Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A twenty-seven year old women with meningo-encephalitis and paranoid symptoms is presented. The patient was admitted to a psychiatric unit where, two months previously, her brother had been under treatment for a paranoid schizophrenic episode. The diagnostic lumbar puncture was performed after several days of increasing periods of disorientation, stupor, incontinence, posturing, and perseveration. There was no fever, no signs of meningeal irritation, and no localizing neurologic deficit. The problem of recognizing organic brain disease presenting as an acute psychotic episode is discussed. In this case, the positive family history was given inappropriate emphasis, while the good pre-morbid adjustment of the patient and the symptoms of confusion and headache were inadequately considered. Viral meningo-encephalitis, particularly that due to herpes simplex, often presents with a picture of behavioral abnormalities and minimal physical signs, and is easily confused with a functional process.
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PMID:Meningo-encephalitis presenting as an acute paranoid psychosis. 21 81

The authors report the cases of three men who presented for evaluation of a rapidly progressing dementia. All were found to have a giant aneurysmal mass in the basifrontal region, and all were successfully treated by surgical excision of the mass. The presenting syndrome included rapidly progressive and severe loss of recent memory associated with confusion, chronic headache, wide-based staggering gait disturbance, urinary urgency, frequency, and incontinence, and a fine tremor of the hands exacerbated by purposeful movements. The clinical presentation, radiological assessment, and surgical treatment are discussed.
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PMID:Aneurysmal tumors of the basifrontal region. 84 29

Colloid cyst is a relatively rare benign tumor which is usually found in the third ventricle. A patient who had a "colloid cyst" in his right lateral ventricle was experienced. A 33-year-old man had suffered from intermittent attacks of headache and vomiting for five months. On July 22, 1974, he was hospitalized to our clinic because of headache, memory and gait disturbance. At the time of admission his consciousness was clear but he had slight memory disturbance and urinary incontinence. Incipient papilledma was noted and the deep tendon reflexes of the lower extrimities were slightly accentuated. Lumbar puncture revealed a clear CSF and its pressure was within normal limit and the protein was 59 mg/dl. The plain skull films showed no abnormal findings. EEG showed an asymmetry of alpha-wave, and paroxysmal high voltage of slow wave was found in the right frontal area. Right cerebral angiography demonstrated an unrolling of the pericallosal arteries suggesting dilatation of the lateral ventricles. On the 9th hospital day, he suddenly began to complain of severe headache and became drowsy. Mannitol and hydrocortisone were injected intravenously without producing any remarkable effects. A ventricular drainage was done, and the patient recovered rapidly. A conray ventriculography revealed a round filling defect in the right lateral ventricle. A transventricular approach through a short linear incision in the right frontal cortex was preformed on the 25th hospital day. A cyst containing colloid substance, about 5x4 cm in size, was found to be attached to the medial wall of the right lateral ventricle anterior to the foramen of Monro. This cyst was almost completely removed. Histological findings revealed inner lining of epithelial cells, He died on the 25th postoperative day from bacterial meningitis. Autopsy confirmed the cyst to have originated from the right lateral ventricle. A review of the literature was made and the pathogenesis and diagnosis of this disease and the mechanism of development of the symptoms were discussed.
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PMID:["Colloid cyst" of the lateral ventricle--report of a case (author's transl)]. 98 73

A case presenting with headaches, organic dysfunction with visual hallucinations, and incontinence of urine, all of two days' duration is described here. EEG obtained on the fourth hospital day showed right-sided PLEDS and on the fifth hospital day a generalized seizure occurred. The other clinical and laboratory data led to a diagnosis of bilateral subdural hematomas. The patient recovered following surgical treatment. No etiologic factor other than the subdural hematomas was found to explain the PLEDS. Possible mechanisms of pathophysiology are discussed.
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PMID:Periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges associated with subdural hematoma. 114 39

The effect of bifemelane hydrochloride on dementia in the elderly was studied in thirty-one patients having cerebrovascular disorders. Alzheimer's disease, Parkinsonism and related diseases. The drug (150 mg) was administered orally three times daily for 10 weeks. The final global improvement rating was 77.4% for all patients. The rates of improvement for Alzheimer's disease were higher than those for cerebrovascular disorders, suggesting that this drug affects Alzheimer's disease through a cholinergic potentiating action. Psychotic, neurological and subjective symptoms, and the activity of daily life, were rated before, during and after treatment. All mean rates of improvement were based on observations made in the 4th week after the start of treatment. Improvement rates for global symptoms were more than 80% for emotional incontinence and prejudice or querulous attitudes toward the nurses, and in headache, tinnitus and dizziness among the subjective symptoms. The improvement in intellectual function was evaluated by the dementia rating scale for the elderly (DRSE), and a significant increase was found in DRSE after treatment with this drug. Side effects attributable to the drug were noted in one patient developing urticaria. It is thus suggested that bifemelane hydrochloride is useful in the treatment of different symptoms of dementia.
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PMID:The clinical effect of bifemelane hydrochloride on dementia in aged patients. 179 96

Thirty-nine cases of primary intracranial arachnoid cyst in the elderly, including one case of our own, were analyzed. Clinical characteristics in these patients were as follows. (1) The number of patients decreased with age, but there were no differences according to sex. (2) Clinical manifestations were similar to those of chronic subdural haematoma or normal pressure hydrocephalus including dementia, urinary incontinence, and hemiparesis. General symptoms such as headache and seizures were also present. (3) Surgery was performed in most patients with generally good outcome regardless of operative procedures (capsular resection vs. shunt). (4) In some cases of advanced age, disease manifestation may have been due to slight head injuries.
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PMID:Primary intracranial arachnoid cyst in the elderly: a survey on 39 cases. 179 42

Sixty-three women with clinical and urodynamic evidence of stress incontinence were evaluated before and after incontinence surgery for symptoms of depression, nervousness, tension, sleep disturbances, decreased appetite, somatic weakness and headaches. Women treated successfully with surgery demonstrated a statistically significant improvement in their subjective psychologic status (P less than .05). Unsuccessful treatment, however, was not associated with a significant change in or deterioration of their symptoms. All the symptoms were evaluated individually to ascertain the specific effects of treatment. Sleep disturbances were significantly improved with successful treatment and worsened with unsuccessful treatment (P less than .05). Tension was significantly improved with successful therapy (P less than .05) but was unchanged if surgery was unsuccessful. Depression became worse with subjectively unsuccessful surgery. Headaches and appetite were not affected by the therapeutic outcome. Therapy can be instrumental in affecting the psychologic status of women with stress incontinence. If the psychologic disability continues after therapy and/or treatment is unsuccessful, a referral for psychologic evaluation should be considered.
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PMID:Stress incontinence in women. Psychological status before and after treatment. 181 93

Communicating normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is an important remote complication of traumatic brain injury (TBI). The diagnosis of this hydrocephalus depends largely on clinical signs and symptoms, including cognitive deterioration, gait changes and incontinence. However, many of these signs are also seen during post-traumatic amnesia, making early recognition of this syndrome difficult. A case study of one man post-TBI, who presented with new-onset hypertension as a sign of NPH, prompted a retrospective chart review of all patients admitted over a 2-year period with a diagnosis of NPH. Ninety per cent of patients had one or more of the classic triad of NPH and 25% of patients had symptoms suggestive of raised intracranial pressure (unexplained nausea, headache and visual disturbance). Mean systolic and diastolic blood pressures among the 20 subjects for six consecutive days pre-operatively compared with those for days 8-14 and 15-21 post-operatively showed no significant differences; a subgroup of five patients (25%), however, demonstrated a significant change in blood pressure temporally related to shunting. We suggest that demonstration of new-onset systemic hypertension may also be a clinical sign suggestive of NPH useful in the evaluation of the TBI patient.
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PMID:Relationship of new-onset systemic hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus. 239 Jun 49

At the age of 29, a woman developed central nervous system manifestations of incontinence, psychosis and a grand mal seizure in February 1982. She was diagnosed as having systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) based on photosensitivity, oral ulcers and elevated antinuclear and anti-DNA antibodies titers. Three years and one month later the patient had episodes of severe headache and vomiting during the course of maintenance treatment. CT examination of the head revealed blood within subarachnoid cisterns, and a small berry aneurysm was found at the distal portion of the basilar artery by cerebral angiography. The possible role of SLE-associated cerebral vascular changes in the development of this aneurysm is discussed.
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PMID:A case of central nervous system lupus associated with ruptured cerebral berry aneurysm. 250 73

We experienced a case of glioblastoma multiforme which exhibited dementia, gait disturbance, headache, and urinary incontinence six months after subtotal removal of the tumor. These symptoms were not due to tumor recurrence, but to communicating hydrocephalus. Communicating hydrocephalus in cases of malignant brain tumors has not often been reported. We discuss the development of this abnormality.
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PMID:Communicating hydrocephalus occurring in the postoperative course of glioblastoma multiforme. 256


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