Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acupuncture has been practiced in the treatment of many diseases in Japan. "Okibari" is one of the procedures in acupuncture treatment: a fine stainless steel or silver needle is inserted into the subcutaneous tissue through the skin, to remain in the subcutaneous tissue. A 57-year-old pharmacist was knocked down by a motorcycle in 1971, since then moderate weakness of left extremities and stiffness of muscles have remained as sequelae. She was consequently treated with acupuncture. Many small needles were inserted permanently in the nuchal, occipital and other areas of the body ten to twelve years before she developed gradual clumsiness and
dysesthesia
in her right hand in 1984. When she was admitted for the first time in 1985, neurological examination revealed left Horner's syndrome and diminished deep sensation in her right extremities with pseudo-athetosis of her right hand, along with spastic
paresis
of left extremities and right carpal tunnel syndrome. An old needle which had strayed into left dorsal medulla was considered to be responsible for these symptoms. In 1988 loss of pain and temperature sensation in the right side of her body below the shoulder, and diminished deep sensation of left extremities were appended, and weakness of her left extremities became aggravated. Pseudo-athetosis of her right hand was seen less prominently. In plain X-ray films many needle shadows were visualized. On CT scan needle shadows could be seen also in the left dorsal medulla, right cerebellum and in the subarachnoid space of left dorsal C1-C2 level.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Acupuncture needles, straying in the central nervous system and presenting neurological signs and symptoms]. 227 62
The authors report a case of compression of the posterior tibial nerve by a cyst originating from the superior tibio-fibular joint. The clinical signs were
dysesthesia
of the sole of the foot and
paresis
of the toe flexors. The diagnosis was obtained by electromyographic studies. The patient recovered completely after surgical excision of the cyst, which had developed beneath the tendinous arch of origin of the soleus muscle.
...
PMID:[A case of compression of the posterior tibial nerve by a synovial cyst with impact on the superior tibiofibular joint]. 356 44
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.
...
PMID:Facial numbness and dysesthesia. New features of carotid artery dissection. 382 88
It is well known that thromboembolism is 1 of the most serious side effects of oral contraceptives (OCs). In Japan, however, reports of thromboembolism following use of OCs are rare, since their clinical use in Japan is restricted to treatment of menstrual irregularities. We reported here on 2 patients affected with cerebrovascular occlusive diseases associated with the administration of OCs. The 1st case was that of a 32-year old woman who developed headaches,
paresis
, and
dysesthesia
of the right limbs following daily intake for 20 days of OCs (0.15 mg mestranol and 5 mg lynestrenol). Neurological symptoms as well as examinations led to the diagnosis of a kind of thalamic syndrome due to cerebral thrombosis. The 2nd case was that of a 37-year old woman who developed right hemiparesis following daily consumption over a 21 day period of OCs as administered above. Clinical symptoms and neurological examinations led to the diagnosis of right hemiparesis due to cerebral thrombosis. The pathogenesis of cerebral thrombosis caused by taking OCs was discussed mainly in connection with coagulation and fibrinolysis. Certain evidence suggesting that hypercoagulability may play a major role in the pathogenesis of thromboembolism during OC ingestion has been derived from the works of other investigators. It is true that estrogen in this compound may induce a state in which an increase in coagulation factors together with a decrease of antithrombin 3 combine to produce hypercoagulation; laboratory tests with our patients, however, produced nothing compatible with a state of hypercoagulability. (author's modified)
...
PMID:[Cerebral thrombosis in woman receiving oral contraceptives: report of two cases (author's transl)]. 746 38
A case of epidermoid carcinoma in the cerebello-pontine (CP) angle is presented. A 42-year-old male was admitted with a complaint of experiencing double vision for four months in January, 1992. During neurological examination, right abducens palsy, right facial
dysesthesia
, and atrophy of the right temporal muscle were noted. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging revealed a mass of low intensity in the right CP angle, which was prominently enhanced with gadolinium. Malignancy was suspected because the tumor on MR enlarged rapidly in a month, so the first surgical resection was performed. Suboccipital exploration of the right CP angle was performed in February. At first, a fragile, pearly part of the mass typical of epidermoid was exposed behind the seventh and eighth cranial nerve complex. Then, a grayish, fibrous part was exposed, which involved the fifth cranial nerve and was attached to the tentorium and the brainstem. Histological diagnosis of the fragile part of the tumor revealed a typical epidermoid cyst and that of the fibrous part was squamous cell carcinoma. During postoperative examinations on other parts of the body, such as endoscopic studies of the trachea and the esophagus, no abnormality was shown. Therefore the tumor was diagnosed as a primary intracranial epidermoid carcinoma. Post-operatively, conventional fractionated external-beam focal irradiation was carried out, which caused regression of the residual tumor for eleven months. Subsequently, palsy of the right side of the tongue and
paresis
of the contralateral side of the extremities and face developed with increase of the right abducens palsy. MR imaging indicated regrowth of the tumor. The second operation via the subtemporal approach was unsuccessful, because the tumor was fibrous and firmly attached to the brainstem.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case report of epidermoid carcinoma in the cerebello-pontine angle]. 747
There is a lack of prospective studies for the long-term results of percutaneous stereotactic radiofrequency rhizotomy (PSR) in the treatment of patients with trigeminal neuralgia. The authors present results in 154 consecutive patients with trigeminal neuralgia treated by PSR and prospectively followed for 15 years. Ninety-nine percent of the patients obtained initial pain relief after one PSR.
Dysesthesia
occurred in 31 patients (23%): in 7% with mild initial hypalgesia; in 15% with dense hypalgesia; and in 36% with analgesia.
Dysesthesia
was mild and did not require treatment in most patients. The corneal reflex was absent or depressed in 29 patients, and keratitis developed in three patients. In 19 of 22 patients with trigeminal motor weakness, the
paresis
resolved within 1 year. Of 33 patients who had pain recurrence, 10 patients had pain that was mild or controlled with medications, and 23 patients required additional surgical treatment. The authors estimated using Kaplan-Meier analysis that the 14-year recurrence rate was 25% in the total group: 60% in patients with mild hypalgesia, 25% in those with dense hypalgesia, and 20% in those with analgesia. Timing of pain recurrence varied according to the degree of sensory loss. All pain recurrences in patients with mild hypalgesia occurred within 4 years after surgery; 10% more of the patients with dense hypalgesia had pain recurrences within the first 10 years compared with patients with analgesia. The median pain-free survival rate was 32 months for patients with mild hypalgesia and more than 15 years for patients with either analgesia or dense hypalgesia. Of the 100 patients followed for 15 years after one or two PSR procedures, 95 patients (95%) rated the procedure excellent (77 patients) or good (18 patients). The authors conclude that PSR is an effective, safe treatment for trigeminal neuralgia. Dense hypalgesia in the painful trigger zone, rather than analgesia, should be the target lesion.
...
PMID:A prospective 15-year follow up of 154 consecutive patients with trigeminal neuralgia treated by percutaneous stereotactic radiofrequency thermal rhizotomy. 749 Jun 43
Ninety of 110 consecutive patients with rheumatoid deformities of the cervical spine surgically treated had associated neurologic deficits. Fifty-five patients had atlantoaxial subluxation. In this group, there were 16 Ranawat Class I patients (normal), 21 Class II (weakness, hyperreflexia,
dysesthesia
), 13 Class IIIA (
paresis
and long-tract findings but can ambulate), and five Class IIIB (quadriparesis and inability to ambulate). After C1-C2 stabilization, 94.8% improved at least one class. Twenty-two patients had AAS-SMO (atlanto-axial subluxation and superior migration of the odontoid) only one before surgery was Class I, five Class II, eight Class IIIA, and eight Class IIIB. Seventy-six percent improved at least one class after surgery. Nineteen had isolated subaxial subluxation (SAS). Three were Class I, two Class II, nine Class IIIA, and five were Class IIIB. After surgery, 94% improved at least one class, and all were ambulating. Fourteen had combined AAS-SMO-SAS deformities. There were no Class I patients, only four Class II, four Class IIIA, and six Class IIIB. After surgery, 71% improved. The four deaths that occurred in the immediate postoperative period were Class IIIB. Fifteen patients had worsening or recurrence of their symptoms. Thirteen of these were related to the later development of subaxial subluxation. Neurologic symptoms and recovery were related to severity of the deformity. Those with SMO had greater neurologic deficits and worse results. In general, neurologic recovery is encouraging even in the IIIB patient. Earlier surgery should be done, however, particularly before SMO develops, if possible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cervical spine surgery in rheumatoid arthritis: improvement of neurologic deficit after cervical spine fusion. 830 35
This report details a traumatic spinal column lesion due to a lap seat belt. A healthy 22-year-old woman was involved in a car accident and suffered a lumbar luxation fracture at the level L1-L2. She developed acute transsectional symptoms with paraplegia and severe hyperpathia in her legs. Plain radiographs (antero-posterior and lateral projection) and lumbar CT scans demonstrated an instable flexion-distraction fracture with ventral compression of the vertebral body of L2 and ventrolisthesis of L1 over L2. Surgical reposition of the luxation fracture and removal of a spinal epidural hematoma was performed 4 h after the trauma. Stabilization was achieved by monosegmental dorsal transpedicular spondylodesis with a fixateur interne. In follow-up the neurological deficits markedly improved. Six months after the trauma, the patient is able to walk, has no
paresis
and no genitourinary disturbances: only mild
dysesthesia
remains. This posttraumatic course confirms that spinal traumas below L1 which spare the conus have a favorable prognosis, because the peripheral nerves of the cauda equina are able to recover. This injured patient was the only one using a lap seat belt; the other four passengers in the same compact car-wearing lap and diagonal seat belts-suffered no harm. We conclude that lap seat belts are not acceptable as an adequate security standard in modern automobile technology.
...
PMID:[Lumbar dislocation fracture with paraplegia after pelvic seat belt injury. Case report]. 903 59
We report a non-hypertensive 23-year-old female with successive hemorrhages in parietal subcortical regions. She had first experienced a transient pain in the left upper extremity one month before admission. She noticed
dysesthesia
in the same limb and weakness on her left hand, and, five days after, visited our hospital because of suddenly developed convulsion in the limb and loss of consciousness for a few minutes. Neurological examination revealed distal dominant flaccid
paresis
, positive pathological reflex and touch and position sense disturbances in the affected limb. Brain CT detected two high-density areas in the parietal lobe. Brain MRI demonstrated an acute phase subcortical hematoma in the left postcentral gyrus and a subacute phase one in the left superior parietal lobule. SPECT indicated hypoperfusion in the left frontal and parietal cortex. Cerebral angiography showed no abnormal findings. Her symptoms gradually improved, but left ulnar-type pseudoradicular sensory impairment remained on discharge. We considered the hemorrhage in this patient have arisen from rupture of cavernous hemangioma, because she was relatively young, the hematomas were oval in shape and successively developed in the left parietal lobe. Our patient suggests that a subcortical hemorrhage in the post-central gyrus causes flaccid
paresis
and pyramidal tract involvement.
...
PMID:[Successive subcortical hemorrhages in the superior parietal lobule and postcentral gyrus in a 23-year-old female]. 959 29
We report a case of acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) in a 45-year-old woman. Her first attack occurred at the age of 38. Because of escalating cyclical premenstrual attacks, the following 2 years, depletion of the endogenous sex hormone was considered as haeme arginate treatment proved insufficient. Gonadotropin releasing hormone agonist treatment with low-dose oestradiol add back was quite successful initially but was abandoned after 18 months when progesterone add back precipitated a severe attack. Following hysterectomy and oophorectomy at age 42 and oestradiol add back, a remarkable monthly regularity of attacks ensured periodically but with milder symptoms. Two years after surgery, preceded by six attack-free months, a puzzling symptom-shift occurred, from abdominal pain, back and thigh pain during the attacks, to solely severe distal extensor
paresis
in the arms. Haeme arginate treatment interrupted the progress of the
paresis
almost immediately and motor function improved considerably up to the 9-month follow-up. Electrophysiological examination revealed only motor neuropathy, consistent with axonal degeneration. Subsequently the symptoms changed yet again, to sensory disturbances with numbness and
dysesthesia
as the primary expression followed by rather mild abdominal pain. However, cyclical attacks occurred, despite absence of endogenous ovarial hormone production, possibly attributable to impaired oestrogen metabolism in the liver, or adrenal oestrogen production. Treatment comprising oophorectomy, low-dose oestradiol add back and haeme arginate infusion for 2 days on the appearance of early AIP symptoms is now quite successful affording improvement in life quality.
...
PMID:Atypical attack of acute intermittent porphyria--paresis but no abdominal pain. 1227 8
1
2
3
Next >>