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

The clinical features of six women with spinal cord meningioma are presented. These cases comprise the neurosurgical experience of one of the authors (B.B.) over approximately a 3-year period. Median age was 76 years with a range of 65-89 years. Previous reports of this disorder have not emphasized the occurrence of this tumour in the later decades. A notable feature was delay in diagnosis. Only one patient had a correct diagnosis of spinal cord compression prior to admission. Incorrect diagnoses included diabetes mellitus, osteoarthritis, degenerative spinal disease, gait disturbance secondary to fall and a thalamic cerebrovascular accident. Gait disorders at presentation included paraparesis, wide-based gait and unclassified disability. All patients had pyramidal tract signs and five had a truncal sensory level. Plain radiographs of the spine were unhelpful and can dissuade the physician from the diagnosis. All tumours were in the thoracic region. Surgery resulted in cure in all patients and diverted one patient from planned institutional care. Spinal cord meningioma should be considered in elderly patients presenting with gait disorder.
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PMID:Spinal cord meningiomas in the elderly. 342 85

Bone marrow transplantation, used in the treatment of cancer, aplastic anemia, and metabolic diseases, involves the use of potentially neurotoxic agents to suppress immunity and eradicate malignancy. Fifty-seven patients with a median age of 11 years (age range, 6 months to 24 years) underwent bone marrow transplantation at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Fifty-nine percent developed neurological abnormalities. Twenty-six patients (46%) had central nervous system (CNS) dysfunction, including infection (8), cerebrovascular accident (5), CNS leukemia (7), metabolic encephalopathy (5), and paraparesis with CNS toxoplasmosis (1). Neuropsychological dysfunction was present in 4 of 5 long-term survivors who were tested. Fourteen of 19 patients (74%) on whom postmortem examination was performed were found to have CNS abnormalities, including cerebral atrophy (10), focal cerebral injury (6), leukemia (5), and infection (3). Fourteen patients (24%) had peripheral nervous system dysfunction. CNS dysfunction was more common in patients with lymphoreticular malignancies. Cerebrovascular accidents (in patients with lymphoreticular malignancies) and infections (in our general population and in patients with lymphoreticular malignancies) occurred more often in our patients than in patients with similar illnesses who did not undergo bone marrow transplantation. The combination of prior treatment and preparative therapy for bone marrow transplantation predisposes patients to neurological and neuropsychological sequelae.
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PMID:Neurological complications of bone marrow transplantation in childhood. 639 64

Of 217 patients with clinical diagnosis of acute stroke 23% had nonischemic lesions diagnosed by computed tomography (CT) or lumbar puncture (LP). CT demonstrated all 37 cases of intracerebral hemorrhagic lesions; 9 were detected by LP. CT failed to demonstrate 8 of 17 cases of subarachnoid hemorrhage, but only 1 of these lacked headache or stiff neck. In 7 of 342 patients who were treated with anticoagulants after LP, spinal hematoma followed LP ( 5 with paraparesis). CT evaluation reduced the incidence of fatal cerebral hemorrhage during anticoagulant therapy of acute stroke. However, even if patients were evaluated with both CT and LP, the incidence of fatal cerebral hemorrhage resulting from intravenous anticoagulant therapy was 2.4%.
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PMID:Evaluation of acute cerebral ischemia for anticoagulant therapy: computed tomography or lumbar puncture. 719 88

The complications associated with lumbar puncture (LP) were compared in 2 groups of 342 patients. The first group of patients was anticoagulated after the LP, and the second was not. The incidence of minor headache or back pain was similar in the 2 groups (Group 1--62%, Group 2--64%). The anticoagulated patients had a higher incidence of paraparesis (Group 1, 5 patients, Group 2, No patients; p less than .05) and severe back or lumbosacral radicular pain lasting more than 48 hours (Group 1, 18 patients, Group 2, 6 patients; p less than .025). Seven of the anticoagulated patients developed spinal hematomas (5 with paraparesis, 2 with severe back pain). Among the anticoagulated patients the risk of a major complication was increased by a traumatic LP (p less than .001), starting anticoagulation within one hour of the LP (p less than .001), or aspirin treatment at the time of the LP (p less than .001). This study suggests that if LP is done, delaying anticoagulation for at least one hour and avoiding concurrent aspirin therapy may decrease the risk of developing an extraparenchymal spinal hematoma.
Stroke
PMID:Complications of lumbar puncture followed by anticoagulation. 730 81

A patient developed paraparesis and signs of meningeal irritation spontaneously while on anticoagulant therapy. At autopsy, a subdural hematoma of the thoracic cord and evidence of widespread subarachnoid hemorrhage were found. The possible mechanism for these combined hemorrhages is discussed.
Stroke
PMID:Subdural hematoma of the spinal cord and widespread subarachnoid hemorrhage complicating anticoagulant therapy. 742 75

Admission analysis of adult non-traumatic paraplegia and paraparesis from 1981 to 1988 was carried out. Information was collected from charts of 223 consecutive admissions according to a pre-set protocol. Paraplegia or paraparesis was responsible for 164(13.4%) of all neurological admissions over the study period. The median age of the patients was 36 years with a male to female ratio of 1.7:1. Tuberculosis was the leading cause of paraplegia or paraparesis accounting for 47% of the cases. Tumours (20%), Landry-Guillain-Barre' syndrome (12.2%) and tropical spastic paraparesis (TSP) (9.8%) were important but less frequent causes in this series. Other causes like disc prolapse, transverse myelitis, spinal artery stroke and fluorosis were rarely encountered. Vertebral deformity (88.1%), vertebral tenderness (88.1%) and abnormal plain spinal X-ray (89%) were the most helpful findings in the diagnosis of tuberculous paraplegia. Nearly all cases of tuberculous paraplegia were treated medically alone. However, the outcome of treatment as judged by the treating physicians was good with a significant response recorded in 78%.
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PMID:Paraplegia at the Tikur Anbessa Teaching Hospital: a seven year retrospective study of 164 cases. 789 48

From 1984 to 1993, 48 thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm resections were performed. The patient age ranged from 21 to 79 years (mean: 65.5 years), and the extent of the aneurysms were as follows: type I (most of descending and upper abdominal), 17 cases; type II (most of descending and most of abdominal), 3 cases; type III (distal descending and upper abdominal), 20 cases; and type IV (most or the entire abdominal aorta), 8 cases. Ten patients presented with ruptured aneurysms, 1 with hemoptysis, 20 with pain, and 20 with no symptoms. Operation was performed using simple aortic cross-clamping in 18 patients, distal perfusion via Gott shunt in 6, and heparinless left-heart bypass (Biomedicus pump) in 24. Intercostal or lumbar vessels were reimplanted into the graft in 13 patients. Aortic cross-clamp time was 25 to 115 minutes (mean: 49.6 minutes). Four of 10 patients (40%) with ruptured aneurysms and 3 of 38 (8%) patients with non-ruptured aneurysms died. Serious complications included paraparesis in 2 patients (5%), renal failure requiring dialysis in 2 (5%), stroke in 1 (2%), bleeding in 5 (12%), intraoperative cardiac arrest in 3 (7%), sepsis in 1 (2%), prolonged ventilation (longer than 3 days) in 11 (27%), and wound dehiscence in 2 (5%). Thoracoabdominal aneurysm resection remains a challenging problem but can be performed with acceptable risk in selected patients. Distal heparinless perfusion without a heat exchanger may help reduce the risk of paraplegia and renal failure.
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PMID:Experience with thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm resection. 818 36

Heat stroke is a thermal insult to the cerebral thermoregulatory system controlling heat production and heat dissipation. The thermal insult may be environmental as in 'classic heat stroke' or endogenous as in 'exertional heat stroke' in joggers or runners. The insult will lead to a steady rise in body core temperature to 40 degrees C or more, exhaustion of sweating with hot dry skin and central nervous system disturbances ranging from confusion to deep coma. Multisystem insult will follow leading to a fatal outcome, if not diagnosed and treated promptly. Rapid evaporative cooling and support of vital organs are the essential factors in the management of this condition. If treated early, no sequelae results, however, pancerebellar syndrome and spastic or flaccid paraparesis have been described in a few cases. Limited sun exposure, proper use of sunscreens, adequate fluid and electrolyte replacement and acclimatization are the key factors for prevention. Despite appropriate prevention and prompt treatment, heat stroke is unlikely to be totally prevented, but the mortality has improved dramatically to less than 10%.
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PMID:Heat strokes: aetiopathogenesis, neurological characteristics, treatment and outcome. 958 49

We present the case of a patient with late neuroborreliosis and a spontaneous temporal lobe hemorrhage. Although ischemic stroke and subarachnoid hemorrhage have been reported in association with Lyme disease, intraparenchymal brain hemorrhage has not been previously described in the course of this disease. The patient is a 48-year old male with a progressive spastic paraparesis of months' duration who presented acute headache, confusion, severe left hemiparesis with sensory deficit and homonymous hemianopsia. A cranial computed tomography scan showed an extensive right temporal lobe hemorrhage with subarachnoid invasion. Brain angiographic and angio-magnetic resonance imaging studies excluded hemorrhage-predisposing vascular abnormalities. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) studies disclosed mononuclear pleocytosis with elevated protein levels. Both serum and CSF anti-Borrelia titers were significantly increased, and serum Western Blot showed bands to protein 34 (ops B), 57, 59 and 62. The patient was treated with ceftriaxone for 4 weeks, with a favorable outcome. It is suspected that cause of the hemorrhage was parenchymatous Lyme-associated vascular damage and/or microaneurysmatic rupture.
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PMID:Spontaneous brain hemorrhage associated with Lyme neuroborreliosis. 1123 62

Diffusion-weighted MR (DWI) is becoming an established method for the investigation of cerebral ischemia. Its value in spinal ischemia has to be demonstrated. We report on a patient presenting with postoperative paraparesis who underwent emergency MRI of the spine with echo-planar diffusion-weighted imaging which showed an area of hyperintensity corresponding to a decrease of diffusion as measured by the apparent diffusion coefficient. On follow-up imaging spinal stroke was confirmed. In conclusion, spinal echo-planar MR imaging can demonstrate ischemic changes despite strong echo-planar artifacts. It could become an important adjunct to the management of patients with suspected spinal ischemia.
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PMID:Anterior spinal artery stroke demonstrated by echo-planar DWI. 1173 67


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