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Volume 20 Issue 5 | PN October 2020 Contents Credit: ALFRED PASIEKA / SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Caption: Cerebellum tissue. Coloured light micrograph of a section through the cerebellum of the brain. This is the grey matter of the cerebellum. It consists of two layers; the molecular layer (dark blue) and the granular layer (light blue). Purkinje cells (orange), a type of neuron (nerve cell), form the junction between the two layers. Purkinje cells consist of a large flask-shaped cell body with many branching process (dendrites). The cerebellum controls balance, posture and muscle coordination. Magnification: X60 when printed at 10 centimetres wide. This article has been chosen by the Editor to be of special interest or importance and is freely available online. This article has been made freely available online under the BMJ Journals open access scheme. See http://authors.bmj.com/open-access/ This journal is a member of and subscribes to the principles of the Committee on Publication Ethics www.publicationethics.org.uk Practical neurology Complementing the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry pn.bmj.com October 2020 Volume 20 Issue 5 Grand rounds: a precious resource to be nutured Management of incidental unruptured intracranial aneurysms Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis Tardive syndromes Muscle biopsy Video consultations in ordinary and extraordinary times Ataxia-telangiectasia Photopsia A neurologist with Parkinson’s disease Editors’ commentary 341 Highlights from this issue P E M Smith, G N Fuller Editorial 342 Grand rounds: a precious resource to be nurtured A L R Russell, M M Reilly, M R Turner 345 Simple visual hallucinations and epilepsy M Manford Reviews 347 Management of incidental unruptured intracranial aneurysms S Renowden, R Nelson 355 Cerebral venous thrombosis: a practical guide L Ulivi, M Squitieri, H Cohen, P Cowley, D J Werring 365 Tardive syndromes E Mulroy, B Balint, K P Bhatia 372 Stop testing for autoantibodies to the VGKC-complex: only request LGI1 and CASPR2 S Michael, P Waters, S R Irani How to understand it 378 Muscle biopsy: what and why and when? J Walters, A Baborie How to do it 388 Video consultations in ordinary and extraordinary times C Duncan, A D Macleod What neurologists need to understand outside their own speciality 396 Ataxia telangiectasia: what the neurologist needs to know M Y Tiet, R Horvath, A E Hensiek Neurological rarities 406 Photopsia J Virdee, S P Mollan 411 Mesial bifrontal stroke presenting as isolated spontaneous confabulations V Nersesjan, H G Bogwardt, D Kondziella Me and my neurological illness 414 A neurologist with Parkinson’s disease D Blacker Image of the moment 416 Ophthalmoscopy in COVID-19 low-risk patients A Jorge, A I Martins, M Prata, C Nazareth, J Cardoso, P G Vaz, J Lemos 418 Hypoglossal palsy from an atlanto-axial synovial cyst D Vaughan, S M Murphy, M D Alexander, R A Walsh Test yourself 420 Acute leukoencephalopathy in an adult C Makawita, S Ravindra, I Rajapakshe, B Senanayake Book club 424 Epileptic: David B N Watson Carphology 425 Carphology A Fo Ben ABN News 426 ABN News J Lawrence, J Sussman PN_vol20_5_toc.indd 1 10-09-2020 19:46:02 on June 4, 2021 by guest. Protected by copyright. http://pn.bmj.com/ Pract Neurol: first published as on 1 October 2020. Downloaded from

PN vol20 5 toc · October 2020 Volume 20 Issue 5 Volume 20 Issue 5 Pages 341–426 October 2020 20 5 Grand rounds: a precious resource to be nutured Management of incidental unruptured

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  • Volume 20 Issue 5 | PN October 2020 Contents

    Credit: ALFRED PASIEKA / SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

    Caption: Cerebellum tissue. Coloured light micrograph of a section through the cerebellum of the brain. This is the grey matter of the cerebellum. It consists of two layers; the molecular layer (dark blue) and the granular layer (light blue). Purkinje cells (orange), a type of neuron (nerve cell), form the junction between the two layers. Purkinje cells consist of a large fl ask-shaped cell body with many branching process (dendrites). The cerebellum controls balance, posture and muscle coordination. Magnifi cation: X60 when printed at 10 centimetres wide.

    This article has been chosen by the Editor to be of special interest or importance and is freely available online.

    This article has been made freely available onlineunder the BMJ Journals open access scheme. Seehttp://authors.bmj.com/open-access/

    This journal is a member of and subscribes tothe principles of the Committee on PublicationEthics

    www.publicationethics.org.uk

    PracticalneurologyComplementing the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry

    pn.bmj.com

    October 2020 Volume 20 Issue 5

    Volume 20 Issue 5 Pages 341–426

    October 2020

    20

    5

    Grand rounds: a precious resource to be nutured

    Management of incidental unruptured intracranial aneurysms

    Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis

    Tardive syndromes

    Muscle biopsy

    Video consultations in ordinary and extraordinary times

    Ataxia-telangiectasia

    Photopsia

    A neurologist with Parkinson’s disease

    Editors’ commentary341 Highlights from this issue

    P E M Smith, G N Fuller

    Editorial342 Grand rounds: a precious resource

    to be nurturedA L R Russell, M M Reilly, M R Turner

    345 Simple visual hallucinations and epilepsyM Manford

    Reviews347 Management of incidental

    unruptured intracranial aneurysmsS Renowden, R Nelson

    355 Cerebral venous thrombosis: a practical guideL Ulivi, M Squitieri, H Cohen, P Cowley, D J Werring

    365 Tardive syndromes E Mulroy, B Balint, K P Bhatia

    372 Stop testing for autoantibodies to the VGKC-complex: only request LGI1 and CASPR2S Michael, P Waters, S R Irani

    How to understand it378 Muscle biopsy: what and why

    and when?J Walters, A Baborie

    How to do it388 Video consultations in ordinary

    and extraordinary timesC Duncan, A D Macleod

    What neurologists need to understand outside their own speciality396 Ataxia telangiectasia: what the

    neurologist needs to knowM Y Tiet, R Horvath, A E Hensiek

    Neurological rarities406 Photopsia

    J Virdee, S P Mollan

    411 Mesial bifrontal stroke presenting as isolated spontaneous confabulationsV Nersesjan, H G Bogwardt, D Kondziella

    Me and my neurological illness414 A neurologist with Parkinson’s

    diseaseD Blacker

    Image of the moment416 Ophthalmoscopy in COVID-19

    low-risk patientsA Jorge, A I Martins, M Prata, C Nazareth, J Cardoso, P G Vaz, J Lemos

    418 Hypoglossal palsy from an atlanto-axial synovial cystD Vaughan, S M Murphy, M D Alexander, R A Walsh

    Test yourself420 Acute leukoencephalopathy in an

    adultC Makawita, S Ravindra, I Rajapakshe, B Senanayake

    Book club424 Epileptic: David B

    N Watson

    Carphology425 Carphology

    A Fo Ben

    ABN News426 ABN News

    J Lawrence, J Sussman

    PN_vol20_5_toc.indd 1 10-09-2020 19:46:02

    on June 4, 2021 by guest. Protected by copyright.

    http://pn.bmj.com

    /P

    ract Neurol: first published as on 1 O

    ctober 2020. Dow

    nloaded from

    http://pn.bmj.com/