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Query: UMLS:C0042373 (
vascular disease
)
17,070
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The association of large pituitary mass, lack of clinical syndromes of pituitary hypersecretion, hypopituitarism and visual field defects suggests the diagnosis of nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma, but the same characteristics can be present in patients affected by other tumorous lesions, cysts, inflammatory processes or
vascular disease
. The management of these patients depends on a correct diagnosis. A 53-year-old woman was admitted for nausea, vomiting and severe hypotension. For three months she had complained of
weakness
, sleepness, skin-dryness and loss of weight. Imaging and endocrine evaluations revealed an intra and extrasellar mass causing hypopituitarism without diabetes insipidus. Histological examination of the tissue obtained at transsphenoidal surgery showed a Rathke's cleft cyst, surrounded by areas of noncaseous granulomatous tissue with scattered multinucleated giant cells of foreign body type, similar to a sarcoid lesion. Other systemic sarcoidosis localizations were absent. After two years of full well-being, the patient reported a sudden visual impairment, due to sarcoidosis involvment of the prechiasmatic tract of the optic nerve, that promptly improved with corticosteroid treatment. This report emphasizes the overlap of signs and symptoms between non functioning tumors and nontumoral masses of hypothalamic-pituitary region and underlines the fact that a correct diagnosis is feasible only on histopathological basis. Although, occasionally, the coexistence of Rathke'cyst with pituitary adenoma has been reported, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of the association between Rathke's cleft cyst and noncaseating granuloma tissue. Finally, the remission of neurolgical symptoms following corticosteroid therapy confirms this treatment as a valid medical approach and suggests its use in a short therapeutic trial when the diagnosis is doubtful.
...
PMID:Granulomatous sarcoidotic lesion of hypothalamic-pituitary region associated with Rathke's cleft cyst. 912 87
Juvenile dermatomyositis (JDM) is an uncommon disease that features muscle
weakness
, a characteristic rash, and vascular changes in skin, muscle, and other organs. We report a patient with JDM who developed multiple angiokeratomas, one of which was calcified. Electron microscopy of an angiokeratoma revealed altered connective tissue consistent with abnormal collagen. To our knowledge, angiokeratomas occurring in association with JDM have not been previously reported. Abnormal collagen distinguishes the angiokeratomas in our patient from those seen in other conditions. We propose that the angiokeratomas resulted from a progressive compensatory response to the obliterative
angiopathy
of JDM.
...
PMID:Angiokeratomas in juvenile dermatomyositis. 1063 42
An 85 years old female presented with acute pain and
weakness
in left lower extremity and doppler evidence of femoropopliteal block was made which subsequently proved fatal. Necropsy revealed extensive amyloid deposition in the heart and amyloid
angiopathy
in rest of the organs.
...
PMID:Senile systemic amyloidosis--a case report. 1086
The deposition of amyloid Abeta peptide in the wall of cerebral vessels (cerebral amyloid
angiopathy
), can lead to
weakness
and rupture of the vessel wall, resulting in hemorrhagic stroke. The Tg2576 transgenic mouse line, overexpressing mutant amyloid precursor protein in an age-dependent manner, forms amyloid
angiopathy
morphologically similar to that seen in the human. We report here the structural and functional disruption of smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in the walls of pial vessels affected by amyloid deposition in the Tg2576 mouse. We demonstrate, using multiphoton imaging, that the arrangement of SMCs becomes disorganized before the onset of cell death, and that these disorganized SMCs are unable to respond appropriately to application of endothelial-dependent and endothelial-independent vasodilators in a closed-cranial window preparation.
...
PMID:Structural and functional disruption of vascular smooth muscle cells in a transgenic mouse model of amyloid angiopathy. 1123 54
Radiation-induced arteritis of large vessels and brachial plexus neuropathy are uncommon delayed complications of local radiation therapy. We describe a 66-year-old woman with right arm discomfort,
weakness
, and acrocyanosis that developed 21 years after local radiation for breast adenocarcinoma. Arteriography revealed arteritis, with ulcerated plaque formation at the subclavian-axillary artery junction, consistent with radiation-induced disease, and diffuse irregularity of the axillary artery. Electromyography showed a chronic brachial plexopathy. The patient's acrocyanosis, thought to be due to digital embolization from her
vascular disease
, improved with antiplatelet therapy. The concurrent combination of radiation-induced arteritis and brachial plexopathy is uncommon but should be considered in patients presenting with upper extremity pain or
weakness
after radiation therapy.
...
PMID:Arteritis and brachial plexus neuropathy as delayed complications of radiation therapy. 1149 27
Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is a systemic
vascular disease
caused by Notch 3 gene mutations. On electron microscopy a specific granular osmiophilic material (GOM) is found surrounding the vascular smooth muscle cells. In 1993, we first proposed the use of skin biopsy to diagnose patients and to identify relatives of patients with CADASIL. We analyze here our experience with skin biopsies from 50 patients with CADASIL and compare the findings with those of 20 normal skin biopsy specimens. A morphometric analysis of skin vessel morphology on electron microscopy was performed by systematic measurements of several blood vessel diameters, as well as of areas of lumen, endothelial cell and smooth muscle cell cross-sectional areas, vessel wall area, arterial media and extracellular matrix areas. We found relative absence of stenosis but marked destruction of smooth muscle cells, resulting in decrease of vessel wall thickness and loss of extracellular matrix area, producing vessel wall
weakness
. Similar changes were also observed in brain arterioles from 5 patients with CADASIL. Our results suggest that hypotonicity of the arteriolar tree may constitute an important pathogenetic mechanism in CADASIL. Other than hypotonicity, the early and severe destruction of smooth muscle cells may potentially result in decreased secretion of vascular endothelial growth factor, loss of vascular permeability and damaging hemodynamic consequences. Blood vessel morphology of skin vessels correlated well with changes in brain arterioles. Vascular morphology in skin biopsy samples contributes to our understanding of the pathogenesis of CADASIL. It could be important to perform skin biopsies in future therapeutic trials of CADASIL as a direct measure of therapeutic effectiveness.
...
PMID:Morphometric analysis of ultrastructural vascular changes in CADASIL: analysis of 50 skin biopsy specimens and pathogenic implications. 1217 9
A 21 year-old female college student with a history of Turner syndrome at age 9, and 6-year growth hormone replacement therapy noticed
weakness
of right extremities when she got up on March 26, 2001. On admission, she showed right hemiparesis (4+/5) and hypesthesia on the right of body. The hemiparesis progressed (3-/5) in spite of antithrombotic therapy. Brain MRI revealed a high intensity lesion with a diameter of 1.5 cm in the posterior limb of the left internal capsule and putamen on DWI and T2WI. MR angiography and TC-CFI revealed no stenosis in her left middle cerebral artery, but > 50% stenosis in the horizontal portion (M1) of her right middle cerebral artery. Branch lesions were presumed to exist in the left M1. Non-atherosclerotic
angiopathy
, coagulopathy, and other conventional risk factors of brain infarction were not found. Pathogenesis of Turner syndrome might have played a role in the development of brain infarction in this patient.
...
PMID:[A case of Turner syndrome complicated with brain infarction]. 1242 65
We describe a 68-year-old woman who presented with falls, mild limb bradykinesia, axial rigidity, and a severe supranuclear gaze palsy, which failed to benefit from levodopa. She subsequently developed severe apraxia, progressive dysarthria, dysphagia, and a frontal cognitive impairment. Pyramidal
weakness
with fasciculations and widespread chronic partial denervation appeared shortly before her death from bronchopneumonia, 6 months after disease onset. A severe cerebral amyloid
angiopathy
diffusely involving the cerebral hemispheres and cerebellum was present at autopsy as well as a second pathological condition indicative of motor neurone disease. Cerebral amyloid angiopathy may rarely present with a progressive supranuclear palsy-like phenotype.
...
PMID:Cerebral amyloid angiopathy and motor neurone disease presenting with a progressive supranuclear palsy-like syndrome. 1262 39
The significance of the risk factors and the rapid diagnosis of encephalic
vascular disease
(EVD) is the reason for this research, where the authors decided to register and analyze the non-medical people knowledge about these risk factors and the symptoms of this group of disease. For this purpose a questionnaire with questions about these facts was applied to 500 voluntaries without pre-selection, 72.6% of them with ages between 16-35 years old, and the answers analyzed by statistical methods. The authors recognized that the risk factors has a good level of knowledge by this population (87.8 % for hypertension, 76.8 % for smoking, 70.8 % for obesity, 68.7 % for sedentary persons, 66.7 % to stress, 66.3 % to alcohol ingest, 60.7 % for fat diet, 59 % to illicit drugs) while the signs and symptoms of EVD has a minor level of knowing and correction: lost sensitivity 70.3 %, headache 64.2 %, twisted mouth 59.5 %, lost or altered speech 57.5 %, dizziness 56 %, syncope 51.7 %, amaurosis 50.3 %, disequilibrium 45 %, deafness 31.2 %,
weakness
41.1 %, nervousness 20.7%, chest pain 20.2 %, fatigue 15.3 % and tinnitus 18.9 %. According this data, the authors suggest that the correction or prevention of risk factors as well the precocious medical attention by the recognition of symptoms of EVD must be the object of public health programs.
...
PMID:[Lay knowledge about stroke]. 1459 81
THREE GROUPS OF PRIMARY INFLAMMATORY MUSCLE DISEASES: The primary inflammatory muscle diseases comprise three main subsets: polymyositis (PM), dermatomyositis (DM) and inclusion body myositis (IBM). PM and DM are characterized by a proximal
weakness
that develops along weeks to months and by elevated creatine phosphokinase levels. Cutaneous involvement including both erythema and edema and infantile or adult onset are DM specific. PM and IBM only concern adults. Several PM/DM manifestations must be searched for because of their severity: swallowing disorders, various mechanisms of respiratory dysfunction (swallowing pneumopathies, interstitial lung disease, respiratory muscle deficiency) and cardiac involvement. DIAGNOSTIC ELEMENTS FOR PM AND DM: Two investigations, beside biopsy, are particularly useful: muscle MRI imaging showing inflammatory pattern and specific detection of antisynthetase autoantibodies (PM/DM with interstitial lung disease) and anti-Mi-1 and 2 in DM. PHYSIOPATHOLOGICAL DATA: PM and DM differ in their histological and physiopathological characteristics: perivascular B and CD4 lymphocyte infiltrates and complement deposits at the origin of humoral induced
vascular disease
in DM and perimysial CD8 lymphocytes inducing a cellular mediated cytotoxic injury in PM. Class I HLA antigen expression on the muscle fibers and production of cytokines play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of these two diseases. PM and DM may be associated with cancers, connective-tissue disease (overlap syndrome). Some PM are secondary to HIV, HTLV1 virus and toxoplasmosis infection. CHARACTERISTICS OF INCLUSION BODY MYOSITIS: IBM, the most frequent acquired myopathy after 50 years of age, is characterized by particular features: not only clinical (late onset, selective
weakness
, early distal involvement, slow course, unresponsiveness to corticosteroid and immunosuppressant agents); but also histological (rimmed vacuoles, filamentous inclusions) and pathogenic (cytotoxic and degenerative inflammatory process, similar to Alzheimer's disease, with beta-amyloid protein accumulation).
...
PMID:[Polymyositis, dermatomyositis and inclusion body myositis, nosological aspects]. 1463 Dec 70
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