Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0028738 (nystagmus)
7,431 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Basilar artery occlusion (BAO) is generally associated with a high mortality rate and a poor functional outcome in survivors. Recently, we encountered a patient with BAO, initially manifesting as vertigo and rebound nystagmus, subsequently followed by bilateral sudden deafness and dysarthria and terminating in a coma state within an interval of 6 h. A review of his history showed he had had two episodes of transient vertigo 2 weeks before the major stroke, and the neurological decline of BAO was heralded by the vertiginous symptoms. Restated, patients with BAO often have transient vertiginous attacks preceding fatal stroke. Therefore, those with vertigo and nystagmus may be signaling a forthcoming stroke event, something that should be considered for clinicians seeing vertiginous patients.
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PMID:Vertigo with rebound nystagmus as an initial manifestation in a patient with basilar artery occlusion. 1559 55

A spontaneous nystagmus (SN) was studied in 50 patients with hemispheric ischemic stroke in the territory of the middle cerebral artery. SN in acute disorders of cerebral circulation in the cerebral hemispheres occurs much more frequently than that in the foci of volume genesis. This may be related with the rate of the pathological process development. SN in ischemic stroke of supratentorial location may be explained by progression of general brain symptoms, secondary involvement of the brain stem and acute impairment of the compensatory mechanisms.
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PMID:[Characteristics of spontaneous nystagmus in supratentorial ischemic foci of the brain]. 1560 81

Pregnancy is considered to be a hypercoagulable state per se with an increased risk for cerebrovascular events, however cerebellar infarction has been rarely described in pregnant women. A nulliparous pre-eclamptic woman at 25 weeks' gestation was submitted to an echocardiographic exam that showed an impaired cardiac structure and function. After 2 h, the patient underwent caesarean section for diagnosis of haemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelet (HELLP) syndrome. Afterwards her platelet count raised, and eight days later she developed nystagmus, ataxia, dysmetria and motor deficit in the right limbs and sensory impairment in the right side of the face and in the left limbs. Cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated a right cerebellar and median posterior bulbar infarction. Colour-coded sonography of cerebral vessels showed an occlusion of the right vertebral artery. Coagulation pattern analysis evidenced double heterozygosis of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene and single mutation of the prothrombin gene. This case report gives evidence of the importance of considering the different risk factors involved in stroke occurrence during pregnancy.
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PMID:Postpartum cerebellar infarction and haemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelet (HELLP) syndrome. 1587 86

We report a case of a 53-year-old man with Behcet's disease (BD) and paradoxical stroke. This patient suddenly developed sensory aphasia, right oculomotor palsy, nystagmus, and left ataxic hemiparesis. MR images showed fresh embolic infarcts in the midbrain and the left parietotemporal lobe. He presented with uveitis, oral aphthous ulcers and genital ulcers. An electrocardiogram revealed no abnormalities, and a transesophageal echocardiogram disclosed a patent foramen ovale. Since venous involvement is common in BD, we suspected the presence of smaller thrombi probable in this patient. We conclude that embolic stroke is a notable complication of BD with right-to-left shunting.
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PMID:Embolic stroke with a patent foramen ovale and Behcet's disease. 1589 45

Cerebellar syndrome following classical heat stroke is rare. We report a case of a 39-year-old man who presented with a cerebellar syndrome including downbeat nystagmus. MRI taken after 3 days of admission was normal. The downbeat nystagmus lasted for 6 days and than gradually disappeared. The ataxia and dysmetria improved gradually over 2 months. A brain CT scan performed 3 months later revealed no cerebellar atrophy. This case is unique as there were no predisposing factors (e.g. hypomagnesemia) and follow-up revealed complete reversibility of the ophthalmological abnormality. It reveals that the vestibulocerebellum is particularly vulnerable to thermal injury.
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PMID:Downbeat nystagmus following classical heat stroke. 1631 Nov 59

We report on a patient suffering from bilateral sudden blindness as initial symptom of Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE). A 37-year-old male alcoholic was admitted to a psychiatric clinic because of excessive alcohol consumption (3.4 per thousand). 24 h later he developed acute bilateral blindness with no light perception, downbeat nystagmus, bilateral ocular abduction deficits, cerebellar ataxia as well as a slight psychomotor slowing and mild disorientation. MRI including diffusion-weighted imaging and MR-angiography 3 h after symptom onset did not reveal findings suggestive for ischemic stroke. Immediate iv-application of thiamine led to a nearly complete remission of the neuroophthalmologic symptoms within 12 h. Although we critically discuss other potential etiologies, we conclude that the complex clinical picture with initial sudden blindness is an unusual presentation of WE.
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PMID:Sudden bilateral blindness in Wernicke's encephalopathy: case report and review of the literature. 1751 12

We reported a 66-year-old man who complained of headache, vertigo, vomiting and chest oppression sensation. He could not walk veering to right and spontaneous contrarateral horizontal nystagmus was noted. A MRI DWI showed scattered multiple small high signals within the territory of left medial branch of posterior inferior cerebellar artery. Cerebellar infarcts specifically affected the tonsil and nodulus, which has tight connections with vestibular labyrinth and vestibular nuclei. Digital subtraction angiography exhibited tapered occlusion on the V4 segment of the right vertebral artery. Stroke mechanism of artery to artery embolism from occlusive site was presumed. As small multiple infarcts were limited within the cerebellar tonsil and nodulus, repeated CT or MRI T2 weighted image did not showed obvious findings. It is worth noting for differential diagnosis that small cerebellar infarcts only detected by diffusion MRI can produce strong vertigo, nausea and chest oppression.
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PMID:[A patient with small cerebellar infarcts at tonsil and nodulus who complained of vertigo, vomiting and chest oppression]. 1788 47

A 70-year-old man presented with unilateral lateral medullary infarction, and then died of rapidly progressive respiratory failure within a day. The clinical manifestations were hiccups, hoarseness, dysarthria, nystagmus, left central facial paralysis, paralysis of the left soft palate, dysphagia, decreased superficial sensation over the right face and upper limb, and cerebellar ataxia in the left upper and lower limbs. The arterial blood gas analysis revealed mild hypoventilation. Soon thereafter, an apneic episode occurred during a sleep and advanced to ataxic respiration, and the patient died. Pathologically, there were fresh ischemic infarction localized to the left dorsolateral area of the upper medulla, caused by atherothrombotic occlusion of the left vertebral artery. These foci were in the areas including the medullary reticular formation, the solitary nucleus, the intramedullary fibers of the vagus nerve, and the nucleus ambiguus on the left side. We attributed the fatal acute progressive respiratory impairment in the present case to impairment of the automatic respiratory system (Ondine's curse) rather than the voluntary respiratory system.
J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis
PMID:Rapidly progressive fatal respiratory failure (Ondine's curse) in the lateral medullary syndrome. 1790 48

A 41-year-old farmer sustained a high-voltage electrical injury resulting in confusion, electrical burns and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation which spontaneously reverted to sinus rhythm after a few hours. Two weeks later he presented with a sudden onset of headache, unsteadiness, horizontal oscillopsia and paraesthesia in the right side of his face. Examination revealed nystagmus to the right, right-sided limb ataxia and a tendency to veer toward the right when walking. An MRI of the brain demonstrated an acute infarct of the right cerebellar hemisphere in the territory of the right posterior inferior cerebellar artery. A transesophageal echocardiogram showed a ruptured mitral valve chordae. This is the first report of a cardio-embolic stroke secondary to mitral valve chordae rupture as a delayed complication of high-voltage electrical injury. Although many mechanisms of direct cerebral electrical injury have been speculated, a cardio-embolic origin should not be overlooked as a cause of stroke secondary to high-voltage electrical injury.
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PMID:Cardio-embolic cerebellar stroke secondary to mitral valve chordae rupture as a delayed complication of a high-voltage electrical injury. 1806 86

The experiments of Alessandro Volta were amongst the first to indicate that visuo-spatial function can be altered by stimulating the vestibular nerves with galvanic current. Until recently, the beneficial effects of the procedure were masked by the high levels of electrical current applied, which induced nystagmus-related gaze deviation and spatial disorientation. However, several neuropsychological studies have shown that much weaker, imperceptible currents that do not elicit unpleasant side-effects can help overcome visual loss after stroke. Here, we show that visual processing in neurologically healthy individuals can also benefit from galvanic vestibular stimulation. Participants first learnt the names of eight unfamiliar faces and then after a short delay, answered questions from memory about how pairs of these faces differed. Mean correct reaction times were significantly shorter when sub-sensory, noise-enhanced anodal stimulation was administered to the left mastoid, compared to when no stimulation was administered at all. This advantage occurred with no loss in response accuracy, and raises the possibility that the procedure may constitute a more general form of cognitive enhancement.
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PMID:Galvanic vestibular stimulation speeds visual memory recall. 1858 62


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