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)

We studied 10 patients with transient global amnesia (TGA). Routine electroencephalograms (EEGs) were normal in six; two showed mild temporal lobe abnormalities, one had bitemporal delta activity with rare sharp waves, and one showed bioccipital rhythmic theta activity. Nasopharyngeal (NP) recordings were obtained in seven patients; five showed independent mesial temporal spike discharges during drug-induced sleep. The discharges are probably due to transient ischemia in deep temporal structures.
...
PMID:Transient global amnesia: clinical and electroencephalographic findings in 10 cases. 57 10

The Syndrome of Transient Global Amnesia is clinically characterized by a disorder of the ability to form memory engrams, appearing suddenly and lasting for several hours. Since the first papers on this syndrome by Bender (1956) and Fisher and Adams (1964) approximately one hundred cases of transient global amnesia have been described. Symptomatology, course, somatic findings and differential diagnosis are discussed with consideration of the literatur and three own observations. Regarding the etiology most authors discuss a transitory localized ischemia in the circulatory area of the vertebral-basilar artery system. Relapsing episodes occur less frequently than single episodes. In connection with this disorder characterized by the paroxysmal occurence and the episodic course, possible ways of genesis of amnesic syndromes are discussed. Theoretically three types of amnestic syndromes of organic origin may be differentiated: (1) amnesia in the frame of "function psychosis", i.e. of global mental deterioration caused by various diffuse brain function disorders; (2) amnesia caused by a combination of diffuse (function psychosis) and local brain function disorder; (3) purely local type of amnesia without function psychosis. In the combined type of amnesia a dissociation between the severity of memory disorders and relatively mild function psychosis is to be found. The importance of psychopathometric investigations, i.e. of quantitative determination of other mental dysfunctions besides memory disorder, for the interpretation of an amnesic syndrome is emphasized. Unfortunately these have not been possible in the cases described in this paper.
...
PMID:[Transient global amnesia - a paroxysmal amnestic syndrome (author's transl)]. 104 11

On basis of 35 patients who have suffered from transient global amnesia the pathophysiological mechanisms of this syndrome are discussed. Our impression is that the primary cause of this syndrome is a transient ischemia of the hippocampus, an opinion common with most earlier authors. The possibility of a unilateral hippocampal disturbance resulting in transient global amnesia is discussed. We are inclined to regard the local hippocampal ischemia as arising from insufficiency of the anterior chorioidal artery and thus as a sequel of internal carotid insufficiency, which has earlier been proved to result from various rotatory, flexion, and extension movements of the neck.
...
PMID:The transient global amnesia syndrome. An analysis of 35 cases. 114 Feb 4

A 59-year-old hypertensive patient presented with transient global amnesia without neurological signs or symptoms. During the following 3 years, he experienced several attacks of vertebrobasilar insufficiency and a cerebellar infarction. CT scan and MRI found a partially thrombosed dolichoectatic basilar artery but no significant lesion within the limbic system. These data suggest transient global amnesia was due to a transient ischemia in the basilar artery distribution.
...
PMID:Transient global amnesia followed by vertebrobasilar ischemia in a case of dolichoectatic basilar artery. 208 87

Transient global amnesia (TGA) is an unusual form of the amnestic syndrome, clinically characterized by profound disturbance of short-term memory with preservation of immediate recall and long-term memory. Spontaneous recovery is the rule and is usually complete within several hours. The etiology of TGA is not clear. It is considered to be caused by transient ischemia confined to the medial temporal lobe, an area supplied by branches of the vertebrobasilar system. Basilar artery migraine is a well-known syndrome, first described by Bickerstaff. Besides pulsating headache, the dominant symptoms are vertigo, ataxic gait, tinnitus, dysarthria, paraeshesia in the hands, homonymous hemianopsia and sometimes drop-attacks. These symptoms are associated with vertebrobasilar system dysfunction. In this paper, three migraine patients, suffering from one episode of TGA, were reported. All patients were women. Case 1 was a 48-year-old woman with a history of common migraine. Case 2 was a 48-year-old woman with a history of classic migraine. Case 3 was a 59-year-old woman with a common migraine. Family history of migraine exists in case 1 and case 3. Their migrainous attacks began in their twenties and thirties. They suddenly suffered migraine with the symptoms of vertebrobasilar dysfunction. These symptoms are ataxic gait (Case 1, 2, 3), dysarthria (Case 1, 2), vertigo (Case 1, 3) and homonymous hemianopsia (Case 1, 3). Simultaneously three patients had TGA. Duration of retrograde amnesia were about twenty-four hours (Case 1), about thirty minutes (Case 2) and about three hours (Case 3).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Basilar artery migraine associated with transient global amnesia]. 262 11

We encountered two cases of typical transient global amnesia (a 53-year-old woman and a 50-year-old man). Both cases showed no evidence of abnormal findings which caused the attack on examinations of CSF, EEG, brain CT, brain MRI and cerebral angiography. Examinations of positron emission tomography, using 15O labeled CO2 and O2, were performed on 14 and 8 days after the attack in the female and male cases, respectively, and those disclosed decreased regional blood flow (CBF), increased oxygen extraction ratio (OER), and decreased oxygen metabolic ratio (CMRO2) in the bilateral medial temporal and occipital lobes, which were supplied by the bilateral posterior cerebral arteries. PET, performed on about one month after the attack, revealed normalized values of CBF, OER, CMRO2 in both cases. These findings strongly suggested that transient global amnesia in our cases may be related to ischemia of the bilateral posterior cerebral arteries.
...
PMID:[Positron emission tomography in two cases of transient global amnesia]. 279 10

The P3 evoked potential has been linked to memory mechanisms, but its neuronal generators are uncertain. Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a disorder of recent memory that has been postulated to result from ischemia or focal seizures in the medial temporal lobes and/or thalamus. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a recording of P3 evoked potential and sphenoidal electroencephalogram during TGA. The tonal P3 was not decremented in comparison to P3 recordings one month and two years after recovery. Sphenoidal electroencephalogram was normal. The results suggest that the neuronal networks which generate the tonal P3 are not involved in the part of the memory system affected by TGA.
...
PMID:The P3 evoked potential and transient global amnesia. 312 55

We studied a large series of patients with transient global amnesia (TGA). Clinical and neuropsychological evaluations are reported. A case-control study provides some arguments against the hypothesis of cerebrovascular ischemia as a main etiology for TGA.
...
PMID:Transient global amnesia: a large series with neuropsychological examination and a case-control study. 317 Jan 68

We describe the clinical and neuroradiologic features of a patient with two episodes of transient amnesia who later developed persistent amnesia and an acute infarction in the left thalamus. The neurobehavioral manifestations were strikingly similar in all three episodes. Cranial computed tomography was normal following the first two episodes. Thalamic ischemia could explain some cases of transient global amnesia.
...
PMID:Transient global amnesia and thalamic infarction. 334 58

In seven entirely healthy children in the age group of 6.5 to 14.5 years, mild head injury produced transient global amnesia (TGA) of median duration of 4.5 hours. None of the patients had convincing signs of brain concussion or clinical focal symptomatology. In four cases CT examination of the brain showed normal findings. Four children had a transient abnormal EEG (intermittent delta rhythms, slowed background activity inconstant local finding (of slow waves). During the period monitored (2-34 months) there was no recurrent attack and the children have had no difficulties. Pathologically, the authors assume ischemia of temporobasal structures induced by mild trauma with a relationship to migraine diathesis and rank the child group among so called benign posttraumatic encephalopathy with a noncomplicated course and good outcome.
...
PMID:Transient global amnesia after mild head injury in childhood. 338 47


1 2 3 4 5 Next >>