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)

A 42-year old woman was admitted to our hospital because of sudden onset of dizziness and oscillopsia. Neurologic examination revealed horizontal, binocular pendular nystagmus, which increase their amplitude on left lateral gaze. She also showed that mild right blephaloptosis, right facial spasms, increased tendon reflexes and positive pathological reflexes of four limbs and mild chorea-like movement of both feet. MRI showed an abnormal high intensity area on a T2weighted and proton density images located at the right tegmentum mesencephali. She was diagnosed as clinically probable multiple sclerosis according to the Poser's criteria. The nystagmus was suppressed by clonazepam and diazepam. To our knowledge, it is a first report of acquired pendular nystagmus associated with the lesion of tegmentum mesencephali. We speculate that the involvement of the tract of paramedian pontine reticular formation causes the nystagmus and the dysfunction of GABAnergic neurons might play an important role of the nystagmus.
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PMID:[Acquired pendular nystagmus associated with the lesion of tegmentum mesencephali in a patient with probable multiple sclerosis]. 1129 65

The chronic myeloproliferative disorders are a group of diseases in which there is an increased proliferation of one or more subtypes of myeloid cells; they include essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV), and primary myelofibrosis (PMF). In ET and PV the main neurologic manifestations are headaches, dizziness and macro- and microvascular, both venous and arterial, thrombosis and intracranial hemorrhages. Paresthesias and chorea also occur in PV. In PMF neurologic complications are very rare and consist predominantly of spinal cord compression by extramedullary hematopoiesis tissue.
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PMID:Chronic myeloproliferative diseases. 2436 72

Spontaneous intracranial hypotension (SIH) is a rare and often underdiagnosed condition, which commonly results from a cerebrospinal fluid leak. The classic clinical presentation of SIH is a postural headache and dizziness. Less frequent complications include nausea, neck stiffness, and even coma. This case report describes a 70-year-old woman with an initial complaint of postural headaches and sleep attacks, who developed a 22-month progressive history of personality and behavioral changes, cognitive decline, urinary incontinence, chorea, and dysarthria. Although no specific cerebrospinal fluid leak was identified, the patient was suspected of having SIH and her symptoms completely reversed after a 2-month course of steroids. This case highlights that SIH represents a rare and reversible cause of a wide spectrum of neurological symptoms, including dementia. Neurologists should be aware of this diagnosis when evaluating patients with neurological signs and symptoms that cannot otherwise be explained.
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PMID:Spontaneous Intracranial Hypotension Presenting With Frontotemporal Dementia: A Case Report. 3017 45