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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
After a lower hemi-cervical spinal cord injury, a patient presented with a left
hemiplegia
and on the same side a unilateral chest wall paradoxical motion mimicking a flail chest. X-rays demonstrated a left hemilateral C6 injury but no rib fractures. We demonstrated that the paradoxical motion was due to the action of the diaphragm acting on the rib
cage
with intercostal respiratory paralysis on the side of
hemiplegia
.
...
PMID:Unilateral chest wall paradoxical motion mimicking a flail chest in a patient with hemilateral C7 spinal injury. 379 55
Static and dynamic lung volumes, maximum respiratory pressures and lung compliance and resistance were registered in 54 subjects with
hemiplegia
or hemiparesis after stroke. These measures of ventilatory function were related to the degree of motor impairment and to the interval between stroke and investigation. In general ventilatory function, particularly parameters depending upon expiratory force, was restricted. This was most pronounced in subjects with severe
hemiplegia
while those with hemiparesis had only small changes. Since dynamic lung volumes (corrected for volume loss), lung compliance and resistance were all normal, it is evident that intrinsic lung function was unaffected. Inspiratory capacity - but no other measured variables of respiratory function - was lower six months after the stroke than earlier. It is suggested that expiratory muscle dys-coordination and weakness caused expiratory dysfunction while the less pronounced inspiratory restriction may be caused by muscular dysfunction and, as time goes by, by rib
cage
contracture.
...
PMID:Restrictive ventilatory dysfunction in stroke: its relation to locomotor function. 658 33
We report a case of conversion paralysis after cervical spine arthroplasty performed in a 45-year-old woman to treat cervico-brachial neuralgia due to a left-sided C6-C7 disc herniation. Upon awakening from the anaesthesia, she had left
hemiplegia
sparing the face, with normal sensory function. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain ruled out a stroke. MRI of the spinal cord showed artefacts from the cobalt-chrome prosthesis that precluded confident elimination of mechanical spinal cord compression. Surgery performed on the same day to substitute a
cage
for the prosthesis ruled out spinal cord compression, while eliminating the source of MRI artefacts. Findings were normal from follow-up MRI scans 1 and 15days later, as well as from neurophysiological testing (electromyogram and motor evoked potentials). The deficit resolved fully within the next 4days. A psychological assessment revealed emotional distress related to an ongoing divorce. The most likely diagnosis was conversion paralysis. Surgeons should be aware that conversion disorder might develop after a procedure on the spine, although the risk of litigation requires re-operation. Familiarity with specific MRI sequences that minimise artefacts can be valuable. A preoperative psychological assessment might improve the detection of patients at high risk for conversion disorder.
...
PMID:Conversion paralysis after cervical spine arthroplasty: a case report and literature review. 2619 10