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

MRI findings of a 14-year-old boy with subdural empyema (SE) are reported and compared with those of serial CT-scan. He was admitted with fever, headache, right hemiplegia and facial palsy. Initial enhanced CT-scan revealed a slit left lateral ventricle and a shift in the mid-line structures, but failed to detect any SE. MRI at 10 days after admission clearly demonstrated SE as an area of low intensity on T1-weight (T1WI) and very high intensity on T2-weight (T2WI). Post-contrast enhanced MRI (CE-MRI), using Gd-DTPA, showed a contrast enhancement in the wall of SE. However, no definite parenchymal abnormal intensity areas were detected, suggesting that the diagnosis was made sufficiently early for timely treatment and good neurological outcome. CE-MRI proved to be a more powerful and better diagnostic procedure than enhanced CT-scan, and was very useful in determining the state and development of the disease.
...
PMID:The efficacy of MR imaging in subdural empyema. 135 35

We report a case of AFP producing gastric cancer manifested by metastasis to the tentorium cerebelli. A 66-year-old male patient was admitted with dysarthria, occipital headache and nausea on May 1, 1990. Neurological examination revealed signs of increased intracranial pressure and the right-sided cerebellar hemispheric signs. CT and MRI showed a round tumor shadow 3cm in diameter, which originated in the right-side tentorium cerebelli and grew in the posterior fossa. Tumor stains fed by the right tentorial artery were recognized by angiography. Serum AFP level was 503.5ng/ml. The patient underwent an operation under general anesthesia in the prone position. The tumor was totally removed via the suboccipital transtentorial approach. Histological examination revealed AFP producing adenocarcinoma. The patient was found to have a gastric cancer after neurosurgical operation, and underwent subtotal gastrectomy by surgeons. Serum AFP level was 254.5ng/ml after removal of metastatic brain tumor, and 5.0ng/ml after subtotal gastrectomy.
...
PMID:[AFP producing gastric cancer manifested by metastasis to the tentorium cerebelli; case report and review of the literature]. 137 52

A 39-year-old man, who had high grade fever and headache for 4 days was admitted to our hospital because of generalized seizure and disturbance of consciousness. He was pyrexial, but not icteric. Neurological examination revealed disorientation, nuchal rigidity and bilateral Babinski reflexes. Laboratory test results included the following: GOT 1,740 U/l, GPT 2,800 U/l, bilirubin 1.2 mg/dl, serum IgM-HA antibody cut-off index 6.8. CSF was clear, with 10 leukocytes/mm3 and protein level of 108 mg/dl. Head CT and MRI revealed no abnormality. An EEG demonstrated diffuse slowing. During the following 2 days, he had increased obtundation and labored breathing. In the second week of hospitalization his neurological conditions and liver function test results improved. A diagnosis of HA was confirmed by a finding of serum IgM-HA antibody. The neurological findings, CSF findings and clinical course indicated acute meningoencephalitis in association with HA. To our knowledge, there have been only 4 previous case reports of meningoencephalitis associated with serologically confirmed HA infection. HA virus infection might pass unnoticed, as many cases of HA infection remain anicteric or subclinical. Therefore, HA virus should also be considered as one of the etiological agents in meningoencephalitis.
...
PMID:[Acute hepatitis A (HA) presenting findings of meningoencephalitis]. 139 33

Studies on the prevalence of MRI signal abnormalities in the brains of migraineurs have yielded controversial results. In order to provide further data on this issue we reviewed the MRI scans of 38 migraine patients without current neurologic symptoms (mean age 35.8 +/- 11.9 years). In addition, we compared the findings in those 24 migraineurs under 50 years without major cerebrovascular risk factors (mean age 30.1 +/- 9.0 years) to that in 14 headache and risk factor free volunteers (mean age 37.8 +/- 5.3 years). Overall, focal areas of hyperintense signal were seen in 15 (39%) patients. They were present on both proton density and T2-weighted spin-echo sequences. Lesion prevalence varied according to the type of headache (18% in migraine without aura, 53% in migraine with typical aura, 38% in basilar migraine). The subset of migraine patients under 50 years exhibited MRI signal abnormalities more than twice as often as controls (33% vs. 14%). Punctate white matter hyperintensities were the predominant finding and were seen in 10 of 15 individuals with MRI lesions. More striking signal abnormalities consisted of symmetrical areas of hyperintensity lateral to the posterior horns in two 24 year old patients and of extensive white matter damage with lacunar infarcts in a 59 year old woman. Our findings confirm a higher prevalence of MRI lesions in a mixed group of migraineurs than in headache free individuals. Signal abnormalities are most often non-specific, however their occurrence relates to the type of migraine.
Headache 1992 Jun
PMID:The prevalence of cerebral damage varies with migraine type: a MRI study. 139 49

This 42-year-old man experienced a sudden onset of occipital headache. Neurological examination revealed a moderately disturbed consciousness and a moderate left hemiparesis. CT scan disclosed a hugh hematoma in the right temporo parietal lobe without intraventricular hemorrhage. A cerebral angiography demonstrated typical findings of moyamoya disease and a small saccular aneurysm at the peripheral portion of the right anterior choroidal artery, which was dilated at the collateral circulation to the parietal lobe. The hematoma was removed at once by a craniotomy. He became alert but mild hemiparesis persisted. MRI disclosed a small signal-void lesion lateral to the trigone of the right lateral ventricle. The angiography repeated three weeks after the removal of the hematoma showed the unchanged size of the aneurysm. Direct surgery for the aneurysm was performed via the right parietal transcortical approach. The aneurysm was reached under the guidance of the intraoperative angiography. Trapping of the parent artery and the excision of the aneurysm were performed. On the basis of the presence of an internal elastic lamina at the neck of the aneurysm, the surgical specimen was histologically verified to be a true aneurysm. Since the collateral circulation was well preserved during surgery, no worsening of the neurological manifestation was observed. In view of the unfavorable prognosis for a moyamoya patient with this type of the aneurysm, which often results in a massive ventricular or intracerebral hemorrhage, surgery directed to the aneurysm itself should be considered.
...
PMID:[A ruptured aneurysm at the peripheral collateral circulation of the anterior choroidal artery in a patient with moyamoya disease: a case report]. 140 65

MS in juvenile patients under the age of 16 occurred in 31 (5%) of our whole MS population of 620 patients in the time from 1975-1991. It does not differ clinically from the disease as observed in 72 patients with later onset MS in respect to symptoms at onset, course, progression rate, rate of relapses and abnormalities in CSF and MRI. However, fever, headache, nausea and vomiting with pleocytosis in CSF during the first episode and development of oligoclonal bands with passage of time may be characteristic in some juvenile patients. The presence of oligoclonal bands and MRI results are of high diagnostic value in this special group of patients.
...
PMID:Early onset MS under the age of 16: clinical and paraclinical features. 141 48

A previously healthy 45 years old carpenter suffered a whiplash injury in a road accident on July, 18th, 1990. He continued to work in spite of occipital headache, episodic sweatening and slight hypersomnia. On August, 8th, 1990 while parking his car into the deck of a ferry-boat he was found slightly confuse and markedly amnestic. A post-traumatic subdural haematoma was suspected. As a CT-scan of the brain was normal, a toxic encephalopathy or an hysterical amnesia were proposed. However, a MRI performed on August, 22th, 1990, apart from a small infarct in the white matter of the left occipital lobe, showed two small bilateral paramedian thalamic infarcts. The last lesions usually follow a thrombotic or embolic occlusion of the "basilar communicating artery" (BCA) belonging to the vertebro-basilar system. The possible etiologic relationship between this syndrome and the previous whiplash injury has been considered. Six months later, while a control MRI showed a reduction of the brain lesions, a neuropsychological examination revealed a slight improvement of memory dysfunction evident also at a distance of further 6 months. This case is interesting because it tests the high sensitivity of MRI in amnestic syndromes and because of the possible role of a whiplash injury in the etiology of BPTI.
...
PMID:Isolated amnesia following a bilateral paramedian thalamic infarct. Possible etiologic role of a whiplash injury. 141 61

Forty-six migraineurs and 69 age- and sex-matched controls referred for MRI scans of the brain were evaluated for the incidence of intracranial pathology. Axial long TR/short TE and long TR/long TE and sagittal short TR/short TE scans were performed in all patients. Enhancement with Gd-DTPA was performed in all controls and in nine migraineurs. Six of 46 (13%) of the migraineurs had white matter lesions versus three of 69 (4.3%) of the controls. The white matter lesions in migraineurs were seen in a younger age group than in the controls. These findings agree with recent MRI studies. Ischemia or an immune-based white matter demyelination are possible mechanisms for the white matter lesions.
Headache 1992 Nov
PMID:MRI in migraineurs. 146 10

A 52 year old, right handed, hearing impaired woman was admitted with headache and neck stiffness. The only neuropsychological symptom was transient auditory perceptions in the left ear, which were musical, seemed familiar and were not influenced by verbal communication. CT and MRI showed a right subarachnoid haemorrhage, while brainstem auditory evoked potentials failed to reveal a brainstem lesion. In patients with organic cerebral disease, unilateral auditory hallucinations (AHs) may indicate a lesion in the contralateral hemisphere. However, according to this review the type of AHs (verbal versus musical) is not consistently associated with a cerebral lesion on either side.
...
PMID:Transient musical hallucinosis of central origin: a review and clinical study. 146 4

We studied six patients with SUNCT, a unilateral headache syndrome with shortlasting attacks and ipsilateral autonomic phenomena with orbital phlebography and MRI. All but one orbital phlebogram showed abnormalities on the headache side (in one patient bilaterally), involving the superior ophthalmic vein or/and the cavernous sinus. No systematic changes were demonstrated on MRI. The phlebography findings were similar to those observed in the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and in cluster headache.
Cephalalgia 1992 Dec
PMID:Shortlasting, unilateral, neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing (SUNCT syndrome): V. Orbital phlebography. 147 43


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>