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)

The effect of radiosurgery on optic gliomas is uncertain. We report two cases of low-grade glioma of the optic nerve and chiasm treated by transcranial subtotal removal and Gamma Knife radiosurgery. The first case was a 2-year-old boy, admitted with visual disturbance and nystagmus. Histopathological examination showed a pilocytic astrocytoma. The tumor volume was 14.4 cm3. Dose planning was performed using axial and coronal T1-weighted enhanced images. The marginal dose was 12 Gy at the 40% isodose line. The dose to the optic apparatus was less than 9 Gy. The second case was a 47-year-old woman, admitted to our hospital with headache and visual disturbance. The histopathological findings showed a fibrillary astrocytoma. The tumor volume was 12.3 cm3. The marginal dose was 14.4 Gy at the 40% isodose curve. The follow-up periods for the two cases were 24 and 43 months, respectively. In both cases the most recent follow-up magnetic resonance scan showed a marked decrease in tumor size, and visual symptoms were improved. No postradiosurgical complications have developed to date. Gamma Knife radiosurgery could be an effective adjuvant therapy for low-grade optic glioma. However, long-term follow-up is required for further evaluation of the efficacy and potential side effects.
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PMID:Two cases of Gamma Knife radiosurgery for low-grade optic chiasm glioma. 903 59

Vestibular symptoms frequently occur in patients with migraine headache. The common migraine is defined in neurology as a unilateral, pulsating headache, which may be associated with nausea and vomiting, and lasts one or several days. In the classic form patients have visual prodromal symptoms. Focal neurological signs in the migraine complique include, for example, oculomotor palsy and vestibular abnormalities. This so-called vestibular migraine is different from basilar migraine, which involves the irritation of the cervical sympathetic system, and can cause symptoms that resemble transient brainstem ischemia. In order to evaluate vestibular dysfunction electronystagmography (ENG) was used. Patients frequently had abnormal caloric test responses, especially with a directional preponderance, and most had a spontaneous nystagmus. In the migraine attack the patients are presumed to have hypersensitivity of the labyrinth with nausea and vomiting, while in the headache-free period the ENG was almost normal. At present, we have had a high success rate in treating patients with pyracetam. Diazepam was used to treat basilar migraine and flunarizine to prevent vestibular migraine.
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PMID:Vestibular disorders in patients with migraine. 906 28

Medial medullary infarctions (MMI) were reported in less than 40 patients with satisfactory clinicotopographic documentation. We studied seven patients with MRI-proven acute MMI seen in two neurologic departments over a 5-year period (1990-1994). MMI represented less than 1% of ischemic strokes in the posterior circulation. Five patients had an infarction above the pyramidal decussation. All patients had contralateral hemiparesis and lemniscal sensory loss, accompanied by ipsilateral lingual palsy (Dejerine's syndrome) in three. Two patients had infarction below the pyramidal decussation, with ipsilateral hemiparesis and lemniscal sensory loss. Accompanying symptoms and signs of MMI were vertigo and nausea (n = 5), mild ipsi- or contralateral decrease in pain sensation (n = 6), headache (n = 4), ipsilateral limb ataxia (n = 6), contralateral truncal lateropulsion (n = 5), mild ipsilateral ptosis (n = 4), nystagmus (n = 4), dysarthria (n = 3), and somnolence (n = 2). Presumed causes of MMI were stenosis, occlusion or dissection of the ipsilateral vertebral artery (n = 5), and cardioembolism (n = 1). Outcome at 3 months was favorable in five patients. In conclusion, the clinical features of MMI are more heterogeneous than commonly thought, whereas its etiology seems fairly constant (vertebral artery disease).
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PMID:Medial medullary stroke: report of seven patients and review of the literature. 971 65

Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a heritable disorder of bone development caused by defective collagen synthesis. Basilar invagination is an uncommon but devastating complication of this disease. The authors present a comprehensive strategy for management of craniovertebral anomalies associated with OI and related osteochondrodysplasias. Twenty-five patients with congenital osteochondrodysplasias (18 OI, four Hajdu-Cheney syndrome, and three spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia) and basilar invagination were evaluated between 1985 and 1995. The male/female ratio in this cohort was 1:1. The mean age at presentation was 11.9 years (range 13 months-20 years). Fourteen patients (56%) presented during adolescence (11-15 years of age). Symptoms and signs included headache (76%), lower cranial nerve dysfunction (68%), hyperreflexia (56%), quadriparesis (48%), ataxia (32%), nystagmus (28%), and scoliosis (20%). Four patients (16%) were asymptomatic. Seven (28%) had undergone previous posterior fossa decompression; one had also undergone ventral decompression. Imaging findings included basilar invagination (100%), ventral brainstem compression (84%), hydrocephalus (32%), hindbrain herniation (28%), and syringomyelia/syringobulbia (16%). Patients with hydrocephalus underwent ventricular shunt placement. Reducible basilar invagination (40%) was treated with posterior fossa decompression and occipitocervical fusion. Those with irreducible ventral compression (60%) underwent transoral-transpalatopharyngeal decompression followed by occipitocervical fusion. All patients improved initially. However, basilar invagination progressed radiographically in 80% (symptomatic in 24%) despite successful fusion. Prolonged external orthotic immobilization with the modified Minerva brace afforded symptomatic improvement and arrested progression of the deformity. The mean follow-up period was 5.9 years (range 1.1-10.5 years). Ventral brainstem compression in OI should be treated with ventral decompression, followed by occipitocervical fusion with contoured loop instrumentation to prevent further squamooccipital infolding. Despite fusion, however, basilar invagination tends to progress. Prolonged immobilization (particularly during adolescence) may stabilize symptoms and halt further invagination. This study represents the largest series to date addressing craniovertebral anomalies in OI and related congenital bone softening disorders.
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PMID:Basilar invagination in osteogenesis imperfecta and related osteochondrodysplasias: medical and surgical management. 917 Nov 73

The therapeutic efficacy of a regimen consisting of intravenous injection of Cardiocrome, containing cytochrome c, flavin mononucleotide and thiamine diphosphate for mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (MEM) was examined. This combined therapy was applied to nine patients with MEM, including four with mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes. For the standard regimen, Cardiocrome was first injected daily, usually for 4 weeks, and later by means of intermittent injections for maintenance treatment. Clinical improvement was obtained in eight of the patients. Improvement was observed in the muscle symptoms of easy fatigability, motor disability and severity of stroke-like episodes, as well as in various other symptoms such as phosphate, tinnitus, headache, corneal edema, chilblains, thalamic pain, respiratory failure, and nystagmus. This clinical improvement was maintained for more than 1 year by additional intermittent injections. In conclusion, this therapy was fairly effective for the management of patients with MEM.
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PMID:Treatment of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with a combination of cytochrome C and vitamins B1 and B2. 918 76

A 58-year-old woman developed slowly progressive hearing loss, anosmia, and unsteady gait. She had neither repeated episode of headache nor a past history of neurosurgical operation or head injury. Neurological examination revealed anosmia, moderate degree of sensorineural hearing loss. She showed loss of caloric response bilaterally. No nystagmus was found. Romberg sign was present. No cerebellar ataxia was noted in the finger-to-nose or the heel-to-knee test. No adiadochokinesis was noted. Deep tendon reflexes were increased in both upper and lower extremities. Sensation was intact. She showed disturbance of the righting reflex in the tilt-table examination. CSF were under normal pressure, xanthochromic with siderophages. CSF total protein and ferritin level were elevated. T2-weighted image (TE4000/TR100) of high field strength magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed marginal hypointensity of the brain stem, the Sylvian fissures, the tips of temporal lobes, anterior cerebellar surfaces and the entire spinal cord. Angiography of the cerebral vessels and spinal arteries failed to identify the source of bleeding. It seemed likely that she had lost bilateral vestibular and auditory functions caused by hemosidelin deposition to her eighth nerves which are often affected by this disorder. Her disturbance of gait and station was apparently similar to cerebellar ataxic gait, however, she did not have limb ataxia. The electronystagmogram revealed marked degree of vestibular dysfunction (VOR) and relative sparing of cerebellar function (OKN). Her disturbance of the righting reflex in the tilt-table examination and the characteristic feature of her Romberg sign with directional preponderance also indicate that the bilateral loss of vestibular functions, i.e., vestibular ataxia caused her dysequilibrium syndrome. It is our impression that vestibular ataxia might precede cerebellar ataxia commonly reported so far.
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PMID:[A case of superficial siderosis of the central nervous system with bilateral vestibular dysfunction]. 936 92

The patient, a 78-year-old female with history of headache and progressive gait disturbance for almost one year, was admitted to our department because of dysphagia and dysphonia since three months before. Neurological examination revealed nystagmus, cerebellar ataxia, deafness, and vesical incontinence. No cerebral injuries were detected by computed tomography (CT) scan, although Paget's. Disease of Bone (PDB) was suggested, confirmed by biochemical and scintigraphic studies. The plain skull X-ray showed platybasia. As all the disarrangements were not explained by PDB complications alone, nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed which demonstrated an Arnold-Chiari malformation (ACM) type I, with mild tonsillar herniation and anterior compression of the brainstem due to basilar impression, without syringomyelia. The association of PDB and ACM is a peculiarity seldom reported. The surgical approach was rejected, but the severity of symptoms and osteitis deformans biochemical activity needed a treatment; it was orientated to modify bone turnover using etidronate, a bisphosphonate, which induced clinical improvement and a decrease in serum alkaline phosphatase as well as in other bone resorption markers, without side effects. The good status and biochemical remission have been maintained a year later.
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PMID:[Paget's disease of bone and basilar impression associated with an Arnold-Chiari type-1 malformation]. 942 43

A 43-year-old woman presented with dull headache, left tinnitus and dizziness. Neurological examination revealed down-beat gaze nystagmus, left tinnitus, positive Romberg sign, poor standing on the left foot, poor tandem gait, left spastic gait and positive pathological reflexes in the bilateral upper and lower extremities. Plain X-ray of the skull and cervical vertebrae demonstrated basilar impression and atlantoaxial fusion. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain and cervical spine showed cerebellar tonsil descent and syringomyelia located in the left side of the spine at the II-III vertebral level which communicated with the fourth ventricle. The patient was diagnosed as having cervical syringomyelia. Arnold-Chiari type I malformation and basilar impression. Preoperative polysomnography showed dysrhythmic breathing and bradypnea during sleep. Abnormal breathing improved after suboccipital decompression craniotomy and upper cervical laminectomy. It was suggested that dysrhythmic breathing was caused by a disorder of the medullary respiratory center. Herniation of the cerebellar tonsil and syringomyelia might have compressed the medulla.
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PMID:A case of Arnold-Chiari Type I malformation presenting with dysrhythmic breathing during sleep. 962 58

A 5-year-old boy presented with a 1-year history of frontal headache and nausea. Neurological examination showed left abducens nerve palsy, left facial nerve palsy, Bruns' nystagmus, and wide-based gait. Neuroimaging demonstrated a lesion with moderate linear enhancement in the left cerebellar hemisphere. He underwent stereotactic needle biopsy. The histological diagnosis was well-differentiated small lymphocytic type of malignant lymphoma. Following the biopsy, the patient underwent radiotherapy (whole brain 30 Gy, local 20 Gy). He has been in good condition for more than 5 years. The long-term survival is attributable to the absence of aggressiveness and the good response to radiation of this subtype of malignant lymphoma.
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PMID:Primary malignant lymphoma of the brain in childhood. 963 39

Central nervous system involvement in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) requires immediate treatment. We report a case in a 30-year-old woman. Clinical features associated asthenia, headache, right nystagmus and coma. A mechanical ventilation was started. The neurologic pattern appeared three months after an initial treatment with pulsed doses of glucocorticoid (500 mg per day for 3 days) and one month after an oral cyclophosphamid regimen (50 mg twice a week). The cerebral involvement was evidenced by MRI and comparative analysis of the antinuclear auto antibodies (ANA) and the complement components in cerebral spinal fluid (CSF), pleural fluid and serum. The MRI slices showed a well-defined meningeal focal lesion. CSF-cell count was normal. CSF-proteins were elevated. ANA were positive, total complement (UI/l) was low, C4 component (g/l) was 0.11, undetectable and 0.25 respectively in plasma, CSF fluid and pleural fluid. The ANA specific pattern was anti-Sm2. We affirmed that specific cerebral injury was present because there were clinical and imaging features and a decrease of the C3 and C4 component in the CSF. The treatment associated in travenous pulsed doses of methylprednisolone (1000 mg per days for 3 days) and cyclophosphamid (500 mg per day for three days). Mechanical ventilation was with drawn one day after the end of the pulse therapy. The diminution of the complement component could help improving cerebral involvement of SLE. More clinical studies are required.
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PMID:[Cerebrospinal fluid complement and antinuclear antibodies in lupus meningoencephalitis]. 977 91


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