Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0026838 (spasticity)
6,471 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this paper we report a patient with Parkinson's disease (PD) presenting with subacute motor symptoms, especially rigidity. The 75-year-old man had relatively moderate PD for 12 years, which was treated with levodopa until he developed marked rigidity. The rigidity became worse, with prolonged off-periods, despite treatment with increased doses of levodopa. At the time of hospitalization he was unable to walk independently, but the clinical neurological examination only revealed aggravation of parkinsonian signs. MRI of the brain showed an intracerebral lesion, which was later confirmed as glioblastoma multiforme. The main feature was onset of marked rigidity a few weeks before severe tumour-specific symptoms developed, but spasticity or hyperreflexia were neither reported at the time of symptom exacerbation nor during hospitalization. This case demonstrates the importance of considering other underlying neurological disease in parkinsonian patients presenting with rapid progression of parkinsonian symptoms.
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PMID:[Subacute worsening of rigidity in a patient with Parkinson disease]. 1885 23

A spinal cordectomy is a treatment option for several disorders of the spinal cord like post-traumatic syringomyelia, spinal cord tumor and myelomeningocele. We have done a systematic analysis of all reported cases of spinal cordectomy to investigate the possible outcomes and complications. A PubMed search was performed for literature published from 1949 to 2015 with search words "spinal cordectomy", "spinal cord transection" and "cordectomy for malignant spinal cord tumors" to select articles containing information about the indication, outcome and complication of spinal cordectomy performed for diverse etiologies. Spinal cordectomy was performed for post-traumatic syrinx (76 cases), SPAM (2 cases), Central pain of spinal cord origin (22 cases), Spasticity (8 cases), Spinal tumors (16 cases) and Myelomeningocele (30 cases). Among the 76 cases, 60 cases fulfilled the inclusion criteria for our outcome analysis in terms of improvement, stabilization or deterioration after spinal cordectomy. The results showed 78.3% excellent improvement, 13.4% stable and 8.3% (5 cases) deterioration. The reported causes of failure of spinal cordectomy for post-traumatic syrinx were scarring of a proximal stump and severe arachnoid adhesion. Sixteen cases of spinal cordectomy related with spinal cord tumors have been reported. Also reported were seven cases of GBM, two cases of AA and one each case of anaplastic tanycytic ependymoma, schwanoma, neurofibroma, atypical meningioma and malignant ganglioglioma. Cordectomy shouldbe strongly considered in patients having malignant spinal cord tumors with complete motor loss and sensory loss below the level of the lesion as a means of preventing the spread of disease from the original tumor focus. Spinal cordectomy is a treatment option with a good outcome for post-traumatic spinal morbidity, spinal cord tumors and myelomeningocele. However, since it is an invasive and irreversible procedure, it is only considered when other options have been exhausted.
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PMID:Spinal cordectomy: A new hope for morbid spinal conditions. 2784