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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0013362 (
dysarthria
)
3,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Syringobulbia
is a term which has been clinically applied to brain stem symptoms or signs in patients with syringomyelia.
Syringobulbia
clefts are found on investigation or at necropsy caused by cutting outwards of the CSF under pressure from the fourth ventricle into the medulla. These should be differentiated from the ascending
syringobulbia
which may occur from upward impulsive fluid movements in a previously established syringomyelia. Clinical analysis of 54 patients suggests that bulbar features are most often found with neither of the above mechanisms but are due to the effects of pressure differences acting downward upon the hind-brain with consequent distortion of the cerebellum and brainstem, traction on cranial nerves or indentation of the brain-stem by vascular loops. The commonest symptoms in the 54 patients were headache (35), vertigo (27), dysphonia or
dysarthria
(21), trigeminal paraesthesiae (27), dysphagia (24), diplopia (16), tinnitus (11), palatal palsy (11) and hypoglossal involvement (11). Careful attention to hydrocephalus is advisable before craniovertebral surgery, but the decompression of the hindbrain and the correction of craniospinal pressure dissociation remains the mainstay of surgical treatment. The results of careful surgery are good, 45 of the 54 cases reported improvement. Most of the reported deterioration occurred in a few patients who did conspicuously badly.
...
PMID:Syringobulbia: a surgical appraisal. 147 91
Syringobulbia
is an uncommon lesion of the central nervous system. It is defined as a pathological cavitation of the brain stem. The most common symptoms are headache, vertigo, dysphonia or
dysarthria
, trigeminal paraesthesia, dysphagia, diplopia, tinnitus, palatal palsy.
Syringobulbia
occurs with atlantoaxial congenital abnormalities (Chiari malformation), infection, tumours, and other causes. The idiopathic
syringobulbia
is however a rare finding. Early surgical treatment is the treatment of choice. We report on a 58-year old female patient with idiopathic
syringobulbia
. She complained of occipital headaches and vertigo. On examination she had horizontal nystagmus and diplopia. Occipital headaches and vertigo were improved after operation. We review the literature on
syringobulbia
, and discuss the clinical features of this uncommon condition.
...
PMID:[Isolated idiopathic syringobulbia: case report and summary of the literature]. 877 68
Syringobulbiais very rare condition defined as slit-like fluid cavity in the brain stem. Several conditions have been reported to be associated with
syringobulbia
including neoplasms, spinal cord traumas or lesions such as tethered cord, hind-brain herniation, infections such as meningitis and in isolation. Although post-traumatic syringomyelia has been wieldy described previously, traumatic brain injury has not been reported as the mechanism and etiology of isolated
syringobulbia
. We herein report a 24-year old man with previous history of severe traumatic brain injury who presented with recent onset inability to walk or coordinate movements, ataxia, dysphonia,
dysarthria
, bilateral third nerve palsy with fixed dilated pupils and eyes deviated outward and downward. He was further diagnosed to have isolated
syringobulbia
extending to upper pons and lower midbrain. Isolated post-traumatic
syringobulbia
is extremely rare condition presenting insidiously with cranial nerve palsies, ataxia and
dysarthria
.
...
PMID:Isolated Post-Traumatic Syringobulbia; Case Report and Review of the Literature. 2716 91