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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Post-
polio
patients sometimes complain about the occurrence of breathing difficulties decades after the
polio
infection. We have examined 40 post-
polio
patients who have had respiratory or non-respiratory
poliomyelitis
for at least 30 years in an attempt to elucidate whether hypoventilation is common and to what extent certain symptoms and simple lung function tests are related to hypoventilation or incipient hypoventilation. We measured arterial blood gases, vital capacity (VC), maximal expiratory and inspiratory pressures (MEP, MIP) and CO2 rebreathing response. Symptoms were assessed by a yes/no questionnaire. Six patients required respiratory assistance at the onset of the disease. At present, two require nocturnal assisted ventilation. Two patients showed manifest hypoventilation; one of which required night-time ventilator, whereas the other patient had not required ventilatory assistance even at the onset of the disease. Significant correlation (p less than 0.05) was found between arterial carbon dioxide tension (a-PCO2) and VC, MEP and ventilation increase during CO2 rebreathing. A significantly higher a-PCO2 was found among those who required respiratory assistance at the onset of the disease, who admitted
headache
and who felt the cough ineffective. Low VC and low ventilatory increase during CO2 rebreathing and the presence of
headache
explained 45% of the variation in a-PCO2 in a multiple regression analysis. We conclude that manifest hypoventilation is rare in this unselected material of post-
polio
patients and that a vital capacity below 45-50% of predicted normal and the presence of frequent
headaches
indicate an increased risk to develop hypoventilation.
...
PMID:Post-polio lung function. 160 61
In the literature there are rare reports on Japanese encephalitis (JE) mimicking
poliomyelitis
or presenting as respiratory paralysis. A case of JE presenting as respiratory paralysis is described. The 22-year-old male was well until five days earlier, when he experienced the acute onset of
headache
and fever. Four days after onset he developed dysphagia and respiratory difficulty, and a tracheotomy was performed. The following day he lapsed into semicoma and the respiration had to be maintained by an artificial ventilator. He regained consciousness by the 10th day after onset. He became able to comprehend questions and express himself by gestures. But the respiration was still paralytic, and assisted ventilation via a tracheotomy had to be continued. The case was clinically diagnosed as encephalitis. Bulbar poliomyelitis was initially considered due to the clinical features of aseptic meningitis, respiratory paralysis, pharyngeal paralysis with pooling secretions in the pharynx, tachycardia and elevated blood pressure. But poliovirus culture obtained from stool and appropriate serological studies were negative. The diagnosis of encephalitis due to JE virus was confirmed by hemagglutination inhibition test (acute phase HI titer 1:320; convalescent phase HI titer 1.1280).
...
PMID:Respiratory paralysis as a presenting symptom in Japanese encephalitis--a case report. 255 72
Diarrhea affects approximately 330,000 travelers from industrialized nations each year. Diarrhea is a reflection of inadequate hygiene or waste disposal in the countries visited, usually developing countries. The greatest incidence occurs in 20-29 years olds who take the most dietary risks. Some foods that pose the greatest risk in descending order include raw oysters, steak tartare, ice cubes, washed vegetables, cold milk, puddings, and sandwiches with mixed fillings. 40% of all travelers have a self limiting and rarely grave diarrheal illness caused by local enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC). Following an incubation period of 5-9 days, symptoms appear (cramps, fever, and 10 or more diarrheal episodes/day). 5% are infected with Giardia lamblia and 4% with Entamoeba histolytica. Giardiasis occurs worldwide and is characterized by grumbling diarrhea, cramps, and flatulence. E. histolytica causes a severe illness characterized by colitis with bloody stools, anorexia, malaise, sweats, weight loss, and epigastric pain. Only 10-100 Shigella bacteria are required by cause shigellosis. Symptoms include blood and mucus in the diarrhea and malaise. A traveler who ingests food with 100,000 Salmonella bacteria in it most likely will fall ill 48 hours after eating the contaminated food. Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers have an incubation period of about 12 days and may be fatal. Initial symptoms consists of
headache
, malaise, fever, and pain and 2 weeks later bloody diarrhea appears. Additional common diarrheal illnesses include cholera, post infectious tropical malabsorption, and those caused by Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Campylobacter species. Another disease common in areas of poor hygiene is
poliomyelitis
with fever, sore throat, and
headache
present in mild forms. If the virus invades the central nervous system, however, paralysis occurs.
...
PMID:Exotic diarrhoeal problems and poliomyelitis. 259 59
In a Nigerian town with a stable population of 20,000, a door-to-door survey was conducted, using a questionnaire involving a complete census and a simple neurological evaluation which had previously showed a 95% sensitivity and an 80% specificity for detecting neurological disease. Positive responders were evaluated and categorised, using agreed criteria for diagnoses. Nearly 100% cooperation was obtained. Life prevalence ratio for at least one episode of
headache
was 51/1000. Crude point prevalence ratio for migrainous
headache
was 5.3/100, and peak age-specific ratio was in the first decade. Prevalence ratio for epilepsy was 533/100,000 and peak age-specific prevalence ratio occurred in the 5-14 years age groups. The prevalence ratio for peripheral nerve disorders was 268/100,000, and age-specific prevalence ratio for tropical neuropathy increased with age. Prevalence ratio for stroke was rather low at 58/100,000, but was probably due to the people's attitude to the disabled elderly and high mortality of stroke which showed annual mortality rate of 70/100,000 which increased with age to 1519/100,000 per year in the eighth decade. Crude prevalence ratios (cases per 100,000) for others are 112 for neurological complications (including sciatica) of spondylosis, 15 each for
poliomyelitis
, motor neurone disease, development speech disorders, 10 each for syncope, hereditary neuropathies. Parkinson's disease, benign essential tremor, primary cerebellar degeneration, cerebral palsy, mental retardation, organic psychosis (probable intracranial tumor) and 5 each for muscular dystrophy, pyomyositis, spina bifida occulta, alcohol dependence and cerebral malaria. The implications of the findings are important for development of community neurological services in the developing countries.
...
PMID:Neurological disorders in Nigerian Africans: a community-based study. 303 73
A 61-year-old normotensive woman was admitted to our hospital with complaints of severe
headache
and nausea. She has had a limp due to the
poliomyelitis
in her childhood. Three days before admission, she had a
headache
without unconsciousness. On admission, she was almost alert. Her vital signs were normal. A mild monoparesis of the atrophic right lower extremity was evident. This impairment was due to her past
poliomyelitis
. There were no other motor palsy, sensory loss, nuchal rigidity, and papilledema. A plain CT scan showed a crescent high density zone adjacent to a round high density mass in the left convexity. A cerebral angiogram showed a vascular left temporoparietal mass supplied by a middle meningeal artery. A craniotomy was then immediately performed. The well encapsulated tumor was totally resected, and the adjacent subdural hematoma was also evacuated. Histologically, the tumor was transitional meningioma with areas containing thin-walled vessels and focal necrosis. Postoperative course was uneventful. The origin of hemorrhage in this case would seem to be the thin-walled blood vessel with loss of vessel support. The clinical significance and the mechanism of the hemorrhage from the meningioma were discussed.
...
PMID:[A case of acute subdural hematoma associated with convexity meningioma]. 306 6
Vaccination with a single dose of trivalent oral
poliomyelitis
vaccine elicited fourfold or greater antibody responses to one or more
poliomyelitis
virus types in 59% of volunteers (16/27) receiving vaccine prepared from virus grown in monkey kidney cells and in 69% of volunteers (16/23) receiving vaccine prepared from virus grown in MRC5 human diploid cells. Type for type the antibody titres and percentages of volunteers responding to the two vaccines were broadly equivalent. The clinical reactivities of both vaccines were similar to that of a placebo in terms of the overall incidence, duration and severity of reactions. The nature of the reactions observed did, however, vary, in that
headaches
were more frequently reported by recipients of vaccine prepared from virus grown in monkey kidney cells. This difference was not, however, statistically significant.
...
PMID:A single-blind, placebo-controlled comparison of the reactivity and antigenicity of trivalent oral poliomyelitis vaccine prepared in monkey kidney or human diploid cell substrates. 640 46
Non-
polio
enteroviruses are currently the most common agents of the central nervous system viral infection, and are the major causes especially in patients with aseptic meningitis. The practical problems with enterovirus meningitis revealed from the investigation of our patients are as follows. (1) The triad of symptoms of meningitis (fever,
headache
, vomiting) were seen only in 50% of the older children affected. The only manifestation of neonates with aseptic meningitis was fever. (2) In more than half of the patients, the cerebrospinal fluid showed polymorphonuclear predominance within 3 days from the onset. (3) The causal viruses were isolated frequently (70%) from the cerebrospinal fluid of the children with aseptic meningitis. (4) The patients more than 1 year of age had no sequela clinically. Among neonates and early infants, transient abnormalities of brain CT findings were seen in 40% and delayed speech in 30%. Their prognosis should be investigated more precisely.
...
PMID:[Enterovirus infections]. 846 Nov 63
Poliomyelitis
is an acute viral disease that attacks the brain and the ventral horn of the spinal cord. Damage to the lower motor neurons usually results in atrophy and weakness of muscle groups, perhaps paralysis and possibly deformity. A second type, bulbar
poliomyelitis
, infects the medulla oblongata and may result in dysfunction of the swallowing mechanism along with respiratory and circulatory distress. Minor forms of
poliomyelitis
result in fever, sore throat,
headache
, and upper body stiffness, but leave no significant atrophy or paralysis. The purpose of this paper is to review post-
polio
syndrome (PPS) as well as the effect of exercise on the symptoms and morphologic adaptations to PPS and where future research efforts should be directed. The most common features of PPS for over 350,000 afflicted survivors include general fatigue, weakness, and joint/muscle pain. The primary reasons for these symptoms include 1) destruction of the anterior horn cells by the
polio
virus, leaving fewer motor neurons to induce muscle contraction; 2) unaffected motor unit enlargement by reinnervation through terminal sprouting; and 3) defective transmission at the neuromuscular junction secondary to failure of terminal axonal sprout. Acute responses to resistive exercise suggest significant muscle strength decrements in the knee extensors compared with similar aged people without
polio
. However, limited training investigation indicates significant strength increases for the knee extensors following at least 6 wk of training. Acute aerobic responses also differ significantly from those observed in aged-matched control subjects. Chronic aerobic responses to limited training studies suggest significant elevations in maximal oxygen uptake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Poliomyelitis and the post-polio syndrome: exercise capacities and adaptation--current research, future directions, and widespread applicability. 847
The last epidemic outbreak of
poliomyelitis
in Norway lasted from 1950 to 1954. The article describes the occurrence of
poliomyelitis
in Western Norway on the basis of 243 medical records from this period. The epidemic reached its peak in Western Norway in 1952, while the highest number of new cases of
poliomyelitis
in Norway as a whole occurred in 1951. We found equal representation of both sexes. Most cases were recorded in late summer and autumn. Most patients (96%) had general symptoms, most frequently
headache
. The fever was moderate. Meningeal irritation (neck stiffness) was recorded in 56% of the cases. The most frequent neurological symptom was asymmetric limb paralysis. 6% of the patients died. High fever, extensive paralysis and inadequate respiration had a negative effect on the prognosis. 57 patients had aparalytic
poliomyelitis
and were hospitalized for a short time.
...
PMID:[Poliomyelitis--not an extinct disease. Outbreak of poliomyelitis in Vestlandet 1950-54]. 914 45
The prevalence rate and other aspects of migraine were investigated among school children (aged 6-13 years) in Enugu. The diagnosis of migraine was made by means of a questionnaire completed by parents which was based on the criteria proposed by Prensky and Sommer, and was further confirmed by personal interview of the parents in their homes. A prevalence rate of 6.8% was found among the 4,398 schoolchildren studied. More girls were affected than boys (158 and 140 respectively). Most (88.4%) of the children had their first attack by 10 years of age. Attacks occurred mostly in the afternoon, with sunlight and exercise as the most important trigger factors.
Headache
of a throbbing nature, sensory aura and relief after sleep were the commonest symptoms. Clinical examination was abnormal in only one child who had paralytic
poliomyelitis
, but EEG abnormalities were found in 51.1% of the children who had the test. The study revealed a hitterto unrecognised high level of morbidity from migraine among school children in Enugu, resulting in a disturbingly high incidence of school absenteeism.
...
PMID:Childhood migraine in Nigeria--I: A community-based study. 947 55
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