Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of cardiac myxoma presenting as metastatic brain tumor are reported. The patient was a 44-year-old man. One year prior to this admission, he had suffered stroke, which was characterized by right hemiparesis and dysarthria. The computed tomographic (= CT) scan of the head at that time showed a low density on the left basal ganglia and the echocardiogram suggested a left atrial myxoma. At surgery, a polypoid myxoma attached to the atrial septum was totally removed. Right hemiparesis was improved and the patient was discharged. A few months later, the patient was evaluated for multiple cutaneous masses and diagnosed by biopsy as metastatic myxoma. The patient's condition remained unchanged until this admission. In March 1985, the patient had a tonic-clonic convulsion marching from right hand and developed right
hemiplegia
with drowsy. An echocardiogram failed to reveal recurrence of the cardiac myxoma. A CT scan revealed a 5-cm, relatively circumscribed, low density mass in the left fronto-parietal lobe, ring mottled enhancement after contrast administration and more enhancement in the delayed scanning of 45 min. Craniotomy showed a tender, friable tumor with a yellowish cyst fluid, but apparently not invading the brain parenchyma. After complete excision of the mass, there was rapid lessing in the
hemiplegia
and improvement in the level of consciousness. A contrast-enhancement CT scan performed 2 weeks after craniotomy revealed no evidence of
residual tumor
. Pathohistological examination showed spindle-shaped and stellate cells which formed clusters and contained large amounts of acid polysaccharides as demonstrated by the alcian blue method.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Cardiac myxoma metastatic to the brain]. 379 Mar 67
An unusual case of peritumoral hemorrhage after radiosurgery for the treatment of metastatic brain tumor is reported. This 64-year-old woman had a history of breast cancer and underwent right mastectomy in 1989. She remained well until January 1993, when she started to have headache, nausea and speech disturbance, and was hospitalized on February 25, 1993. Neurological examination disclosed right hemiparesis and bilateral papilledema. CT scan and MR imaging showed a solitary round mass lesion in the left basal ganglia region. It was a well-demarcated, highly enhanced mass, 37mm in diameter. Cerebral angiography confirmed a highly vascular mass lesion in the same location. She was treated with radiosurgery on March 8 (maximum dose was 20Gy in the center and 10Gy in the peripheral part of the tumor). After radiosurgery, she had an uneventful course and clinical and radiosurgical improvement could be detected. Her neurological symptoms and signs gradually improved and reduction of the tumor size and perifocal edema could be seen one month after radiosurgery. However, 6 weeks after radiosurgery, she suddenly developed semicoma and right
hemiplegia
. CT scan disclosed a massive peritumoral hemorrhage. Then, emergency craniotomy, evacuation of the hematoma and total removal of the tumor were performed on April 24. Histopathological diagnosis was adenocarcinoma. It was the same finding as that of the previous breast cancer. Histopathological examination revealed necrosis without tumor cells in the center and
residual tumor
cells in the peripheral part of the tumor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Peritumoral hemorrhage after radiosurgery for metastatic brain tumor: a case report]. 807 40
Huge supratentorial ependymomas are rarely encountered tumors, even in the infant population. A recovery from complete
hemiplegia
following a tumor resection including the primary motor cortex was observed. A 5-month-old girl presented with a conjugate deviation to the right and a head circumference that had gradually expanded since birth. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated a well-enhanced huge mass extending into the right hemisphere. A subtotal removal with the primary motor cortex was performed. However, a regrowth of the
residual tumor
was observed and, thereafter, the patient underwent a subsequent surgical intervention 5 months later. The histological findings demonstrated an ependymoma. Her motor function was dramatically improved after rehabilitation and no tumor recurrence was detected for 10 years. A diffusion tensor imaging study showed that the motor fibers arose from the residual frontal lobe. The successful surgical management of ependymoma may depend on a total microscopic resection. In a case demonstrating a huge ependymoma, we had to remove a very thin motor cortex with the tumor. However, the motor function recovered completely. The motor damage inflicted at an early developmental age may be fully compensated due to the neuroplasticity of the residual brain.
...
PMID:Functional motor recovery of an infant after a huge ependymoma resection. 1963 49
OBJECTIVE Resection of insular gliomas is challenging. In cases of intraoperative injury to the lenticulostriate arteries (LSAs), the usual result is a dense
hemiplegia
. LSAs are usually localized just behind the medial tumor border but they can also be encased by the tumor. Thus, exact localization of these perforators is important. However, intraoperative localization of LSAs using conventional neuronavigation can be difficult due to brain shift. In this paper, the authors present a novel method of intraoperative LSA visualization by navigated 3D ultrasound (3DUS) power Doppler. This technique enables almost real-time imaging of LSAs and evaluation of their shift during insular tumor resections. METHODS Six patients harboring insular Grade II gliomas were consecutively operated on at the Department of Neurosurgery in Bratislava using visualization of LSAs by navigated 3DUS power Doppler. In all cases, the 3DUS data were repeatedly updated to compensate for the brain shift and display the actual position of LSAs and
residual tumor
. RESULTS Successful visualization of LSAs was achieved in all cases. During all surgeries, the distance between the bottom of the resection cavity and LSAs could be accurately evaluated; in all tumors the resection approached the LSAs and only a minimal amount of tissue covering these perforators was intentionally left in place to avoid injury to them. CONCLUSIONS Visualization of LSAs by navigated 3DUS power Doppler is a useful tool that may help to prevent injury of LSAs during removal of insular low-grade gliomas. However, reliability of this method has to be carefully evaluated in further studies.
...
PMID:Visualization of lenticulostriate arteries during insular low-grade glioma surgeries by navigated 3D ultrasound power Doppler: technical note. 2684 21
Brainstem glioma usually carries a poor prognosis and prolonged survival is very infrequent. In a detailed Pubmed, Medline search for prolonged survival, authors could got a longest survival only up to seventeen years, reported by Umehara
et al
, who was subjected to gamma knife therapy and got symptomatic, MRI brain reveled large tumor growth during pregnancy necessitating emergency surgery and histopathological diagnosis was pilocytic astrocytoma. Authors report an interesting case of midbrain glioma diagnosed 21 years back, who underwent gross resection in the year 1993, histopathology was pilocytic astrocytoma, WHO grade I, and received gamma knife surgery for residual subsequently and he presented with sudden onset left sided
hemiplegia
on the current admission. The cranial MRI imaging revealed an infarct involving right hemi midbrain, contrast MRI brain revealed no residual glioma. To the best knowledge of authors such prolonged survival is not reported with a case of brainstem glioma survived twenty- one years with non
residual tumor
on the last imaging study represents first case of its kind in the western literature and probably developed
hemiplegia
due to bleed, highlighting bleed as delayed complication following gamma knife therapy for cranial tumors.
...
PMID:Pilocytic Midbrain Astrocytoma Presenting with Fresh Bleed after Twenty-one-years Survival Following First Surgery: A Unique Case of Longest Brainstem Glioma Survival. 2816 14