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Dive into the research topics where Vuk Aleksic is active.

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Featured researches published by Vuk Aleksic.


BMC Medicine | 2017

Post-stroke dementia – a comprehensive review

Milija Mijajlovic; Aleksandra M. Pavlović; Michael Brainin; Wolf-Dieter Heiss; Terence J. Quinn; Hege Ihle-Hansen; Dirk M. Hermann; Einor Ben Assayag; Edo Richard; Alexander Thiel; Efrat Kliper; Yong Il Shin; Yun Hee Kim; Seong Hye Choi; San Jung; Yeong Bae Lee; Osman Sinanović; Deborah Levine; Ilana Schlesinger; Gillian Mead; Vuk Milošević; Didier Leys; Guri Hagberg; Marie Helene Ursin; Yvonne Teuschl; S.V. Prokopenko; Elena Mozheyko; Anna Bezdenezhnykh; Karl Matz; Vuk Aleksic

Post-stroke dementia (PSD) or post-stroke cognitive impairment (PSCI) may affect up to one third of stroke survivors. Various definitions of PSCI and PSD have been described. We propose PSD as a label for any dementia following stroke in temporal relation. Various tools are available to screen and assess cognition, with few PSD-specific instruments. Choice will depend on purpose of assessment, with differing instruments needed for brief screening (e.g., Montreal Cognitive Assessment) or diagnostic formulation (e.g., NINDS VCI battery). A comprehensive evaluation should include assessment of pre-stroke cognition (e.g., using Informant Questionnaire for Cognitive Decline in the Elderly), mood (e.g., using Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), and functional consequences of cognitive impairments (e.g., using modified Rankin Scale). A large number of biomarkers for PSD, including indicators for genetic polymorphisms, biomarkers in the cerebrospinal fluid and in the serum, inflammatory mediators, and peripheral microRNA profiles have been proposed. Currently, no specific biomarkers have been proven to robustly discriminate vulnerable patients (‘at risk brains’) from those with better prognosis or to discriminate Alzheimer’s disease dementia from PSD. Further, neuroimaging is an important diagnostic tool in PSD. The role of computerized tomography is limited to demonstrating type and location of the underlying primary lesion and indicating atrophy and severe white matter changes. Magnetic resonance imaging is the key neuroimaging modality and has high sensitivity and specificity for detecting pathological changes, including small vessel disease. Advanced multi-modal imaging includes diffusion tensor imaging for fiber tracking, by which changes in networks can be detected. Quantitative imaging of cerebral blood flow and metabolism by positron emission tomography can differentiate between vascular dementia and degenerative dementia and show the interaction between vascular and metabolic changes. Additionally, inflammatory changes after ischemia in the brain can be detected, which may play a role together with amyloid deposition in the development of PSD. Prevention of PSD can be achieved by prevention of stroke. As treatment strategies to inhibit the development and mitigate the course of PSD, lowering of blood pressure, statins, neuroprotective drugs, and anti-inflammatory agents have all been studied without convincing evidence of efficacy. Lifestyle interventions, physical activity, and cognitive training have been recently tested, but large controlled trials are still missing.


Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 2013

Clinical consequences of aspirin and clopidogrel resistance: an overview.

Milija Mijajlovic; O. Shulga; S. Bloch; Nadežda Čovičković-Šternić; Vuk Aleksic; N. M. Bornstein

The aim of this review is to introduce the concept of personalized medicine in secondary stroke prevention with antiplatelet medication. In the last years, many studies have been conducted regarding aspirin resistance and genotyping of clopidogrel metabolism. A review of the currently published data on this issue emphasizes the importance of focusing on the individualizing approach in antiplatelet therapy to achieve maximal therapeutic beneficial effect. However, many authors suggest that, before new information from ongoing trials become available, good clinical practice should dictate the use of low dose of aspirin that was shown to be effective in the prevention of stroke and death in patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease, because higher doses do not have significantly better efficacy than lower doses in secondary stroke prevention, but lower‐dose aspirin is associated with less side effects. On the other hand, many factors are associated with clopidogrel resistance, and recent genetic studies showed that the CYP2C19*2 genotype (loss‐of‐function allele) is related to poor metabolism of clopidogrel, but larger studies are needed to definitively confirm or rule out the clinical significance of this genetic effect. The aim of personalized approach in secondary stroke prevention is to take the most appropriate medicine in the right dose in accordance with the clinical condition of the patient and associated risk factors.


Human & Experimental Toxicology | 2014

Dynamics of oxidative/nitrosative stress in mice with methionine–choline-deficient diet-induced nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Bojan Jorgačević; Dušan Mladenović; Milica Ninkovic; V Prokić; Mn Stanković; Vuk Aleksic; I Cerović; R Ješić Vukićević; Danijela Vucevic; Milena Stanković; Tatjana Radosavljevic

Insulin resistance, oxidative stress, and proinflammatory cytokines play a key role in pathogenesis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). The aim of our study was to investigate the dynamics of oxidative/nitrosative stress in methionine–choline-deficient (MCD) diet -induced NAFLD in mice. Male C57BL/6 mice were divided into following groups: group 1: control group on standard diet; group 2: MCD diet for 2, 4, and 6 weeks (MCD2, MCD4, and MCD6, respectively). After treatment, liver and blood samples were taken for histopathology, alanine- and aspartate aminotransferase, acute phase reactants, and oxidative/nitrosative stress parameters. Liver malondialdehyde level was higher in all MCD-fed groups versus control group (p < 0.01), while nitrites + nitrates level showed a progressive increase. The activity of total superoxide dismutase and its isoenzymes was significantly lower in all MCD-fed groups (p < 0.01). Although catalase activity was significantly lower in MCD-fed animals at all intervals (p < 0.01), the lowest activity of this enzyme was evident in MCD4 group. Liver content of glutathione was lower in MCD4 (p < 0.05) and MCD6 group (p < 0.01) versus control. Ferritin and C-reactive protein serum concentration were significantly higher only in MCD6 group. Our study suggests that MCD diet induces a progressive rise in nitrosative stress in the liver. Additionally, the most prominent decrease in liver antioxidative capacity is in the fourth week, which implies that application of antioxidants would be most suitable in this period, in order to prevent nonalcoholic steatohepatitis but not the initial NAFLD phase.


Forensic Science International | 2012

Forensic aspects of water intoxication: Four case reports and review of relevant literature

Nemanja Radojevic; Bojana Bjelogrlic; Vuk Aleksic; Nemanja Rancic; Mira Samardzic; Stojan Petković; Slobodan Savic

Water intoxication (WI) is a rare condition that originates from over-consumption of water, with a potentially fatal outcome. Increased water intake (polydipsia) is followed by urination of high amount of diluted urine (polyuria) which are the main initial symptoms of WI. We present four case reports of WI. Two of them are unusual pediatric clinical cases using medical documentation and police case files, one of which is related to child abuse, and the other to a psychiatric disorder. The other two cases are fatal adult cases submitted to autopsy from a psychiatric hospital. Also, we present a diagnostic algorithm for polydipsia and polyuria before death. WI is usually seen in patients with psychiatric disorders, victims of child abuse or torture, drug abusers or it can be iatrogenically induced.


Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment | 2014

Cluster headache as a first manifestation of multiple sclerosis: case report and literature review

Milija Mijajlovic; Vuk Aleksic; N. Sternic

Cluster headache (CH) is estimated to be the most common primary trigeminal autonomic headache, although it is a rare disabling medical condition. Dominant symptoms of CH include severe unilateral orbital, supraorbital, and/or temporal pain, lasting from 15 to 180 minutes if untreated, associated with at least one of various autonomic symptoms during the headache, such as conjunctival injection, lacrimation, nasal congestion and rhinorrhea, facial sweating, miosis, ptosis, and eyelid edema. Headache is not frequently a symptom of multiple sclerosis (MS). The most commonly reported primary headaches are migraine without aura and a tension-type headache. Several described cases involved complicated migraine, ophthalmoplegic migraine-like headache, and finally cluster-like headache. We present a case of a 45-year-old male patient who had typical CH attacks as the initial and only clinical manifestation of MS, which was diagnosed after cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) isoelectric focusing and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) investigation. He presented as a typical cluster-like headache patient since in the background of the CH symptoms and signs, were MS demyelinating lesions. In a patient with CH symptoms one should always think about the possibility of cluster-like-headache, which presents the CH patient with different underlying diseases, so we proposed a protocol to evaluate such patients and exclude diseases that could be in the background of CH symptoms.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2013

The effects of caloric restriction against ethanol-induced oxidative and nitrosative cardiotoxicity and plasma lipids in rats

Danijela Vucevic; Dušan Mladenović; Milica Ninkovic; Vuk Aleksic; Milena Stanković; Marija Stankovic; Bojan Jorgačević; Rada Ješić Vukićević; Tatjana Radosavljevic

Caloric restriction (CR) prevents or delays a wide range of aging-related diseases possibly through alleviation of oxidative stress. The aim of our study was to examine the effect of CR on oxidative and nitrosative cardiac damage in rats, induced by acute ethanol intoxication. Male Wistar rats were divided into following groups: control; calorie-restricted groups with intake of 60–70% (CR60–70) and 40–50% of daily energy needs (CR40–50); ethanol-treated group (E); calorie-restricted, ethanol-treated groups (CR60–70 + E, CR40–50 + E). Ethanol was administered in five doses of 2 g/kg every 12 h, while the duration of CR was five weeks before ethanol treatment. Malondialdehyde level was significantly lower in CR60–70 + E and significantly higher in CR40–50 + E vs. control. Nitrite and nitrate level was significantly higher in CR40–50 + E compared to control group. Activity of total superoxide dismutase (SOD) and its isoenzyme, copper/zinc-SOD (Cu/ZnSOD), was significantly higher in CR60–70 + E and lower in CR40–50 + E vs. control. Activity of manganese-SOD (MnSOD), that is also SOD isoenzyme, was significantly lower in  CR40–50 + E compared to control group. Plasma content of sulfhydryl (SH) groups was significantly higher in CR60–70 group vs. control. Plasma concentration of total cholesterol, triacylglycerol, low-density lipoproteins and high-density lipoproteins was significantly lower in CR60–70 group compared to control values. Food restriction to 60–70% of daily energy needs has a protective effect on acute ethanol-induced oxidative and nitrosative cardiac damage, at least partly due to alleviation of ethanol-induced decrease in SOD activity, while restriction to 40–50% of energy needs aggravates lipid peroxidation and nitrosative stress.


Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2013

The effect of calorie restriction on acute ethanol-induced oxidative and nitrosative liver injury in rats

Dušan Mladenović; Milica Ninkovic; Vuk Aleksic; Tamara Sljivancanin; Danijela Vucevic; Vera Todorovic; Milena Stanković; Olivera Stanojlovic; Tatjana Radosavljevic

The aim of our study was to examine the effect of calorie restriction (CR) on oxidative and nitrosative liver injury in rats, induced by acute ethanol intoxication. Male Wistar rats were divided into groups: (1) control; (2) calorie-restricted groups with intake of 60-70% (CR60-70) and 40-50% of daily energy needs (CR40-50); (3) ethanol-treated group (E); (4) calorie-restricted, ethanol-treated groups (E+CR60-70 and E+CR40-50). Ethanol was administered in 5 doses of 2g/kg every 12h, and duration of CR was 5 weeks before ethanol treatment. Malondialdehyde and nitrite and nitrate level were significantly lower in E+CR60-70 and higher in E+CR40-50 vs. E group. Liver reduced glutathione content and activity of both superoxide dismutase izoenzymes were significantly higher in E+CR60-70 and lower in E+CR40-50 vs. E group. Oxidative stress may be a potential mechanism of hormetic effects of CR on acute ethanol-induced liver injury.


Biomedical papers of the Medical Faculty of the University Palacky, Olomouc, Czechoslovakia | 2013

Neurosarcoidosis: Two case reports with multiple cranial nerve involvement and review of the literature

Milija Mijajlovic; Mihailo Mirkovic; Violeta Mihailovic-Vucinic; Vuk Aleksic; Nadezda Covickovic-Sternic

BACKGROUND Involvement of the central nervous system is registered in a relatively small number of patients with sarcoidosis. In this article we present two cases with various neurological symptoms that fulfill criteria for neurosarcoidosis (NS). In addition, we review the literature on NS with special attention to isolated cranial nerve involvement. METHODS AND RESULTS First patient: Neurological examination identified multiple cranial neuropathy, moderate right-sided hemiparesis, polyradiculoneuritis of the lower limbs and positive meningeal signs. Laboratory tests showed serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) inflammatory abnormalities, with increased values of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE). CSF analysis also showed presence of 9 oligoclonal IgG bands. Brain and spine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed diffuse meningopathy, and focal granulomatous lesion in the body of the L5 vertebra. Lung sarcoidosis was confirmed by additional diagnostic procedures. The patient was treated with Methylprednisolone and a tapering course of oral Prednisone, which reduced the pain in the back and legs and improved the strength of the right leg. However, the other neurological deficiencies remained. After confirming lung sarcoidosis, the patient received Methotrexate in addition to Prednisone but during the following 2 years the patients condition progressively worsened and ended in death. Second patient: Neurological findings showed weakness of the right n. oculomotorius and the right n. trochlearis, as well as the right-side face weakness. We found raised level of the ACE in serum and CSF. Thorax high-definition computed tomography (HDCTT) showed ribbon-like domains of discrete changes in the pulmonary parenchyma. MRI of the brain showed multiple white matter lesions. This patient also received Methylprednisolone followed by Prednisone, and after two months, ocular motility normalized. CONCLUSION The diagnosis of NS is always a challenge. For this rerason definitive diagnosis requires the exclusion of other causes of neuropathy. Multiple cranial neuropathies should always arouse suspicion of NS.


Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment | 2017

Role of prediabetes in stroke

Milija Mijajlovic; Vuk Aleksic; N. Sternic; Mihailo Mirkovic; Natan M. Bornstein

Stroke is one of the leading causes of death and probably the greatest cause of adult disability worldwide. Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a state of accelerated aging of blood vessels. Patients with diabetes have increased risk of stroke. Hyperglycemia represents a risk factor for poor outcome following stroke, and probably is just a marker of poor outcome rather than a cause. Lowering of blood glucose levels has not been shown to improve prognosis. Also, prevention of stroke risk among patients with DM is not improved with therapy for reduction of glucose levels. On the other hand, prediabetes, a metabolic state between normal glucose metabolism and diabetes, is a risk factor for the development of DM type 2 and subsequently for stroke. Several methods are known to identify prediabetes patients, including fasting plasma glucose levels, 2-hour post load glucose levels, and glycosylated hemoglobin levels. In this text, we tried to summarize known data about diagnosis, epidemiology, risk factors, pathophysiology, and prevention of prediabetes in relation to DM and stroke.


World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2011

Renal cancer and Wegener's granulomatosis: a case report

Uros Bumbasirevic; Dejan Dragicevic; Aleksandar Janicic; Vesna Cemerikic-Martinovic; Milica Cekerevac; Vuk Aleksic; Cane Tulic

Wegeners granulomatosis (WG) is a systemic disorder characterized by necrotizing vasculitis involving the respiratory tract, and in most cases, the kidneys. The most common manifestation of WG in the kidneys is segmental necrotizing glomerulonephritis. The presence of a renal mass as a manifestation of WG is rare. We report a patient with WG in whom a CT scan revealed an infiltrating mass in the lower portion of the left kidney. After surgical exploration, we performed an open radical nephrectomy. Histopathology showed clear cell type renal cell carcinoma (RCC). RCC associated with WG has been reported in only a few cases, and in most of them, the diseases started simultaneously, suggesting common pathogenetic pathways. Long-term immunosuppressive treatment is a known risk factor in the development of malignancies, so occurrence of RCC in WG has been proposed as a side effect of cyclophosphamide treatment. Furthermore, it is important to make a differential diagnosis between RCC and pseudotumors in WG as they cannot be distinguished solely on basis of imaging findings. Due to the higher risk of urologic malignancies, more frequent checkups and screening of WG patients should be considered.

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Milan Spaic

Military Medical Academy

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