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)

Transient global amnesia is a benign condition of sudden onset that resolves spontaneously. Retrograde amnesia prevents recall of events antedating the episode by hours to years, and anterograde amnesia produces the characteristic features of inability to learn new material and repetitious questioning. Laboratory investigation of these patients is generally unrewarding. Transient global amnesia is easily distinguished from amnesia caused by head trauma or transient ischemic attack, confusional state, and functional amnesia. Although transient global amnesia is most likely caused by transient ischemia of brain structures important for memory, thromboembolic cerebrovascular disease is not the cause. The patient with transient global amnesia should be treated conservatively.
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PMID:Transient global amnesia. When memory temporarily disappears. 360 46

The authors studied 18 cases of transient global amnesia, a syndrome occurring in middle age, characterized by a sudden memory loss of recent events and transient inability to acquire new knowledge, while consciousness and personal identity are preserved. Chemical and laboratory findings indicates that TGA is probably due to transient ischemia in the temporal lobe and hippocampus.
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PMID:[Transitory global amnesia]. 383 53

The clinical picture and investigation of 26 patients (16 males and 10 females) with diagnosis of transient global amnesia (TGA) are reported. Age ranged from 51 to 78 years at the time of TGA, which occurred mor often between 60 and 70 year-old people. Three patients presented more than one episode (3, 4 and 5). Precipitating factors were identified in 8 cases (emotional stress in 7 and physical exercise in 1). Risk factors for cerebrovascular disease were found in 13 cases, mainly hypertension (9 cases) and diabetes (3 cases). EEG was normal in 20 cases and disclosed diffuse delta waves in 2, temporal delta waves in 1 and temporal theta waves in another patient. CAT scan showed no abnormalities in 3 cases and ischemia in the vertebro-basilar system in another 2. Brain angiography was normal in 1 case and showed abnormalities in the vertebro-basilar system arteries in 3. During the follow-up period, which ranged from 1 to 84 months, no neurologic deterioration was seen. The role of risk factors for vascular diseases, epilepsy and migraine in the development of TGA is discussed.
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PMID:[Transient global amnesia: study of 26 cases]. 401 36

Twelve patients with transient global amnesia (TGA) were studied. Seven (58%) of the 12 had a headache during their attack; five (42%) of the 12 were migraineurs. Measurement of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) by the xenon Xe 133 inhalation method showed similar patterns of flow in five of the seven patients tested. The rCBF abnormalities were impaired vasomotor response in the watershed area between the middle cerebral artery and posterior cerebral artery territories, and/or focal ischemia in the inferior part of the temporal lobe. These rCBF abnormalities differed from those seen in patients with carotid transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) and vertebrobasilar TIAs. We speculate that the vasomotor phenomena in migraine may play a major role in the cause of TGA.
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PMID:The transient global amnesia-migraine connection. 668 94

A patient in whom transient global amnesia (TGA) led to the diagnosis of a metastasis of a transition-cell carcinoma of the bladder to the non-dominant hemisphere is described. In previously reported cases of TGA associated with brain tumors, the tumors involved either the dominant or both hemispheres. The etiology of TGA associated with a brain tumor is most likely vascular, as suggested by the sudden development and the transitory character of the event. In contrast to the "common" form of TGA (where both temporal lobes suffer temporary ischemia), in these patients only one side of the limbic system is affected, because a brain tumor has already compromised the other limbic area. Therefore, the dominance of the hemisphere with the tumor is of no consequence, as both hemispheres have been involved. It is concluded that the TGA in these patients is not due to, but is rather associated with, a unilateral brain tumor.
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PMID:Transient global amnesia associated with a single metastasis in the non-dominant hemisphere. Case report. 684 97

Twelve patients with transient global amnesia (TGA) had prior migraines (six classical and six common). In three patients, classic migrainous phenomena accompanied TGA, and in nine patients severe headache accompanied the amnestic attack. Migrainous vascular dysfunction in the dominant posterior cerebral artery territory could explain TGA: (1) The pathophysiology and transient nature of TGA have led many to postulate posterior circulation vascular disease; migraine is a vascular disorder with a posterior circulation bias. (2) TGA and migraine share common precipitants. (3) Migraine differs from arteriosclerotic ischemia; the repetitive queries of TGA are absent in amnestic stroke. (4) TGA and migraine are usually benign.
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PMID:Transient global amnesia and migraine. 719 42

28 patients with transient global amnesia (TGA) were followed for a mean period of 73 months. The patients fell into 3 diagnostic groups: a group where patients had associated symptoms and signs of transient focal cerebral ischemia (TIA), a migraine group and a miscellaneous group. 22 patients had evidence of cerebrovascular disease or risk factors for cerebrovascular disease, and a vascular basis for the amnesic attack was highly suggestive in 25 patients. During the follow-up period 2 patients died, 3 had recurrent TGA and 13 developed a completed stroke or suffered from further TIA's. Permanent memory impairment was encountered in 9 cases. An unfavourable course was related to the presence of other TIA manifestations and/or risk factors for cerebrovascular disease. The study indicates that TGA is probably due to transient ischemia in the vertebrobasilar arterial distribution area. TGA per se has a good prognosis, but the coexistence of risk factor or manifest cerebrovascular disease implies a high rate of a subsequent completed stroke or permanent memory impairment.
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PMID:Transient global amnesia -- its clinical and pathophysiological basis and prognosis. 721 Nov 87

A Japanese female case of transient global amnesia (TGA), who developed an amnesic episode after sexual intercourse, is reported. The mechanism of how TGA in the present case is precipitated by sexual intercourse could be explained by the elevated blood pressure during sexual intercourse that drops rapidly, causing a temporal ischemia in the distribution of the basilar artery. Furthermore, the importance of sexual intercourse as a precipitating factor of TGA is stressed.
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PMID:Sexual intercourse as a precipitating factor of transient global amnesia. 841 84

Dural arteriovenous fistula (AVF) of the anterior cranial fossa is associated usually with cerebral hemorrhage or subarachnoid hemorrhage, while an association with transient global amnesia has not been reported previously. A case presenting the latter unusual symptom is described and the surgical treatment of AVF is discussed. A 64-year-old woman was hospitalized complaining of transient memory impairment. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging demonstrated a flow void in the left frontal lobe and temporal pole. Cerebral angiography revealed an AVF in the anterior cranial fossa, which was fed bilaterally by the ethmoidal arteries and by branches of the external carotid arteries. The AVF drained into the superior sagittal sinus and the superficial sylvian vein via large varices. Following transfemoral embolization, surgical treatment was carried out. Postoperative angiography revealed complete obliteration of the anomaly. There were no further episodes of amnesia. In our presented case, there is an association between the presenting symptoms and the AVF. The combination of ischemia and congestion in the frontal and temporal lobes may have caused transient memory impairment. From our surgical experience, the excision of the vascular connection between the dura and the frontal lobe following the coagulation of the dura mater of the anterior part of the base of the skull without extensive excision seems to be recommended.
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PMID:Transient global amnesia and dural arteriovenous fistula of the anterior cranial fossa. 894 42

There is uncertainty about the etiology of transient global amnesia and none of the pathogenetic hypotheses proposed so far, i.e. transient ischemia, epileptic discharge and spreading depression of cortical electrical activity, is completely satisfactory. Using water suppressed proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy we studied one patient during a typical episode of transient global amnesia and 2 weeks thereafter in order to investigate the metabolic changes in the hippocampal region. In both hippocampi, spectra of N-acetyl-aspartate, creatine-phosphocreatine, compounds containing choline and lactate failed to show changes consistent with cerebral ischemia, both in the acute phase and in the follow-up. Spreading depression in response to emotional stress seems a likely explanation in this patient, who suffered from migraine in the past.
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PMID:Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy during transient global amnesia. 955 91


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