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)

During the five years running from December 1993 to January 1998, 112 patients who had come to our University Clinic suffering from headache were examined. From this group 71 complaining of tinnitus during headache were recruited for the study: 19 patients suffered from migraine without aura, 8 migraine with aura, 15 tension headache, 21 mixed headache, 3 basic migraine and 5 cluster headache. The purpose of this work was to determine the incidence and to identify the frequency of the various types of tinnitus in the study sample. Once cardiovascular and metabolic pathologies, previous cranial or cervical traumas, barotrauma, chronic on-the-job noise exposure, cervical arthritis, ATM malocclusion, use of drugs that damage the hearing apparatus, morbose processes of the external and middle ear, otosclerosis, jugular tympanum paraganglioma, Meniere's disease, acoustic neurinoma were all ruled out, the patients underwent the following battery of instrumental tests: tonal audiometry, impedance measurement, vestibular examination, electronystagmography, ABR, simplified tinnitometry. Only those patients with normal hearing underwent the tinnitometry and, therefore, the type of tinnitus was established only for this group of 53 patients. Tinnitometry showed that 37% of these subjects had tinnitus at the higher frequency tones, 11% at the middle frequencies, 29% complained of tinnitus at the lower frequencies while 23% complained that the bothersome buzzing was a compound noise. In addition, the subjective intensity of the tinnitus was analyzed. The authors devised a tinnitus irritation scale covering a range from 0 (not irritating) to 10 (intolerable). The tinnitus was bilateral in 66% of the cases while it was limited to only one ear in the remaining 34%. In 15% of the cases tinnitus was present even when there was no headache. In the literature, the etiopathogenesis of tinnitus associated with migraine headache has been attributed to vascular and neuropeptide mechanisms. Even the psychological component appears to play a role in triggering the event. These hypotheses deserve more in depth study.
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PMID:[Tinnitus during headache: clinical-instrumental evaluation]. 1043 37

Between 1991 and 2000, 154 cerebello-pontine angle (CPA) tumors were seen at the University ENT-department of the Sint-Augustinus Hospital, Antwerp. Amongst these, 127 were vestibular schwannomas detected by MR-imaging. Noteworthy is that in 5% of these, the ABR latencies were within normal limits. One hundred patients underwent tumor removal either by the translabyrinthine (66) or by the retrosigmoid (34) approach and all had a follow-up of at least two years. For large tumors (> 2 cm extension in the CPA) or in the case of poor hearing the translabyrinthine approach was used. For patients with tumor extension in the CPA ofless than 2 cm and with serviceable residual hearing on the affected side, (at least < 50 dB PTA, > 50% SSD) the retrosigmoid approach with endoscopic control was used. Most patients (96%) had a House-Brackmann grade 1 or 2 facial function before surgery. Although this group dropped to 76% 6 months after surgery it increased again to reach 84% within 2 years. Thus, 88% percent of patients with normal preoperative facial function achieved a Grade I or II after two years. The facial outcome is very much dependent on the size of the tumor. A good result (House-Brackmann Grade 1 or 2) is the rule (92%) for small tumors (< 10 mm extension in the CPA), still attainable (82%) for medium tumors (11-25 mm), but less apparent (56%) for large tumors (> 26 mm). It was possible to preserve hearing in 38% of the retrosigmoid interventions. Although unbalance and headache are rather frequent early postoperative symptoms (respectively 52% and 31%), these complaints decrease with time and are infrequent after two years (unbalance = 7%, headache = 4%). Our results were compared with three large multicentric studies. They are in line with data from the literature and compare favorably with the better results. Although good grading systems exist for facial nerve and hearing outcomes, the authors regret that a general consensus on tumor size measurement is still not yet available. It would facilitate data comparison between different centers and the choice between the therapeutical modalities.
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PMID:Results of 100 vestibular schwannoma operations. 1283 74

In systemic sclerosis (SSc), there may develop hearing and balance disorders as a result of the immune-mediated vasculitis and fibrosis in the inner ear. The objective of the study was evaluation of the hearing organ function in patients with SSc with relationship to duration of the disease and Raynaud phenomenon and also to type and severity of the disease. Twenty unselected, consecutive patients with SSc diagnosed in compliance with the international diagnostic criteria of the American Rheumatism Association (1982), were enrolled into the study. The control group consisted of 26 otologically healthy persons matched to the SSc group for age and sex. Case history was recorded for all patients from questionnaire data. Otolaryngological examination and battery of audiological tests (pure tone audiometry, speech audiometry, impedance audiometry and auditory brainstem response-ABR) were performed. In the anamnesis 60% of patients reported vertigo, 55% headaches, 50% tinnitus, 40% hyperacusis, 40% hearing loss and 30% ear fullness. It was found that patients with SSc had significantly poorer mean hearing thresholds than the control group for 0.5, 1, 6 and 8 kHz. In ABR there were no differences between SSc and control groups although an increase of latency averages in the group of limited patients with SSc compared with the diffuse patients with SSc was observed. In eight patients (40%) sensorineural hearing loss, mostly bilateral and symmetrical was found. Furthermore, no relation was seen between hearing level and duration, type and severity of the disease. Ear involvement is frequent in systemic sclerosis and should be taken into consideration during diagnostic and therapeutic procedures.
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PMID:Hearing organ disorders in patients with systemic sclerosis. 2046 85