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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An eleven year old boy presented with sudden onset right-sided
hemiplegia
and ipsilateral lower facial weakness. Two-dimensional echo revealed the diagnosis of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy with multiple intracardiac clots.
MRI
scan of head showed infarctions in the area of caudate nuclei, putamen, brain stem and cerebellum. On anticoagulation therapy, all thrombi, except one, disappeared. The child died 2.5 months later due to resistant cardiac failure.
...
PMID:Embolic stroke in a child with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. 971 25
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
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has been used to describe cortical plasticity after unilateral cerebral lesions. The objective of this study was to find out whether cortical plasticity occurs after bilateral cerebral lesions. We investigated central motor reorganization for the arm and leg muscles in cerebral palsy (CP) patients with bilateral cerebral lesions using TMS. Seventeen patients (12 with spastic diplegia, 1 with spastic
hemiplegia
, and 4 with athetoid CP) and 10 normal subjects, were studied. On CT/
MRI
, bilateral periventricular leukomalacia was observed in all spastic patients with preterm birth. In two normal subjects, motor responses were induced in the ipsilateral tibialis anterior, but no responses were induced in any normal subject in the ipsilateral abductor pollicis brevis (APB) or biceps brachii (BB). Ipsilateral responses were more common among CP patients, especially in TMS of the less damaged hemisphere in patients with marked asymmetries in brain damage: in 3 abductor pollicis brevis, in 6 BBs, and in 15 tibialis anteriors. The cortical mapping of the sites of highest excitability demonstrated that the abductor pollicis brevis and BB sites in CP patients were nearly identical to those of the normal subjects. In patients with spastic CP born prematurely, a significant lateral shift was found for the excitability sites for the tibialis anterior. No similar lateral shift was observed in the other CP patients. These findings suggest that ipsilateral motor pathways are reinforced in both spastic and athetoid CP patients, and that a lateral shift of the motor cortical area for the leg muscle may occur in spastic CP patients with preterm birth.
...
PMID:Central motor reorganization in cerebral palsy patients with bilateral cerebral lesions. 1020 49
The aim of this study was to evaluate whether children with congenital
hemiplegia
show abnormal hand function on the non-hemiplegic side and whether this, if present, can be related to the type and extent of brain lesions on
MRI
. Twenty-two children with congenital
hemiplegia
of age ranging between 4.8 and 12.3 years, were assessed with a clinical and
MRI
assessment. Clinical assessment included a structured neurological examination, assessment of hand grips and the Movement Assessment Battery for Children which also includes one item assessing speed and accuracy in each hand. The results showed that 64% of the children studied showed some degree of functional impairment of the non-hemiplegic hand. Manual dexterity 1 from the Movement ABC was, in our experience, a more sensitive tool to detect minor functional abnormalities than the evaluation of hand grips. The severity of the impairment on the non-hemiplegic side was not significantly related to the severity of impairment in the hemiplegic hand (p > 0.05). In contrast, a significant association was found with the site of lesions as hand function in the non-hemiplegic hand was always normal in children with unilateral lesion and abnormal in the ones with bilateral parenchymal lesions (p < 0.05). Children with predominantly unilateral lesions but with bilateral ventricular dilatation or periventricular changes showed more variable results.
...
PMID:Congenital hemiplegia in children at school age: assessment of hand function in the non-hemiplegic hand and correlation with MRI. 1022 54
Children with spastic
hemiplegia
have impaired dexterity in the affected extremity. The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether the force co-ordination pattern during precision grip in 13 children between 4 and 10 years of age with predominant unilateral brain lesions is related to manual dexterity and to the location and size of the brain lesion. The force co-ordination pattern was investigated by means of a specially designed object that monitored the isometric fingertip forces applied to the contact surfaces during precision grip. Hand function was measured by means of neurological examination, functional hand-grips and dexterity. Brain lesions were identified by series of ultrasound and
MRI
scans. Normally, the fingertip forces are applied to the object in the initial phase of the lift in an invariant force co-ordination pattern (i.e. grip-lift synergy), in which the grip and load forces are initiated simultaneously and increase in parallel with unimodal force rate trajectories. A majority of children with unilateral brain lesions had not developed the force co-ordination pattern typical for their age, but produced an immature or a pathological pattern. The developmental level of the grip-lift synergy was determined and quantified according to criteria derived from earlier studies on normally developed children. There was a clear relationship between the developmental level of the grip-lift synergy and impaired dexterity, indicating that proper development of the force co-ordination pattern is important for skilled hand function. The grip-lift synergy correlated with the total extent of lesions in the contralateral cortex and white matter and with lesions in the thalamus/basal ganglia, while no correlation was found for isolated cortical lesions. The results suggest that the neural circuits involved in the control of the precision grip are organized in a parallel and distributed system in the hemispheres, and that the basal ganglia are important during the formation of these circuits. Perinatal lesions in specific cortical motor areas may be compensated for by circuits elsewhere in the grip-lift motor system, while large lesions exclude this possibility.
...
PMID:Impaired grip-lift synergy in children with unilateral brain lesions. 1035 67
The patient, a 51-year-old male with a two year history of AIDS, was admitted to our hospital because of
hemiparalysis
and vomiting. The
MRI
study showed multiple lesions with ring-enhancement in the right basal brain area. Empirical therapy for toxoplasma encephalitis was started. After 64 days, the subsequent brain
MRI
showed deterioration. A 201Tl-SPECT study was performed and the findings were consistent with those of malignant lymphoma (ML). The patient was treated with 40 Gy of whole brain radiation,
MRI
showed partial response to this therapy, and clinical improvement was achieved. The definitive diagnosis of primary CNS lymphoma can be made only by brain biopsy, and many cases have been diagnosed at autopsy. The clinical and radiological findings of primary CNS lymphoma resemble toxoplasma encephalitis. An empirical therapy for toxoplasma encephalitis is recommended to avoid brain biopsy in these cases. The use of 201Tl-SPECT for the differential diagnosis of these diseases have been reported. Considering the poor prognosis of primary CNS lymphoma in AIDS, the application of 201Tl-SPECT before empirical therapy for toxoplasma must be important for appropriate treatment.
...
PMID:[Successful treatment of primary CNS lymphoma diagnosed by 201thallium-single photon emission computed tomography (201Tl-SPECT) with whole-brain radiation therapy in an AIDS patient]. 1042 54
A 60-year-old hypertensive woman had a pontine hemorrhage that caused slight right
hemiplegia
, deep sensory disturbance on her right side and dysarthria. Three months after the stroke, she was transferred to our hospital for rehabilitation. Approximately 6 months later, she gradually began to complain of the visual oscillation. Continual, unceasing conjugate vertical/rotatory eye movements were observed. Fixation was momentary at best because of an inability to dampen the spontaneous eye movements. Electrooculography (EOG) showed bilateral vertical/rotatory sinusoidal eye movements of 2.5 Hz frequency and 10- to 35-degree amplitude. Both vertical and horizontal optokinetic nystagmus were absent. Caloric stimulation did not evoke any responses bilaterally. There were no rhythmical movements at similar frequencies in other parts of the body such as palatal myoclonus.
MRI
revealed not only hematoma mainly at the dorsal pontine tegmentum but also hypertrophy of the inferior olive nucleus, suggesting disruption of the central tegmental tract. Lesions of this tract may be one cause of pendular nystagmus. Several drug therapies were investigated for the nystagmus. There was no response to baclofen 15 mg. Trihexyphenidyl 4 mg was discontinued because of drug-induced hallucinations. Tiapride 600 mg and phenobarbital 90 mg were each slightly effective in reducing both frequency and amplitude of nystagmus. Treatment with clonazepam 1 mg resulted in the striking disappearance of nystagmus. She was aware of this and no longer experienced oscillopsia. Despite the visual benefit, however, the patient did not wish to continue this drug because of drowsiness and muscle relaxation. The potential long-term therapeutic application of clonazepam should be further investigated. To our knowledge, there have been no reports of successful treatment in acquired pendular nystagmus with clonazepam. Therefore, based on this favorable experience, it is suggested that clonazepam should be added to the list of potential therapies for pendular nystagmus.
...
PMID:[Acquired pendular nystagmus after pontine hemorrhage]. 1065 2
To overcome long-term complications of hemispherectomy, We modified its operative method. The modified hemispherectomy was performed for 31 patients between 1985 and 1992. These patients were studied for 7 years after operation. The results showed total control of seizures in 28 children with chronic epilepsy (90%) or near-total control in the others. No deaths or delayed complications were noted but improvement in behavior and
hemiplegia
. CT and
MRI
showed marked shift of the remaining hemisphere. On brain-stem auditory evoked potentials, the latency of peak I was not variant (P > 0.05). The method makes the insulation of the subdural cavity from the ventricular system more reliable, and climates the pathological conditions.
...
PMID:[Long-term results in 31 patients on total hemispherectomy modified for infantile hemiplegic epilepsy]. 1067 77
We report a case of a 47 year old woman who presented with a history of motor convulsions and a three month history of an increasingly painful and progressively enlarging mass on the right side of her back. Neurological examination revealed generalised wasting and a right sided
hemiplegia
. A biopsy of the mass was taken for microbiology which reported growing branching gram positive rods after three days of incubation. A mycological diagnosis of Nocardia asteroides was made. An
MRI
scan revealed extensive infiltration of the fungal mass into extending from the base of the skull to fifth cervical vertebra.
...
PMID:Not everything acid-fast is Mycobacterium tuberculosis--a case of Nocardia. 1069 19
Three cases of meningioma revealed by hemorrage are reported. The first patient, 65 presented with a temporal hematoma associated with intraventricular contamination. The diagnosis of a tumoral origin of the hemorrhage was made only few weeks later when the total hematoma resorption was ended. The second patient, 49 presented with a sudden right
hemiplegia
. CTscan and
MRI
revealed a left frontal tumor surrounded by hematoma. The third patient, 46, presented with a transient aphasia and superior limb dysesthesia. CT scan showed a temporal hematoma; a carotid angiography revealed a typical meningioma blush. A review of the literature collected 54 additional cases of meningioma associated with hemorrage. Clinical findings and mechanisms are discussed.
...
PMID:[Intracranial meningiomas revealed by hemorrhage. Report of three cases and literature review]. 1071 92
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