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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a placebo controlled randomized trial we evaluated the efficacy of melbrosia in women who suffered from severe menopausal symptoms. We could show that there was hardly no difference in the change of biochemical parameters, but we found out that the decrease of menopausal symptoms (
headache
,
urinary incontinence
, dry vagina, decreasing vitality) was significant in women who did undergo melbrosia medication compared to those who just took placebo. Due to our investigations we reasoned that melbrosia is especially appropriate to women who do not want and who do not need hormone replacement therapy, but who do suffer from menopausal symptoms.
...
PMID:[Placebo-controlled study of melbrosia in treatment of climacteric symptoms]. 777 Nov
We present a case illustrating the usefulness of motor evoked potentials (MEPs) in differentiating psychogenic from organic postoperative paralysis. Discussed is a 12-year-old girl who underwent surgery for the repair of a recurrent syringomyelia. On the 6 day after a proximal revision of her syringoperitoneal shunt she returned to the hospital with deep quadriparesis, bowel and bladder
incontinence
, and complaining of severe
headache
. An MRI scan showed the syrinx to be collapsed, and removal of the shunt had no impact on her clinical symptoms. Repeat somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) showed no change in comparison to those obtained at the end of her preceding surgery. MEPs were normal for the lower extremities, a finding which is inconsistent with a severe upper motor neuron lesion. She was diagnosed with psychogenic paralysis, and fully recovered within 1 month. We propose that a neurophysiological evaluation including MEPs is useful in the differential diagnosis of psychogenic and organic motor weakness.
...
PMID:The use of motor evoked potentials in the diagnosis of psychogenic quadriparesis. A case study. 820 96
We present a 81-year old male who developed dementia, gait disturbance and right hemiparesis. He was well until the age of 74 when he developed a hemorrhagic infarction in the right occipital region, which left him left homonymous hemianopsia. One year later he had one TIA attack consisting of dizziness,
headache
, and some clouding of consciousness. At that time, atrial fibrillation was found. At age 79, he was attacked by right hemiparesis. Cranial CT scans revealed a lesion consistent with a hemorrhagic infarct in the left middle cerebral artery territory. Two months prior to his final admission, he had a gradual onset of forgetfulness, labile affect, nocturnal agitation and hallucination which were followed by gait disturbance and
urinary incontinence
. On admission, he was alert but moderately demented. In addition he showed difficulty in repetition, limb kinetic and ideomotor apraxia of the left hand indicative of sympathetic apraxia, and constructional apraxia bilaterally. Granial nerves appeared intact except for left homonymous hemianopsia. His gait was wide-based and small stepped. No weakness or ataxia was noted. Deep reflexes were diminished on the left side. Plantar reflex was equivocally extensor of the left. Light touch and pain was slightly diminished on the right side. Cranial CT scans revealed a large low density area in the left fronto-temporo-parietal region. Also ventricular dilatation, diffuse low density change in the subcortical white matter, and diffuse cortical atrophy were seen. His clinical course was complicated by melena, anemia, pneumonia, cardiac failure and renal failure. He expired 2 months after his admission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A 81-year-old man with dementia, gait disturbance, hemiparesis, and sympathetic apraxia]. 833 25
We report a case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in a 38-year-old man, transmitted by a cadaveric dural graft. In August 1985, he underwent cranial nerve decompression for hemifacial spasm and received a cadaveric dural graft for dural closure. He had been well until he began to complain of blurred vision and
headache
in May, 1990. He developed dementia, myoclonus and
urinary incontinence
over the subsequent 3 months. He was admitted to our hospital in August, 1990. On admission, he was somnolent and showed gait disturbance, myoclonus in extremities and elevated deep tendon reflexes symmetrically. The results of analysis of blood, urinary and cerebrospinal fluid were normal. The initial computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging detected no abnormality. Electroencephalography showed typical periodic synchronous discharge (PSD). There was progressive worsening of his neurological symptoms, and this developed into mutism in September, 1990. CT, 11 months after clinical onset, showed marked enlargement of the ventricles and the sulci. In view of his rapid worsening clinical course, PSD findings on electroencephalography, and delayed progressive changes of CT findings, the diagnosis of CJD disease was made. The cadaveric dural graft was suspected as the cause of the patient's condition. Since Thadani et al reported the first case of CJD transmitted by cadaveric dural graft in 1988, 3 other cases have been reported. This is most likely the 5th reported case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease transmitted by cadaveric dural graft.
...
PMID:[Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease transmitted by cadaveric dural graft: a case report]. 845 5
A 53-year-old right-handed woman presented with
headaches
and dizziness. She had been well for ten years following successful cadaveric renal transplantation and was taking prednisolone and azathioprine. Two months later she had more
headaches
with transient dominant hemisphere disturbances and then suffered a completed right hemisphere deficit. As this was recovering, she developed an ischemic optic neuropathy, Computerized tomography (CT) was then normal although CSF analysis showed lymphocytosis and high protein. Steroid trial led to dramatic symptomatic and clinical recovery. On tailing off steroids, progressive bilateral hemisphere disturbance occurred. She was bedbound, with fever,
headache
,
incontinence
and disturbed consciousness. New evidence of infarction in watershed territories on CT led to temporal lobe biopsy. Cortical arterioles and venules showed proliferation of lymphoid cells staining for leucocyte common antigen and B-cell markers characteristic of Neoplastic Angioendotheliomatosis (NAE). After chemotherapy she regained independence and mobility and CSF protein fell. This is the first case of NAE to our knowledge in association with immunosuppression for renal transplant and is further evidence that NAE is malignant lymphoma. Cerebrovascular disease is common in such patients, the simultaneous events in differing territories is typical of NAE. Response to chemotherapeutic agents occurred although the typical natural history was unchanged.
...
PMID:Neoplastic angioendotheliomatosis: a treatable "vascular dementia" occurring in an immunosuppressed transplant patient. 847 50
We report a patient with Morgagni syndrome. The main aim of this paper is to discuss hyperostosis frontalis interna (HFI) and coexisting clinical feature and to describe the pathomorphology in detail on the basis of MRI images of the skull. The patient, a woman, was 82 years old when she first came to our hospital. She had a 20-year history of hypertension and chronic
headache
, and had been excessively obese till three years before. On admission she presented with a broad spectrum of clinical symptoms and signs including insomnia, disorientation to place, loss of memory, dementia, night delirium, reduced deep tendon reflexes in the lower extremities,
urinary incontinence
and upward gaze palsy. Because of a fair recovery within several days, it was suspected that so-called "treatable dementia" played a considerable role in the above-mentioned clinical state. Laboratory testing data, including hormone levels, were all within normal limits. EEG examinations showed slowed, diffuse, and poorly developed alpha-waves with no paroxysms. Cranial CT in horizontal sections disclosed a deformed frontal bone with convexlens-shaped thickening bilaterally and diffuse high density on both sides. MRI images revealed more detailed structures: the outer plate, diploe and inner plate of the skull, and abnormal ossifications. Based on these findings we diagnosed her illness as Morgagni syndrome. Recent reports, though few in number, have tended to focus on the EEG findings, hormones and psychiatric states in this syndrome, and descriptions of the HFI itself seem to be rare. The true cause of this syndrome is not yet known, so this rare presentation of MRI images of HFI is thought to be important in explaining this peculiar phenomenon in the skull.
...
PMID:[MRI findings of hyperostosis frontalis interna--a case of Morgagni syndrome]. 875 3
A 61-year-old man with multiple subcutaneous, ileocecal and neurologic manifestations was reported. Histological examination of subcutaneous and ileocecal mass showed non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (diffuse medium cell type [LSG classification]), B-cell type.
Headache
, somnolence and
incontinence of urine
were considered owing to the CNS involvement by lymphoma cells. The cranial CT findings showed diffuse spread involving the lateral and third ventricle and hypothalamus with adjacent edema. Then he was treated by VEMP regimen and repeated intrathecal MTX injections. The neurologic remission with improvement of cranial CT findings was obtained and he has been free of the disease for 15 years.
...
PMID:[Long-term survivor (15 years) following central nervous system involvement in B-cell lymphoma]. 896 Jun 70
Legionella is a frequent etiologic agent in the development of both nosocomial and community acquired pneumonias. Involvement of the nervous system is common in Legionella infections. We present a case of Legionnaires' disease which illustrates distinctive neurologic findings including delirium and cerebellar dysfunction. Furthermore, this paper reviews the neurological and psychiatric features of 609 Legionella infected patients with involvement of the nervous system. The most common signs were disorientation (58%),
headache
(52.4%), and somnolence (39.7%). Less frequent or rare were: cerebellar dysfunction (11.2%), hallucinations (8.4%), agitation or stupor (4.1%), affective disorders (3.1%), peripheral neuropathy (2.8%), pyramidal disturbances (2.1%), memory loss (1.6%), seizures (1.5%), cranial nerve palsies (1.5%),
incontinence
(0.7%), and extrapyramidal disturbances (0.3%). Cranial CT scans, cerebrospinal fluid findings, and nerve and muscle biopsies were usually unremarkable. Neuropathologic examinations failed to demonstrate specific characteristics. Hyponatremia and serum CPK level elevation were present in up to 89% and 50% of patients, respectively. Prognosis of disturbances of the nervous system was mainly good. We conclude that in the presence of definite neurological findings, pulmonary infection, hyponatremia, and CPK elevation Legionella infection should be considered.
...
PMID:[Neurologic and psychiatric symptoms of legionella infection. Case report and overview of the clinical spectrum]. 927 65
The patient, a 78-year-old female with history of
headache
and progressive gait disturbance for almost one year, was admitted to our department because of dysphagia and dysphonia since three months before. Neurological examination revealed nystagmus, cerebellar ataxia, deafness, and vesical
incontinence
. No cerebral injuries were detected by computed tomography (CT) scan, although Paget's. Disease of Bone (PDB) was suggested, confirmed by biochemical and scintigraphic studies. The plain skull X-ray showed platybasia. As all the disarrangements were not explained by PDB complications alone, nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed which demonstrated an Arnold-Chiari malformation (ACM) type I, with mild tonsillar herniation and anterior compression of the brainstem due to basilar impression, without syringomyelia. The association of PDB and ACM is a peculiarity seldom reported. The surgical approach was rejected, but the severity of symptoms and osteitis deformans biochemical activity needed a treatment; it was orientated to modify bone turnover using etidronate, a bisphosphonate, which induced clinical improvement and a decrease in serum alkaline phosphatase as well as in other bone resorption markers, without side effects. The good status and biochemical remission have been maintained a year later.
...
PMID:[Paget's disease of bone and basilar impression associated with an Arnold-Chiari type-1 malformation]. 942 43
Torticollis results from various pathological mechanisms, and its elucidation depends on identifying diseases of musculoskeletal, neural and ocular tissues. This study characterized the underlying diseases of children hospitalized with torticollis, excluding congenital torticollis. Records of 36 children with torticollis seen during 4 years were reviewed and categorized according to presumed etiology. Most could be classified into 2 categories: in 39% it was due to trauma and in 36% to upper respiratory tract infection. Most girls were in the first group and most boys in the second group. There were 3 cases of ocular torticollis due to superior-oblique muscle palsy, 1 with a post-burn eschar, 2 with neurological disorders (intramedullary cervical astrocytoma and leukodystrophy with macrencephaly), and in 3 no associated cause was found. There was a clear seasonal trend with 58% of cases presenting from November through February, 33% from April through July, and the rest, of neurological or ocular origin, during the rest of the year. In cases of post-traumatic torticollis 21% had neurological symptoms such as weakness of the limbs,
headaches
or
incontinence
. Only a few had prior upper respiratory tract infection. All children whose torticollis was assigned to infection had had fever. Only 8% had had neurological complaints or vomiting, half of whom presented with fever exceeding 37.5 degrees C. 46% had restriction of movement and 38% had tenderness. In over 60% of those in this group there were signs of an upper respiratory tract infection, such as lymphadenopathy or a white blood cell count exceeding 15,000/microliter, 3 patients with recurrent torticollis were diagnosed as having severe neurological diseases. Mean hospitalization time was 4 days (range 1-28). Hospitalization periods were similar for all kinds of patients and treatment by traction or fixation did not affect this period.
...
PMID:[Acquired torticollis in hospitalized children]. 945 71
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