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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 3
-year-old Chinese girl with alternating
hemiplegia
syndrome failed to respond to anticonvulsants, antimigrainous drugs, and calcium channel blockers. She made a complete remission with a 4-week course of steroid, and relapsed after steroid withdrawal. Electroencephalogram and brain mapping during the hemiplegic attack showed unilateral high-voltage sharp slow-wave discharges in the temporo-occipital region contralateral to the hemiplegic side and diffuse high-voltage slowing during attacks of quadriplegia or other clinical manifestation such as dullness, lethargy, or yawning. Brain perfusion single photon emission computed tomographic (SPECT) scan study during the attack showed decreased uptake in the temporoparietal region contralateral to the hemiplegic side and in the ipsilateral basal ganglia, whereas the perfusion was normal between attacks. Electroencephalogram background activity was improved while the child was in clinical remission with steroid treatment. Computed tomographic and magnetic resonance imaging scans of the brain were normal. Carotid angiogram failed to show any structural or dynamic changes of the carotid arteries. The possible mechanism underlying alternating
hemiplegia
syndrome might be transient and reversible cerebral ischemia with high-voltage slow-wave discharges shown in the electroencephalogram and decreased perfusion in SPECT scan.
...
PMID:Alternating hemiplegia syndrome: electroencephalogram, brain mapping, and brain perfusion SPECT scan study in a Chinese girl. 840 62
A 3
.7-year-old girl presented with an anterior neck injury followed by progressive subcutaneous emphysema and loss of consciousness. After resuscitation, a laceration on the first tracheal cartilage was closed surgically. As she was extubated one week later, she was found to have right
hemiplegia
and muteness. MRI showed a T2-bright lesion on the tegmentum of the left midbrain down to the upper pons. Right vertebral angiography disclosed an intimal flap with stenosis at the C3 vertebral level presumably caused by a fracture of the right C3 transverse process later confirmed in a cervical 3D-CT scan. Her muteness lasted for 10 days, after which she began to utter some comprehensible words in a dysarthric fashion. Her neurological deficits showed improvement within 3 months of her admission. Transient mutism after brain stem infarction has not been reported previously. We discuss the anatomical bases for this unusual reversible disorder in the light of previous observations and conclude that bilateral damage to the dentatothalamocortical fibers at the decussation of the superior cerebellar peduncle may have been responsible for her transient mutism.
...
PMID:Transient mutism resolving into cerebellar speech after brain stem infarction following a traumatic injury of the vertebral artery in a child. 1067 11
A 3
-year-old male developed
hemiplegia
and aphasia after convulsive status epilepticus. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance images demonstrated cytotoxic edema in the white matter 6 days after the seizure episode and subsequently in the gray matter after an additional 7 days. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance images demonstrated a subacute evolution of the pathologic process after the status epilepticus.
...
PMID:Changes in diffusion-weighted MRI after status epilepticus. 1078 54
A 3
-year-old male patient with hereditary spherocytosis who developed moyamoya syndrome, presenting
hemiplegia
, and slurred speech is reported. Transient ischemic attacks occurred repeatedly with hemolytic crises. Magnetic resonance imaging and angiography revealed bilateral occlusion of the internal carotid and middle cerebral arteries with the formation of moyamoya vessels and multiple infarctions in the basal ganglia. Although splenectomy can increase the risk of stroke, no stroke occurred after splenectomy. On aspirin and dipyridamole therapy the patient has been free of neurologic deficits and progression of the vasculopathy for 5 years. This rare observation suggests that anemic hypoxia more greatly contributes to the progression of moyamoya syndrome than postsplenectomy thrombocytosis or reduced deformability of spherocytes.
...
PMID:Moyamoya syndrome with spherocytosis: effect of splenectomy on strokes. 1148 2
A 3
-year-old girl developed right
hemiplegia
with acute onset, followed by generalized convulsion, choreic movement, and severe motor deterioration. She became bed-ridden a few months after the onset. Intravenous cyclophosphamide pulse therapy resulted in a remarkable improvement of her clinical symptoms. At age of six, she has recovered markedly with the residual symptom of minimum dysarthria. Autoimmune mechanism similar to the antiphospholipid syndrome was considered to be the pathogenesis of this case.
...
PMID:[A child with choreic movement, generalized convulsion and severe neurological deterioration responded to cyclophosphamide]. 1602 99
Moyamoya vasculopathy is a progressive, occlusive vasculopathy leading to ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes. No treatments are established to treat acute ischemic stroke with moyamoya vasculopathy.
A 3
-year-old girl with moyamoya syndrome developed acute left
hemiplegia
. Emergent angiography showed near-occlusion of the supraclinoid segment of the right internal carotid artery. Balloon angioplasty was performed within 6 hours of symptom onset, with significant improvement in the child's neurological symptoms. This is the youngest case of intracranial balloon angioplasty, and this article discusses the paucity of data regarding angioplasty and other forms of endovascular intervention in pediatric cerebrovascular disease and moyamoya vasculopathy. Further study is needed to determine the safety and efficacy of endovascular intervention in these diseases.
...
PMID:Angioplasty for acute stroke with pediatric moyamoya syndrome. 2050 56
A 3
-month-old girl exhibited asymmetric abnormal eye movement and unilateral dystonic posture intermittently after the first few days of life. Unilateral ocular deviation or nystagmus were the main signs of abnormal eye movements. She was suspected to have alternating
hemiplegia
of childhood (AHC) despite the absence of apparent alternating hemiplegic episodes. Gene analysis revealed a de-novo missense mutation (Asp801Asn) of ATP1A3. AHC is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by recurrent transient attacks of
hemiplegia
affecting the unilateral or bilateral side of the body; in most cases, these attacks begin in the first 6 months of life. Initial symptoms of AHC are not alternating hemiplegic episodes, but rather asymmetric abnormal eye movement, dystonic posture, or seizures. It is difficult to diagnose AHC early because no specific findings are observed in the diagnostic laboratory or neuroradiological examinations. Early diagnosis is important because flunarizine may have a protective effect on the severe motor deterioration associated with AHC. Asymmetric abnormal eye movement could be an important clinical symptom for the diagnosis of AHC in early infancy.
...
PMID:[Characteristic asymmetric abnormal eye movement and dystonic posture as the first symptoms of alternating hemiplegia of childhood]. 2714 44