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147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Conversion disorders often present with dramatic physical presentations suggestive of severe organic disease. We present the case of a young woman who presented to the Emergency Department with a dense left hemiparesis suggestive of a severe acute stroke. Emergent referral to a regional stroke center facilitated rapid medical evaluation, exclusion of organic disease, and confirmation of conversion disorder as the etiology for the symptoms. This report highlights the dramatic clinical presentations that may result from conversion disorders as well as the benefits of rapid medical evaluation by specialty stroke centers.
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PMID:A case of conversion disorder presenting as a severe acute stroke. 1667 78

Conversion disorder is caused by previous severe stress, emotional conflict, or an associated psychiatric disorder, and usually presents with one or more neurologic symptoms. Clinically, it is challenging to diagnose diseases such as transient ischemia attack, stroke, brain tumor, spinal cord injury, and neuropathy. In this case report, we present a male stroke patient who had a typical conversion disorder.
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PMID:Conversion disorder in stroke: a case report. 1711 Mar 49

Acute hemiplegia and hemianesthesia is commonly caused by obstruction of major cortical arteries. Such a presentation secondary to a conversion reaction is very rare, especially in the pediatric age group. The authors report an adolescent presenting with acute complete left-sided hemiplegia and sensory loss together with decreased tendon reflexes mimicking an acute arterial stroke. Examination revealed Hoover's sign was present and the patient was oblivious to his stern neurological state. Movement of his paralytic limbs was observed during sleep. Cortical and spinal CT, cortical MRI, motor and somatosensory evoked potentials and a PET study were all normal. As such, the diagnosis of psychogenic hemiplegia was established, apparently within a period that the patient had experienced severe emotional stress while questioning his gender identity. After three days, the adolescent began to move the paralytic limbs along gradual resolution of sensory deficit, leading to complete clinical recovering within two months. Although extremely rare, a conversion reaction should be taken into account in children presenting with acute hemiplegia and anaesthesia, even accompanied with decreased tendon reflexes, when the patient is oblivious to his alleged grave state, and when clinical observations such as Hoover's sign remain intact, substantiated by normal extensive radiological and neurophysiological investigation. Intact motor evoked potentials serve as a key for the diagnosis of psychogenic hemiplegia and, should therefore be performed in suspected cases.
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PMID:[Acute hemiplegia and hemianesthesia together with decreased tendon reflexes mimicking acute stroke representing a conversion disorder]. 2042 37

We here report on a 43-year-old man who was repeatedly admitted to our stroke unit with acute onset of sensorimotor hemisyndrome of acute onset. In most cases symptoms ceased shortly after admission, but twice when symptoms persisted thrombolytic therapy was applied. This case demonstrates that in emergency situations a rare differential diagnosis like conversion disorder with sensorimotor deficits may be hard to establish even if the patient presents to the same emergency unit.
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PMID:[Thrombolytic therapy in conversion disorder with sensorimotor hemisyndrome]. 2051 5

Since decision-making for thrombolysis in acute stroke settings is restricted to a limited time window and based on clinical assessment and CT findings only, thrombolysis is sometimes applied to patients with a final diagnosis other than a stroke. From a prospectively collected stroke/MRI data bank (2004-2010) with 648 suspected ischemic stroke patients treated with rtPA, we identified patients without evidence of acute infarction on follow-up MRI and a final diagnosis other than a stroke or acute cerebrovascular event. We compared demographics, symptoms, complications, and outcome of patients with stroke mimics (SM) to those with acute infarction. In 42 patients, an SM was diagnosed: seizures in 20, conversion disorder in seven, dementia in six, migraine in three, brain tumor in two, and others in four patients. Patients with SM less often had typical stroke symptoms like dysarthria (p < 0.01), facial palsy (p < 0.001), hemiparesis (p < 0.001), horizontal gaze palsy (p < 0.001), and visuospatial neglect (p = 0.03), while aphasia (p = 0.004) and accompanying convulsions (p = 0.01) occurred more often. Independent predictors of SM were known cognitive impairment, aphasia, and accompanying convulsions. Thrombolysis-related complications (orolingual angioedema) occurred in one SM patient and none of the SM patients deteriorated clinically. Stroke mimics comprise neurological/psychiatric disorders and differ from ischemic stroke patients with regard to the clinical presentation at onset. This might be helpful in deciding which patients should undergo acute stroke MRI to rule out SM, facilitate treatment decisions, and reduce the risk of unnecessary therapy.
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PMID:How to identify stroke mimics in patients eligible for intravenous thrombolysis? 2223 65

Acute unilateral weakness along with sensory impairment is commonly caused by obstruction of major cortical arteries in either adults or children. A somatoform presentation mimicking acute vascular stroke is very rare, especially in the pediatric age group. Here we report three adolescents presenting with acute unilateral weakness and sensory impairment along with diminished tendon reflexes who were suspected to have an acute stroke but who had developed a somatoform psychogenic disorder. Two adolescents had complete hemiplegia and one had weakness of the left leg - two had moved the alleged paralytic limbs during sleep. A normal Hoover sign was suggestive of a somatoform psychogenic etiology rather than true vascular stroke. Cortical and spinal MRI, motor-evoked potentials (MEP) and somatosensory-evoked potentials were normal. All adolescents recovered completely. Therefore, a somatoform conversion reaction should be considered in children presenting with acute unilateral weakness and sensory alterations, which is corroborated by a normal Hoover sign and intact MEP.
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PMID:Diagnostic value of Hoover sign and motor-evoked potentials in acute somatoform unilateral weakness and sensory impairment mimicking vascular stroke. 2253 58

We describe two young female patients with symptoms and signs initially of conversion disorder. It became apparent, however, that both patients had a posterior circulation stroke. These cases remind us of just how broad the clinical presentation of neurological diseases is and illustrate how careful we must be in our own attributions, actions and diagnoses particularly when assessing patients with bizarre behaviour and with apparent inconsistencies on neurological examination.
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PMID:Stroke mimicking conversion disorder: two young women who put our feet back on the ground. 2266 50

Stroke mimics are patients diagnosed initially with stroke who finally receive a different diagnosis, such as seizure, conversion disorder or encephelopathy. We compared the number of stroke mimics receiving thrombolytic therapy via a telestroke network and via a conventional primary stroke centre. We reviewed the data on all patients who received intravenous t-PA through the ARSAVES statewide telestroke network or at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) stroke centre between November 2008 and January 2012. During the study period there were 252 patients (46 UAMS, 206 ARSAVES). Of the 206 telestroke patients, 141 patients (68%) were transferred to the UAMS and were examined there by a vascular neurologist where a diagnosis of stroke or stroke mimic was made; 65 patients (32%) stayed at the peripheral site and were excluded from the present study. Of the 189 study patients, 3-month outcome data were available on 166 (89%), 43 from UAMS (94%) and 123 from ARSAVES (87%). The mean door to needle time was significantly shorter at the UAMS (72 min vs. 91 min, P = 0.001). However, the percentage of good outcomes was similar in both groups (70% vs. 58%, P = 0.21) and both groups had similar total time from symptom onset to treatment (154 min vs. 156 min, P = 0.81) and similar baseline characteristics. The percentage of stroke mimics was similar in the two groups: UAMS 4.3% and ARSAVES 7.8% (P = 0.53). Although making a diagnosis of stroke mimic may be challenging on face-to-face encounter, our study shows that this challenge does not increase if telemedicine is used instead. Larger prospective studies are now required to confirm the findings of our study.
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PMID:Thrombolysis to stroke mimics in telestroke. 2303 34

The approach to the child with ataxia requires a detailed history and careful general and neurological examination as well as selected blood work and brain imaging and increasingly available genetic testing for inherited ataxias that usually have an episodic or progressive presentation. The differential of acute and recurring ataxia covered in this chapter includes intoxication (e.g., antiepileptics, lead, alcohol), postinfectious cerebellitis, hemorrhage, ischemic stroke, tumor (posterior fossa or cerebellum), brainstem encephalitis, occult neuroblastoma, Miller Fisher syndrome, conversion reaction, multiple sclerosis, epileptic pseudoataxia, vasculitis (e.g., Kawasaki), metabolic etiologies (e.g., maple syrup urine disease, pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency, ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, biotinidase deficiency, Hartnup disease, and argininosuccinic aciduria), migraine, migraine equivalents (benign paroxysmal positional vertigo), autosomal dominant episodic ataxias (with seven types currently identified), and hypothyroidism. Cooperation with therapists and providers from other specialties including ophthalmology and genetics and metabolism is essential to caring for these children and their families.
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PMID:Ataxia. 2362 31

Stroke can be categorized as ischemic stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, or subarachnoid hemorrhage. Awakening with or experiencing the abrupt onset of focal neurologic deficits is the hallmark of the diagnosis of ischemic stroke. The most common presenting symptoms of ischemic stroke are speech disturbance and weakness on one-half of the body. The most common conditions that can mimic a stroke are seizure, conversion disorder, migraine headache, and hypoglycemia. Taking a patient history and performing diagnostic studies will usually exclude stroke mimics. Neuroimaging is required to differentiate ischemic stroke from intracerebral hemorrhage, as well as to diagnose entities other than stroke. The choice of neuroimaging depends on availability of the method, the patient's eligibility for thrombolysis, and presence of contraindications. Subarachnoid hemorrhage presents most commonly with sudden onset of a severe headache, and noncontrast head computed tomography is the imaging test of choice. Cerebrospinal fluid inspection for bilirubin is recommended if subarachnoid hemorrhage is suspected in a patient with a normal computed tomography result. Public education about common presenting stroke symptoms may improve patient knowledge and clinical outcomes.
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PMID:Diagnosis of acute stroke. 2588 71


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