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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A woman with CREST syndrome since the age of 35, had 11 and 13 years respectively after her disease onset, two episodes of CVA with residual right side
hemiplegia
. The angiography revealed segmented stenosis in the left common carotid, right subclavian and left renal arteries. At the age of 49 she developed gangrene of the right foot, requiring below the knee amputation. Pathological examination of the surgical specimen, showed extensive intimal fibrosis of the vessel walls in large and medium size arteries. Involvement of large and medium size arteries is infrequent in scleroderma. The case described illustrates this severe and unusual complication.
Clin Rheumatol 1982
Dec
PMID:Hemiplegia and peripheral gangrene secondary to large and medium size vessels involvement in C.R.E.S.T. syndrome. 718 36
Patients who had suffered repeated falls or a single fall which led to hospitalization were tested for errors in visual perception of the verticality or horizontality of a rod presented on a video screen. Fallers had significantly greater average error scores than nonfallers. Fallers were more likely to be elderly or hemiplegic, and these conditions were also associated with elevated error scores. However, when age or
hemiplegia
was removed as a factor in the analysis, perceptual errors were still significantly greater in fallers than in nonfallers.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1981
Dec
PMID:Visual perception of verticality and horizontality among elderly fallers. 731 23
A three year old Thoroughbred filly was examined because of bilateral nasal discharge and external swelling of the left laryngeal area. Endoscopy revealed an enlarged left arytenoid cartilage, left laryngeal
hemiplegia
and drainage of purulent material into the lumen of the larynx. Radiographs showed a large fluid and gas filled cavity overlying the caudal larynx and cranial trachea. Surgical drainage and debridement of the abscess led to complete healing by secondary intention. Laryngeal ventriculectomy was performed as a treatment for left laryngeal
hemiplegia
, but a grave prognosis for respiratory soundness was given due to the extensive laryngeal fibrosis. The etiology of the Staphylococcus aureus abscess is unknown but may have originated from oral trauma to the larynx.
Can Vet J 1981
Dec
PMID:Paralaryngeal abscess with laryngeal hemiplegia and fistulation in a horse. 733 17
Chronic chondritis of the arytenoid cartilage was diagnosed in 7 male Thoroughbred horses examined for obstructive upper airway disorders. The history of the cases was characterized by a 3- to 6-month progression of exercise intolerance and inspiratory dyspnea during exercise. Endoscopy revealed marked asymmetry of the rima glottidis, partial or complete inability to abduct the involved cartilage, and axial displacement of the involved arytenoid cartilage. In less severe cases, the disorder was confused with laryngeal
hemiplegia
. Focal elevated lesions of the involved cartilage, which were frequently seen, produced contact lesions on the contralateral cartilage. Subtotal arytenoidectomy was performed in 6 cases. Histologic examination of the removed cartilages revealed marked lamination of the cartilage with fibrous connective tissue. Granulating sinus tracts were seen in 3 cases. The surgical intervention resulted in marked improvement of exercise intolerance in 5 cases.
J Am Vet Med Assoc 1980
Dec
01
PMID:Chronic chondritis of the equine arytenoid cartilage. 744 Mar 15
Five cases of alternating
hemiplegia
in infancy are reported. Special consideration is given to the associated ictal manifestations (tonic seizures, dystonic posturing and abnormal movements bouts of nystagmus and acute autonomic disturbances), some of which were noted in every case. Previously reported cases are reviewed critically, 14 of whom are considered to belong to the same syndrome as the five presented here. The nosology of the syndrome is discussed, and the differences between alternating
hemiplegia
and the common types of
hemiplegia
or basilar migraine are emphasized. Whatever its exact nature, alternating
hemiplegia
in infancy constitutes a well-defined and recognizable syndrome, with a guarded mental and neurological prognosis.
Dev Med Child Neurol 1980
Dec
PMID:Alternating hemiplegia in infants: report of five cases. 745 Mar 4
The cognitive development of a group of 89 cerebral-palsied infants, aged six to 24 months, was investigated using the Uzgiris-Hunt scales. The results were compared with normative data for the Italian population and with data obtained in a group of low-risk term and preterm infants, 11 to 13 months old. The test was easy to carry out, even on infants with a severe motor impairment. The majority of the infants showed cognitive delay on most of the scales. Tetraplegic patients performed significantly worse than those with diplegia or
hemiplegia
. There were no differences between preterm and term infants, for either normal or cerebral palsy groups, if age was corrected for preterm birth. Sensorimotor development appeared to be organized similarly for cerebral-palsied infants and normal controls; however, these data raise the question of the role of action in early cognitive development.
Dev Med Child Neurol 1993
Dec
PMID:Sensorimotor development in cerebral-palsied infants assessed with the Uzgiris-Hunt scales. 750 38
Lingual motricity was prospectively studied in 32 consecutive stroke patients with hemiparesis or
hemiplegia
involving the face. We excluded patients with vertebrobasilar infarcts, controlateral stroke, arteriovenous malformations, internal carotid artery dissection, severe aphasia or severe bucco-lingual apraxia. The study population consisted of 18 males and 14 females with a mean age of 64.2 years. Seventeen patients had a lesion located in the right hemisphere and 15 in the left one. The lesion was of ischemic origin in 19 patients and hemorrhagic in 13. Lingual motricity was studied at rest and at protraction. We recorded whether the following abnormalities were present: lingual deviation, limitation of protraction or lateral movements, atrophy, hypotonia and fasciculations. Sixteen patients had a deviation of the tongue at protraction. The other abnormalities were deviation of the tongue at rest, limitation of lateral movements at protraction, unilateral lingual hypotonia and limited protrusion. Of 16 patients with deviation of the tongue at protraction, 10 had no deviation at rest. Of the 6 remainders, 2 had deviation of the tongue towards the opposite side, at rest, and 4 towards the same side. Most patients with deviation of the tongue at protraction, had a lesion of the posterior limb of the internal capsule and of the posterior part of the lenticular nucleus. Most patients without lingual deviation, had a lesion of the capsule-lenticular region and of the superior portion of the internal capsule, just under the corona radiata.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Rev Neurol (Paris) 1994
Dec
PMID:[Lingual motility in unilateral hemispheric vascular complications. Study of the cortico-hypoglossal afferences]. 767 21
One hundred cases of hypertensive complications due to irregular drug-therapy were studied in medicine units of Dhaka Medical College Hospital for the period of one year from February 7, 1989 to February 6, 1990. Among those stroke had headed the list (48%) manifesting in various ways e.g. cerebral haemorrhage with focal neurological signs--
hemiplegia
, hemiperesis, aphasia etc. Hypertension associated with varying degrees of cardiac ischaemias and heart failure was seen in 14% and 10% cases respectively. Highest incidence of complications was seen in 1-5 years after detection of hypertension with mean age of 55 +/- 18.70 years. Out of 48 cases of strokes, smoker were 41 (75.92%). Regarding reasons of noncompliance of drugs, personal carelessness was the prominent one (47%). Among the risk-factors for atherosclerosis family history tops the list (66%). Diabetes coexists with hypertension in 13% cases. Ocular complications were seen in 06% cases of malignant hypertension with variable retinal changes.
Bangladesh Med Res Counc Bull 1993
Dec
PMID:Study of complications in hypertensive patients having irregular treatment. 803 Dec 88
Case records of 450 horses with signs of neurological disease are reviewed. One hundred and nineteen horses with neurological disease due to trauma were examined, of which 60 were due to spinal cord trauma, 47 to brain or cranial nerve trauma and 12 to peripheral nerve trauma. Cervical vertebral fractures/trauma were the most common injury. Basisphenoid/basioccipital bone fractures were the most common form of cranial trauma and facial nerve paralysis the most common cranial nerve injury. Eighty-nine horses with neurological disease due to malformation were examined. Cervical vertebral malformation occurred in 83 horses and congenital defects in 6 foals. Neurological disease due to inflammation or infection occurred in 30 horses. The most common disease of this type was meningitis, which occurred in 11 horses and foals. Neoplasms in the CNS caused neurological disease in 8 horses. The final category was miscellaneous neurological disease, which was diagnosed in 204 horses. Diseases in this category included neonatal (28 cases), toxic/metabolic (27 cases), idiopathic (133 cases), degenerative (3 cases) and other neurological diseases (13 cases). The most common condition was idiopathic laryngeal
hemiplegia
(116 cases). Where possible, diagnosis relied on a thorough neurological examination with use of ancillary tests in selected cases including rhinolaryngoscopy, radiography, myelography, ophthalmoscopy and cerebrospinal fluid analysis when indicated. In many cases necropsy and histopathological confirmation or diagnosis was necessary.
Aust Vet J 1993
Dec
PMID:A survey of neurological diseases in horses. 811 10
A 77 year old woman was hospitalized one hour after the onset of right
hemiplegia
and aphasia. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination was negative and MRA indicated occlusion of the left middle cerebral artery. Treatment with streptokinase was instituted (a 60 minute intravenous infusion of 1.5 MU of streptokinase in 100 ml of saline solution). Two hours after infusion, the patient's motor function clearly improved. An MRA examination performed six hours later showed partial recanalization of the obstructed vessel. Our report demonstrates the potential usefulness of MRA monitoring during thrombolytic therapy.
Ital J Neurol Sci 1993
Dec
PMID:Magnetic resonance angiography monitoring of streptokinase in occlusion of the middle cerebral artery. 812 65
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