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Query: UMLS:C0013362 (
dysarthria
)
3,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Advances in neuroimaging techniques have enabled the recognition of developmental malformations of the brain during life. Careful correlation of clinical and imaging features has identified several new syndromes. We have studied 31 patients with a congenital neurological syndrome characterised by
pseudobulbar palsy
, cognitive deficits, and bilateral perisylvian abnormalities on imaging studies. All patients had diplegia of the facial pharyngeal, and masticatory muscles, of variable severity. Some patients had slight
dysarthria
, whereas others were unable to speak. 85% of patients had mental retardation, ranging from mild to severe. Epilepsy was present in 27 (87%) and commonly consisted of atypical absence, atonic/tonic, tonic-clonic seizures, and, less frequently, partial attacks. Seizures were poorly controlled in 55%. Magnetic resonance imaging showed bilateral perisylvian cortical malformations consistent with polymicrogyria, confirmed at necropsy. Division of the corpus callosum in several patients resulted in seizure improvement. This congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome can be clinically diagnosed and confirmed by imaging studies. Further studies are necessary to elucidate its cause.
...
PMID:Congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome: study of 31 patients. The CBPS Multicenter Collaborative Study. 809 39
Anterior corpus callosotomy was performed in a patient with
pseudobulbar palsy
, mild mental retardation and intractable epilepsy related to congenital bilateral perisylvian cortical dysplasia. Before surgery, she had daily atonic drop attacks, rare and mainly sleep-related oromotor seizures, and multifocal and diffuse paroxysmal EEG discharges; after callosotomy, less abrupt atonic drop attacks recurred monthly and the EEG epileptiform abnormalities disappeared. Video-EEG sleep recordings revealed the clinically unsuspected serial recurrence of oromotor seizures, probably related to the clinically observed aggravation of
dysarthria
. New surgical techniques, in addition or alternative to callosotomy, should be developed in order to avoid or reduce the risk of aggravating some types of partial seizures in patients with bilateral cortical displastic lesions, intractable epilepsy and epileptic falls.
...
PMID:Anterior corpus callosotomy: effects in a patient with congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome and oromotor seizures. 853 19
Foix-Chavany-Marie Syndrome or anterior opercular syndrome constitutes the cortical form of
pseudobulbar palsy
. Its most common etiology is stroke in the region of either operculum. Clinically it can be characterized by severe
dysarthria
and facio-pharyngo-glosso-masticatory dysplasia with automatic-voluntary dissociation. An inversion of this classical dissociation can be seen in patients with emotional paralysis in the face, in whom asymmetry of emotional expression but conservation of voluntary movement can be seen. The lesional topography of this inverse dissociation corresponds to the supplementary motor area. both processes support the existence of an anatomical base which is different for emotional movements and voluntary types. We describe the clinical case of a 65 year old woman with a history of breast cancer who presented a subacute and progressive clinical picture of dysphagia and severe
dysarthria
. Upon neurological examination slight velo-palato-pharyngea was noticed; most relevant was paralysis of the facial muscles for either emotional or automatic movements while voluntary innervation was maintained. Neuroradiological studies show the presence of brain metastasis located in both Roland opercula. Although the neuroanatomic bases for automatic-voluntary dissociation remain unclear, our case lends weight to the evidence that impulses for voluntary and emotional movements originate in different cortical areas or else take a different route through the brain. We have been unable to find any cases of biopercular lesion with inverse dissociation described in the literature we reviewed.
...
PMID:[Biopercular lesion with inverse dissociation]. 855 92
We studied 36 patients with MRI-proven isolated acute pontine infarct. Corresponding to the constant territories of intrinsic pontine vessels, infarcts followed a predictable distribution, enabling us to delineate three main syndromes. Twenty-one patients had a ventral pontine infarct. Motor involvement varied from mild hemiparesis (ventrolateral pontine syndrome) to severe hemiparesis with bilateral ataxia and
dysarthria
(ventromedial pontine syndrome). In addition, three-fourths of the patients had clinical evidence for usually mild tegmental dysfunction. Eleven patients had a tegmental pontine infarct, presenting tegmental signs (eye movement disorders, cranial nerve palsies, sensory disturbances), and mostly mild motor deficits (tegmental pontine syndrome). Only four patients had alternating deficits, and these never corresponded to any of the so-called classic pontine syndromes. Infarcts in the medial and the extreme lateral tegmental territory were never observed in isolation, being always associated with cerebellar or larger (and multiple) infarctions in the posterior circulation. Four patients with a bilateral ventrotegmental pontine infarct presented with acute
pseudobulbar palsy
, bilateral motor deficits, and tegmental signs. The results of etiologic work-up emphasize the concept of basilar artery branch disease, which was the most common presumed cause of stroke (16/36, 44%). Basilar artery branch disease was particularly associated with large ventral infarcts, severe clinical symptomatology, progressive or fluctuating course, and local recurrence. Presumed small-artery disease (9/36, 25%) was usually associated with small ventral or tegmental infarcts and rapidly improving lacunar syndromes. Large-artery stenosis (8/36, 22%) and cardioembolism (1/36, 3%) were less common than in series of posterior circulation infarcts that include simultaneous pontine and extrapontine lesions. Recovery was good in two-thirds of the patients, the worse outcome being associated with large ventral infarcts.
...
PMID:Isolated infarcts of the pons. 855 68
Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a neurodegenerative disorder that is generally considered to be nonfamilial. We report a brother and sister with clinical and pathologic findings characteristic of PSP. Both developed parkinsonism in the eighth decade of life and within 5 years exhibited severe postural instability, bradykinesia, rigidity, dystonia,
dysarthria
, dysphagia, urinary incontinence,
pseudobulbar palsy
, and supranuclear oculomotor dysfunction but no tremor. Neither responded to levodopa and/or carbidopa. Their mother and, possibly, maternal grandfather reportedly suffered from a parkinsonian syndrome. Essential tremor occurred in the siblings' father and in two of the brother's three children. Autopsy in the brother at age 81 years and sister at age 79 years revealed changes typical of PSP with atrophy and neurofibrillary tangles in the globus pallidus, subthalamic nucleus, and rostral tegmental brainstem. No Lewy bodies were present. These cases are the first pair of relatives reported with autopsy confirmation of PSP in both and raise the question of genetic predisposition to PSP.
...
PMID:Autopsy-proven progressive supranuclear palsy in two siblings. 878 66
Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a distinct clinicopathological syndrome described by Steele, Richardson and Olszewski in 1964. Its clinical features include supranuclear ophthalmoplegia,
pseudobulbar palsy
,
dysarthria
, nuchal dystonia, and dementia. The neuropathological changes are characteristic and include cell loss, gliosis, and neurofibrillary degeneration in the basal ganglia, brain stem and cerebellum. But, all these clinical features are not present in the early stage and diagnosis of PSP is sometimes difficult. Atypical presentation of PSP includes the case without ophthalmoplegia, with markedly dementia, or pure akinesia. Pure akinesia presents freezing of gait, handwriting and speech without rigidity or tremor, and can be the initial and early symptom-complex of PSP.
...
PMID:[Progressive supranuclear palsy]. 901 35
In 1926, Foix, Chavany and Marie described an acquired syndrome of fasciopharyngoglossomasticatory diplegia resulting from bilateral infarction of the anterior operculum. Clinical features consisted of facial diplegia,
dysarthria
,
pseudobulbar palsy
, mild to severe mental retardation, and seizures. A developmental form, similar in presentation in adults with MRI findings consisting of bilateral perisylvian cortical malformation consistent with polymicrogyria involving the sylvian fissure and opercular cortex, has been recognized; but few pediatric cases of congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome (CBPS) have been reported. Over the past four years, we have encountered 12 cases of CBPS presenting in childhood. Age ranges were from 1 week to 11 years with a median of 2.25 years; six were less than two years of age. Seven were male and five female. Ten had bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria on MRI; two had unilateral perisylvian schizencephaly with contralateral perisylvian polymicrogyria. Clinical manifestations included developmental delay in 7; poor palatal function in 5; hypotonia in 4; arthrogryposis in 4; hemiparesis in 3; apnea in 3; paraparesis in 2; micrognathia in 2; pectus excavatum in 2; quadriparesis in 1; and hearing loss in 1. Seizures occurred in seven (58%) and consisted of infantile spasms (n = 1), generalized tonic-clonic (n = 1), complex partial (n = 2), partial motor (n = 2; 1 with secondary generalization), and febrile convulsions (n = 1). CBPS has different manifestations in the pediatric population than in adults. CBPS is more common than previously thought, is recognizable by MRI and should be suspected clinically in any infant or child presenting with oromotor dysfunction/pseudobulbar signs and developmental delay, especially if there are associated congenital malformations. Epilepsy is not a constant feature in the pediatric presentation and is variable in type and severity.
...
PMID:Pediatric congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome: clinical and MRI features in 12 patients. 930 9
Congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome (CBPS) is a recently described, neuronal migration disorder, characterized by
pseudobulbar palsy
, epilepsy and mental retardation and bilateral perisylvian dysplasia. A 15-year-old boy was diagnosed with CBPS according to the typical clinical, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features. The patient was suffering from atypical absence seizures, repeating daily in spite of antiepileptic drug therapy, since age 7 years. He had also experienced rare generalized tonic-clonic seizures and complex partial seizures. Neurological examination showed severe restriction of tongue movements, severe
dysarthria
, dysphagia, facial diplegia, mild pyramidal signs and moderate mental retardation. A computed tomographic (CT) scan demonstrated bilateral perisylvian enlargement. The diagnosis was corrected with MRI after six years. Frequent irregular generalized spike and wave abnormalities and focal sharp and slow waves over the posterior regions of both hemispheres were shown by electroencephalograms (EEG). The patient was treated with Na-Valproate, carbamazepine and lamotrigine but did now show any significant change in seizure frequency in the eight-year follow-up period. Intractable seizures, mental retardation and particularly congenital
pseudobulbar palsy
suggest this congenital entity. Those patients who exhibit these typically clinical features, must have MRI.
...
PMID:A clinically recognizable neuronal migration disorder: congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome. Case report with long-term clinical and EEG follow-up. 953 Sep 47
Freezing is a common and disabling symptom in patients with Parkinsonism. It affects most commonly the gait in the form of start hesitation and sudden immobility often resulting in falling. A higher incidence of freezing occurs in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) which is characterized clinically by a constellation of symptoms including supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, postural instability, axial rigidity,
dysarthria
, Parkinsonism, and
pseudobulbar palsy
. Pharmacologic therapy of PSP is currently disappointing and the disease progresses relentlessly to a fatal outcome within the first decade after onset. This report concerns a 67 year old woman with a diagnosis of PSP in whom freezing and frequent falling were the most disabling symptoms of the disease at the time of presentation. Both symptoms, which were rated 4 on the Unified Parkinson Rating Scale (UPRS) which grades Parkinsonian symptoms and signs from 0 to 4, with 0 being normal and 4 being severe symptoms, were resistant to treatment with dopaminergic drugs such as levodopa, amantadine, selegiline and pergolide mesylate as well as with the potent and highly selective noradrenergic reuptake inhibitor nortriptyline. Weekly transcranial applications of AC pulsed electromagnetic fields (EMFs) of picotesla flux density was associated with approximately 50% reduction in the frequency of freezing and about 80-90% reduction in frequency of falling after a 6 months follow-up period. At this point freezing was rated 2 while falling received a score of 1 on the UPRS. In addition, this treatment was associated with an improvement in Parkinsonian and pseudobulbar symptoms with the difference between the pre-and post EMF treatment across 13 measures being highly significant (p < .005; Sign test). These results suggest that transcranial administration AC pulsed EMFs in the picotesla flux density is efficacious in the treatment of PSP.
...
PMID:Transcranial AC pulsed applications of weak electromagnetic fields reduces freezing and falling in progressive supranuclear palsy: a case report. 962 98
We present a rare autopsy case of von Recklinghausen's disease with Moyamoya vessels and arteriovenous malformation. A 58-year-old female patient suffered from
dysarthria
and dysphagia. On examination, Parkinson's signs,
pseudobulbar palsy
, and muscular weakness of the left extremity and pyramidal tract signs were observed. An enhanced brain computed tomography revealed abnormal high-density network vessels at the thalamus and midbrain. By cerebral angiography, the following changes were observed; occlusion of the right internal carotid artery at the bifurcation, and abrupt narrowing and occlusion of the left internal carotid artery at the bifurcation and siphon. A lateral vertebral arteriography revealed telangiectasia at the basilar tip. The patient died of pulmonary thromboembolism at age 61. The vessels of the circle of Willis were hypoplastic. The optic nerves, infundibulum and mammillary body were covered with a large number of ectastic vessels. Arteriovenous malformations were observed in the bilateral occipital lobes. Histopathologically, the elastic lamina of Moyamoya vessel was conspicuously wavy and often duplicated or triplicated, and discontinued occasionally. Discontinuity of the elastic lamina of the perforating arteries and circumferential arteries supplied by the middle cerebral artery (MCA), anterior CA (ACA) and posterior CA (PCA), was also occasionally observed. It is likely that the Moyamoya vessels in this patient were compensatorily formed by congenital hypoplasia of the internal artery, MCA, ACA and PCA.
...
PMID:Moyamoya disease with concurrent von Recklinghausen's disease and cerebral arteriovenous malformation. 965 50
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