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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (
dizziness
)
9,689
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Within the frame work of lumbar myelography, 158 patients were entered in a double-blind study in order to test a dimeric contrast medium (iotrolan) against a monomeric one (iopamidol), both of them non-ionic. A three-step scheme was applied to evaluate the X-ray pictures with respect to contrast quality. Particular attention was paid to the visibility of details, i.e. the nerve root and its course, as well as to how well it could be distinguished in the nerve root sheath. On the basis of a high level of significance (P less than 0.05), comparison of the two contrast media showed no difference in contrast quality. Sixty-nine percent of the examinations using iotrolan resulted in excellent contrast quality, whereas the corresponding very good results using iopamidol lay at 76%. Twenty-nine percent of the patients examined with iotrolan and 27% of those examined with iopamidol showed side effects. Headache occurred most frequently, followed by nausea,
dizziness
and
neck pain
. Sixty percent of the patients suffering from postmyelographic reactions reported delayed headache, which occurred most often with iotrolan rather than iopamidol. As for manifestation of other postmyelographic side effects, there were no significant differences (P less than 0.05, Fischer's test) between the two groups of contrast media.
...
PMID:[Iotrolan versus iopamidol. A controlled double-blind study with lumbar myelography]. 844 9
Motor vehicle accidents with a whiplash mechanism of injury are one of the most common causes of neck injuries, with an incidence of perhaps 1 million per year in the United States. Proper adjustment of head restraints can reduce the incidence of
neck pain
in rear-end collisions by 24%. Persistent
neck pain
is more common in women by a ratio of 70:30. Whiplash injuries usually result in
neck pain
owing to myofascial trauma, which has been documented in both animal and human studies. Headaches, reported in 82% of patients acutely, are usually of the muscle contraction type, often associated with greater occipital neuralgia and less often temporomandibular joint syndrome. Occasionally migraine headaches can be precipitated.
Dizziness
often occurs and can result from vestibular, central, and cervical injury. More than one third of patients acutely complain of paresthesias, which frequently are caused by trigger points and thoracic outlet syndrome and less commonly by cervical radiculopathy. Some studies have indicated that a postconcussion syndrome can develop from a whiplash injury. Interscapular and low back pain are other frequent complaints. Although most patients recover within 3 months after the accident, persistent
neck pain
and headaches after 2 years are reported by more than 30% and 10% of patients. Risk factors for a less favorable recovery include older age, the presence of interscapular or upper back pain, occipital headache, multiple symptoms or paresthesias at presentation, reduced range of movement of the cervical spine, the presence of an objective neurologic deficit, preexisting degenerative osteoarthritic changes; and the upper middle occupational category. There is only a minimal association of a poor prognosis with the speed or severity of the collision and the extent of vehicle damage. Whiplash injuries result in long-term disability with upward of 6% of patients not returning to work after 1 year. Although litigation is very common and always raises questions of secondary gain in patients with persistent symptoms, most patients are not cured by a verdict. Acute treatment of
neck pain
consists of ice for 24 hours followed by heat applications, pain pills, NSAIDs, and muscle relaxants. Trigger point injections can be beneficial in both the acute and the persistent phases. Use of cervical collars should probably be kept to a minimum during the first 2 to 3 weeks after the injury and then avoided. Early passive mobilization and range of motion exercises may accelerate recovery. Physical therapy and transcutaneous nerve stimulators may be helpful in reducing pain and improving movement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Some observations on whiplash injuries. 143 66
Head injuries have been shown to account for between 4 and 22% of soccer injuries. Clinical and neuropsychological investigations of patients with minor head trauma have revealed organic brain damage. 69 active football (soccer) players and 37 former players of the Norwegian national team were included in a neurological and electroencephalographic (EEG) study to investigate the incidence of head injuries mainly caused by heading the ball. 3% of the active and 30% of the former players complained of permanent problems such as headache,
dizziness
, irritability, impaired memory and
neck pain
. 35% of the active and 32% of former players had from slightly abnormal to abnormal EEG compared with 13 and 11% of matched controls, respectively. There were fewer definitely abnormal EEG changes among typical 'headers' (10%) than among 'nonheaders' (27%). The former players were also subjected to cerebral computed tomography (CT), a neuropsychological examination and a radiological examination of the cervical spine. One-third of the players were found to have central cerebral atrophy and 81% to have from mild to severe (mostly mild to moderate) neuropsychological impairment. The radiological examination of the cervical spine revealed a significantly higher incidence and degree of degenerative changes than in a matched control group.
...
PMID:Head and neck injuries in soccer. Impact of minor trauma. 143 95
This review focuses on the features of pseudotumor cerebri in the pediatric age group. There is no sex predilection in children, and obesity does not appear to be an important factor. Infants and young children may present with irritability, apathy, or somnolence, rather than headache.
Dizziness
and ataxia may also occur. Papilledema is infrequently noted in pediatric patients if the fontanelles are open or the sutures are split. Pre-adolescents appear more likely than adults or adolescents to have manifestations of their pseudotumor cerebri other than headache and papilledema, including lateral rectus pareses, vertical strabismus, facial paresis, back and
neck pain
. Among the etiologies that are particularly pertinent to children are tetracycline therapy, malnutrition or renutrition, and the correction of hypothyroidism. Children with pseudotumor cerebri are at risk for visual loss and their visual function must be closely monitored. Surgical intervention is imperative when vision is threatened.
...
PMID:Pediatric pseudotumor cerebri (idiopathic intracranial hypertension). 147 50
In a double blind prospective study of side effects to cervical myelography 38 patients were evaluated with neurologic examination, electroencephalography (EEG), brainstem evoked response (BER), somatosensory evoked responses (SSER), and continuous reaction times prior to and at 6 h and 24 h after myelography with either metrizamide or iohexol. A difference in the incidence of side effects (for example headache,
dizziness
, nausea, and
neck pain
) to the two different contrast media indicated that the inconveniences related to myelography were not only due to the spinal puncture. A contrast medium effect on the central nervous system varying from one agent to another was present. A high frequency of EEG deteriorations among patients with adverse clinical reactions and on only discrete affection upon BER indicated the reaction to be located to the cerebral cortex. Weakened tendon reflexes and reduced strength in the upper extremities were probably caused by blockade in the motor roots as SSER were normal indicating no affection of the sensory pathways. This hypothesis is in agreement with the fact that the patients were in the prone position in the first phase of the investigation causing the highest concentration of contrast medium around the motor roots and the anterior part of the spinal cord. Difference in metabolic effect may explain differences in side effects of metrizamide and iohexol.
...
PMID:Central nervous system reactions to cervical myelography. 191 Sep 98
To answer the question whether there are clinical arguments for organic lesions in patients with persistent complaints after whiplash-injuries, 200 patients referred for assessment by insurance companies and legal institutions, were investigated 2 years or more after the injury. There were 89 males and 111 females.
Pain in neck
, head and arms persisted in 195 patients.
Dizziness
persisted in 60 patients. Vestibular investigation revealed abnormalities in 48 of them and in 9 patients without
dizziness
. As these vestibular findings can not be understood from a neurological point of view, further research as to their significance is needed. Asthenopia was present in 3 cases and psychic disturbances in 27. Of 100 patients 87 regarded themselves as more or less severely invalidated. It is concluded that this investigation shows no evidence for organic lesions in these patients. This does not mean however that the complaints should be considered unjustified.
...
PMID:[The late whiplash syndrome; reality or fiction?]. 202 Mar 27
The relationship between psychosocial stress, cognitive performance and disability was assessed in 97 randomly selected common whiplash patients. Patients were investigated early after injury (mean 7.2 days, SD = 3.8) and again at 6 months. Assessment included different aspects of psychosocial stress, negative affectivity, personality traits and attentional functioning. At 6 months six patients (7%) showed partial or complete disability (disabled group) while 91 patients went back to work at pre-injury levels (non-disabled group). However, 26 patients from the latter group at 6 months were still symptomatic. The disabled and non-disabled groups did not differ with respect to psychosocial stress, negative affectivity and personality traits as assessed at baseline. At 6 months no significant differences were found between the disabled group and 26 symptomatic patients from the non-disabled group with respect to any of the assessed factors. The disabled group showed a combination of the following variables as assessed at baseline: greater age, initial
neck pain
intensity, initial back pain, blurred vision, and anxiety but less
dizziness
, sensitivity to noise and neurotic or behavioural problems in childhood.
...
PMID:Psychosocial stress, cognitive performance and disability after common whiplash. 842 Dec 55
The main purpose of the present study was to define and understand more clearly the headache, and in particular the long-lasting attacks or continuous pain associated with the Chiari type I malformation. Of 34 patients with the malformation, the 20 patients who had or had had headache problems were interviewed according to a standardized questionnaire. Many patients had several headache types. Ten patients had shortlasting "cough headache" attacks lasting less than 5 minutes, 14 patients had relatively long-lasting attacks lasting from 3 hours to several days, and 8 patients had continuous headache. Unlike the short-lasting cough headache attacks, long-lasting attacks were usually not precipitated by Valsalva-like maneuvers. With discriminant analysis, this headache could rather well be differentiated from that of migraine and cervicogenic headache patients. In many respects, however, this headache resembled cervicogenic headache with occipital and
neck pain
, pain in the arm, restriction of neck movement, and
dizziness
often accompanying the headache.
Dizziness
was the most distinguishing feature in the Chiari patients. These features, together with a beneficial effect of surgical treatment in some patients, suggest a causal relationship between the malformation and headache. From the histories of a few illustrative cases, it is suggested that the malformation may cause long-lasting headache attacks or continuous head pain by compression of the brainstem, central cord degeneration or intracranial hypertension.
...
PMID:Headache associated with the Chiari type I malformation. 849 55
Patients with spontaneous
neck pain
, headache,
dizziness
and/or pain to the upper limbs are frequently observed. Common cervicodynia, due to the involvement of arthromuscular structures of the cervical spine, was diagnosed in the patients with these symptoms in the absence of trauma or neurologic signs. The authors investigated the clinical-radiologic correlation in a series of 130 symptomatic patients and considered it a metameric disorder. The frequent association of many radiographic signs at the same level often prevents single radiographic signs from being assessed individually; therefore, the authors selected some patients with just one radiographic change per functional unit, to assess its relationship with clinical symptoms. The patients underwent anteroposterior, lateral and functional (flexion-extension) radiographs of the cervical spine. Vertebral rotation, detected on antero-posterior views as a spinous process deviation, was the most frequent isolated sign (79/130 cases) per metameric level, with strong clinical correlation (70/79 cases). Vertebral rotation was probably due to unilateral muscular stiffness. Other single radiologic signs per functional unit with strong clinical correlation follow: atloaxial rotation (13/130 with clinical-radiologic agreement of 12/13), functional blockage (13/130 with clinical-radiologic agreement of 11/13), angular flexion (21/130 with clinical-radiologic agreement of 19/21) and overall disc space thinning (12/130 with clinical-radiologic agreement of 10/12). Atloaxial rotation is represented as an asymmetry of the spaces between the odontoid and the lateral masses of the atlas; functional blockage consists of insufficient or lacking physiological width of the occipito-atlantoid or interspinous space in functional tests. Angular flexion consists of a single flexion angle of the cervical spine in functional tests; two or more angles indicate normal flexion of the cervical spine. This study confirmed the poorer clinical impact of degenerative changes, mostly interapophyseal arthrosis, than of other radiologic signs. Interapophyseal arthrosis alone was isolated in single functional units in 46/130 patients, mostly at C7-D1, with clinical-radiologic agreement in 19/46 patients. Clinical-radiologic correlation proved the high diagnostic value of anteroposterior, lateral and functional radiographs of the cervical spine in common cervicodynia, which make them a valuable tool for the clinician.
...
PMID:[Clinico-radiologic correlations in common neck pain]. 869 21
Useful clinical tests are lacking for the controversial entity "cervical vertigo". In earlier studies patients assumed to suffer from cervical vertigo or
dizziness
manifested disturbed postural control as compared to healthy subjects, but were hard to distinguish from patients with other balance disorders. Using posturography in which stance was perturbed by a vibratory stimulus applied towards the calf muscles, we studied 16 consecutive patients with recent onset of
neck pain
and concomitant complaints of vertigo or
dizziness
, but normal findings at otoneurological examination and electronystagmography; 18 patients with recent vestibular neuritis; and 17 healthy subjects. We performed system identification of a model of the control of upright human stance, using the vibratory stimulus as input and the recorded body sway as output. According to values for the three normalized parameters of the transfer function of the model (i.e., swiftness, stiffness, and damping), cervical vertigo patients were distinguished both from healthy subjects (P < 0.001), and from vestibular neuritis patients (P < 0.001). It was also possible to distinguish the vestibular neuritis group from the group of healthy subjects (P < 0.01). The results show disturbed postural control in patients with cervical vertigo to differ from that in patients with recent vestibular neuritis, and indicate posturographic assessment of human posture dynamics to be a possible future tool for use in diagnosing cervical vertigo.
...
PMID:Dizziness of suspected cervical origin distinguished by posturographic assessment of human postural dynamics. 871 8
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