Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A rare but difficult to treat complication of midtrimester abortion is cervicovaginal fistula. It has been reported as a consequence of criminal, spontaneous, and induced abortions with either laminaria, Hegar dilatation, puncture of the ovum, or by injection of soap. This condition was recently reported as a consequence of intraamniotic hypertonic saline or prostaglandin (PG) instillation. At the Women's Hospital in Los Angeles, 5291 midtrimester abortions with intraamniotic instillation of hypertonic saline had been performed since the advent of elective abortion. There were 4 cases of central cervical rupture (cervicovaginal fistula) for a net incidence of 1:1000. 3 out of 373 intraamniotic PGF2alpha-treated patients developed cervical fistula for an incidence 10 times higher than saline abortion. Other studies confirm this finding. If all such studies are combined, the net incidence is 9 in 678 cases or 1.3%. High risk patients include those who are pregnant for the 1st time, are less than 21 years old, and are treated with hypertonic saline augmented by oxytocin. The fistula may occur with intraamniotic PGF2alpha alone, but the incidence is greater in patients receiving PGs and oxytocin together. A recurring feature is a moderate to severe cramping pain without cervical response even before oxytocin is started. The use of mechanical dilatation of the cervix with the introduction of either laminaria tents or Foley catheters is suggested for primigravid patients receiving hypertonic saline and intravenous oxytocin augmentation. If cervical spasm is the mechanism of action of PGF2alpha, initial insertion of laminaria should be considered with all primigravid patients. Further study of a larger series should be done to elucidate the role of PGs in the development of cervicovaginal fistula. 7 case reports are presented.
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PMID:Cervicovaginal fistula: an apparent increased incidence with prostaglandin F2alpha. 484 42

We report a 3-year-6-month-old boy with chordoid meningioma in the foramen magnum. Chordoid meningioma represents between 0.5 and 1.0% of all meningiomas, and it is frequently located in the supratentorial region. The patient started with an episode of instability, falls, and headache; after which, he developed cuadriparesis, cervical pain, and neck stiffness, which slightly improved after medical treatment, so he was referred to our hospital. Physical examination revealed left hemiparesis and cervical muscle spasm with left torticollis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated an intradural-extramedullary well-circumscribed, homogeneous enhancing mass, in the anterior part of the foramen magnum with cervical extension. The operative technique was the extreme-lateral craniocervical retrocondylar approach with total removal and dural coagulation. Histopathological examination demonstrated a chordoid meningioma, with meningotelial basophilic mucoid chordoma-like component in 80% of the tissue. The immunohistochemical stains were positive to epithelial membrane antigen, vimentin, and S-100 protein. At 10 months follow-up, the patient showed improvement in his neurological deficit with physical rehabilitation, and motor response in his extremities are now normal; neck stiffness with cervical spasm disappeared postoperatively. MRI showed no residual tumor. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a chordoid meningioma on the foramen magnum in a child.
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PMID:Chordoid meningioma of the foramen magnum in a child: a case report and review of the literature. 1821 97