Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (hemiplegia)
3,997 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinical features of the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) territory infarcts were investigated in ten patients, ranging in age from 38 to 76 years. In all patients, there were MR images of infarction located in the area supplied by the AICA. The lesion was on the left side in 6 patients and right side in 4. The lesion of brain stem including the middle cerebellar peduncle was found in 7 patients and that extended to the cerebellum was in 3 patients. The main ipsilateral neurological signs were the VII and VIII cranial nerves palsy and cerebellar ataxia. The V and VI cranial nerves palsy. Horner's syndrome, and dysphagia were also present. The main contralateral sign was superficial sensory disturbance, but no hemiplegia. The underlying pathology included chiefly hyperlipidemia, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus. Cerebral angiography was performed in 8 patients, most of which was observed severe arteriosclerosis suggesting poor hemodynamics in the vertebral and basilar arteries. The prognosis was relatively good, but the VII, VIII, and V cranial nerves palsy and contralateral superficial sensory disturbance remained as the sequelae. As mentioned above, there were various neurological findings and MR images in AICA territory infarcts. Especially there were some patients whose lesion extended to the upper medulla and neurological findings were similar to the Wallenberg syndrome. It is important that one investigates not only axial slices but also coronal slices of MR image to estimate the extension of AICA territory infarct.
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PMID:[Clinical features of anterior inferior cerebellar artery territory infarcts--a study of ten patients]. 904 27

We report a transient type I factor VIII inhibitor that arose in a 30-year-old hemophilia patient just after staphylococcal septicemia. This situation usually occurs early in the course of substitution therapy with factor VIII concentrate in hemophilia patients. Although disseminated intravascular coagulation and acute respiratory distress syndrome developed after septic shock, the patient recovered following intravenous administration of antibiotics (meropenem and gentamycin), an antithrombin preparation, high-dose methylprednisolone, and recombinant factor VIII concentrate (rFVIII). During this therapy, however, activated partial thromboplastin time gradually lengthened. On the seventh day of hospitalization, intracranial hemorrhage occurred with right hemiplegia, even though the substitution therapy had continued at the same dosage (30 U/kg per day) of rFVIII. At that point, 4 Bethesda units of the type I inhibitor against factor VIII were detected in the plasma. Increased amounts (46 U/kg per day) of rFVIII and prednisolone were administered, and hypothermic therapy was initiated. Following these treatments, the patient's general condition gradually improved, and within 25 days the inhibitor titer dropped to undetectable levels and did not recur during treatment. These clinical findings suggest that the staphylococcal septic shock may have acted as a trigger in the development of transient factor VIII inhibitor in this patient.
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PMID:Transient factor VIII inhibitor in a hemophilia patient after staphylococcal septic shock syndrome. 1119 24

Upper extremity hemiplegia is a common consequence of unilateral cortical stroke. Understanding the role of the unaffected cerebral hemisphere in the motor recovery process has been encouraged, in part, by the presence of ipsilateral corticospinal projections (iCSP). We examined the neuroplastic response of the iCSP from the contralesional primary motor cortex (cM1) hand/arm area to spinal levels C5-T1 after spontaneous long-term recovery from isolated frontal lobe injury and isolated frontoparietal injury. High-resolution tract tracing, stereological, and behavioral methodologies were applied. Recovery from frontal motor injury resulted in enhanced numbers of terminal labeled boutons in the iCSP from cM1 compared with controls. Increases occurred in lamina VIII and the adjacent ventral sectors of lamina VII, which are involved in axial/proximal limb sensorimotor processing. Larger frontal lobe lesions were associated with greater numbers of terminal boutons than smaller frontal lobe lesions. In contrast, frontoparietal injury blocked this response; total bouton number was similar to controls, demonstrating that disruption of somatosensory input to one hemisphere has a suppressive effect on the iCSP from the nonlesioned hemisphere. However, compared with controls, elevated bouton numbers occurred in lamina VIII, at the expense of lamina VII bouton labeling. Lamina IX boutons were also elevated in two frontoparietal lesion cases with extensive cortical injury. Because laminae VIII and IX collectively harbor axial, proximal, and distal motoneurons, therapeutic intervention targeting the ipsilateral corticospinal linkage from cM1 may promote proximal, and possibly distal, upper-limb motor recovery following frontal and frontoparietal injury.
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PMID:Frontal and frontoparietal injury differentially affect the ipsilateral corticospinal projection from the nonlesioned hemisphere in monkey (Macaca mulatta). 2622 29