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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dipyridamole stress 201Tl scintigraphy is widely used in the investigation of myocardial ischaemia. We report our experience of adverse effects observed during this diagnostic procedure. A prospective study was undertaken of 435 consecutive patients (mean age 59 years; 273 males) referred to two nuclear medicine departments for assessment of myocardial perfusion was undertaken. Patients were monitored prior to and following the infusion of dipyridamole. All symptomatic, haemodynamic and electrocardiographic changes were documented. No deaths occurred in this series. Adverse events were observed in 174 (40%) patients. Of these, three patients experienced 'major' adverse events (0.6%) requiring hospitalization (myocardial infarction = 1; chest pain = 1; simple
partial seizure
= 1). 'Moderate' adverse events occurred in 39 (8.9%) patients and required intravenous aminophylline to reverse effects (ST segment abnormalities = 26; nausea = 7
headache
= 3; chest pain = 2; bronchospasm = 1; protracted vomiting = 1; diarrhoea = 1). 'Minor' adverse events were experienced by 132 (30.3%) patients and did not require aminophylline. Sixty per cent of our patients experienced no ill effects from dipyridamole given as an exercise substitute in conjunction with 201Tl imaging. The rest had symptoms which were mostly mild, although a few patients found the experience unpleasant. Only one patient experienced a life-threatening episode.
...
PMID:Safety of intravenous dipyridamole thallium myocardial perfusion imaging: experience in 435 patients. 847 71
A 37-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital on October 4, 1991 because of fever,
headache
, and abnormal behavior. Although she was treated with aciclovir, she developed encephalitis, which slowly manifested itself over the next month as meningeal irritation, loss of consciousness,
partial seizure
, and quadriparesis. Her cerebrospinal fluid showed mild lymphocytic pleocytosis without protein elevation. Serum IgG antibody titer to rubella virus was elevated, but the rubella virus could not be detected in the cerebrospinal fluid by PCR amplification. Her consciousness level improved slowly, and by the end of November she suffered only dystonic posture of her right arm and hand. By the middle of December, there were no abnormal neurological findings except some extrapyramidal tract signs and symptoms, such as tremor and rigidity. The serum rubella virus IgG titer had fallen back into the normal range. Her illness was diagnosed as subacute panencephalitis, and she recovered completely about 5 months after the onset of the disease. The lack of rubella virus in the cerebrospinal fluid suggests that panencephalitis may not be dependent on virus replication within the central nervous system. Specific T cells sensitized to proteolipid protein synthetic peptides (PLP158-166) identified with rubella virus were detected in this case during the active stage. These observations imply that subacute panencephalitis may be dependent on an immune-mediated mechanism and that PLP-specific T cells may play an important role in pathogenesis of the disease.
...
PMID:[A case report of subacute panencephalitis associated with specific T cells sensitized to proteolipid protein (PLP) synthetic peptides identified with rubella virus]. 897 31
We report a case of benign cerebral angiopathy in a 37 year-old woman in the postpartum period occurring after bromocriptine therapy to suppress lactation. She presented with severe
headache
, hyperthermia and bradycardia. She had
partial seizure
. Angiography excluded cortical vein thrombosis but revealed multiple narrowing of intracerebral arteries. Bromocriptine was stopped. The patient totally recovered. A second angiography performed 3 months later was normal. Postpartum cerebral angiopathy is considered as rare but the prevalence is probably underestimated. Neurological features of this affection are multiple. Diagnosis is made by angiography performed in emergency and which showed narrowing of intracerebral arteries which are reversible. Prognosis is good. Reversible vasoconstriction may be due to acute arterial hypertension, sometimes triggered by ergot derivatives.
...
PMID:[Benign angiopathy of the puerperium: a clinicoradiological case associated with ingestion of bromocriptine]. 897 78
The clinical, radiologic and pathologic features of a case of parasagittal solitary fibrous tumor of the meninges are reported. The patient was a 44 year-old male who presented with a complex
partial seizure
and a history of
headaches
and confusion. Radiological studies showed a large extra-axial dural-based mass in the right parietal region, predominantly isointense with gray matter and hypointense with respect to white matter on T1-weighted images, and hypointense with respect to gray matter on T2-weighted images. At surgery, the mass was very vascular, quite firm and very adherent to the convexity. Histologically the tumor was composed of spindle-shaped cells growing in fascicles within a collagenous matrix. Solitary fibrous tumor of the meninges is a newly described entity, which should be kept in mind in the clinical and radiological differential diagnosis of extra-axial brain tumors.
...
PMID:Parasagittal solitary fibrous tumor of the meninges. Case report and review of the literature. 1021 88
Over a period of ten years, a boy had several episodes of coma, lasting three to five days. Each episode was preceded by hemiparesis or paresthesias, aphasia,
headaches
and behavioural changes, with subsequent loss of consciousness.
Partial seizures
occurred during the first episode. A history of migraine or hemiplegic migraine was found in several members of the family. Linkage to chromosome 1q21-23, where a gene for familial hemiplegic migraine has been mapped, was shown in this family.
...
PMID:Recurrent episodes of coma: an unusual phenotype of familial hemiplegic migraine with linkage to chromosome 1. 1056 14
Photosensitivity is a typical feature of photosensitive epilepsy which is usually considered a form of idiopathic generalized epilepsy.
Partial seizures
featuring visual symptoms are rarely reported in photosensitive epilepsy. In this study, we describe 13 neurologically normal patients in whom daytime seizures were always induced by television and began with elementary visual hallucinations, followed frequently by vomiting,
headache
and then secondary generalization. Three patients additionally reported nocturnal seizures, which have not been described in previous studies. Two of these latter patients had generalized tonic-clonic seizures, the other always awoke from sleep and could describe typical visual hallucinations at the beginning of the seizure. EEG features included normal background activity and occipital spikes or spike-waves in all but two patients. Eight patients also showed generalized epileptiform activity during intermittent photic stimulation. Seizure frequency was low in all. Apart from two patients, who refused treatment, all patients received antiepileptic drugs. Only one patient continued to have rare seizures after treatment; in the others seizure control was achieved with monotherapy. We conclude that reflex occipital lobe epilepsy is an idiopathic form of the benign partial epilepsies, which may overlap with one another.
...
PMID:Reflex occipital lobe epilepsy. 1098 3
Visual phenomena like lightnings, disturbed contours of objects, or skotoma, can be due to ophthalmological diseases, but can also occur as symptoms generated by the central nervous system ("aura") in migraine or epilepsy. A subsequent hemicrania is considered as a hallmark of migraine, but in many cases does not allow for a certain distinction from postictal
headaches
in patients with focal epilepsy. A detailed analysis of the aura does, however, provide sufficient information for classifying the disorder as an aura in migraine or as a simple partial epileptic seizure in most cases. The higher degree of differentiation of visual phenomena including colour, movement, and complex visual phenomena, is characteristic of the activation of neuronal circuits during an epileptic aura. The higher speed of transsynaptic propagation of epileptic discharges and postictal inactivation causes a more rapid time-course of the epileptic aura as compared to a migraine aura resulting from a depolarization spreading by diffusion. Clinically, the diagnosis of epilepsy is supported by additional positive motor phenomena or by a transition into a complex
partial seizure
, e. g. when epileptic activity spreads into a temporal lobe. Secondarily generalized seizures, however, may also occur in patients with migraine. Interictal and ictal EEG recordings can be important to prove an epileptic origin, but their sensitivity is low if ictal discharges remain limited to a small brain area. In rare cases, measurements of ictal cerebral perfusion can contribute to the differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Differential diagnosis of visual aura in migraine and epilepsy]. 1159 Apr 66
George Gershwin, renowned composer and pianist, well known for his popular works, died on the 11th July 1937 due to a brain tumor. His neurological symptoms first appeared on that same year, in February, with a simple olfactory
partial seizure
, characterized by an unpleasant smell of burnt rubber (uncinated seizure). He later had a quick clinical descend, with severe
headache
that occurred in bouts, dizziness, coordination compromise and olfactory seizures, eventually lapsing into a coma on the 9th July 1937. It was then that a gliomatosus cyst was diagnosed, which on microscopic examination proved to be a "glioblastoma multiforme". Despite the surgical intervention, Gershwin died soon after the procedure without recovering his consciousness. We make a brief review of Gershwin's neurologic disease, with emphasis on the initial symptoms, namely the uncinated seizures.
...
PMID:The uncinated crisis of George Gershwin. 1213 61
Blood brain barrier disruption enhances drug delivery in primary central nervous system lymphoma. In this study, we report adverse events that were encountered intraoperatively and in the postoperative period in these patients. A retrospective analysis of 17 patients documenting demographic data, preprocedure medical history, intraoperative, and postoperative anesthetic complications was conducted between January 2002 and December 2004. Seventeen patients underwent 210 treatments under general anesthesia with a mean of 12.4+/-7.2 treatments per patient.
Focal seizures
occurred in 13% of patients. Generalized motor seizures occurred in 4 treatment sessions in 2 different patients. The incidence of seizures was significantly higher when the internal carotid artery was used for injection, as opposed to the vertebral artery (20.8% and 6.02%, respectively, P=0.0034). Tachycardia associated with ST segment depression occurred 9 times (4.3%) in 3 patients. One patient had significant ST segment elevation (more than 1.5 mm). Transient cerebral vasospasm after methotrexate injection occurred in 9% of patients. Postoperative nausea and vomiting were observed in 11.9% of patients. After emergence, lethargy and obtundation occurred in 7.6% of the cases. The incidence of postoperative
headache
and reversible motor deficits was 6% and 3.8%, respectively. Our review highlights the problems that were encountered during blood brain barrier disruption under anesthesia and in the postoperative period. Further prospective studies are required for comprehensive evaluation of intraprocedure and postprocedure complications that will allow development of an optimal anesthetic plan and will improve patient outcome by preventing potential complications.
...
PMID:Perioperative complications of blood brain barrier disruption under general anesthesia: a retrospective review. 1815 25
Zonisamide (ZNS), a sulfonamide antiepileptic drug, is indicated as an adjunct therapy for
partial seizure
disorders with and without secondary generalization. ZNS has a favorable pharmacokinetic profile because of its rapid absorption and high bioavailability. Its activity is related to the blockade of voltage gated sodium and calcium channels, modulation of central dopaminergic, GABAergic, and serotonergic functions, as well as inhibition of carbonic anhydrase and monoamine oxidase B. ZNS has potential efficacy for an array of neuropsychiatric disorders including migraine and other
headache
syndromes, neuropathic pain, Parkinson's disease, essential tremor, stroke, obesity, anxiety, bipolar and binge-eating disorders.
...
PMID:Therapeutic role of zonisamide in neuropsychiatric disorders. 1878 51
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