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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report 4 patients with
hemiplegia
due to a posterior cerebral artery occlusion. Associated clinical signs were aphasia,
alexia
or a neglect syndrome, hemianopia, and hemisensory loss.
Hemiplegia
was due to infarction in the lateral midbrain. The level of the occlusion in the posterior cerebral artery may be located distal to the junction with the posterior communicating artery.
...
PMID:Hemiplegia in posterior cerebral artery occlusion. 221 37
We report here a case of multiple sclerosis (MS) showing pure
alexia
. The patient was a 28 year-old, right-handed male student of medicine. He had been healthy prior to college, but when he tried to read the newspaper one morning in January of 1983, he suddenly became aware that he could not. He could speak fluently and had no disturbances of auditory comprehension. No signs of abnormality were noted in his writing ability. Thereafter, the patient occasionally experienced difficulty in reading, together with right homonymous hemianopsia. These symptoms, however, usually vanished following sleep. In April, 1984, the patient experienced headache and ataxia when walking, followed by repeated remission and exacerbation of the symptoms. Corticosteroid therapy produced complete disappearance of the headache and ataxia. In September of 1985, he was hospitalized at our department due to the clouding of consciousness accompanied by convulsions. Neurologically, no abnormalities of the ocular fundus were noted and Babinski's sign was negative, but left
hemiplegia
was observed. Neuropsychologically, his intelligence was normal and he had no difficulty in writing, but paralexia was noted. There were no disorders of spontaneous speech or auditory comprehension. Examination by CT scan and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a number of lesions in the white substance of the cerebrum, including the left occipital lobe. The abnormal signs seen radiographically vanished when cortical hormones were administered. It has been thought that the symptoms of multiple sclerosis are due mainly to disorders of the white substance, and that MS seldom produces symptoms of aphasia, due to the fact that the lesions in this disease are generally small.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of multiple sclerosis with pure alexia]. 260 43
A 74-year-old right-handed man with multiple cerebral infarction who presented with dementia simulating dementia of Alzheimer type (DAT) is reported. He had been well until April 20, 1987 when he developed transient right hand palsy lasting overnight. Eleven days later, he became confused, disorientated, and amnestic. He was admitted to this hospital on June 8. Physical examination revealed hypertension (170/90mmHg). On neurological examination, his consciousness was clear but he was demented. He showed disorientation, amnesia, and urinary incontinence. His most prominent symptom was disturbance of speech, including fluent aphasia and
alexia
with agraphia. Additionally, he showed ideomotor apraxia, construction apraxia, right-left agnosia, finger agnosia, and acalculia. On July 9, he had a transient attack of right
hemiplegia
with confusion. The brain CT scan performed on admission was unremarkable except for cavum septi pellucidum and a small low density area in the right basal ganglia. However, single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) by 123I-labeled N-isopropyl-p-iodoamphetamine disclosed hypoperfusion of the cerebral blood flow in the border zones of the temporoparietal and frontal lobes on the left. A follow-up brain CT scan taken one month later demonstrated low density in the new areas corresponding to hypoperfusion shown by SPECT. Although the clinical features of the present case resembled those of DAT, dementia in this case was regarded as the result of multiple cerebral infarction since it occurred acutely with mild motor deficits, and brain CT scans and SPECT showed lesions indicating focal cerebral ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Multi-infarct dementia clinically simulating dementia of Alzheimer type. A comparison with angular gyrus syndrome]. 278 20
A right-handed man, born of a right-handed family, presented an infarct in the territory of the right middle cerebral artery, with a left
hemiplegia
, a left lateral homonymous hemianopsia and an expression aphasia. The oral trouble disappeared in some weeks, but later a permanent linguistic deficit persisted, affecting mainly the written language and realizing a clinical picture of
alexia
-agraphia with Gerstmann's syndrome. The neurolinguistic study showed a preferential alteration of the phonologic system in the written language, and at a lesser degree in the oral modality. The extent of the lesion and the relative integrity of oral expression and comprehension, suggested that these functions were localized in the left hemisphere, whereas lecture, writing, calculation, body-parts notion, laterality notion, had been simultaneously implanted during the ontogenesis in the right hemisphere. The latter was probably also responsible for phonological aspects of written and spoken language, according to a scheme opposite to that of usual right-handers.
...
PMID:[Crossed alexia-agraphia in a right-handed patient]. 361 68
After a cerebral infarction, some patients acutely demonstrate contralateral
hemiplegia
, or aphasia. Those are the obvious symptoms of a cerebral infarction. However, less visible but burdensome consequences may go unnoticed without closer investigation. The importance of a thorough clinical examination is exemplified by a single case study of a 72-year-old, right-handed male. Two years before he had suffered from an ischemic stroke in the territory of the left posterior cerebral artery, with right homonymous hemianopia and global
alexia
(i.e., impairment in letter recognition and profound impairment of reading) without agraphia. Naming was impaired on visual presentation (20%-39% correct), but improved significantly after tactile presentation (87% correct) or verbal definition (89%). Pre-semantic visual processing was normal (correct matching of different views of the same object), as was his access to structural knowledge from vision (he reliably distinguished real objects from non-objects). On a colour decision task he reliably indicated which of two items was coloured correctly. Though he was unable to mime how visually presented objects were used, he more reliably matched pictures of objects with pictures of a mime artist gesturing the use of the object. He obtained normal scores on word definition (WAIS-III), synonym judgment and word-picture matching tasks with perceptual and semantic distractors. He however failed when he had to match physically dissimilar specimens of the same object or when he had to decide which two of five objects were related associatively (Pyramids and Palm Trees Test). The patient thus showed a striking contrast in his intact ability to access knowledge of object shape or colour from vision and impaired functional and associative knowledge. As a result, he could not access a complete semantic representation, required for activating phonological representations to name visually presented objects. The pattern of impairments and preserved abilities is considered to be a specific difficulty to access a full semantic representation from an intact structural representation of visually presented objects, i.e., a form of visual object agnosia.
...
PMID:[Associative visual agnosia. The less visible consequences of a cerebral infarction]. 2140 Sep 59
We report the case of a patient with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)- antibody-associated disease presenting with tumefactive demyelinating lesion. Neurological examination showed aphasia, acalculia, agraphia,
alexia
, left-right disorientation, and right
hemiplegia
. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed a large monofocal lesion with mild brain edema and ring enhancement. Stereotactic brain biopsy was performed, and neuropathological findings showed inflammatory demyelination and preserved axons without tumor cells. A cell-based assay detected anti-MOG antibody in the cerebrospinal fluid. Neurological symptoms gradually improved after steroid pulse therapy. MOG-antibody-associated diseases should be considered in the differential diagnosis of tumefactive demyelinating lesion.
...
PMID:A case of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-antibody-associated disease presenting with tumefactive demyelinating lesion. 3247 83