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)

Unusual calcification of the cerebral medullary veins is noted in a 34-year-old mentally retarded female who had a right carotid-jugular anastomosis 30 years earlier. The patient was hospitalized because of a right neck mass, proptosis, and the recent onset of left flaccid hemiplegia. Arch aortography and CT of the head and neck were performed. Surgery to oblate the fistula provided dramatic relief of venous engorgement in the orbits and face. The finding of medullary vein calcification is emphasized because it is a hitherto unreported entity.
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PMID:Calcifications of cerebral medullary veins associated with carotid-jugular fistula. 709 13

A case of large fronto-temporo-parietal epidural hematoma associated with ipsilateral retrobulbar hematoma is reported. A 24-year-old man soon after a head injury due to a traffic accident became comatose with anisocoria and hemiplegia and developed exophthalmos, conjuctival chemosis, downward and lateral displacement of the eyeball. CT scan of the brain and the orbit showed the large epidural clot communicating with an ipsilateral retrobulbar hematoma through a sphenoid bone fracture. The patient underwent emergency surgery. Postoperatively, he improved and was discharged in good conditions. On follow-up one month later he was symptoms free. The available literature is reviewed: our case seems to be the fifth reported.
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PMID:Large epidural hematoma associated with ipsilateral retrobulbar hematoma. Case report. 938 74

Two cases of aspergillosis of the paranasal sinuses are reported. The first case was a 30-year-old man who had a 5-month history of bilateral proptosis. Physical examination revealed nasal polyps in both middle meatus. A skin test for Aspergillus was positive. Laboratory study showed levels of serum IgE and IgE specific for Aspergillus level to be elevated significantly. Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed pansinusitis with some bone erosion. The patient underwent bilateral Caldwell-Luc procedures and external sinus surgery (frontal, ethmoid and sphenoid sinuses). Histopathological examination showed thin septate hyphae in allergic mucin. The patient is now being treated with sinus irrigation and oral administration of fluconazole and suplatast tosilate. The second case was a 78-year-old man who had a 2-month history of nasal obstruction and a 3-week history of headaches. He also had a history of diabetes mellitus. Physical examination showed swelling of the nasal septum due to abscess. CT showed an abscess in the nasal septum and opacification of the left sphenoid sinus. There was no bone destruction. The patient underwent left sphenoid sinus surgery, and histopathological examination revealed aspergillosis of the sphenoid sinus. He presented with left visual disturbance and blepharoptosis 2 months after surgery. Ocoulusion of the internal carotid artery was revealed by MR angiography and it was thought to be caused by intracranial invasion of aspergillus. Loss of consciousness and right hemiplegia ensued despite antifungal chemotherapy. The patient died about 1 year after the onset of symptoms. Case 1 was thought to involve allergic aspergillus sinusitis, and Case 2 invasive aspergillus sinusitis. We emphasize the significance of headache, diabetes mellitus and lesion in the sphenoid sinus as a sigh of intracranial aspergillus invasion, based on our experience as well as findings reported by other clinicians in the Japanese literature.
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PMID:[Report of two rare cases of fungal sinusitis]. 1038 20

Article abstract-A 65-year-old woman presented with a left abduction deficit and "red eye," mild proptosis, chemosis, arterialization of the conjunctival vessels, intention tremor, and bilateral pyramidal signs. MRI showed significant left-sided brainstem involvement that mimicked a tumor. Right hemiplegia ensued 1 week later. Venous congestion of the brainstem with hemiplegia resulting from shunting of blood flow from both carotid arteries is an extremely rare complication of carotid-cavernous fistula.
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PMID:Carotid-cavernous fistula with brainstem congestion mimicking tumor on MRI. 1113 2

Sarcoidosis is a chronic disease of unknown aetiology. Neurosarcoidosis is registered in 5% of patients with sarcoidosis. Clinical manifestations of sarcoidosis are numerous and diverse. Manifestation of Neurosarcoidosis includes partial- and grand-mal seizures, low-grade fever, headache, increased intracranial pressure, visual disturbances, diabetes insipidus, amenorrhea- galacterorrhea syndrome and pituitary failure, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, hyperprolactinemia, unilateral and bilateral facial palsy, infiltration of meninges (aseptic meningitis) and nerve roots, leptominingitis, pachymeningitis with cranial neuropathies, pseudotumor, mild cognitive disorder, psychosis, delirium, dementia, disorientation, amnesia, progressive visual deterioration and proptosis, axonal polyneuropathies, mononeuropathies, chronic polyradiculoneuritis, peripheral neuropathy, cranial nerve abnormalities, radiculopathies, peripheral neuropathy, mononeuritis multiplex, progressive numbness and deep sensation disturbance in bilateral lower extremities, hemiplegia, hyperreflexia with pathological reflexes and hypesthesia, upward gaze palsy, spinal cord compression, dysarthria, dysphagia, weakness, episodes of blurred vision, diplopia, intracerebral hemorrhage, neuro-ophthalmic manifestations, intranuclear ophthalmoplegia, dysorientation, vasculitis presenting with strokes, intracranial hypothalamic lesion, paresthesis, hemiparesis, myelopathy in the cervico-thoracic region, lumbar pain, sensory level and inability of lateral gaze (Tab. 2, Ref. 60).
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PMID:Clinical manifestations of neurosarcoidosis. 1982 43

Mucormycosis is a life-threatening fungal infection that occurs in immunocompromised patients. The most common predisposing risk factor for mucormycosis is diabetes mellitus. Rhino-orbito-cerebral mucormycosis is the most common form in diabetic patients and is characterized by paranasal sinusitis, ophthalmoplegia with blindness, and unilateral proptosis with cellulitis, facial pain with swelling, headache, fever, rhinitis, granular or purulent nasal discharge, nasal ulceration, epistaxis, hemiplegia or stroke, and decreased mental function. Diabetic ketoacidosis is the most common and serious acute complication of diabetic patients. We herein report 2 cases of fatal rhino-orbito-cerebral mucormycosis in a patient with diabetic ketoacidosis.
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PMID:Rhino-orbito-cerebral mucormycosis in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis. 2462 43

We describe a patient with traumatic carotid-cavernous fistula (CCF), subsequently developing contralateral extensive hemorrhagic venous infarction from retrograde venous reflux into the opposite basal vein of Rosenthal. A 54-year-old woman was involved in a motor vehicle accident and sustained severe traumatic brain injury. Two months later, she developed bilateral proptosis and audible bruit. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) of the brain demonstrated the right direct CCF. Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images showed a small hyperintense area at the left basal ganglia. Ten days later, she developed right-sided grade 2/5 hemiparesis, facial upper motor neuron weakness, and cognitive impairment. Follow-up MRI showed significant progression of hyperintensities involving the left-sided centrum semiovale, basal ganglia, thalamus, midbrain, pons, cerebellum, basal frontal, temporal lobes, especially subcortical white matter on FLAIR images, and multiple hypointense foci of hemorrhagic component on T2*-weighted gradient-echo images, representing hemorrhagic venous infarction. While waiting for embolization, she rapidly developed right hemiplegia and aphasia, and became somnolent. Under general anesthesia, emergency endovascular treatment was performed successfully to obliterate the fistula without surgical intervention. Five months after endovascular treatment, MRI and MRA confirmed no residual fistula and revealed nearly complete resolution of abnormal increased signal intensity. In the present case, the factors related to the presence of this rare condition were absence of the ipsilateral basal vein of Rosenthal (BVR), occlusion of posterior segment of the contralateral superior petrosal sinus, and a developed uncal vein with hypoplastic second and third segments of the contralateral BVR.
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PMID:Contralateral extensive cerebral hemorrhagic venous infarction caused by retrograde venous reflux into the opposite basal vein of Rosenthal in posttraumatic carotid-cavernous fistula: A case report and literature review. 2978 69