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)

A 64-year-old hypertensive woman with hyponatremia due to acute gastroenteritis and the use of diuretics developed dysarthria, dysphagia, and quadriparesis 4 days after rapid correction of hyponatremia. The clinical course, electrodiagnosis (blink reflex) and cranial computed tomographic findings are compatible with an antemortem diagnosis of central pontine myelinolysis (CPM). CPM can be prevented by cautious correction of hyponatremia. Spontaneous recovery in this case contrasts sharply to the poor outcome in previously reported cases of CPM.
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PMID:Antemortem diagnosis of central pontine myelinolysis--report of a case. 228 70

The experience of 500 transcranial Doppler (TCD) sonographies at Siriraj Hospital between April 1988- June 1989 were reported. The indications for TCD study were hemiplegia 156 (31.20%), vertigo 119 (23.80%), transient ischemic attack (TIA) 26 (5.20%), hemihypalgesia 14 (2.80%), dysarthria-dysphagia syndrome 13(2.60%), visual problem 13(2.60%), syncope 10(2.00%), memory loss 8(1.60%), aphasia 6(1.20%), carotid bruit 6(1.20%), miscellaneous (artereovenous malformation, aneurysm, arteritis, carotico-cavernous fistula, tinnitus, etc) 25(5.00%), and healthy subjects 92(18.4%). Abnormal TCD studies were found in various conditions of different percentages, i.e. 91.03 per cent in hemiplegia, 76.47 per cent in vertigo, 65.38 per cent in TIA, 71.43 per cent in hemihypalgesia, 61.54 per cent in dysarthria - dysphagia syndrome, 38.46 per cent in visual problem and 30.43 per cent in normal subject. TCD is noninvasive, safe and painless. It is a useful screening test for prophylaxis of cerebrovascular disease in the elderly.
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PMID:Transcranial Doppler ultrasonography: experience of 500 patients. 228 86

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 retrospective study investigated the incidence and types of communication problems in 115 patients referred for swallowing difficulties. Each patient had a bedside swallowing evaluation completed as well as a screening of communication abilities. A formal speech-language evaluation was done when warranted and possible. Of the 115 patients, 93 had suspected swallowing problems based on the bedside evaluation done by the speech-language pathologist. Videofluoroscopy was performed on 85 of these patients. A significant positive correlation was found between communication impairments and both suspected and videofluoroscopically confirmed dysphagia. Cognitive problems were the most frequent communication impairment with dysarthria being second. Neurological diseases were the most common medical diagnoses in patients with swallowing difficulties. The case is presented for the speech-language pathologist to be the primary diagnostician and manager of both communication and oral-pharyngeal swallowing disorders whether they co-occur or not.
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PMID:The incidence of communication disorders in dysphagic patients. 229 37

From a series of 460 dementia patients referred to a regional brain bank, 14 (3%) patients had a pathologic diagnosis of primary degeneration of the brain involving multiple sites (frontoparietal cortex, striatum, medial thalamus, substantia nigra, and hypoglossal nucleus), with cell loss and astrocytosis. There were no neuronal inclusions and essentially no senile plaques. This entity, which we have termed "dementia lacking distinctive histology" (DLDH), presented with memory loss and personality changes, and led to death, usually within 2 to 7 years. Dysarthria and dysphagia were prominent in the later phases of the illness in most patients. The psychometric findings of some of the patients were consistent with a "frontal" lobe dementia. A few patients had prominent caudate atrophy on CT as well as neuropathologically. Eight of our patients had positive family histories for neurologic disease, mainly dementia. DLDH, in addition to Pick's disease, is a major member of the frontal-lobe dementia group. In patients under age 70 years, the frontal lobe dementias represent an important diagnostic consideration.
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PMID:Dementia lacking distinctive histologic features: a common non-Alzheimer degenerative dementia. 230 Feb 43

A case is presented of a patient with progressive bulbar palsy, a form of motor neuron disease, which is a progressive degenerative disorder of the motor nuclei in the medulla producing atrophy and fasciculations of the musculature of the tongue, dysarthria, dysphagia, and excessive accumulation of secretions. The patient may initially seek dental consultation. Clinicians should be aware of the signs and symptoms of this inexorably fatal disease so that an early neurologic referral is made and the appropriate symptomatic therapies instituted.
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PMID:Progressive bulbar palsy: a case report of a type of motor neuron disease presenting with oral symptoms. 230 45

In myasthenia gravis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis the ENT specialist or the phoniatrician may be consulted first, because in about 30 percent of all cases the initial symptoms are dysarthria, dysphagia or dyspnea. Three typical cases of each condition are presented. The quality of life of the patients can be improved considerably by early diagnosis and treatment. Special diagnostic and therapeutic procedures are described.
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PMID:[Dysarthria, dysphagia or dyspnea as a reason for the initial consultation in pseudoparalytic myasthenia gravis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis]. 231 Apr 61

Dysarthria, dysphagia and repeated aspiration in a 54-year-old woman diagnosed and treated for myasthenia gravis 7 years earlier were initially thought to represent a late exacerbation of myasthenia. A cervical mass invading the jugular foramen and causing multiple lower cranial nerve palsies was biopsied and found to represent invasive ectopic thymoma.
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PMID:Late pseudo-exacerbation of myasthenia gravis due to ectopic thymoma invading lower cranial nerves. 231 Oct 16

We report the case of a 62-year old man presenting with generalized muscular weakness, amyotrophy, dysarthria and dysphagia. Neurological examination showed bilateral pyramidal signs and lingual fasciculations. The clinical diagnosis was amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, since only shivers and weight loss pointed to hyperthyroidism. However, after several months the patient developed typical manifestations of hyperthyroidism. After treatment of hyperthyroidism, the neurological symptoms disappeared. Although this association is extremely rare, one must have in mind the possibility of thyroid dysfunction when studying patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
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PMID:[Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis syndrome and hyperthyroidism. Cure with antithyroid drugs]. 233 Apr 66

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


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