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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The identification and management of neurological deficit are each essential for
stroke
rehabilitation. Management of the two most commonly encountered deficits,
hemiplegia
and communication disorder, is discussed. An eleven point
Stroke
Rehabilitation Outcome plan forms a good basis for discussion with relatives about what to expect.
...
PMID:Concepts in stroke rehabilitation. 178 82
Three cases of anterior choroidal artery territorial infarction, diagnosed by computerized tomography, with the triad of
hemiplegia
, hemianaesthesia and hemianopia, pure motor
stroke
and ataxic hemiparesis are described. Major and minor (lacular) infarctions in the territory of the anterior choroidal artery involve almost exclusively the basal segment of the posterior limb of the internal capsule and manifest themselves by symptoms of long pathway lesion. Based on the published case reports and the authors' own observations, the complete capsular syndrome characterized by the triad of
hemiplegia
, hemianaesthesia and hemianopia was differentiated from partial capsular syndromes including the following forms: pure motor
stroke
, pure sensory
stroke
, sensorimotor
stroke
, sensory
stroke
with hemiataxia, ataxic hemiparesis, dysarthria and/or clumsy hand, and homonymous hemianopia (quadrantanopia or sectoranopia). The characteristic features of the above types of capsular syndromes were analyzed. Distant symptoms of territorial infarctions involving the anterior choroidal artery are transcortical sensory or motor aphasias and construction apraxia in the dominant hemisphere, left side perception failure and visual-construction apraxia in the non-dominant hemisphere, and cerebellar hemiataxia. These distant symptoms are a manifestation of distant cortical or cerebellar metabolic depression due to the mechanism of diaschisis.
...
PMID:[Anterior choroidal artery syndromes]. 180 18
Patients with both resectable lung cancer and coronary artery disease require preoperative cardiac evaluation in order to determine and prevent the surgical risk and to discuss the desirability of preventive myocardial revascularization. The results of thoracic surgery in coronary disease patients have been studied in a series of 51 patients operated upon for lung cancer at the Marie Lannelongue hospital, Paris, between 1985 and 1988. Thirty-two patients underwent non invasive exploration prior to surgery (exertion ECG in 22, myocardial radioisotope scanning in 10); 35 patients had coronary arteriography at the last moment, and 9 asymptomatic patients with an old history of myocardial infarction had no specific exploration. Forty-nine patients had lung surgery alone, preceded in 5 cases by percutaneous coronary angioplasty; one patient had pulmonary surgery and coronary surgery simultaneously, and another patient had coronary surgery first, later followed by lung surgery. No perioperative death was due to cardiovascular causes. A 75-year old male patient died of respiratory failure 30 days after lobectomy. The postoperative period was totally uneventful in 39 patients. No perioperative myocardial infarction was recorded; 4 patients experienced an episode of thoracic pain with ECG signs of myocardial infarction but no rise in serum enzyme concentrations. One patient had a
cerebral vascular accident
responsible for
hemiplegia
. Two late sudden deaths, probably of cardiac origin, occurred 4 and 11 months respectively after surgery. The actuarial survival rate at 3 months was 48 percent. In all survivors, the coronary symptoms were controlled by medical treatment. It seems, therefore, that perioperative complications in this type of patient can be avoided by preoperative evaluation of the coronary disease and by preventive myocardial revascularization in case of critical coronary stenosis.
...
PMID:[Lung resection for cancer in coronary patients. Immediate and medium-term results. Retrospective study in a series of 51 patients]. 182 64
Recently, it has been proposed that shoulder subluxation in
hemiplegia
is accompanied by 1) the appearance of a V-shaped articular configuration occurring between the humeral head and glenoid fossa and 2) the presence of chronic pain. The main purpose of this study was to investigate the validity of these statements. We evaluated 40 hemiplegic subjects over 3 months. Radiographs of the affected and nonaffected shoulders were taken at both a frontal plane (0 degree) and a 45 degree incidence. From these patients, subluxed (n = 19) and nonsubluxed (n = 21) groups were formed. Pain was evaluated using the Present Pain Intensity index of the McGill Pain Questionnaire. On these x-ray films, measurements were taken of the V-shaped space, abduction of the arm, and rotation of the scapula. The statistical analysis (analysis of variance for repeated measures) contrasted the results obtained from the nonaffected side with those from the affected side over the 3 months studied. At the 45 degree angle, which better exposes the articular configuration of the shoulder, the difference in the V angle between the affected and nonaffected shoulders was significant for the subluxed group (p less than 0.01), indicating that such a V-shaped space can be identified. The measures taken also indicate that a downward subluxation of the humeral head occurs relative to the scapula without any systematic abduction of the humerus or downward rotation of the scapula. None of the results obtained from the frontal plane x-ray films was significant. Finally, no significant relation was found between subluxation and shoulder pain.
Stroke
1991 Jul
PMID:Clinical significance of the V-shaped space in the subluxed shoulder of hemiplegics. 185 6
A rare case of ischemic
stroke
related to Herpes zoster infection of the eye and documented arteritis in an HIV-positive patient is analyzed. The woman, aged 32, who was born in Angola and lived in Zaire, was diagnoses at the Hospital Universitario de Santa Maria, Lisbon. She presented with a 5-month history of sudden
hemiplegia
, 4 months after onset of herpes zoster ophthalmicus. Among extensive diagnosis tests, she was positive for HIV by ELISA and Western blot, hepatomegaly, and generalized lymphadenopathy. She has left Herpes zoster ophthalmicus with ptosis bulbi and mottled discoloration of the skin over the distribution of the 1st division of the left trigeminal nerve, and right spastic hemiparesis. Her helper T-cell count was 952/cubic mm, and her T-cell ratio was 0.9. She had anemia, hypoalbuminemia, positive serology for cytomegalovirus, Herpes simplex, Epstein Barr virus, and hepatitis B. She had no bacterial infections, but her stool contained Trichuris trichiura eggs and giardia lamblia cysts. Her cardiovascular system and cerebrovascular fluid were negative. Computed tomography of the head showed an old left capsular infarct. Cerebral angiography showed arteritis of the left choroidal artery with occlusion. She was treated with metronidazole and mebendazole, and had surgery for removal of the left eye with a prosthetic replacement.
Strokes
are common in AIDS patients, resulting from fungal infections, endocarditis, infectious or non-infectious emboli, or arteritis from herpes zoster infections. This is the 1st published case of
hemiplegia
and Herpes zoster in a European or African patient with HIV-1.
...
PMID:Herpes zoster and controlateral hemiplegia in an African patient infected with HIV-1. 186 23
A case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and
stroke
-like episodes, in which a pituitary growth hormone (GH) secretion deficiency of hypothalamic origin was revealed through neuro-endocrinological examinations, was described. The case was a 10-year-old girl, who had been suffering from generalized tonic seizures since age 5, four episodes of alternating
hemiplegia
since age 6, stunted growth since age 7, and simple partial motor seizures as well as gelastic seizures since age 8. Marked elevation of lactate and pyruvate in both serum and CSF, abundant ragged red fibers in biopsied muscle, and low density areas in the left occipital lobe and bilateral globus pallidus in addition to diffuse brain atrophy on CT scan and MRI of the head were demonstrated, although the activities of muscle enzymes complex I-IV were within normal ranges. Pituitary GH secretion was deficient under the loadings with insulin, L-DOPA, sleep, and a single growth hormone releasing factor (GRF) administration, but normal GH response was registered under the repetitive stimulation with GRF. Activities of other hormonal axes were normal. It is likely that short stature commonly observed in MELAS patients is due to hypothalamic dysfunction, which might be brought out by chronic ischemia and energy deficiency of the diencephalon based upon mitochondrial abnormality of that region. It is likely that gelastic seizure in this case is due to hypothalamic dysfunction.
...
PMID:[Hypothalamic GH Deficiency and gelastic seizures in a 10-year-old girl with MELAS]. 187 57
A prognostic score was derived from a prospective study of 120 consecutive patients with
cerebrovascular accident
. Multivariate analysis was used to compare the presenting clinical features of 106 (88%) of these patients with their immediate outcome (survival or death). Similar analysis was also used to compare features on CT scan with immediate outcome in 45 patients. The immediate prognostic features included old age, history of previous
stroke
, mental obtundation at the onset, persistent altered consciousness greater than or equal to first 48 hours, altered consciousness appearing in the first 24-72 hours, complete
hemiplegia
, seizures, aspiration pneumonitis, and multiple/massive lesions and gross mass effect on CT scan. The prognostic score derived from discriminant function using CT scan variables was less accurate than that formulated from only clinical variables. In the latter (using clinical variables) a prognostic score of 46 or less suggested a 50% chance of recovery, scores of 47 or more a 50% chance of death, while scores of 12 or less and 63 or more suggested a 99% likelihood of survival and death respectively.
...
PMID:Predicting the immediate outcome of patients with cerebrovascular accident: a prognostic score. 188 80
The role and timing of a carotid endarterectomy in the setting of an acute ischemic
stroke
-in-evolution remain controversial. Although computed tomographic (CT) scans typically show no abnormalities in the acute stage, it is generally agreed that a dense neurological deficit (
hemiplegia
) and/or multiple modality neurological disturbance (involving motor, sensory, gaze, and visual field impairment) represent contraindications to surgical intervention. We present a case of an acute right holohemispheric neurological deficit including dense
hemiplegia
, hemisensory loss, gaze disturbance, hemineglect, and impaired level of consciousness. This persisted for 4 days while serial CT scans showed no evidence of infarction. Angiography revealed pre-occlusive stenosis of the right internal carotid artery with sluggish antegrade flow. The anterior collaterals of the circle of Willis were impaired, and the right middle cerebral artery territory filled via the posterior communicating artery. Despite the dense neurological deficit persisting for 4 days, a carotid endarterectomy was performed. Gradual neurological improvement was noted within hours of the operation, and all neurological deficits resolved within the subsequent 3 days. This case is consistent with prolonged holohemispheric hemodynamic compromise below the threshold of neurological dysfunction, but above the threshold of tissue infarction ("idling neurons"). Features assisting in the recognition of this unusual scenario and the indications and risks of revascularization in this setting are discussed.
...
PMID:Reversal of a dense, persistent, holohemispheric neurological deficit after an endarterectomy of the carotid artery: case report. 154 8
Thirty-two patients whose first
stroke
was due to double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere were identified among 1,911 consecutive patients from the Lausanne
Stroke
Registry. The double infarct involved territories of the superficial middle cerebral artery, superficial posterior cerebral artery, lenticulostriate, anterior choroidal artery, or borderzone. The most common combination involved territories of the anterior middle cerebral artery plus the posterior middle cerebral artery. In the patients with the double infarct, the prevalence of potential cardiac sources of embolism (19%) was similar to that found in the registry in general, but the double infarct was closely associated with tight (greater than or equal to 90% of the lumen diameter) stenosis or occlusion (75%) of the internal carotid artery. The most common neurological picture mimicked large infarction in the middle cerebral artery territory, but nearly half of the patients with double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere had a specific clinical syndrome, which was not found in the 1,879 remaining patients from the registry, including hemianopia-
hemiplegia
(in 6), acute conduction aphasia-hemiparesis (in 2), and acute transcortical mixed aphasia (in 6), in relation to characteristic combinations of infarcts. These unique clinical and etiological correlates warrant the recognition of double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere from other acute ischemic strokes.
...
PMID:Double infarction in one cerebral hemisphere. 192 25
We compared patients with unawareness of
hemiplegia
lasting more than 1 month after right hemisphere
stroke
with other patients with right hemisphere
stroke
who became aware of
hemiplegia
within a few days after onset. Patients with persistent unawareness invariably had severe left hemisensory loss and usually had severe left spatial neglect. They were almost always apathetic; their thought lacked direction, clarity, and flexibility, and they had at least moderate impairment of intellect and memory. Their right hemisphere strokes were large and always affected the central gyri or their thalamic connections and capsular pathways. In addition, there was evidence of at least mild left hemisphere damage, most commonly caused by age-associated atrophy. The pathogenesis of anosognosia for
hemiplegia
may involve failure to discover paralysis because proprioceptive mechanisms that ordinarily inform an individual about the position and movement of limbs are damaged, and the patient, because of additional cognitive defects, lacks the capacity to make the necessary observations and inferences to diagnose the paralysis. We discuss the implications of this "discovery" theory and contrast it with other explanations of anosognosia.
...
PMID:The pathogenesis of anosognosia for hemiplegia. 194 7
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