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)

We report herein a case of a intraspinal hematoma in a 9-year-old boy with factor IX deficiency. Replacement of factor IX resulted in resolution of symptoms. The most frequent presentations of intraspinal hematomas are neck or back pain, paresis, sensory impairment, and urinary retention. Intraspinal hematomas may have devastating sequelae, including hemiplegia and quadriplegia. The occurrence or development of sequelae are related to the length of time between onset of symptoms and factor replacement. Whenever the physician suspects intraspinal hematoma, immediate replacement should be given to obtain levels of 80-100% prior to any imaging studies. Factor levels should be maintained at 30-50% for 10-14 days while the patient is monitored closely with serial neurological examinations. Most patients respond to factor replacement, but laminectomy should be considered for intractable or progressive cases.
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PMID:Intraspinal hematomas in hemophilia. 153 Jan 22

Twenty-eight term neonates with severe perinatal asphyxia were referred to a tertiary neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). The morbidity of asphyxia included involvement of the pulmonary (n = 24 infants), central nervous system (n = 22), renal (n = 15), cardiac (n = 14), metabolic (n = 13) and hematologic (n = 10) systems. The majority of neonates had more than three organ systems involved. Twenty-four neonates survived the neonatal course and at NICU discharge all system effects other than the central nervous system had resolved. At 5 years (60 months), 14 children had a normal neurologic examination, 9 had spastic quadriplegia and one had hemiplegia. Nine children had a McCarthy General Cognitive Index (GCI) greater than or equal to 84, 3 had a GCI between 68 and 83 and 12 scored less than 67. Neonatal seizures, renal problems, microcephaly at 3 months, and post-neonatal seizures were associated with an abnormal neurologic outcome or a GCI less than 67. A neurologic examination during the first year of life may reveal whether children with birth asphyxia will be relatively normal at age 5 years or whether they will show considerable delay.
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PMID:Acute neonatal morbidity and long-term central nervous system sequelae of perinatal asphyxia in term infants. 171 44

We re-examined 371 infants with birth weights less than 1501 g at a corrected age of 18-20 months. This sample amounted to 91% of such infants admitted to one of the six neonatal intensive care units in Hamburg between July 1983 and 1986. The neurological examination and a developmental evaluation using the Griffith Developmental Scale revealed higher rates of abnormalities than in most other studies. Fifty-five children (14.8%) suffered from cerebral palsy, classified in 45 as spastic diplegia, in 5 as spastic tetraplegia, in 1 as spastic hemiplegia and in 4 as dystonia. Of the children, 41 (11%) showed minor neurological deviations (hyperactivity, clumsiness, intention tremor). The development of 30 children (8%) without neurological abnormalities was moderately retarded (DQ 80-89, corrected for gestational age [GA]). Nineteen children (5%) were severely retarded (DQ less than 80, corrected for GA) and four children (1.5%) were blind due to retrolental fibroplasia. An isolated delay of speech development was found in 5 children. Seventy children (18.9%) had a major and 87 children (23.5%) a minor handicap.
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PMID:Development of very low birth weight infants: a regional study of 371 survivors. 172 Mar 87

Lateral flexion of the cervical spine may cause a sagittally oriented fracture of the lateral mass with shearing of all or part of the lateral mass away from the vertebral body. We report 22 patients with 24 sagittal fractures of the cervical lateral masses. Cross-table lateral roentgenograms suggested the presence of a sagittal lateral mass fracture in two thirds of the cases based upon malalignment or widening of the facet joints, displaced fracture fragments, subluxation of the spine, or rotation of the spine above the level of abnormality. However, the cross-table lateral roentgenogram was normal in one third of cases. Oblique roentgenograms were available in eight cases; these were positive in five, equivocal in one, and negative in two. Visible fracture lines, often associated with lateral displacement of part or all of the lateral mass, allowed all 24 fractures to be detected on the supine anteroposterior view films. Sagittal lateral mass fractures were unstable in 59% (13/22) of the cases; neurologic deficits, including quadriplegia, hemiplegia, and radiculopathy, were present in 45% (10/22). Computed tomography and complex-motion tomography were useful in confirming the sagittal lateral mass fracture and in detecting other associated fractures.
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PMID:Sagittally oriented fractures of the lateral masses of the cervical vertebrae. 174 36

Paraparesis (paraplegia) refers to partial (-paresis) or complete (-plegia) loss of voluntary motor function in the pelvic limbs. Similar involvement of all four limbs is termed tetraparesis (tetraplegia). Paraparesis generally results from spinal cord lesions caudad to the second thoracic spinal cord segment, whereas tetraparesis occurs because of lesions craniad to this segment (see discussion of spinal cord lesion localization in The Neurologic Examination and Lesion Localization, on page 328). The limbs may be affected equally; however, asymmetric lesions cause greater clinical involvement on the ipsilateral side. Strictly unilateral lesions at C1-T2 result in clinical involvement on only the affected side of the body (hemiparesis, hemiplegia). Monoparesis (monoplegia) occurs subsequent to unilateral T2-S1 lesions. Trauma and neoplasia are the most common spinal cord diseases affecting cats. Urinary and fecal incontinence often occur concomitant with paresis. General concepts relating to disorders of micturition are discussed at the conclusion of this chapter.
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PMID:Paraparesis (paraplegia), tetraparesis (tetraplegia), urinary/fecal incontinence. Spinal cord diseases. 180 59

The study intends to value results of follow-up of risk neonates hospitalized for the period 1980-88 at Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of Bufalini Hospital Cesena and the course with time of neurologic and neuropsychological alterations, reported to the birth-rate of territory in which operates the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. The survivor infants attended in follow up have been 419: 63 of neonatal weight less than or equal to 1500 g (group A), 117 of weight 1501-2000 g (group B), 239 of weight greater than 2000 g (group C). The follow-up provided at first 12 months of life a pediatric examination together with motoscopic examination to Milani-Comparetti every two months, at 3 years--4 years and 6 months, 7 years a pediatric examination with evaluation of Intelligence Quotient (N.E.M.I.), at last two months of 1st Primary School evaluation of acquired scholastic learning capacities by reading test of Inizan and calculation test of Meljac. Diagnosis of cerebral palsy (C.P.) has been always placed at first 12 months of life. All the survivors have been executed pediatric checks as foreseen at first 12 months of life. The subjects with CP are 26 (%); of these 13 have an I.Q. less than or equal to 70. The risk to develop CP seems to depend strictly by hypoxic perinatal stress (21/26 infants). The type of CP seems to be conditioned by neonatal weight, in particular as regards spastic paraplegia (10/12 infants of weight less than or equal to 2000 g), but hemiplegia and tetraplegia are with equality distributed (7/14 infants of weight less than or equal to 2000 g).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Neurologic risks caused by perinatal and neonatal problems in a provincial hospital]. 209 90

The timing of mentally executed movements was measured in ten patients with hemiplegia, tetraplegia and paraplegia. In hemiplegic patients a significant difference in mental duration times was found between the paralysed and the normal "represented limb". The paralysed limb was mentally much slower than the healthy one. In contrast, movement times in tetraplegic and paraplegic patients did not differ from those in normal subjects. All patients reported a sensation of subjective effort accompanying the execution of the mental tasks. These observations are compatible with an outflow processing underlying motor imagery.
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PMID:Effect of brain and spinal cord injuries on motor imagery. 214 1

The aims of the study were (1) to replicate previous quantitative studies of motor activity in low-risk and high-risk preterm infants and (2) to apply a new method of systematic analysis of the qualitative characteristics of general movements in these two groups of infants. Sequential one-hour videorecordings of the unstimulated infants in the incubator were made during the preterm period and then continued during the postterm period until about 20 weeks. The high-risk group consisted only of infants with signs of haemorrhage and/or leucomalacia in the repeated ultrasonograms of the brain. The neurological follow-up continued up to a minimum of one and a maximum of three years of corrected age. The quantification of the various motor patterns in 12 matched pairs of low-risk and high-risk preterm infants revealed a slight but significant (P = 0.05) excess of isolated arm movements in the low-risk cases during the activity phase. No other movement pattern differed significantly. The qualitative assessment of general movements during the preterm period resulted in all but one of the 14 low-risk cases having a normal quality of general movements. In the lesion-group (N = 29) all the infants had an abnormal quality during the preterm period. Eight cases later became neurologically normal although 1 of them had strabism. In addition, one infant was blind (ROP) and retarded and one other had mental retardation. Nineteen infants later developed cerebral palsy (two monoplegia of a leg, three hemiplegia, 5 diplegia and 9 quadriplegia). Strabism was present in 48.3% of the whole group of 29 cases. A semi-quantitative estimation of various aspects of the abnormal general movements made a typology of abnormal patterns possible. A graphic display of developmental trajectories of individual cases, depicting the course of abnormal aspects along the time axis, helps document the evolution of abnormal signs. Their course is a better predictor of the neurological outcome than the nature and localization of the lesion, detected by imaging techniques. The qualitative assessment of general movements from videorecordings is a reliable, quick, cheap and totally non-intrusive method in neonatology for the early detection of functional impairment of the nervous system.
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PMID:Qualitative changes of general movements in preterm infants with brain lesions. 225 80

During the more than five years from January 1984 to June 1989, twenty-four patients with definite or probable cystic periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) were diagnosed by cranial ultrasonography at Mackay Memorial Hospital. The 24 patients were divided into two groups. Group A comprise two boys and four girls who received longitudinal sonographic follow-ups for leukomalacia. Of these six patients, five were premature and all suffered from severe perinatal insults. In each case, sequences of developmental cystic PVL were observed by serially scanning the brain. High echogenicity was discovered during the initial stages (2 to 7 days) in the periventricular area, and cystic formations were observed between the age of 18 and 60 days. Clinically, only one patient developed normally; four had severe motor dysfunction and poor motor development; and one was lost during follow-up, Group B was composed of 18 patients who visited the out-patient clinic for psychomotor retardation evaluation, and were found through ultrasound to have or possibly have cystic PVL formations at various stages. The clinical work-up revealed that 12 had spastic quadriplegia; 2 had hemiplegia; 3 had spastic displegia; and 1 case had hypotonic cerebral palsy. In infants, PVL is considered to be a much more reliable and important prognostic predictor than intraventricular hemorrhage. Consequently, it is crucial that physicians should screen patients at high risk for PVL, especially those with perinatal insults.
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PMID:Periventricular leukomalacia in infancy: ultrasonic diagnosis and neurological outcome. 226 Apr 65

The authors report a case of alternating hemiplegia (AH) in a 3yr 6m old boy who had presented, from the age of 4 months on, episodes of alternating hemi- or quadriplegia. Brainstem auditory evoked potentials were recorded both in the interictal state and, for the first time, during an attack. There was no significant difference between the two states. These findings suggest that a massive involvement of the posterior vascular territory is not likely to be associated with attacks in AH.
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PMID:Brainstem auditory evoked potentials in alternating hemiplegia: ictal vs interictal assessment in one case. 229 51


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