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)

We report a patient with medial medullary infarction who showed deep sensory impairment as his prominent neurological manifestation. A 54-year-old man with a history of hypertension was admitted to our hospital with numbness of the bilateral upper and lower extremities, followed by dysarthria and right hemiparesis. Physical examination revealed no abnormalities except for high blood pressure. He hiccuped continuously. On neurological examination, he exhibited dysarthria, mild dysphagia and right hemiparesis without facial or lingual paresis. Sensitivity to light touch and pinprick was normal, but sensitivity to vibration and joint position was severely decreased in the bilateral upper and lower extremities, predominantly in the lower extremities and on the right side in the upper extremities. He had been treated with antiedema agents and thromboxane synthetase inhibitor. His hiccups stopped within two weeks, and his right hemiparesis gradually improved within one month. However, his deep sensory impairments remained prominent. Blood examinations disclosed positive lupus anticoagulant. MRI showed bilateral infarction at the medial portion of the upper medulla oblongata, extending to both pyramids, especially on the left. Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) after median nerve stimulation showed P14 and the later components with prolonged latency. No SEP were recorded after posterior tibial nerve stimulation. The latency of P14 was well correlated with the severity of deep sensory impairments in the upper extremities. Neurological manifestations of our patient are not typical of medial medullary infarction, and are informative about the functional anatomy of the deep sensory tract in the medulla oblongata. We discuss the relation of the intractable hiccups to the bilateral medial medullary lesions, and emphasize the importance of lupus anticoagulant as one of the risk factors in brainstem infarction.
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PMID:[A case of medial medullary infarction with prominent deep sensory impairment]. 892 33

The aim of this study was to investigate whether the side and location of single small infarcts (< or = 3 cm) in the corona radiata (28 patients) and pontine base (36 patients) influence the incidence of contralateral upper or lower limb paresis and dysarthria. While the severity of contralateral limb paresis was not significantly different between right and left corona radiata lesions, infarcts presenting with contralateral limb paresis and/or dysarthria presented significantly more often in the left than in the right hemisphere, and left infarcts were significantly smaller than right infarcts. Lesions related to dysarthria and upper and lower limb paresis were arranged anterior-posteriorly in the paraventricular corona radiata region. Pontine base infarcts presenting with dysarthria also presented significantly more often in the left than in the right pons. Dysarthria showed a significant correlation with lesions presenting in the dorsomedial portion of the pontine base, upper limb paresis with those in the dorsomedial and dorsolateral portions, and lower limb paresis with lesions in the ventromedial portion. These results suggest greater influence of the left descending motor fibers on contralateral limb movement and articulation than of the right and face-arm-leg somatotopy of motor fibers in the paraventricular corona radiata region (anteroposterior) and in the pontine base (dorsoventral).
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PMID:The side and somatotopical location of single small infarcts in the corona radiata and pontine base in relation to contralateral limb paresis and dysarthria. 895

We describe eight patients with slowly progressive speech production deficit combining speech apraxia, dysarthria, dysprosody and orofacial apraxia, and initially no other deficit in other language and non-language neuropsychological domains. Long-term follow-up (6-10 years) in 4 cases showed an evolution to muteness, bilateral suprabulbar paresis with automatic-voluntary dissociation and frontal lobe cognitive slowing without generalised intellectual deterioration. Most disabled patients presented with an anterior opercular syndrome (Foix-Chavany-Marie syndrome), and pyramidal or extrapyramidal signs. CT and MRI findings disclosed asymmetric (left > right) progressive cortical atrophy of the frontal lobes predominating in the posterior inferior frontal region, notably the operculum. SPECT and PET revealed a decreased cerebral blood flow and metabolism, prominent in the left posterior-inferior frontal gyrus and premotor cortex, extending bilaterally in the most advanced cases. Pathological study of two cases showed non-specific neuronal loss, gliosis, and spongiosis of superficial cortical layers, mainly confined to the frontal lobes, with no significant abnormalities in the basal ganglia, thalamus, cerebellum, brain stem (except severe neuronal loss in the substantia nigra in one case), and spinal cord. We propose to call this peculiar syndrome Slowly Progressive Anarthria (SPA), based on its specific clinical presentation, and its metabolic and pathological correlates. SPA represents another clinical expression of focal cortical degeneration syndromes, that may overlap with other similar syndromes, specially primary progressive aphasia and the various frontal lobe dementias.
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PMID:Slowly progressive anarthria with late anterior opercular syndrome: a variant form of frontal cortical atrophy syndromes. 899 3

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a progressive degenerative disease of upper and lower motor neurons with a prevalence of 4.3/100.000. The clinical symptoms include peripheral weakness and central spastic paresis and bulbar paralysis (weakness of mimic muscles, atrophy of the tongue, dysarthria). The prognosis leads to death within a few years. Pathogenetic factors are free O2-radicals, a disturbance of glutamate-metabolism, abnormal accumulation of neuronal proteins and autoimmunological mechanisms.
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PMID:[Clinical aspects of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis]. 901 7

We reported five patients having presented only with clumsy hand and dysarthria which resulted from motor paresis confined to one side of the fingers and the ipsilateral face and tongue. All of them were right-handed, and their manifestation was transient. They had no abnormalities of muscle tonus and sensation, and no ataxia. The features of these cases differed from those of the dysarthria-clumsy hand syndrome because of absence of ataxia, and could be distinguished from pure motor hemiplegia by a motor paresis with cheiro-oral topography. MRI examinations showed a localized lesion at the border between internal capsule and corona radiata (two cases), or in the corona radiata just over this region (three cases). In the former cases in which the internal capsule was involved, we confirmed the lesion in the genu and anterior half of the posterior limb of the internal capsule. The lesion was on the left side in all five patients. It has been known that the pyramidal tract consists of the large and small fibers. The large ones are localized in the posterior part of the posterior limb of the internal capsule, and the damage of them produces sustained and serious motor paralysis. The small ones are widely distributed in the genu and the posterior limb of the internal capsule. The findings of our study suggest that the small fibers have adjacent somatotopy for the hand and mouth in the region of the genu and the anterior part of the posterior limb of the internal capsule, and that the damage of them may lead to mild, transient motor paresis without spasticity.
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PMID:[Motor paresis with cheiro-oral topography due to small infarct in the internal capsule or the corona radiata]. 914 66

The side-effects and complications of posteroventral pallidotomy are analysed in 138 consecutive patients who underwent 152 pallidotomies. Transient side-effects, lasting less than three months, appeared in 18% of the patients, that is, 16.5% of the surgical procedures. Long term complications, lasting more than 6 months, were noted in 10% of the patients, that is, 9.2% of the surgical procedures. Sixteen complications occurred alone or in various combinations in 14 patients and included fatigue and sleepiness (2), worsening of memory (4), depression (1), aphonia (1), dysarthria (3), scotoma (1), slight facial and leg paresis (2) and delayed stroke (2). Complications such as dysarthria and paresis could be attributed to MR- or CT-verified pallidal lesions lying too medially and encroaching on the internal capsule. Two of the patients with deterioration in memory had some memory impairment before surgery, and the aphonic patient had dysphonia preoperatively. The study suggests that stereotactic MRI and careful impedance monitoring and macro-stimulation of the posteroventral pallidum area should be sufficient for minimizing the risk of complications; the stereotactic lesion should be centered within the posterior ventral pallidum without involvement of internal capsule. It is concluded that pallidotomy is a safe procedure if performed on cognitively alert patients, and it seems that both the incidence and especially the severity of complications are lower for posteroventral pallidotomy than for thalamotomy.
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PMID:The side-effects and complications of posteroventral pallidotomy. 923 12

Sixty-three patients with tick-borne encephalitis were studied for sequelae up to 5 years after the acute illness (median: 12 months, range: 1-44 months). Patients were examined clinically, by neuropsychological testing and by electroencephalography. The clinical presentation during the acute stage was as follows: Meningitis (M,n = 12), Meningoencephalitis (Me,n = 27), Meningoencephalomyelitis (My,n = 15), and Meningoencephaloradiculitis (R,n = 9). A total of 59 patients reported a neurasthenic syndrome after discharge, which correlated with the severity of the acute illness. Twenty patients were not able to work because of reduced stress tolerance, fatigue or an elevated emotional sensitivity, which lasted for 3 months at most. In some patients hypacusis (n = 7), severe dysarthria and dysphagia (n = 4) remained essentially unimproved for years following the acute illness. While in 8/9 patients with radiculitis paresis of the extremities improved well over months to years, improvement was quite limited in all patients with myelitis. In 41/55 patients, investigations by electroencephalography revealed normal findings even within months after acute illness. Persistent cognitive deficits were present only in 7/11 patients with a severe course of disease.
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PMID:[Follow-up and prognosis of early summer meningoencephalitis]. 927 61

Vertebral artery dissections (VADs) following a variety of minor traumatic mechanisms have been previously reported. This article reports 2 cases of VAD with delayed recognition following motor vehicle collisions (MVCs). The first VAD patient developed major neurologic abnormalities 28 hours after an MVC. The second VAD patient presented with 3 weeks of neck and head pain beginning 8 weeks after an MVC and subsequent chiropractic manipulation. The anatomy and pathophysiology of VAD are reviewed. Early ED recognition prior to the onset of major neurologic deficits (e.g., paresis, dysarthria, ataxia, or altered mental status) is emphasized. An algorithm for the ED management of the entity is suggested.
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PMID:Vertebral artery dissection. 933 33

Clinical records of 89 patients with lacunar stroke were reviewed, to evaluate the occurrence of neurological syndrome and to correlate the frequency of its signs with the localization of ischaemic lesions seen in neuroimaging examinations. "Pure" motor paresis (50%) and sensory-motor paresis (27%) were the most common clinical syndromes. The localization in putamen and corona radiata (37%), or in anterior part of the internal capsule and in the head of the caudate nucleus (35%) were the most frequent sites of localization. In the group of patients with lesions in anterior part of internal capsule or with lesions in putamen and corona radiata "pure" motor paresis was the most common clinical syndrome. Additionally, in the group of patients with lesions in putamen and corona radiata sensory motor paresis was also frequently observed (44%). During one year of follow-up 22 patients died. Dysarthria and disability (Barthel Index < 60) were the independent predictors of one year mortality. Non-neurological complications were the main cause of death.
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PMID:[Lacunar strokes: clinical conditions vs. localization of lesions in neuroimaging studies]. 944 38

In a family with two sets of dizygotic twins, three, possibly all four, siblings were affected by the same disorder. The parents were unrelated and the illness seemed limited to one generation. Onset was in the early to mid-20s with tics and choreiform movements, dysarthria, and dysphagia. Two twins had epilepsy. There was a marked dyscoordination of bulbar musculature reminiscent of pseudobulbar paresis. Involuntary movements were prominent during the first years, but then disappeared and were replaced by an akinetic-rigid parkinsonian appearance in the late stage. The intellect remained largely intact. Tendon reflexes were reduced. Varying degrees of peripheral nerve changes were seen. Two patients died after 22-24 years from causes indirectly related to the main illness. Marked degenerative changes were found in the caudate nucleus and putamen. Acanthocytes in significant numbers could not be detected in peripheral blood. Lipoproteinelectrophoresis was normal. Creatine kinase levels were moderately raised in one patient, normal in the others. Although certain clinical resemblances exist with neuroacanthocytosis, the exact nosologic status of the disorder has not been determined.
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PMID:Progressive pseudobulbar paresis, early choreiform movements, and later rigidity: appearance in two sets of dizygotic twins in the same family. 961 54


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