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

Forty patients suffering from vertigo of different genesis received thiethylperazine 6.5 mg or meclizine 25 mg, 2 capsules a day for 5 days, according to double-blind, cross-over methodology in randomized order. It appeared that the effect on the symptoms vertigo, gait disturbance and nausea does not differ significantly for the two preparations. On the other hand, an almost significant effect on vertigo, and, to a smaller degree, on gait disturbances, was obtained during the second period of treatment, independent of administered preparation. Side-effects in the form of fatigue and headache occur to the same extent after both preparations. Meclizine should be an alternative to thiethylperazine in the treatment of vertigo, especially in patients who might risk chronic dyskinesia in long-term treatment.
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PMID:Comparative investigation between thiethylperazine and meclizine in vertigo of different genesis. 36 Jul 66

A 41-year-old female of mitochondrial myopathy characterized by recurrent paralytic ileus and atonic bladder with the evidence of peripheral nerve involvement was described. This patient was admitted to our hospital because of the episode of paralytic ileus and atonic bladder at the age of 40 and 41 (1987). She had noticed sporadic headache from 1967, constipation from 1977, tinnitus and hearing disturbance from 1984. One month after her second admission in 1987, her symptoms of paralytic ileus and atonic bladder gradually disappeared. She was then transferred to the department of neurology for the evaluation of underlining neurological disorders. Neurological examination revealed dementia, oro-lingual dyskinesia, and proximal muscular weakness. However, none of the following signs or symptoms were observed; Ophthalmoplegia, blepharoptosis, retinitis pigmentosa, myoclonus, cerebellar ataxia, sensory disturbance, and orthostatic hypotension. Deep tendon reflexes were normal. Planter responses were flexor. Pyruvate and lactate were elevated in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid. Brain CT scan displayed moderate cerebral atrophy and basal ganglia calcifications. EMG was normal except for the external anal sphincter muscles which showed a denervation pattern. Motor nerve conduction velocity was normal in the right median and the right peroneal nerves. Sensory nerve conduction velocity was also normal in the right median and the right sural nerves. However, the amplitude of sensory potential was low in both these nerves. Atonic type of neurogenic bladder was noted on cystometry. There was a lack of voiding desire. The number of active sweat glands iontophoretically stimulated by pilocarpine was reduced. The most prominent feature of the muscle biopsy (the left biceps brachii) was myopathic changes with ragged-red fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Paralytic ileus and atonic bladder in a case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy--electrophysiological, chemical and pathological study with evidence of the peripheral nerve involvement]. 255 55

With the aid of a questionnaire form we have gathered information about the clinical picture of patients suffering from primary ciliary dyskinesia. The study group numbered 34 persons, whose diagnosis was confirmed by electron microscopy. Chronic cough and common cold symptoms are present from shortly after birth. Twenty-three respondents reported respiratory tract problems in the neonatal period. The dysfunctional cilia result in chronic respiratory tract infections (chronic bronchitis; bronchiectasis; pneumonia; chronic sinusitis, rhinitis or otitis media). These lead to the following complaints: frequent blowing of the nose (in 32 pat.; 94%), chronic productive cough (in 28 pat.; 82%), chronic common cold (in 26 pat.; 77%), hearing problems (in 24 pat.; 71%), shortness of breath (in 23 pat.; 68%), frequent headache (in 13 pat.; 38%) and sore throat (in 9 pat.; 27%). In order to prevent the invalidating consequences of this disorder appropriate steps should be taken as soon as possible. These should include physiotherapy and adequate antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:[Primary ciliary dyskinesia; a questionnaire study of the clinical aspects]. 258 63

300 patients with sleeping sickness have been admitted, at the AHT clinic of Daloa, over a time period of 22 months. The sex ratio of the patients is 1.5 males for 1 female; the mean age is 25.5 years. The most frequent signs and symptoms observed by clinical examination are: fever (30%), nodes (86.3%), prurigo (43.3%), splenomegaly (15.3%), hepatomegaly (1%), headache (72.6%), vigilance and sleeping disturbances (68.7%), perioral reflexes (67.6%), cheiro-oral reflexes (64.3%), movement disorders consisting of tremor, choreo-athetosis movements, buccal dyskinesia or seizures (35%), motor palsy and gait disorders (15%), tonus disturbances (12.3%), sensitivity abnormalities (17%), endocrine disorders (16.3%), psychiatric symptoms (6.3%). According to CSF status, 261 patients have been classified in second period (P2). This group, although biologically well defined, is in fact a miscellaneous group of clinical signs and symptoms ranging from apparently normal patients to sleeping comatose and cachectic patients. 93% of the patients in this group have peripheral signs associated with neurological symptoms. They are as frequent in the first period as in the second period, with a statistical significance. This is an argument to think that the CNS is early affected in the course of the disease. The classification of the patients in groups of increasing neurological impairments, is in accordance with this hypothesis. 89% of the patients in the second period have only slight neurological signs. This explain how difficult it is for a physician to use melarsoprol in the treatment of all patients classified in second period.
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PMID:[The different present-day clinical picture of human African trypanosomiasis caused by T. b. gambiense. Analysis of 300 cases from a focus in Daloa, Ivory Coast]. 284 37

Stress thallium imaging with intravenous dipyridamole permits assessment of coronary artery disease (CAD) without the need for exercise. However, intravenous dipyridamole is available in the United States only on an experimental basis. To study the use of oral dipyridamole as a clinically available alternative to intravenous dipyridamole for this purpose, 100 patients underwent thallium imaging with oral dipyridamole. Each patient received 300 mg of pulverized tablets in a 30-ml suspension. Maximal increase in mean heart rate and decrease in mean blood pressure occurred 30 minutes after ingestion. At 45 minutes, 2 mCi of thallium was given intravenously and serial imaging was begun within 7 minutes. The serum dipyridamole level (mean +/- standard deviation) 45 minutes after 300 mg was administered orally (3.7 +/- 2.2 micrograms/ml) was similar to that 5 minutes after 0.56 mg/kg was given intravenously (4.6 +/- 1.3 micrograms/ml). Fifty-five patients had some adverse effects between 15 and 75 minutes after oral ingestion, including nausea, headache, dizziness, chest pain (25 patients) and electrocardiographic changes (14 patients). Intravenous aminophylline was used to resolve these adverse effects in 21 patients. There were no severe arrhythmias, myocardial infarctions or deaths. Of the 43 patients with angiographically documented CAD, 39 had an initial perfusion defect that redistributed on the delayed images. When the results in patients who had undergone catheterization were analyzed by individual segment, the presence of thallium redistribution was associated with normal or hypokinetic contrast left ventriculographic wall motion of that segment, whereas the presence of a persistent defect was associated with akinesia or dyskinesia (Fisher's standardized Z = 9.14).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Usefulness of oral dipyridamole suspension for stress thallium imaging without exercise in the detection of coronary artery disease. 395 32

One hundred and eighty-one patients with treated Parkinson's disease completed a self-administered questionnaire on symptoms, and their responses were compared with those of 263 control subjects randomly selected from a general practice population. Nine symptoms were reported by the patients with more than a fivefold excess when compared with the controls. These included jerking of the limbs, shaking of the hands, excessive salivation, poor mental concentration, grimacing, being frozen or rooted to the spot, and hallucinations. Compared with the general control population, the patients did not have an excess of stomach or limb pain, indigestion, headache, or any decrease of interest in sex. This observational survey, unlike a randomised controlled trial, could not ensure that the different treatment groups were comparable in important respects. However, certain associations were apparent; for example, patients receiving both a decarboxylase inhibitor and levodopa tended to report fewer attacks of being frozen to the spot, fewer problems with salivation, and a reduced frequency of defaecation. Patients receiving anticholinergic drugs reported an excess of dry mouth, faintness, and dyskinesia, and fewer hot flushes.
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PMID:The symptoms of patients treated for Parkinson's disease. 400 65

Motor disorders affecting the orofacial musculature include bruxism, chronic orofacial muscle pain affecting the jaw and neck muscles and the involuntary waking period disorders such as orofacial dyskinesia, oral mandibular dystonia, tremor and others. Research at UCLA has touched these and many other areas. Current results have indicated the usefulness of contingent afferent electrical stimulation of the lip to control bruxism; provided information regarding the fatigue, endurance and recovery faculties of the protrusive jaw muscles; explored the issue of chronic muscle hyperactivity inducing headache pain; and worked with botulin toxin as a method to treat orofacial dystonia and dyskinesia.
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PMID:Oral motor disorders in humans. 768 5

A double-blind, randomized study of parallel group design comparing remoxipride and thioridazine (dose range 150-600 mg/day of either drug) was undertaken at 11 Australian centres. A total of 144 patients (remoxipride = 73, thioridazine = 71) with DSM-III-R schizophrenia or schizophreniform disorder commenced the study, and 89 patients (remoxipride = 45, thioridazine = 44) completed the 6 weeks of the trial. The mean daily doses at last rating were 404 mg (remoxipride) and 378 mg (thioridazine). Initial Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale scores decreased by a mean 8.7 points in both remoxipride and thioridazine groups. Equivalent treatment responses were also confirmed by Clinical Global Impression. During the study, sedatives or hypnotics were needed by 68% of the remoxipride patients and 51% of the thioridazine patients. Thioridazine was associated with more postural hypotension, drowsiness, increased sleep, headache, dizziness on rising, dry mouth, sexual dysfunction and weight gain, while remoxipride patients reported more insomnia. There were no differences between remoxipride and thioridazine on dystonia, hypokinesia, dyskinesia, rigidity and akathisia. The results indicate that remoxipride has similar antipsychotic efficacy to thioridazine but causes fewer side effects.
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PMID:The Australian multicentre double-blind comparative study of remoxipride and thioridazine in schizophrenia. 787 41

Endoscopic sphincterotomy may be the treatment of choice in type I sphincter of Oddi dyskinesia, but in type II dyskinesia the results are controversial, the complication rate may be high, and technically endoscopic sphincterotomy is not always possible. Nifedipine has been observed to relax the sphincter of Oddi and to enhance biliary drainage, especially in patients suffering from sphincter of Oddi dyskinesia. Therefore, nifedipine (10 mg, three times a day) was compared with placebo in treating suspected type II sphincter of Oddi dyskinesia in 13 cholecystectomized patients in a 16-wk study period in a double-blind "cross-over" manner. Daily, the patients completed a diary of the pains, need of pain medication, and headache. Clinical examinations and blood tests for liver chemistry were performed at 4-wk intervals. Nifedipine diminished the number of days on which the patients experienced biliary-type pains (10.5 +/- 8.6 vs. 5.8 +/- 4.1, p = 0.042), and the number of days when pain medication was needed was slightly reduced (5.2 +/- 3.9 vs. 3.6 +/- 3.2, p = 0.066). After the study, one patient preferred to undergo endoscopic sphincterotomy, eight patients preferred to continue with nifedipine, and four patients preferred analgesics only. Liver chemistry remained unchanged in this study. Also heart rate, blood pressure, and the number of days of headache were not different between the nifedipine and placebo periods. We conclude that nifedipine is well tolerated in patients with type II sphincter of Oddi dyskinesia, and nifedipine may be tried for reducing the number of painful days and need for analgesics in patients with this disorder.
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PMID:Nifedipine for suspected type II sphincter of Oddi dyskinesia. 801 86

Japanese-B virus encephalitis (JE) is considered a uniphasic illness with a variable outcome. Biphasic illness patterns have never been reported previously. From an endemic zone in India we observed six patients of JE (from 62 patients treated in 7 years) who had an early relapse resulting in the biphasic clinical course. Five had poor socio-economic status and three had laboratory evidence of nutritional deficiency. Two patients were adults and the other four were children. Fever, rigors, headaches, body aches, altered consciousness, rigidity and tremors predominated the first phase of illness. During the second phase, behavioural changes, dystonia, pen-oral dyskinesia, drooling, mutism and muscle wasting due to anterior horn cell involvement were the important features. Though the serial antibody titres against the JE virus showed a four-fold rise in the initial or late convalescent phases, there was no increase during the second phase of the illness as compared to the first phase. On MRI, fresh lesions appeared during the second phase at the sites known for their involvement in JE, suggesting recrudescence of the virus. One patient survived with major sequelae, two with minor sequelae and the other three had complete recovery. We conclude that some patients with JE may have an early relapse after partial recovery, giving rise to the biphasic illness pattern. A locally prevalent genetic variant of the virus or host factors may be responsible for the altered clinical course of the disease. Biphasic illness does not necessarily mean a bad prognosis.
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PMID:Biphasic illness pattern due to early relapse in Japanese-B virus encephalitis. 1116 88


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