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)

Neurologic sequelae of Paget's disease of bone include involvement of the spinal cord or cauda equina due to mechanical compression by enlarged vertebrae, ischemia caused by a spinal artery, steal syndrome or neoplasm. We describe a patient with Paget's disease of bone who presented with acute cauda equina syndrome due to a spinal epidural hematoma. Clinicians need to recognize this entity since surgical intervention may result in a favorable outcome.
...
PMID:An unusual manifestation of Paget's disease of bone: spinal epidural hematoma presenting as acute cauda equina syndrome. 221 67

The cauda equina syndrome is an uncommon and poorly understood complication of ankylosing spondylitis. The clinical and radiologic findings in five patients with this syndrome are described. Typical findings include cutaneous sensory impairment of the lower limbs and perineum with sphincter disturbances. Motor impairment occurs less frequently, and associated pain is an inconstant feature. Enlargement of the caudal sac and dorsal arachnoid diverticula that erode the lamina and spinous processes are characteristic myelographic and computed tomographic findings. The pathogenesis of the cauda equina syndrome in ankylosing spondylitis remains unknown but may be due to demyelination, post-irradiation ischemia, or compression from spinal arachnoiditis.
...
PMID:Cauda equina syndrome complicating ankylosing spondylitis. 232 76

Spinal stenosis, which may be congenital/developmental or acquired in origin, is a narrowing of the spinal canal, nerve root canals, or intervertebral foramina. Compression of the spinal cord or nerve roots may lead to structural neuronal damage, neuronal ischemia or edema, and axonal transport block. The most frequent symptom in patients with spinal stenosis is back pain and some have classic neurogenic claudication. We have performed urodynamic evaluations in 2 patients with combined cervical and lumbar spinal stenosis. A girl with achondroplastic dwarfism had urgency incontinence and detrusor hyperreflexia. An adult man with acquired degenerative spinal stenosis had difficulty voiding and findings compatible with the cauda equina syndrome.
...
PMID:Urodynamic evaluation of patients with spinal stenosis. 318 19

We describe 5 patients who presented with an acute cauda equina syndrome, which we believe was due to infarction of the conus medullaris. In 3 patients, the onset was spontaneous, and in 2 patients it was secondary to temporary occlusion of the distal aorta during medical manipulation. Pain in the buttocks and posterior thighs was a prominent initial symptom in the 3 patients with unprovoked attacks. The main clinical features were profound impairment of bowel and bladder function and of perianal and perineal sensation (S3 to S5 segments). There was sensory and motor impairment in the legs of variable extent, most marked in the S1 and S2 segments, but extending as high as L4 in 2 patients. In 1 patient, ischemic changes in the conus medullaris were confirmed post mortem. Ischemia confined to the caudal tip of the spinal cord is rare, and an underlying anomaly of the pattern of arterial supply is a likely predisposing factor. Four patients had partial return of function over a period of weeks.
...
PMID:Infarction of the conus medullaris. 359 40

Spontaneous spinal epidural haematoma is an unusual but well recognized cause of compressive myelopathy or cauda equina syndrome. Radicular pain is one of the earliest symptoms and a hallmark of spontaneous spinal epidural haematoma, as in the case of cervical spondylosis and disc prolapse. Should an epidural haematoma be located in the cervical spine, the resultant cervical radicular pain may sometimes be erroneously attributed to a cardiac cause, especially in the setting of pre-existing cardiac disease. The error in diagnosis can lead to another pitfall, the addition of heparin. If the etiology of the pain is a cervical epidural haematoma this can have grave consequences. Moreover, patients with cardiac ischemia who are treated with anticoagulants may rarely develop a cervical epidural haematoma. The resulting radicular pain can overlap with cardiac pain and escape recognition. Symptoms of neck and upper extremity pain with bilateral signs of myelopathy with a sensory level should lead to a suspicion of acute cervical cord compression. The addition of heparin can only compound the disastrous consequence of a rapidly expanding spinal epidural haematoma. The following cases illustrate this diagnostic and therapeutic conundrum.
...
PMID:Cervical spinal epidural haematoma: the double jeopardy. 894 71

Paget's disease of bone is associated with involvement of the central and peripheral nervous system. The brain, spinal cord, cauda equina, spinal roots, and cranial nerves can be affected in Paget's disease due to their anatomic relationship to bone. Neurologic syndromes are uncommon but include headache, dementia, brain stem and cerebellar dysfunction, cranial neuropathies, myelopathy, cauda equina syndrome, and radiculopathies. The central complications result from pagetic involvement of the skull. Expansion of diseased bone can result in compression of cranial nerves as they exit their bony foramina. Softening of the skull leads to basilar invagination with compression of the brain stem, cerebellum, and lower cranial nerves. Brain stem compression can cause hydrocephalus. Rarely, there is direct compression of the brain from acute epidural hematoma or hypertrophy of the calvarium. Myelopathy, cauda equina syndrome, and radiculopathies most commonly result from hypertrophy of the spine with direct compression. Spinal stenosis can also result from ossification of extradural structures or pathologic fractures. Ischemia from vascular compression or a steal syndrome has also been described. Neurologic complications rarely occur due to sarcomatous transformation of pagetic bone. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computerized tomography (CT)-myelography, and bone X-rays are helpful to localize the lesion and direct therapy. Treatment options include surgical decompression, ventricular shunt placement, and medical management with calcitonin and/or the bisphosphonates. The selection of treatment will vary depending upon the rate of progression and the severity of the neurologic deficit.
...
PMID:The neurologic complications of Paget's disease. 1051 Feb 21

Extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK) is a mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) that mediates several cellular responses to mitogenic and differentiation signals, and activation of ERK in dorsal horn neurons by noxious stimulation is known to contribute to pain hypersensitivity. In order to elucidate the pathophysiological mechanisms of the cauda equina syndrome, secondary to spinal canal stenosis, we evaluated walking dysfunction triggered by forced exercise and activation of ERK in the dorsal horn using a rat model of neuropathic intermittent claudication. Rats in the lumbar canal stenosis (LCS) group showed a shorter running distance from 1 to 14 days after surgery. Two minutes after running on the treadmill apparatus, phosphorylation of ERK was induced in neurons in the superficial laminae in the LCS group but not in the sham group, whereas there was no change in the deeper laminae. Intrathecal administration of the MAPK kinase inhibitor, U0126, 30 min before running, clearly increased the running distance, whereas there was no significant change in the vehicle control group 3 days after surgery. In addition, a prostaglandin E1 analog, OP-1206 alpha-CD, administered orally, improved the walking dysfunction, and further, inhibited activation of ERK following running 7 days after surgery. These findings suggest that intermittent claudication triggered by forced walking might affect the phosphorylation of ERK in the superficial laminae, possibly via transient (partial) ischemia of the spinal cord. ERK activation in the dorsal horn neurons may be involved in the transient pain in the neuropathic intermittent claudication model.
...
PMID:Activation of extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase in dorsal horn neurons in the rat neuropathic intermittent claudication model. 1508 27

Cauda equina syndrome is a relatively uncommon condition typically associated with a large, space-occupying lesion within the canal of the lumbosacral spine. The syndrome is characterized by varying patterns of low back pain, sciatica, lower extremity sensorimotor loss, and bowel and bladder dysfunction. The pathophysiology remains unclear but may be related to damage to the nerve roots composing the cauda equina from direct mechanical compression and venous congestion or ischemia. Early diagnosis is often challenging because the initial signs and symptoms frequently are subtle. Classically, the full-blown syndrome includes urinary retention, saddle anesthesia of the perineum, bilateral lower extremity pain, numbness, and weakness. Decreased rectal tone may be a relatively late finding. Early signs and symptoms of a developing postoperative cauda equina syndrome are often attributed to common postoperative findings. Therefore, a high index of suspicion is necessary in the postoperative spine patient with back and/or leg pain refractory to analgesia, especially in the setting of urinary retention. Regardless of the setting, when cauda equina syndrome is diagnosed, the treatment is urgent surgical decompression of the spinal canal.
...
PMID:Cauda equina syndrome. 1866 36

Acute aortic occlusion is an uncommon vascular emergency that can present with predominantly neurologic symptoms owing to spinal cord ischemia. We describe a 62-year-old woman who experienced acute thrombosis of an abdominal aortic aneurysm that initially presented as cauda equina syndrome. She was treated operatively with an axillary bifemoral bypass. Our case report is followed by a discussion of acute aortic occlusion.
...
PMID:Acute thrombosis of an abdominal aortic aneurysm presenting as cauda equina syndrome. 2306 43

Combined spinal anesthesia and postoperative epidural analgesia is widely used in orthopedic surgery. Uncommon but serious neurologic complications of neuraxial anesthesia (NA) include direct trauma during needle or catheter insertion, central nervous system infections, and neurotoxicity of local anesthetics. Cauda equina syndrome (CES) is a rare complication after NA but can result in severe neurologic deterioration that may require surgical intervention. We present a case of a 69-year-old woman with postpolio syndrome who developed CES after combined spinal anesthesia and postoperative epidural analgesia. Perioperative observations and follow-up examinations, including magnetic resonance imaging, revealed no evidence of direct needle- or catheter-induced trauma, spinal hematoma, spinal ischemia, intraneural anesthetic injection, or infection. We speculate that CES symptoms were observed because of enhanced sensitivity to a combination of regional anesthetic technique-related microtrauma and neurotoxicity of bupivacaine and ropivacaine. Thus, practitioners should be aware that patients with preexisting neurologic diseases may be at increased risk for CES after NA.
...
PMID:A patient with postpolio syndrome developed cauda equina syndrome after neuraxial anesthesia: A case report. 2823 27


1 2 Next >>