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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Otologic manifestations of pseudotumor cerebri heightened awareness of pseudotumor cerebri and its varied subtle presentations will allow for a more expedient diagnosis by the otolaryngologist. Pseudotumor cerebri is defined as increased intracranial pressure and papilledema without a mass lesion or obstruction of the ventricular system. Presenting symptoms most commonly are
headache
and
visual dysfunction
. However, patients may present with associated symptoms of tinnitus, dizziness and hearing loss. These patients may be seen first by the otolaryngologist. Fourteen patients with a diagnosis of pseudotumor cerebri are reviewed. Nine of the 14 patients had neurotologic symptoms during the course of their evaluation. Pseudotumor cerebri is a diagnostic challenge. Keys to diagnosis are a high index of suspicion, careful history and funduscopic examination in patients with unexplained neuro-otologic symptoms.
...
PMID:Otologic manifestations of pseudotumor cerebri. 192 May 79
The empty sella syndrome is common in middle-aged women, usually presenting with
headache
, and only occasionally associated with endocrine or visual abnormalities. It is rare in childhood. Childhood cases tend to present either with endocrine disturbances, visual symptoms, or with craniofacial syndromes. We present three cases of complete empty sella with childhood onset, each discovered unexpectedly during evaluation of endocrine or
visual dysfunction
.
...
PMID:Empty sella syndrome in childhood. 350 92
A series of 74 patients with craniopharyngiomas were treated during a 15-year period. Of the 74 patients, 40 were males and 34 were females, with a mean age of 27 years (range 3 to 65 years). Twenty-eight patients (38%) were less than 18 years of age. Remission was defined as clinical improvement with stable ophthalmological and neurological status, radiological evidence of a decrease in tumor size, and either a continued decrease or a stable tumor size on follow-up radiological evaluations. A fair result was considered remission with new neurological deficits related to surgical intervention. All other results were considered a failure. The mean follow-up period in this study was 4 years, with 100% of the patients monitored. In children, the most common presentation was that of growth failure (93%). In adults, sexual dysfunction was the most common presentation, with 88% of males presenting with impotence or marked decrease in sexual drive, and 82% of females presenting with primary or secondary amenorrhea, often associated with galactorrhea. Considering the pediatric and adult populations together, the most common presenting symptom was
visual dysfunction
, with 71% of patients presenting in this manner. Fifty percent of patients presented with severe
headache
. The most frequent preoperative finding was a visual field defect, with 72% of patients so affected; 42% of patients had preoperative hypothyroidism and 24% had hypoadrenalism. Diabetes insipidus was present preoperatively in 23%. Hydrocephalus was uncommon, being present in only 15%. A subfrontal craniotomy was used in 47% of patients, a transsphenoidal approach in 39%, a subtemporal approach in 11%, a transcallosal approach in 5%, and a suboccipital craniectomy in 2%. Multiple procedures were required in 15% of patients in order to provide significant relief of compressive symptomatology. The results of therapy indicate that total tumor removal was deemed to have been achieved in only seven patients, six of whom have had no recurrence. However, 91% of patients are in remission, one had a fair result, and two died as a direct result of surgical intervention. One patient died from uncontrolled disease, and three patients died from unrelated causes. The results of this study indicate that radical subtotal removal followed by radiotherapy is an acceptable treatment for craniopharyngioma.
...
PMID:Surgical management of craniopharyngiomas. A review of 74 cases. 371 25
This paper reviews both clinical and experimental literature relating to
visual dysfunction
in migraine, starting with the eye and progressing via the retina and visual pathways to the visual cortex. Migraine is associated with (i) a pupillary sympathetic hypofunction, and (ii) a cortical hypersensitivity to visual stimuli (perhaps only in migraine with aura), the pathogenesis of which remains to be determined. Various hypotheses are discussed, and it is proposed that the methods of visual psychophysics may represent a useful approach in the future study of cortical hyperexcitability in migraine. Paradoxically, little research has been directed towards understanding (i) the photophobia of migraine attacks, and (ii) how migraine may be triggered by visual stimuli. Research aimed at elucidating the mechanisms of these phenomena may enhance understanding of the pathogenesis of migraine.
Cephalalgia
1996 Dec
PMID:Visual system dysfunction in migraine: a review of clinical and psychophysical findings. 898 Aug 53
Neurologic and visual symptoms frequently occurred in 56 reported patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET). They may either precede or follow the well-known microcirculatory complications of ET of acroparesthesias, erythromelalgia, and acrocyanosis or ischemia of one or more toes. In comparison with transient ischemic attacks in patients with vascular risk factors, the usual neurologic presentation of ET consists of brief attacks of sudden cerebral or
visual dysfunction
, which can be either well localized or diffuse and entirely nonspecific. A dull and throbby
headache
usually lasting for several hours frequently accompanies the neurologic symptoms. Visual symptoms are less frequent and include transient monocular blindness and global symptoms such as scintillating scotomas and attacks of blurred vision. Neurologic and visual symptoms may leave minor sequelae but are generally nondisabling. The striking similarity to migraine, together with the absence of vascular risk factors and the striking efficacy of aspirin treatment supports the hypothesis that the ischemic neurologic and visual symptoms in ET are caused by shear rate-induced intravascular activation and aggregation of platelets with subsequent transient sludging or occlusion of the cerebral arterial microvasculature. Available data show that both the erythromelalgic distress and the ischemic neurologic attacks in ET are completely abolished by control of platelet function with low dose aspirin alone or reduction of platelet counts to normal as well as by the combination of platelet reducing therapy and low-dose aspirin. Early recognition and appropriate treatment of neurologic symptoms in patients with ET is therefore of great clinical relevance.
...
PMID:Neurologic and visual symptoms in essential thrombocythemia: efficacy of low-dose aspirin. 926 53
Fifty-six patients with craniopharyngiomas were operated by microsurgical techniques during a 20-year period. Of the 56 patients, 28 were males and 28 were females, with a mean age of 33 years (range 1 to 78 years). Twenty patients (35.7%) were less than 15 years of age. Remission was defined as clinical improvement with stable ophthalmological and neurological status, CT and/or MRI evidence of a decrease in tumor size or tumor disappearance when a patient was discharged from hospital. Ineffectiveness was defined as lack of change in the preoperative clinical status. The mean follow-up period in this study was 6.9 years, with 11 patients monitored. The most common presentation was
visual dysfunction
(69.6%). 33.9% of the patients presented with
headache
. The most frequent preoperative finding was a visual field defect, with 55.4% of the patients so affected; 39.5% of patients had preoperative hypothyroidism and 40% had hypoadrenalism. Diabetes insipidus was found preoperatively in 7.1%. Three female patients had amenorrhea. Hydrocephalus was uncommon, being present in only 10.7%. Unruptured aneurysms were found incidentally in 2 cases. A pterional approach was used in 29 patients (52%), a transcallosal approach in 13 (23%), a transcortical approach and a transsphenoidal approaches in 3 (5%), and a lamina terminalis approach in 1 patient. Multiple procedures were required in 8 patients in order to provide significant relief of compressive symptomatology. Overall, 12.5% of the tumors were completely resected. 92.9% of our patients were in remission, 2 had ineffectiveness result, and 2 died of postoperative complications. Except for the completely resected cases, all the other patients underwent radiotherapy postoperatively. The results of this series show that microsurgical management of craniopharyngiomas yields good operative results.
...
PMID:Microsurgical management of craniopharyngiomas--outcomes in 56 patients. 965 51
The purposes of this article are to report a case with temporal arteritis (TA) and to summarize and reanalyze the cases of temporal arteritis associated with fever in published articles for understanding better the clinical features of TA. A case with biopsy-proven TA is reported. The publications with TA and fever were searched by using MEDLINE in English from 1966 to 1999. Three hundred sixty cases of temporal arteritis associated with fever were reanalyzed. The results showed that a case of biopsy-proven TA with typically clinical manifestation was initially misdiagnosed and that the reanalysis of 360 cases revealed that the common clinical findings at presentation were abnormal temporal arteries,
headache
, low fever, loss of weight, polymyalgia rheumatica, jaw claudication,
vision disorder
, arthralgis or myalyias, and ear pain and that the uncommon clinical findings at presentation were high fever, malaise, anorexia, breast pain, transient ischemic attack/stroke, cough, mental disorder, diarrhea, and uterine prolapse, etc. Laboratory findings were the range of erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) 14 to 149 with a mean of 97.0 mm/hr, white blood cells being normal or increased in the range of 10.9 to 22.9 x 10(9)/L, hemoglobin level 7 to 16 g/dL, the platelets count increased to 785 x 10(9)/L, and microscopic hematuria. The diagnosis was made by a combination of clinical features, an increased ESR, a response to steroids, and, most specifically, temporal artery biopsy. The initial diagnosis was misdiagnosed in 38.2% of patients. In conclusion, the features of TA associated with fever have not been widely appreciated yet. TA is a common cause of fever of unknown origin (FUO) in the elderly. TA should be considered when patients complain of common and uncommon manifestations. An elevated ESR will aid in the diagnosis of TA, and temporal artery biopsy will provide certainty.
...
PMID:Temporal arteritis and fever: report of a case and a clinical reanalysis of 360 cases. 1110 64
To investigate whether typical clinical, diagnostic and neuropathological findings can be identified in a patient with a postmortem diagnosis of a Heidenhain variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). We report a new case of CJD in a rare variant. A man admitted to hospital with cefalea and
vision disorder
. Clinical and neurological examination showed
headache
, vision reduction, psychomotor anxiety and progressive torpor. The patient died 4 h after admission to hospital. The autopsy findings included marked encephalic vascular congestion. Hystoneurology examination showed no macroscopic anomaly. Microscopy findings included neuronal loss, gliosis in striate area with arachnoid cells and cerebellum microspongiosis. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is a rare neurodegenerative human disorder. The prion hypothesis as an explanatory model is currently favoured by majority of researchers. A disease course described by Heidenhain including the leading symptoms of a visual disorder and rapid progression. This report emphasize the multidisciplinary role (forensic, neurogenetic and neurohistologic) for diagnosis and to standardize a protocol to investigate.
...
PMID:A Heidenhain variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: forensic implication. 1563 87
A 46-year-old man presented with frontal
headache
, a visual field defect and general fatigue. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain showed symmetrical enlargement of the pituitary gland and stalk due to the presence of a mass lesion extending toward the optic chiasm. Gadolinium injection further revealed homogeneous strong enhancement with involvement of the adjacent dura (dural tail). Basal plasma levels of ACTH, free thyroxine and gonadotropins were decreased, and 24-h urinary 17-OHCS excretion was reduced. An elevated anti-thyroglobulin antibody titer indicated the presence of autoimmune thyroiditis. Under the suspicion of autoimmune hypophysitis, 60 mg/day prednisolone sodium succinate was intravenously administered for two weeks followed by a decreasing dose of oral prednisolone. Clinical symptoms and pituitary dysfunction recovered during steroid treatment and MRI showed marked shrinkage of the pituitary mass. Early initiation of an intravenous dose of glucocorticoid followed by oral steroid administration therefore seems to be an efficient treatment for autoimmune hypophysitis even in patients with
visual dysfunction
.
...
PMID:Autoimmune hypophysitis treated with intravenous glucocorticoid therapy. 1713 27
Symptomatic metastases to the pituitary (MP) from renal cell carcinoma (RCC) are rare. In this largest case series reported, we describe the clinical features, treatment and outcome of 5 patients. Over a 6-year period (2000-2006), we treated 5 patients (3 males; mean age 61 years) with large sellar masses and RCC. Four patients had a history of RCC, while in one, RCC was diagnosed after surgery. RCC was diagnosed a median of 11 years prior to diagnosis of MP (range 0-27 years). Four patients had previously developed distant metastases. Clinical presentation included bitemporal hemianopia (3 patients), lethargy (3),
headaches
(2) and diabetes insipidus (DI) (2). Panhypopituitarism was present in 3 patients and the other two had deficiency of at least ACTH and gonadotropin axes. Elevated prolactin was seen in 3 patients. MRI showed an enhancing sellar mass with suprasellar extension and chiasmal compression in all; prominent vascular flow voids were seen in 2. Three patients underwent transsphenoidal surgery and radiation, while 2 underwent radiotherapy alone. Four patients are alive (follow up 6-46 months); 1 patient died due to systemic metastases at 12 months. Metastases to the pituitary from RCC cause more severe hypopituitarism and
visual dysfunction
compared to those from other primaries, whereas DI is less common. MRI shows contrast enhancement, stalk involvement, sclerosis and/or erosion of sella and presence of vascular flow voids. Combined treatment using decompressive surgery and stereotactic radiotherapy may result in better outcomes.
...
PMID:Symptomatic pituitary metastases from renal cell carcinoma. 1754 48
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