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

Neurologic involvement of Lyme disease typically consists of meningitis, cranial neuropathy, and radiculoneuritis, alone or in combination, lasting for months. From 1976 to 1983, we studied 38 patients with Lyme meningitis. Headache and mild neck stiffness, which fluctuated in intensity, and lymphocytic pleocytosis were the common findings. Half of the patients also had facial palsies, which were unilateral in 12 and bilateral in seven. In addition, 12 patients had motor and/or sensory radiculoneuropathies; asymmetric weakness of extremities was the most common finding. Although incomplete presentations of neurologic involvement of Lyme disease may be confused with other entities, the typical constellation of neurologic symptoms represents a unique clinical picture.
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PMID:Neurological findings of Lyme disease. 651 50

A giant aneurysm of the left vertebral artery which was nearly completely thrombosed and very difficult to diagnose, was successfully treated by a complete surgical excision. The patient had been hospitalized eight times because of brief episodes of headache associated with neck stiffness, nausea, vomiting and numbness of the left hand. On the ninth admission, the diagnosis of a "tumour" involving the posterior fossa was established. At operation an aneurysm of the left vertebral artery was found and resected. At discharge, one week after surgery, the patient was free of neurologic deficits.
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PMID:A tumor-simulating giant aneurysm of the vertebral artery. Case report. 663 54

Clinical assessment of patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is important both in determining management and in predicting outcome. A previous report showed considerable observer inconsistency when patients were graded with either the Hunt and Hess or the Nishioka system. This study evaluates observer variability in assessment of the individual clinical features from which these grading systems are derived. Assessment of the presence or absence of neck stiffness caused least inter-observer variability. Headache caused most variability, due to difficulty in grading its severity. Determination of the severity of a neurological deficit proved more reliable than deciding whether or not a deficit was present. The terms used to describe the level of consciousness in the Hunt and Hess and Nishioka systems were found to be significantly less consistent than the Glasgow Coma Scale. The authors suggest that when patients with SAH are assessed it is necessary to take into account the consistency with which observers can record a clinical feature, as well as its prognostic importance.
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PMID:Observer variability in assessing the clinical features of subarachnoid hemorrhage. 684 10

A condition commonly seen after motor vehicle accidents is studied. This is the "late whiplash" syndrome, which is defined as a collection of symptoms and disabilities seen more than six months after a neck injury occurring in a motor vehicle accident. A series of 300 cases is examined. With the use of factor analysis the syndrome is defined as consisting of headache, neckache, neck stiffness, and depression, as well as anxiety, all of which are strongly correlated with each other. There is, on the other hand, a poor correlation with physical or radiological abnormalities. The condition is common in women, especially in the 21 to 40 years' distribution. It is shown that social variables may be relevant n the production of the syndrome.
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PMID:The late whiplash syndrome. 693 81

The patient was a 48-year-old housewife, who had a sudden onset of severe headache followed by loss of consciousness for a few hours on the day of admission. Initially she showed slight restlessness due to headache, neck stiffness and subhyaloid hemorrhage. Four-vessel study revealed a basilar aneurysm on right retrograde brachial angiography and anterior communicating aneurysm on left carotid angiography. Two weeks after the onset, when she had no neurological deficit except for intermittent appearance of disorientation, both aneurysms were successfully clipped through right pterional approach of Yasargil. The subarachnoid hemorrhage was apparently due to basilar bifurcation aneurysm. Postoperatively, she showed right hemiparesis including her face, aniscocoria (left, 4 mm, oval: right, 1.5 mm, round) and conjugate deviation toward the left. The disturbance of conjugate eye movement and the hemiparesis completely disappeared in 2 and 7 days respectively. The patient was discharged 4 weeks postoperatively with mild left 3rd nerve palsy. At present, one year postoperatively, she is fully engaged in her housewife life without any neurological deficits. A case of superior Foville syndrome combined with Weber syndrome after clipping of basilar bifurcation aneurysm was reported and its anatomicoclinical mechanism was reviewed. The pathogenesis was supposed to be left midbrain ischemic lesion due to circulatory disturbance of P-1 perforators (P-1: proximal posterior cerebral artery); e.g., occlusion on clipping of vasospasm. This P-1 perforator syndrome after aneurysmal clipping has been reported only little. The importance of preservation of these perforators with careful dissection and manipulation under microscopy was emphasized.
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PMID:[Superior Foville syndrome after clipping of basilar bifurcation aneurysm--case report (author's transl)]. 724 18

610 sacrorodiculographic and myelographic examinations were carried out injecting at lumbar level Iopamidol at 200, 300 and 370 mg I/ml concentrations. Immediate and early complications have been noticed in 18,52% of cases, i.e. sensation of pain during contrast injection, headache, nausea, vomit, neck stiffness, photophobia, epilepsy. In sacrorodiculographic examinations, side effects especially occurred by using 370 mg I/ml concentrations; in lumbar and thoracic myelographies, incidence of complications did not statistically differ by uing 300 or 370 mg I/ml concentrations. Side effects have occurred most frequently in cervical myelographies carried out with 370 mg I/ml concentration. Analysis of complications as well as radiographic results suggest to use Iopamidol at 300 mg I/ml concentration in sacrorodiculographics, in lower thoracic myelographies and in studies of narrowed, stenosed or obstructed canals; Iopamidol at 370 mg I/ml concentration may be used in upper thoracic studies and cervical myelographies.
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PMID:[Sacroradiculo graphic and myelographic investigations with iopamidol: study of 610 examinations (author's transl)]. 734 52

A case of a young women with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobin (PNH) who developed thrombosis of the cerebral veins after beginning a regimen of oral contraceptives is presented. She was 24 years old and presented with a 3-week history of frontal headache, neck stiffness, paraesthesiae of both arms, and weakness of the left leg. She had begun use of Microgynon 2 months before presentation, but had discontinued use when symptoms began. Hematological studies showed a shortened partial thromboplastin time, high fibrinogen and factor VIII levels, and prlonged euglobulin clot lysis time. Though this patient had a history of coagulation difficulties, it was not until after taking the estrogen-containing contraceptive preparation that PNH developed. The mechanism of thrombosis may be related to the liberation of thromboplastic material from hemolysed erythrocytes and to interaction between complement-sensitive platelets and complement components in plasma. It is suggested that the estrogen augmented the previously existing thrombotic condition in this patient, and that administration of estrogen-containing preparations should not occur in women with thrombotic disorders.
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PMID:Cerebral vein thrombosis and the contraceptive pill in paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria. 744 35

A 56-year-old male presented with a posterior fossa cavernous angioma manifesting as persistent headache with mild neck stiffness. Lumbar puncture revealed subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Repeated four-vessel angiography failed to identify the source of the SAH. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging demonstrated multiple small lesions in the posterior fossa and cerebral hemispheres, and the SAH. A mass arising from the biventral lobule of the right cerebellar hemisphere extended exophytically into the cisterna magna with intratumoral hemorrhage. These findings were compatible with the presumptive diagnosis of SAH from the mass at the right biventral lobule. The lesion was totally removed through a suboccipital craniectomy without sequelae. The histological diagnosis was cavernous angioma. Intracranial cavernous angioma presenting only as SAH has never been reported before. The use of MR imaging in establishing the diagnosis of vascular malformations is emphasized, particularly when neither computed tomography nor angiography can adequately visualize the origin of SAH.
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PMID:Intracranial cavernous angioma manifesting as subarachnoid hemorrhage--case report. 750

Forty-five patients under the age of 20 years with rhinogenic subdural empyema were treated at Groote Schuur Hospital and Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital between 1979 and 1991. Thirty-two were male and 13 female. The majority were between 13 and 19 years of age. Headache was the predominant symptom in 41 patients. Vomiting occurred in 15 and 21 presented with seizures, 2 in status epilepticus. Thirty had swinging pyrexias and 26 neck stiffness while only 14 had focal neurological signs. Swelling of the face or orbit was seen in 24. Twenty-two had depressed levels of consciousness and 7 had Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) values below 11/15. White cell counts and erythrocyte sedimentation rates were raised in all cases. Twenty-three patients underwent lumbar punctures despite the inherent danger in this procedure. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis showed a pleocytosis in all cases; no organisms were cultured in any of the specimens. The diagnosis in all cases was made by contrast-enhanced computed tomography. Twenty-five patients underwent multiple burrholes, 9 small craniectomies and 11 craniotomies. Thirty-four patients made an excellent recovery. All of the 6 patients who died had GCS values below 11 at the time of their surgery.
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PMID:Rhinogenic subdural empyema in older children and teenagers. 757 Feb 36

The purpose of this report is to describe a new complication of propofol administration. A previously fit patient underwent intravenous anaesthesia with propofol for removal of dental wires. Postoperatively he developed myoclonic jerking of his limbs. On regaining consciousness he complained of an occipital headache, neck stiffness and photophobia, and was found to have nuchal rigidity on examination. These clinical features resolved over the following week. Subsequent investigations failed to explain the aetiology of the symptoms of meningeal irritation, which suggests that propofol was the causative agent. While prolonged myoclonus has been previously described with propofol administration, this is the first report of meningism occurring with its use.
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PMID:Prolonged myoclonus and meningism following propofol. 872 64


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