
Matthew P Kirschen
VerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1942–2024
Research topics
- Medicine
- Political Science
- Nursing
- Psychology
Selected publications
Ethical Considerations in Dementia Diagnosis and Care
Neurology · 2021 · 41 citations
- Political Science
- Medicine
- Psychology
Alzheimer disease and other dementias present unique practical challenges for patients, their families, clinicians, and health systems. These challenges reflect not only the growing public health effect of dementia in an aging global population, but also more specific ethical complexities including early loss of patients' capacity to make decisions regarding their own care, the stigma often associated with a dementia diagnosis, the difficulty of balancing concern for patients' welfare with respect for patients' remaining independence, and the effect on the physical, emotional, and financial well-being of family caregivers. Caring for patients with dementia requires respecting patient autonomy while acknowledging progressively diminishing decisional capacity and continuing to provide care in accordance with other core ethical principles (beneficence, justice, and nonmaleficence). Whereas these ethical principles remain unchanged, neurologists must reconsider how to apply them given changes across multiple domains including our understanding of disease, clinical and legal tools for addressing manifestations of illness, our expanding awareness of the crucial role of family caregivers in providing care and maintaining patient quality of life, and societal conceptions of dementia and individuals' personal expectations for aging. This revision to the American Academy of Neurology's 1996 position statement summarizes ethical considerations that often arise in caring for patients with dementia; although it addresses how such considerations influence patient management, it is not a clinical practice guideline.
Acute flaccid myelitis: cause, diagnosis, and management
The Lancet · 2020 · 177 citations
- Medicine
Acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) is a disabling, polio-like illness mainly affecting children. Outbreaks of AFM have occurred across multiple global regions since 2012, and the disease appears to be caused by non-polio enterovirus infection, posing a major public health challenge. The clinical presentation of flaccid and often profound muscle weakness (which can invoke respiratory failure and other critical complications) can mimic several other acute neurological illnesses. There is no single sensitive and specific test for AFM, and the diagnosis relies on identification of several important clinical, neuroimaging, and cerebrospinal fluid characteristics. Following the acute phase of AFM, patients typically have substantial residual disability and unique long-term rehabilitation needs. In this Review we describe the epidemiology, clinical features, course, and outcomes of AFM to help to guide diagnosis, management, and rehabilitation. Future research directions include further studies evaluating host and pathogen factors, including investigations into genetic, viral, and immunological features of affected patients, host-virus interactions, and investigations of targeted therapeutic approaches to improve the long-term outcomes in this population.
Frequent coauthors
- 388 shared
Michael Rubin
VA Salt Lake City Healthcare System
- 380 shared
Leon G. Epstein
Lurie Children's Hospital
- 305 shared
Richard J. Bonnie
University of Virginia
- 255 shared
Ariane Lewis
New York University
- 226 shared
Alexis A. Topjian
- 187 shared
David M. Greer
University School
- 172 shared
Katharina M. Busl
Florida College
- 171 shared
Benjamin Tolchin
Yale University
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