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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sixty eight cases of chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH) surgically treated (December 1984-December 1988) with twist drill craniostomy (3-4 mm) and application of a closed drainage system (CDS) are reviewed. The patients were distributed in four groups depending on the density of the hematoma: hypodense (36 cases), isodense (6 cases), of mixed density (22 cases) and hyperdense (4 cases). In about one third of patients (25 cases) the duration of symptoms was shorter than one week, in 21 cases it was between one week and one month, and in 22 patients it was longer than one month. 77.95% of cases had a preceding head injury. Headache and motor deficits were the leading symptoms, being present in 43 (63.2%) and 42 (61.7%) cases, respectively. Twelve patients (17.6%) were comatose on admission. Twelve patients required reoperation. Six patients died (8.8%). The preoperative neurological status and associated systemic diseases influenced the outcome. We think that limited craniostomy with CDS is the therapy of choice for symptomatic CSDH.
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PMID:[Symptomatic chronic subdural hematoma. Analysis of 68 cases treated surgically with small craniotomy and placement of a closed drainage system]. 186 63

A case is reported of ruptured dissecting aneurysm of the intracranial vertebral artery (VA) operated on with VA trapping and bilateral posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) side-to-side anastomosis. A 42-year-old male suddenly developed severe headache and vomiting. On admission, 3 hours later, he was in a state of moderate confusion (Japan Coma Scale 3) and had neck stiffness. Computed tomography (CT) revealed diffuse subarachnoid hemorrhage, especially thick in the posterior fossa with right side dominance. Right vertebral angiography disclosed a fusiform dilatation with proximal narrowing of the right VA which originated just proximal to the VA-PICA junction. Lateral suboccipital craniectomy was undertaken with the patient in a left park bench position. Right VA was dilated and discolored black, and right PICA arose from the proximal portion of this aneurysmal dilatation. Since it was impossible to clip the VA distal to the PICA for the proximal clip-occlusion, the VA including the VA-PICA junction was trapped. Considering the risk of developing infarction at the PICA territory, bilateral PICA was anastomosed at their posterior medullary segment in a side-to-side fashion because the occipital artery (OA) had been cut at the skin incision and could not be used for the OA-PICA anastomosis. The postoperative course was benign, but a mild lateral medullary syndrome developed. CT revealed no abnormal low density area and left vertebral angiography demonstrated the patency of the bypass. Thereafter, the deficit subsided gradually and the patient was discharged. He is presently working without neurological deficit.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Vertebral dissecting aneurysm treated with trapping and bilateral posterior inferior cerebellar artery side-to side anastomosis; case report]. 188 26

We report three cases of ruptured cerebral aneurysms associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). A 52-year-old woman (case 1) with a fifteen-year history of systemic lupus erythematosus suddenly lost consciousness. She was admitted in a state of deep coma. A computed tomography (CT) scan revealed acute hydrocephalus and diffuse subarachnoid hemorrhage in the basal, interhemispheric and bilateral Sylvian cisterns. Fifteen years prior to this admission, cerebral angiograms demonstrated no cerebral aneurysm. She underwent ventricular drainage immediately. Postoperatively, her condition did not improve, and she died on the 18th day. During the autopsy, two saccular cerebral aneurysms were found: one aneurysm was at the right middle cerebral artery bifurcation, and another one was on the anterior communicating artery, which had disruption of the internal elastic lamina and medial smooth muscle, and infiltration of inflammatory cells. In the major cerebral arteries, for example the bilateral internal carotid arteries, disruption or dissection of the internal elastic lamina, intimal fibrosis and transmural infiltration of inflammatory cells were observed. The second patient, a 36-year-old woman with a six-year history of SLE, was admitted to our hospital with sudden severe headache. A CT scan showed subarachnoid hemorrhage, and cerebral angiograms disclosed saccular cerebral aneurysms on the anterior communicating artery and the left superior cerebellar artery, and a fusiform one on the left posterior cerebral artery. Surgery was not recommended because of her multiple medical problems. Her consciousness improved gradually over 2 months. She was transferred to the department of internal medicine for treatment of renal failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinicopathological studies of three cases of cerebral aneurysms associated with systemic lupus erythematosus]. 189 Oct 53

Nontraumatic intracerebellar hemorrhage is rare during childhood. We report such a case due to rupture of arteriovenous malformation, in which surgery was able to bring about satisfactory recovery from deep coma without spontaneous respiration. This case shows that operative treatment should not be abandoned even though neurological deficits are very serious. This 6-year-old boy suddenly complained of headache while playing in a nursery and became restless. Because of deterioration of consciousness level followed by loss of respiration, he was transferred from a local physician to our clinic 4 hours after the onset. Computerized tomography scan disclosed a hematoma in the cerebellar hemisphere. Emergency suboccipital craniectomy was carried out 1 hour later. Immediately after operation, respiration was restored. Vertebral arteriography was performed 1 month after the operation, when the patient had recovered but could barely communicate with his family. The study revealed a small arteriovenous malformation supplied by the anterior inferior cerebellar artery. The malformation was removed 3 months after admission. The postoperative course was uneventful and the patient attended a primary school without neurological deficits except for slight ataxia 6 months after the onset.
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PMID:[A case of intracerebellar hemorrhage in infancy]. 189 25

Listeriosis occurred in two patients, a 46-year-old woman and a 41-year-old man, in the course of an underlying malignant disease. The woman had a metastasizing pancreatic apudoma, requiring partial pancreas resection with splenectomy. After the end of cytostatic treatment she developed headaches and fever up to 40 degrees C. Listeria monocytogenes was demonstrated in the blood and cerebrospinal fluid. She went into coma on the day after hospital admission and, despite antibiotic administration, she died on the fourth day of treatment. The 41-year-old man was suspected of having an angioimmunoblastic lymphoma. Severe haemolytic anaemia (haemoglobin 4.4 g/dl) was treated with glucocorticoids, massive blood transfusions and splenectomy, at first without success. During immunosuppressive treatment with prednisone and cyclophosphamide the haemoglobin rose. But he was still feverish with nocturnal sweating. Neurological symptoms of motor aphasia, cranial nerve deficits and incomplete hemiparesis rapidly developed. Computed tomography revealed a focus in the internal capsule. Blood culture grew Listeria. The focal encephalitis healed with minor sequelae after antibiotic treatment. Both patients had hypogammaglobulinaemia, but no granulocytopenia. It is stressed that listeriosis should be included in the differential diagnosis in cases of septicaemia or cerebral infection occurring in the course of malignant disease.
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PMID:[Listeriosis in malignant diseases]. 190 99

Three members of a family developed eosinophilic myelomeningoencephalitis following ingestion of Pila snails. They were father, daughter and son and had similar clinical presentations. Two days after ingestion of snails, they developed a generalized itchy maculopapular rash followed by myalgia, marked paresthesia, fever and headache. Two days later there was weakness of the extremities which was progressive in severity involving the legs more than the arms. They later developed urine retention and cloudiness of consciousness. Two patients progressed to coma, one of whom died after 3 weeks and the other died at home 9 months after the onset. Autopsy of the fatal case revealed multiple tracks and cavities with the presence of Angiostrongylus cantonensis in the brain and various levels of the spinal cord.
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PMID:Eosinophilic myelomeningoencephalitis caused by Angiostrongylus cantonensis: a report of three cases. 194 89

In Canada in late 1987 there was an outbreak of an acute illness characterized by gastrointestinal symptoms and unusual neurologic abnormalities among persons who had eaten cultivated mussels. Health departments in Canada solicited reports of this newly recognized illness. A case was defined as the occurrence of gastrointestinal symptoms within 24 hours or of neurologic symptoms within 48 hours of the ingestion of mussels. From the more than 250 reports received, 107 patients met the case definition. The most common symptoms were vomiting (in 76 percent of the patients), abdominal cramps (50 percent), diarrhea (42 percent), headache, often described as incapacitating (43 percent), and loss of short-term memory (25 percent). Nineteen patients were hospitalized, of whom 12 required intensive care because of seizures, coma, profuse respiratory secretions, or unstable blood pressure. Male sex and increasing age were associated independently with the risks of hospitalization and memory loss. Three patients died. Mussels associated with this illness were traced to cultivation beds in three river estuaries on the eastern coast of Prince Edward Island. Domoic acid, which can act as an excitatory neurotransmitter, was identified in mussels left uneaten by the patients and in mussels sampled from these estuaries. The source of the domoic acid appears to have been a form of marine vegetation, Nitzschia pungens, also identified in these waters in late 1987. The contaminated mussels from Prince Edward Island were removed from the market, and no new cases have occurred since December 1987. We conclude that the cause of this outbreak of a novel and severe intoxication was the ingestion of mussels contaminated by domoic acid, a potent excitatory neurotransmitter.
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PMID:An outbreak of toxic encephalopathy caused by eating mussels contaminated with domoic acid. 207 68

In late 1987 there was an outbreak in Canada of gastrointestinal and neurologic symptoms after the consumption of mussels found to be contaminated with domoic acid, which is structurally related to the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate. We studied the neurologic manifestations in 14 of the more severely affected patients and assessed the neuropathological findings in 4 others who died within four months of ingesting the mussels. In the acute phase of mussel-induced intoxication, the patients had headache, seizures, hemiparesis, ophthalmoplegia, and abnormalities of arousal ranging from agitation to coma. On neuropsychological testing several months later, 12 of the patients had severe anterograde-memory deficits, with relative preservation of other cognitive functions. Eleven patients had clinical and electromyographic evidence of pure motor or sensorimotor neuronopathy or axonopathy. Positron-emission tomography of four patients showed decreased glucose metabolism in the medial temporal lobes. Neuropathological studies in the four patients who died after mussel-induced intoxication demonstrated neuronal necrosis and loss, predominantly in the hippocampus and amygdala, in a pattern similar to that observed experimentally in animals after the administration of kainic acid, which is also structurally similar to glutamate and domoic acid. We conclude that intoxication with domoic acid causes a novel and distinct clinicopathologic syndrome characterized initially by widespread neurologic dysfunction and then by chronic residual memory deficits and motor neuronopathy or axonopathy.
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PMID:Neurologic sequelae of domoic acid intoxication due to the ingestion of contaminated mussels. 207 68

We analysed two of our own and 21 patients described in the literature with listeria brainstem encephalitis. The disease was characterised by a prodromal state with fever, nausea and headache followed by severe brainstem dysfunction with multiple cranial nerve palsies, ataxia, respiratory insufficiency and coma. The diagnosis was established by isolation of Listeria monocytogenes from CSF and/or serum. Serological tests are without diagnostic evidence. Cerebrospinal fluid examination may not initially point to a bacterial infection. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging technique might supply evidence of brainstem involvement and contribute to an early diagnosis. There is a high percentage of lethal outcome without early antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:Listeria brainstem encephalitis: two own cases and literature review. 201 6

In this report we present aspects of the epidemiology of headache (i.e., pain in the head, face, ear, or neck) among children with brain tumors. The data are derived from the 3,291 subjects in the Childhood Brain Tumor Consortium databank. Overall, 62% of the children with brain tumors experienced chronic or frequent headaches prior to their first hospitalization: 58% of children with supratentorial tumors and 70% of children with infratentorial tumors. The relative frequency of headache increased through age 7 and then leveled off regardless of tumor location. For children under age 5, headache rarely had a duration of more than 1 year prior to hospitalization. Among children over age 4, headache duration of at least one year was significantly greater for supratentorial than for infratentorial tumors. Children with a brain tumor and headache had a different distribution of symptoms and neurologic signs than those without headache. Tumor location and headache status were interactively associated with the presence of other symptoms and neurologic signs. Children with headache had a greater number of other symptoms and neurologic signs. Regardless of tumor location among children with headache, nausea or vomiting, papilledema, and hypoactive tendon reflexes were more frequent, while upper extremity weakness, optic atrophy, and irritability were less frequent. Diplopia, coma, stiff neck, anesthesia or hypesthesia, pupillary abnormalities, and abnormalities of personality, academic performance, or speech were associated with headache in children with supratentorial tumors. No specific symptoms or neurologic signs were associated with headache in children with infratentorial tumors. Supratentorial craniopharyngioma, ependymoma, and protoplasmic astrocytoma were associated with significantly high rates of headache as was infratentorial pilocytic astrocytoma.
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PMID:The epidemiology of headache among children with brain tumor. Headache in children with brain tumors. The Childhood Brain Tumor Consortium. 202 72


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