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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinically unsuspected pituitary adenomas are common among adults on autopsy and MRI survey. Acute pituitary hemorrhage is far more rare. We report a case of a 61-year-old male patient with locally advanced prostate cancer who presented with an acute picture of pituitary
apoplexy
after his first dose of leuprolide. He developed headache and
neck pain
within a few hours of treatment followed by nausea, vomiting, ptosis and diplopia. Pituitary apoplexy is a potentially life threatening medical emergency. Although the pathophysiology is poorly defined, various conditions and treatments have been reported to trigger
apoplexy
.
Apoplexy
has been reported in response to pituitary stimulation by GnRH or GnRH-agonists. Initial stimulatory effects of gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) analogue may induce
apoplexy
in patients with asymptomatic gonadotroph adenomas.
...
PMID:Pituitary apoplexy after leuprolide. 1683 87
We studied the clinical and neuroradiological features of 41 cases with spontaneous bilateral internal carotid artery dissection (ICAD), including 3 cases in our hospital and 38 retrieved from the English literature. Bilateral ICAD accounts for 15.8% of young
stroke
patients with ICAD in our hospital. The most common presentations are head and/or
neck pain
, cerebral ischemia, carotid bruit and Horner's syndrome. The cerebral ischemic symptoms are extremely variable in bilateral ICAD, including unilateral hemisphere, bilateral hemisphere or brainstem-like symptoms. Although the underlying pathogenesis remains uncertain, good vascular and clinical outcomes are achieved for spontaneous bilateral ICAD.
...
PMID:Spontaneous bilateral internal carotid artery dissection with acute stroke in young patients. 1705 83
Spontaneous dissection of the cervical internal carotid artery (sICAD) causes, in more than 90% of patients, carotid territory ischemia, local signs and symptoms on the side of dissection, or both, whereas the remaining sICAD remain clinically asymptomatic. Local signs and symptoms include head, facial, or
neck pain
, Horner syndrome, pulsatile tinnitus, and cranial nerve palsy. Head, facial, or
neck pain
occurs in 64-74% and is the presenting symptom in up to 58.5%, and the only manifestation in 2.2-4.5%. Headache is observed in 65-68%, facial pain in 34-53%, and
neck pain
in 9-26%. Horner syndrome consisting essentially of miosis and ptosis is detected in 28-41%. Cranial nerve palsy is reported in 8-16%; the lower cranial nerves IX-XII are most commonly affected, in particular the hypoglossal nerve. The facial nerve may also be involved; dysgeusia results mainly from involvement of the chorda tympani (0.5-7.0%) or the glossopharyngeal nerve. Transient pareses of the ocular motor (III, IV and VI) and trigeminal nerves have been observed. Pulsatile tinnitus is reported in 16-27%. About three quarters of sICAD cause ischemic events, which include ischemic
stroke
in 80-84%, transient ischemic attack in 15-16%, amaurosis fugax in 3%, ischemic optic neuropathy in 4%, and retinal infarct in 1%. Patients with sICAD causing ischemia show a lower prevalence of Horner syndrome and palsy of the caudal cranial nerves than patients with sICAD causing no ischemic events, whereas headache,
neck pain
, and pulsatile tinnitus are equally frequent in both groups. After an ischemic
stroke
, independency defined by a moderate Rankin scale score of 0-2 occurs in 63-90%, whereas the outcome of retinal infarct and ischemic optic neuropathy are not well known.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of carotid dissection. 1729 Jan 13
The most frequent clinical manifestation of vertebral artery dissection is posterior headache or
neck pain
accompanied or followed by posterior circulation transient ischemic attack or
stroke
. Rarer clinical features include isolated headache or
neck pain
, cervical spinal cord ischemia and cervical root impairment. Asymptomatic vertebral artery dissections have been reported. In the case of primary intracranial vertebral artery dissection or intracranial extension of an extracranial dissection, subarachnoid hemorrhage and rarely rostral cervical spinal cord ischemia or posterior fossa mass effect may occur.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of vertebral artery dissection. 1729 Jan 14
There are multiple reports in the literature of serious and at times fatal complications after cervical spine manipulation therapy (CSMT), even though CSMT is considered by some health providers to be an effective and safe therapeutic procedure for head and
neck pain
syndromes. We report a case of a young female with
cervicalgia
and headache with fatal posterior circulation
cerebrovascular accident
after CSMT. Serious complications are infrequent, with a reported incidence between one per 100,000 to one in 2 million manipulations. The most frequent injuries involve artery dissection or spasm.
Stroke
as a complication of cervical manipulation and dissection of the vertebral arteries (VAD) is a rare but well recognized problem.
Neck pain
, headache, vertigo, vomiting and ataxia are typical symptoms of VAD, but this vascular injury also can be asymptomatic. The most common risk factors are migraine, hypertension, oral contraceptive pills and smoking.
Stroke
following CSMT is more common than the literature reports. The best values derive from retrospective surveys. The lack of identifiable risk factors place those who undergo CSMT at risk of neurologic damage. Accurate patient information and early recognition of the symptoms are important to avoid catastrophic consequences.
...
PMID:Cervical spine manipulation: an alternative medical procedure with potentially fatal complications. 1845 37
Manipulation of the cervical spine remains a common intervention for
neck pain
and dysfunction, despite the well-documented associated risk of vertebrobasilar
stroke
. The currently advocated pre-manipulative risk assessment protocols include the use of provocative positional tests to challenge the integrity of the vascular supply to the brain. This paper critically evaluates the validity of these pre-manipulative provocative tests in the light of ultrasonographic blood flow studies of the vertebral arteries. It also critically evaluates the evidence concerning the clinical utility of a portable continuous wave Doppler device (or velocimeter) to examine vertebral artery blood flow prior to neck manipulation. There is clear evidence that the provocative tests may produce both false positive and false negative findings. Initial research regarding the clinical use of a velocimeter suggests this device may provide a more objective assessment of vertebral artery blood flow than the provocative tests. However, the sensitivity, specificity and reliability of the use of the velocimeter in identifying abnormal vascular flow in the vertebral arteries, and therefore its clinical utility, has not yet been fully established.
...
PMID:Pre-manipulative testing and the use of the velocimeter. 1799 21
Chiropractic's popularity is rising among the general population. Moreover, few studies have been conducted to properly evaluate its safety. We report three cases of serious neurological adverse events in patients treated with chiropractic manipulation. The first case is a 41 years old woman who developed a vertebro-basilar
stroke
48 h after cervical manipulation. The second case represents a 68 years old woman who presented a neuropraxic injury of both radial nerves after three sessions of spinal manipulation. The last case is a 34 years old man who developed a cervical epidural haematoma after a chiropractic treatment for
neck pain
. In all three cases there were criteria to consider a causality relation between the neurological adverse events and the chiropractic manipulation. The described serious adverse events promptly recommend the implementation of a risk alert system.
...
PMID:Chiropractic manipulation: reasons for concern? 1829 73
We present a case of a 4-year-old previously healthy child who had a possible first-time seizure at home, and upon a second Emergency Department evaluation was found to have gross cerebellar ataxia suggestive of acute
stroke
. Initial computed tomography scan and metabolic work-up were unrevealing. Subsequent neuroimaging demonstrated
stroke
in the left medulla and cerebellum secondary to left vertebral artery dissection. Cervical artery dissection may cause up to 20% of strokes in childhood and adolescence. Unlike typical adult presentations, antecedent or concurrent head and
neck pain
occurs less often in pediatric dissections. Symptoms of posterior circulation ischemia resulting from vertebral artery dissection may include vertigo, vomiting, ataxia, dysarthria, and seizure. Willingness to utilize newer, non-invasive imaging modalities may lead to earlier recognition of cervical artery dissection when patients have prodromal symptoms or episodes of transient ischemia. Vertebral artery dissection should be included in the differential diagnosis when evaluating children with first time seizure, headache, or
neck pain
.
...
PMID:A preschool-age child with first-time seizure and ataxia. 1797 66
A 34-year-old woman presented with a 5-month history of persistent vertigo after multiple roller coaster rides, followed by
neck pain
for 1 month and then 2 weeks of blurred vision related to diplopia. She was ultimately found to have bilateral cervical vertebral artery dissection. The images are described and the literature is reviewed regarding late diagnosis of vertebral dissection and prior cases of roller coaster-associated dissection.
J
Stroke
Cerebrovasc Dis
PMID:Bilateral vertebral artery dissection possibly precipitated in delayed fashion as a result of roller coaster rides. 1819 Aug 21
Twelve patients (mean age 36,0+/-10,4 years) with a vertebral artery dissection (VAD) were followed-up during 2,5 months - 5 years. All patients underwent magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the head, MR-angiography (11 patients - repeated studies), 5 patients - conventional cerebral angiography. VAD was located on extracranial (7), intracranial (1), extra-intracranial levels (4), the extension of dissection to the basilar artery was found in 2 patients. Dissection involving both vertebral arteries was observed in 6 patients, recurrent VAD after 4-15 months - in 3 patients. A total number of VAD was 22, a total number of cerebrovascular events - 15. The latter included ischemic strokes (13), transient ischemic attacks (1) and isolated headache (1). Ischemic cerebrovascular events were characterized by the combination of cerebral ischemic symptoms with occipital headache and/or posterior
neck pain
(79%) which usually preceded ischemic cerebral symptoms by the interval of several hours - 3 weeks as well as a goof recovery of neurological deficit (92%). In a half of patients, cerebral ischemic symptoms developed after neck movements or manual therapy. Angiography revealed the stenosis of vertebral arteries, usually elongated, irregular or tapered (64%), more often located at the level of V3-V4 segments, vertebral artery occlusion (36%) and pseudoaneurisms (19%). The repeated angiography performed in 2-3 months or more showed positive changes in 82%, the complete (86%) or partial (14%) resolution of all stenoses and the complete or partial recanalization of the half of vertebral artery occlusions, the regress of all pseudoaneurisms. An intramural hematoma on MR imaging (the axial plane) was found in 85% dissections analyzed, the increased vertebral artery outer diameter - in 69%. Atherosclerotic plaques were absent in all cases. VAD is one of unknown causes of ischemic
stroke
in vertebrobasilar circulation. Diagnosis is based on characteristic clinical and angiography data.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous dissection (intramural hematoma) in vertebrobasilar artery and ischemic stroke]. 1837 92
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