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Featured researches published by Stuart J. McCarter.


Sleep Medicine | 2013

Treatment outcomes in REM sleep behavior disorder

Stuart J. McCarter; Christopher L. Boswell; Erik K. St. Louis; Lucas G. Dueffert; Nancy L. Slocumb; Bradley F. Boeve; Michael H. Silber; Eric J. Olson; Maja Tippmann-Peikert

OBJECTIVE REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is usually characterized by potentially injurious dream enactment behaviors (DEB). RBD treatment aims to reduce DEBs and prevent injury, but outcomes require further elucidation. We surveyed RBD patients to describe longitudinal treatment outcomes with melatonin and clonazepam. METHODS We surveyed and reviewed records of consecutive RBD patients seen at Mayo Clinic between 2008-2010 to describe RBD-related injury frequency-severity as well as RBD visual analog scale (VAS) ratings, medication dosage, and side effects. Statistical analyses were performed with appropriate non-parametric matched pairs tests before and after treatment, and with comparative group analyses for continuous and categorical variables between treatment groups. The primary outcome variables were RBD VAS ratings and injury frequency. RESULTS Forty-five (84.9%) of 53 respondent surveys were analyzed. Mean age was 65.8 years and 35 (77.8%) patients were men. Neurodegenerative disorders were seen in 24 (53%) patients and 25 (56%) received antidepressants. Twenty-five patients received melatonin, 18 received clonazepam, and two received both as initial treatment. Before treatment, 27 patients (60%) reported an RBD associated injury. Median dosages were melatonin 6 mg and clonazepam 0.5 mg. RBD VAS ratings were significantly improved following both treatments (p(m) = 0.0001, p(c) = 0.0005). Melatonin-treated patients reported significantly reduced injuries (p(m) = 0.001, p(c) = 0.06) and fewer adverse effects (p = 0.07). Mean durations of treatment were no different between groups (for clonazepam 53.9 ± 29.5 months, and for melatonin 27.4 ± 24 months, p = 0.13) and there were no differences in treatment retention, with 28% of melatonin and 22% of clonazepam-treated patients discontinuing treatment (p = 0.43). CONCLUSIONS Melatonin and clonazepam were each reported to reduce RBD behaviors and injuries and appeared comparably effective in our naturalistic practice experience. Melatonin-treated patients reported less frequent adverse effects than those treated with clonazepam. More effective treatments that would eliminate injury potential and evidence-based treatment outcomes from prospective clinical trials for RBD are needed.


Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports | 2012

REM Sleep Behavior Disorder and REM Sleep Without Atonia as an Early Manifestation of Degenerative Neurological Disease

Stuart J. McCarter; Erik K. St. Louis; Bradley F. Boeve

Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is a parasomnia characterized by repeated episodes of dream enactment behavior and REM sleep without atonia (RSWA) during polysomnography recording. RSWA is characterized by increased phasic or tonic muscle activity seen on polysomnographic electromyogram channels. RSWA is a requisite diagnostic feature of RBD, but may also be seen in patients without clinical symptoms or signs of dream enactment as an incidental finding in neurologically normal individuals, especially in patients receiving antidepressant therapy. RBD may be idiopathic or symptomatic. Patients with idiopathic RBD often later develop other neurological features including parkinsonism, orthostatic hypotension, anosmia, or cognitive impairment. RSWA without clinical symptoms as well as clinically overt RBD also often occurs concomitantly with the α-synucleinopathy family of neurodegenerative disorders, which includes idiopathic Parkinson disease, Lewy body dementia, and multiple system atrophy. This review article considers the epidemiology of RBD, clinical and polysomnographic diagnostic standards for both RBD and RSWA, previously reported associations of RSWA and RBD with neurodegenerative disorders and other potential causes, the pathophysiology of which brain structures and networks mediate dysregulation of REM sleep muscle atonia, and considerations for the effective and safe management of RBD.


Sleep | 2015

Antidepressants Increase REM Sleep Muscle Tone in Patients with and without REM Sleep Behavior Disorder.

Stuart J. McCarter; St Louis Ek; David J. Sandness; Arndt K; Erickson M; Tabatabai G; Bradley F. Boeve; Michael H. Silber

STUDY OBJECTIVES REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is associated with antidepressant treatment, especially in younger patients; but quantitative REM sleep without atonia (RSWA) analyses of psychiatric RBD patients remain limited. We analyzed RSWA in adults receiving antidepressants, with and without RBD. DESIGN We comparatively analyzed visual, manual, and automated RSWA between RBD and control groups. RSWA metrics were compared between groups, and regression was used to explore associations with clinical variables. SETTING Tertiary-care sleep center. PARTICIPANTS Participants included traditional RBD without antidepressant treatment (n = 30, 15 Parkinson disease [PD-RBD] and 15 idiopathic); psychiatric RBD receiving antidepressants (n = 30); and adults without RBD, including antidepressant-treated psychiatric (n = 30), untreated psychiatric (n = 15), and OSA (n = 60) controls. INTERVENTIONS N/A. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS RSWA was highest in traditional and psychiatric RBD, intermediate in treated psychiatric controls, and lowest in untreated psychiatric and OSA controls (P < 0.01). RSWA distribution and type also differed between antidepressant-treated patients having higher values in anterior tibialis, and PD-RBD with higher submentalis and tonic RSWA. Psychiatric RBD had significantly younger age at onset than traditional RBD patients (P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS Antidepressant treatment was associated with elevated REM sleep without atonia (RSWA) even without REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD), suggesting that antidepressants, not depression, promote RSWA. Differences in RSWA distribution and type were also seen, with higher anterior tibialis RSWA in antidepressant-treated patients and higher tonic RSWA in Parkinson disease-RBD patients, which could aid distinction between RBD subtypes. These findings suggest that antidepressants may mediate different RSWA mechanisms or, alternatively, that RSWA type and distribution evolve during progressive neurodegeneration. Further prospective RSWA analyses are necessary to clarify the relationships between antidepressant treatment, psychiatric disease, and RBD.


Sleep Medicine | 2014

Factors associated with injury in REM sleep behavior disorder

Stuart J. McCarter; Erik K. St. Louis; Christopher L. Boswell; Lucas G. Dueffert; Nancy L. Slocumb; Bradley F. Boeve; Michael H. Silber; Eric J. Olson; Timothy I. Morgenthaler; Maja Tippmann-Peikert

OBJECTIVE As factors associated with injury in rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) remain largely unknown, we aimed to identify such factors. METHODS We surveyed consecutive idiopathic (iRBD) or symptomatic RBD patients seen between 2008 and 2010 regarding RBD-related injuries. Associations between injuries and clinical variables were determined with odds ratios (OR) and multiple logistic regression analyses. The primary outcome variables were injury and injury severity. RESULTS Fifty-three patients (40%) responded. Median age was 69 years, and 35 (73.5%) were men. Twenty-eight (55%) had iRBD. Twenty-nine (55%) reported injury, with 37.8% to self and 16.7% to the bed partner. 11.3% had marked injuries requiring medical intervention or hospitalization, including two (4%) subdural hematomas. iRBD diagnosis (OR = 6.8, p = 0.016) and dream recall (OR = 7.5, p = 0.03) were associated with injury; and iRBD diagnosis was independently associated with injury and injury severity adjusting for age, gender, DEB frequency, and duration. Falls (p = 0.03) were also associated with injury severity. DEB frequency was not associated with injury, injury severity, or falls. CONCLUSIONS Injuries appear to be a frequent complication of RBD, although the relatively low response rate in our survey could have biased results. iRBD patients are more likely to suffer injury--and more severe injuries--than symptomatic RBD patients. In addition, recall of dreams was also associated with injury, and dream enactment behavior (DEB)-related falls were associated with more severe injuries. One in nine patients suffered injury requiring medical intervention. The frequency of DEB did not predict RBD-related injuries, highlighting the importance of timely initiation of treatment for RBD in patients having even rare DEB episodes. Future prospective studies will be necessary to define predictors of injury in RBD.


Neurology | 2013

Restless legs syndrome and daytime sleepiness are prominent in myotonic dystrophy type 2

Erek M. Lam; Paul W. Shepard; Erik K. St. Louis; Lucas G. Dueffert; Nancy L. Slocumb; Stuart J. McCarter; Michael H. Silber; Bradley F. Boeve; Eric J. Olson; Virend K. Somers; Margherita Milone

Objectives: Although sleep disturbances are common in myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1), sleep disturbances in myotonic dystrophy type 2 (DM2) have not been well-characterized. We aimed to determine the frequency of sleep disturbances in DM2. Methods: We conducted a case-control study of 54 genetically confirmed DM2 subjects and 104 medical controls without DM1 or DM2, and surveyed common sleep disturbances, including symptoms of probable restless legs syndrome (RLS), excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS), sleep quality, fatigue, obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), probable REM sleep behavior disorder (pRBD), and pain. Thirty patients with DM2 and 43 controls responded to the survey. Group comparisons with parametric statistical tests and multiple linear and logistic regression analyses were conducted for the dependent variables of EDS and poor sleep quality. Results: The mean ages of patients with DM2 and controls were 63.8 and 64.5 years, respectively. Significant sleep disturbances in patients with DM2 compared to controls included probable RLS (60.0% vs 14.0%, p < 0.0001), EDS (p < 0.001), sleep quality (p = 0.02), and fatigue (p < 0.0001). EDS and fatigue symptoms were independently associated with DM2 diagnosis (p < 0.01) after controlling for age, sex, RLS, and pain scores. There were no group differences in OSA (p = 0.87) or pRBD (p = 0.12) scores. Conclusions: RLS, EDS, and fatigue are frequent sleep disturbances in patients with DM2, while OSA and pRBD symptoms are not. EDS was independently associated with DM2 diagnosis, suggesting possible primary CNS hypersomnia mechanisms. Further studies utilizing objective sleep measures are needed to better characterize sleep comorbidities in DM2.


Neurology | 2014

Lesional REM sleep behavior disorder localizes to the dorsomedial pons

Erik K. St. Louis; Stuart J. McCarter; Bradley F. Boeve; Michael H. Silber; Kejal Kantarci; Eduardo E. Benarroch; Alora Rando; Maja Tippmann-Peikert; Eric J. Olson; Michelle L. Mauermann

REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is characterized by dream enactment behaviors (DEB) and REM sleep without atonia (RSWA). A key structure in REM sleep muscle tone regulation in the rodent model is the sublateral dorsal (SLD) tegmental nucleus in the dorsomedial pons.1 Lesions of an analogous structure, the subceruleus (SC) nucleus are thought to mediate RSWA in humans, enabling DEB.1,2 However, in vivo human studies of discrete dorsomedial pontine lesions causing RBD in isolation have been limited.2–4 We report such a case of lesional RBD due to vasculitis. The Mayo Clinic Institutional Review Board approved this study.


Sleep Medicine | 2015

Neuroimaging-evident lesional pathology associated with REM sleep behavior disorder

Stuart J. McCarter; Maja Tippmann-Peikert; David J. Sandness; Eoin P. Flanagan; Kejal Kantarci; Bradley F. Boeve; Michael H. Silber; Erik K. St. Louis

BACKGROUND/RATIONALE Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is a potentially injurious parasomnia characterized by dream enactment behavior and polysomnographic REM sleep without atonia (RSWA). Recently, RBD not only has been shown to be strongly associated with synucleinopathy neurodegeneration but has also been rarely reported to be associated with structural lesions involving the brainstem or limbic system. The aim of this study was to describe the clinical, neuroimaging, and outcome characteristics in a case series of patients with lesional RBD. METHODS This is a retrospective case series from a tertiary care referral center. RESULTS A total of 10 patients with lesional RBD were identified. Seven (70%) were men, with an average age of sleep symptom onset of 53.7 ± 17.0 years. Structural pathology evident on neuroimaging included four extraaxial (three meningiomas and one basilar fusiform aneurysm with brainstem compression) and six intraaxial (encephalomalacia, multiple sclerosis, vasculitis, autoimmune limbic encephalitis, and leukodystrophy) lesions. No patient developed parkinsonian features or cognitive impairment suggestive of synucleinopathy over an average of 45.4 ± 35.2 months of follow-up. CONCLUSIONS RBD is rarely associated with non-synuclein structural lesions affecting the pons, medulla, or limbic system. The spectrum of lesional RBD comprises tumors, aneurysms, leukodystrophy, and autoimmune/inflammatory/demyelinating brain lesions.


Journal of Parkinson's disease | 2016

Risk Factor Profile in Parkinson's Disease Subtype with REM Sleep Behavior Disorder

Marie L. Jacobs; Yves Dauvilliers; Erik K. St. Louis; Stuart J. McCarter; Silvia Rios Romenets; Amélie Pelletier; Mahmoud Cherif; Jean-François Gagnon; Ronald B. Postuma

BACKGROUND Numerous large-scale studies have found diverse risk factors for Parkinsons disease (PD), including caffeine non-use, non-smoking, head injury, pesticide exposure, and family history. These studies assessed risk factors for PD overall; however, PD is a heterogeneous condition. One of the strongest identifiers of prognosis and disease subtype is the co-occurrence of rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD).In previous studies, idiopathic RBD was associated with a different risk factor profile from PD and dementia with Lewy bodies, suggesting that the PD-RBD subtype may also have a different risk factor profile. OBJECTIVE To define risk factors for PD in patients with or without associated RBD. METHODS In a questionnaire, we assessed risk factors for PD, including demographic, medical, environmental, and lifestyle variables of 189 PD patients with or without associated polysomnography-confirmed RBD. The risk profile of patients with vs. without RBD was assessed with logistic regression, adjusting for age, sex, and disease duration. RESULTS PD-RBD patients were more likely to have been a welder (OR = 3.11 (1.05-9.223), and to have been regular smokers (OR = 1.96 (1.04-3.68)). There were no differences in use of caffeine or alcohol, other occupations, pesticide exposure, rural living, or well water use. Patients with RBD had a higher prevalence of the combined family history of both dementia and parkinsonism (13.3% vs. 5.5% , OR = 3.28 (1.07-10.0). CONCLUSION The RBD-specific subtype of PD may also have a different risk factor profile.


Annals of clinical and translational neurology | 2014

Greatest rapid eye movement sleep atonia loss in men and older age.

Stuart J. McCarter; Erik K. St. Louis; Bradley F. Boeve; David J. Sandness; Michael H. Silber

To determine quantitative REM sleep muscle tone in men and women without REM sleep behavior disorder, we quantitatively analyzed REM sleep phasic and tonic muscle activity, phasic muscle burst duration, and automated REM atonia index in submentalis and anterior tibialis muscles in 25 men and 25 women without REM sleep behavior disorder. Men showed significantly higher anterior tibialis phasic muscle activity. Higher phasic muscle activity was independently associated with male sex and older age in multivariate analysis. Men and the elderly may be biologically predisposed to altered REM sleep muscle atonia control, and/or some may have occult neurodegenerative disease, possibly underlying the predominance of older men with REM sleep behavior disorder.


Sleep Medicine | 2013

Is rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder in Parkinson disease a specific disease subtype

Stuart J. McCarter; Erik K. St. Louis; Bradley F. Boeve

Originally thought to be a unique nighttime phenomenon at the time of its description in humans in 1986 [1], rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is receiving growing attention due to its strong association with synucleinopathy neurodegenerative disorders. These disorders include Parkinson disease (PD), dementia with Lewy bodies, or multiple system atrophy, with subsequent neurodegeneration unfolding in over 80% of idiopathic RBD patients undergoing long-term follow-up [2,3] and in up to 98% of autopsied RBD patients demonstrating pathologically confirmed synucleinopathy [4]. Because dream enactment often presents prior to the development of overt neurologic symptoms and in some cases precedes overt neurodegenerative motor, autonomic, or cognitive manifestations by more than 50 years, RBD has been considered a potential early biomarker for neurodegeneration and a targetable time point for the administration of future neuroprotective therapies [5–8]. Studies examining cognitive deficits seen in idiopathic RBD prior to the development of overt mild cognitive impairment or dementia have reported impairments in executive functioning, attention, and memory, presumably as presymptomatic manifestations of early synucleinopathy [5,8]. Several investigations also have examined symptomatic RBD in the context of PD, analyzing differences between patients with both PD and RBD (PD–RBD) and PD patients without RBD (PD–no RBD) [9–16]. In this issue of Sleep Medicine, Plomhause et al. [17] reported on the frequency of RBD in newly diagnosed dopaminergic treatment–naïve PD patients and the lack of differences in cognitive functioning between PD patients with and without RBD in contrast to previous studies analyzing chronic PD–RBD and PD–no RBD patients. Their work confirms several previous studies by demonstrating the high frequency of RBD in PD patients (30%), and importantly it demonstrates that RBD frequently is present early in the course of PD, emphasizing the need for early questioning of patients on potential presence of dream enactment symptoms. Additionally, the study emphasizes the consideration toward treatment of potentially injurious parasomnia behavior in all PD patients, even at the time of initial presentation [18]. A unique strength of this study [17] was its focus on analyzing newly diagnosed PD patients prior to dopaminergic treatment with a relatively short duration of parkinsonism, with an average of 11 months and 15 months in PD–RBD and PD–no RBD, respectively, in contrast to previous studies with an average PD duration over five years. Additional strengths included rigorous dual-night polysomnography controlling for first night effect, the use of well-accepted standardized methods for quantifying REM sleep without atonia metrics, and concomitant comprehensive neuropsychologic testing. The experimental design of Plomhause

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