Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (dizziness)
9,689 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a case of a 32-year-old man who presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage. As revealed by lumbar puncture, the cerebrospinal fluid had low glucose, high protein levels, and pleocytosis with 5% of eosinophils. Cultures were negative. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and complement fixation reactions for cysticercosis in cerebrospinal fluid were positive. An angiogram revealed an aneurysm of the right anteroinferior cerebellar artery. At surgery, the aneurysm was found to be surrounded by thickened leptomeninges, which histologically presented dense inflammation and remains of Cysticercus. The aneurysm could not be clipped, and it was wrapped. Postoperatively, the patient had dizziness and right ear tinnitus. He received prednisone therapy on alternate days and subsequently received albendazole for subarachnoid cysticerci. At the 4-year follow-up, the patient was asymptomatic and had normal cerebrospinal fluid. Although we cannot rule out a congenital aneurysm, its location inside an area of severe arachnoiditis around a cysticercus suggests an inflammatory origin. This type of vascular lesion not reported before should be suspected in patients with chronic cysticercotic meningitis.
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PMID:Subarachnoid hemorrhage secondary to a ruptured inflammatory aneurysm: a possible manifestation of neurocysticercosis: case report. 874 71

Neurotuberculosis is a potentially fatal disease which requires prompt diagnosis and immediate multidrug antitubercular treatment as per international guidelines. There is evidence that the bacterial spread can continue even during therapy at least in its initial stages. We monitored our patient not only with chest X-rays but with brain MRI during the first 6 weeks. To our surprise on serial MRI, during treatment, we found several new localization of the disease in a pauci-symptomatic patient. These included vessel wall inflammation (vasculitis), arachnoiditis and hypophysitis. At 4 weeks of treatment, the patient complained of dizziness and vomiting which were first dismissed as treatment side-effects but MRI revealed multiple cortical venous hemorrhagic infarcts. We report this case to emphasize the importance of neuroimaging even in case of the most subtle symptoms and that disease can continue to progress in the initial phase of treatment which may require additional therapeutic intervention.
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PMID:Multifaceted progressive neurotuberculosis in a single patient: from miliary tuberculomas to cortical venous infarct. 3113 Nov 15