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

A 40-year-old male with no history of underlying disease was admitted to Hokusho Central Hospital on May 25, 1991, complaining of high fever and headache. Physical examination on admission revealed a temperature of 38.5 degrees C, a pulse rate of 84 beat/min (relative bradycardia) and no abnormal findings for the chest or abdomen. Slight neck stiffness without Kernig's sign was observed at neurological examination. Laboratory data were: ESR 11 mm/lh, WBC 12000/mm3, C-reactive protein positive. Lumbar puncture showed an initial pressure of 230 mmH2O; CSF revealed a cell count of 2633/3 mm3 with mononuclear pleocytosis, total protein of 76 mg/dl and sugar of 54 mg/dl (CSF:blood glucose ratio 0.47). We initially suspected tuberculous or cryptococcal meningitis, but Campylobacter fetus subsp. fetus (C. fetus) was isolated from the CSF and venous blood on the 27th hospital day. IPM/CS 1 g/day, MINO 200 mg/day and FOM 4 g/day were intravenously administered. This antibiotic therapy was very effective: the patient was soon afebrile, and gradually all signs and symptoms were resolved. C. fetus was sensitive to IMP/CS, MINO, KM, GM, EM, OFLX, CP. The patient was discharged with no complication. He has eaten raw beef frequently before admission, but stool culture for C. fetus was negative.
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PMID:[A case of Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus meningitis]. 845 Feb 75

Listerial brainstem encephalitis is a rare disease. Only 62 cases have been reported previously; all were in adults, only 8% of whom were immunosuppressed. The disease has a characteristic biphasic course: a nonspecific prodrome of headache, nausea or vomiting, and fever lasting for several days is followed by progressive asymmetrical cranial-nerve palsies, cerebellar signs, hemiparesis or hypesthesia, and impairment of consciousness. Neck stiffness was initially present in only 55% of the cases described thus far. Studies of cerebrospinal fluid often revealed only mild abnormalities. Cultures of cerebrospinal fluid and blood were positive in 41% and 61% of cases, respectively. Respiratory failure occurred in 41% of cases. Initial computed tomography of the brain often gave normal results; magnetic resonance imaging better demonstrated brainstem abnormalities. Overall mortality was 51%. All untreated patients died. When treatment with ampicillin or penicillin was initiated early, the rate of survival was > 70%; however, neurological sequelae developed in 61% of survivors.
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PMID:Brainstem encephalitis (rhombencephalitis) due to Listeria monocytogenes: case report and review. 850 61

An outbreak of aseptic meningitis caused by echovirus type 9 occurred between March and October, 1990, in Kagoshima, Southern Japan. Clinical manifestations and laboratory data of 259 children with aseptic meningitis who were admitted to the outpatient clinic of pediatrics in the Kagoshima City Hospital were analyzed (other diseases caused by echovirus type 9 were not investigated). The patients' age ranged from 1 month to 15 years and the highest incidence was in 4-year-old children. The male:female ratio was 1.3:1. Frequencies of headache (69%), vomiting (64%), neck stiffness (36%) and rash (195%) were lower than those in the previous reports in the United States or in the Europe. Pleocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid increased with increasing age in the younger children. A predominance of neutrophils in cerebrospinal fluid lasted for 3 days or more after onset in 16% of the patients. Seroepidemiologic study suggested that the accumulation of susceptible children < 5 years of age had predisposed to the epidemic.
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PMID:Echovirus type 9 epidemic in Kagoshima, southern Japan: seroepidemiology and clinical observation of aseptic meningitis. 855 29

A 43-year-old woman complaining of severe pain of the right side of the face was admitted to the Department of Neurosurgery. It had been present for three months and diagnosed as trigeminal neuralgia. The CT scan without contrast material had been considered normal at that time. Three months later, after a favourable response to carbamazepine, she suddenly developed right occipital headache and drowsiness. On admission, she was alert, and neurological examination revealed only mild neck stiffness. Computed tomographic scan demonstrated an acute hematoma in the right cerebellopontine angle and in the fourth ventricle. Vertebral angiography revealed an aneurysm of the right anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA). A posterior fossa approach disclosed a large, nearly totally thrombosed, saccular AICA aneurysm, which showed minimal compression to the pons at the trigeminal root entry zone. The aneurysm was clipped and excised. She showed an excellent recovery and was free of pain in the early postoperative period and at the last examination 16 months later. Aneurysms in the distal AICA are very rare lesions. Only 31 cases have been published so far. Distal AICA aneurysm in an extremely unusual cause of trigeminal neuralgia secondary to aneurysmal compression. The literature concerning AICA aneurysms and their clinical manifestations is reviewed and discussed.
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PMID:Isolated trigeminal neuralgia secondary to distal anterior inferior cerebellar artery aneurysm. 873 65

Subdural empyema, a collection of pus in the space between the dura and arachnoid, is a rare type of intracranial infection. We report on 23 patients, aged 8 months to 70 years, with subdural empyema who were treated in our clinic between 1989 and 1994. The sources of subdural empyemas were meningitis in five patients, middle ear in five, trauma in four, paranasal sinus in three, complications of surgery and subdural tap in four, and unknown in two patients. The common presentations were headache, focal neurologic deficit, fever, vomiting, seizures, and neck stiffness. Diagnosis was achieved by computerized tomography and neurologic examinations in all cases. Treatment was effected by burr hole or small craniotomy with catheter drainage, and antibiotics were administered to all patients. The mortality rate was 8.7%; the remaining patients made a good recovery without sequelae. We therefore recommend burr hole with catheter drainage plus antibiotics as a method of treating subdural empyema.
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PMID:Treatment of subdural empyema by burr hole. 875 81

Intracranial complications of sinusitis are infrequent since the advent of antibiotics, and furthermore the prognosis is improved by medical therapy. We have seen a patient with an intracranial complication of sinus infection that had a history of frontal bone trauma five years ago. Then following an upper respiratory tract infection, headache, bilateral periorbital pain and swelling, spiking fever, neck stiffness, bilateral chemosis and ophthalmoplegy developed. Cavernous sinus thrombosis was diagnosed clinically and high doses of I.V. antibiotics were started promptly. The patient's condition improved in the first week of her admission. She was discharged three weeks later, without any surgical intervention. Two-year follow up showed no cranial nerve palsies or any neurologic deficiencies. A good result has been achieved by immediate medical measures.
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PMID:Cavernous sinus thrombosis: a rare complication of sinusitis. 905 42

We retrospectively compared the clinical manifestations, laboratory features, and outcome of cryptococcal meningitis in 44 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive and 21 HIV-negative patients in Durban, South Africa, and contrasted our findings with those in the developed world. Cryptococcal meningitis was the initial AIDS-defining illness in 84% of patients. Headache, fever, convulsions, neck stiffness, and neurological signs were more common in HIV-positive patients. We detected neurological abnormalities in 50% of the HIV-positive group. Seventeen percent of HIV-positive patients had completely normal CSF indices. HIV-positive patients with cryptococcal meningitis frequently had oral candidiasis and tuberculosis as coexistent illnesses. Prognostic factors identified in the West do not appear to be applicable in Africa. Death during hospitalization was significantly higher in the HIV-positive group. HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis in Africa is apparently associated with higher rates of neurological complications and death than is such disease in developed countries of the world.
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PMID:Cryptococcal meningitis in Durban, South Africa: a comparison of clinical features, laboratory findings, and outcome for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive and HIV-negative patients. 911 35

Two hundred and eighty-two consecutive surgical operations were performed over a period of 11 months, February-September, 1991, December 1991-February 1992 at two private medical centres. Anaesthesia was conducted by the surgeon assisted by the theatre nurses. Intravenous ketamine was given in 72% of operations, xylocaine infiltration in 12.8%, spinal anaesthesia in 11.3% and intravenous thiopentone anaesthesia in 4% of the patients. Major and minor surgical operations were performed on 180 (63.9%) and 102 (36.2%) patients, respectively. With ketamine anaesthesia side effects included transient intra-operative hypertension in 76.8%, delirium/confusion in 56.7% and dreams in 5.4% of the patients. Hypotension at induction and postoperative headache/neck stiffness were the principal side effects in spinal anaesthesia occurring in 59.2% and 12.8%, respectively. Reversible apnoea occurred in three patients and cardiac arrest in one patient of those who had intravenous thiopentone. It appeared, therefore, that where there is no anaesthetist as is often the case in under-doctored areas, after careful patient selection, intravenous ketamine, spinal and local infiltration anaesthetic techniques are safe and useful for many surgical procedures. There is the need to avoid intravenous thiopentone by untrained personnel and in settings poorly equipped for cardiopulmonary resuscitations.
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PMID:Where there is no anaesthetist: a study of 282 consecutive patients using intravenous, spinal and local infiltration anaesthetic techniques. 1041 88

The last epidemic outbreak of poliomyelitis in Norway lasted from 1950 to 1954. The article describes the occurrence of poliomyelitis in Western Norway on the basis of 243 medical records from this period. The epidemic reached its peak in Western Norway in 1952, while the highest number of new cases of poliomyelitis in Norway as a whole occurred in 1951. We found equal representation of both sexes. Most cases were recorded in late summer and autumn. Most patients (96%) had general symptoms, most frequently headache. The fever was moderate. Meningeal irritation (neck stiffness) was recorded in 56% of the cases. The most frequent neurological symptom was asymmetric limb paralysis. 6% of the patients died. High fever, extensive paralysis and inadequate respiration had a negative effect on the prognosis. 57 patients had aparalytic poliomyelitis and were hospitalized for a short time.
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PMID:[Poliomyelitis--not an extinct disease. Outbreak of poliomyelitis in Vestlandet 1950-54]. 914 45

A 44-year-old man presented with sudden headache and neck stiffness. Computed tomography (CT) demonstrated subarachnoid haemorrhage. CT and magnetic resonance (MR) angiography showed the cause to be a ruptured anterior communicating artery aneurysm. These findings were confirmed by digital subtraction angiogram and at surgery. The role of imaging in detection of cerebral aneurysms is briefly discussed.
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PMID:Clinics in diagnostic imaging (28). 936 91


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