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Anal fissure is one of the most common causes of anal pain but its etiology and pathophysiology remain obscure. Many theories have been advanced to explain the origin of anal fissures but trauma of faecal mass and hypertonicity of the internal sphincter seem to be the most important factors. The initial lesion in anal fissure is a tear in the anoderm mostly in its posterior midline caused by overstretching of the anal canal. Secondary fissures may occur on a commonly lateral position as a result of inflammatory bowel disease, previous anal surgery, venereal, dermatologic, infectious or neoplastic disease. As the fissure becomes deeper and more chronic the sclerotic fibres of the internal anal sphincter are seen as well as a sentinel pile and a hypertrophied anal papilla. The disease enters in a vicious circle of anal pain, constipation, faecal trauma and sphincter spasm.
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PMID:[Etiology, pathogenesis and classification of anal fissure]. 887 Dec 58

Hemifacial spasm is a neurological disorder due to abnormal hyperactivity of the facial nerve. The most common cause of hemifacial spasm is a neuro-vascular conflict in the cerebellopontine angle between a vascular loop and the root of the facial nerve (96% of cases). Tumors are the cause of hemifacial spasm in only 1% of cases). The authors present their results in 100 patients who underwent microvascular decompression for essential hemifacial spasm between 1990 and 1995. They used microsurgical and endoscopic procedures by a minimal retrosigmoid approach in all cases. The most common offending vessels were the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (70%), the vertebral artery (41%) and the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (28%). An aberrant vein was found in 2 cases. There were 38% of multiple artery-nerve conflicts. Physiopathology of hemifacial spasm is explained by two principal theories: in the ephaptic theory, hyperactivity and an abnormal nervous impulse pathway are due to a short demyelinated area on the nerve trunk caused by the offending vessel, inducing short circuiting between adjacent nerve fibers. In the nuclear theory, hyperactivity of the facial nerve is due to an abnormal and automatic activity of the facial nerve nucleus itself, induced by the vessel. The authors used pre and postoperative electromyographic tests and intraoperative electromyographic tests. Their results tend to prove the nuclear theory. Ninety per cent of the patients had a good result, with a mean follow-up time of 30 months in 60 cases. In 82% of the cases, there was a total recovery after a single procedure. There was no mortality and no facial palsy. Hearing loss occurred in less than 5%.
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PMID:[Neuro-vascular decompression in hemifacial spasm: anatomical, electrophysiological and therapeutic results apropos of 100 cases]. 918 4

A review of the reports of 848 cervical spine radiographs was done to assess the yield of useful and critical information in a group of patients without trauma. In 470 of these patients the clinical record also was reviewed; 54.2% of the radiographs were read as having degenerative change, 35% were read as normal, and 8.5% were read as being consistent with muscle spasm. The remaining 2.3% included diagnoses of anatomic or congenital variants, soft tissue calcification, or old compression fractures. There were no serious diagnoses such as acute fracture, dislocation, or neoplasm that, had they not been identified, would have put the patient in jeopardy. Thus, for most outpatients with nontraumatic symptoms of a nonspecific or nonlocalizing nature, the use of cervical spine radiographs as a screening tool is not justified.
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PMID:Value of cervical spine radiographs as a screening tool. 922 45

Sixty patients with primitive hemifacial spasm were treated by means of a minimally invasive retrosigmoid approach in which endoscopic and microsurgical procedures were combined. Intraoperative endoscopic examination of the cerebellopontine angle showed that for 56 of the patients vessel-nerve conflict was the cause of hemifacial spasm. The most common offending vessel was the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (39 patients), next was the vertebral artery (23 patients), and last was the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (16 patients). Nineteen of the patients had multiple offending vascular loops. In one patient, another cause of hemifacial spasm was an epidermoid tumor of the cerebellopontine angle. For three patients, it was not possible to determine the exact cause of the facial disorder. Follow-up information was reviewed for 54 of 60 patients; the mean follow-up period was 14 months. Fifty of the patients were in the vessel-nerve conflict group. Forty of the 50 were free of symptoms, and four had marked improvement. The overall success rate was 88%, and there was minimal morbidity (no facial palsy, two cases of severe hearing loss).
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PMID:Hemifacial spasm: endoscopic vascular decompression. 933 88

Hemifacial spasm (HFS) is characterized by involuntary, irregular contraction of the muscles innervated by one facial nerve. Usually, it is caused by facial nerve injury either due to microvascular compression or a posterior fossa tumor, but it also occurs without apparent cause. It is rare in children; no congenital cases have yet been reported. We report the first case of congenital HFS in a term newborn delivered by forceps after a normal labor. Multimodal evoked potentials, electroencephalogram, computed tomography of the petrous bone, as well as brain magnetic resonance imaging and angiography disclosed no abnormalities. Serial neurodevelopmental examinations and video recordings performed until 8 months of age documented a normal neurodevelopmental status and a tendency for spontaneous diminution of the HFS. An intrauterine facial nerve injury as the causative factor of HFS, being responsible for its benign course, is proposed.
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PMID:Benign congenital hemifacial spasm. 936 2

Pamidronate is an effective drug used not only in patients with tumor-associated hypercalcemia, but also in normocalcemic patients with metastatic bone disease to relieve pains. We describe a 39-year-old normocalcemic patient with subclinical hypoparathyroidism and bone metastasis due to breast carcinoma. Following parenteral administration of 60 mg pamidronate, the corrected serum level of calcium decreased from 2.12 mmol/l (=8.9 mg/dl) to 1.42 mmol/l (5.7 mg/dl), accompanied with carpal pedal spasm. The present case indicates that the hypocalcemia due to latent hypoparathyroidism was compensated by extensive osteolysis due to bone metastasis, and that overt hypocalcemia may develop after intravenous administration of pamidronate in such a patient.
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PMID:Symptomatic hypocalcemia in a patient with latent hypoparathyroidism and breast carcinoma with bone metastasis following administration of pamidronate. 963 Feb 1

Ephaptic transmission is one of the electrophysiological hallmarks of hemifacial spasm. It is generally accepted that in the majority of patients with idiopathic hemifacial spasm, microvascular compression of the facial nerve at the site where the nerve exits the brain stem is the underlying cause. Whether the actual site of the ephapse is at the site of the lesion or at a nuclear level due to hyperexcitability of the facial motor nucleus is still controversial. Rarely, hemifacial spasm may be due to space occupying lesions in the cerebellopontine angle or in the brain stem. We report the electrophysiological findings of four patients with hemifacial spasm due to extra-axial tumors in different locations of the posterior fossa. The location of the tumor was intrameatal in one patient, in the cerebellopontine angle in two patients and in the brain stem in another patient. Facial nerve motor neurographies including transcranial magnetic stimulation revealed abnormal findings in two patients. Selective stimulation of facial nerve branches demonstrated delayed (ephaptic) responses in all but one patient whose hemifacial spasm had disappeared after treatment with carbamazepine. The latencies of the delayed responses did not correlate with the tumor location. In sum, the site of ephaptic transmission cannot be reliably determined by latency measurements of the delayed response because of its variability which is probably caused by the different size and diameter of the axons participating in ephaptic transmission as well as by the extent of focal demyelination at the site of the lesion. A neuroradiological work up including MR imaging should be mandatory in all patients with hemifacial spasm because electrophysiological studies fail to differentiate between idiopathic and symptomatic hemifacial spasm.
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PMID:Hemifacial spasm due to posterior fossa tumors: the impact of tumor location on electrophysiological findings. 974 97

Hemifacial spasm (HFS) is a peripherally induced movement disorder characterized by involuntary, unilateral, intermittent, irregular, tonic or clonic contractions of muscles innervated by the ipsilateral facial nerve. We reviewed the clinical features and response to different treatments in 158 patients (61% women) with HFS evaluated at our Movement Disorders Clinic. The mean age at onset was 48.5+/-14.1 years (range: 15-87) and the mean duration of symptoms was 11.4+/-8.5 (range: 0.5-53) years. The left side was affected in 56% instances; 5 patients had bilateral HFS. The lower lid was the most common site of the initial involvement followed by cheek and perioral region. Involuntary eye closure which interfered with vision and social embarrassment were the most common complaints. HFS was associated with trigeminal neuralgia in 5.1% of the cases and 5.7% had prior history of Bell's palsy. Although vascular abnormalities, facial nerve injury, and intracranial tumor were responsible for symptoms in some patients, most patients had no apparent etiology. Botulinum toxin type A (BTX-A) injections, used in 110 patients, provided marked to moderate improvement in 95% of patients. Seven of the 25 (28%) patients who had microvascular decompression reported permanent complications and the HFS recurred in 5 (20%). Although occasionally troublesome, HFS is generally a benign disorder that can be treated effectively with either BTX-A or microvascular decompression.
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PMID:Hemifacial spasm: clinical findings and treatment. 984 77

Congenital cholesteatoma is the third most common tumor found in the cerebellopontine angle. It must be differentiated from acoustic neuromas, meningiomas, metastatic tumors, arachnoid cysts and lipomas. Symptoms include hemifacial spasm, progressive facial paralysis, hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo, pain and otorrhea. Radiologic and magnetic resonance imaging frequently can be useful to establish a preoperative diagnosis. The treatment of choice is total removal of the lesion. Complete removal with preservation of normal structures is the most difficult and technically exacting procedure performed by the neurotologic surgeon. The clinical features and results from a series of 19 cases, nine of which extended into the cerebellopontine angle, are discussed.
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PMID:Cholesteatoma of the cerebellopontine angle. 987 34

Two cases of facial neurinoma successfully treated with gamma knife radiosurgery are reported. Case 1, a 33-year-old female, developed a right-sided hemifacial spasm about five years ago. Then she suffered gradual progression of right-sided facial palsy, dysgeusia and reduction of lacrimation, but she had no hearing disturbance. T1-weighted MRI with gadolinium DTPA showed a well-circumscribed tumor at the geniculate ganglion extending to the middle cranial fossa. The tumor was treated with gamma knife radiosurgery which reduced its size, but didn't reduce the patient's facial palsy. Case 2, a 36-year-old female, presented with fluctuating facial palsy and sensorineural hearing loss lasting for fourteen years. T1-weighted enhanced MRI showed a well-enhanced tumor at the CP angle extending to the middle cranial fossa. The tumor was treated with gamma knife radiosurgery, which caused central tumor necrosis, but didn't reduce the tumor size. Meanwhile the patient's facial palsy improved. Gamma knife radiosurgery is apparently effective against facial neurinomas without producing serious complications such as complete facial palsy and hearing loss. Our study indicates that gamma knife radiosurgery is a useful therapeutic alternative for facial neurinomas.
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PMID:[Two cases of facial neurinoma successfully treated with gamma knife radiosurgery]. 1006 50


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