F Boesen

Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Hvidovre, Capital Region, Denmark

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Publications (25)43.17 Total impact

  • Article: Cognitive function and anticonvulsant therapy: effect of monotherapy in epilepsy
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    ABSTRACT: Introduction– The effect of antiepileptic drugs (AED) on cognitive function was studied in 87 patients with epilepsy. Material and methods– Group A: (n = 52) started AED treatment (carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, sodium-valproate, phenobarbital or phenytoin). Group B: (n = 27) had AED monotherapy withdrawn (carbamazepine or sodium-valproate). Group C: (n = 8) was switched from phenytoin to carbamazepine monotherapy. The patients were tested before and 4 months after change of the treatment. Results– In group A the test performances were in general unchanged. Patients who had their drug treatment withdrawn (group B) and the patients who were switched from phenytoin to carbamazepine (group C) improved in single tests. The predominant changes in performance seem to be due to practice effect. Conclusion– Cognitive functions are only minimally influenced by AEDs after short-term treatment whereas there is a slight improvement after discontinuation of long-term administration of carbamazepine and valproate. A lack of practice effect might be the first indicator of a negative effect of AED on cognitive function.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 01/2009; 92(1):19 - 27. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Myelopathy in AIDS. A clinical and electrophysiological study of 23 Danish patients
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    ABSTRACT: ABSTRACT— In a cross-sectional population study of Danish patients with AIDS 16 of 23 had clinical signs of neurological disease with muscle weakness or ataxia of the lower limbs as the dominant manifestation. Tibial and median nerve conduction was mildly slowed in a few patients and 15 had widening of cerebral ventricles at CT. However, all had prolonged latency of cortical evoked response following tibial nerve stimulation mainly due to slowing through the spinal cord. The prolongation of the latency of the evoked cortical responses was most pronounced in patients with lower limb ataxia and/or paresis. It is concluded that affection of the long tracts of the spinal cord are closely associated with the human immunodeficiency virus infection.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 01/2009; 77(1):64 - 73. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Sympathetic vasoconstrictor reflexes in Parkinson's disease with autonomic dysfunction.
    E B Andersen, F Boesen
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    ABSTRACT: Centrally and locally elicited sympathetic vasoconstrictor responses were examined in 12 patients with symptoms and signs of cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction due to Parkinson's disease. The sympathetic reflex mechanisms were measured in skeletal muscle and subcutaneous tissue of the arm and leg using the 133-Xenon washout technique. This method allows differentiation between local and central sympathetic reflexes in different tissues. The results indicate an abolished centrally mediated vasoconstrictor response in skeletal muscle in the arm and a decreased response in skeletal muscle in the leg and in subcutaneous tissue. This is in agreement with an autonomic dysfunction located in the central nervous system. A possible spinal sympathetic reflex controlling blood flow in subcutaneous tissue and leg muscles is considered. The sympathetic vasoconstrictor responses in parkinsonian patients without autonomic failure were of normal magnitude and the responses were not affected by long-term levodopa treatment.
    Clinical Autonomic Research 03/1997; 7(1):5-11. · 1.30 Impact Factor
  • Article: Transcranial Doppler and cardiovascular responses during cardiovascular autonomic tests in migraineurs during and outside attacks.
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    ABSTRACT: The transcranial Doppler (TCD) and cardiovascular responses to established tests of autonomic function were studied in 50 migraineurs (23 of whom experienced aura and 27 who did not) and 30 healthy control subjects. In addition to the measurements outside attacks, 10 migraineurs were also tested during unilateral attacks of migraine without aura. Transcranial Doppler examinations of middle cerebral artery (MCA) blood velocity showed no differences between migraineurs and healthy subjects and no difference between migraineurs experiencing an attack and outside an attack when examined in response to a head-up tilt test, a cold-pressor test and a Valsalva manoeuvre. The cardiovascular reflexes in response to the Valsalva manoeuvre suggested a mild parasympathetic hypofunction in migraineurs, both those with and those without aura. On the basis of the present results and previous findings by others, we conclude that mild parasympathetic hypofunctioning with preserved sympathetic functioning is an established finding in migraine both with and without aura.
    Brain 11/1995; 118 ( Pt 5):1319-27. · 9.46 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cognitive function and anticonvulsant therapy: effect of monotherapy in epilepsy.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: The effect of antiepileptic drugs (AED) on cognitive function was studied in 87 patients with epilepsy. Group A: (n = 52) started AED treatment (carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, sodium-valproate, phenobarbital or phenytoin). Group B: (n = 27) had AED monotherapy withdrawn (carbamazepine or sodium-valproate). Group C: (n = 8) was switched from phenytoin to carbamazepine monotherapy. The patients were tested before and 4 months after change of the treatment. In group A the test performances were in general unchanged. Patients who had their drug treatment withdrawn (group B) and the patients who were switched from phenytoin to carbamazepine (group C) improved in single tests. The predominant changes in performance seem to be due to practice effect. Cognitive functions are only minimally influenced by AEDs after short-term treatment whereas there is a slight improvement after discontinuation of long-term administration of carbamazepine and valproate. A lack of practice effect might be the first indicator of a negative effect of AED on cognitive function.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 08/1995; 92(1):19-27. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Local and central sympathetic reflex control of blood flow in skeletal muscle and subcutaneous tissue in normal man.
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    ABSTRACT: The effect of age and sex on relative changes in blood flow and vascular resistance in skeletal muscle and subcutaneous tissue during postural changes and during local increase in transmural pressure was studied in 33 healthy subjects. The intra-individual variation was studied in five subjects. Blood flow was measured by the local 133Xenon wash-out method. No relation to age or sex was seen in the centrally elicited sympathetic vasoconstrictor responses in subcutaneous tissue and skeletal muscle and in the locally elicited vasoconstriction in subcutaneous tissue. A small, but statistically significant, correlation to sex and age was found in the local sympathetic vasoconstrictor response in skeletal muscle. The age correlation was caused only by an attenuated response in the young subjects below 40 years of age and may be fortuitous. The intra-individual variation was acceptably small. Based on the present results, a reduction in blood flow in skeletal muscle and subcutaneous tissue during centrally or locally elicited sympathetic vasoconstriction of 10% or less should be considered abnormal. The local 133Xenon wash-out method is of value in examining patients suspected of dysfunction in the sympathetic part of the autonomic nervous system.
    Clinical Physiology 10/1991; 11(5):451-8.
  • Article: Central nervous system involvement in human immunodeficiency virus disease. A prospective study including neurological examination, computerized tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging.
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    ABSTRACT: Sixty-seven patients with different stages of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection (47 CDC group IV, 20 CDC groups II or III) were followed prospectively for a median of 18 months with neurological examination, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and computerized tomography (CT) to evaluate the incidence of the AIDS dementia complex (CDC definition) and other neurological complications. Ten patients developed CNS opportunistic infection or malignancy. Among the remaining 57 patients, 12 of 37 (32%) belonging to CDC group IV, and 1 of 20 (5%) belonging to CDC groups II/III developed the AIDS dementia complex (p = 0.03). MRI white matter lesions occurred in 32% of CDC group IV patients and 5% of CDC groups II/III patients (p = 0.03). The corresponding figures for brain atrophy at CT were 71% and 30% (p less than 0.01) and for neurologic signs 49% and 20% (p = 0.06). The development of the AIDS dementia complex was significantly associated with the occurrence of MRI white matter lesions and a CD4 cell count of less than 200 x 10(6)/l, whereas it was not statistical significantly associated with brain atrophy at baseline. It is concluded that the AIDS dementia complex is a common feature of late stage HIV infection. Brain atrophy occurs in a large percentage of HIV infected patients, but the clinical significance of this atrophy is not clear.
    Danish medical bulletin 09/1991; 38(4):374-9. · 0.75 Impact Factor
  • Article: Oesophageal transit in patients with autonomic dysfunction. The effect of treatment with fludrocortisone.
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    ABSTRACT: Oesophageal function was examined by radionuclide transit measurements in 15 patients with severe autonomic deficiency and orthostatic hypothension and 23 healthy volunteers. Seven of the patients were re-examined after treatment for 3 weeks with fludrocortisone acetate (Florinef). Six patients and five control subjects were evaluated before and after i.v. administration of atropine. The mean transit time (MTT) was prolonged (P less than 0.007) and the residual activity increased (P = 0.038) in the patients compared with the control group. Prolonged MTT was associated with oesophageal symptoms. Treatment of orthostatic hypotension with fludrocortisone acetate significantly reduced MTT. Atropine increased MTT and residual activity. The increase in heart rate after atropine was correlated in the patients with MTT before treatment. The results demonstrate the frequent presence of impaired oesophageal function in patients with severe autonomic dysfunction, irrespective of aetiology. The impairment seems to be closely related to parasympathetic insufficiency. The improvement after fludrocortisone may suggest an influence of ion balance on oesophageal function in these patients.
    Clinical Physiology 02/1991; 11(1):83-92.
  • Article: The incidence of herniated disc and varicella zoster virus infection in lumboradicular syndrome.
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    ABSTRACT: 121 patients suffering from lumboradicular syndrome were examined for the presence of varicella zoster virus (VZV) infection. Lumbar myelography was carried out on all. VZV-antibody determination in blood, as well as in spinal fluid, was by indirect ELISA. In 40% of cases lumbar myelography revealed no signs of a herniated disc; none had raised antibody titre in spinal fluid. VZV-antibody titre in blood indicated VZV infection in only 3.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 09/1989; 80(2):142-4. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cardiovascular autonomic function in multiple sclerosis.
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    ABSTRACT: The autonomic nervous function of the cardiovascular system was investigated by non-invasive methods in 30 multiple sclerosis patients between 20 and 50 years of age. The results were compared to those of 30 healthy controls in the same age group. Minor abnormalities of parasympathetic and sympathetic function occurred. Heart rate variation at deep breathing was reduced and more than half of the patients had abnormal responses during an orthostatic procedure, mainly as an increased rise in heart rate. Decreased rise in blood pressure at sustained handgrip was also demonstrated. The abnormalities correlated poorly with other clinical signs and symptoms in the patients.
    Journal of the Autonomic Nervous System 03/1989; 26(1):77-84.
  • Article: Selegiline and levodopa in early or moderately advanced Parkinson's disease: a double-blind controlled short- and long-term study.
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    ABSTRACT: Selegiline 10 mg per day was compared to placebo as an adjunct to levodopa treatment in this double-blind study of early or moderately advanced Parkinson's disease. Thirty-eight patients completed an initial cross-over trial comprising two treatment periods, each of eight weeks, with a four weeks' wash-out period between them. Thirty of the patients continued in a long-term, double-blind parallel trial with a mean duration of 16 months (range 6-30 months). Selegiline treatment allowed a significant reduction of the necessary daily levodopa dose in both parts of the study and of the daily dosing frequency in the long-term investigation. In spite of this reduction of levodopa dose, an improvement was noted in tremor during the short-term selegiline periods. The side-effects were slight and related to dopamine effects and disappeared after reduction of levodopa-dose. The results support the use of selegiline as an early adjunctive treatment in Parkinson's disease.
    Acta neurologica Scandinavica. Supplementum 02/1989; 126:147-52.
  • Article: Myelopathy in AIDS. A clinical and electrophysiological study of 23 Danish patients.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: In a cross-sectional population study of Danish patients with AIDS 16 of 23 had clinical signs of neurological disease with muscle weakness or ataxia of the lower limbs as the dominant manifestation. Tibial and median nerve conduction was mildly slowed in a few patients and 15 had widening of cerebral ventricles at CT. However, all had prolonged latency of cortical evoked response following tibial nerve stimulation mainly due to slowing through the spinal cord. The prolongation of the latency of the evoked cortical responses was most pronounced in patients with lower limb ataxia and/or paresis. It is concluded that affection of the long tracts of the spinal cord are closely associated with the human immunodeficiency virus infection.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 02/1988; 77(1):64-73. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Substantial effect of acute hydration on blood pressure in patients with autonomic failure.
    J Mehlsen, F Boesen
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    ABSTRACT: The effect of acute hydration on arterial blood pressure levels was investigated in ten patients with severe postural hypotension due to autonomic failure. Blood pressure and heart rate were determined in the supine and 60-degree head-up tilted position. Plasma volume and left ventricular ejection fraction were measured in the supine position. Measurements were repeated after rapid infusion of 11 of isotonic saline. Acute hydration resulted in increased supine mean blood pressure levels (P less than 0.01) despite normal plasma volumes in all patients. The postural reductions in mean blood pressure were reduced from 40 mmHg before to 20 mmHg after saline (median values, P less than 0.01). The results indicate that normal plasma volumes do not ensure optimal circulatory status in patients with autonomic failure. Acute hydration with isotonic saline may be used for immediate corrections of blood pressure levels in patients with autonomic failure and the response to acute hydration may be used as an indicator of the circulatory status in these patients.
    Clinical Physiology 07/1987; 7(3):243-6.
  • Article: Transverse myelitis in mixed connective tissue disease.
    C Pedersen, H Bonen, F Boesen
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    ABSTRACT: A case of transverse myelitis in a 16-year-old woman with mixed connective tissue disease is described. After treatment with azathioprine and prednisolone complete recovery was obtained.
    Clinical Rheumatology 07/1987; 6(2):290-2. · 2.00 Impact Factor
  • Article: Resistance to cerebrospinal fluid outflow and intracranial pressure in patients with hydrocephalus after subarachnoid haemorrhage.
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    ABSTRACT: Resistance to CSF-outflow (Rout) and intracranial pressure (ICP) were measured in 33 patients with hydrocephalus after subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). Eleven patients examined between 10 to 30 days after SAH had high pressure hydrocephalus (HPH). Twenty-two patients had normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). All HPH-patients had ICP above 15 mmHg, plateau waves and B-waves, a median Rout of 59 mmHg x ml-1 x min-1 (range 29-100). All NPH-patients had a normal ICP level, no plateau waves, but long periods of B-waves and a median Rout of 22 mmHg x ml-1 x min-1 (range 6-47). Of the 11 patients with HPH six were shunted and five had temporary ventricular drainage. Five patients improved and six died. Of the five survivors only one went back to work. Of the 22 NPH-patients 18 were treated with a shunt, one refused shunt operation and three had normal Rout. Seventeen improved after shunting. At follow-up 12 had a normal social life, 5 lived in a nursing home and 1 was dead. Thus, early development of hydrocephalus after subarachnoid haemorrhage is associated with a high Rout and a high ICP, whereas late (more than one month) hydrocephalus may be associated with normal ICP and high Rout. Patients with NPH and a high Rout have frequent B-waves and should be shunted. Patients with a long interval from subarachnoid haemorrhage to the diagnosis of hydrocephalus often have a normal ICP, low frequency of B-waves, normal CSF-dynamics and need no shunting.
    Acta Neurochirurgica 02/1987; 88(3-4):79-86. · 1.52 Impact Factor
  • Article: Resistance to cerebrospinal fluid outflow and intracranial pressure in patients with hydrocephales after subarachnoid haemorrhage
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    ABSTRACT: Resistance to CSF-outflow (Rout) and intracranial pressure (ICP) were measured in 33 patients with hydrocephalus after subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH). Eleven patients examined between 10 to 30 days after SAH had high pressure hydrocephalus (HPH). Twenty-two patients had normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). All HPH-patients had ICP above 15 mmHg, plateau waves and B-waves, a median Rout of 59 mmHgml–1min–1 (range 29–100). All NPH-patients had a normal ICP level, no plateau waves, but long periods of B-waves and a median Rout of 22 mmHgml–1min–1 (range 6–47).Of the 11 patients with HPH six were shunted and five had temporary ventricular drainage. Five patients improved and six died. Of the five survivors only one went back to work. Of the 22 NPH-patients 18 were treated with a shunt, one refused shuntoperation and three had normal Rout. Seventeen improved after shunting. At followup 12 had a normal social life, 5 lived in a nursing home and 1 was dead.Thus, early development of hydrocephalus after subarachnoid haemorrhage is associated with a high Rout and a high ICP, whereas late (more than one month) hydrocephalus may be associated with normal ICP and high Rout. Patients with NPH and a high Rout have frequent B-waves and should be shunted. Patients with a long interval from subarachnoid haemorrhage to the diagnosis of hydrocephalus often have a normal ICP, low frequency of B-waves, normal CSF-dynamics and need no shunting.
    Acta Neurochirurgica 01/1987; 88(3):79-86. · 1.52 Impact Factor
  • Article: Neurological complications and concomitants of AIDS.
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    ABSTRACT: A survey of the literature of neurological manifestations associated with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) shows a broad disease spectrum affecting approximately one third of the patients in large hospital series. The complications include focal cerebral lesions caused by abscesses, lymphomas, leucoencephalopathy or infarcts as well as encephalitis, meningitis and myelitis. Most opportunistic infections of the central nervous system presumably are caused by toxoplasma gondii, cytomegalovirus and cryptococcus neoformans. One tenth of all patients have neurological disease as their initial symptom of AIDS. The diagnosis should always be considered in patients at risk and in males with an unusual neurological history or with a peculiar CT scan of the brain. Besides the opportunistic complications of AIDS, LAV/HTLV-III itself probably attacks the nervous system and gives rise to concomitant lesions of the long tracts of the spinal cord with ataxia, paresis and spasticity and to subacute encephalopathy and peripheral nerve abnormalities as well.
    Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 01/1987; 74(6):467-74. · 2.47 Impact Factor
  • Article: Blood flow in skeletal muscle of tetraplegic man during postural changes.
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    ABSTRACT: Relative changes in blood flow and vascular resistance in arm and leg muscle during head-up tilt at 45 degrees were studied in eight patients with complete cervical spinal cord transection and in 13 healthy volunteers. Muscle blood flow was measured by the local 133Xe washout method. In forearm muscle kept at heart level blood flow remained constant in the tetraplegic patients during head-up tilt, in contrast to that seen in the normal subjects, where blood flow decreased by 30%. In the dependent leg muscle, head-up tilt caused a decrease in blood flow of 46% and 40% in the patients and normals, respectively. Abolition of the local veno-arteriolar axon reflex, by inducing local counter-pressure to prevent venous distension in the dependent leg muscle, reduced the decrease in blood flow to 24% and 23%, respectively. Thus, the vascular response to head-up tilt differed significantly in forearm muscle between the two groups, whereas no difference was seen in the leg muscle. The absence of the vasoconstrictor response in forearm muscle indicates that postural sympathetic reflexes to this region depend on sympathetic reflexes integrated in centres located rostrally to the spinal cord. The results further suggest that local veno-arteriolar axon reflexes as well as spinal reflexes contribute to the observed vasoconstriction in the leg muscle.
    Clinical Science 05/1986; 70(4):321-5. · 4.61 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Clinical neurological picture of Danish patients with AIDS].
    Ugeskrift for laeger 04/1986; 148(14):828-30.
  • Article: Decrease in beta-receptor density explaining the development of pindolol- and prenalterol-tolerance in orthostatic hypotension.
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    ABSTRACT: A 58-year-old woman with diabetic autonomic dysfunction was well treated for orthostatic hypotension with pindolol. After eight months however, symptoms recurred in spite of continued treatment with pindolol. Addition of prenalterol, a beta-blocking agent with very high intrinsic sympathomimetic activity, had a marked clinical effect on her orthostatic hypotension. Before treatment with prenalterol, stroke volume and left ventricular enddiastolic volume markedly decreased during tilt, as demonstrated by radionuclide angiography. After short-term prenalterol treatment, the orthostatic decreases of stroke volume and left ventricular end-diastolic volume were less pronounced. During continued prenalterol treatment, both symptoms and haemodynamic changes recurred in the erect position. Beta-receptor density in her lymphocytes decreased from elevated levels before prenalterol to subnormal levels, when the clinical effect had disappeared. The data suggest that the tolerance development to prenalterol may be explained by the decrease in beta-adrenergic receptor density.
    Danish medical bulletin 07/1985; 32(3):194-6. · 0.75 Impact Factor