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

A 48-year-old woman, with right-sided proptosis and decreased visual acuity, presented with acute left sensorimotor deficit. Recent ischemia in the right posterior watershed area was found on CT and MR imaging, as well as a right-sided medial sphenoid wing meningioma causing high-grade stenotic encasement of the cavernous portion of the right internal carotid artery. Because the patient was symptomatic and complete resection of the meningioma was impossible, the stenosis was successfully treated with a balloon-expanding stent.
...
PMID:Symptomatic stenosis of the cavernous portion of the internal carotid artery due to an irresectable medial sphenoid wing meningioma: treatment by endovascular stent placement. 1690 74

Leukapheresis is often considered in the management of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) with hyperleukocytosis and its sequelae, including myocardial infarction, pulmonary complications, and stroke. It is utilized on the assumption that leukapheresis improves blood rheology. We present a woman with AML and a history of meningioma encasing her left internal carotid artery. She presented with hyperleukocytosis and symptoms of ischemia. As her white blood cell continued to rise despite initiation of hydroxyurea therapy, she underwent leukapheresis emergently. Transcranial Doppler ultrasound demonstrated increased flow velocities in the left internal carotid and the right middle cerebral arteries, which normalized after leukapheresis. This is the first documentation that leukapheresis, in combination with hydroxyurea, improves cerebral hemodynamics in a patient with AML.
...
PMID:Increased cerebral blood flow after leukapheresis for acute myelogenous leukemia. 1765 77

Dynamic images are temporal sequences of images, where the intensities of certain regions of interest (ROI's) change with time, whereas anatomical structures remain stationary. Here, new applications of dynamic image analysis, called similarity mapping, are reviewed. Similarity mapping identifies regions in a dynamic image sequence according to their temporal similarity or dissimilarity with respect to a reference ROI. Pixels in the resulting similarity map whose temporal sequence is similar to the reference ROI have high correlation values and are bright, while those with low correlation values are dark. Therefore, similarity mapping segments structures in a dynamic image sequence based on their temporal responses rather than spatial properties. The authors describe the abilities of similarity mapping to identify different image structures present in several dynamic MRI datasets with potential clinical value. They demonstrate that similarity mapping technique has been successful in identifying the following structures: 1) renal cortex and medulla, 2) activated areas of the brain during photic stimulation, 3) ischemia in the left coronary artery territory, 4) lung tumor, 5) tentorial meningioma, and 6) a region of focal ischemia in brain.
...
PMID:Applications of similarity mapping in dynamic MRI. 1821 52

Surgery of a meningioma is composed of four essential consecutive steps; devascularization, detachment, debulking, and dissection. However, this is not the case with a huge meningioma in which circumferential devascularization and detachment may be difficult to complete before debulking is attempted. We report a case of a 37-year-old female presented headache, memory disturbance, and character change and sustaining a huge falx meningioma, with hypervascular appearance. Intraoperatively her blood pressure decreased to 45/30 mmHg due to profuse bleeding caused by "premature debulking" followed by significant brain swelling, which pushed out the tumor from the underlying brain after detachment of the tumor from the falx, and, consequently, yielded en bloc removal like a birth delivery. The histopathological diagnosis was angiomatous meningioma with prominent capillary proliferation without findings of celluar atypia. We thought that relative hyperemia in the brain surrounding the tumor, which was induced by the craniotomy, and acute brain ischemia caused by the intraoperative significant hypotension, might facilitate en bloc removal. We should be aware that huge meningiomas may cause intraoperative acute brain swelling as well as significant blood loss. Also we should carefully consider the indication and select proper candidates for presurgical cerebral angiography and tumor embolization because of the inherent risk that is apt to be underestimated.
...
PMID:[Huge falx meningioma resected en bloc following acute brain swelling: a case report]. 1880 Jun 38

A retrospective study to investigate the clinical epidemiological characteristics of vertigo was carried out on 187 patients with vertigo. A clinical history for each patient was recorded precisely about the attack, frequency, and development of vertigo, its duration, intensity, and the accompanied symptoms including the risk factors for cerebrovascular disease, etc. All the patients were subjected to physical examination with special attention to neurologic systems and Dix-Hallpike maneuver, computed tomography/computed tomography-angiography (CT/CTA) and MRI scan were performed when necessary. Majority of the patients in this study suffered with posterior circulation ischemia (59.89%) and benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (16.04%). Other ailments that affected these patients included migraine, Meniere's disease (1.6%), sudden hearing loss (1.07%), vestibular neuronitis, multiple sclerosis, acute viral encephalitis, meningioma, neurosis, posttraumatic vertigo, acute myocardial infarction (0.53%), and neurosis (14.97%). It appeared that in comparison to younger patients the elderly population is likely to be more susceptible to vertigo. Vertigo attacks patients with various diseases, which pre-dispose the patients to this disease. Presentation of vertigo can be clinically diagnosed in most cases of patients suffering from posterior circulation ischemia.
...
PMID:A clinical epidemiological study in 187 patients with vertigo. 2097 71

We describe a case of sphenoid wing meningioma presenting with cerebral infarction due to extended vascular encasement in which endovascular angioplasty was performed before surgery to avoid perioperative ischemia. A severe stenosis involved the intracranial internal carotid artery and the proximal segments of the middle and anterior cerebral arteries. Endovascular dilatation was followed by complete surgical resection. Preoperative mild aphasia and hemiparesia resolved completely after surgery. Endovascular angioplasty of arterial trunks and their branches can be proposed before the resection of skull base meningiomas encasing these arteries to decrease the risk of perioperative brain ischemia related to their surgical manipulation or vasospasm.
...
PMID:Endovascular angioplasty before resection of a sphenoidal meningioma with vascular encasement. 2200 6

Specific red flag clinical signs in ophthalmology might indicate serious underlying systemic disease. This review illustrates five big red flags in neuro-ophthalmology of interest to comprehensive ophthalmologists. These clinical signs include: (i) retinochoroidal venous collaterals, (ii) optic disc edema with a macular star, (iii) chronic red eyes refractory to topical therapy, (iv) aberrant regeneration not secondary to ischemia, and (v) the misdiagnosis of immune disease in immunosuppressed patients. We also describe the common causative factors suggested by these red flags (i.e., optic nerve sheath meningioma, infectious neuroretinitis, carotid cavernous fistula, compressive third nerve lesions, and the incorrect diagnosis of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome [THS]), as well as the distinctive laboratory or radiographic signs for each condition.
...
PMID:Big red flags in neuro-ophthalmology. 2341 92

The lower cranial nerves innervate the pharynx and larynx by the glossopharyngeal (CN IX) and vagus (CN X) (mixed) nerves, and provide motor innervation of the muscles of the neck by the accessory nerve (CN XI) and the tongue by the hypoglossal nerve (CN XII). The symptomatology provoked by an anomaly is often discrete and rarely in the forefront. As with all cranial nerves, the context and clinical examinations, in case of suspicion of impairment of the lower cranial nerves, are determinant in guiding the imaging. In fact, the impairment may be located in the brain stem, in the peribulbar cisterns, in the foramens or even in the deep spaces of the face. The clinical localization of the probable seat of the lesion helps in choosing the adapted protocol in MRI and eventually completes it with a CT-scan. In the bulb, the intra-axial pathology is dominated by brain ischemia (in particular, with Wallenberg syndrome) and multiple sclerosis. Cisternal pathology is tumoral with two tumors, schwannoma and meningioma. The occurrence is much lower than in the cochleovestibular nerves as well as the leptomeningeal nerves (infectious, inflammatory or tumoral). Finally, foramen pathology is tumoral with, outside of the usual schwannomas and meningiomas, paragangliomas. For radiologists, fairly hesitant to explore these lower cranial pairs, it is necessary to be familiar with (or relearn) the anatomy, master the exploratory technique and be aware of the diagnostic possibilities.
...
PMID:The lower cranial nerves: IX, X, XI, XII. 2391 71

Diagnosis of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) often causes difficulties, in particular, in elderly people with concomitant diseases. The article presents a case of a 77 year-old woman with BPPV. A patient's complaint on vertigo was mistakenly diagnosed as brain ischemia because the patient had long suffered from uncontrolled arterial hypertension. MRI-study revealed leucoaraiosis and one lacuna as well as a meningioma which was mistakenly linked to vertigo. The diagnosis of BPPV, use of Epley maneuver with the following vestibular exercises resulted in complete stopping of vertigo. Effective treatment of arterial hypertension with the normalization of arterial pressure, use of aspirin and statins reduced the risk of stroke. Exclusion of BPPV is needed in all cases of vertigo with unclear etiology.
...
PMID:[Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo in a female with arterial hypertension and meningioma]. 2487 29

In this review paper the authors analyze new therapeutic options for the embolization of meningiomas, as well as the future of meningioma treatment through recent relevant cohorts and articles. They investigate various embolic materials, types of meningiomas amenable to embolization, imaging techniques, and potential imaging biomarkers that could aid in the delivery of embolic materials. They also analyze perfusion status, complications, and new technical aspects of endovascular preoperative embolization of meningiomas. A literature search was performed in PubMed using the terms "meningioma" and "embolization" to investigate recent therapeutic options involving embolization in the treatment of meningioma. The authors looked at various cohorts, complications, materials, and timings of meningioma treatment. Liquid embolic materials are preferable to particle agents because particle embolization carries a higher risk of hemorrhage. Liquid agents maximize the effect of devascularization because of deeper penetration into the trunk and distal tumor vessels. The 3 main imaging techniques, MRI, CT, and angiography, can all be used in a complementary fashion to aid in analyzing and treating meningiomas. Intraarterial perfusion MRI and a new imaging modality for identifying biomarkers, susceptibility-weighted principles of echo shifting with a train of observations (SW-PRESTO), can relay information about perfusion status and degrees of ischemia in embolized meningiomas, and they could be very useful in the realm of therapeutics with embolic material delivery. Direct puncture is yet another therapeutic technique that would allow for more accurate embolization and less blood loss during resection.
...
PMID:Preoperative endovascular embolization of meningiomas: update on therapeutic options. 2572 29


<< Previous 1 2 3 Next >>