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Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The palmo-mental reflex has been described, together with other neurological signs, in
senile dementia
. It is, however, found in normal adults, where its frequency increases with age. In vascular
hemiplegia
it has a considerably higher incidence, nevertheless it is not a sign of mental deterioration.
...
PMID:Semiological value of the palmo-mental reflex in vascular hemiplegia. 43 65
A 77-year-old female with left
hemiplegia
caused by cerebral infarction and with mild
senile dementia
was admitted for further examination of hematological abnormalities. She was diagnosed as acute myelogenous leukemia (AML-M5a) according to French-American-British classification. Since intensive combination chemotherapy seemed difficult, she was treated with oral administration of cytarabine ocfosfate (200 mg/day, for 14 days), a cytidine deaminase-resistant derivative of Ara-C, resulting in complete remission. Major side effects were nausea, vomiting and appetite loss, but their incidences were reduced tolerably when cytarabine ocfosfate was given just before sleeping. Cytarabine ocfosfate might be useful to treat AML in elderly patients having certain complications such as cerebrovascular disease.
...
PMID:[Successful treatment of acute myelogenous leukemia in an elderly patient with cytarabine ocfosfate]. 812 96
Activities of daily living (ADL), mental function, spontaneity, emotion and problematic behaviors were compared in elderly patients with hip fracture,
hemiplegia
, hemiparesis,
senile dementia
of Alzheimer type and multi-infarct dementia. Osteoarthropathy patients with normal intelligence served as a control group. ADL was most strongly affected by spontaneity, then, by intelligence. The contributions of emotion and problematic behaviors were not very marked.
...
PMID:Spontaneity in dementia: an analysis of 696 institutionalized elderly patients. 965 18
The aims of this study were to identify risk factors for hip fracture in men aged 50 years or more. We identified 730 men with hip fracture from 14 centers from Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Greece and Turkey during the course of a prospective study of hip fracture incidence and 1132 age-stratified controls selected from the neighborhood or population registers. The questionnaire examined aspects of work, physical activity past and present, diseases and drugs, height, weight, indices of co-morbidity and consumption of tobacco, alcohol, calcium, coffee and tea. Significant risk factors identified by univariate analysis included low body mass index (BMI), low sunlight exposure, a low degree of recreational physical activity, low consumption of milk and cheese, and a poor mental score. Co-morbidity including sleep disturbances, loss of weight, impaired mental status and poor appetite were also significant risk factors. Previous stroke with
hemiplegia
, prior fragility fractures,
senile dementia
, alcoholism and gastrectomy were associated with significant risk, whereas osteoarthrosis, nephrolithiasis and myocardial infarction were associated with lower risks. Taking medications was not associated with a difference in risk apart from a protective effect with the use of analgesics independent of co-existing osteoarthrosis and an increased risk with the use of anti-epileptic agents. Of the potentially 'reversible' risk factors, BMI, leisure exercise, exposure to sunlight and consumption of tea and alcohol and tobacco remained independent risk factors after multivariate analysis, accounting for 54% of hip fractures. Excluding BMI, 46% of fractures could be explained on the basis of the risk factors sought. Of the remaining factors low exposure to sunlight and decreased physical activity accounted for the highest attributable risks (14% and 9% respectively). The use of risk factors to predict hip fractures had relatively low sensitivity and specificity (59.6% and 61.0% respectively). We conclude that lifestyle factors are associated with significant differences in the risk of hip fracture. Potentially remediable factors including a low degree of physical exercise and a low BMI account for a large component of the total risk.
...
PMID:Risk factors for hip fracture in men from southern Europe: the MEDOS study. Mediterranean Osteoporosis Study. 1036 29