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 clinical presentation and laboratory features in relation to short-term outcome in 118 prospectively studied Sudanese children who were admitted with meningococcal (MC) meningitis and/or septicaemia during the 1988 group A MC epidemic in Greater Khartoum are described. Their ages ranged from 25 days to 15 years (mean: 78 months) and 42% were less than 5 years old. The male:female ratio was 1.6:1. Forty (34%) came from one of the peri-urban shanty towns encircling Greater Khartoum. A history of MC immunization (A and C vaccine) was obtained in 22%, but only five children (4.8%) had the vaccine between 4 weeks and 1 year before their illness. The commonest symptoms on admission were vomiting, neck rigidity and diarrhoea. Convulsions were significantly more frequent in children under 5 years old (p = 0.0005). Fifty-six (47%) had evidence of malnutrition. In descending order, fever, neck stiffness and Kernig's sign were the most commonly observed signs, the latter two being significantly more often detected in children older than 1 year. Twenty-four patients 20%) had disturbed consciousness. The case fatality rate was 6.3% and this was significantly higher in those presenting with meningococcal septicaemia (p = 0.0006). Other significant associations with mortality were short duration (less than 1 day) of symptoms (p = 0.0006) and clinical shock detected on admission p = 0.003). Transient complications were infrequent and permanent neurological sequelae were confined to bilateral profound sensorineural hearing loss in three children (2.9%) and hemiplegia in two 1.9%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical features and complications of epidemic group A meningococcal disease in Sudanese children. 170 38

Thirty eight cases of moyamoa disease, 21 children, 17 adults were encountered during a 16-year period at Yonsei University Medical Center. Clinical manifestations, together with computed tomography (CT) and angiographic findings were analyzed with a review of the literature. The mean age was 6.3 +/- 3.5 years in children and 36.8 +/- 9.9 years in adults. The majority of attacks occurred in spring in both adults and children. The most common chief complaint on admission was hemiparesis followed by convulsion in children, while in adults, loss of consciousness was most common followed by headache. Of transient neurologic deficits, hemiplegia was most common in children, while cranial nerve involvement was common in adults. Hemiplegia, also was the most common permanent neurologic manifestation in children, while hemiparesis and intellectual deterioration were the most common in adults. Of the children, 90.6% showed infarction on CT, while 88.2% of adults had hemorrhage. Bilateral occlusion of the carotid arteries was the most common site of lesions in both adults and children on cerebral angiogaphy.
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PMID:Moyamoya disease in Korea. 178 Nov 86

Surgical treatment of medically intractable epileptic fits in children is highly specialized, owing to the specific etiology of epilepsies in this age group and the epileptogenic property of the brain in childhood. In our series of 340 patients operated on for medically intractable epileptic seizures, there were 34 (10%) patients up to 15 years of age (the youngest was 2 years old; mean age was 11 years). This group of patients comprises four subgroups: 9 patients with temporal foci, 6 patients with extratemporal foci, 16 patients with infantile hemiplegia and epilepsy, and 3 patients with epilepsia partialis continua (Kozhevnikov's disease). Preoperatively, detectable brain lesions were present in 30 (88%) cases, a much higher frequency than in adult surgical series. Postoperative follow-up so far is 1-14 years (mean, 4 years). Surgical outcome in this group of 34 patients is as follows: 21 (62%) are seizure-free, 8 (23%) have improved, and 5 (15%) have shown no improvement.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of epilepsy: our experiences with 34 children. 179 22

Out of 604 Gambian children admitted with falciparum malaria to one hospital between September and December, 1988, 308 had cerebral malaria and 203 were severely anaemic (haemoglobin less than 60 g/l). 14% of those with cerebral malaria died, as did 7.8% of those with severe anaemia. 32 (12%) of children surviving cerebral malaria had residual neurological deficit. 69 other children were admitted with clinical features strongly suggestive of cerebral malaria but with negative blood films; 16 of these died and 3 had residual neurological deficits. The commonest sequelae of cerebral malaria were hemiplegia (23 cases), cortical blindness (11), aphasia (9), and ataxia (6). Factors predisposing to sequelae included prolonged coma, protracted convulsions, severe anaemia, and a biphasic clinical course characterised by recovery of consciousness followed by recurrent convulsions and coma. At follow up 1-6 months later over half these children had made a full recovery, but a quarter were left with a major residual neurological deficit. Cerebral malaria in childhood may be an important cause of neurological handicap in the tropics.
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PMID:Neurological sequelae of cerebral malaria in children. 197 27

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

Thirty out of 287 patients (10.4%) admitted to hospital for infective endocarditis between December 1970 and January 1990 had neurological complications. Twenty-three patients had native valve infectious endocarditis and 7 had prosthetic valve endocarditis. The clinical features were characterized by the frequency of aortic valve involvement (23 out of 30) and other complications, especially cardiac failure (16 cases) and peripheral vascular manifestations (7 cases). The commonest organism was the staphylococcus (53% of identified organisms) but the number of negative blood cultures was high (50% of cases). The neurological complication was often the presenting symptom of the endocarditis (19 cases) but it occurred after bacteriological cure in 4 cases. The complications observed were cerebral ischemia (16 cases), cerebral haemorrhage (11 cases), coma (2 cases), and one peripheral neuropathy causing a Claude Bernard Horner syndrome. These complications presented with hemiplegia in 17 cases, a meningeal syndrome in 8 cases, a convulsion in 1 case, a Von Wallenberg syndrome in 1 case, and a Claude Bernard Horner syndrome in 1 case. Twelve patients had a transient or permanent neurological coma. Cerebral CT scan showed ischemic lesions in 7 cases and haemorrhagic lesions in 10 cases. Carotid angiography demonstrated mycotic aneurysms in 6 patients. Twelve patients died: the cause of death was neurological coma (7 cases), low cardiac output (4 cases) and haemorrhagic shock (1 case). Four patients underwent neurosurgery: 3 for clipping a mycotic aneurysm and 1 for drainage of an intracerebral haematoma. Poor prognostic factors were: coma, cardiac failure, cardiac valve prosthesis and, above all, the extent and multiplicity of the neurological lesions. The authors propose the following measures to improve the prognosis: early surgery in cases of large and/or mobile vegetations especially when the infecting organism is a staphylococcus and when a systemic embolism has occurred; routine CT scanning and/or digitised cerebral angiography in all patients with infective endocarditis to detect surgically accessible mycotic aneurysms.
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PMID:[Neurologic manifestations of infectious endocarditis]. 201 89

The cerebral protective actions of a new thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) analogue, YM-14673, [Na-[[(S)-4-oxo-2-azetidinyl-carbonyl]-L-histidyl-L-prolinamide] dihydrate), were compared with those of CDP-choline (cerebral metabolic enhancer) and naloxone in rats rats subjected to unilateral carotid artery ligation and anoxic exposure (Levine rats). Drugs were administered intraperitoneally or orally 20, 80, and 140 min after anoxia. YM-14673 (0.03 to 1 mg/kg i.p. and 0.3 to 10 mg/kg p.o.) decreased the incidence of neurological deficits, such as hemiplegia and convulsion followed by coma and death, for 48 h after ischemia and anoxia. Both the increase in the brain water content and the degeneration of neurons in the cerebral cortex and thalamus were prevented by YM-14673 at a dose of 0.1 mg/kg (i.p.). CDP-choline (400 mg/kg i.p.), which is currently used in the therapy of cerebral vascular diseases, and naloxone (3 mg/kg i.p.) also decreased the incidence of the neurological deficits. These results suggest that YM-14673 protects Levine rats against neurological deficits, presumably by attenuating the development of brain edema and preventing neuronal damage. This compound may be useful in the therapeutic treatment of cerebral vascular diseases.
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PMID:Pharmacological actions of a new TRH analogue, YM-14673, in rats subjected to cerebral ischemia and anoxia. 211 71

Moya-Moya disease has been associated to a number of disease entities including Down syndrome. Initial clinical manifestations in our patient were alternating lateralizing seizures with sudden onset hemiparesis. Ct scan demonstrated several infarcts in different stages of evolution, in the territory of left middle cerebral artery. Single digital subtraction angiography showed bilateral occlusion, predominantly on the left side of the supraclinoid portion of the interna carotid arteries with formation of collateral circulation in the diencephalic territory. The association of Moya-Moya disease and Down syndrome is not fortuitous and it is probably due to a congenital vascular dysplasia. It should be suspected in children with trisomy 21 (with or without congenital heart disease) who presents with alternating hemiplegia and convulsions or acute hemiplegia.
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PMID:[Acute hemiplegia in childhood and alternating hemiconvulsions secondary to Moya-Moya disease. Report of a case associated with Down's syndrome]. 228 71

Strokes in children occur in conjunction with cardiac disease, hematological disorders, trauma, intracranial infections and migraine. Recently several inborn errors of metabolism have been recognized as possible causes of stroke-like symptoms. We describe a female heterozygote of ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, who presented with convulsions and right sided hemiplegia. MR-imaging of the brain demonstrated an acute ischemic lesion in the left hemisphere. In addition to other known metabolic causes of stroke like attacks urea cycle defects should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute hemiplegia in childhood.
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PMID:Acute hemiparesis as the presenting sign in a heterozygote for ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. 223 17

Between December 1985 and July 1986 a study on cerebral palsy was undertaken among the inpatients and outpatients of the department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Muhimbili Medical Centre Centre, Dar Es Salaam. The objective of the study was to determine the clinical pattern of cerebral palsy and its associated handicaps. During this period, 100 children with cerebral palsy 56 boys and 44 girls ranging in age between four months and 10 years were seen. The commonest type of cerebral palsy seen was spastic tetraplegia which occurred in 36 percent of the cases followed by spastic diplegia and hemiplegia seen in 20 and 15 percent of the cases respectively. In 70 children the cerebral palsy was associated with other severe handicaps, the commonest being epilepsy which occurred in 35 percent of the children followed by deafness, speech disorders and blindness. Birth asphyxia, convulsions of undetermined causes, low birth weight, meningitis and cerebral birth trauma were found to be the leading causes of cerebral palsy. As these conditions are largely preventable or amendable to treatment, it is suggested that improvement of antenatal and perinatal care is important in the reduction of the incidence of cerebral palsy.
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PMID:Cerebral palsy in Dar Es Salaam. 239 97


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