Mater Graft (mater + graft)

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of Mater Graft

  • dura mater graft


  • Selected Abstracts


    Clinical and genetic features of human prion diseases in Catalonia: 1993,2002

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 10 2004
    R. Sanchez-Valle
    We describe the clinical and genetic characteristics of the 85 definite or probable human prion diseases cases died between January 1993 and December 2002 in Catalonia (an autonomous community of Spain, 6 million population). Seventy-three (86%) cases were sporadic Creutzfeld-Jakob diseases (sCJD) (49 definite, 24 probable), with a median age at onset of 66 years. The clinical presentation was dementia in 29 cases, ataxia in 14 and visual symptoms in five. The median survival was 3 months. The 14-3-3 assay was positive in 93% cases, 62% presented periodic sharp wave complexes (PSWC) in EEG but only 18% the typical signs on MRI. Forty-eight sCJD were studied for codon 129 PRNP polymorphism: 69% were methionine/methionine (M/M), 14.5% valine/valine (V/V) and 16.5% M/V. Six out of seven V/V cases did not present PSWC and in two survival was longer than 20 months. Eleven cases (13%) were genetic: five familial fatal insomnia and six familial CJD (fCJD). Up to four (67%) fCJD lacked family history of disease, two presented seizures early at onset and one neurosensorial deafness. The only iatrogenic case was related to a dura mater graft. No case of variant CJD was registered. The study confirms in our population the consistent pattern reported worldwide on human prion diseases. Atypical features were seen more frequently in sporadic 129 V/V CJD and fCJD cases. [source]


    Iatrogenic Creutzfeldt,Jakob disease subsequent to dural graft: persisting risk after 1987

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 5 2003
    C. Boutoleau
    The first case of Creutzfeldt,Jakob disease (CJD) related to the use of a dura mater graft of cadaveric origin was identified in 1987 and this procedure is now considered as one of the main causes of iatrogenic CJD. Although the decontamination procedure for the preparation of graft material was modified, the product was withdrawn from the market in many countries a few years later and replaced by synthetic material. In this context, two patients treated in our institution developed CJD following a cadaveric dural graft performed after cerebral and lumbar trauma. Their clinical presentation, showing predominant cerebellar symptoms, late deterioration and myoclonic jerks, and a rapid disease course until death, was similar to that of previously reported cases involving the iatrogenic form. As the graft for one of the patients was performed in 1991 (several years after modification of the decontamination procedure), this fourth reported case suggests that the risk of iatrogenic CJD may have persisted in some patients treated after 1987, when grafts of cadaveric origin were totally abandoned. [source]


    Increased asymmetric pulvinar magnetic resonance imaging signals in Creutzfeldt,Jakob disease with florid plaques following a cadaveric dura mater graft

    NEUROPATHOLOGY, Issue 1 2006
    Yoshinobu Wakisaka
    A 9-year-old Japanese girl received a cadaveric dura mater graft during surgery following a head injury with brain contusion. She continued to do well, but when she became 19-years-old, she gradually showed a violent character and was treated in a psychiatric hospital. Another 6 years later, 200 months after the procedure, she developed a progressive gait ataxia, which subsequently led to her death within 10 months of onset. An autopsy showed she had CJD. This patient represents an atypical case of dura-associated CJD (dCJD) with unusual clinicopathological features including the late occurrence of myoclonus, an absence of periodic synchronous discharges in the electroencephalogram, and the presence of widespread florid plaques. However, our detection of an asymmetrical increase in the MRI-derived images of pulvinar nuclei has not been previously observed in other atypical cases of dCJD. Because atypical dCJD cases share several clinicopathological features with those of vCJD, and because asymmetrical hyperintense signals in the pulvinar have been observed in some neuropathologically confirmed vCJD cases, we had some difficulty in a differential diagnosis between atypical dCJD and vCJD. This is the first atypical dCJD case showing a pulvinar high signal compared with all other basal ganglia on MRI. [source]