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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 70-year-old woman developed left hypoglossal nerve palsy, a right hemiparesis sparing the face, and a typical left
Wallenberg's syndrome
. These symptoms resulted from a lesion in the left half of the medulla oblongata, suggesting Babinski-Nageotte syndrome, a rare cerebrovascular disease. This is the first case of ischemic infarction in the territory of the left vertebral artery and posterior inferior cerebellar artery demonstrated on magnetic resonance imaging. Severe bilateral lesions of the distal vertebral arteries demonstrated on digital subtraction angiography may have contributed to the development of this syndrome.
Stroke
1991 Feb
PMID:Babinski-Nageotte syndrome on magnetic resonance imaging. 159 18
Two cases of dissecting aneurysm of the vertebral artery are reported and the 70 cases reported previously are reviewed. Case 1 showed
Wallenberg's syndrome
following sudden headache on the right side without SAH. Angiograms demonstrated the "pearl and string sign" on the right vertebral artery, characteristic of a dissecting aneurysm. Through a right suboccipital craniectomy, the right vertebral artery was found to be discolored purplish-red and swollen, so the proximal vertebral artery was clipped. The postoperative course was uneventful. Case 2 showed
Wallenberg's syndrome
with antecedent headache. CT scan was normal and lumber puncture revealed xanthochromic CSF, which was attributed to a SAH several days before. Angiograms disclosed the "pearl and string sign" on the right vertebral artery, and right vertebral artery clipping was performed. Postoperatively it was uneventful. Intracranial dissecting aneurysms of the vertebrobasilar system are not as rare as previously thought. They can often be overlooked as fusiform aneurysms or as thrombosis associated with SAH and/or ischemic attacks. The difficulty in diagnosis, leads to a high morbidity and mortality rate. Recently many cases have been reported in sequence. These cases involving SAH were successfully treated by surgical procedure. However in addition to our cases, only two cases of successful surgical treatment after ischemic
stroke
, have been reported. We emphasize that surgical intervention should be carried out for dissecting aneurysms of the vertebro-basilar system, even without SAH, to prevent further dissection which could cause SAH or/and further brainstem infarction. Proximal vertebral artery occlusion is the most beneficial treatment of choice.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Dissecting aneurysm of the vertebral artery--report of two cases and review of the literature]. 306 7
The authors present a case of dissecting aneurysm of the right posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) in a 47-year-old female, who suffered from mild subarachnoid hemorrhage. Right vertebral angiogram showed typical "pearl and string" sign of the PICA, but we could not fully understand the condition until a surgical exposure revealed a purple sausage-like dissecting aneurysm of the PICA. The aneurysm was wrapped with muscle pieces. Postoperatively she developed
Wallenberg's syndrome
, but it subsided gradually. No specific disorder concerning the mural dissection was found in this patient, except for a history of mild hypertension. This case is unusual because it affected not an arterial trunk but a small branch and we could find only one other case reported in the literature. Other formerly reported cases were of arterial trunks. The intracranial dissecting aneurysm has been known as a rare cause of cerebral infarct in children and adolescents. Infants are also affected and referred to as "infantile hemiplegia". It mainly affects one of the trunk arteries and cause a severe ischemic
stroke
, and surgically treatable case is rare. But as the typical angiographic findings are commonly known the number of the reported cases is increasing at an accelerating rate, and some of them are being noted to need surgical treatment because they cause subarachnoid hemorrhage. We here emphasize that not only trunk arteries but also small branch arteries can develop mural dissection, leading to subarachnoid hemorrhage. Dissecting aneurysm of a smaller artery would be milder in symptom, and would give more chance for surgical intervention.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Dissecting aneurysm of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery--a case report]. 343 31
Vertebral artery dissection seems to be a frequent cause of
stroke
in young adults. We report a 34 years old female that suffered a cardiac arrest while practicing aerobics, with complete recovery and four months later developed an acute
Wallenberg's syndrome
. Magnetic resonance imaging showed an infarction in the right posterolateral medulla oblongata and in the right cerebellar hemisphere. Angiography revealed an occlusion of the third segment (V3) of the right vertebral artery which was hypoplastic. The patient was anticoagulated with a favorable clinical outcome. A follow up angiography, performed six months later, showed an incomplete recanalization of the vessel. Vertebral artery dissection should be suspected in every patient with ischemic symptoms or signs related to the vertebrobasilar territory, specially in young or middle aged patients with a history of trauma. Magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasound-doppler examinations are the diagnostic test of choice.
...
PMID:[Dissection of vertebral artery: report of a case and review of the literature]. 759 35
Using a standard protocol including MRI and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), we studied 28 consecutive patients, all with an acute infarct in the lower brainstem. MRI patterns above and below the inferior olivary nucleus enabled identification of six topographical types of infarct: small midlateral, dorsolateral, inferolateral, large inferodorsolateral, dorsal and paramedian infarcts. Small midlateral, dorsolateral, inferolateral and inferodorsolateral infarcts were the most common types and were associated with
Wallenberg's syndrome
, with specific clusters and severity of neurological features in each of the four groups. Dorsal infarcts were both anatomically and clinically overshadowed by a constant associated cerebellar infarct in the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) territory. Paramedian infarction led to crossed tongue and sensorimotor hemiplegia, while a patient with an almost complete hemimedullary infarct had unusual ipsilateral sensory and motor disturbance due to lesion extension toward the upper spinal cord. A coexisting cerebellar infarct was present in 36% of the cases, but was never found with midlateral or inferolateral infarct. Angiography showed an embolic occlusion of the PICA in five patients (18%), four of them having dorsal or dorsolateral infarct. Atheromatosis was by far the most frequent
stroke
aetiology (72%), with intracranial vertebral artery tight stenosis or occlusion in 28% of the cases and in 75% of the cases with large inferodorsolateral infarct. Vertebral artery dissection and cardioembolism accounted each for 14% of the cases, the latter being associated with dorsal infarct. Our study shows that differences in topographical patterns of infarction in the lower brainstem probably reflect differences in aetiopathogenic mechanisms.
...
PMID:Infarction of the lower brainstem. Clinical, aetiological and MRI-topographical correlations. 765 78
We report a 57-year-old man who developed
Wallenberg syndrome
and vertebral artery dissection, probably as a complication of neck rotation during golf exercise. He noticed pain in the neck during golf exercise. About 16 hours later, he developed numbness in the right hand, cold sweat, vertigo, hiccup, double vision and ataxia in gait. Neurological examination on the 22nd day revealed a right
Wallenberg syndrome
. The right vertebral angiogram showed a marked stenosis of the vertebral artery at the portion across the dura, and a dissecting aneurysm in the portion from its entrance into the posterior fossa through the exit of the right posterior inferior cerebellar artery. Quick rotation and/or extension of the neck and head during golf exercise probably caused the vertebral artery dissection, resulting in
Wallenberg syndrome
. More attention should be paid to relatively trivial trauma as the cause of
stroke
, especially in the victims of younger ages.
...
PMID:[Wallenberg syndrome and vertebral artery dissection probably due to trivial trauma during golf exercise]. 833 99
We report a case of rhombencephalitis with meningitis in a 36-years-old previously healthy man; neurological signs and symptoms were initially consistent with a diagnosis of
Wallenberg syndrome
. Analysis of cerebrospinal fluid showed predominantly lymphocytic pleocytosis and elevated protein levels. A CT brain scan was normal. MRI of the brain showed a hypertensive type lesion in T2, in the right pontomedullary region that suggested inflammation. A blood culture grew Listeria monocytogenes. The patient improved and fully recovered with appropriate antibiotic treatment. Listeria monocytogenes is a recognized cause of acute brainstem meningoencephalitis. Differential diagnoses that must be considered are other forms of purulent meningitis, viral meningoencephalitis, granulomatosis infections of the central nervous system and, occasionally,
stroke
.
...
PMID:[Wallenberg syndrome as a sign of rhombencephalitis-meningitis due to Listeria monocytogenes]. 855 85
In spite of the general clinical uniformity of
Wallenberg's syndrome
(WS), individual patients present with a slightly different clinical picture, and detailed studies with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) show differences in the topography of the brain stem lesion. Neurophysiological characterization of the lesion in WS has been known for a long time, but there are no studies on the possible correlation between lesion topography and neurophysiological deficit. Assuming that afferents from the three branches of the trigeminal nerve reach different parts of the trigeminal nuclei, we examined the possible correlation between the lesion topography assessed by the MRI and the neurophysiological deficit, assessed by studying the brain stem reflexes in patients with WS within 2 weeks after
stroke
. Neurophysiological abnormalities were always located in the afferent branch of the reflexes examined, but not all patients exhibited abnormalities in all responses. The ophthalmic branch was involved in 92.8% of patients, and the mandibular branch in 57.1% of patients. The patients with MRI lesions located in the lower medulla had normal responses with infraorbital or mental nerve stimulation. The results of this neurophysiological study confirm the heterogeneity of WS. Whether the neurophysiological identification of different subgoups of patients is relevant for clinical outcome needs further studies.
...
PMID:Brain stem reflexes in patients with Wallenberg's syndrome: correlation with clinical and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings. 876 Dec 64
Vertebrobasilar-distribution
stroke
is a rare but sometimes severe complication of chiropractic neck manipulation. We report two patients with dissections of the vertebral arteries authenticated two and six days after the cervical manipulation. In the first case, a
Wallenberg's syndrome
occurred due to a dissection of the right intracranial vertebral artery; the patient was treated with anticoagulant therapy but little improvement of the disorder was noted. The second patient had transitory neurologic manifestations which led to the discovery of an intimal tear of the ostium of the right vertebral artery with a floating clot. Further embolic complications were avoided by performing a venous bypass between the right common carotid and the vertebral artery at the base of the skull. Therapists should be aware of vertebrobasilar complications after spinal manipulations and should ask for early explorations (brain CT, cerebral angiography) to institute rapidly the most appropriate treatment.
...
PMID:[Manipulations of cervical vertebrae and trauma of the vertebral artery. Report of two cases]. 902 51
A 52-year-old man with diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia and smoking habit, experienced transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) with symptoms of left orbital pain, left blepharoptosis and hoarseness lasting for five minutes on March 10, 1997. Subsequently, the same symptoms repeated once or twice daily. On March 28, he had dysphagia, numbness and disturbance of pain and temperature sensation (segmental dissociated sensory disturbance) on the right side of the body above the level of the Th10, the right upper limb and face. The deficits persisted for more than 24 hours. Angiographic studies revealed an occlusion of the left vertebral artery immediately after branching of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery. MRI demonstrated a hyperintense lesion on MRI T2 weighted image in the left lateral medulla. About three months after the completed
stroke
, he had six episodes of TIAs of left Horner's sign and hoarseness. To our knowledge, this is the rare case that had frequent TIAs presenting the
Wallenberg syndrome
before and after the onset of lateral medullary infarction. We speculate that the TIAs resulted from microembolism from the proximal end of occluted left vertebral artery and failure of the microcirculation in and around the lateral portion of the medulla oblongata.
...
PMID:[A case with frequent episodes of transient ischemic attack presenting the Wallenberg syndrome before and after the onset of brain infarction]. 1042 53
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