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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The most common indication for the use of radiation therapy in the treatment of benign central nervous system disease is for the treatment of benign brain tumors, such as meningioma, pituitary adenoma, acoustic neuroma, arteriovenous malformation, and craniopharyngioma. Other less common benign intracranial tumors treated with radiation include chordoma, pilocytic astrocytoma, pineocytoma, choroid-plexus papilloma,
hemangioblastoma
, and temporal bone chemodectomas. Benign conditions, such as histiocytosis X, trigeminal neuralgia, and epilepsy, are also amenable to radiation treatment. There have also been reports of radiosurgery being used for the treatment of movement disorders and psychiatric disturbances, such as obsessive-compulsive and anxiety disorders. For benign brain tumors, radiation therapy as either primary or adjuvant therapy plays an integral role in improving local control. In the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia, epilepsy,
tremor
, and some psychiatric disturbances, radiosurgery may help ameliorate or eliminate some symptoms. Patients with benign central nervous system disease are expected to live a long time. As such, treatment should be highly conformal and based on three-dimensional planning using magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography, or both. It is critical that damage to normal brain be minimized.
...
PMID:Radiation therapy for benign central nervous system disease. 1009 4
Renal transplantation is method of choice for treatment of patients with end-stage renal disease without contraindications for immunosuppressive therapy. Neurological complications occur frequently in renal transplant recipients. They may be the consequence of immunosuppressive treatment, but more often evolve as the consequence of previous disturbances which developed during the state of uraemia and treatment with dialysis. The most pronounced neurotoxic effect has calcineurin inhibitors tacrolimus and cyclosporine. The spectrum of neurological disturbances caused by calcineurin inhibitors range from very mild symptoms as paraesthesiae,
tremor
, headache or flushing, to severe changes that may cause lethal outcome. Peripheral neuropathies in renal transplant recipients may occur in the form of mononeuropathy or polyneuropathy. Cerebrovascular diseases are consequence of changes on blood vessels caused by uraemia, dialysis and side effects of immunosuppressive drugs. They cause death in 8% of renal transplant recipients. Central nervous system (CNS) infections usually occur during the first posttransplant year. Unclear symptomatology frequently postpones the diagnosis. Diagnostic evaluation should include magnetic resonance imaging for localization of the process, as well as lumbal puncture in cases without contraindications for the procedure, in order to determine the causative agent. Regarding the ominous prognosis of CNS infections in the immunocompromised host, only timely diagnosis may improve survival. The most common causative agents are Cryptococcus neoformans, Listeria monocytogenes and Aspergillus funigatus. Viral infections also occur, and are commonly caused by herpes virideae, varicella-zoster virus and papova virus. CNS infections clinically present as meningitis, progressive dementia or focal neurological defect. The most common primary brain tumors are B-cell lymphomas, but glioblastoma,
hemangioblastoma
, leiomyosarcoma or glioma may also occur. In cases of neurological posttransplant complications, optimal treatment should be guided by neurologist, nephrologist and infectologist, in some cases also by neurosurgeons.
...
PMID:[Neurological complications in renal transplant recipients]. 1857 36