Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cervical spinal cord neurapraxia (CCN) leads to transient episodes ranging from paresthesia to paresis to plegia (complete paralysis), and occurs in athletes with some demonstrable degree of cervical spinal stenosis. Determination of spinal stenosis requires demonstrating a sagittal diameter of the spinal canal less than 14 mm from C4 to C6. Because radiologic techniques vary affecting the accuracy of this measure, a ratio method was developed comparing the spinal canal to the vertebral body width, demonstrating that a ratio of less than 0.8 is indicative of cervical spinal stenosis. Although this has high sensitivity (93%), the low predictive value of 0.2% makes this a poor screening tool for athletic participation. Further complicating the challenge of determining which athletes are at risk for quadriplegia are data showing that athletes who suffered permanent injury did not recall transient episodes of CCN, and conversely none of the athletes with CCN later developed permanent neurologic injury. Nevertheless, 56% of football athletes returning to sport after an episode of CCN experienced a recurrence as determined by survey data. Those with CCN and documented ligamentous instability, magnetic resonance imaging evidence of cord defects or swelling, neurologic symptoms or signs for greater than 36 hours, or more than one recurrence have an absolute contraindication.
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PMID:Cervical spinal stenosis with cord neurapraxia: evaluations and decisions regarding participation in athletics. 1283 46

Segmental zoster paresis is a rare complication of herpes zoster, characterized by focal motor weakness that does not always present simultaneously with skin lesions. Zoster paresis can be easily confused with other neuromuscular or spinal diseases. This case report describes the case of a 72-year-old woman with herpes zoster and cervical spinal stenosis at the same spinal level, where it was difficult to distinguish segmental zoster paresis from cervical radiculopathy combined with motor neuropathy. Although segmental zoster paresis in the upper extremity is rare, it should be included in the differential diagnosis of segmental pain and weakness in the extremities, especially in older or immunocompromised patients. Correct diagnosis is required, to avoid unnecessary surgery and allow timely antiviral treatment.
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PMID:Zoster-associated segmental paresis in a patient with cervical spinal stenosis. 2362 22

A 59-year-old left-handed man presented with chest pain and hypertension and was found to have an acute descending aortic dissection on imaging. After thoracic endovascular repair of the dissection, he developed left arm weakness and ischemia. Despite carotid-subclavian transposition, the patient was found to have persistent left triceps weakness as well as bilateral leg paresis. An urgent spinal drain was placed that improved his lower extremity deficit but did not greatly change his arm symptoms. Magnetic resonance imaging of the spine revealed previously undiagnosed severe multilevel spinal stenosis requiring operative decompression. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the contribution of cervical spinal stenosis to post-thoracic endovascular repair spinal ischemia.
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PMID:An unusual cause of spinal cord ischemia after thoracic endovascular repair. 2556 98