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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The orthopaedic surgeon is often the first consultant to whom a patient with syringomyelia is referred. The disease is not as rare as he may suppose, but its early presenting features are very variable; if he relies solely on such familiar features as pes cavus and scoliosis, he may well miss the diagnosis. The commonest presenting symptom is pain in the head, neck, trunk or limbs;
headache
or neckache made worse by straining is particularly significant. A history of birth injury also may suggest the possibility of syringomyelia, especially if any
spasticity
subsequently worsens. Neurological features which may be diagnostic include nystagmus, dissociated sensory loss, muscle wasting,
spasticity
of the lower limbs or Charcot's joints. Radiographic features include erosion of the bodies of cervical vertebrae and widening of the spinal canal; if, at C5, the size of the canal exceeds that of the body by 6 millimetres in the adult, pathological dilatation is present. The presence of basilar invagination or other abnormalities of the foramen magnum, of spina bifida occulta and of scoliosis are further pointers. Thermography is a useful way of showing asymmetrical sympathetic involvement in early cases. A greater awareness of the prevalence of syringomyelia may lead to earlier diagnosis and to early operation, which appears to hold out the best hope of arresting what is all too commonly a severely disabling and progressive condition.
...
PMID:Orthopaedic features in the presentation of syringomyelia. 15 24
We have studied the clinical presentation and course of a chronic inflammatory disease occurring in childhood and observed in 30 patients. The first symptoms were generally present at birth, except in a few patients where they were first noticed in early infancy. All the patients had the association of three main symptoms: neurological, cutaneous and articular. The skin rash was the first symptom observed in all the patients and looked like a chronic non pruritic urticaria varying during the day. The articular manifestations involved knees, ankles and feet, elbows, wrists and hands unaffecting the other joints. They could be mild giving arthritis during flare-ups or severe with major radiological modifications affecting the epiphysis, metaphysis and growth cartilage. The neurological manifestations were characterized by a chronic meningitis and symptoms indicating meningeal irritation:
headaches
, seizures,
spasticity
of legs. Most patients had a cerebral atrophy and a low IQ. Sensory organ involvement occurred progressively during the follow-up: ocular inflammation with optic atrophy, deafness and hoarseness. Common morphological features characterized these patients with short stature, head enlargement, saddle back nose and short and thick extremities with clubbing of fingers. The course was that of a chronic inflammatory disease with numerous flare-ups associating fever, splenomegaly and adenomegaly. Except for a high level of eosinophils in blood, CSF and tissues, the biology was non specific and only exhibited features of inflammation. Except for two families, the disease was sporadic. A high frequency of prematurity with features resembling a foetal infection was observed but no proof of a possible causal virus has so far been found so that etiology remains unknown.
...
PMID:A chronic, infantile, neurological, cutaneous and articular (CINCA) syndrome. A specific entity analysed in 30 patients. 348 35
Moyamoya disease was originally defined as a characteristic syndrome of recurrent
headaches
, occlusion of the distal internal carotid arteries and the foggy (moyamoya) clusters of collateral vessels at the base of the brain as demonstrated by cerebral angiography. The etiology is unknown and pathobiology is poorly understood. We examined the intracranial arteries in 3 patients to demonstrate characteristic changes and to obtain a better understanding of the basis mechanisms of the disease. Controls were obtained from 3 normotensive patients who died as a result of cancer. Occluded internal carotid arteries were characterized by severe thickening of the intima with a dense luminal array of smooth muscle cells, a deeper less cellular zone, pronounced tortuosity of the internal elastica and thinning of the media. Collateral vessels were arterial in structure and were affected by similar proliferative changes in the intima, thinning of the media, and contorted internal elastica. Stainable lipids were not part of the typical components. Severe contortion of the internal elastica, medial damage and intimal proliferation may result from recurrent and sustained
spasticity
of the cerebral arteries. The distal lenticulostriate arteries showed severe medial damage similar to what is termed as a moth-eaten change in hypertensive patients dying of massive cerebral hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural studies of cerebral arteries and collateral vessels in moyamoya disease. 646 67
The authors reviewed the clinical findings, radiological evaluation, and operative therapy of 39 patients with syringomyelia. Syringoperitoneal (SP) shunting was used in 15 patients and other procedures were used in 24 patients. Follow-up periods ranged from 1 1/2 to 12 years. During the period of this study, metrizamide myelography in conjunction with early and delayed computerized tomography scanning replaced all other diagnostic procedures in patients with syringomyelia. Preoperative accuracy for the two procedures was 87%. The most common symptoms were weakness (79%), sensory loss (67%), pain (38%), and leg stiffness (28%). Surgery was most effective in stabilizing or alleviating pain (100%), sensory loss (81%), and weakness (74%);
spasticity
,
headache
, and bowel or bladder dysfunction were less likely to be reversed. Approximately 80% of patients with idiopathic and posttraumatic syringomyelia and 70% of those with arachnoiditis improved or stabilized. Better results were obtained in patients with less severe neurological deficits, suggesting the need for early operative intervention. A higher percentage of patients had neurological improvement with SP shunting than with any other procedure, especially when SP shunting was the first operation performed. Patients treated with SP shunts also had the highest complication rate, most often shunt malfunction. These results indicate that SP shunting is effective in reversing or arresting neurological deterioration in patients with syringomyelia.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of syringomyelia. Favorable results with syringoperitoneal shunting. 674 90
We report a series of 26 patients affected by a Chiari I malformation treated at our department between 1987 and 1993. All patients underwent pre- and postoperative evaluation by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Sequential perioperative motor evoked potential (MEP) recordings were performed in 8 patients. The preoperative symptoms can be divided into four subgroups: cephalgias (84.6%), cranial nerve deficits (69.2%), motor deficits (76.9%), sensory deficits (73%). Twenty-five out of 26 patients underwent craniovertebral decompression, 1 a transoral anterior decompression. One patient died 2 months after surgery because of progressive pulmonary failure. We registered following postoperative complications transient hypoglossal palsy (1 case), vertigo (2 cases), meningitis (1 case), minor CSF leaks (3 cases).
Cephalgias
subsided in 17 and improved in 4 out of 22 patients. Cranial nerve deficits improved in 8 and were stabilized in 7 out of 18 patients. A limited recovery of trigeminal function was possibly due to nuclear lesions. Five patients whose vestibular disturbances were not relieved by surgery were put on a course of carbazepine. Vertigo resolved in one case and in two others improved. While hypesthesia improved after decompression, the other sensory deficits were stabilized in 5% of the patients.
Spasticity
improved in 12 out of 18 patients, but weakness only in 7 out of 17 patients. Motor disturbances were always detected by MEP-recording. MEP-characteristics were not specific, resembling those of patients with other intra-, extramedullary myelopathies. Functional recovery was not matched by an improvement of the MEP parameters. MEP may be used as tool for surveillance of patients whose clinical findings are not progressive and are not at first surgical candidates.
...
PMID:Cranio-cervical decompression for Chiari I malformation. A retrospective evaluation of functional outcome with particular attention to the motor deficits. 772 49
Three children with pronounced livedo reticularis present since birth (cutis marmorata-telangiectasia congenita) have been followed to the ages of eight, 17 and 21 years. During childhood they developed frequent recurrent transient stroke-like hemipareses, affecting either side of the body, associated with ipsilateral pain,
headache
, visual symptoms, dysphasia, fits and confusion. Intellectual failure and, in one, progressive
spasticity
have followed. Attacks were more frequent in winter. Other problems have included abnormal peripheral vascular responses to temperature change, gastro-intestinal bleeding, glaucoma, local tissue hypertrophy and, in the two older patients, renal involvement with hypertension. Their condition represents a form of congenital vasculopathy. Anticonvulsants, anti-migraine agents, anti-platelet drugs and flunarizine have been ineffective. Nifedipine prevented further attacks in one patient and reduced attacks in another, but has not helped the third child. Adequate clothing and warmth may also be important.
...
PMID:Congenital livedo reticularis and recurrent stroke-like episodes. 840 21
Records of 108 patients with lupus erythematosus beginning in childhood (1953-1990) were reviewed; 25 had recorded neurologic findings. This is the largest group of childhood lupus erythematosus patients with neurologic disease that has been reported. The average age of children at the time of diagnosis of lupus was 154 months. There were 22 girls and 3 boys in the group. All patients met at least four of the 1982 American Rheumatism Association criteria for the classification of systemic lupus erythematosus. Average age at onset of neurologic difficulties was 168 months. In 4 patients, the neurologic symptoms preceded the diagnosis: 1 month (spastic diplegia), 1 month (bilateral weakness and
spasticity
), 24 months (chorea), and 26 months (chorea), respectively. Four patients had neurologic symptoms coincident with the diagnosis of lupus erythematosus. In those patients whose symptoms followed the diagnosis of lupus erythematosus, the average elapsed time until symptoms appeared was 33 months; the single lowest and highest outliers were discounted. Most frequent findings were
headache
(16/25) and behavioral aberrations (10/25). All behavioral manifestations were depression except in 1 patient. Other prevalent findings included hemichorea or chorea (7/25), cerebrovascular accident with hemiplegia or diplegia (7/25), seizures (5/25), visual loss (3/25), and cranial neuropathy (2/25). Vertigo and myelopathy occurred in 1 patient each. All patients were treated primarily with corticosteroids and azathioprine; in the presence of active disease, the drug dosages were increased with significant improvement in neurologic symptoms. Resolution usually occurred from days to months; most improved in a few days to a few weeks; 3-4 months was the longest period until symptoms subsided.
...
PMID:Neurologic characteristics of childhood lupus erythematosus. 855 56
The Seldinger technique was developed using a plastic introducer through which introduction and manipulations of a silicone spinal catheter, an extradural stimulation lead or a small diameter fibreoptic scope are possible without the risk of damage to the vulnerable devices. It is not intended as a replacement of the standard technique of introducing a spinal catheter through a Tuohy needle in general anaesthetic practice. Silicone spinal catheters and stimulation leads are used for long-term therapy in intractable chronic pain and
spasticity
. A fibreoptic scope is used for endoscopic examination of the subarachnoid or extradural space. Using a standard Tuohy needle the soft silicone extradural lead can be damaged easily by manipulations during insertion. For this reason the manufacturer modified the Tuohy needle for extradural silicone lead introduction. The disadvantages of this modified Tuohy needle are: first, difficulty in localization of the extradural space, second, the needle is unsuitable for a subarachnoid catheter or introduction of a fibreoptic scope. The Seldinger technique was performed 25 times in 18 patients, introducing a spinal silicone catheter (n = 14), an extradural silicone stimulation lead (n = 2) or a small diameter fibreoptic endoscope (n = 9). Paraesthesiae caused by neural irritation occurred in awake patients. This did not differ from the technique using a Tuohy needle only. Neural damage or trauma did not occur with the Seldinger technique. The incidence of post-spinal
headache
was the same for both techniques. No further complications were noted.
...
PMID:Extradural and subarachnoid catheterization using the Seldinger technique. 867 57
The results of stimulating human subjects with the LISS Cranial Stimulator (LCS) and the LISS Body Stimulator (LBS) include an increase or decrease in the activities of certain neurotransmitters and neurohormones and the reduction of associated pain, insomnia, depression, and
spasticity
. The effects were documented in human subjects with measurements of the serum concentration of the various agents and assessments of the symptoms being performed before and after stimulation. The stimulators had a carrier frequency of 15,000 hz, which utilizes the bulk capacitance of the body, and a 15 hz modulating bioactive frequency. The second modulating frequency presently used, 500 hz, reduces the energy input to the patient by half. Significant increases in levels of CSF serotonin and beta endorphin were recorded post stimulation. There were also elevations in the levels of plasma serotonin, beta endorphin, GABA and DHEA together with diminished levels of cortisol and tryptophan. Concomitant with these changes were significant improvements in the symptoms of pain, insomnia,
spasticity
, depression, and
headache
.
...
PMID:Physiological and therapeutic effects of high frequency electrical pulses. 880 93
The use of standing devices by spinal cord-injured subjects was investigated through a national survey of a sample of individuals who returned their manufacturer's warranty card to two companies. We obtained a 32% response rate (99/310). The majority of respondents were male (87%) with a median age between 41 and 50 years. Seventy-seven percent were paraplegic and 21% were quadriplegic. Forty percent had between 1 and 5 years experience with their device, and 84% of those responding were currently using their standing device. Forty-one percent used their standing device one to six times a week; two-thirds stood between 30 minutes and 1 hour for each use. Less than 10% of subjects experienced any side effects, such as nausea or
headaches
, from standing. Twenty-one percent of subjects reported being able to empty their bladder more completely. There was also a favorable response by some individuals on the effects of the standing devices on bowel regularity, reduction of urinary tract infections, leg
spasticity
, and number of bed sores. Finally, 79% of subjects highly recommended use of standing devices to other people with spinal cord injury. The positive responses of individuals using standing devices is a strong recommendation for the assistive technology community to make these devices more available to individuals with spinal cord injury.
...
PMID:Follow-up assessment of standing mobility device users. 1033 84
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