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

A rare case of acute subdural hematoma due to dural metastasis from malignant pleural mesothelioma is reported. A 65-year-old man was brought to a nearby hospital complaining of lumbago. He suddenly complained of headache on the third hospital day and fell into a deep coma within a short while. Computed tomography showed a crescent shaped high density area in the right fronto-temporo-parietal region with midline shift to the left side. He was admitted as an emergency case to our clinic on April 24, 1989. Under the diagnosis of acute spontaneous subdural hematoma, emergency operation was performed. Nests of malignant sarcomatous cells were found in the clot obtained during the procedure, but the origin of the tumoral cells could not be identified. The patient failed to recover from the comatose state and died with pancytopenia on the 17th hospital day. General autopsy showed wide-spread malignant pleural mesothelioma with metastases to the lung, liver and bone marrow. Examination of the head revealed dural metastatic tumor and a subdural hematoma over the left hemisphere. Histopathology showed that many tumor cell nests were found only within the dilated veins of the dura. There, acute subdural hematoma was assumed to have developed suddenly and there was massive bleeding from the capillaries of the inner vascular layer of the dura. The relevant literature about intracranial metastasis of malignant pleural mesothelioma was reviewed, and the mechanism of subdural hematoma due to dural metastasis from malignant tumor was discussed.
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PMID:[A case of acute subdural hematoma due to dural metastasis from malignant pleural mesothelioma]. 813 66

Human ehrlichiosis is a recently described zoonosis caused by a rickettsia that infects leukocytes. Most patients have fever, headache, chills, and myalgias and develop leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, and elevations in serum hepatic aminotransferases. The cause of the peripheral leukopenia and thrombocytopenia is not known. We studied peripheral blood smears, bone marrow aspirates, and bone marrow biopsy specimens from patients with serologically proven ehrlichiosis to characterize the pathologic changes associated with leukopenia or thrombocytopenia, to detect the presence of immunohistologically demonstrable ehrlichiae, and to establish the infected host target cell(s). Specimens were obtained from 12 patients, and immunohistology for Ehrlichia chaffeensis was performed on tissue sections, aspirated bone marrow, and peripheral blood smears. Mean leukocyte and platelet counts available for nine patients were white blood cell count 3,300/microL (range, 1,100 to 10,300/microL) and platelets 61,000/microL (range, 40,000 to 82,000/microL). Findings included myeloid hyperplasia (eight cases), megakaryocytosis (seven cases), granulomas (eight cases), marrow histiocytosis (one case), myeloid hypoplasia (one case), pancellular hypoplasia (one case), and normocellular marrow (two cases). Morulae of E chaffeensis were detected in four of 10 cases examined by immunohistology. Most ehrlichiae were detected within histiocytes, although morulae were rarely present within lymphocytes. Leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, or pancytopenia apparently most often results from peripheral sequestration or destruction; however, hypoplasia of marrow elements is present occasionally. Immunohistologic demonstration of E chaffeensis offers a direct means for establishing the etiologic diagnosis. These observations show the relatively frequent occurrence of bone marrow granulomas and suggest that infection of cells of the reticuloendothelial system may participate in the pathogenesis of human ehrlichiosis.
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PMID:Human ehrlichiosis: hematopathology and immunohistologic detection of Ehrlichia chaffeensis. 849 79

A 42-year-old white man had headache, fever, chills, abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting, night sweats, and dark urine for 3 days before admission; he had history of a tick bite 6 weeks earlier. Progressive systemic deterioration, heralded by progressive hepatosplenomegaly and pancytopenia, occurred despite doxycycline therapy. Subsequent recovery was preceded by progressive resolution of hepatosplenomegaly. Progressive hepatosplenomegaly has not been previously reported in association with systemic monocytic ehrlichiosis.
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PMID:Systemic ehrlichiosis presenting as progressive hepatosplenomegaly. 919 48

Human Granulocytic Ehrlichiosis (HGE) is a recently described human illness in the US which manifests as fever, myalgia and headache combined with pancytopenia and elevated concentrations of hepatic transaminases. Genetic analyses indicate that the agent of HGE appears to be an Ehrlichia species that is closely related to E. equi and E. phagocytophila. Ixodes dammini and I. scapularis were identified as potential vectors of HGE. Ixodes ticks are also the vector of Borrelia burgdorferi, the agent of Lyme borreliosis. The presence of antibodies against Ehrlichia in 132 sera from Danish patients with definite Lyme neuroborreliosis were examined in order to provide immunoserologic evidence of this infection in Denmark. Patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis were chosen as a test cohort, as these patients had been infested by a tick sufficient for transmission of B. burgdorferi. All had cerebrospinal fluid lymphocytic pleocytosis. As controls, serum samples from 50 healthy Danish blood donors were included. Of the 132 patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis, 5 (3.8%) reacted with the E. equi antigen substrate at titres 1:128. None of the blood donors were found seropositive for E. equi. At least 2 of the patients found seropositive for HGE constituted probable cases of HGE with E. equi antibody titres of at least 80 combined with fever, headache and myalgias. However, in no cases were we able to detect the presence of the HGE agent in the serum by PCR. We conclude that human exposure to granulocytic Ehrlichiae species may also occur in Europe, although further studies will be necessary to document active infection with these potential pathogens.
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PMID:Immunoserologic evidence of Human Granulocytic Ehrlichiosis in Danish patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis. 973 Mar 6

Mast cells (MC) are multipotent hemopoietic effector cells producing diverse mediators like histamine, heparin, or tissue type plasminogen activator. We report a 75-year-old male patient with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) of recent onset (3 months' history) associated with a massive leukemic spread of immature tryptase+ MC (tentative term: myelomastocytic leukemia). The patient presented with pancytopenia, bleeding, hypofibrinogenemia, and an increased cellular tryptase level. Moreover, an excessive elevation of plasmin-antiplasmin complexes (9,200 ng/ml; normal range: 10-150), an elevated D-dimer, and an increase in thrombin-antithrombin III complexes were found. The identity of the circulating MC was confirmed by immunophenotyping (CD117/c-kit+, CD123/IL-3R alpha-, CD11b/C3biR-), biochemical analysis (cellular ratio [ng:ng] of tryptase to histamine >1), and electron microscopy. Bone marrow (bm) examination showed trilineage dysplasia (17% blasts), 30% diffusely scattered MC, and a complex karyotype. No dense, compact MC infiltrates (mastocytosis) were detectable in bm sections. Despite hyperfibrinolysis and mediator syndrome (flushing, headache), the patient received remission induction polychemotherapy (DAV) followed by two cycles of consolidation with intermediate dose ARA-C (2 x 1 g/m2/day on days 1, 3, and 5). He entered complete remission after the first chemotherapy cycle without evidence of recurring MDS. Moreover, in response to chemotherapy, the hyperfibrinolysis and mediator syndrome resolved, and the circulating c-kit+ MC disappeared. We suggest consideration of polychemotherapy as a therapeutic option in patients with high-risk MDS of recent onset, even in the case of MC lineage involvement.
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PMID:Hyperfibrinolysis in a case of myelodysplastic syndrome with leukemic spread of mast cells. 1033 14

A 50-year-old African American woman presented with bilateral lower extremity pain, a history of falls during the past several months, and personality and behavior changes. She had been in good health until approximately 5 months before admission, when she began to fall with increasing frequency, often while going down a flight of stairs. She described these falls as her "legs giving out" and feeling very heavy and unsteady. There was no head trauma or loss of consciousness. Her daughter noticed that her gait had become somewhat unsteady during the last several months. Her family also noted a change in her personality at this time. Previously, she had been a very tidy person who took great care with her appearance, who was working as a customer service representative. However, she had become less social and very withdrawn. She had been observed putting on dirty clothes after showering, as well as eating constantly. The patient denied any fevers, chills, night sweats, headaches, vision changes, or tinnitus. She also denied any rashes, muscle pain, or intolerance to heat or cold. There was no history of seizure disorder or depression. Her past medical history was notable only for hypertension and being a passenger in a motor vehicle crash 1 year before admission. She denied any alcohol, tobacco, or illicit drug use, and had no travel history other than coming to the United States, as she was originally from Trinidad. On physical examination, she was a moderately obese African American woman with a flat affect, psychomotor slowing, and alopecia of the scalp. She was alert and oriented to person, place, and time, but had a score of 26 out of 30 on the Mini-Mental State Examination. She lost points only for recall; she had no difficulty with serial 7s. Her cranial nerves were intact and her speech was fluent, although sparse, and she did not make any paraphasic errors. Her muscle strength was 5/5 in both the upper and lower extremities. Reflexes were 2+ in the upper extremities and 1+ in the lower extremities, and toes were downgoing bilaterally. She had intact sensation to light touch and pinprick, but markedly diminished proprioception of her lower extremities bilaterally. She had a wide-based gait with a positive Romberg sign and was markedly ataxic. Rectal examination yielded a positive guaiac test with brown stool, normal tone, and no masses. The remainder of the physical examination was normal. Laboratory studies revealed pancytopenia with a hematocrit of 22.7% and a mean corpuscular volume of 118.2 fL. A peripheral smear that was performed on admission, prior to transfusion, revealed macrocytic red cells and hypersegmented neutrophils.
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PMID:Cases from the Osler Medical Service at Johns Hopkins University. 1465 20

About 110 patients were enrolled to study the atypical presentations and the chloroquine sensitivity pattern of Plasmodium vivax malaria. The diagnosis was made from Giemsa stained peripheral blood smear. The co-infection of falciparum malaria was excluded both by smear and ParaSight F-test. After a thorough clinical work up, biochemical investigations were done. The fever clearance and parasite clearance time were determined in all cases. Absence of malarial paroxysm (22.8 per cent), migrainous headache (4.5 per cent), myalgia (6.3 per cent), episodic urticarial rash (1.8 per cent), relative bradycardia (13.6 per cent) and postural hypotension (2.7 per cent) were the atypical manifestations encountered. Besides this, severe forms like jaundice (7.2 per cent), cerebral involvement (0.9 per cent), severe anaemia (7.2 per cent), thrombocytopenia (3.6 per cent) and pancytopenia (0.9 per cent) had been detected. All, except the patient with cerebral involvement were treated with chloroquine patients responded well to the treatment except two (1.8 per cent) patients who had chloroquine resistance. This study showed that vivax malaria can present with atypical and protean manifestations. The changing clinical profile along with development of chloroquine resistance may be considered as a warning signal.
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PMID:Atypical manifestations of Plasmodium vivax malaria. 1468 6

A 31-yr-old man presented with a 1-wk history of fever, chills, weakness, headaches, and a significant 20-lb weight loss over the preceding 2 months. His past medical history was relevant for liver amebiasis during childhood. Two days before admission, the patient noticed jaundice. He denied abdominal pain or other GI symptoms, and there was no history of alcohol intake, medications, or illicit drugs. His physical examination revealed generalized jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly, and bilateral leg edema. Neurologically, the patient was agitated, with periods of disorientation, and he had bilateral flapping. His blood tests revealed pancytopenia, renal failure, liver failure, and coagulopathy. Because the patient had a fever, hepatosplenomegaly, and pancytopenia, a further workup also included a bone marrow and liver biopsy. No conclusive diagnosis could be made from the above tests, and the patient died 5 days after admission. Postmortem evaluation, including flow cytometry and gene rearrangement in the tissue obtained from the liver, revealed large B cell lymphoma. This case illustrates an unusual presentation of hepatic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Current information regarding this entity is scant, mainly owing to its rarity. We present a review of the literature, including the incidence, presentation, treatment, and prognosis of primary hepatic lymphoma.
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PMID:Primary hepatic non-Hodgkin's lymphomas: case report and review of the literature. 1468 34

Over the course of a few years, an obese 52-year-old woman with a 23-year history of hypertension developed a number of abdominal complaints including gall stones. Her blood pressure became increasingly difficult to control and she developed diabetes mellitus and suffered palpitations and headaches. It became noticeable that she had a moon face. Laboratory tests revealed hypercortisolism. CT-scan showed a large inhomogeneous mass of nine centimetres in her left adrenal gland, which was subsequently removed surgically. The histopathological diagnosis was consistent with an adenoma. After a number of months the patient developed bone and liver metastases and the diagnosis was amended to carcinoma of the adrenal cortex. She then underwent radiotherapy and chemotherapy treatment. One year after surgery she developed a pancytopenia and died. Adrenocortical carcinomas are rare tumours with an incidence of about 1-2 cases per million of the population. Symptoms are heterogeneous since both functional (hormonal overproduction) and non-functional (mass effect) tumours exist. Surgical resection is the only curative therapy. It may be difficult to distinguish between benign and malignant cortical tumours.
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PMID:[The adrenocortical carcinoma, a tumour of wide clinical diversity]. 1555 52

We reported a case of X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome (XLP) with multiple nodular lesions in the brain and lungs. A 21-year-old man was admitted because of one month history of low grade fever, headache, nausea, and amnesia. He developed agammaglobulinemia following Epstein-Barr virus infection at 3-year-old, and thereafter was administered 7.5g of immunoglobulin every 3 weeks with a diagnosis of XLP. Physical examination was unremarkable on admission. Neurological examination revealed disorientation of time, and bilateral gaze-evoked nystagmus. Neuropsychological tests demonstrated impairment of recent memory and calculation. Pleocytosis (83/microl) and increase of protein (1269 mg/dl) and IgG (141 mg/dl) in the CSF were observed. Brain MRI showed multiple nodular lesions with high intense signal on T2-weighted images and Gd-DTPA enhancement on T1-weighted images. Chest CT showed multiple nodular lesions in the bilateral lungs. The needle lung biopsy was performed, which showed infiltration of lymphocytes around the vessels. An immunohistochemical study showed that the infiltrating cells were mainly CD8 positive T lymphocytes. B lymphocyte and plasma cells were not seen. The histological findings excluded intravascular malignant lymphoma and lymphomatoid granulomatosis. Therefore we diagnosed lymphoid vasculitis. The patient developed pancytopenia caused by hemophagocytic syndrome 48 days after admission and was treated with 1 g of methylprednisolone per day for 3 days and a tapered dose of steroid (500 mg to 125 mg of methylprednisolone and 60 mg to 10mg of predonisolone) for 21 days, which resulted in the improvement of clinical features (hemophagocytic syndrome and central nervous system symptoms) and the abnormal CSF findings. The multple nodular lesions in the brain and the lungs shrank 1 month after treatment and disappeared 11 months later. There are few reports concerning lymphoid vasculitis with XLP, and no effective treatment has been described. Our case suggests that steroid therapy may be useful for the treatment of lymphoid vasculitis in XLP.
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PMID:[Case of X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome (XLP) with multiple nodular lesions in the brain]. 1676 91


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