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:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Owing to the morphological, physiological and pathophysiological similarities in the vasculature of the brain and the inner ear, the term
apoplexy
can also be applied to the inner ear. The
apoplexy
of the labyrinth is defined as an acute and severe panlabyrinthic disturbance with sudden hearing loss or
deafness
in association with vestibular functional disorders. The
apoplexy
may occur after hemorrhage as a result of inner ear blood vessel ruptures or after malacias following localised ischemias just as it occurs in the brain. Treatment of such cases were carried out by application of high doses of cortison. The prognosis of these inner ear disturbances is unfavourable.
...
PMID:[The apoplexy of the labyrinth (author's transl)]. 14 Sep 82
In a five year retrospective study of 360 patients with homozygous (SS) sickle cell disease, eighteen (5%) were found to have neurological complications. Their ages ranged from 7 months to 21 years with a mean of 11.1 +/- 6 years. Of those with neurological complications, twelve (67%) of the patients had
cerebrovascular accident
, six (33.3%) convulsions, three visual disturbance; one sensorineural
deafness
, one cerebellar degeneration and the last one confusion and hallucinations. Four of the patients had multiple neurological complications. There was only one patient with recurrence of neurological complications. Two patients were hypertransfused and up to the end of the study period none of them had any recurrence. The pattern of neurological complications are similar to that observed in other studies. However, in this study, there were fewer recurrences of neurological complications.
...
PMID:Neurological complications of sickle cell anaemia at KNH: a five year retrospective study. 129 28
Sudden inner ear hearing loss initially might suggest a psychogenic disorder of hearing, particularly when it is bilateral and simultaneous. The differential diagnosis includes disseminated encephalitis, syphilitic labyrinthitis and Cogan's syndrome. The history and cause of acute bilateral
deafness
in meningitis are easy to recognise. Furthermore, unilateral acute inner ear
deafness
should not be regarded as idiopathic without further consideration. A acoustic neuroma is a possible cause even of a low-tone hearing loss. More controversial is rupture of the round window membrane as a cause of sudden
deafness
. The
deafness
after epidemic parotitis obviously leads to a total unilateral hearing loss in every case. Even labyrinthine
apoplexy
with loss of hearing and vestibular function can be caused by a tumour of the cerebellopontine angle. Idiopathic sudden
deafness
should be defined as an acute sensory hearing loss whose anatomical basis in an acute vascular endolymphatic hydrops of unknown cause. The sudden
deafness
affects only one ear; tinnitus and brief vertigo can be accompanying symptoms. A sudden hearing disorder due to other causes should be distinguished from idiopathic lesions.
...
PMID:[Acute inner ear deafness]. 174 70
A female patient who had clinical characteristics of MELAS but with no apparent muscle symptoms was reported. She was in good health until 12 years and 5 months of age when she began to have afebrile generalized tonic-clonic convulsions. Thereafter, she had repeated
stroke
-like episodes, including headache, vomiting, convulsions, hemiparesis and left ehemianopsia. She had neither muscle weakness, fatigability nor atrophy. Laboratory examinations disclosed elevated lactate and pyruvate levels in the serum and cerebrospinal fluids, transient focal low density areas on brain CT and right sensorineural
deafness
by audiometry. No ragged-red fibers (RRF) were found in the first biopsy at 13 years and 6 months of age, and two RRF-like fibers containing red granular materials in the subsarcolemnal regions in the second at 15 years and 3 months of age. A biochemical assay on the two biopsied muscles demonstrated normal enzyme activities in the mitochondrial electron transport system. She was diagnosed as having MELAS because of remarkable mitochondrial abnormalities in smooth muscle cells in the intramuscular arterioles which were clearly demonstrated by succinic dehydrogenase (SDH) stain and on electron microscopy. It was suggested that the
stroke
-like episodes in this patient were induced by a preferential damage to the mitochondria in the blood vessel walls. Thus, we conclude that a simple method of identifying the strongly SDH-reactive blood vessels (SSV) in frozen sections is critical in supporting or making diagnosis of MELAS.
...
PMID:[MELAS without ragged-red fibers: a case report]. 176 Feb 9
Fibromuscular dysplasia of the arteries (FMD) is a segmental angiopathy which may produce obstruction of the carotid, cerebral, renal, mesenteric, coronary or iliac arteries. Except for lesions related to arterial hypertension, retinal manifestations have not yet been reported. This paper describes the case of a 10-year-old boy with progressive
deafness
, a history of an unexplained
stroke
and progressive occlusions of the retinal arterioles in the fundus periphery. This resulted in retinal neovascularization and recurrent retinal and vitreous hemorrhages. Despite repeated photo- and cryocoagulation the eyes progressed to a tractional retinal detachment which was successfully treated by vitrectomy and scleral buckling. The diagnosis of FMD was made on the basis of a histopathological examination of a temporal artery biopsy. The child also presented an asymptomatic but severe aneurysmal dilatation of the aorta and CT scan and MRI showed dilated cerebral arteries. The father of our patient had died at the age of 27 years either from myocardial infarction or rupture of a dissecting aortic aneurysm. He was highly myopic and had lost one eye from retinal detachment. The younger brother of our patient also presents aneurysmal dilatation of the aorta and tortuous cerebral vessels. Ocular examination is still normal. The findings in this family are compatible with an autosomal dominant inheritance with variable expression.
...
PMID:Retinal manifestations in fibromuscular dysplasia. 182 Dec 2
We describe a pregnant young woman with branch retinal arteriolar occlusions, encephalopathy, and hearing loss in whom we demonstrated a patent foramen ovale. She improved while receiving anticoagulants and no immunosuppressive therapy. The microangiopathic syndrome of retinopathy, encephalopathy, and
deafness
may be due to a disturbance of coagulation and/or microembolism.
Stroke
1991 Jul
PMID:Microangiopathy of the brain, retina, and ear: improvement without immunosuppressive therapy. 185 14
Neuropathological studies were carried out in two patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathies in whom the underlying lesions in muscle mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and respiratory enzyme complexes have been investigated. The first, a man with Kearns-Sayre syndrome, died at the age of 49 years. Autopsy showed an old parietal lobe infarct, diffuse spongiform leukoencephalopathy of cerebral and cerebellar white matter and mild spongiform change in deep grey matter and brainstem nuclei. Heteroplasmy of skeletal muscle mitochondrial DNA with a 3.5 kb mtDNA deletion in one of two mtDNA populations was found. The second case, a woman, suffering from myoclonic epilepsy, cerebellar ataxia, bilateral sensorineural
deafness
, several '
stroke
-like' episodes died at age 52. At autopsy, an old infarct was seen in the L internal capsule. Severe loss of neurons and gliosis were found in the dentate nuclei, moderate changes in the red nuclei and inferior olivary nuclei and mild changes in the substantial nigra and locus coeruleus. In both patients, skeletal muscle biopsy showed numbers of ragged-red fibres and intramitochondrial paracrystalline inclusions at electron microscopy. A defect in the synthesis of the ND5 subunit of the respiratory complex I was suggested in the second patient in whom a diagnosis of MELAS was made.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathies: a correlation between neuropathological findings and defects in mitochondrial DNA. 190 31
Acute episodes of focal neurological dysfunction are a well-recognized complication of the mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. Because of rapid remission, biochemical tests and other diagnostic procedures are mostly performed after the acute phase. We report the case of a patient suffering from mitochondrial disease manifesting primarily with seizures, progressive
deafness
and dementia, who experienced multiple
stroke
-like episodes. Other members of the family with evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction are presented briefly. EEG and biochemical findings in the acute stage are correlated with clinical symptoms, showing characteristics distinct from the chronic illness. The possible involvement of dietary factors in the provocation of
stroke
-like episodes is discussed and regulation of glucose intake suggested as a strategy in the prevention of
stroke
-like episodes.
...
PMID:Stroke-like episodes in familial mitochondrial encephalomyopathy: clinical and biochemical aspects. 190 33
We report a case of delusion characterized by a time disorientation with a constant three days advance. Five years previously, the patient had suffered a left hemisphere
stroke
with aphasia. The delusional belief appeared at the same time as a cortical
deafness
following a second right hemisphere infarction. There was severe behaviour disturbances which lasted seven months, then cleared without any other change in the clinical picture. The lesions involved the left parietal lobe as well as the temporal and insular regions of both hemispheres.
...
PMID:[Systematized temporal delusion and hearing disorders of cortical origin]. 219 35
We have reported the clinical and autopsy findings in a case with generalized seizures, myoclonus, blindness and
deafness
which was accompanied by
stroke
-like episodes. This case was diagnosed as mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis &
stroke
-like episodes (MELAS) from these findings. Solitary and continuous lesions of softening were distributed in both hemispheres, more severely in the frontal and occipital poles. These lesions did not correspond to a vascular supply. The pulvinar, lateral and medial geniculate body of the thalamus, cerebellar vermis and dentate nucleus had small lesions of softening. The cortical lesions occurred mainly in layer 4, and the most prominent lesions among them appeared cystic, involving the subcortical white matter, but nerve cells in layer 1 and 2 were preserved. Proliferation of small blood vessels was seen around the softening areas. Electron microscopy revealed increased mitochondria in endothelial cells of these vessels, abnormal dense bodies in skeletal muscle cells and tightly packed mitochondria in choroid plexus epithelial cells. Immunohistochemical study suggested that vimentin positive cells were seen around lesions and proliferated vessels are different from those seen in the intact tissues.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of generalized seizures, myoclonus, blindness and deafness]. 220 39
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>