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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors report 18 cases of arthrosic sciatica due to toot compression in the lateral recess by posterior corporeal and/or posterior apophyseal osteophytosis. The authors study the clinical and radiological characteristics that may indicate the diagnosis and discuss the different mechanisms by which vertebral arthrosis can lead to radicular compression. When surgery is necessary because of the persistent nature of the sciatica, a broader approach should be undertaken than that required for excision of the disc, in order to explore fully the roots, the multiplicity of possible compression sites being one of the essential characteristics of these cases of arthrosic radiculopathy. Study of the literature and of the series of sciatica patients operated upon by the authors shows that although discal hernia is far from being the most frequent cause of common sciatica, arthrosic compression is a cause that cannot be ignored, especially in aged subjects.
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PMID:[Arthrotic sciatica caused by radicular compression of osteophytic origin in the lateral recess. Apropos of 18 cases]. 98 29

Abdominal pain caused by diabetic radiculopathy is uncommon, and abdominal hernia as a complication is rare. We report a case of abdominal wall herniation caused by diabetic truncal radiculopathy requiring surgical repair. Clinical and diagnostic features of this entity are reviewed.
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PMID:Repair of posterolateral ventral herniation caused by diabetic truncal neuropathy. 137 86

Cervical spondylotic myelopathy usually arises in patients in their late 40s or early 50s, most frequently at the C5/6 and C6/7 levels. Recently, excellent results have been attained with microsurgery in cases of cervical spondylosis. On the other hand, treatment of cervical spondylotic myelopathy in patients with athetoid dystonic cerebral palsy entails several problems. The authors report three cases of such troublesome myelopathy. A 34-year-old male with severe athetoid movement showed cervical spondylotic myelopathy. Myelography and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging demonstrated compression of the spinal cord through the C3-C5 levels. A 47-year-old female with athetoid dystonic cerebral palsy presented myelopathy. Myelography and MR imaging showed instability and spinal cord compression at the C5/6 level. A 34-year-old male with spasmodic torticollis showed C6 radiculopathy due to cervical disc hernia at the C5/6 level. Cervical anterior decompression with interbody fusion brought temporary improvement in all the three patients. However, such problems as slippage of Halo-vest, difficulty in eating during Halo-vest fixation, relapse of neurological deficit, were experienced. Due to postoperative cervical instability, cervical laminectomy is considered to be contraindicated in such patients. Anterior decompression with bone fusion has been reported effective, but, if athetoid dystonia continues, there is a potential for myelopathic deterioration due to spondylotic changes adjacent to the fused vertebrae.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of cervical spondylotic radiculomyelopathy with abnormal involuntary neck movements. Report of three cases]. 248 93

Two therapeutic approaches designed specifically to relieve the symptoms of sciatica and resolve the signs of lumbar radiculopathy brought about by herniation of the nucleus pulposus have evolved. The surgical removal of the lumbar disc is an operation which has undergone miniaturization in recent years. Treatment of disc hernia by chemical hydrolysis of the nucleus pulposus (chemonucleolysis) has, over the past 20 years, become an alternative to open surgical treatment. These two forms of therapy are compared as to their efficacy and safety. Neurosurgeons now have the data to decide on the suitability of employing one or the other (or both) of these forms of treatment in the care of patients with intractable sciatica.
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PMID:Sciatica--management by chemonucleolysis versus surgical discectomy. 352 81

Radiculopathy or myelopathy often occurs during adult life in patients who have athetosis. Herniation of an intervertebral disc, spondylosis, malalignment or instability of the cervical spine, or a combination of these lesions, can develop because of the athetoid hyperactivity. We reviewed the cases of ten patients who had cervical radiculopathy or myelopathy, or both, secondary to athetosis and who were surgically treated between the ages of thirty and fifty-eight years. The surgery consisted of discectomy, removal of osteophytes, and anterior interbody fusion. When several segments were involved, an extensive subtotal resection of the vertebrae and discs, followed by strut bone-grafting, was done.
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PMID:Cervical radiculopathy or myelopathy secondary to athetoid cerebral palsy. 359 93

Atypical disc herniation, especially extra foraminal disc herniation (EFDH), is apt to be overlooked, because myelography and peridurography can give false positive and false negative findings. Eleven cases of EFDH were diagnosed since 1975, and all were confirmed by operative treatment. This number is a very small percentage of the total, but if these cases had not been diagnosed correctly, the results of surgery would have been poor. Selective lumbosacral radiculography and nerve root block techniques are very useful in determining the nerve root involved. Discography is an excellent diagnostic technique for finding the relationship between the nerve root and hernia mass. Extra foraminal disc herniation must be kept in mind as a cause of lumbar radiculopathy.
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PMID:Extraforaminal disc herniation. 371 25

The paper presents the results of tomographic studies of 119 patients with clinical manifestations of radiculopathy or radiculomyelopathy. MR tomography was performed on the Magnaview unit ("Instrumentarium", Finland) at field intensity 0.04 T. The analysis of T1- and T2-weighted sagittal tomograms providing MRT picture of osteochondrosis and various hernias shows that osteochondrosis involves several disks simultaneously while their bulging towards the vertebral canal is multiple. The severity of the hernia in some cases does not closely agree with degeneration degree or the decline of the vertebral disk height. However there is a close correlation between the size and direction of the hernia on the one hand and the clinical manifestations on the other hand.
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PMID:[Ultra-low magnetic resonance tomography of thoracic and lumbar spine osteochondrosis]. 799 Mar 53

Enlargement of the calf usually is associated with venous thrombosis, haemorrhage, focal myositis or a tumour in bone or muscle. Occasionally a calf enlargement is due to isolated muscle hypertrophy as a sign of radicular or peripheral nerve injury. Most neurogenic muscle hypertrophy is confined to the calf muscle, but the phenomenon has also been seen in other muscles. Three patients with S-I radiculopathy leading to ipsilateral neurogenic calf hypertrophy following hernia nuclei pulposi are described, two men of 79 and 78 years old and a woman of 46 years. The symptoms gradually subsided with time and conservative treatment. The pathogenesis of neurogenic muscle hypertrophy possibly involves partial denervation atrophy and compensatory hypertrophy of remaining muscle fibres.
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PMID:[Neurogenic muscle hypertrophy]. 827

The diagnostic sensitivity of dermatomal somatosensory evoked potentials (DSEPs) was evaluated in a homogeneous group of fifteen patients with low back pain due to isolated lumbosacral radiculopathy. The normative values from L3 to S1 were defined, as were the parameters of abnormality. In seven patients with pseudoradicular or referred leg pain, a negative neurological examination and images indicative of protrusion or paramedian disc hernia, the DSEPs were normal in six cases and slightly altered in one. In eight patients with deafferentation leg pain, clinical signs of root damage and images indicative of an intraforaminal hernia, the DSEPs showed varying degrees of alteration which could generally be correlated to the severity of the clinical picture. This method can therefore be useful in differentiating pain due to stimulation of the receptors of the osteoarticular structures or the root sheath, in which the DSEPs are normal, from pain due to direct root damage, in which the DSEPs are altered. This functional evaluation of anatomical damage provides further information which may help to achieve a better therapeutic approach.
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PMID:Dermatomal somatosensory evoked potentials in the diagnosis of lumbosacral radiculopathies. 885 9

In the pathophysiology of lumbosacral radiculopathy, inflammation of the nerve root is of critical importance. Additionally, free radicals have been shown to be associated with some inflammatory process. This study was designed to investigate whether free radicals participate in the pathophysiology of nerve root involvement. We measured superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 31 patients with unilateral lumbosacral radiculopathy caused by a herniated disc using electron spin resonance (ESR) spectrometry. Then SOD activity was compared with the type of nerve root compression as seen on preoperative myelography. SOD activity in the normal control group was 7U/ml, while that in the hernia group remarkably decreased. The concentration gradient of SOD activity was different between central herniation and centrolateral herniation. Our findings indicate that free radicals are generated after nerve root compression. Under severe deficiency of SOD activity in CSF, serum SOD penetrates into CSF after further compression. In addition, SOD in CSF may play an important role in protecting against nerve root involvement.
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PMID:Superoxide dismutase activity in cerebrospinal fluid and its relation to compression of the lumbosacral nerve root. 887 81


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