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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The case of a 31-year-old man who died after a 4 month illness of adult subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (Leigh) is reported. The disease presented with visual disturbances and the principal symptoms were ptosis, a conjugate ophthalmoparesis and a slight tremor of the hands. The case was misdiagnosed as probable multiple sclerosis. Neuropathology disclosed characteristic symmetrical necrotizing lesions, mainly localized in the brain stem. The similarity of the lesions with Wernicke's disease is pointed out. Possible etiological and pathogenetic factors are discussed.
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PMID:Subacute necrotizing encephalopathy (Leigh) in an adult. 71 Apr 52

Many neurologic disorders, such as eclampsia, pseudotumor cerebri, stroke, obstetric nerve palsies, subarachnoid hemorrhage, pituitary tumors, and choriocarcinoma, can develop in the pregnant patient. Maternal mortality from eclampsia, which ranges from 0 to 14%, can be due to intracerebral hemorrhage, pulmonary edema, disseminated intravascular coagulation, abruptio placentae, or failure of the liver or kidneys. Associated fetal mortality ranges from 10 to 28% and is directly related to decreased placental perfusion. Pseudotumor cerebri can be associated with serious visual complications; thus, the therapeutic goal is to prevent loss of vision. The risk of stroke in the pregnant patient is 13 times the risk in the nonpregnant patient of the same age. The major causes of stroke in pregnant patients are arterial occlusion and cerebral venous thrombosis. Lumbar disk prolapse is common in pregnant patients, and lumbosacral plexus injuries can occur during labor or delivery. In addition, peripheral nerve compression or entrapment syndromes are thought to be caused by the retention of fluid during pregnancy. The incidence of subarachnoid hemorrhage during pregnancy is 1 in every 10,000 patients, a rate 5 times higher than in nonpregnant women. Because of a proliferation of prolactin-secreting cells, the pituitary gland can enlarge dramatically during pregnancy, a change that can disclose a previously unknown tumor or cause a known pituitary tumor to become symptomatic. The incidence of choriocarcinoma is 1 in 50,000 full-term pregnancies but 1 in 30 molar pregnancies. This malignant tumor has a high rate of cerebral metastatic lesions. In addition to these disorders that develop during pregnancy, the pregnant state can affect numerous preexisting neurologic conditions, including epilepsy, headaches, multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, spinal cord injury, and brain tumors. We discuss advice for patients with such conditions who wish to become pregnant, recommendations for medical and surgical management, and surgical considerations for neurologic complications during pregnancy.
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PMID:Selected neurologic complications of pregnancy. 225 22

13 (59%) of 22 cases of confirmed multiple sclerosis were of acute or subacute onset and 12 cases (18 eyes) had acute retrobulbar neuritis with acute visual impairment as the initial symptom. During the course of disease, other ocular complaints occurred, such as ptosis, diplopia, nystagmus, pupil signs, visual field defects, or optic nerve disorders. The initial symptoms, clinical manifestations, morbid course, diagnosis, and pathological findings were also touched upon.
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PMID:[Ocular findings in multiple sclerosis]. 262 Jun 15

Psychogenic urinary retention is rare event. 6 cases are reported: diagnostic urologic and neurologic work-up is outlined. The final statement is the exclusion of rare or minimal neurogenic causes (silent disk prolapse, early multiple sclerosis and so on) and the evidence of cause-effect relationship between psychic trauma and starting of urinary symptoms are compulsory to join the diagnosis of psychogenic urinary retention.
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PMID:[Psychogenic retention of urine in women: diagnostic and therapeutic problems]. 341 Nov 34

An 18-year-old girl developed a reversible locked-in state with bilateral ptosis and almost complete ophthalmoplegia. She later presented with a relapsing and remitting course suggestive of multiple sclerosis. Autopsy findings demonstrated bilateral capsular and tegmental demyelinating lesions. In addition to this unusual aetiology, this is the first report with pathological evidence of a locked-in syndrome due to lesions outside the ventral brainstem.
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PMID:Reversible capsulo-tegmental locked-in state as first manifestation of multiple sclerosis. 368 27

A 12-year-old girl presents with optic atrophy, pale papilla, amblyopia and microcephaly (-3 s.d.) with mild mental retardation and facial dysmorphism. She had mitral insufficiency with mitral prolapse and moderate short stature (-2.5 d.s.). She had normal flash visual evoked potentials, normal electroretinograms and electrooculograms and normal cranial CT scan as well as other lab tests to rule out malformations, tumors or multiple sclerosis. Her lymphocyte karyotype showed a variegated mosaicism with: 2 cells with 49, XX, +mar,+mar,+mar; 21 cells with 48, XX, +mar,+mar; 57 cells, with 47, XX,+mar; 20 cells with 46,XX; while parental karyotypes were normal. This syndrome therefore associates optic atrophy, mental retardation and microcephaly and short stature with chromosomal instability in the form of variegated mosaicism.
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PMID:Optic atrophy, microcephaly, mental retardation and mosaic variegated aneuploidy: a human mitotic mutation. 798 82

A 42-year-old housewife with myasthenia gravis (MG) for 22 years, who was initially treated by radiation to the hyperplastic thymus and anti-cholinesterase therapy, developed bilateral ptosis, paresthesia of her right face and decreased taste sensation after house work at the age of 42 years. Neurological examinations revealed lateral and vertical gaze palsy, upward nystagmus, decreased taste sensation, peripheral facial palsy on the left side. She also had hypalgesia on the right face, arm and chest up to Th7 level, and urinary retention. She had hyperreflexia on the right side but no extensor toe signs. CSF study revealed 5 cells/microliters and protein of 23 mg/dl. Serum IgG anticardiolipin antibody was positive. Magnetic resonance imaging studies revealed high intensity areas in the brainstem tegmentum and periventricular white matter. Diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS) was made. This is the first case in which MG, MS and serum anticardiolipin antibody were present simultaneously, which may be all due to some immunological abnormality. Steroid therapy made anti-cardiolipin antibody negative, but new MS plaque developed in 7 months, which favors diagnosis of MS rather than infarction, since the activities of ACLA were not correlating to clinical symptoms. MRI was helpful in detecting MS plaques in MG patients.
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PMID:[A case of myasthenia gravis associated with multiple sclerosis and positive anticardiolipin antibodies]. 836 70

A 38-year-old male with bilateral pseudo-internuclear ophthalmoplegia (-INO) in myasthenia that could have been misdiagnosed as INO in multiple sclerosis is reported. He experienced fluctuating symptoms including double vision, imbalance, and tinnitus. His eye movements simulated bilateral INO, with a downshoot in abduction. After thymectomy, his eye movements became normal. From our case and a review of the literature, we propose that ptosis, downshoot, and fatigability are likely to be signs of pseudo-INO in myasthenia, whereas an impaired vertical smooth pursuit is unlikely. Dissociated nystagmus and monocular overshoot might be the results of central compensation.
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PMID:Bilateral pseudo-internuclear ophthalmoplegia in myasthenia gravis. 916 84

The patient is a 72-year-old man who had tonsillitis and underwent incision on March 6, 1998. He complained headache and nausea from March 10 and double vision from March 12. He was admitted to our hospital on March 14. Neurological examination on March 18 revealed bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia with exotropia (WEBINO), bilateral ptosis and disturbance of convergence. Lumbar puncture revealed moderately elevated protein (46 mg/dl) with normal pressure and cells. The T2-weighted images of head MRI showed multiple high intensity lesions in anterior commissure and right pons. After he was treated with methylprednisolone, his headache and ptosis disappeared. The lesion in anterior commissure on MRI disappeared also. But WEBINO remained at the time of discharge. WEBINO syndrome is caused by lesion of pons and midbrain. The most common cause of bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia is multiple sclerosis in the European and American countries, but the frequency of vascular origin is higher in Japan than in the European and American countries. All the cases of WEBINO syndrome reported in Japan are vascular origin. This is the first case of WEBINO syndrome not of vascular origin.
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PMID:[A case of post-infectious wall-eyed bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia (WEBINO) syndrome]. 1042 55

The plant Cannabis sativa has a long history of medical use in the treatment of pain and spasms, the promotion of sleep, and the suppression of nausea and vomiting. However, in the early 70s cannabis was classified in the Narcotic Acts in countries all over the world as having no therapeutic benefit; therefore, it cannot be prescribed by physicians or dispensed by pharmacists. In the light of this contradictory situation an increasing number of patients practices a self-prescription with cannabis products for relieving a variety of symptoms. An anonymous standardized survey of the medical use of cannabis and cannabis products of patients in Germany, Austria and Switzerland was conducted by the Association for Cannabis as Medicine (Cologne, Germany). During about one year 170 subjects participated in this survey; questionnaires of 128 patients could be included into the evaluation. 68% of these participants were males, 32% females, with a total mean age of 37.5 (+/- 9.6) years. The most frequently mentioned indications for medicinal cannabis use were depression (12.0%), multiple sclerosis (10.8%), HIV-infection (9.0%), migraine (6.6%), asthma (6.0%), back pain (5.4%), hepatitis C (4. 8%), sleeping disorders (4.8%), epilepsy (3.6%), spasticity (3.6%), headache (3.6%), alcoholism (3.0%), glaucoma (3.0%), nausea (3.0%), disk prolapse (2.4%), and spinal cord injury (2.4%). The majority of patients used natural cannabis products such as marihuana, hashish and an alcoholic tincture; in just 5 cases dronabinol (Marinol) was taken by prescription. About half of the 128 participants of the survey (52.4%) had used cannabis as a recreational drug before the onset of their illness. To date 14.3% took cannabis orally, 49.2% by inhalation and in 36.5% of cases both application modes were used. 72.2% of the patients stated the symptoms of their illness to have 'much improved' after cannabis ingestion, 23.4% stated to have 'slightly improved', 4.8% experienced 'no change' and 1.6% described that their symptoms got 'worse'. Being asked for the satisfaction with their therapeutic use of cannabis 60.8% stated to be 'very satisfied', 24.0% 'satisfied', 11.2% 'partly satisfied' and 4.0% were 'not satisfied'. 70.8% experienced no side effects, 26.4% described 'moderate' and 3.3% 'strong' side effects. 84.1% of patients have not felt any need for dose escalation during the last 3 months, 11.0% had to increase their cannabis dose 'moderately' and 4.8% 'strongly' in order to maintain the therapeutic effects. Thus, this survey demonstrates a successful use of cannabis products for the treatment of a multitude of various illnesses and symptoms. This use was usually accompanied only by slight and in general acceptable side effects. Because the patient group responding to this survey is presumably highly selected, no conclusions can be drawn about the quantity of wanted and unwanted effects of the medicinal use of the hemp plant for particular indications.
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PMID:[Results of a standardized survey on the medical use of cannabis products in the German-speaking area]. 2146 33


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