Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (hemiplegia)
3,997 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The case reported was a 69-year-old patient with a myxoma of the left atrium presenting as multiple emboli: acute ischaemia of the lower limbs preceded, three months before, by a spontaneously regressive right hemiplegia which, in view of the patient's age, was considered to be a simple manifestation of atherosclerosis. The diagnostic value of the echocardiogram in cases of systemic emboli of undetermined origin is stressed.
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PMID:[Myxoma of the left atrium diagnosed by pathological examination of an embolism of the aortic bifurcation (author's transl)]. 60 Jul 23

A case of intracranial saccular aneurysm occurring in early childhood and presenting with sudden dysphasia and hemiplegia is reported. A review of the literature emphasizes the rarity of this lesion. Despite a significant preoperative neurological deficit, the patient tolerated aneurysm clipping and recovered well. The majority of reported cases involve males under 2 years old. Aneurysms in infants have a distribution different from that seen in adults. Microscopic examination of these lesions fails to show any evidence of inflammation or atherosclerosis. The data suggest that the pathogenesis of these rare childhool lesions differs from that of adult saccular aneurysms.
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PMID:Saccular aneurysm of infancy and early childhood. 68 77

The known risk factors for atherosclerosis do not possess the same significance in young people as in the elderly. Hypercholesterolemia, diabetes and cigarette smoking appear to have a greater bearing below the age of 50 than later, particularly in myocardial infarction but also in apoplexy. On the other hand, hypertension is an important factor in the young and, especially in the case of apoplexy, even more so in advanced age. There is marked difference with regard to preexisting heart disease, which scarcely plays a role in myocardial infarction of the younger patient but is a factor in some 50% of hemiplegia cases. Only one fifth of elderly patients with this disease have no preexisting carcdiopathy. The similarity of the risk factors in elderly patients either with or without apoplexy is due to the fact that arteriosclerosis is already established in both groups and the risk factors which give rise to ischemia, thrombosis or embolism assume prominence. The therapeutic implications are briefly discussed.
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PMID:[Risk factors and age]. 113 58

A case is presented of severe atherosclerosis of the basilar artery, successfully treated with percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty. Crescendo daily transient ischemic attacks consisted of alternating hemiplegia and were refractory to medical management, including anticoagulation therapy. The clinical course, endovascular treatment, and results are described. Prior published experiences with this condition are reviewed.
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PMID:Angioplasty for basilar artery atherosclerosis. Case report. 143 38

The most important pathophysiological and pathogenetic facts are: The lower autoregulation threshold of cerebral blood flow and hypoxidosis, blood pressure in bradycardia, cerebral fits and stroke marks in CT, carotid atherosclerosis; reduced cerebral metabolism in chronic alcoholism and Wernicke. Reversible hypoglycemic induced hemiplegia. Multiinfarct syndrome and cerebral degenerative process Alzheimer. Effect of treatment by Piracetam.
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PMID:[Pathophysiology, clinical aspects and therapy of pre- and postoperative disorders of cerebral circulation and function]. 198 1

The aim of this work is to study extracranial carotid lesions and their relation to some risk factors for atherosclerosis, in a large group of hemiplegic patients during rehabilitation treatment. The results indicate that in patients with stabilized ischemic stroke there is a high percentage of positive Duplex Scanner examination. However, the presence of negative patients with hemiplegia leads us, in this case, to look for a carotid lesion placed higher up. The high presence of bilateral atherosclerotic lesions also shows that atherosclerosis is not only a local process. The clinical event may be caused by the type of carotid lesion (as demonstrated by thrombosis or carotid lesions with superficial ulceration contralateral to the hemiplegia).
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PMID:Evaluation of extracranial carotid system with duplex scanner HR in hemiplegic patients. 261 27

An 80-year-old hypertensive woman developed right hemiplegia and died 24 hours after admission. Neuropathologic examination revealed multiple cerebral infarcts of various ages and diffuse subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy. Clusters of asymptomatic "expanding" lacunes, due to dilatation of the perivascular spaces, were found in both dentate nuclei. These cavities, which presented as space-occupying lesions, were surrounded by a single layer of flattened cells and contained 1 or more sections of normal-looking arterioles. Such a topographic grouping of lacunes in the dentate nucleus has not been described previously. The mechanism of widening of the perivascular compartment remains unclear; its occurrence in a hypertensive patient and its association with typical Binswanger's subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy and severe atherosclerosis with multiple infarcts suggest a common pathophysiologic mechanism possibly including an alteration of the blood-brain barrier.
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PMID:Expanding cerebellar lacunes due to dilatation of the perivascular space associated with Binswanger's subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy. 368 82

Using a standard protocol including MRI and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), we studied 28 consecutive patients, all with an acute infarct in the lower brainstem. MRI patterns above and below the inferior olivary nucleus enabled identification of six topographical types of infarct: small midlateral, dorsolateral, inferolateral, large inferodorsolateral, dorsal and paramedian infarcts. Small midlateral, dorsolateral, inferolateral and inferodorsolateral infarcts were the most common types and were associated with Wallenberg's syndrome, with specific clusters and severity of neurological features in each of the four groups. Dorsal infarcts were both anatomically and clinically overshadowed by a constant associated cerebellar infarct in the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) territory. Paramedian infarction led to crossed tongue and sensorimotor hemiplegia, while a patient with an almost complete hemimedullary infarct had unusual ipsilateral sensory and motor disturbance due to lesion extension toward the upper spinal cord. A coexisting cerebellar infarct was present in 36% of the cases, but was never found with midlateral or inferolateral infarct. Angiography showed an embolic occlusion of the PICA in five patients (18%), four of them having dorsal or dorsolateral infarct. Atheromatosis was by far the most frequent stroke aetiology (72%), with intracranial vertebral artery tight stenosis or occlusion in 28% of the cases and in 75% of the cases with large inferodorsolateral infarct. Vertebral artery dissection and cardioembolism accounted each for 14% of the cases, the latter being associated with dorsal infarct. Our study shows that differences in topographical patterns of infarction in the lower brainstem probably reflect differences in aetiopathogenic mechanisms.
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PMID:Infarction of the lower brainstem. Clinical, aetiological and MRI-topographical correlations. 765 78

One hundred cases of hypertensive complications due to irregular drug-therapy were studied in medicine units of Dhaka Medical College Hospital for the period of one year from February 7, 1989 to February 6, 1990. Among those stroke had headed the list (48%) manifesting in various ways e.g. cerebral haemorrhage with focal neurological signs--hemiplegia, hemiperesis, aphasia etc. Hypertension associated with varying degrees of cardiac ischaemias and heart failure was seen in 14% and 10% cases respectively. Highest incidence of complications was seen in 1-5 years after detection of hypertension with mean age of 55 +/- 18.70 years. Out of 48 cases of strokes, smoker were 41 (75.92%). Regarding reasons of noncompliance of drugs, personal carelessness was the prominent one (47%). Among the risk-factors for atherosclerosis family history tops the list (66%). Diabetes coexists with hypertension in 13% cases. Ocular complications were seen in 06% cases of malignant hypertension with variable retinal changes.
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PMID:Study of complications in hypertensive patients having irregular treatment. 803 Dec 88

Does the use of warm-body perfusion in elderly patients with severe cerebrovascular disease lead to a higher incidence of stroke, due to hypotension secondary to low systemic vascular resistance? Two thousand, three hundred eighty-three (2,383) consecutive myocardial revascularizations were performed (1987-1992) using warm-body (perfusion 37 degrees C), cold-heart surgery (cold cardioplegic arrest). The perfusion pressure was maintained between 50-70 torr; hematocrit was kept around 20%. Prospective data during hospitalization revealed 23 operative deaths (1%), and 24 patients (1%) who developed new neurological signs after surgery. The latter formed three groups: Group I consisted of six patients with severe neurological deficits, who never regained consciousness and died after support systems withdrawal. Group II included 14 patients with postoperative clinical evidence of focal cerebral infarction (9 had hemiplegia, 2 had visual disturbance, and 3 showed alteration of memory), all of whom had residual defects at discharge; Group III was composed of four patients with minor neurological deficits after surgery (hemiparesis, gait disturbance, mental changes) which had cleared up by discharge. These data were compared retrospectively with 1605 patients (1980-1986) undergoing myocardial revascularization with moderate (25-30 degrees C) hypothermia and the same surgical team and operative techniques. Both groups had similar preoperative demographics except the warm group included more elderly patients, higher numbers with unstable angina and poor ejection fraction, and more frequent use of a mammary artery conduit. Neurological complications were 1% and 1.3% for the normothermic and hypothermic perfusion groups respectively. Incremental risk factors of stroke remain: age over 70 years, diffuse atherosclerosis of the aorta, carotid occlusive disease, and severe hypotension during perfusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Neurological complications during myocardial revascularization using warm-body, cold-heart surgery. 804 89


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