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

A case of medial inferior pontine syndrome or Foville's syndrome is described. The patient presented to the emergency department with an acute history of slurred speech, vertigo and diplopia as major complaints. He also mentioned the appearance of weakness and numbness in his left leg. The physical examination revealed a crossed neurological deficit (ipsilateral cranial nerve deficit with contralateral motor weakness) which is typical for posterior circulation stroke in the brainstem territory. In our patient the lesion was located in the right medial inferior pontine region. All the symptoms and signs disappeared within 24 hours confirming the importance of a detailed physical and neurological examination of each patient presenting at the emergency department with a neurological deficit.
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PMID:A rare case of diplopia: medial inferior pontine syndrome or Foville's syndrome. 902 1

The Superior Foville Syndrome is a rare clinical feature of stroke or brain hemorrhage. Few cases have been reported worldwide particularly in Africa. We report the case of a 20 years old patient resident in Senegal with no known medical history. He was admitted on August 2015 in the Neurology Department of Fann National Teaching Hospital for an abrupt onset of left body side weakness, acute headaches and rotatory vertigo five days before admission. The physical examination found a superior Foville Syndrome. And the brain CT scan shown hemorrhage at the right inferior part of the pons compressing the fourth ventricle. No cause of this hemorrhage stroke has been found. Superior Foville syndrome is a rare clinical presentation of stroke and presented a rich semiological feature of the posterior cerebral fossa.
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PMID:Superior Foville syndrome due to pontine hemorrhage: a case report. 2829 69

In this report, we describe unilateral medial pontomedullary junction (MPMJ) syndrome as a novel brain stem stroke syndrome. A 68-year-old woman suddenly developed vertigo, ipsilateral facial paresis, contralateral thermal hypoalgesia (TH) and dysphagia without lateral gaze palsy, curtain sign and hoarseness. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging showed a small infarction at the right MPMJ. MR angiography did not show vertebrobasilar arterial dissection, thrombosis or vasospasm. Finally, her dysphagia regressed over 4 weeks in synchronization with recovery of TH. To the best of our knowledge and based on a review of the literature, this MPMJ syndrome associated with the unilateral MPMJ infarction is a novel brain stem stroke syndrome different from Foville syndrome, Millard-Gubler syndrome, Wallenberg syndrome or Dejerine's syndrome. In the MPMJ syndrome, transient, albeit severe, dysphagia based on the TH-impaired swallowing reflex bothered the patient more than hemiparesthesia of TH did.
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PMID:Medial pontomedullary junctional infarction presenting vertigo, ipsilateral facial paresis, contralateral thermal hypoalgesia and dysphagia without lateral gaze palsy, curtain sign and hoarseness: a case presentation of a novel brain stem stroke syndrome with sensory disturbance-based dysphagia and review of the literature. 3069 37