Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013362 (dysarthria)
3,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 74-year-old woman was admitted because of abdominal pain. A few weeks before this admission she had had a cerebral infarction in the right hemisphere, reflected by a left sided paralysis, dysarthria, depression and a slight cognitive disorder. The night before admission she woke up from a sharp, continuous pain in the right upper abdomen. Physical examination disclosed pain in the right upper abdomen on palpation. Laboratory tests showed a slight elevation of all 'liver' enzymes. A differential diagnosis of cholecystitis or pyelonephritis was made. Additional tests did not confirm either of these diagnoses. Because of immobilisation pulmonary embolism was then suspected. This diagnosis was confirmed by scintigraphy. The patient was treated and made a full recovery. Diagnostic errors can be made by faulty triggering and omitting verification. The diagnostic strategy for pulmonary embolism is a ventilation perfusion scan, which is followed in case of a non high-probability result by pulmonary angiography. It is emphasized that the presentation of pulmonary embolism can be aspecific.
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PMID:[Clinical thinking and decision making in practice. A patient with pain in the upper abdomen]. 1006 38

We present 3 sporadic cases of a subacute to chronic, progressive motor (i.e. weakness, ataxia, spasticity, dysarthria, and dysphagia) and cognitive disorder in adults of both sexes, without proven immunocompromise or malignancy. Neuroimaging studies revealed tiny calcifications with atrophy of the cerebrum, pons, and midbrain in 1 patient, cerebral atrophy in another, and cerebral atrophy and periventricular white matter hyperintensities in the third. Clinical diagnoses included cortico-pontine-cerebellar degeneration, mixed neurodegenerative disorder, progressive supranuclear palsy, diffuse Lewy body disease, and Lyme disease. One atrophic brain revealed widely disseminated, millimeter-sized gray lesions in cerebral white matter and obscured anatomic markings of the basis pontis. The most conspicuous microscopic feature in all was capillaries with focally piled up endothelial nuclei, some of which appeared to be multinucleated, or enlarged, hyperchromatic crescentic single nuclei. Although seen mostly without associated damage, they were also noted with white matter lesions displaying vacuolation, demyelination, spheroids, necrosis, vascular fibrosis, and mineralization; these were most severe in the basis pontis. Immunostains and probes to herpes simplex virus-I, -II, and -8; adenovirus, cytomegalovirus, varicella-zoster, Epstein-Barr virus, measles, JC virus, and herpes hominis virus-6 were negative. Electron microscopy revealed no virions in endothelial cells with multilobed or multiple nuclei and duplicated basal laminae. However, mycoplasma-like bodies, mostly 400 to 600 nm in size, were found in endothelial cell cytoplasm and capillary lumina. Platelets adhered to affected endothelial cells. Polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry of fixed samples for Mycoplasma fermentans were negative; other species of Mycoplasma remain viable pathogenic candidates.
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PMID:A novel cerebral microangiopathy with endothelial cell atypia and multifocal white matter lesions: a direct mycoplasmal infection? 2300 Dec 18

We evaluated clinical presentation, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with late-onset multiple sclerosis (LOMS). Fifty-two patients with definitive multiple sclerosis (MS) diagnosed after the age of 50 years were identified between 1991 and 2002. Data pertaining to clinical characteristics, CSF analysis, and cerebral and spinal MRI were compared with those of 52 young-onset MS (YOMS) patients matched for sex and disease duration. Mean age at the time of diagnosis was 57 years in the LOMS group - the oldest patient was 82 - and 29 years in the YOMS group. Motor symptoms were significantly more often present in the LOMS than in patients with YOMS (90 % vs. 67 %, p = 0.014). Visual symptoms, residual signs of optic neuritis, and dysarthria were less frequent for LOMS. Sensory symptoms, ataxia, oculomotor symptoms, cognitive disorder, or fatigue did not differ between both groups. The majority of LOMS patients (83 %) had a primary progressive disease course, whereas 94 % of the YOMS group had a relapsing-remitting course. MRI showed typical multifocal supratentorial (LOMS vs. YOMS: 96 % vs. 98 %) and infratentorial (44 % vs. 62 %) lesions without significant group differences. Of particular interest, spinal lesions were more common (81 %) in LOMS compared to YOMS (48 %, p = 0.024), and cerebellar lesions were less frequent in the LOMS group (11 % vs. 44 %, p = 0.001). Gadolinium-enhanced lesions were initially present in less LOMS patients (15 %) than in YOMS (63 %, p < 0.001). CSF analysis revealed pleocytosis less frequently in LOMS (34 %) compared to YOMS (67 %, p = 0.006) but oligoclonal banding occurred without in both groups without differences. YOMS patients responded to corticosteroids (93 %) to a significantly greater degree than LOMS patients (73 %; p = 0.004). For individuals who develop LOMS, a primary progressive course is frequent, with motor symptoms as the prominent feature. Vigilance is necessary to recognise MS in this population because of its unusual presentation.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics of patients with late-onset multiple sclerosis. 1828 94

Sarcoidosis is a chronic disease of unknown aetiology. Neurosarcoidosis is registered in 5% of patients with sarcoidosis. Clinical manifestations of sarcoidosis are numerous and diverse. Manifestation of Neurosarcoidosis includes partial- and grand-mal seizures, low-grade fever, headache, increased intracranial pressure, visual disturbances, diabetes insipidus, amenorrhea- galacterorrhea syndrome and pituitary failure, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, hyperprolactinemia, unilateral and bilateral facial palsy, infiltration of meninges (aseptic meningitis) and nerve roots, leptominingitis, pachymeningitis with cranial neuropathies, pseudotumor, mild cognitive disorder, psychosis, delirium, dementia, disorientation, amnesia, progressive visual deterioration and proptosis, axonal polyneuropathies, mononeuropathies, chronic polyradiculoneuritis, peripheral neuropathy, cranial nerve abnormalities, radiculopathies, peripheral neuropathy, mononeuritis multiplex, progressive numbness and deep sensation disturbance in bilateral lower extremities, hemiplegia, hyperreflexia with pathological reflexes and hypesthesia, upward gaze palsy, spinal cord compression, dysarthria, dysphagia, weakness, episodes of blurred vision, diplopia, intracerebral hemorrhage, neuro-ophthalmic manifestations, intranuclear ophthalmoplegia, dysorientation, vasculitis presenting with strokes, intracranial hypothalamic lesion, paresthesis, hemiparesis, myelopathy in the cervico-thoracic region, lumbar pain, sensory level and inability of lateral gaze (Tab. 2, Ref. 60).
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PMID:Clinical manifestations of neurosarcoidosis. 1982 43