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

Syringobulbia is a term which has been clinically applied to brain stem symptoms or signs in patients with syringomyelia. Syringobulbia clefts are found on investigation or at necropsy caused by cutting outwards of the CSF under pressure from the fourth ventricle into the medulla. These should be differentiated from the ascending syringobulbia which may occur from upward impulsive fluid movements in a previously established syringomyelia. Clinical analysis of 54 patients suggests that bulbar features are most often found with neither of the above mechanisms but are due to the effects of pressure differences acting downward upon the hind-brain with consequent distortion of the cerebellum and brainstem, traction on cranial nerves or indentation of the brain-stem by vascular loops. The commonest symptoms in the 54 patients were headache (35), vertigo (27), dysphonia or dysarthria (21), trigeminal paraesthesiae (27), dysphagia (24), diplopia (16), tinnitus (11), palatal palsy (11) and hypoglossal involvement (11). Careful attention to hydrocephalus is advisable before craniovertebral surgery, but the decompression of the hindbrain and the correction of craniospinal pressure dissociation remains the mainstay of surgical treatment. The results of careful surgery are good, 45 of the 54 cases reported improvement. Most of the reported deterioration occurred in a few patients who did conspicuously badly.
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PMID:Syringobulbia: a surgical appraisal. 147 91

Spontaneous dissections of the internal carotid arteries are uncommon but are not rare. They constitute a fairly common cause of ischemic stroke in young patients (young in terms of the age at which strokes generally occur). The common presenting manifestations are (1) unilateral headaches followed after a period of delay by focal cerebral ischemic symptoms or (2) unilateral headaches and ipsilateral incomplete Horner's syndrome. These may or may not be associated with subjective or objective bruits. In rare instances, spontaneous dissections of the internal carotid arteries may present as lower cranial nerve palsies and cause dysphonia, dysarthria, dysphagia, and numbness of the throat. Affected patients may initially present to the otolaryngologist or be referred to one. This article describes eight patients with spontaneous dissections of the internal carotid arteries and lower cranial nerve palsies, and the pertinent literature is reviewed.
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PMID:Spontaneous dissection of the cervical internal carotid artery. Presentation with lower cranial nerve palsies. 155 74

Formaldehyde is but one of many chemicals capable of causing the tight building syndrome or environmentally induced illness (EI). The spectrum of symptoms it may induce includes attacks of headache, flushing, laryngitis, dizziness, nausea, extreme weakness, arthralgia, unwarranted depression, dysphonia, exhaustion, inability to think clearly, arrhythmia or muscle spasms. The nonspecificity of such symptoms can baffle physicians from many specialties. Presented herein is a simple office method for demonstrating that formaldehyde is among the etiologic agents triggering these symptoms. The very symptoms that patients complain of can be provoked within minutes, and subsequently abolished, with an intradermal injection of the appropriate strength of formaldehyde. This injection aids in convincing the patient of the cause of the symptoms so he can initiate measures to bring his disease under control.
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PMID:Diagnosing the tight building syndrome. 344 98

In the light of the literature the authors discuss the case of a 66 year-old hypertensive patient presenting headaches, disorders of gait and deglutition, dysphonia and urinary incontinence. A CAT scan showed dilatation of the entire ventricular system. Anatomo- pathological investigation showed a voluminous bisaccular aneurysmal malformation in the basilar artery. By deforming the pons and the medulla oblongata, the aneurysm had compressed the fourth ventricle and cerebral aqueduct, thus causing hydrocephalus. (Acta neurol. belg., 1980, 80, 80-85).
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PMID:[Hydrocephalus due to a large aneurysm in the basilar artery (author's transl)]. 745 79

Syringobulbia is an uncommon lesion of the central nervous system. It is defined as a pathological cavitation of the brain stem. The most common symptoms are headache, vertigo, dysphonia or dysarthria, trigeminal paraesthesia, dysphagia, diplopia, tinnitus, palatal palsy. Syringobulbia occurs with atlantoaxial congenital abnormalities (Chiari malformation), infection, tumours, and other causes. The idiopathic syringobulbia is however a rare finding. Early surgical treatment is the treatment of choice. We report on a 58-year old female patient with idiopathic syringobulbia. She complained of occipital headaches and vertigo. On examination she had horizontal nystagmus and diplopia. Occipital headaches and vertigo were improved after operation. We review the literature on syringobulbia, and discuss the clinical features of this uncommon condition.
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PMID:[Isolated idiopathic syringobulbia: case report and summary of the literature]. 877 68

The case of a 27 year old male patient is presented. He had been complaining for three months prior to his initial medical examination of severe pulsating headache in the right occipital region, propagating toward the right parietal and temporal regions, occasionally extending along the neck to the right shoulder. The pain subsequently spread over the right tonsil, the voice became hoarse and the patient experienced difficulties in swallowing. On admission to our Department we found: persistent attacks of headache, dysphonia, dysphagia, the palatine arch was slow during phonation. The right pharyngeal reflex was absent, there was pain on palpation over the right occipital bone and the antero-lateral region of the neck, as well as hypotrophy of the right sternocleidomastoid muscle. Selective right carotid arteriogram was performed--the A/P view revealed lateral displacement of the right internal carotid artery 3 cm above the bifurcation, while on lateral view the artery was pushed forward. Computed tomography of the neck with bolus contrast enhancement showed a space-occupying lesion which caused asymmetry of right pharyngeal valleculae. During surgery the tumor was found to have a spindleform shape, to emerge from the jugular foramen and to involve within its capsule the first cervical sympathetic ganglion. After enlarging the jugular foramen we achieved total extirpation of the tumor along with the first right sympathetic ganglion. The histological characteristics of the specimen defined it as neurofibroma and neural ganglion. The headache subsided in the postoperative period, recovery of the voice without dysphonia was also noted. A month later the fibrillar contractions of the tongue disappeared.
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PMID:A neurofibroma affecting the first right cervical sympathetic ganglion and entering the jugular foramen of the skull base. 931 62

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.
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PMID:[Paget's disease of bone and basilar impression associated with an Arnold-Chiari type-1 malformation]. 942 43

Current evidence suggests that addition of the long-acting beta2-agonist salmeterol to an inhaled corticosteroid in patients with persistent asthma symptoms provides greater clinical benefit than doubling the dosage of the inhaled corticosteroid. Fixed combination salmeterol/fluticasone propionate in 3 different fluticasone propionate dosage strengths administered via the Diskus powder inhaler does not result in any untoward interaction that affects the pharmacodynamic or pharmacokinetic profiles of the individual drugs, or their adverse effect profiles - including the influence of the corticosteroid on plasma cortisol levels. Administration of fixed combination salmeterol/ fluticasone propionate to both adults and children with persistent asthma provides greater improvements in lung function than either agent alone, and at least equal effectiveness to the same dosages of the 2 agents given by separate powder inhalers. Preliminary reports indicate that combination therapy has also demonstrated superior efficacy to budesonide (fluticasone propionate dosages were 25% those of budesonide). The most commonly encountered adverse effects in clinical trials with combined salmeterol/fluticasone propionate therapy have been oropharyngeal candidiasis. hoarseness/dysphonia, throat irritation, headache, tachycardia/palpitations, tremor and dizziness (all in < or =5% of patients).
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PMID:Salmeterol/fluticasone propionate combination. 1040 Apr 6

Sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous disease of unknown etiology that has a wide variety of clinical manifestation. Lung involvement may slowly undergo pulmonary fibrosis. Chronic sarcoid arthritis is a rare, usually non destructive arthropathy; may be a mono, oligo or polyarthritis. Knees, ankles, shoulders, wrists and small joint of the hands and feet may be involved. It can involve skin, eyes, exocrine glands such as salivary and lacrimal glands, and many other tissues. We describe the case of a 77 years old woman with a history of rhinopharyngitis with epistaxis and chronic laryngitis since youth; a dry mouth and throat, a erythematous, infiltrative skin lesion in the forehead and in the nape of the neck, a purple lesion of the left ear and nose, skin dystrophy of the hands from 30 years before. She underwent an operation for a left femoral fracture with hemotransfusion 14 years ago. Then she developed a polyarthritis of the small joints of the hands (II, III and IV right DIP, I, III, e V left DIP; III and V bilateral PIP), knees, tarsi, toes and left elbow. An HCV chronic hepatitis was discovered 6 years before. She is affected by productive cough, dysphonia, dyspnoea at rest, fever, headache and asthenia for over 5 years. Laboratory examination revealed leukopenia, HCV hepatitis with anti HCV, HCV-RNA, transaminases elevated and cryoglobulinemia. HCV may be involved in the etiopathogenesis of rheumatic diseases, lung fibrosis and may moreover contribute to the onset or progression of sarcoidosis; the possible pathogenesis is discussed.
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PMID:[Chronic polyarthritis in a patient affected by sarcoidosis and chronic HCV infection. Case report and review of the literature]. 1210 83

Botulinum toxin is a dreaded biological toxin elaborated by Clostridium botulinum. The action of this toxin is to cause paralysis of both voluntary and involuntary muscles. The unique property of paralysing capability of muscles has been used for the benefit of human beings. Dr Allan Scot, an ophthalmologist, first used the toxin in a patient with squint in 1981 and since then the botulinum toxin is being used in various disorders characterised by muscle overactivity such as spasticity in both children and adult, dystonic conditions such as blepharospasm, cervical dystonia, spasmodic dysphonia, writer's cramp, etc, hemifacial spasm and headache. Its main action is at the terminal nerve endings of myoneural junction and it prevents release of acetylcholine from vesicles thus causing chemical denervation. Its action persists for 3 to 4 months on an average. Its side effects such as drooping, diplopia, dysphagia, depending on the sites of injection, are few and usually transient. Generalised anaphylaxis is almost unknown. Now botulinum toxin is being used in non-neurological conditions where muscles are under spasmodic state such as achalasia cardia, anal fissure, spasm of urethral sphincter, etc. Because of wider safety range and fewer complications, botulinum toxin has been an important therapeutic armamentarium in different branches of medicine and surgery.
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PMID:Botulinum toxin: a dreaded toxin for use in human being. 1245 15


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