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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Development of very low birth weight infants: a regional study of 371 survivors. 172 Mar 87
Distinct chronic posttraumatic syndromes, ascribed to neurological deficits of patients suffering severe head injuries and being in prolonged coma, are much less frequently encountered in the literature than acute traumatic syndromes. The major components of the posttraumatic midbrain syndrome, resulting from compressive necrosis or vascular infarction at the midbrain level, are ipsilateral cerebellar signs (the predominant one being
intention tremor
), contralateral pyramidal signs (the predominant one being a spastic-dystonic hemiparesis), dysarthria, and mild to moderate intellectual impairment. Significant bilateral cerebellar dysfunction following head injury, without pyramidal, extrapyramidal, or pseudobulbar signs, constitutes a posttraumatic cerebellar syndrome. Its most disabling component, namely posttraumatic
intention tremor
, may be alleviated by thalamotomy. Following severe closed head injury, an infrequently encountered posttraumatic entity of dystonic
hemiplegia
or hemiparesis, which may be alleviated by thalamotomy, can occur, but does not have a specific neuroanatomical basis. Intention tremors following severe head injuries, rarely associated with hydrocephalus and without other significant cerebellar findings, can develop as a dysfunction of the cerebellofugal outflow system. While chronic posttraumatic syndromes can be complex and difficult to treat, cerebellar stimulation has been utilized ipsilaterally to modulate limb spasticity, and bilateral ventrolateral cryothalamectomies staged 4-6 months apart have been successful in alleviating severe (intractable) intention tremors.
...
PMID:Rehabilitative neurosurgery: posttraumatic syndromes. 262 1
Article abstract-A 65-year-old woman presented with a left abduction deficit and "red eye," mild proptosis, chemosis, arterialization of the conjunctival vessels,
intention tremor
, and bilateral pyramidal signs. MRI showed significant left-sided brainstem involvement that mimicked a tumor. Right
hemiplegia
ensued 1 week later. Venous congestion of the brainstem with
hemiplegia
resulting from shunting of blood flow from both carotid arteries is an extremely rare complication of carotid-cavernous fistula.
...
PMID:Carotid-cavernous fistula with brainstem congestion mimicking tumor on MRI. 1113 2