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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0026838 (
spasticity
)
6,471
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy of
Binswanger
is characterized clinically by hypertension, dementia,
spasticity
, syncope, and seizures. It is usually diagnosed pathologically by the finding in white matter of diffuse demyelination or foci of necrosis plus arteriosclerotic and hypertensive vasculopathy. We present a case in which the diagnosis was made on the basis of the clinical course and a computerized tomogram which demonstrated extensive white matter degeneration. Postmortem examination confirmed both the diagnosis and the extent of the degeneration as shown by CT scan.
...
PMID:Subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy (Binswanger): computerized tomography. 57 97
A 55-year-old mildly hypertensive woman died after having developed a subcortical dementia during the past 9 years, with focal neurological signs. She presented at the age of 46 years with short episodes of dizziness and diplopia, suggesting that transient ischemic attacks involved the posterior fossa structures. Over the next 8 years, she developed difficulty in walking, urinary incontinence and seizures. On examination in 1989, she was severely demented. There was tetraparesis, bilateral arm and leg
spasticity
with hyperreflexia and bilateral Babinski signs. She showed epilepsia partialis continua involving the eyes, left hemiface and limbs. CT showed hypodensity of the white matter and lacunes in the basal ganglia and centrum semiovale, moderate hydrocephalus with cerebellar and cortical atrophy. Clinical and radiological features were similar to those of
Binswanger's disease
. Similar cases had occurred in the family affecting the patient's grandfather, father and two brothers, suggesting an autosomal dominant hereditary disease. Postmortem examination disclosed a
Binswanger
type of leukoencephalopathy caused by a peculiar microangiopathy characterized by a slightly basophilic small arterial granular degeneration of the medial sheath associated with the presence of ballooned smooth muscle cells with clear cytoplasm. Electron microscopic study revealed degenerative changes in the parietal vessels with notable increase of basal-membrane-type material and electron-dense granular deposits. These lesions could correspond to a specific familial pathology of the small arteries of the brain. They are identical to those reported in some patients with autosomal dominant inheritance. For other patients with similar clinical features and the same familial pattern, reported as "hereditary multi-infarct dementia'' and "chronic familial vascular encephalopathy'', there are no sufficient objective pathological facts to consider that they have the same disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Small arterial granular degeneration in familial Binswanger's syndrome. 814 Aug 99