waldemar; Marianne Juhler; Peter Høgh; S Holm; L Garde; L L Knudsen; L. Klinken; F. Gjerris

The regional cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (rCMRglu) has never been investigated in large consecutive groups of patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), a potentially treatable form of dementia with an unpredictable outcome after shunt surgery. Using PET and 18F-2-fluorodeoxyglucose, rCMRglu was studied in 18 patients who fulfilled hydrodynamic criteria for NPH and in whom a biopsy of the frontal cortex was obtained. When compared with an age matched group of 11 healthy subjects, the patients with NPH showed a significant rCMRglu reduction in all cortical and subcortical regions of interest. Individual metabolic patterns, however, disclosed a large topographical heterogeneity. Furthermore, histopathological examination identified Alzheimers disease or cerebrovascular disease in six cases, and no parenchymal disease or non-specific degenerative processes in the remaining 12. After separating the patients according to the histological diagnosis, the rCMRglu patterns were still heterogeneous, the abnormalities ranging from focal to diffuse in both subgroups. After shunt operation, 11 patients did not improve or worsened clinically. Six patients improved; of those, two had Alzheimer changes and two cerebrovascular changes in their biopsy. The metabolic pattern of these six patients did not differ from the rest of the NPH group. The results indicate that the NPH syndrome may be non-specifically associated with different degenerative disorders. The metabolic heterogeneity, together with the heterogeneous histopathological findings, indicate the necessity of reevaluating the pathogenesis of the NPH syndrome, and may account for the high variability in the success rate of shunt surgery series.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2007

Idiopathic normal-pressure hydrocephalus: clinical comorbidity correlated with cerebral biopsy findings and outcome of cerebrospinal fluid shunting

R Bech-Azeddine; Peter Høgh; Marianne Juhler; F. Gjerris; Gunhild Waldemar

Objectives: To elucidate the importance of clinically diagnosed cerebral comorbidity in idiopathic normal-pressure hydrocephalus (INPH) and its effect on improvement after shunt surgery as well as concordance with parenchymal pathological changes described in frontal cerebral biopsy specimens. Methods: In 28 consecutive patients diagnosed with INPH and shunted according to clinical, radiological and cerebrospinal fluid dynamic criteria, concomitant disorders were carefully registered, with special emphasis on cerebrovascular disease (CVD) and possible Alzheimer’s disease. During shunt surgery, a frontal cerebral biopsy specimen was obtained and subsequently analysed for pathological changes. Results: One or several concurrent disorders were present in 89% of the patients, most often CVD (n = 17) and possible Alzheimer’s disease (n = 12), of which eight patients presented both, diagnosed according to the criteria of the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders Association. The shunt success rate was 33%. A clear tendency towards increasing prevalence of CVD or Alzheimer’s disease was found in the subgroups with no improvement or clinical deterioration compared with the patients improving after shunt surgery. The presence of CVD tended towards an unfavourable shunt outcome. The pathological parenchymal changes reflected the clinical diagnoses of comorbidity, and were described in about half of the biopsy specimens, with Alzheimer’s disease (n = 7) and vascular changes (n = 7) being the most common findings. However, no significant correlation was found with the clinical diagnoses of Alzheimer’s disease and CVD. The presence of cerebral comorbidity, whether diagnosed clinically or by brain biopsy, did not preclude clinical improvement after shunt operation. Conclusions: A high prevalence of CVD and Alzheimer’s disease was found in patients shunted for INPH, which was reflected, although less commonly, by similar neuropathological biopsy findings. No significant correlation was found between the presence of comorbidity and shunt outcome. The findings support the perception of INPH as a multiaetiological clinical entity, possibly overlapping pathophysiologically with CVD and Alzheimer’s disease.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1994

White matter magnetic resonance hyperintensities in dementia of the Alzheimer type: morphological and regional cerebral blood flow correlates.

Gunhild Waldemar; P. Christiansen; Henrik B.W. Larsson; Peter Høgh; Henning Laursen; N. A. Lassen; Olaf B. Paulson

In a prospective MRI study the presence, appearance, volume, and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) correlates of periventricular hyperintensities (PVHs) and deep white matter hyperintensities (DWMHs) were examined in 18 patients with probable Alzheimers disease and in 10 age matched healthy control subjects, all without major cerbrovascular risk factors. The 133Xe inhalation method and the [99mTc]-d,l-hexamethyl-propylene-amine-oxime (HMPAO) technique with single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) were used to measure rCBF. Rating scores for PVHs were significantly higher in the Alzheimers disease group (p < 0.01) and correlated significantly with the volume of ventricles (p < 0.05) and with systolic arterial blood pressure (p < 0.01), but not with rCBF. By contrast, there was no significant difference in the rating scores or volumes of DWMHs between the two groups, although three patients had extensive DWMH lesions in the central white matter. In the group of patients with Alzheimers disease as a whole, the volume of DWMHs correlated well with rCBF in the hippocampal region ( r = -0.72; p < 0.001), but not with frontal, temporal, parietal, or occipital rCBF. Postmortem histopathology of extensive DWMH lesions in one patient with definite Alzheimers disease showed a partial loss of myelin and astrocytic gliosis, but no ischaemic changes. It is concluded that DWMH lesions may be associated with reduced rCBF in the hippocampal region. The heterogenous topography of neocortical rCBF deficits in Alzheimers disease could not be explained by deafferentation from underlying white matter hyperintensities and therefore may reflect variations in the topography of cortical abnormalities.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2000

Apoliprotein E and multiple sclerosis: impact of the epsilon-4 allele on susceptibility, clinical type and progression rate

Peter Høgh; Oturai A; Schreiber K; Morten Blinkenberg; O S Jørgensen; Ryder L; Olaf B. Paulson; Per Soelberg Sørensen; Gitte M. Knudsen

The purpose of this study was to investigate the relation between APOE genotype and Multiple Sclerosis (MS) in a genetically homogeneous population. We examined 240 patients consulting the MS-clinic during a period of 3 years (1996-1999). The mean age of the patients was 41.7 years (range 19-80 Y, SD 10.0 Y). As a measure of the progression rate (PR) the last registered Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) score was divided by the time span (years) from disease onset until the latest assessment. The APOE genotype was determined from saliva and/or blood samples using PCR-techniques. The prevalence of different APOE genotypes was compared with the allele-distribution in a population of 361 persons from a Danish cross-sectional population study. The frequency of APOE-e4/e4 homozygotes was significantly higher in the MS-group as compared to controls (P<0.05, odds ratio: 2.3), whereas the frequency distribution of other genotypes did not differ significantly. The rate of progression was significantly faster in the APOE-e4/e4 homozygotes compared to other genotypes in the MS group (P<0.05). This study suggests that the APOE-e4/e4 homozygotes have an increased risk of developing MS. MS patients with the APOE-e4/e4 allele may also have an increased rate of disease progression.


Neurology | 2013

APOE genotype and MRI markers of cerebrovascular disease Systematic review and meta-analysis

Sabrina Schilling; Anita L. DeStefano; Perminder S. Sachdev; Seung Hoan Choi; Karen A. Mather; Charles DeCarli; Wei Wen; Peter Høgh; Naftali Raz; Rhoda Au; Alexa Beiser; Philip A. Wolf; Jose R. Romero; Yi Cheng Zhu; Kathryn L. Lunetta; Lindsay A. Farrer; Carole Dufouil; Lewis H. Kuller; Bernard Mazoyer; Sudha Seshadri; Christophe Tzourio; Stéphanie Debette

Objective: We aimed to examine the association of APOE ε genotype with MRI markers of cerebrovascular disease (CVD): white matter hyperintensities, brain infarcts, and cerebral microbleeds. Methods: We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of 42 cross-sectional or longitudinal studies identified in PubMed from 1966 to June 2012 (n = 29,965). This included unpublished data from 3 population-based studies: 3C-Dijon, Framingham Heart Study, and Sydney Memory and Ageing Study. When necessary, authors were contacted to provide effect estimates for the meta-analysis. Results: APOE ε4 carrier status and APOE ε44 genotype were associated with increasing white matter hyperintensity burden (sample size–weighted z score meta-analysis [meta]-p = 0.0034 and 0.0030) and presence of cerebral microbleeds (meta odds ratio [OR] = 1.24, 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.07, 1.43], p = 0.004, and 1.87 [1.26, 2.78], p = 0.002), especially lobar. APOE ε2 carrier status was associated with increasing white matter hyperintensity load (z score meta-p = 0.00053) and risk of brain infarct (meta OR = 1.41[1.09, 1.81], p = 0.008). Conclusions: APOE ε4 and APOE ε2 were associated with increasing burden in MRI markers for both hemorrhagic and ischemic CVD. While the association of APOE ε4 with an increased burden of CVD could be partly contributing to the relationship between APOE ε4 and AD, APOE ε2 was associated with MRI markers of CVD in the opposite direction compared to AD.


European Journal of Neurology | 2001

Idiopathic normal‐pressure hydrocephalus: evaluation and findings in a multidisciplinary memory clinic

R. Bech‐Azeddine; Gunhild Waldemar; Gitte M. Knudsen; Peter Høgh; Peter Bruhn; Gordon Wildschiødtz; F. Gjerris; Olaf B. Paulson; Marianne Juhler

The diagnostic evaluation of patients with possible idiopathic normal‐pressure hydrocephalus (INPH) is traditionally performed in the settings of either neurological, neurosurgical or psychiatric departments. The diagnostic procedure and findings in 71 consecutive patients referred with a clinical and radiological suspicion of INPH to our out‐patient multidisciplinary memory clinic are evaluated. Primary diagnoses and potential concomitant disorders considered of secondary importance for the symptomatologies were established. Abnormal hydrodynamics, demonstrated by intraventricular pressure monitoring and infusion test were mandatory for the diagnosis of INPH. Mean age was 68 years and mean Mini‐Mental State Examination (MMSE) score was 22. DSM IV criteria of dementia were fulfilled in 42%. In half of the referred patients (n=36), the suspicion of INPH was already disproved subsequently to the evaluation programme performed in the outpatient clinic. The main primary diagnosis was cerebrovascular disease (CVD) comprising 27% (n=19) of the referrals, whereas INPH was diagnosed in only 20% (n=14). Shunt improvement rate was 72%. The remaining patients were diagnosed as having one of 26 different conditions. A multiplicity of disorders mimics the INPH syndrome, with CVD being the primary differential diagnosis. Evaluating patients with possible INPH in an outpatient multidisciplinary memory clinic is an effective and rational diagnostic approach.

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Birgitte Bo Andersen

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Olaf B. Paulson

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Lene Wermuth

Odense University Hospital

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Asmus Vogel

University of Copenhagen

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Kristine Hoffmann

Copenhagen University Hospital

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