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 present the rare case of a 62-year-old woman with Churg-Strauss syndrome associated with a left third nerve palsy and a mononeuritis multiplex. Cranial nerve palsies are unusual in patients with Churg-Strauss syndrome, and the most frequent cranial nerve lesion observed is an ischemic optic neuritis. Third nerve involvement secondary to vasculitis-induced ischemia is extremely rare in this disorder.
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PMID:Churg-Strauss syndrome associated with third nerve palsy and mononeuritis multiplex of the legs. 765 94

Cranial nerve palsies are rare complications of internal carotid artery (ICA) dissections. The aim of this study is to evaluate the incidence of cranial nerve palsies in consecutive patients with ICA dissection and to describe clinical and radiological characteristics and their evolution over time. This study was conducted in 52 consecutive patients with dissection of the ICA. We have analyzed clinical data of patients with cranial nerve palsy as complication of ICA dissection. We defined ICA dissection as angiographic evidence of a string sign, double lumen, or internal flaps or visualization on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or computed tomographic scans of an enlarged arterial wall due to the hematoma. Of 52 consecutive patients with ICA dissection 7 had cranial nerve palsies: 2 had an involvement of the Vth cranial nerve and 5 had lower cranial nerve palsies. Five patients totally recovered while 2 did not after a 2 to 10-month period. The frequency of cranial nerve palsies associated with ICA dissection is higher in our study than in those of the literature. Many patients presenting with cranial nerve palsies due to ICA dissection without any ischemic event are probably not referred to stroke units. Angiography is less sensitive than cervical MRI to detect such patients. Cranial nerve palsies could either be due to compression by the enlarged ICA wall or an ischemia of the nerve.
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PMID:Cranial nerve palsies due to internal carotid artery dissection: seven cases. 866 29

Cranial nerve palsy has a variety of causes such as cerebral ischemia, nerve ischemia in diabetes, infectious and noninfectious meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhage, malignant tumors of the skull base, neck, or upper mediastinum, aortic aneurysm, surgery of the thyroid,and many more. We report two cases of spontaneous carotid dissections leading to cranial nerve palsies, which is an uncommon cause of isolated cranial nerve palsies.ICA dissection must therefore be included in the differential diagnosis of lower cranial nerve palsy and should be assessed by duplex ultrasound and MRI as is demonstrated in our cases.
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PMID:[Isolated cranial nerve palsy secondary to carotid dissection]. 1259 20

Spontaneous dissection of the cervical internal carotid artery (sICAD) causes, in more than 90% of patients, carotid territory ischemia, local signs and symptoms on the side of dissection, or both, whereas the remaining sICAD remain clinically asymptomatic. Local signs and symptoms include head, facial, or neck pain, Horner syndrome, pulsatile tinnitus, and cranial nerve palsy. Head, facial, or neck pain occurs in 64-74% and is the presenting symptom in up to 58.5%, and the only manifestation in 2.2-4.5%. Headache is observed in 65-68%, facial pain in 34-53%, and neck pain in 9-26%. Horner syndrome consisting essentially of miosis and ptosis is detected in 28-41%. Cranial nerve palsy is reported in 8-16%; the lower cranial nerves IX-XII are most commonly affected, in particular the hypoglossal nerve. The facial nerve may also be involved; dysgeusia results mainly from involvement of the chorda tympani (0.5-7.0%) or the glossopharyngeal nerve. Transient pareses of the ocular motor (III, IV and VI) and trigeminal nerves have been observed. Pulsatile tinnitus is reported in 16-27%. About three quarters of sICAD cause ischemic events, which include ischemic stroke in 80-84%, transient ischemic attack in 15-16%, amaurosis fugax in 3%, ischemic optic neuropathy in 4%, and retinal infarct in 1%. Patients with sICAD causing ischemia show a lower prevalence of Horner syndrome and palsy of the caudal cranial nerves than patients with sICAD causing no ischemic events, whereas headache, neck pain, and pulsatile tinnitus are equally frequent in both groups. After an ischemic stroke, independency defined by a moderate Rankin scale score of 0-2 occurs in 63-90%, whereas the outcome of retinal infarct and ischemic optic neuropathy are not well known.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations of carotid dissection. 1729 Jan 13