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Query: UMLS:C0027960 (
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21,279
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a patient of atypical type of Sturge-Weber syndrome who demonstrated a reversible change by
MRI
FLAIR method in ictus and postictal state. A 5-year-old boy was admitted to our hospital because of severe headache, vomiting and loss of consciousness with his eyes conjugated to left for a few minutes. He had no facial
nevus
and other abnormal findings in physical examination. CT scan showed two small calcifications in the right occipital lobe. Postcontrast T 1-weighted image of
MRI
demonstrated a right parieto-occipital leptomeningeal enhancement. We diagnosed this case as an atypical type of Sturge-Weber syndrome. Although, on admission, FLAIR method showed the area of high signal intensity, after anticonvulsant therapy, those abnormal area disappeared. It is presumably detected by FLAIR method slight extravasation of plasma element in the surface of the brain due to regional hyperperfusion in ictus.
...
PMID:[A case of atypical type of Sturge-Weber syndrome demonstrated reversible change by MRI FLAIR method in ictus and in postictal state]. 1045 52
We report a case of giant congenital melanocytic
nevi
(GCMN) at risk of developing neurocutaneous melanosis (NCM) with age-related changes observable on
MRI
of the brain. However, although the usefulness of MR imaging in NCM is well known, age-related changes on
MRI
have rarely been reported. The prevalence of positive
MRI
findings and prognosis in GCMN accompanied by epilepsy and/or mental retardation awaits clarification. This case report may suggest the importance of serial brain
MRI
in cases of GCMN in assessing the risk of NCM.
...
PMID:Age-related changes of the MR appearance of CNS involvement in neurocutaneous melanosis complex. 1114 97
Neurological symptoms in a patient with large congenital melanocytic
naevus
are highly suggestive of cerebromeningeal melanoma metastasis. The presence of melanocytic cells in cerebrospinal fluid confirms this diagnosis If their malignant nature is shared with cutaneous naevocytic cells. Conversely, neurocutaneous melanosis is diagnosed when benign melanocytosis meningitis is found in patients with multiple and/or large congenital melanocytic
naevus
, whether cutaneous
naevus
cells are benign or not, or when cerebrospinal fluid cells are malignant with benign cutaneous melanocytic
naevus
. We report the case of a young man aged 19 presenting with multiple and large congenital melanocytic
naevus
who experienced transcient neurological signs and increased intracranial pressure. Cerebral neuroimaging evoked meningeal infiltration which benign melanocytic nature was supposed on CSF analysis and confirmed by necropsy findings, only 3 month after neurological onset, leading to neurocutaneous melanosis diagnosis. This rare neuroectodermal dysembryoplasia finds expression in various neurological signs, depending on patient's age and leptomeningeal and/or cerebral proliferation localization. Lumbar puncture, cerebral scanography and
MRI
may help diagnosis, but only histological examination can prove neurocutaneous melanosis, more often by necropsy because of poor prognosis.
...
PMID:[Melanocytic meningitis and large congenital melanocytic naevus: neurocutaneous melanosis]. 1277 73
Sturge-Weber Syndrome (SWS) is characterized by facial flammeus
nevus
, leptomeningeal angiomatosis and coroidal hemangioma and
MRI
and CT scans are used to disclose the angiomatosis and secondary brain lesions. We review the CT and/or
MRI
scan of 26 patients with SWS. In 75% of cases the SWS was unilateral and in 25% bilateral, being the angiomatosis more frequent on occipital lobe (93%) than on the parietal (83%), frontal (53%) and temporal (53%) lobe. Diencephalon was involved in 13%, midbrain in 6% and cerebellum in 6% of cases. Other imaging features were: calcifications (88%), brain atrophy (85%), coroidal plexuses hypertrophy (72%), medullar veins enlargement (61%), ocular coroidal enhancement (20%).
MRI
was superior in depicting all morphological abnormalities of SWS, but calcifications.
MRI
is the best imaging method to evaluate morphologically the SWS, being useful to confirm the diagnosis and establish the extension of the disease.
...
PMID:[Sturge-Weber syndrome revisited. Evaluation of encephalic morphological changes with computerized tomography and magnetic resonance]. 1286 92
When cholestatic liver disease is present, liver ultrasound should be performed to ascertain if cholestasis is extrahepatic or intrahepatic. If bile ducts appear dilated and the probability of interventional treatment is high, endoscopic retrograde cholagio-pancreatography (ERCP) or trans-hepatic cholangiography (THC) should be the next step. If the probability of interventional therapeutics is low, cholangio-
MRI
should be performed. Once bile duct dilation and space occupying lesions are excluded, a work up for intrahepatic cholestasis should be started. Some specific clinical situations may be helpful in the diagnostic strategy. If cholestasis occurs in the elderly, drug-induced cholestatic disease should be suspected, whereas if it occurs in young people with risk factors, cholestatic viral hepatitis is the most likely diagnosis. During the first trimester of pregnancy cholestasis may occur in hyperemesis gravidorum, and in the third trimester of gestation cholestasis of pregnancy should be suspected. A familial history of recurrent cholestasis points to benign recurrent intrahepatic cholestasis. The occurrence of intrahepatic cholestasis in a middle-aged woman is a frequent presentation of primary biliary cirrhosis, whereas primary sclerosing cholangitis should be suspected in young males with inflammatory bowel disease. The presence of vascular spider
nevi
, ascites, and a history of alcohol abuse should point to alcoholic hepatitis. Neonatal cholestasis syndromes include CMV, toxoplasma and rubinfections or metabolic defects such as cystic fibrosis, alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency, bile acid synthesis defects, or biliary atresia. The treatment of cholestasis should include a management of complications such as pruritus, osteopenia and correction of fat soluble vitamin deficiencies. When hepatocellular failure or portal hypertension-related complications occur, liver transplantation should be considered.
...
PMID:Diagnostic and therapeutic approach to cholestatic liver disease. 1497 98
Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) is a phakomatosis characterized by vascular
nevus
flammeus, leptomeningeal venous angiomatosis, seizures, dementia, hemiplegia, hemianopsia, and glaucoma. Various imaging findings (gyriform calcification, atrophy of the ipsilateral hemisphere, leptomeningeal enhancement, ipsilateral choroid plexus enlargement, thickened calvarium, enlargement of paranasal sinuses and mastoid air cells, enlargement of deep veins, and white matter change adjacent to leptomeningeal enhancement) are seen in SWS. We examined the efficacy of CT and MR imaging in making the diagnosis in 14 patients. All patients underwent CT and
MRI
, and 11 of 14 patients underwent contrast-enhanced
MRI
. The most specific finding was leptomeningeal enhancement. Gyriform calcification, atrophy of the ipsilateral hemisphere, and ipsilateral chroid plexus enlargement were seen at high frequencies. Thickened calvarium was more frequent in adult patients. Enlargement of paranasal sinuses and mastoid air cells, enlargement of deep veins, and white matter change adjacent to leptomeningeal enhancement were seen in some (3-5) patients. A combination of findings of plain CT and
MRI
(including postcontrast
MRI
and MR venography) are useful for diagnosing SWS.
...
PMID:[Imaging of Sturge-Weber syndrome: cranial CT and MR findings]. 1521 82
We report the video-polysomnographic sleep characteristics of a 25-year-old woman with the Mulvihill-Smith syndrome, a rare clinical condition characterized by progeria-like aspect, peculiar multiple pigmented
nevi
, low stature, and cognitive impairment. Among the various exams, two overnight video-polysomnographic recordings were carried out; moreover, cerebral
MRI
and molecular analysis of the prion protein gene (PRNP) were also performed. The video-polysomnographic recordings showed the absence of clear sleep episodes but the presence of periods during which the patient had poor contact with the environment, stereotyped afinalistic movements of the upper limbs and hands, irregular or periodic breathing (with central apnea episodes), heart rate arrhythmia, and rapid eye movements. Cerebral
MRI
showed only diffuse mild enlargement of the cortical sulci and the molecular genetics analysis of the PRNP was normal. Our clinical and neurophysiological study seems to indicate that a particular condition of severe sleep disruption, similar to some extent to that reported in the fatal familial insomnia and in the Morvan fibrillary chorea, which has been indicated as Agrypnia Excitata in recent literature, might be associated with the Mulvihill-Smith syndrome. The inclusion of a detailed study on the sleep characteristics of eventual additional patients will certainly help our understanding of this rare condition.
...
PMID:Agrypnia excitata in a patient with progeroid short stature and pigmented Nevi (Mulvihill-Smith syndrome). 1636 48
Sturge-Weber syndrome is a neurocutaneous syndrome with a facial port-wine
nevus
and neurologic features, typically including seizures and hemiparesis. Glaucoma may also occur.
MRI
features include leptomeningeal angiomatosis, cortical and pial calcifications, and angiomatous change of the choroid plexus. We reviewed a subset of patients with Sturge-Weber syndrome with the rare finding of deep venous occlusion, and present such a case, unusual by comparison to previously reported cases of Sturge-Weber syndrome with deep venous occlusion. Six previously reported cases were reviewed. All cases presented with seizures; five of six had evidence of leptomeningeal angiomatosis; half had cerebral hemiatrophy. This report presents a unique case lacking clinical seizures, but with a port-wine stain and congenital glaucoma. This patient lacked the radiologic findings of leptomeningeal angiomatosis and hemicerebral atrophy, but demonstrated deep venous occlusion with frontal venous collaterals. There is a wide spectrum of findings in Sturge-Weber syndrome. The lack of seizures and angiomatosis in this case are likely "true-true" and related. The case illustrates the unusual finding of deep venous occlusion in Sturge-Weber syndrome occurring without leptomeningeal angiomatosis. Additionally, it demonstrates that although the initial evaluation is normal, patients may later manifest clinical characteristics of Sturge-Weber syndrome.
...
PMID:Sturge-Weber syndrome: deep venous occlusion and the radiologic spectrum. 1707 5
The nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome (NBCCS) is a rare, still well-defined autosomal dominant disorder, characterized by multiple cutaneous basal cell carcinomas, jaw keratocysts and a variety of other tumors and developmental anomalies. The
nevi
turn malignant with time, and thus, early diagnosis, follow-up, and treatment are imperative. This article presents a case of a 60-year-old man with classical form of NBCCS. The images from conventional radiography, CT and
MRI
are discussed in the context of clinical presentation of the disease, and the importance of imaging modalities in the diagnostic process is stressed.
...
PMID:A case of nevoid basal cell cutaneous syndrome - radiological, CT and MRI findings. 1741 18
Although the incidence of melanoma is still rising in Caucasian populations, the increase in mortality has leveled off. Improvements in early diagnosis, with more frequent diagnosis of low-risk patients (i.e. those with <1 mm of tumor thickness), is the main reason for these divergent developments. Primary prevention has not yet been successful and recent studies have demonstrated the lack of effectiveness of sunscreen in preventing
nevi
in children. Progress was made in early melanoma diagnosis when dermoscopy and digital dermoscopy were introduced, and computer algorithms have proved to be highly efficacious for automated melanoma diagnosis. Primary melanomas are now excised with narrower surgical margins of 1-2 cm. Sentinel-node biopsy is recommended as a nodal staging procedure in patients with tumor thickness of 1 mm and more, but the prognostic impact of this procedure has not yet been demonstrated. New imaging techniques, e.g. whole-body
MRI
and PET-CT, provide more accurate staging, particularly in patients with apparent metastasis, and facilitate decisions on surgical treatment strategies. Staging is now based on the 2001 TNM classification including tumor thickness and histopathologic ulceration in stages I and II and lymph node micro and macro-metastasis in stage III. A stage- and risk-adopted follow-up schedule is proposed for melanoma surveillance. Adjuvant therapy with interferon-alpha in high-risk patients offers a small benefit in terms of recurrence-free and overall survival; the optimal dosage and duration of this treatment are still to be defined. Almost no progress has been made in the medical treatment of disseminated metastasis of melanoma. Therapy with dacarbazine and a few other single agents remains the first-line treatment approach of choice. A number of new treatment modalities, including targeted molecules and immunologic approaches with monoclonal antibodies, are under development; hopefully, new treatment modalities will be available in the near future.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of cutaneous melanoma: state of the art 2006. 1749 87
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