Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 21-year-old nurse presented with severe headache after ingesting one phenylpropanolamine (Trimolets) tablet. Examination revealed hypertension. Although no specific therapy was administered to the patient, her blood pressure normalized within a few hours of admission to hospital and has remained normal since. The patient declined rechallenge with the suspected drug.
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PMID:Hypertension after ingestion of Trimolets. 73 45

This report is a case of intracranial neurinoma of the jugular foramen. A 21-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with complaints of headache, nausea, tinnitus on the left and deafness on the left. The neurological examination revelaed bilateral choked disc, Bruns Cushing nystagmus, hearing disturbance on the left, slight disturbance of vestibular function on the left, diminished gag reflex on the left, curtain sign on the left, loss of taste on the posterior third of the left side of the tongue, and deviation of the tongue to the left on protrusion, accompanied with atrophy and fasciculation on the left. Skull-XP showed the enlargement of the jugular foramen. Pneumoencephalogram showed the enlargement of the fourth ventricle combined with the superior, posterior displacement of it's floor. We confirmed the diagnosis of the jugular foramen neurinoma on the left. By suboccipital craniectomy a walnutsized tumor was disclosed at the jugular foramen. The tumor was encapsuled with smooth, thick capsule and was colored in dark rouge. This tumor was removed totally and the postoperative course was uneventful. The pathological diagnosis was neurinoma. We consider that this tumor originated in the ninth or tenth cranial nerve.
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PMID:[Intracranial neurinoma of the jugular foramen-a case report (author's transl)]. 124 Nov 11

A 21-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of high fever, cough, and headache. Other clinical manifestations included hepatosplenomegaly, anemia, leukopenia, and mild liver dysfunction. As she had been diagnosed to have systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) previously, we first suspected that this disease had become exacerbated. However, the titers of anti-EB virus (VCA-IgG) and some other viruses were high on admission, and hemophagocytosis by macrophages was observed on bone marrow examination. Therefore, she was diagnosed to have virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome (VAHS). Prednisolone therapy was then initiated, but the patient responded poorly. We next tried gamma globulin, and the clinical findings and laboratory data were improved. Our patient showed a very favourable clinical course following gamma globulin therapy, suggesting that steroid and gamma globulin should be considered as a treatment even in the early stages of this syndrome in adults.
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PMID:[Steroid and gamma globulin therapy against virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome]. 127 36

A 21-year-old male presented with visual disturbance followed by severe headache. Computed tomography showed right thalamic hemorrhage entering the right lateral ventricle. Cerebral angiography revealed bilateral symmetrical arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) fed by the lenticulostriate, anterior choroidal, and lateral posterior choroidal arteries and draining into the vein of Galen. Partial removal of the right AVM induced bleeding on the left side, probably due to postoperative hemodynamic changes. Bilateral symmetrical cerebral AVMs are extremely rare, but provide serious problems for surgical intervention in the deep cerebrum.
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PMID:Bilateral symmetrical cerebral arteriovenous malformations in the basal ganglia--case report. 137 66

A 21-year-old man experienced sudden and intense rotational vertigo. A moment later, he was amazed to see the whole visual world rotate clockwise progressively by about 160 degrees. On the following day, the visual tilt was only 30 degrees, and it soon receded completely, while headache appeared. CT scan, magnetic resonance imaging, vertebral arteriography, and cerebrospinal fluid analysis were normal, and the aetiology could not be ascertained. Illusions of visual tilt are an unusual consequence of disorders affecting the vestibular system. The locus of the impairment is usually in the brainstem, particularly in association with Wallenberg's syndrome. However, the peripheral vestibular pathways or the vestibular projections into the cerebral cortex may occasionally be involved. In the latter case, the visual tilt is part of a vestibular epileptic seizure.
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PMID:[Illusion of visual tilt: a case]. 164 89

Sparganosis is a rare infection caused by a tapeworm larva from the genus Spirometra. A 21-year-old Indian man presented with an 18-month history of episodic confusion followed by a grand mal seizure. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain confirmed the presence of a lesion of the left occipital lobe. Subsequent stereotactic biopsy revealed a plerocercoid larva or sparganum. Surgical resection resulted in cure. This case prompted a review of the literature on central nervous system sparganosis. Altogether, 17 other cases of primary cerebral sparganosis have been reported previously. Seizures, headache, and focal neurologic signs are common at presentation. Neuroradiologic imaging is sensitive but not specific for the identification of lesions. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay of cerebrospinal fluid or serum may be diagnostically helpful. However, the diagnosis is generally made after surgical resection, which is usually curative.
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PMID:Cerebral sparganosis: case report and review. 201 16

Central neurocytoma is a rare intraventricular tumor recently accepted as a clinicopathological entity. A 21-year-old female was admitted with three-year history of episodic headaches and vomiting, and with rapid deterioration of her left vision over two weeks prior to admission. Computed tomography (CT) scan revealed a marked hydrocephalus and an isodense, mildly enhancing mass in the left lateral ventricle. On magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan, T1-weighted images revealed an intraventricular mass of slightly high intensity signal, which contained areas of low intensity signal representing multiple intratumoral cysts. The tumor showed a minimal enhancement with Gd-DTPA. A diagnosis of central neurocytoma was confirmed by an electron-microscopic study of a surgical specimen; there were numerous neuronal cell processes containing microtubules and dense-core vesicles, and a few small intercellular junctions were also identified.
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PMID:Central neurocytoma: report of a case. 213 Jul 97

A 21-year-old female with mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) experienced nausea, headache, consciousness disturbance, nuchal rigidity, and a temperature of 38.5 less than or equal to C three days after the intake of sulindac (300 mg/day). Cerebrospinal fluid analysis revealed an opening pressure of 310 mm of water, a predominantly lymphocytic pleocytosis, and elevated protein content of 89 mg/dl. After discontinuing sulindac, the aseptic meningitis improved in five days. In the acute stage, CT scan disclosed contrast enhancement in the cerebral hemispheres, which suggests that hypersensitivity may be involved in the pathogenesis of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug (NSAID) induced aseptic meningitis.
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PMID:Sulindac-induced aseptic meningitis in mixed connective tissue disease. 254 92

A 21 year-old man presented with a history of sudden onset of aphasia and headache. CT showed a left parietal hypodensity and pallidal calcifications. The ECG showed a Wolff-Parkinson-White's syndrome. The patient then developed successively focal epileptic seizures, temper disorders, a cardiomyopathy, a pepper and salt retinopathy with hemeralopia, a left hemiplegia, deafness, and fever of unexplained origin. Left carotid angiography showed thin, irregular or occluded branches of the middle and anterior cerebral arteries. Blood muscle enzymes, lactate and pyruvate, were elevated with acidosis. Muscle biopsy revealed a mitochondrial myopathy and blood chemistry showed a severe deficiency of respiratory chain enzymes. Death occurred after 28 months. This case showed the diagnostic features of Melas, with some elements of the Kearns-Sayre syndrome. To our knowledge, this is the first case were serial angiographies allowed demonstration of arterial changes capable of explaining cerebral infarctions.
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PMID:[Mitochondrial myopathy. Encephalopathy with lactic acidosis and cerebral infarction]. 264 81

A 21-year old women taking oral contraceptives suffered thromboembolic stroke associated with mitral valve prolapse. She had been using an unspecified oral contraceptive for 3 months postpartum, and had smoked a pack a day for 5 years. She complained of sudden right orbital headache, left-sided weakness and pain. Clinical exam showed left sided anopsia, facial paralysis, tongue protrusion, parietal sensory deficit, and loss of position sense. Computed tomography suggested a lesion near the right middle cerebral artery; and cerebral angiography revealed an 8 x 2 mm filling defect in that artery. A midsystolic click without a murmur was evident in the cardiac exam. Thickened, redundant mitral valve leaflets with marked prolapse, and a mass on the atrial side of the posterior leaflet appeared on the echocardiogram. The atrial thrombus was considered the source of the apparent embolism in the cerebral artery. Oral contraceptives have been found to increase the risk of thrombotic stroke and venous thromboembolism. Therefore, women with known mitral valve prolapse or leaflets may be advised not to use the pill.
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PMID:Embolic stroke in a woman with mitral valve prolapse who used oral contraceptives. 374 65


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