Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have reported the cases of two young patients who presented transient mutism in the course of recovery from removal of a cerebellar medulloblastoma. Although cerebellar symptoms were observed immediately after surgery, neither consciousness disturbance nor sensory aphasia was observed when the patients were mutic. From the analysis of serial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Gd-enhanced regions were noticed in the dentate nucleus and the cerebellar peduncle when mutism appeared, and they disappeared when mutism was gone. Although the mechanism of this interesting symptom is not clear, these MRI findings may indicate that focal ischemia or edema associated with surgical procedure may play a role in the appearance of this symptom.
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PMID:[Transient cerebellar mutism after removal of a posterior fossa tumor in two cases]. 760 34

Four patients aged from 20 to 48 years with transient mutism are presented: 3 patients underwent surgery for midline tumours of the mesencephalic-cerebellar region (medulloblastoma in two cases and pinealoblastoma in one), at times attached to one or both lateral recesses of the IV ventricle. One patient was hospitalized and treated for brain-stem ischemia. All patients developed mutism 48 to 72 hours after surgery; in the patient with brain-stem softening mutism appeared 72 hours after admission. All the patients had unimpaired consciousness and no deficits of lower cranial nerves. Speech, always normal in the first hours after surgery, was regained after a period of 6-16 weeks. Various hypotheses for this speech disorder are analyzed.
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PMID:Transient "cerebellar" mutism in lesions of the mesencephalic-cerebellar region. 824 72

The authors report two cases of ischemic stroke secondary to occlusive vasculopathy two decades after radiation therapy (RT) for medulloblastoma. Both patients underwent posterior fossa medulloblastoma partial resection, followed by craniospinal RT in which a cobalt 60 source was used; 40 Gy were given to the whole brain plus a 15-Gy boost to the posterior fossa. Both patients received multiagent chemotherapy, immediately following radiation therapy in the first case and after repeated craniotomy for recurrence 13 years after radiation in the second case. They experienced multiple sequelae from radiation and chemotherapy, including growth retardation and psychomotor delay. However, 20 years after treatment, they remained tumor free and able to work, until they presented with focal neurological deficits and seizures. Computerized tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain in both cases showed no tumor recurrence, but did demonstrate ischemia in a posterior cerebral artery distribution. Cerebral angiography revealed multiple mid-sized arterial wall irregularities as well as focal stenoses consistent with a postirradiation vasculopathy. The pathophysiological mechanisms, radiological appearance, and incidence of this syndrome are reviewed from the literature.
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PMID:Late postirradiation occlusive vasculopathy in childhood medulloblastoma. Report of two cases. 972 22

We report a 12-year-old child with episodes of migraine-like headaches with visual and motor auras a year after the surgical resection and radiation therapy for medulloblastoma The patient presented with an episode of headache, prolonged aphasia, right hemiparesis, status epilepticus, and salt wasting. There was no evidence of a structural lesion. The neurologic deficits resolved over a period of 6 weeks. Because of the progressive deterioration in neurologic deficits, the patient underwent an extensive battery of laboratory tests and multiple neuroimages, all of which were normal. The unusually prolonged neurologic deficit in this patient without demonstrable structural lesions and his eventual complete recovery were most likely caused by ischemia in the left hemisphere secondary to vasospasm. This presentation mimics migraine headache. Evidence suggesting that this represents a long-term complication of treatment of children with central nervous system neoplasia is presented.
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PMID:Pseudomigraine with prolonged aphasia in a child with cranial irradiation for medulloblastoma. 1195 86

Nestin is a class VI intermediate filament protein expressed in the cytoplasm of stem and progenitor cells in the mammalian CNS during development. In adults, nestin is present only in a small subset of cells and tissues, including the subventricular zone of the adult mammalian brain, where neurogenesis occurs. Nestin expression has also been detected under such pathological conditions as ischemia, inflammation, and brain injury, as well as in various types of human solid tumors and their corresponding cell lines. Furthermore, nestin was recently found in the nuclei of glioblastoma, neuroblastoma, and angiosarcoma cells and it was proved to interact directly with the nuclear DNA in neuroblastoma cells. Here, we perform the first study of the intracellular distribution of nestin in cell lines derived from neurogenic tumors. Using immunodetection methods, we examined nestin expression in tumor-derived cell lines obtained from 11 patients with neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, or glioblastoma multiforme. Besides its standard cytoplasmic localization, nestin was present in the nuclei of two neuroblastoma cell lines and one medulloblastoma cell line. Nestin was only present in the nuclei of cells with diffuse cytoplasmic staining for this protein, and the proportion of cells positive for nestin in nuclei, as well as the intensity of staining, varied. The presence of nestin in the nuclei was confirmed by both transmission electron microscopy and Western blotting. Our results indicate that the presence of nestin in the nuclei of tumor cells is not very rare, especially under in vitro conditions.
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PMID:Analysis of nuclear nestin localization in cell lines derived from neurogenic tumors. 2134 Apr 83

We report a case of neovascularization secondary to Purtscher's retinopathy that showed minimal improvement with photocoagulation treatment. A 14-year-old boy with a history of cerebellar medulloblastoma presented with blurry vision and floaters after being struck by a motor vehicle while riding his bike. At presentation, visual acuity was 20/400 in his right eye and counting fingers in his left eye. Fundus examination showed disk edema, retinal whitening, and retinal hemorrhages in both eyes. Optical coherence tomography demonstrated thinning of the temporal retina and disruption of the inner segment-outer segment junction of the photoreceptor layer in the right eye and thickening and edema of the nasal macula, as well as a central foveal hyper-reflectivity, in the left eye. At the initial visit, there was no ischemia or neovascularization (NV). One month later, the patient developed NV of the disk and ischemia in the mid-periphery of the left eye. The patient underwent treatment with pan-retinal photocoagulation. The NV regressed, but visual outcome remained poor at his 5-month follow-up visit.
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PMID:Neovascularization in Purtscher's retinopathy. 2212 5

The surgical risk factors and neuro-imaging characteristics associated with cerebellar mutism (CM) remain unclear and require further investigation. Therefore, we aimed to examine surgical and MRI findings associated with CM in children following posterior fossa tumor resection. Using our data registry, we retrospectively collected data from pediatric patients who acquired CM and were matched based on age and pathology type with individuals who did not acquire CM after posterior fossa surgery. The strength of association between surgical and MRI variables and CM were examined using odds ratios (ORs) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs). A total of 22 patients (11 with and 11 without CM) were included. Medulloblastoma was the most common pathology among CM patients (91%); the remaining 9% were diagnosed with a pilocytic astrocytoma. Tumor attachment to the floor of the fourth ventricle (OR 6; 95% CI 0.7-276), calcification/hemosiderin deposition (OR 7; 95% CI 0.9-315.5), and post-operative peri-ventricular ischemia on MRI (OR 5; 95% CI 0.5-236.5) were found to have the highest measures of association with CM. Our results may suggest that tumor attachment to the floor of the fourth ventricle, pathological calcification, and post-operative ischemia have a relatively higher prevalence in patients with CM. Collectively, our work calls for a larger multi-institutional cohort study of CM patients to encourage further investigation of the determinants and management of CM in order to potentially minimize its development and predict onset.
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PMID:Analysis of surgical and MRI factors associated with cerebellar mutism. 2852 6