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)

A metastatic seminoma of the right temporal fossa, with facial pain, extraocular paresis, otitis, and abdominal symptoms, was found in a 34-year-old man one year after orchidectomy for a primary testicular tumor that had been treated by surgery and radiotherapy. This is an unusual intracranial metastatic tumor that merits active treatment.
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PMID:Metastatic intracranial seminoma. 42 Jun 4

Since 1978, the authors have observed 7 cases of dissecting aneurysm in the internal carotid artery. Symptoms were severe headache and subsequent neurologic deficit in young persons (3 women, 4 men; mean age 35 years). The underlying pathology was spontaneous dissection of the cervical internal carotid artery, with surgical confirmation in 3 cases and typical angiographic patterns in all cases. Spontaneous dissection of the cervical internal carotid artery is being increasingly recognized as a cause of cerebral ischemia in young adults. Moreover this clinicopathologic event is more common than had previously been supposed. The etiology remains unclear, except in 15% of cases in which dystrophy of the media (Marfan's syndrome) is in cause. No history of cervical trauma can be found. Typical clinical features consist in ipsilateral headache preceding an abrupt neurologic deficit in a 40-year-old person. An incomplete Horner syndrome (oculosympathetic paresis without facial anhidrosis) associated with facial pain and numbness is pathognomonic, but the majority of dissections are less typical. The typical angiographic pattern is an elongated regular stenosis of the high cervical internal carotid artery, 2 cm above the non-involved bulbus ("string sign"). The dissection may modify to a tapered occlusion above the point of origin of the internal carotid artery. The natural course is spontaneous resolution of the stricture, without relapse. Optimal management is non-operative since medical treatment has proved to be efficient. These cases confirm the benign course and overall good prognosis of spontaneous dissections of the internal carotid artery which are not as rare as the scarcity of reports might indicate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Spontaneous dissection of the internal carotid artery. Apropos of 7 cases and a review of the literature]. 217 45

We reported a 71-year-old male with lateral medullary syndrome presented acute respiratory arrest after ataxic respiration. The patient had experienced transient diplopia repeatedly for about 2 weeks and then the developed persistent diplopia and vertigo. On the third day he was admitted to our hospital because of neurological deterioration and aspiration pneumonia. He showed left Horner's sign and double vision. And he had sensory disturbances of pain and temperature in the left face and the right side of the body, left limb ataxia and truncal ataxia. He showed dysarthria, severe dysphagia and left mild central facial paresis, but no hemiparesis. This case was clinically considered to be a typical case of left lateral medullary syndrome. When he was admitted to our hospital, he showed hypoxia with hypercapnea in spite of no history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. This condition was considered to be a central alveolar hypoventilation. He had two episodes of sudden-onset respiratory arrest following ataxic respiration on the 4th and 5th days, but no cardiac arrest. He was supported his respiration by mechanical ventilation until he was able to breathe spontaneously on the 29th day. The 22nd day MRI disclosed high intensity area in the left lateral and dorso-medial medulla in T2-weighted image, and this lesion was 1.5 cm in length. Therefore this case was diagnosed medullary infarction. This case developed ipsilateral facial pain in chronic stage. Pain existed around the eye and in the cheek, and pain was like toothache and unbearable like thalamic pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of medullary infarction presented lateral medullary syndrome and respiratory arrest after ataxic respiration]. 268 32

Raeder's syndrome consists of oculosympathetic paresis and ipsilateral facial pain, with variable involvement of the trigeminal and oculomotor nerves. A 63-year-old woman experienced severe facial pain, a partial Horner's syndrome, and restriction of ocular movements on the left side. A left carotid angiogram disclosed a giant aneurysm of the cavernous portion of the internal carotid artery. This is the third reported case of Raeder's syndrome due to aneurysm of the intracranial internal carotid artery. Her facial pain was relieved by carotid ligation, and serial computed tomographic scans showed decrease of aneurysmal size.
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PMID:Raeder's syndrome associated with intracranial internal carotid artery aneurysm. 380 74

Facial numbness and dysesthesia have not been emphasized as presenting features in spontaneous internal carotid artery dissection. Progressive facial pain, accompanied by oculosympathetic paresis, altered taste, and facial numbness suggest the possibility of basal skull neoplasm. We describe a patient, with previously undiscovered fibromuscular dysplasia, who presented with severe neck and face pain, dysgeusia, oculosympathetic paresis, and markedly reduced facial sensation due to a spontaneous vascular dissection. Altered facial sensation should now be included in the symptomatology of internal carotid artery dissection.
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PMID:Facial numbness and dysesthesia. New features of carotid artery dissection. 382 88

A case of granular cell tumor of the major salivary glands is presented. This tumor appeared as an expansive multinodular mass that arose from facial nerve trunks. The presenting symptoms of facial pain and paresis and the intraoperative findings of tumor adhesion to nerves led to the clinical impression of malignancy. At intraoperative consultation, the tumor resembled an acinic cell carcinoma. Pathologists should be aware that granular cell tumors may involve the major salivary glands and that it should be considered in the diagnostic differential diagnosis.
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PMID:Granular cell tumor of the parotid. 999 Jan 11

Internal carotid artery dissection (ICAD) is a known cause of unilateral headache and focal cerebral ischemic symptoms. Other symptoms include oculosympathetic paresis, facial pain, neck pain, subjective carotid bruits, and cranial nerve deficits. Traumatic dissection has an obvious precipitating incident preceding the neurologic or visual symptoms. An ICAD that occurs spontaneously or from trivial trauma usually lacks an obvious incident and thus requires awareness of its possibility for accurate detection and treatment. Dissections arise from a defect in the internal elastic lamina allowing penetration of blood into the arterial wall. Despite its low incidence, ICAD must be considered in young to middle-aged patients who present with headache and transient cerebral or retinal ischemic symptoms. This report describes a patient who had bilateral internal carotid artery dissections following trivial trauma. The etiologies, clinical manifestations, diagnostic modalities, treatment options, and outcomes of ICAD are discussed.
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PMID:Bilateral internal carotid artery dissection due to trivial trauma. 1086 16

A 75-year-old woman presented with fever and right temporal, periorbital and facial pain for 7 days. Physical examination revealed an ipsilateral paresis of the superior division of the oculomotor nerve with mild exophthalmos. She also had hyperglycemia. CT scan of the paranasal sinuses showed acute sinusitis. Rhinoscopy demonstrated black necrotic tissue in the nasal septum. KOH preparation of tissue biopsy specimen revealed large, non septate hyphae with right angle branching, diagnostic of rhinocerebral mucormycosis. She was treated with amphotericin B, surgical debridement and insulin therapy. Surgical tissue specimen also confirmed mucormycosis. She improved after treatment, but 4 months later, ptosis and upward palsy still persisted.
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PMID:Superior branch palsy of the oculomotor nerve caused by rhinocerebral mucormycosis. 1156 Feb 25

In young and middle age subjects, spontaneous carotid dissection is an increasingly recognized cause of ischemic stroke. Their usual presentation is facial pain with a Horner syndrome and a contra lateral paresis. Blindness has been reported as a presenting symptom in only a few cases. We report a 50 years old man who presented with amblyopia in the left eye, without periocular pain. Fundoscopy showed papilledema and a peripapillar hemorrhage, compatible with an ischemic optic neuropathy. A magnetic resonance angiography confirmed a left carotid dissection.
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PMID:[Blindness caused by an ischemic optic neuropathy by spontaneous carotid dissection. Report of a case]. 1463 92

Recurrent unbearable, paroxysmal, unilateral facial pain in the distribution of one or more branches of the trigeminal nerve often provoked by sensory stimuli is typical for idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia. The less frequent localization in the area of ophthalmic branch (5%) is particularly controversial and should be distinguished from pathological lesions in the brainstem and middle and posterior cranial fossa and from diseases of the orbit and eye. This case study presents a 79-year-old woman with typical clinical features of 1st division trigeminalgia without any neurological loss and with normal results of laryngological, ophthalmological, and stomatological examinations as well as neuroimaging CT, and MR /MRA evaluation. Only the evoked potential blink and masseter reflexes demonstrated the pathological values in the early phase of illness. After 1 year of pharmacological treatment no improvement was achieved and the pain became neuropathic and paresis of 3rd, 4th and 6th nerves developed, as observed in Tolose-Hunt syndrome. MRI of the orbit revealed a pathological mass in its apex with a connection to the superior orbital fissure. However, treatment with steroids was completely ineffective. Surgical resection of the tumor (leiomyosarcoma) only partially reversed oculomotor palsy and diminished aching. In differential diagnosis of idiopathic and symptomatic trigeminalgia, early MR and MRA imaging is the most essential and sometimes may be the best single test to evaluate lesions even in distant areas of the nervous system branches.
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PMID:Progression of preexisting trigeminalgia to Tolose-Hunt-like syndrome. The importance of neuroimaging for early differential diagnosis. 1465 50


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