Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mute or nearly mute patient who is alert and has good understanding of speech and a right hemiparesis could have Broca's aphasia, akinesia of speech (transcortical motor aphasia), or aphemia. The patient who has Broca's aphasia does not write well, and his speech does not improve greatly with repetition. The speech of a patient with akinesia of speech improves with repetition. The aphemic patient writes normally, but his speech does not improve with repetition. The mute patient whose eyes are open but who is poorly responsive and moves little or not at all could be an akinetic mute (with either a cingulate or a thalamomesencephalic lesion) or have a locked-in syndrome. The latter is diagnosed by asking the patient to look up and down or to open and close his eyes. If he obeys these commands, the physician questions him using a code of eye movement responses. If the patient fails to respond at all, he is an akinetic mute; intense stimulation may result in speech or movement. If the patient is drowsy and has third nerve involvement, the lesion is in the thalamomesencephalic reticular formation. If the patient appears alert and has episodes of agitation, he probably has bilateral lesions in the gyri cinguli. Patients with weakness of the bulbar musculature (facial, palatal, and tongue weakness and dysphonia) may have either upper motor neuron or lower motor neuron lesions. Only bilateral upper motor neuron lesions produce permanent dysarthria. As a typical example, a patient has a transient left hemiparesis with dysarthria and almost completely recovers. Later, however, a right hemiparesis develops and the patient experiences severe bilateral facial weakness, drooling, dysphagia, and severe dysarthria. The absence of atrophy of the bulbar musculature, a hyperactive jaw jerk and gag reflex and, sometimes, inappropriate laughing or crying episodes indicate that the lesion is located above the medulla in the corticobulbar tracts. Flaccid paralysis, absence of the jaw jerk or gag reflex, and absence of other upper motor neuron signs, such as upgoing toes, indicate a lower motor neuron or neuromuscular junction problem. Appropriate tests to rule out myasthenia gravis should be done. The other conditions discussed here are often obvious from their clinical presentation. Although the specific disorder of speech sometimes is helpful in localizing the cause, in most patients, the associated deficits on neurologic examination are of greatest value.
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PMID:Nonlanguage disorders of speech reflect complex neurologic apparatus. 16 83

A case of infantile spinal muscular atrophy (Werdnig-Hoffmann's disease) with complete proximal pareses obvious at birth giving rise to neonatal asphyxia is reported. Reduction of fetal movements was noted from the 32nd week of pregnancy. The infant was extremely floppy at birth and spontaneous movements were restricted to hands, feet and face. Fibrillations of the tongue, diaphragmatic hemiparesis and dysphagia were observed. Unassisted ventilation was not compatible with survival and the infant succumbed to the disease in the neonatal period. Muscle biopsy and autopsy confirmed the clinical diagnosis. Infantile spinal muscular atrophy causing neonatal asphyxia seems to be unusual and not earlier described. Constant muscular hypotonus in an asphyctic newborn should raise suspicion of a neuromuscular disorder.
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PMID:Infantile spinal muscular atrophy (morbus Werdnig-Hoffmann) causing neonatal asphyxia. 57 32

A case of left atrial myxoma with repeated multiple cerebral emboli is reported. A-44-year-old man first developed a sudden right hemiparesis in October 1969. After intensive physical theraphy, strength improved and he was able to return to his work. In March 1970, he suddenly lost consciousness and remained comatose for a day. Upon waking, he had a profound right hemiparesis, motor aphasia and Gerstmann's syndrome. He was admitted to Hiroshima City Hospital on August 1, 1970. The cardiac examination, including an electrocardiogram, was entirely normal. Laboratory studies revealed a normal blood count and urinalysis; erythrocyte sedimentation rate was elevated (32mm/hour). On a left cerebral angiographic study, performed on September 6, 1971, multiple aneurysmal dilatations of the branches of the left middle cerebral artery were demonstrated. No specific diagnosis was made. In January 1973, he developed dysarthria, dysphagia and quadriplegia because of the recurrent cerebral attacks. He had a high temperature continuously for three days and died on May 30, 1974. At autopsy a myxoma with the peduncle was attached to the septal wall of left atrium, and there were old infarcts in the brain, the myocardium and the kidneys.
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PMID:[Left atrial myxoma with repeated multiple cerebral emboli]. 103 60

We report a 10-year-old Down syndrome patient who developed dystonia, choreoathetosis, dysarthria, and dysphagia beginning with hemiparesis. Cranial computed tomography disclosed bilateral calcification in the globus pallidus which resembled a sign of premature aging. Conversely, the clinical course and magnetic resonance imaging findings resembled those of Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome.
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PMID:Globus pallidus calcification in Down syndrome with progressive neurologic deficits. 153 15

This report describes a rare complication after the resection of a tumor of the posterior fossa, the "one-and-a-half" syndrome. The one-and-a-half syndrome is a disturbance of horizontal eye movements in which patients have lateral gaze palsy in one direction and internuclear ophthalmoplegia in the other direction. The patient was a 54-year-old woman who developed headaches, diplopia, and blurred vision over 6 months. Computed tomographic scans and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated an enhancing, mixed density, midline mass of the cerebellum. After a resection of the mass, an anaplastic astrocytoma, the patient complained of more severe diplopia and facial weakness. An examination disclosed a left one-and-a-half syndrome, left peripheral facial paralysis, dysarthria, dysphagia, mild left hemiparesis, dysmetria of the left upper limb, and truncal ataxia. The brain stem showed no abnormalities on postoperative computed tomographic scans. After 4 months of follow-up, the one-and-a-half syndrome had not improved, even though other signs had improved or resolved. This syndrome is caused by damage to structures within the pontine tegmentum: the medial longitudinal fasciculus, the ipsilateral paramedian pontine reticular formation, or the ipsilateral abducens nucleus. Multiple sclerosis and brain stem infarction are the most common causes of the one-and-a-half syndrome. Less frequently, it is caused by primary and metastatic tumors of the brain stem and cerebellum. Rarely, the one-and-a-half syndrome can develop postoperatively after the removal of tumors of the posterior fossa. The mechanism of pontine tegmental injury remains unknown.
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PMID:"One-and-a-half" syndrome after a resection of a midline cerebellar astrocytoma: case report and discussion of the literature. 196 11

61 of 1,590 (3.8%) patients with cerebrovascular disease showed suprabulbar palsy of the pure form (42 patients; 2 had autopsy) and striate form (19 patients; 3 had autopsy). 25 patients with the pallidopyramidal syndrome were included since the clinical picture bordered on the striate form. The pure variety was characterized by dysarthria, dysphagia and automatic voluntary dissociation of facial movements. Half of the patients also had hemiparesis, primitive reflexes and short-step gait. In the striate form, the main signs were dysarthria, dysphagia, automatic voluntary dissociation, rigidity and hypokinesia. Brisk tendon reflexes, primitive reflexes, short-step gait and mental deterioration were also present in half of the patients. The pure variety was caused by multiple infarcts and/or lacunae (85.7%), while the striate form had vascular lesions by computed tomography in only 36.8% of the cases. Histological findings, showing lipohyalinosis of the arterial wall leading to stenosis and occlusion of the lumen and tissue rarefaction and disintegration, support the assumption that microinfarctions, sometimes found only by histopathological examination, are the leading pathogenetic factor in this form. Hypertension, cardiopathy, smoking habit, dyslipemia and diabetes are the most frequent risk factors in both forms.
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PMID:Pseudobulbar palsy: a clinical computed tomography study. 229 26

A sixty-year-old man was admitted to our hospital on January, 1989. He had suffered a hemorrhage in the right side of pontine tegmentum on April, 1988. He had been in deep coma for about a week, and then he had showed diplopia, mild right deafness, right facial palsy, left hemiparesis, dysarthria, dysphagia, and urinary disturbance. He showed slight improvement of these symptoms and signs, but had developed thereafter extremity myorhythmia on the left side. On admission, rightward slow eye movement (absence of saccadic eye movement and preservation of pursuit eye movement of both eyes) was present. MRI revealed a hypointensity lesion with a hyperintensity spot on T2-weighted images showing an old hemorrhage in the right pontine tegmentum and a hyperintensity lesion on T2-weighted images showing an olivary pseudohypertrophy on the right. We concluded that the extremity myorhythmia in this patient was caused by the damage of the right central tegmental tract followed by right olivary pseudohypertrophy. The rightward slow eye movement was considered to be due to the damage of the right paramedian pontine reticular formation and/or its afferent fibers in the pontine tegmentum.
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PMID:[Left-sided extremity myorhythmia and rightward slow eye movement caused by a hemorrhage in the right pontine tegmentum]. 233 25

The authors report a case of ataxic hemiparesis (dysarthria-clumsy hand syndrome plus crural hemiparesis with homolateral ataxia), secondary to a single cerebellar lacuna (CT scan), in a left rostral para-vermian position in the vicinity of the peduncle and secondary to arterial hypertension. They discuss the nosological aspects of this recently established entity and the origin of particularly severe and persistent dysphagia in their case (cerebellar dysphagia?)
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PMID:[Ataxic hemiparesis due to a cerebellar lacuna]. 251 Apr 50

We reported a 71-year-old male with lateral medullary syndrome presented acute respiratory arrest after ataxic respiration. The patient had experienced transient diplopia repeatedly for about 2 weeks and then the developed persistent diplopia and vertigo. On the third day he was admitted to our hospital because of neurological deterioration and aspiration pneumonia. He showed left Horner's sign and double vision. And he had sensory disturbances of pain and temperature in the left face and the right side of the body, left limb ataxia and truncal ataxia. He showed dysarthria, severe dysphagia and left mild central facial paresis, but no hemiparesis. This case was clinically considered to be a typical case of left lateral medullary syndrome. When he was admitted to our hospital, he showed hypoxia with hypercapnea in spite of no history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. This condition was considered to be a central alveolar hypoventilation. He had two episodes of sudden-onset respiratory arrest following ataxic respiration on the 4th and 5th days, but no cardiac arrest. He was supported his respiration by mechanical ventilation until he was able to breathe spontaneously on the 29th day. The 22nd day MRI disclosed high intensity area in the left lateral and dorso-medial medulla in T2-weighted image, and this lesion was 1.5 cm in length. Therefore this case was diagnosed medullary infarction. This case developed ipsilateral facial pain in chronic stage. Pain existed around the eye and in the cheek, and pain was like toothache and unbearable like thalamic pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of medullary infarction presented lateral medullary syndrome and respiratory arrest after ataxic respiration]. 268 32

A new case of sub-occipital Pott's disease is reported: a 26 year old, coloured male patient from Senegal was admitted for: cervical pain of 6 month duration, neck stiffness, dysphagia, left XII paralysis and left hemiparesis. The radiological study found an anterior atlanto-axial subluxation, basilar impression, and increased thickness of the retropharyngeal soft tissue, lysis of the left occipital condyle and the left lateral mass. CT scan study revealed a retropharyngeal mass and an epidural contrast-enhanced lesion at the C2 C3 C4 levels. Chest-X ray showed one tuberculous lesion at the right apex. The research of Acid Fast Bacilli in gastric secretion samples and the results of the retropharyngeal mass puncture were positive. An antituberculous trichemotherapy was started. After early reduction by skull tongs traction, an occipito-cervical arthrodesis by Roy Camille plates was performed, followed by the wearing of a minerva plaster jacket and then a plastic collar. Each one for a 5 month period. One year later, there remained only a left XII paralysis, but the bony reconstruction was not yet obvious on tomography. A survey of the literature of 70 cases of sub-occipital Pott's disease has pointed out these findings: cervical pain (98%), neck stiffness (82%), Atlantoaxial subluxation (68%), thickened prevertebral soft tissue shadow (77%), lateral mass lysis (48%) other tuberculous focus (29%). The main therapeutic trends are: early and long-lasting antituberculous poly-chemotherapy, early reduction of subluxations, prolonged contention for slight osteolytic lesions and for major: lytic lesions, a posterior surgical procedure either by bone graft combined with wires or preferably fusion by means of occipito-cervical plates. The removal of abscess is discussed.
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PMID:[Suboccipital Pott's disease]. 344 87


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