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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Four cases of arteriosclerotic aneurysm of the arteria lusoria are described. In one patient a tumor of the superior mediastinum was suspected, the chief signs of which are dyspnea and irritative cough. In a further patient, enlargement of the left superior mediastinum was noted in routine fluoroscopy. Clinical investigation revealed an aneurysm of the arteria lusoria. In the third patient, dysphagia, slight cough and torticollis were interpreted as symptoms of a neoplasm of the esophagus or larynx. The fourth patient, in whom aneurysm of the arteria lusoria was discovered by chance at autopsy, displayed no clinical or radiological signs. Abberrant right subclavian artery (arteria lusoria) is a relatively frequent finding in autopsies. Aneurysm of the arteria lusori is apparently also a typical complication.
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PMID:[Aneurysm of the arteria lusoria. Report on 4 cases]. 125 Nov 44

We reviewed the efficacy and adverse effects of repeated botulinum toxin injections into hyperactive neck muscles of 107 successive patients with spasmodic torticollis. They received 510 injection treatments over a median period of 15 months (range 3-42 months). One patient failed to benefit at all, but 101 (95%) patients reported considerable (moderate or excellent) benefit from at least one treatment. On a global subjective response rating, 93% of 429 treatments resulted in some improvement and 76% in moderate or excellent improvement. Pain reduction followed 89% of 190 treatments with moderate or excellent reduction after 66%. Median duration of benefit was 9 weeks. All torticollis types responded equally well and injections into two (or more) involved neck muscles were more effective than injection into a single muscle. The most frequent adverse effect was dysphagia, occurring after 44% of all treatments, but this was severe after only 2%. Antibodies to botulinum toxin were detected in the serum of three out of the five patients in whom loss of treatment efficacy occurred. We conclude that botulinum toxin treatment is the most effective available therapy for spasmodic torticollis and practical advice is provided for anyone wishing to set up the technique.
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PMID:Botulinum toxin treatment of spasmodic torticollis. 774 82

To determine risk factors for dysphagia after ventral rhizotomy, videofluoroscopic barium swallowing examinations were done on 41 spasmodic torticollis patients before and after surgery. Radiologic abnormalities were present in 68.3% of the patients before surgery, but these were only mildly abnormal in the majority. After surgery 95.1% showed radiologic abnormalities which were moderate or severe in one-third of the patients. Swallowing abnormalities correlated significantly with duration of torticollis and subjective complaints of swallowing difficulty both before and after surgery, but not with age, sex, or type of torticollis. The major acute postoperative finding was aggravation of preexisting pharyngeal dysfunction. Follow-up from about half of our original sample showed that gradual improvement occurred from 4 to 24 weeks after surgery by subjective report. We review the innervation of intrinsic and extrinsic pharyngeal musculature, and suggest that C1-3 rhizotomies and selective sectioning of the spinal accessory nerve are responsible for aggravation of pharyngeal swallowing dysfunction in the acute postsurgical period.
Dysphagia 1992
PMID:Swallowing in torticollis before and after rhizotomy. 149 53

One hundred and twenty-six patients with different forms of focal dystonia (89 with cervical dystonia, 12 with hand cramps and 25 with laryngeal dystonia) were treated with localised injections of botulinum toxin. Mean doses per muscle were 200 mouse units (m.u.) for treating cervical dystonia, 40-120 m.u. for forearm muscles in writers' cramp and 3.7 m.u. for the thyroarytenoid muscle in laryngeal dystonia. Responder rates have been above 80% in all patient groups and beneficial effects could be reproduced over follow-up periods of up to 4 years. The commonest side-effects were dysphagia after treatment of spasmodic torticollis, weakness of neighbouring muscles after injections for hand cramps and breathiness and hypophonia following laryngeal injections. All these were transient and generally well tolerated. It is concluded that botulinum toxin injections are a safe and effective treatment in all three types of focal dystonia.
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PMID:Treatment of cervical dystonia hand spasms and laryngeal dystonia with botulinum toxin. 154 63

Thirty-seven patients with spasmodic torticollis (cervical dystonia) who received repeated local injections of botulinum toxin have been followed up for a mean period of 12.3 (10-29) months, during which time 138 treatment sessions were performed. Mean doses per muscle averaged 320 mouse units (mu; range 160-1000 mu botulinum toxin A prepared by CAMR, Porton Down, UK). Eighty-six per cent of patients experienced significant improvement of posture and 84% of those with pain had relief following the first injection. Muscular patterns of recurrent torticollis were relatively constant and in most patients efficacy was maintained with subsequent injections, while 15% of all follow-up sessions failed. Only 2 of 37 patients were consistent nonresponders; 22% and 10% of all sessions were complicated by transient dysphagia and weakness of neck muscles, respectively. It is concluded that local botulinum toxin injections can be a safe and efficaceous long-term treatment of spasmodic torticollis and that optimal doses should be between 200 and 400 mu/muscle.
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PMID:Treatment of spasmodic torticollis with local injections of botulinum toxin. One-year follow-up in 37 patients. 154 64

We prospectively evaluated the frequency, severity, and radiologic features of swallowing abnormalities following Botox treatment of spasmodic torticollis. We performed both clinical and radiologic evaluations of swallowing before and following Botox in 18 consecutive cervical dystonia patients receiving their first Botox treatment. Before Botox, 11% of the patients had clinical symptoms of dysphagia and 22% had radiologic signs of a peristaltic abnormality. After Botox, the signs and symptoms of dysphagia in these patients did not change, but an additional 33% developed new dysphagic symptoms and 50% of the patients developed new peristaltic abnormalities by radiologic studies. Complaints of swallowing difficulty were always associated with abnormal radiologic findings. Neither the total Botox dose nor Botox into particular muscles differed between those with dysphagia and those without.
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PMID:Dysphagia after botulinum toxin injections for spasmodic torticollis: clinical and radiologic findings. 162 Mar 39

A double blind placebo controlled crossover trial was performed of botulinum toxin "A" in 20 patients with spasmodic torticollis. There was a statistically significant benefit for those treated with toxin; 12 on toxin improved objectively, compared with four on placebo (p less than 0.04). After a follow up period of one year, 16 still seemed to benefit from repeated toxin injections. The main side effect was dysphagia, which appeared to be dose related in individual patients.
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PMID:A double blind trial of botulinum toxin "A" in torticollis, with one year follow up. 195

Sixty patients (30 men, 30 women, mean age 45.5 [18-71] years) with various forms of spasmodic torticollis were treated with local injections of botulinus A toxin. The results of treatment were assessed on an arbitrary scale (0-4) by the patients, by an examiner and by a neurologist who studied video recordings without knowing at what stage they had been recorded. After the first course of injections (a maximum of three injections of 10-40 ng in four weeks) 50 patients (83%) reported a better than 50% improvement; the mean score on the four point scale fell from 3.6 to 1.85 (P less than 0.001). The severity of the disorder as judged from the video recordings fell from a mean of 3.23 to 1.71 (P less than 0.001). The effect lasted for an average of 14 weeks. 6 patients developed mild dysphagia, in two further cases severe dysphagia occurred which lasted for up to four weeks. Twenty patients were followed up for more than one year: in nine of them the interval between courses of injections, the dose being unaltered, remained the same (12-14 weeks), but thereafter the abnormal movements returned with the same severity as before treatment. In eight patients the intervals between courses grew longer and the abnormal movements became less severe. Two patients have been symptom free for 20 and 13 months respectively, but one female patient failed to respond owing to the presence of antibodies against botulinus A toxin. The results indicate that local injection of botulinus toxin is a successful treatment for spasmodic torticollis.
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PMID:[Treatment of spasmodic torticollis with local injections of botulinum toxin A]. 201 63

Esophageal pH monitoring is recognized as the best diagnostic procedure for gastroesophageal reflux (GER) and operation is seldom recommended in the absence of abnormal pH data. To emphasize that operation should not be ruled out for children who may have false-negative pH studies, we report 14 patients operated on for GER in spite of normal pH-monitoring. The mean age was 54 months (range, 18 to 90). Clinical features included vomiting, dysphagia, respiratory disease, anemia, and torticollis. All had radiologic evidence of GER, and 10 had endoscopic and histological esophagitis. Conventional pH-monitoring values were normal but lower esophageal sphincter pressure and propulsive peristalsis were significantly decreased whereas nonpropulsive contractions were predominant. Operation was recommended after an average of 24 months of unsuccessful medical treatment. Independent postoperative assessment showed that 13 of the 14 patients were relieved of their symptoms and dysphagia persists in one. We suggest that the diagnosis of GER should be accepted on the basis of sound clinical judgement plus more than one abnormal test even when pH results are normal. Operation should not be withheld when clinically indicated. There are several explanations for false-negative pH studies, of which alkaline reflux is probably the most important and warrants further investigation in children.
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PMID:Surgery for gastroesophageal reflux in children with normal pH studies. 206 6

Extended esophageal pH-metering is the best method for GER diagnosis, but it has a certain number of false negatives. In a attempt to judge in which extent we can indicate surgery with a "normal" pH-metering study, we have reviewed our 110 operated children since 1982, and selected 12 in whom pH studies were normal. There where five females and seven males with ages ranging between 18 and 90 months. The clinical course until the diagnosis was accepted was long. Nine patients had vomiting, five respiratory disease, six dysphagia, four anemia and three torticollis. Only two were malnourished. There was radiologic GER in all children (with only one hiatal hernia). In spite of "normal" pH-metering, eight had decreased lower esophageal sphincter, and 11 disturbed motility. Nine had endoscopic esophagitis and eight histologic esophagitis. After operation, indicated only after long periods of medical treatment, vomiting disappeared in all, and so did respiratory disease and torticollis. Five families were very satisfied, six rather satisfied (gas bloat syndrome) and one frankly dissatisfied (dysphagia with severe immotility). Based on this evidence, we believe that some limited indications for surgery in GER are acceptable even in the presence of "normal" pH-studies.
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PMID:[False negatives in pH measurement. A retrospective study of 12 surgical cases]. 207 69


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