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)

Cardiac myxoma, a relatively common condition in adults, is exceptionally rare in childhood. It is usually observed in the left atrium. The condition may be latent and a chance echocardiographic finding or present with arrhythmias, intermittent mitral obstruction or embolic phenomena. The authors report the case of an 11-year old child with no previous medical history, admitted to hospital after sudden right hemiplegia due to an ischaemic cerebrovascular accident. The investigation of a cardiac embolic abnormality led to the finding of a very large left ventricular tumour inserted into the mitral annulus and prolapsing into the left ventricular outflow tract, the histological examination of which confirmed the diagnosis of myxoma. Cardiac myxomas in children seem to have a much more variable site of implantation than in adults, especially in the right heart in infancy. Treatment is always surgical. Echocardiography should be requested early in children presenting with a murmur of recent origin, malaises, or unexplained inflammatory syndromes, and would seem to be the only means of avoiding the severe embolic complications of these histologically benign tumours.
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PMID:[An unusual site of cardiac myxoma. Apropos of a case in an 11-year old child]. 929 59

Cardiac myxoma is a source of emboli to the vascular tree, especially to the central nervous system. Although it is rare, its early recognition is particularly important because of its unique clinical features of subsequently leading to intracerebral or subarachnoid hemorrhage, even brain metastases, and its potential for surgical cure. Missing the diagnosis may lead to devastating results, including stroke, even sudden death. A 40-year-old male with no other conventional vascular risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes or hyperlipidemia presented with right hemiplegia, global aphasia, vomiting, and fever. Infarction over the left middle cerebral artery was disclosed on magnetic resonance imaging study, and echocardiogram showed a huge mass, about 5cm in size, on the mitral valve which was histopathologically proved to be a cardiac myxoma. He also presented with multiple emboli to the kidneys and the left eye. There is uncertainty about the role of anticoagulation. The treatment of choice remains surgical excision of the cardiac myxoma which may lead to normalization of serum interleukin-6 levels and resolution of constitutional symptoms, and the intracranial aneurysms may regress and resolve.
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PMID:Young stroke, cardiac myxoma, and multiple emboli: a case report and literature review. 1699 1