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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Symptomatic common carotid artery occlusion (CCAO) is rare. We studied 17 patients with ischemic cerebrovascular symptoms and unilateral CCAO on angiography to help clarify clinical and radiologic features. Mean age was 62 years; 65% were women. Predominant symptoms and signs included visual-ipsilateral monocular or retrochiasmal symptoms (88%), motor weakness (88%), sensory disturbance (59%), dizziness/lightheadedness (53%), and syncope (24%).
Dysarthria
, headache, or involuntary limb shaking occurred less frequently. Positionally related symptoms occurred in approximately two-thirds of the patients. TIAs were often multiple and preceded a stroke or occurred without subsequent stroke in 82%. Hemispheric TIAs contralateral to the CCAO occurred in 41%. Ten patients (59%) suffered stroke, seven (70%) of which were ipsilateral to the CCAO. Vascular risk factors included cigarette use (76%), hypertension (71%),
diabetes mellitus
(41%), and hyperlipidemia (41%); 82% had two or more risk factors. Known cardiac disease was present in 59%. CCAO was present at the origin of the vessel in most patients. Most had atherosclerotic narrowing of multiple extracranial large vessels. During follow-up, none of the patients had a spontaneous second infarct; five had TIAs, including two with amaurosis fugax, all in the CCAO territory. More restricted external carotid collaterals may, in part, explain the higher frequency of ipsilateral stroke and contralateral TIAs than reported for internal carotid occlusion.
...
PMID:Common carotid artery occlusion. 279 68
The clinical features of 115 patients from 90 families with Friedreich's ataxia are described. Onset of symptoms was before the age of 25 (mean 10.52) years in all the index cases. An analysis of early cases suggested that limb and truncal ataxia and absent tendon reflexes in the legs were the only consistent diagnostic criteria within five years of presentation.
Dysarthria
, signs of pyramidal tract dysfunction in the legs and loss of joint position and vibration sense are not necessarily present during the first five years of symptoms, but appear to develop eventually in all cases. Scoliosis and ECG evidence of cardiomyopathy were found in over two-thirds of the patients studied; pes cavus, distal amyotrophy, optic atrophy, nystagmus and deafness were all less frequent. The disorder was gradually progressive in all cases. The mean age of losing the ability to walk was 25 years; 95 per cent were chair-bound by the age of 44 years. About 10 per cent of the patients had
diabetes mellitus
which was controlled by oral hypoglycaemic drugs in one quarter.
Diabetes
appeared to be associated with a higher incidence of optic atrophy and deafness.
Diabetes
also clustered within sibships; the risk of an individual with Friedreich's ataxia developing
diabetes
if an affected sib has it is over 40 per cent. Similarly, cardiomyopathy ran true within affected members of the same sibship, but there were instances of discordance which suggest that the development of the non-neurological features of Friedreich's ataxia may be controlled by modifying genes rather than heterogeneity of the main gene. Segregation analysis and an increased consanguinity rate amongst parents of patients (5.55 per cent) confirmed that this disorder is of autosomal recessive inheritance. A study of 101 first degree relatives of the patients with Friedreich's ataxia failed to demonstrate any neurological or electrocardiographic abnormalities which could be ascribed to the heterozygous state.
...
PMID:Friedreich's ataxia: a clinical and genetic study of 90 families with an analysis of early diagnostic criteria and intrafamilial clustering of clinical features. 727 14
Twenty patients are described with a distinctive clinical syndrome characterised by progressive cerebellar ataxia developing within the first two decades. This is associated with
dysarthria
, pyramidal signs in the limbs, normal or increased knee jerks and upper limb reflexes and in some instances sensory loss. Inheritance is probably autosomal recessive in the majority, if not all, of the cases. The preservation of tendon reflexes distinguishes this disorder from Friedreich's ataxia. Other important differences from Friedreich's ataxia are absence of optic atrophy, cardiomyopathy,
diabetes mellitus
and severe skeletal deformity. The prognosis was better in the present series than in cases of Friedreich's ataxia; patients remained ambulant, on average, for more than 10 years longer.
...
PMID:Early onset cerebellar ataxia with retained tendon reflexes: a clinical and genetic study of a disorder distinct from Friedreich's ataxia. 727 63
Friedreich ataxia is an autosomal recessive ataxia with onset usually before puberty whose characteristic clinical features include progressive ataxia of gait and limbs,
dysarthria
, loss of joint position and vibratory sense, absent knee and ankle jerks, and Babinski signs. Foot deformity, scoliosis,
diabetes mellitus
, and cardiac involvement are common and characteristic. Patients survive until about age 30 years although longer survivals occur. A later onset, more slowly progressive form seems to be an allelic variant. The basic process seems to be a dying-back of neuronal processes. Using linkage mapping techniques, the classical form of Friedreich ataxia has been localized to 9q13-q21, a region on the long arm of chromosome 9. Haplotype analysis, analysis of recombinants, and physical mapping techniques, including construction of a YAC contig, have narrowed the interval for the Friedreich ataxia gene, FRDA, to a few hundred thousand base pairs. Candidate genes in the region are being studied by techniques of mutation analysis. It is likely that the Freidreich ataxia gene will be cloned soon. A condition resembling Friedreich ataxia with decreased vitamin E levels has been localized to chromosome 8 and is discussed elsewhere.
...
PMID:Friedreich ataxia. 761 92
Clinical features of cerebellar infarction in the territory of the superior cerebellar artery (SCA) were investigated in six male patients, ranging in age from 50 to 69 years. In all patients, there were MR images of infarction located in the area supplied by the SCA. The lesion was on the left-side in 2, right-side in 3 and bilateral (recurrent) in 1 patient. The onset of disease occurred with nausea, vomiting and floating sensation, with no overt brain stem signs other than symptoms of unilateral cerebellar ataxia and
dysarthria
. Five of the 6 patients had heart disease and cerebral angiography without definite evidence of SCA occlusion, strongly suggesting occlusion of the artery at its periphery due to cardiogenic embolism. A comparison of these 6 patients with those reported previously in Japan suggests that patients with SCA occlusion may be divided into two distinct subgroups: one manifesting diffuse brain stem signs in addition to cerebellar signs, and the other showing cerebellar signs as the only neurologic manifestation. In the former group, comprising the vast majority of patients, SCA occlusion occurred at the origin of the vessel due to a thrombus under a state of hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
or malignancy, producing signs of brain stem involvement, such as dissociating sensory disturbance and Horner's sign. While in the latter group, which included these 6 patients, paucity of brain stem signs, absence of definite cerebral angiographic evidence of SCA occlusion, and the presence of heart disease were distinguishing clinical features. Cardiogenic cerebral embolism was probably the underlying pathology in many of the cases and the functional prognosis was favorable.
...
PMID:[Cerebellar infarction in the territory of the superior cerebellar artery, presenting a predominant cerebellar symptom--with special reference to its pathophysiology]. 761 47
Wolfram's syndrome is defined by the association of
diabetes mellitus
, diabetes insipidus, optic atrophy and nerve deafness. Other neurological anomalies, such as ataxia, nystagmus, tonic pupil, dizziness,
dysarthria
, dysphagia and epilepsy are rarely described and tend to appear later than the primary manifestations. We describe a patient with Wolfram's syndrome whose magnetic resonance image (MRI) of the head showed brainstem and cerebellar atrophy years before the appearance of clinical signs of brainstem disfunction. We conclude that alterations in MRI precede neurological symptoms by several years in Wolfram's syndrome.
...
PMID:[Wolfram's syndrome: correlation of clinical signs and neurological images]. 769 38
We reported a rare case of marked dilatation of the bilateral common carotid artery (CCA) associated with stenosis of the left middle cerebral artery (MCA). A 64-year-old female was admitted with right hemiparesis and
dysarthria
. She was hospitalized 2 years ago for cholecystitis. For 5 years, she has been under medical treatment for hypertension,
diabetes mellitus
, hyperlipidemia, cardiac failure associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and atrial fibrillation. Brain CT scan showed infarction of the left corona radiata. Angiography revealed marked dilatation of the bilateral CCA and the internal carotid artery (ICA), moderate dilatation of the innominate artery and the right subclavian artery, kinking of the right CCA, diverticular outpouching of the left ICA, and stenosis of the right external carotid artery and the left MCA. Breast CT scan revealed moderate dilatation and marked calcification of the ascending aorta and the aortic arch. Laboratory examination did not show any sign of inflammation, rheumatoid factor (RA), antistreptolysis-O (ASLO) and antinucleotic antibody. Based on the clinical course, radiological findings and laboratory data, possible diagnosis of the dilatation of the bilateral CCA was discussed with particular emphasis on arteriosclerotic aneurysm and aortitis syndrome.
...
PMID:[Marked dilatation of the bilateral common carotid artery: a case report]. 773 79
The authors report a rare case of intracranial aspergillosis presenting marked granulomatous pachymeningitis. A 58-year-old male who had a three-year history of
diabetes
and chronic bronchitis was referred to us because of progressive left hemiparesis and
dysarthria
. Postcontrast CT scan showed a ring-enhancing lesion with marked perifocal edema in the right parietal lobe, and right subdural enhancing mass. MR image revealed hypertrophic dura mater in the right convexity. On June 9, 1992, partial removal of the intra-axial cystic mass and granulomatous dura mater was performed. A number of characteristic aspergillus hyphae were recognized in the resected cyst and granulomatous dura mater. Postoperatively, the patient was treated with amphotericin-B and fluconazole. But granulomatous pachymeningitis became progressively enlarged and eventually created a large mass effect again. On January 23, 1993, the patient died of pneumonia. Cerebral aspergillosis is getting common but preoperative diagnosis is still difficult because of its causing several clinical features such as brain abscess, granuloma, intracerebral hemorrhage, cerebral infarction, meningitis, and encephalitis. Several comments were made about the pathogenesis of these features, and the necessity of early diagnosis and treatment was emphasized.
...
PMID:[A case of aspergillosis presenting marked granulomatous pachymeningitis]. 819 39
The frequency of cerebellar infarctions over two and a half years was 2.7% of the 1300 hospitalized patients over that period. Sixteen patients with cerebellar infarctions were studied by using clinical manifestations and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Ages ranged from 41-87 (mean 63.5) years; 13 were men and 3, women. Risk factors included: hypertension (50%),
diabetes
(44%), prior stroke (44%), cardiac disease (38%), and hyperlipidemia (19%). Common symptoms and signs were dizziness/vertigo (75%), unsteadiness (69%),
dysarthria
(69%), and nausea/vomiting (50%). Infarcts mainly involved the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) territory and tended to be associated with brainstem infarcts in 14 of the 16 patients. Most cerebellar infarctions had a benign course, especially the small ones. No mortality was noted in this series. The short-term outcome of the cerebellar infarctions seemed to depend on the size of the infarcts and the sites of the artery occlusion. It was concluded that diagnosis of cerebellar infarctions requires a high index of clinical suspicion, especially when patients present with a sudden onset of ataxia, dizziness/vertigo, nausea/vomiting and
dysarthria
; and that MRI is a useful tool for the detailed study of cerebellar infarctions and can elucidate associated brainstem infarcts.
...
PMID:A clinical and MRI study of cerebellar infarctions. 829 26
A 61-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital on September 18, 1991 because of left hemiparesis, dysphagia, and
dysarthria
since five days before. She was formerly pointed out
diabetes mellitus
and hypertension, but she did not receive any treatment. The MRI showed a high signal area in the right paramedian portion of the upper pons on T2 weighted image and proton image. The angiography showed that persistent primitive proatlantal artery originated from the left internal carotid artery and joined to the horizontal portion of the left vertebral artery. The image of carotid-vertebrobasilar system and proatlantal artery showed so severely arteriosclerotic. This is the first report of brainstem infarction with persistent primitive proatlantal artery. In this case, the pontine infarction was thought to occur on the basis of the arteriosclerosis of blood vessels and change of blood flow of carotid-vertebrobasilar system due to persistent primitive proatlantal artery.
...
PMID:[A case of pontine infarction with persistent primitive proatlantal artery]. 829 79
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