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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The syndrome first described in 1904 by the Spanish otolaryngologist, Antonio Garcia Tapia, has been variously interpreted by subsequent authors such that there is little current agreement as to the site of the lesion responsible for the condition or the specific symptoms included in this disorder. The confusion arose in part because Tapia's original patient had associated neurologic findings. Careful review of Tapia's reports reveals (1) that he regarded the syndrome as consisting of ipsilateral
hemiplegia
of the larynx and tongue with normal function of the soft palate and (2) that he believed the lesion resulting in these signs was outside the CNS.
...
PMID:Tapia's syndrome. The erratic evolution of an eponym. 37 80
In addition to regulating sensory and motor function, the human brain is also involved in the coordination of complex mental processes. In some cerebrovascular accidents,
hemiplegia
may be completely absent and deficits of language, behavior, and memory may dominate the clinical picture.
...
PMID:Acute behavioral derangements without hemiplegia in cerebrovascular accidents. 39 52
Among 500 epileptic patients studied by Computerized Tomography, 11 patients presented an occipital porencephaly (or a dilation of the occipital horn with a "porencephalic" aspect) sometimes associated with a ventricular dilation. These 11 patients represented 2.2% of our patients and 5% of those less than 20 yr of age which is frequent in relation to lesions of the same type having a different topography. Clinical and EEG studies of these 11 patients revealed
hemiplegia
or hemiparesis in 8 cases, hemianopsia in 7 cases, a severe partial epilepsy in 6 cases which was temporal in 5 patients, a secondary generalized epilepsy in 3 cases, and an epilepsy unable to be classified in 2 cases. The "porencephalies" responsible for these clinical signs are most likely of encephalomalacic origin, secondary to circulatory troubles in the peri- or postnatal period. Remillard et al. maintain that perinatal occlusion of the posterior cerebral artery is responsible. However, in our personal series, the results obtained from CT, PEG and angiography do not permit us to be as affirmative as to the vascular etiology responsible.
...
PMID:Demonstration of a little known cause of infantile epilepsy, occipital porencephaly, by computerized tomography (CT). 40 Oct 48
Intracerebral hemorrhage has been thought in the past to be manifested by sudden onset of
hemiplegia
, severe headache and deep coma proceeding to death in most cases. There are patients who present with less ominous symptoms who have heretofore been though to have cerebral infarction or transient ischemic attacks who in reality have intracerebral hemorrhages. Computerized tomography has allowed us to identify these patients and to separate them from the large group of patients with ischemic infarcts either due to thromboses or emboli. Six patients were reported with unexpected brain hemorrhages and their good prognosis is emphasized.
...
PMID:Unexpected brain hemorrhages and the value of computerized tomography. 40 Oct 51
Movement-related desynchronization was investigated in the EEG from central region in human subjects, during voluntary self-paced movement of the thumb. The average dynamic time-behaviour of the power in the alpha band was calculated from 4 sec before to 2 sec after voluntary movement. In all investigated subjects (9 students and 7 patients with several forms of
hemiplegia
) a significant power reduction before voluntary movement of the thumb was found. This power decrease can be interpreted as desynchronization of the central mu activity. Therefore, it appears that in all subjects a mu activity can be demonstrated. In most cases, a short-lasting desynchronization of central mu activity occurred about 2 sec before movement onset and was followed by a second one, about 1 sec before movement onset which reached a maximum during initiation of movement. Frequently the first desynchronization occurred in parallel but often also before the Bereitschaftspotential.
...
PMID:[Changes in the spontaneous EEG-activity before and during voluntary self-paced movement. New ways of investigation of the central mu-activity (author's transl)]. 41 44
Basilar artery occlusion occurred in a 13-year-old boy. Eighteen cases in children reported in the literature were also analyzed. Basilar artery occlusion is more common in males. The main clinical manifestations are disturbance in consciousness,
hemiplegia
or quadriplegia, and pupillary abnormalitites. The prognosis is better in children than in adults.
...
PMID:Basilar artery occlusion in childhood: report of a case. 42 Jun 17
In ten patients, 11 infarcts involving mainly the internal capsule have been examined pathologically. Serial sections of the involved basal ganglia were studied in ten infarcts and only a gross dissection was made in the other. The implicated penetrating arteries were traced throughout their length and obstructive vascular lesions were found in nine instances. In two of the nine there was an atheromatous plaque with a superimposed thrombus, in four an atheromatous plaque had caused severe stenosis, in one a destructive arterial process lipohyalinosis had occurred, in one case the nature of the obstruction remained "uncertained," and in one the penetrating arteries were obstructed at their orifices by an atheroma in the superior division of the middle cerebral artery. In two cases the vessels were patent, suggesting embolism. The atheromas consisted almost exclusively of a conglomerate of fat-filled macrophages. The clinical correlate was a pure motor
hemiplegia
or hemiparesis involving the face, arm, and leg without sensory deficit, homonymous hemianopia, receptive aphasia, or apractognosia. Confusion was prominent in one patient.
...
PMID:Capsular infarcts: the underlying vascular lesions. 42 Jun 25
The prerequisites for effective rehabilitation programmes in elderly patients are described, taking into account the specific social, physiological and psychological changes associated with senescence. The special problems facing elderly patients admitted to hospital are discussed and how their needs can be met. The importance of dementia as a factor influencing rehabilitation is considered and the various forms of residential and non-residential care described. Similarly, the paramount importance of accurate diagnosis of the causes of confusional states is emphasized and principles of management described. The fruitfulness of effective liaison between the psychiatrist and geriatrician is underlined and various ways by which this can be achieved, including the place of psychogeriatric assessment unit, and the role of the acute geriatric ward and geriatric rehabilitation unit. The principles of management of the elderly mentally ill in hospital are outlined. As specific examples of the principles and problems of rehabilitation programmes for disorders in the elderly, a detailed description is presented of the rehabilitation of the patient with myocardial infarction and the patient who has developed a
hemiplegia
following a cerebrovascular accident.
...
PMID:Rehabilitation in the elderly. 42 Jul 2
This is a detailed clinical and autopsy documentation of a rare entity--primary cardiac myxosarcoma in a 29-month-old girl. The patient had sudden onset of right
hemiplegia
and angiographic evidence of multiple occlusions of the left middle cerebral artery. Subsequent M-mode and sector echocardiography showed a mobile, pedunculated left atrial tumor, which was excised. No other tumor mass was noted at the time of surgical exploration, and postoperatively, the patient received a course of chemotherapy (vincristine, dactinomycin, and cyclophosphamide). After a temporary improvement in her condition, the patient died following several days of rapid deterioration; this was 3 months after the onset of symptoms. Autopsy showed that death was due to brainstem herniation secondary to massive infiltration of the brain by tumor, and there were also widespread systemic metastases.
...
PMID:Primary cardiac myxosarcoma in a child. 42 7
The secondary symptomatic forms of livedo reticularis can follow cerebrovascular incidents with consecutive
hemiplegia
; this is rarely known. A further patient is described who developed an asymmetrical livedo reticularis on the hemiplegic half of the body. The reason of the
hemiplegia
was an intracerebral hemorrhage.
...
PMID:[Vasculitis racemosa hemoplegica]. 42 14
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