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56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have designed a screening system to diagnose unruptured aneurysms, including the use of digital subtraction angiography (DSA). We surveyed 115 patients who had undergone clipping procedures after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) and questioned them with regard to the subjective symptoms. Sixty-eight of 92 patients who returned the questionnaire reported, prior to rupture, headache, eye pain, and neck pain most frequently, and also impairment of extraocular movements, ptosis, visual field defects, and motor and sensory disturbances. Nineteen (47.5%) of 40 patients who had complete pain relief after surgery complained of headache from 1 week to 1 month before SAH. In addition, nine patients (22.5%) complained of headache for several years, and were also pain-free after surgery. For the indication of DSA, we employed an expert system based on fuzzy set theory. Seven groups of parameters are: Group 1, a basic questionnaire concerning age, sex, and past and family histories; Group 2, 15 warning signs selected on the basis of retrospective study; and Groups 3-7, detailed questions concerning each sign. Scoring weights assigned to each condition based on the results of the retrospective study, and threshold values were determined by several neurosurgeons. The certainty factors for intermediate hypotheses were calculated from these weights and threshold values and summed up, from which the conclusion was obtained. Twelve new cases of unruptured cerebral aneurysm were diagnosed using this screening system. This system may improve the ability to diagnose cerebral aneurysms before rupture.
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PMID:New screening system for unruptured cerebral aneurysms--combination of an expert system and DSA examination. 170 35

Cranial neuropathy affecting the eyes is a possible symptom of type II diabetes. In this article, Dr Dickerman describes a case in which diabetes was diagnosed in a 63-year-old woman who presented with unilateral headache and eye pain.
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PMID:Ophthalmoplegia with headache. Be aware of diabetes. 203 88

Periocular pain may result from local pathology or be referred from distant sites. Ophthalmic examination will detect most local disease, although a careful search may be needed to determine the cause of subtle entities. Painful ophthalmoplegia results from a variety of neoplasms and inflammations, often in the area of the cavernous sinus. Cluster headache should be differentiated from more sinister causes of painful Horner's syndrome. Systemic diseases that cause periocular pain and migraine and other classic headache syndromes that may present with eye pain alone are also discussed.
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PMID:Ocular and periocular pain. 268 63

An outbreak of unexplained illness occurred in members of an army reserve unit after field training in an area of New Jersey endemic for Lyme disease. Nine (12%) of the 74 who attended the exercise had serological evidence of Ehrlichia infection, defined as a single rise in titer of antibody to Ehrlichia canis greater than or equal to 1:160 four weeks after training. Two reservists with early serum samples had documented seroconversion, defined by a four-fold or greater increase in titer of antibody to E. canis, with a peak titer of greater than or equal to 1:160. Reservists with serological evidence of Ehrlichia infection were more than three times as likely to report arthralgia, myalgia, headache, appetite loss, nausea, eye pain, and abdominal pain than the other reservists. No reservist with serological evidence of Ehrlichia infection was hospitalized and most had minimal or no symptoms. This outbreak of ehrlichiosis suggests that the usual symptoms of Ehrlichia infection are milder than previously reported and that ehrlichiosis must be considered in symptomatic persons with recent tick exposure.
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PMID:An outbreak of ehrlichiosis in members of an Army Reserve unit exposed to ticks. 291 68

1031 British optometrists completed a questionnaire to give information on their rates of referral and notification to the medical profession. Data were collected in relation to the conditions concerned, the age and sex of the patient, and the spectacle correction. Major causes of referral were cataract, glaucoma, fundus changes, headaches/migraine/eye pain and lowered visual acuity; 6.5% of all patients seen were referred to their general medical practitioner notified, and of this group it was estimated that 25-30% could have managed with reading glasses which comprised spherical lenses of equal power. If such glasses could be self-selected, without reference to a medical practitioner or optometrist, a significant number of people would not benefit from the health screening aspects of the eye examination.
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PMID:Referrals and notifications by British optometrists. 326 10

Four patients, two men 25 and 43 years old and two women 20 and 40 years old, had complete monocular temporal hemianopsias, suggesting that it may be a more common functional deficit than has been recognized. The initial symptoms were visual loss and headache, and eye pain also occurred. Correct diagnosis is possible if the absence of a relative afferent pupillary defect and the persistence of a hemianopsia on binocular testing are demonstrated.
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PMID:Functional monocular temporal hemianopsia. 394 40

The authors investigated the role of secondary immunologic response, virus serotype, age, and sex on the clinical manifestations of dengue fever in Puerto Rico. From surveillance data for 1990 and 1991, this study identified 3,926 laboratory-positive cases, including 889 for whom dengue immunologic status and symptoms could be ascertained. Of those, 622 cases were virologically confirmed, and 267 cases were serologically confirmed. More than 50% of all positive patients reported fever, chills, headache, eye pain, body pains, joint pains, nausea, vomiting, or skin rash. The frequency of reporting signs, symptoms, and hospitalization was significantly higher among persons with secondary infections diagnosed by serological methods. Only rash was more common among those with primary infections. Symptom reporting increased with age; body pains, joint pains, and rash were significantly more frequently reported by female patients. No significant difference in symptom frequency was found among the virologically confirmed cases, comparing primary and secondary cases or infections due to different serotypes. The data for serologically confirmed cases suggest that in Puerto Rico the manifestations of dengue fever are, as with dengue hemorrhagic fever in Asia, more prominent among those who are experiencing secondary infections, and this effect may be more marked in the younger age groups.
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PMID:Symptoms of dengue fever in relation to host immunologic response and virus serotype, Puerto Rico, 1990-1991. 748 67

Pain originating from ophthalmic disease has been well documented. A series of patients presenting with eye or periorbital pain attributed to cervical region dysfunction were diagnosed and treated with injections of subcutaneous lidocaine followed by triamcinolone acetonide. Twelve patients, 11 women and 1 man, ranging in age from 20 to 82 years had an evaluation including a complete eye examination, and laboratory tests and neuroimaging as dictated by the history to exclude structural abnormalities or systemic disease. All patients had marked focal suboccipital tenderness ipsilateral to the side of their headache and eye pain. A subcutaneous injection with 2% lidocaine followed by triamcinolone acetonide 40 mg was administered directly to the site of focal tenderness. After injection, five patients described total relief of pain, five patients described some degree of pain relief, and two patients had no relief of headache. Duration of pain relief ranged from several hours to 3 months. Patients may present with periorbital or eye pain as a result of disease affecting the cervical sensory roots with subsequent stimulation of the trigeminal apparatus. Subcutaneous injection of lidocaine and triamcinolone acetonide may be of help in the diagnosis of these patients and provide temporary relief.
Headache 1995 Feb
PMID:Referred ocular pain relieved by suboccipital injection. 767 65

Reported is one case of cerebral cryptococcosis in a 12-year-old girl. The diagnosis was confirmed by the detection of Cryptococcus neoformans with both India ink preparation of the cerebrospinal fluid and Sabouraud's media culture. Clinical presentation included progressive severe headache, vomiting, left eye pain, diplopia, dizziness and unstable gait. Fever was absent as a symptom. Initial brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed a focal lesion over the right cerebellar hemisphere with better demonstration than contrast-enhanced computed tomography. The patient was treated with amphotericin B and 5-flucytosine with good final outcome. Early diagnosis and proper therapy are necessary in order to decrease the motality of cerebral cryptococcosis.
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PMID:Cerebral cryptococcosis in a child. 779 79

The clinical, laboratorial perimetric and fluorescein angiographic features of the arteritic type of the anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (A-AION) was studied in 25 patients (40 eyes) in order to characterize the profile of the disease and to allow the differential diagnosis with the non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NA-AION) and other disorders of the optic nerve. The A-AION occurred in patients 60 to 88 years old (mean 74 years) and was highly predominant in females (64 per cent). Fifteen patients had both eyes involved, either simultaneously or usually within few days or weeks after the initial involvement. Headache and eye pain were the most commonly observed prodromic complaints whereas systemic symptoms of giant cell arteritis (GCA) were seen in all patients. The laboratorial abnormalities most commonly found were high values of reactive C protein, plasmatic fibrinogen and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. In the great majority of the patients visual acuity was severely affected. The optic disc was always abnormal, usually showing a pale edema. In addition to that retinal changes were commonly found. Goldmann perimetry disclosed a wide variety of visual fields abnormalities, the most common of them being inferior altitudinal defects. Fluorescein fundus angiography revealed delayed or absent disc fluorescence, or sectorial or diffuse hypofluorescence or hyperfluorescence of the optic disc. Choroidal filling delay was the most characteristic and frequent angiographic finding in the arteritc type of the disease.
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PMID:[The arteritic type of anterior ischemic optic neuropathy. Study of 25 cases]. 789 8


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