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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We investigated the relationship of neurologic, neuropsychological, and social interaction impairments to the work status of a large sample of penetrating head-injured patients wounded some 15 years earlier during combat in Vietnam. Extensive standardized testing of neurologic, neuropsychological, and social functioning was done at follow-up on each head-injured patient (N = 520), as well as on a sample of uninjured controls (N = 85). Fifty-six percent of the head-injured patients were working at follow-up compared with 82% of the uninjured controls. Seven systematically defined impairments proved to be most correlated with work status. These were post-traumatic epilepsy,
paresis
, visual field loss, verbal
memory loss
, visual
memory loss
, psychological problems, and violent behavior. These disabilities had a cumulative and nearly equipotent effect upon the likelihood of work. We suggest that a simple summed score of the number of these seven disabilities can yield a residual "disability score" which may prove to be a practical tool for assessing the likelihood of return to work for patients in this population and perhaps in other brain-injured populations. These findings may also help to focus rehabilitation efforts on those disabilities most likely to affect return to work.
...
PMID:Residual impairments and work status 15 years after penetrating head injury: report from the Vietnam Head Injury Study. 842 17
We reported a 32-year-old man with general
paresis
. He showed slowly progressive bradykinesia and recent
memory loss
. Argyll Robertson pupils were not present. Muscle strength and sensations were normal except for slight vibratory disturbance. Tendon reflexes were slightly exaggerated. MMSE, HDS-R and WAIS-R scores showed the intellectual impairment. His laboratory investigations revealed elevated both TPHA and FTA-ABS titers in the serum and the CSF. The CSF contained leukocytosis (25/mm3) and protein 80 mg/dl. Cranial CT and MRI demonstrated diffuse cortical atrophy. SPECT revealed marked reduction of the blood flow in bilateral cerebral hemisphere. Cerebral angiography revealed moderate stenosis of the major vessels. The diagnosis of neurosyphilis (general
paresis
) was made and the treatment of intravenous benzyl penicillin potassium 24 million units per day was started. After 6 weeks of the treatment, the clinical signs (includes MMSE, HDS-R and WAIS-R scores) and the findings of SPECT and cerebral angiography showed improvement. Although the cell count and protein in the CSF became decreased, the titers of TPHA and FTA-ABS in the serum and the CSF were not decreased. Neurosyphilis should always be considered in a etiologically unknown case with bradykinesia and dementia.
...
PMID:[Therapeutic case of general paresis manifested by bradykinesia and recent memory loss]. 1061 61
Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning is an important cause of mortality and late neurological sequelae such as
memory loss
, personality changes, psychosis, dementia, and so on. The benefits of hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) therapy are still discussed, but the majority of trials recommend it in severe cases with coma and/or hemodynamic instability, irrespective of carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) level, to prevent permanent neurological deficits. We present a 35-yr-old woman who underwent accidental CO poisoning. Although breathing 100% oxygen by mask during transfer to the hospital, she was in deep coma, hypotensive, cyanotic, and hypoxic (arterial pO(2) 7,41 kPa, HbO(2) 87.8%), with serum COHb 26.7% on hospital admission. Orotracheal intubation, mechanical ventilation, iv fluids, dobutamin, and norepinephrine were administered. COHb level decreased to 17.2% within 1 h. To prevent severe neurological sequelae, the patient was transferred as soon as possible to an HBO center 60 km distant to perform HBO therapy twice at 3.0 and once at 2.2 atm within 24 h. After the second HBO session, the patient regained consciousness, and respiratory failure and shock resolved. She was transferred to our hospital and discharged few weeks later with discrete
paresis
of peripheral nerves, discrete ischemic brain lesions on computed tomography (CT) scan, and moderately abnormal electroencephalogram (EEG) without cognitive disturbances. She was able to resume her daily activities. We conclude that in severe CO poisoning, normobaric oxygen therapy and resuscitation by fluids, inotropic agents, and catecholamines is essential for survival, but additional HBO therapy seems to prevent major neurological sequelae.
...
PMID:Severe carbon monoxide poisoning treated by hyperbaric oxygen therapy--a case report. 1639 63
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is frequently used in the presurgical diagnostic procedure of epilepsy patients, in particular for lateralization of speech and memory and for localization of the primary motor cortex to delineate the epileptogenic lesion from eloquent brain areas. fMRI is one of the non-invasive procedures in the presurgical diagnostic process, together with medical history, seizure semiology, neurological examination, interictal and ictal EEG, structural MRI, video EEG monitoring and neuropsychology. This diagnostic sequence leads either to the decision for or against elective epilepsy surgery or to the decision to proceed with invasive diagnostic techniques (Wada test, intra-operative or extra-operative cortical stimulation). It is difficult to evaluate the contribution of the fMRI test in isolation to the validity of the entire diagnostic sequence. Complications such as
memory loss
and aphasia in temporal lobe resections or
paresis
after frontal lobe resections are rare and rarely of disastrous extent. This further complicates the evaluation of the clinical relevance of fMRI as a predictive tool. In this article studies which investigated the concordance between fMRI and other diagnostic gold standards will be presented as well as the association between presurgical fMRI and postsurgical morbidity.
...
PMID:[Clinical application of functional MRI for chronic epilepsy]. 2003 27
Authors report a case of a 35-year-old male with right-sided mild
paresis
, incontinence, dysexecutive syndrome, short-term
memory loss
and behavioral changes. Bilateral cerebral infarcts in the region of the caudate nuclei and the adjacent white matter were proved by brain MRI and multiple stenoses of the branches of Willis-circle were confirmed by MR angiography. Elevated protein level and pleocytosis were found in the cerebrospinal fluid with intrathecal IgG synthesis. Serum rapid plasma reagin, Treponema pallidum Particle Agglutination test, Treponema pallidum ELISA, liquor Venereal Disease Research Laboratory tests were positive. Meningovascular neurosyphilis was diagnosed. 24M U/day intravenous penicillin-G treatment was given for 14 days. The patient has vascular dementia due to the bilateral strategic infarcts disconnecting the prefrontal circuits; his symptoms are similar to general
paresis
. Laboratory and radiologic improvement was observed. Still, the patient have severe residual cognitive decline.
...
PMID:[Meningovascular neurosyphilis as the cause of ischemic cerebrovascular disease in a young man]. 2149 67
The incidence of neurosyphilis has declined dramatically because of the availability of penicillin. However, in recent years there has been an increase in the occurence of neurosyphilis. General paresis, a form of parenchymatous neurosyphilis, causes dementia. Some of the symptoms include
loss of memory
, poor understanding and judgment, and behavioral changes. It is important to distinguish general
paresis
from neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, because with precise diagnosis and treatment, complete recovery is possible We describe epidemiological data, diagnosis and treatment of neurosyphilis as well as present our cases.
...
PMID:[Neurosyphilis and Dementia]. 2705 49
Hashimoto encephalopathy (HE) is characterized by heterogeneous neurological symptoms. HE is diagnosed based on three criteria-the presence of antithyroid antibodies, neurological symptoms from the cerebrum and/or cerebellum, and a positive response to immunotherapy. We clinically analyzed 18 patients (3 men, 15 women; age range, 38-81years) diagnosed with HE in our hospital from May 2013 to January 2016. Eleven patients showed sensory abnormalities such as strong pain, deep muscle pain, dysesthesia, paresthesia, or neuralgia. Surprisingly, the majority of the pain was distributed in a manner that was not explainable anatomically. Seventeen patients showed motor disturbances, such as weakness,
paresis
of extremities, or dexterity movement disorder, and eight patients showed give-way weakness, which is disruption of continuous muscle contraction. Other symptoms indicative of brain-related anomalies such as tremor, dystonia, involuntary movements, cerebellar ataxia, parkinsonism,
memory loss
, and chronic fatigue were also seen. In most patients, such motor, sensory, or higher brain functions were markedly improved with immunosuppressive therapies such as prednisolone, azathioprine, or immunoadsorption therapy. Although give-way weakness and anatomically unexplainable pain are typically considered as being psychogenic in origin, the presence of these symptoms is indicative of HE. HE exhibits diffuse involvement of the entire brain and thus, these symptoms are explainable. We propose that physicians should not diagnose somatoform disorders without first excluding autoimmune encephalopathy.
...
PMID:[Clinical Features and Treatment of Hashimoto Encephalopathy]. 2766 88