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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (
encephalomyelitis
)
13,017
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eight newborn calves showing
ataxia
were necropsied and examined histologically. Six of seven cerebrospinal fluid samples collected from these animals had neutralizing antibody for Akabane virus (AKV). All examined calves had nonsuppurative
encephalomyelitis
, localized mainly in the midbrain and spinal cord. Corresponding to the encephalitic lesion, AKV antigen was demonstrated in neuroglial cells in the brain stem and neuronal cells in the ventral horn of the spinal cord. This is the first study to demonstrate AKV antigen by immunohistochemistry in naturally infected newborn calves.
...
PMID:Demonstration of Akabane virus antigen using immunohistochemistry in naturally infected newborn calves. 1128 Mar 78
Stiff man syndrome (SMS), an uncommon neurological disease, is characterised by symmetrical muscle stiffness and spasms that often lead to skeletal deformity. Variants of the syndrome may involve one limb only (stiff leg syndrome), a variety of additional neurological symptoms and signs such as eye movement disturbances,
ataxia
, or Babinski signs (progressive
encephalomyelitis
with rigidity and myoclonus), or be associated with malignant disease (paraneoplastic SMS). Antineuronal autoimmunity and accompanying autoimmune diseases, most often insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, are characteristic features of SMS and its variants. The condition is frequently misinterpreted as psychogenic movement disturbance, but electromyographic abnormalities and the presence of autoantibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid help to establish the correct diagnosis. The aetiology of SMS is obscure. However, several features suggest that SMS is an autoimmune-mediated chronic
encephalomyelitis
. In line with this hypothesis, immunomodulation with a front-loaded methylprednisolone regimen reduces stiffness and spasms and improves other neurological symptoms in the majority of patients. Plasmapheresis or intravenous immunoglobulins are effective less frequently. For symptomatic treatment, the benzodiazepines are drugs of first choice. An alternative of last resort is baclofen administered intrathecally via an implanted pump device.
...
PMID:Stiff man syndrome. 1151 Jun 22
A 28-year-old woman initially suffered high fever and headache (day 1). Aseptic meningitis was diagnosed on day 3. Limb ataxia, however, appeared on day 7, and external ophthalmoplegia and drowsiness were recognized on day 8. Urinary disturbance and orthostatic hypotension appeared on day 13. Cerebrospinal fluid showed moderately high cell counts(mononuclear cells, 51/microliter; polynuclear cells, 9/microliter). MRI T2-weighted images showed high intensity lesions in the pons and mesencephalon. No serum anti-GQ1b IgG antibody was detected on day 4. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) viral capsid antigen-IgG antibody was positive, and EBV determined nuclear antigen antibody was seroconverted. EBV-DNA was detected in the CSF by PCR. These findings indicate prior infection by EBV. After intravenous dexamethasone therapy, these symptoms rapidly disappeared. Our patient showed external ophthalmoplegia,
ataxia
, and disturbance of consciousness, which are the cardinal signs in Bickerstaff's brainstem encephalitis. The time course of her neurological symptoms, the presence of meningitis, and the MRI findings, however, indicated the pathogenesis of acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis
rather than Bickerstaff's brainstem encephalitis. We diagnosed this patient as a brainstem encephalitis associated with EBV infection.
...
PMID:[A case of brainstem encephalitis associated with Epstein-Barr virus infection: differentiation of acute disseminated encephalomyelitis and Bickerstaff's brainstem encephalitis]. 1172 5
Hashimoto's encephalopathy may present with a wide variety of different neurological symptoms and signs. These include recurrent severe migrainous headache, psychoses, seizures,
ataxia
, dementia, stupor and coma. We present a personal series of 18 adult patients with Hashimoto's encephalopathy and a review of the literature in this paper. The natural history, laboratory abnormalities and neuroimaging data in these cases favour an immunopathological basis for this syndrome similar to relapsing acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis
. We suggest that Hashimoto's
encephalomyelitis
should be considered in the differential diagnosis of seizures, coma, atypical migraine and reversible dementia. Serological screening for anti-thyroid antibody should form part of the initial investigations in all relapsing and reversible encephalopathies.
...
PMID:The clinical spectrum, diagnosis, pathogenesis and treatment of Hashimoto's encephalopathy (recurrent acute disseminated encephalomyelitis). 1287 Oct 97
We report a 49-year-old previously healthy woman with acute onset of decrease in attention, dysarthria and
ataxia
, accompanied by drowsiness. On admission, there were cloudness of consciousness, hallucination and left hemiparesis. Cerebrospinal fluid study revealed a cell count of 1/mm3, and the cytology was class I with a slight increase in protein. MRI of the brain performed on admission showed multiple gadolinium-enhanced lesions with a T2 weighted high intensity area in the cerebral white matter. At first the patient was diagnosed as acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis
(ADEM), and treated with methylprednisolon pulse therapy. Soon after, she showed transient clinical improvement, but her condition soon worsened. MR spectroscopy revealed elevated choline peak, decreased NAA peak and lactate peak, which indicated a neoplastic lesion. The brain biopsy disclosed diffuse intravascular lymphoma (IVL). MRS was useful in the differential diagnosis of IVL from ADEM.
...
PMID:[MR spectroscopy findings of a case of intravascular malignant lymphoma: usefulness for differential diagnosis]. 1288 28
This study includes 90 children (41 female and 49 male) in the age range of 2-16 years with acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis
(ADEM). Thirty-three patients developed ADEM following rubella infection, 26 children following varicella infection, 20 suspected viral aetiology ADEM and 11 multiphasic disseminated
encephalomyelitis
(MDEM). All patients had neurological, routine laboratory and viral serology study with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Brain and/or spinal cord magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were performed in 14 children. A follow-up study was in 1-5 years. Typing of DRB1 gene HLA class II was performed in 38 patients. We established that the varicella and rubella groups had preferential patterns. Rubella ADEM is characterized by acute explosive onset, seizures, coma and moderate pyramidal signs, whereas varicella infection is characterized by cerebella
ataxia
and mild pyramidal dysfunction. The suspected viral aetiology ADEM was characterized by polisymptomatic presentation. MDEM was characterized by older age of patients (11.6 +/- 2.8 years), more severe and prolonged local neurological symptoms, including myelitis symptoms and marked extrapyramidal signs, with distinct demyelination in MRIs. As a whole, ADEM is associated with DRB1*01 and DRB1*017(03) in the Russian population. Thus, ADEM is a separate autoimmune condition with a specific mechanism due to the type of genetic immunoregulatory base and specificity of viral trigger.
...
PMID:Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis in children: clinical features and HLA-DR linkage. 1514 32
Blastomycosis was diagnosed in six nondomestic felids from eastern Tennessee, including two Asian lions (Panthera leo persicus), one African lion (Panthera leo), one Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris), one cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus), and one snow leopard (Panthera uncia). Clinical signs included lethargy, anorexia, weight loss, dyspnea, sneezing.
ataxia
, and paresis. Variable nonspecific changes included leukocytosis, monocytosis, moderate left shift of neutrophils, moderate hypercalcemia, hyperproteinemia, and hyperglobulinemia. Thoracic radiographs revealed interstitial and alveolar changes, consolidation or collapse of a lung lobe, bullae formation, and a pulmonary mass. Agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID) serology for Blastomyces dermatitidis was performed in five felids and was positive in three. The tiger had cerebral blastomycosis and was positive for AGID serologic tests of both cerebrospinal fluid and serum. One percutaneous lung aspirate in the snow leopard and one bronchial aspirate in an Asian lion demonstrated B. dermatitidis organisms. whereas tracheal wash samples and a nasal discharge were nondiagnostic in others. Treatment with itraconazole was attempted in four cats. The tiger improved before euthanasia, whereas the others did not survive beyond initial treatments. In four felids, B. dermatitidis was found in the lungs and tracheobronchial lymph nodes associated with a florid pyogranulomatous reaction; the tiger had a pyogranulomatous
encephalomyelitis
, and the cheetah had a single pulmonary granuloma. Thoracic radiography, cytologic examination of lung lesion aspirates, and B. dermatitidis AGID serology should be performed on clinically ill zoo felids in endemic areas to rule out blastomycosis.
...
PMID:Blastomycosis in nondomestic felids. 1458 83
A previously healthy female, aged 4 years 3 months, developed brainstem encephalitis with clinical manifestations of fever, decreased level of consciousness, and left facial and abducens paralysis 1 week after bilateral parotitis. Twenty days after remission of encephalitis, she manifested new symptoms of
ataxia
, dysarthria, and fever. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed multiple hyperintense lesions which were increased in size when compared with the first magnetic resonance imaging. She was treated with glucocorticoids and intravenous immunoglobulin. Forty-eight days after therapy, she was able to walk with support and recovered completely on follow-up. Brainstem encephalitis and acute disseminating
encephalomyelitis
are discussed as rare complications of mumps.
...
PMID:Brainstem encephalitis and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis following mumps. 1498 8
The murine leukemia virus (MLV) TR1.3 provides an excellent model to study the wide range of retrovirus-induced central nervous system (CNS) pathology and disease. TR1.3 rapidly induces thrombotic events in brain microvessels and causes cell-specific syncytium formation of brain capillary endothelial cells (BCEC). A single amino acid substitution, W102G, in the MLV envelope protein (Env) regulates the pathogenic effects. The role of Env in determining this disease phenotype compared to the induction of spongiform
encephalomyelitis
with a longer latency, as seen in several other MLV and in human retroviruses, was determined by studying in vitro-attenuated TR1.3. Virus cloned from this selection, termed TRM, induced progressive neurological disease characterized by
ataxia
and paralysis and the appearance of spongiform neurodegeneration throughout the brain stem and spinal cord. This disease was associated with virus replication in both BCEC and highly ramified glial cells. TRM did not induce syncytium formation, either in vivo or in vitro. Sequence and mutational analyses demonstrated that TRM contained a reversion of Env G102W but that neurological disease mapped to the single amino acid substitution Env S159P. The results demonstrate that single nucleotide changes within disparate regions of Env control dramatically different CNS disease patterns.
...
PMID:Disparate regions of envelope protein regulate syncytium formation versus spongiform encephalopathy in neurological disease induced by murine leukemia virus TR. 1525 11
An apparently novel neurological disease clinically characterized by shaking, tremors, seizures, staggering gait, and
ataxia
was first observed in farmed mink kits in Denmark in 2000 and subsequently in Sweden, Denmark, and Finland in 2001, and again in Denmark in 2002. Lymphoplasmacytic
encephalomyelitis
was found in the affected kits. The lesions were most severe in the brainstem and cerebellum and consisted of neuronal degeneration and necrosis, neuronophagia, focal and diffuse gliosis, perivascular cuffs formed by lymphocytes, plasma cells and macrophages, and segmental loss of Purkinje cells. Testing was conducted to determine the cause of the disease, including general virological investigations (virus culture, negative-staining electron microscopy, immunoelectron microscopy, polymerase chain reaction for herpesviruses, adenoviruses, pestiviruses, and coronaviruses), tests for specific viral diseases (canine distemper, Borna disease, Louping ill, West Nile virus infection, tick-borne encephalitis, Aleutian disease), tests for protozoa (Toxoplasma gondii, Neospora caninum, Encephalitozoon cuniculi), bacteria (general culture, listeria, Clamydophila psittaci), and intracerebral inoculation of neonatal mice. The results of all these investigations were negative. One group of 3 mink kits inoculated intracerebrally with brain homogenate of affected mink developed clinical signs and histological lesions similar to those observed in naturally infected mink. Based on the histopathological features, it is postulated that the disease is caused by a yet unidentified virus.
...
PMID:Investigations into shaking mink syndrome: an encephalomyelitis of unknown cause in farmed mink (Mustela vison) kits in Scandinavia. 1530 41
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