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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three cases of brain abscess following an occlusion of the internal carotid artery were reported. Case 1: A 6-year-old girl with congenital heart disease was admitted with headache, disturbance of consciousness and left hemiparesis. Right carotid angiography revealed an occlusion of the right internal carotid artery. After 6 months, she was readmitted with high fever. CT scan revealed a low density area and a ring-like shadow at the same site of cerebral infarction. Case 2: A 69-year-old man was admitted in semicoma and with right
hemiplegia
. Left angiography revealed an occlusion of the left internal carotid artery. After 2 months, a brain abscess was noted in the infarcted area. Case 3: A 20-year-old man with congenital heart disease, was admitted due to headache, vomiting and high fever. CT scan revealed a brain abscess in the right frontal lobe. Carotid angiography showed bilateral internal carotid artery occlusion. We concluded that diminution of cerebral
oxygen
and encephalomalacia are predisposing factors to the evolution of brain abscess.
...
PMID:[Brain abscess (Part 5)--Brain abscess following internal carotid occlusion (author's transl)]. 49 56
Two recent cases suggest that hyperbaric
oxygen
may be an important adjunct to the surgical treatment of occlusion of major cerebral arteries within the first few hours after onset of neurological deficit. In both patients, one with an embolus to the right middle cerebral artery and one with a surgical occlusion of the left internal carotid artery, circulation to the ischemic area was restored more than eight hours after occlusion. In the patient with the middle cerebral artery embolus,
hemiplegia
cleared after a six-minute exposure to hyperbaric
oxygen
. The patient with occlusion of the internal carotid artery was revascularized by anastomosis of a superficial temporal artery less than 1 mm in diameter to a branch of the middle cerebral artery. Her
hemiplegia
and aphasia cleared rapidly and concomitantly with intermittent exposure to hyperbaric
oxygen
during the first nine postoperative days. Postoperative angiograms demonstrated patency in both cases. The implications of these observations are discussed.
...
PMID:Hyperbaric oxygen as an adjunct to acute revascularization of the brain. 53 62
A model for ergonomic studies of domestic work in varying patient groups has been constructed. A control group of 15 healthy women, 30-59 years of age, 9 female patients with
hemiplegia
and 13 with multiple sclerosis (MS) were studied with exercise test on a bicycle ergometer. Recordings of time consumption, heart rate and subjectively perceived exertion were made during a 4.5-5 hour domestic work program. Four of the more strenuous work elements were restudied also with respect to
oxygen
uptake. The hemiplegic patients required more time and had higher perceived exertion, but lower heart rate and
oxygen
uptake for the same work tasks than did the controls. The MS-patients also had higher perceived exertion. There was a rather poor relationship between determined and indirectly estimated energy expenditure. Various explanations are discussed. The results demonstrate the importance of the perceived exertion in choosing the work intensity.
...
PMID:Ergonomic studies of standardized domestic work in patients with neuromuscular handicap. 116 86
A 13-mo-old child is brought to his pediatrician following sudden onset of left-sided
hemiplegia
. The pediatrician accompanies the child and family to the emergency room. The pediatrician has been following the child, who has a diagnosis of possible cyanotic congenital heart disease. The child has never been known to have had a hypercyanotic episode.
Oxygen
saturation determinations by pulsed oximeter had been in the range of 84% to 88%. On one occasion, when the child was very upset, a reading of 78% was observed. At his 1-year visit, his hemoglobin level was 13 g/dL. On admission to the emergency department, a computed tomographic scan of the head was ordered. It demonstrated a right-sided nonhemorrhagic cerebrovascular lesion.
...
PMID:Complications of polycythemia in patients who have cyanotic congenital heart disease. 147 May 71
Angina pectoris results from an insufficient flow of
oxygen
to the myocardia cells. It is not an unusual complication in the dental office, the most frequent factors that trigger angina are: -stress, -pain, -exercise. The treatment consists in providing
oxygen
and vasodilators. Hypertension is characterized by an increase in the diastolic arterial blood pressure over 120 mmHg and by other clinical manifestations. Stress, pain, and exercise are the most frequent factors responsible for hypertensive disease. Hypertensive disease can lead to various complications ranging from a headache to myocardial infarct or
hemiplegia
. Treatment consists of different types of vasodilators.
...
PMID:[Angina pectoris and hypertension]. 181 3
An 8-year-old Quarter Horse gelding was anesthetized for surgical exploration and debridement of a chronic draining wound in the intermandibular space. Anesthesia was without complication other than persistently low PaO2. Severe airway obstruction was evident immediately after extubation, requiring tracheostomy. Endoscopic diagnosis was bilateral arytenoid paralysis, which gradually resolved over the next 7 days. Compression, trauma, or tension of the recurrent laryngeal nerves are the postulated causes of idiopathic laryngeal
hemiplegia
in horses. The extremely extended position of the head and neck during anesthesia, perhaps compounded by low arterial
oxygen
content, may have resulted in a hypoxemic insult to the recurrent laryngeal nerves and caused bilateral arytenoid paralysis in this horse.
...
PMID:Bilateral arytenoid cartilage paralysis after inhalation anesthesia in a horse. 226 56
A 69-year-old woman underwent hyperbaric
oxygen
therapy because of a nonhealing ulcer of her foot. During decompression, she developed a left-sided
hemiplegia
and confusion. Recompression resulted in transient neurologic improvement, but she eventually became comatose. Ventricular dysrhythmias developed and she died without regaining consciousness 17 h after onset of symptoms. An autopsy revealed diffuse interstitial pulmonary fibrosis with severe paracicatricial emphysema, chronic interstitial inflammation, and chronic bronchitis with abundant intrabronchial mucus. There was extensive multifocal ischemic injury of the cerebral cortex. The hippocampi, basal ganglia, and cerebellum were spared. Scattered acute myofiber necrosis was present in the heart. Clinical presentation and autopsy findings strongly support the diagnosis of air embolism and illustrate a potential risk of hyperbaric
oxygen
therapy in patients with preexisting pulmonary disease.
...
PMID:Barotrauma and air embolism in hyperbaric oxygen therapy. 234 42
Upper airway flow mechanics and arterial blood gas measurements were used to assess the efficacy of subtotal arytenoidectomy for treatment of induced left laryngeal
hemiplegia
in horses. Measurements were collected with the horses at rest, and trotting or pacing on a treadmill (6.38 degrees incline) at speeds of 4.2 and 7.0 m/s. Experimental protocols were performed after right common carotid artery exteriorization (baseline), after left recurrent laryngeal neurectomy (LRLN), and after left subtotal arytenoidectomy. At baseline, increasing treadmill speed progressively increased peak inspiratory and expiratory flow (VImax and VEmax, respectively), peak inspiratory and expiratory transupper airway pressure (PuI and PuE, respectively), respiratory frequency (f), tidal volume (VT), minute volume (VE), and heart rate. Inspiratory and expiratory times (TI and TE, respectively) and arterial
oxygen
tension (PaO2) decreased with increased treadmill speed; inspiratory and expiratory impedance (ZI and ZE, respectively) did not change. After LRLN, VImax, f, and PaO2 significantly (P less than 0.05) decreased at exercise, whereas PuI, TI, and ZI significantly increased. Minute volume decreased at exercise after LRLN, but the changes were not significant; LRLN had no effect on VEmax, PuE, ZE, heart rate, arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2), or VT. Subtotal arytenoidectomy did not improve upper airway flow mechanics or blood gas measurements impaired by laryngeal
hemiplegia
.
...
PMID:Failure of subtotal arytenoidectomy to improve upper airway flow mechanics in exercising standardbreds with induced laryngeal hemiplegia. 239 98
A Blalock-Taussig-anastomosis was performed at the age of 2 years in a boy with transposition of the great arteries, ventricular septal defect, and pulmonary atresia. Nine years later he developed a transient aphasia. Cranial computed tomography (CT-scan) revealed a structure compatible with brain abscess. The boy was conscious and no neurological deficit was found. Initial therapy consisted of Ampicillin, Tobramycin, and Metronidazole, 12 days later an acute
hemiplegia
developed. 30 ml of pus were aspirated from the brain abscess, and the boy's condition dramatically improved. Streptococcus milleri was found bacteriologically and antibiotic therapy was continued over six weeks. Serial CT-scans during and after therapy demonstrated disappearance of the brain abscess. The presented case shows that after a shunt procedure in cyanotic heart disease right-to-left-shunting and therefore chronic
oxygen
desaturation and polycythemia are still present as facilitating factors for focal encephalomalacia, cerebritis, and brain abscess. In case of short duration of neurological symptoms and a size of abscess less than 4 cm in diameter antibiotic therapy without total excision may eliminate the infection.
...
PMID:[Successful treatment of a brain abscess with antibiotics and drainage puncture in an 11-year-old boy with a complex cyanotic heart defect]. 358 39
10 cases are presented in which a posterior cerebral artery (PCA) deficit developed suddenly in dramatic fashion with headache, visual symptoms, sensory and motor deficits, and signs of 3rd nerve involvement. There were 9 females and 1 male, ranging in age from 18-51 years with 7 cases under age 35. In 9 of the 10 patients, headache was prominent at the onset; 6 patients reported being dramatically stricken with a severe, sharp localized pain in the forehead or occiput. Visual symptoms were prominent at the onset in 7 patients -- 4 patients experiencing blindness and 3 patients a hemianoptic deficit. Hemisensory symptoms or deficit occurred in 6 instances, a hemiparesis in 3, combined weakness and sensory deficit in 1. Evidence of a 3rd nerve palsy was found in 3 cases. A persisting neurologic deficit occurred in 10 cases -- visual field defect, 6 cases;
hemiplegia
, 1; slight weakness, 1; and a sensory deficit, 2. A movement disorder developed on the involved side in 7 cases. Evidence of infarction in 1 or both occipital lobes was obtained in 6 patients. 1 patient did not have impaired visual fields, and the other 3 were examined before the days of nuclear medicine and CT scanning. Conventional angiography was performed in 8 patients with the following results: retrothalamic occlusion of 1 PCA (1 patient); distal occlusion of 1 PCA (1 patient); retrothalamic narrowing of 1 PCA (1 patient); irregularity of the wall of the upper basilar artery and both PCAs (1 patient); and in 4 angiography was normal. A digital subtraction angiogram in 1 patient was normal; 1 patient did not have an arteriogram. A history of accompanied migraine was obtained in 3 patients. 1 patient was pregnant; 1 patient was 3 months postpartum. 1 patient was taking oral contraceptives; 1 patient had taken 1 contraceptive pill, and 1 patient was receiving injections of estrogen. These cases represent involvement of the territory of the PCA. They share the same features in varied combinations. The onset or evolution is dramatic, distinctive, or alarming. The cases do not fall easily into any commonly recognized category of cerebrovascular disturbances. The process that most likely applies to this group of cases is migraine. If that is so, the term "catastropic migraine" or "cataclysmic migraine" may have some currency. If it is assumed that the process is ischemic and since vascular obstruction was found in 2 cases, the possibility of using heparin therapy might be considered. In most of the present cases, steroid therapy was used to control brain swelling. If the pathologic process is temporary vasospasm, the use of hemodilution or hyperbaric
oxygen
could be an option.
...
PMID:Unusual vascular events in the territory of the posterior cerebral artery. 395 50
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