Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neurovascular compression syndromes are usually treated by interposing Teflon felt or padding or some other implant between the offending vessel and the nerves. However, this cannot be done in some cases in which ectatic vertebrobasilar arteries are involved. In these instances, alternative techniques must be used. The authors report the use of a sling made of Prolene to reposition the vertebral artery in two patients with neurovascular compression disorder. The clinical results were gratifying, with complete resolution of the patients' symptoms. Compression by large vessels is an uncommon but important source of neurovascular compression in patients with trigeminal neuralgia, hemifacial spasm, disabling positional vertigo, and, possibly, hypertension. The technique described may be useful to surgeons treating these problems.
...
PMID:Repositioning of the vertebral artery as treatment for neurovascular compression syndromes. Technical note. 972 39

This paper offers a review of cranial nerve rhizopathies caused by vascular compression of cranial nerves in the posterior cranial fossa. We present our results of microvascular decompression for trigeminal neuralgia, hemifacial spasm, and glossopharyngeal neuralgia caused by compression of the 5th, 7th and 9th cranial nerves, respectively. After a median observation time of 38 months, 20 of 25 patients with trigeminal neuralgia were completely free of pain, and one patient reported more than 50% pain relief. Four out of five patients treated for hemifacial spasms were completely free of spasms. Of two patients treated for glossopharyngeal neuralgia, one reported complete pain relief, whereas the other reported less than 50% pain relief. No serious complications occurred. The results of microvascular decompression reported in the literature reviewed, including results of the treatment of tinnitus and positional vertigo due to compression of the 8th cranial nerve, hypertension due to compression of the 10th cranial nerve and spastic torticollis due to compression of the 11th cranial nerve. It is concluded that the rationale behind microvascular decompression is supported by an extensive amount of data.
...
PMID:[Vascular compression and cranial nerve diseases]. 984 12

Previous investigations have identified focal areas of alveolar bone tenderness, increased mucosal temperature, abnormal anesthetic response, radiographic abnormality, increased radioisotope uptake on bone scans, and abnormal marrow within the quadrant of pain in patients with chronic, idiopathic facial pain. The present case reports a 53-year-old man with multiple debilitating, "idiopathic" chronic facial pains, including trigeminal neuralgia and atypical facial neuralgia. At necropsy he was found to have numerous separate and distinct areas of ischemic osteonecrosis on the side affected by the pains, one immediately beneath the major trigger point for the lancinating pain of the trigeminal neuralgia. This disease, called NICO (neuralgia-inducing cavitational osteonecrosis) when the jaws are involved, is a variation of the osteonecrosis that occurs in other bones, especially the femur. The underlying problem is vascular insufficiency, with intramedullary hypertension and multiple intraosseous infarctions occurring over time. The present case report illustrates the extreme difficulties involved in the diagnosis and treatment of this disease.
...
PMID:Maxillofacial osteonecrosis in a patient with multiple "idiopathic" facial pains. 1053 67

Microvascular decompression (MVD) proved to be the method of choice in treating trigeminal neuralgia, facial hemispasm, glossopharyngeal neuralgia, and torticollis spastica. So did MVD for the left rostral ventrolateral medulla oblongata and glossopharyngeal and vagus nerves in association with primary arterial hypertension. Five patients with primary essential hypertension were treated with MVD. During a longer follow-up, 75% of the patients had lowered blood pressure. In 2 patients, MVD was performed for trigeminal nerves due to ipsilateral trigeminal neuralgia. This paper presents and analyzes the clinical findings in these 5 patients and discusses the global state-of-the-art of MVD for arterial hypertension.
...
PMID:[Microvascular decompression as a treatment of essential hypertension]. 1260 41

The headache is a very frequent symptom and represents the 0.36%-2.5% of all reasons of claim to Emergency Department. Even if it is rarely related to high risk diseases, it is mandatory to promptly differentiate life-threatening conditions. In order to establish a correct diagnostic and therapeutic pathway and ask for aimed specialistic consultation, the emergency physician must be familiar with the various categories of headache. It is important to distinguish between essential headache and secondary headache. All patients presenting to the emergency department with the complaint of headache should be interviewed carefully regarding their history. The quality of pain associated with the intensity, location, rate, duration, modality of onset, relieving or worsening conditions, response to drugs, symptoms or signs associated must be investigated as well. Careful neurological examination including the vision of fundus oculi and the evaluation of rigor nucalis can provide further important diagnostic information. Laboratory exams do not usually give significant issues in the majority of patients with headache. However, dosage of inflammation index can be useful when an infective or inflammatory disease is suspected. CT scan can rule-out the suspicion of organic intracranial causes. When the physician suspects meningitis or subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) not showed by CT scanning, rachicentesis can turn out diagnostic. The modality of onset, clinical characteristics and differential diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage, intracranial hypertension, colloidal cyst of the third ventricle, trigeminal neuralgia, temporal arteritis and pituitary adenomas and apoplexy will be discussed. These diseases are not only of neurological and neurosurgical interest, but involve also the physician in the Emergency Department.
...
PMID:The headache in the Emergency Department. 1554 36

Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) has a prevalence of 0.1-0.2 per thousand and an incidence ranging from about 4-5/100,000/year up to 20/100,000/year after age 60. The female-to-male ratio is about 3:2. A review of several case series shows that pain is more predominant on the right side, but the difference is not statistically significant. TN is significantly associated with arterial hypertension, Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy, glossopharyngeal neuralgia (GN) and multiple sclerosis. GN has an incidence of 0.7/100,000/year and epidemiological studies have shown it to be less severe than previously thought. Post-herpetic neuralgia has a comparable incidence to idiopathic TN. The epidemiology of the central causes of facial pain is still unclear, but it is known that persistent idiopathic facial pain is a widespread, not easily manageable problem.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of typical and atypical craniofacial neuralgias. 1592 23

A 77-year-old woman with hypertension and senile depression had suffered from medically unresponsive trigeminal (left ophthalmic) neuralgia despite microvascular decompression surgery for twice. The patient underwent stereotactic gamma knife radiosurgery (77 Gy) for the neuralgia, resulting in pain relief. However, approximately 20 months after the radiosurgery, she developed left facial palsy with hydrodipsia, left xerophthalmia, and left facial hypesthesia. Oral prednisolone was administered, and these symptoms disappeared in several months. This is the first report of facial palsy following gamma knife radiosurgery for trigeminal neuralgia.
...
PMID:[A case of delayed facial palsy following gamma knife radiosurgery for intractable trigeminal neuralgia]. 1616 95

Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is paroxysmal, lancinant pain often described as an "electric wave" by patients, with involvement of the divisions of the fifth cranial nerve. Demyelinating, compressive, ischaemic diseases are involved in the physiopathology of TN, but there are some cases without explanation. Familial TN (FTN) is a rare condition, about 1%-2% of all TN cases, while sporadic cases are the most common. To date, there have been about 126 reports of FTN. We describe the case of a 66-year-old man who had been complaining for 3 years of right-side paroxysmal lancinating pain in the second division of the fifth cranial nerve. A brain MRI with angiographic sequences did not show neurovascular conflicts or other pathological conditions. The patient had a family history of TN, which had been diagnosed in 3 other family members (father, sister and first cousin), who had undergone medical or surgical treatment for TN. There was no family history of hypertension, metabolic disorders, neurological or traumatic diseases. Animal studies have shown a probable involvement of genes codifying for calcium channels as the starting alterations in trigeminal excitability. Our FTN could be a good model to investigate the role of gene mutations in this condition.
...
PMID:Idiopathic familial trigeminal neuralgia: a case report. 1769 Aug 51

Deep brain stimulation is a minimally invasive targeted neurosurgical intervention that enables structures deep in the brain to be stimulated electrically by an implanted pacemaker. It has become the treatment of choice for Parkinson's disease, refractory to, or complicated by, drug therapy. Its efficacy has been demonstrated robustly by randomized, controlled clinical trials, with multiple novel brain targets having been discovered in the last 20 years. Multifarious clinical indications for deep brain stimulation now exist, including dystonia and tremor in movement disorders; depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and Tourette's syndrome in psychiatry; epilepsy, cluster headache and chronic pain, including pain from stroke, amputation, trigeminal neuralgia and multiple sclerosis. Current research argues for novel indications, including hypertension and orthostatic hypotension. The development, principles, indications and effectiveness of the technique are reviewed here. While deep brain stimulation is a standard and widely accepted treatment for Parkinson's disease after 20 years of experience, in chronic pain it remains restricted to a handful of experienced, specialist centers willing to publish outcomes despite its use for over 50 years. Reasons are reviewed and novel approaches to appraising clinical evidence in functional neurosurgery are suggested.
...
PMID:Deep brain stimulation: indications and evidence. 1785 Jan 94

Chronic headache is still a frequent problem in old age, affecting about 10% of all women and 5% of all men older than 70 years. The incidence of primary headache decreases with advancing age, while that of secondary headache increases. The clinical characteristics of migraine can also change with age; for example, vegetative symptoms are less prominent, and less intense migrainous pain localized predominantly in the neck is frequently reported. Migraine aura can also be experienced more frequently in isolation, without a headache. Hypnic headache is a rare primary headache syndrome that occurs almost exclusively in the elderly. Most of the secondary headache syndromes that occur more frequently in old age present clinically as tension-type headache. Examples of rather common reasons for secondary headache syndromes in the elderly are intracranial space-occupying lesions, ophthalmological problems and autoimmune diseases such as giant cell arteritis. Elderly patients are especially likely to have a number of illnesses at any one time for which they take various medications each day, so that headaches can also quite often be caused by their medication or by withdrawal of these. As a result of such multimorbidity the homeostasis is disturbed in such patients, leading to various conditions that can entail concomitant headaches (sleep apnoea syndrome, dialysis headache, headache attributed to arterial hypertension or hypothyroidism). Familiar facial neuralgias, such as trigeminal neuralgia or postherpetic neuralgia following manifest herpes zoster affecting the face, become markedly more frequent with age. In general, in the treatment of headaches in the elderly it is essential to pay careful attention to potential interactions with the multiple drugs needed because of other diseases; in addition, the comorbidities themselves have to be taken into account, especially depression, anxiety and cognitive impairment, necessitating multimodal, interdisciplinary therapy plans.
...
PMID:[Headache in the elderly]. 1822 47


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 Next >>