BioMed Alliance and 17 other civil society organisations call on policy makers to ensure that the next multiannual EU budget will be fit-for-purpose to address current and future health threats.
For August 2020, we have selected Rogers J.P. et al. “Psychiatric and neuropsychiatric presentations associated with severe coronavirus infections: a systematic review and meta-analysis with comparison to the COVID-19 pandemic” Lancet Psychiatry 2020; 7:611-627.
The urgent need for
coordination of research efforts and strong EU leadership in health research
embedded in a European Council for
Health Research have been identified as key policy topics during the BioMed
Alliance Spring meeting.
The BioMed Alliance sent… Continue Reading
This Guideline addresses a number of medical issues which neurologists and other medical doctors who are involved in the medical management of patients with dementia are confronted with on a regular basis.
In this study recently published in Brain, the authors collected detailed clinical and paraclinical data from patients with suspected COVID-19-related neurological disorders in whom the diagnosis of COVID-19 was confirmed through RNA PCR, or where the diagnosis was probable/possible according to World Health Organisation criteria.
In this research letter recently published in JAMA, the authors assessed persistent symptoms in patients who had been discharged from hospital after recovery from COVID-19.
Anosmia, stroke, paralysis, cranial nerve deficits, encephalopathy, delirium, meningitis, and seizures are some of the neurological complications in patients with COVID-19.
In this study, recently published in Brain, the authors present cerebrovascular disease case incidence in hospitalised patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection.
In this paper, the authors retrospectively reviewed all COVID-19–positive patients admitted to the neuroscience intensive care unit for monitoring of malignant cerebral oedema
In this paper, the authors pooled all consecutive patients hospitalised with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 and acute ischaemic stroke across 28 sites from 16 countries.
In this paper, the authors report a case of a previously healthy 58-year-old man who acutely developed hyposmia, generalised myoclonus, fluctuating and transient changes in level of consciousness, opsoclonus and an asymmetric hypokinetic-rigid syndrome with ocular abnormalities following severe SARS-CoV-2 infection.
In this review recently published in JAMA, the authors summarise the current evidence regarding the pathophysiology, transmission, diagnosis, and management of COVID-19.