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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage is of difficult clinical diagnosis. The causes can be varied, but the hemorrhage is most often associated with hypertensive cardiovascular disease. The neurological symptomatology is complex and often misleading. The diagnosis is mainly dependent of familiarity of the eye signs seen in this disease. Among these, the spontaneous unilateral eye closure is presented as an additional striking manifestation. The displacement of the brain stem by the hematoma is frequently associated with a seventh nerve palsy on the side of the hemorrhage. The patient in an effort to obviate the diplopia caused by the gaze dissociations and extraocular motor palsies, has only the option to close the eye on the noninvolved side of the face, and thus the eye remaining open is on the side of the cerebellar hematoma. This paper presents reports of two patients with these symptoms.
Stroke
PMID:Diplopia and involuntary eye closure in spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage. 127 9

The authors describe the course of herpetic encephalitis in 52 patients aged 16 to 64 years. Five types of the initial manifestations of herpetic infection of the CNS were revealed. In 44.3% of cases the disease started from the general cerebral symptomatology and consciousness disturbance; in 13.6% it started in a brain stroke-like manner followed by the development of the comatose status; in 13.6% of cases from memory disorder and unmotivated actions; in the same percentage of cases, the disease onset was marked by the dominance of dizziness, diplopia, ataxia and central hemiplegia ; in 15.9% the disease started from pains in the stomach, loin and lower limbs. Hemispheric and pseudotumorous stem encephalitides (48.1 and 13.6% respectively) were predominant; in 25% meningoencephalitides and in the remainder, encephalomyelitis running their course in the form of disseminated encephalomyelitis (5.7%), focal myelitis (5.7%) or opticomyelitis (1.9%). The data presented attest to the pleomorphism of the clinical picture of herpetic lesions of the CNS.
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PMID:[Clinical forms of acute herpetic infections of the central nervous system in adults]. 132 73

The disturbance of visual perception associated with nystagmus is a rare phenomenon. This is a case of a 61-year-old woman who developed progressive right hemisensory deficit, left facial sensory deficit, vertigo, staggering to the left, left ptosis, vertical diplopia, and ataxia of the left upper extremity. She had rotatory nystagmus in primary position, which increased in amplitude with left gaze. The above signs and symptoms were consistent with lateral medullary syndrome. During her rehabilitation, the patient complained of visual disturbances typical of oscillopsia. These disturbances, or illusions, are compensatory mechanisms for nystagmus and its resultant retinal error. The purpose of this case presentation was to study the pathophysiology underlying oscillopsia in patients with nystagmus and to stimulate awareness of such visual disturbances in stroke patients.
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PMID:Visual illusions in a patient with lateral medullary syndrome. 199 Oct 18

Symptoms compatible with vertebrobasilar ischemia have been reported in patients with unilateral or bilateral carotid occlusive disease. Intracranial steal phenomena have been proposed to explain the symptoms. In a review of 54 patients with angiographically documented severe bilateral carotid stenosis (less than or equal to 2 mm residual lumen) or occlusion, eight had symptoms suggesting vertebrobasilar insufficiency. Five patients were identified retrospectively, and the other three were evaluated prospectively. Symptoms included various combinations of hemodynamically mediated, transient bilateral motor, sensory, or visual impairment. Dysarthria, dysphagia, and diplopia were generally absent. Each patient also described additional symptoms compatible with transient hemispheric or retinal ischemia. The anatomic regions subserving the bilateral vertebrobasilar-like symptoms could be correlated with angiographically estimated arterial border zones in both hemispheres and may thus represent bilateral hemispheric border zone ischemia rather than brain stem ischemia. An intracranial steal need not be invoked.
Stroke 1990 Dec
PMID:The syndrome of bilateral hemispheric border zone ischemia. 226 72

A sample of people aged 65 and over were interviewed at home and asked a series of questions aimed at identifying episodes of possible transient neurological dysfunction. During follow-up of respondents initially free from manifest cerebrovascular disease, no relationship was found between subsequent stroke and reported episodes of diplopia, transient numbness or weakness, non-rotatory dizziness or blackouts. There was an association of stroke with reported blurring or dimming of vision, statistically significant only for the sexes combined (relative incidence ratio 1.5), and a consistently increased risk in men and women reporting rotatory vertigo (relative incidence ratio 2.5). This relationship remained significant when adjusted for the association of rotatory vertigo with ECG evidence of heart disease. Thus rotatory vertigo is a risk factor for stroke but non-rotatory dizziness is not. Conversely a previous study of falling in the same population sample had shown an association with rotatory vertigo but not with non-rotatory dizziness.
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PMID:Transient neurological dysfunction and risk of stroke in an elderly English population: the different significance of vertigo and non-rotatory dizziness. 231 24

Lupus anticoagulants and anticardiolipin antibodies are antiphospholipid antibodies (APLAb) with related antigenic specificities and are newly recognized markers for an increased risk of thrombosis. We studied 48 patients who presented with cerebral or visual dysfunction associated with APLAb to help clarify the diagnostic, clinical, laboratory, radiologic, and pathologic features in these patients. Most patients presented with transient cerebral ischemia or cerebral infarction. Recurrent and stereotypic events were frequent. Visual disturbances resulted from amaurosis fugax, retinal arterial or venous occlusion, occipital ischemia, diplopia, and migraine-like disturbances. Three patients presented with severe atypical classic migraine. Recurrent infarcts of brain and eye were significantly associated with the presence of cigarette smoking, hyperlipidemia, and a positive antinuclear antibody. During 44.4 patient-years of prospective follow-up, the combined stroke and systemic thrombotic event rate was 0.27 events per patient-year and was 0.54 events per patient-year if TIA and death were included. Forty (83%) of the patients did not have systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Thrombocytopenia was present in 15 (31%) and a false-positive VDRL in 11 (23%) of the patients. Cerebral angiography was normal or revealed large-vessel occlusion or stenosis without changes suggestive of vasculitis. Patients with only transient dysfunction generally had normal radiologic studies, including angiography. Organs and arterial vessels studied pathologically revealed thrombotic occlusive disease without vasculitis. APLAb are strongly associated with an immune-mediated thrombotic tendency, generally in the absence of SLE. Other stroke risk factors may add to the risk of recurrent ischemic events in patients with APLAb.
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PMID:Cerebrovascular and neurologic disease associated with antiphospholipid antibodies: 48 cases. 238 25

Five male patients sought medical attention for diplopia and were found to have third nerve palsies secondary to pituitary adenomas. In four cases this was the only neurologic abnormality. In the fifth there was an additional, asymptomatic, temporal visual field defect in one eye. Partial third nerve involvement was seen in all but one patient. Four patients underwent successful surgery and were found to have chromophobe adenomas. One patient had clinical and laboratory evidence of Cushing's syndrome. An initial diagnosis of cerebral aneurysm was made in three cases when the third nerve palsy followed a severe, acute headache. Later it became evident that pituitary apoplexy was the correct diagnosis. The mechanisms by which a pituitary adenoma causes a third nerve palsy are discussed. The importance of recognizing a pituitary tumor as the etiology of an isolated third nerve palsy is emphasized.
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PMID:Third nerve palsy: the presenting sign of a pituitary adenoma in five patients and the only neurological sign in four patients. 293 21

Neurologic findings were studied in 166 consecutive patients with biopsy-proven giant cell (temporal) arteritis. Neurologic problems occurred in 51 patients (31%): neuropathies (23), TIA/strokes (12), neuro-otologic syndromes (11), tremor (6), neuropsychiatric syndromes (5), tongue numbness (3), and myelopathy (1). Neuro-ophthalmologic problems occurred in 35 patients (21%): amaurosis fugax (AF) (17), permanent vision loss (PVL) (14), scintillating scotoma (8), and diplopia (3). Abnormalities in large arteries in 52 patients (31%) included bruits and diminished pulses. The carotid artery was involved in 31 patients (bilateral in 58%). Overall, 35% of patients with carotid disease had TIA/stroke, AF, or PVL.
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PMID:Neurologic disease in biopsy-proven giant cell (temporal) arteritis. 334 37

During the past five years, 22 patients were operated on and 21 occipital artery-caudal, loop-posterior, inferior cerebellar artery anastomoses were completed. All but one patient had suffered either TIAs of the vertebrobasilar system or brain stem stroke with complete or partial recovery. All the patients had significant atherosclerotic occlusive disease of both vertebral arteries and bilateral hypoplasia of the posterior communicating arteries. Three patients died shortly after surgery because of brain stem infarction and myocardial infarction. In one of these patients no anastomosis was performed. Two other patients also died 2.5 years after the operations because of a metastatic carcinoma and a stroke. Diplopia and cerebellar ataxia were developed in one patient and meningitis in another patient postoperatively with partial and complete recovery, respectively. Fifteen of the remaining 16 patients have either improved or remained the same. One patient has gotten worse. Sixteen patients had anastomosis, a patency rate of 87.5 percent. The blood flow of the occipital artery was measured intraoperatively following the completion of anastomosis in 5 patients. The mean blood flow varied between 15-80 ML/min. with an average of 46 ML/min. The neurological mortality and morbidity in this operation, in addition to the neurological condition of the patient prior to surgery, seem to be significantly related to the position of the patient during the surgery and how well his vital signs, especially blood pressure, are kept within normal limits. A lateral semiprone position, with the head and neck flexed and about 5 degrees above the heart level, seems to be a satisfactory position. With careful selection of the patients and the maintenance of normal vital signs, especially during surgery, good results can be obtained.
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PMID:Short- and long-term results of microvascular anastomosis in the vertebrobasilar system, a critical analysis. 611 55

A series of 72 patients with typical trigeminal neuralgia who underwent microsurgical exploration of the trigeminal nerve in the posterior fossa is analyzed. The operations were performed between 1977 and 1980 with an average follow-up period of 4.94 years. Seventy-eight percent of the patients have remained free of pain after the operation. Of the 16 patients (22%) that were either not relieved of their pain or had a recurrence, two are well-controlled with medical treatment and the rest have required a variety of surgical procedures (mostly radiofrequency rhizotomy) for pain relief. Recurrences were significantly more common in females. There was no relationship between recurrence rate and the age of the patient or the duration of the symptoms before surgery. Definite compression of the trigeminal nerve at the root entry zone by an arterial loop singly or in combination with other arteries or a vein was found in 82% of the patients. The recurrence rate in this group was 19%. Definite compression by a vein was found in seven patients and the pain recurred in four (47%), a significant difference. There was no death or disabling stroke in this series, but persistent unilateral hearing loss occurred in a total of 14 patients (19%), with complete deafness in the ipsilateral ear in five patients (7%). In addition, two patients suffered mild but persistent ataxia of gait and two patients intermittent diplopia. These results are compared with the results of other reported series.
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PMID:Microvascular decompression for trigeminal neuralgia. A five-year follow-up study. 646 31


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