Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (ataxia)
15,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixteen stroke patients suffering from ataxic hemiparesis syndrome were studied with regional cerebral blood flow measured by 133-Xenon inhalation technique (12 patients) and by SPECT (HMPAO) (9 patients). The causative lesions (hematoma in 7 and infarct in 9), unilateral in 15 patients and bilateral in 1, were located in the posterior two-thirds of the corona radiata, thalamo-capsular and subthalamus regions, or cerebral peduncle. Ataxia of the cerebellar type was unilateral in 15 patients and bilateral in 1 with similar, deep, bilateral causative lesions. Four patients presented some characteristics of proprioceptive ataxia (mixed ataxia). Associated cognitive disturbances were present in 9 patients and absent in 7. Eleven of the 12 subjects studied by 133-Xenon inhalation technique showed limited centro-parietal hypoperfusion, mainly in the inferior parietal lobule, ipsilateral to the causative lesion and bilaterally in the patient with bilateral lesions and ataxia. Ipsilateral hypoperfusion was confirmed in 7/9 patients studied by SPECT, which also demonstrated contralateral cerebellar hypoperfusion in 4 patients. These findings suggest that ataxic hemiparesis syndrome results from functional depression (diaschisis) consequent to the interruption at many levels of an "inferior parietal associative cortex-cerebellar anterior lobe" circuit.
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PMID:Parieto-cerebellar loop impairment in ataxic hemiparesis: proposed pathophysiology based on an analysis of cerebral blood flow. 818 Aug 98

A 69-year-old female presented with sudden onset of truncal ataxia, urinary incontinence, mental confusion, and Parinaud's sign. With conservative treatment, her ataxia and urinary incontinence resolved. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging disclosed a round mass with laminated intramural hemorrhage in the third ventricle. Right vertebral angiography demonstrated a giant aneurysm in the distal basilar artery. Xenon-enhanced computed tomography showed that cerebral blood flow (CBF) was reduced in the thalamus bilaterally and was paradoxically decreased by acetazolamide. Two months later, MR imaging showed that the intramural hemorrhage had shrunk, and the edema in the thalamus was resolving. The CBF reduction and vascular response to acetazolamide had reversed to some extent. A partially thrombosed giant aneurysm can grow acutely as the result of fresh intramural hemorrhage. The edema is secondary to ischemia and loss of vasoresponsivity.
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PMID:Extensive edema in the thalamus caused by thrombosed basilar artery aneurysm. 964 Sep 62

The authors present a case of diffuse axonal injury (DAI) treated by cervical spinal cord stimulation (C-SCS) for gait disturbance. The patient had right hemiparesis of moderate degree, mild ataxia, ideational apraxia and gait disturbance, when admitted to our hospital for rehabilitation. He could not walk by himself, nevertheless neurorehabilitation was done for four months. Xenon-CT was examined by C-SCS loading and the changes of regional cerebral blood flow were significantly increased in both hemispheres, especially in the thalamus. C-SCS was performed continuously on condition of 25 Hz, 200 microsec and 0.5 V, daily for a month. Neurological deficits, especially gait disturbance due to ideational apraxia, were gradually improved after initiation of C-SCS, and the patient could walk by himself. We speculate that C-SCS played a role in triggering improvement of gait disturbance at the chronic stage in our case, and SCS may be helpful for neurorehabilitation of focal symptoms after DAI.
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PMID:Successful treatment by spinal cord stimulation for gait disturbance in a patient with diffuse axonal injury. 1451 23