Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042571 (vertigo)
7,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of basilar artery occlusion after STA-SCA bypass surgery is reported. The patient was a 56 year old male and presented a TIA of vertigo and speech disturbance. The preoperative angiogram revealed severe stenosis of the basilar artery in its midportion between the bifurcation of AICA and that of SCA. After surgery, the patient's clinical course was uneventful, but the angiogram showed that the previous stenotic segment of the basilar artery had been occluded and the distal portion of the basilar artery and its branches were perfused through the widely-patent STA-SCA bypass. About 6 months after the operation, the patient developed a pontine infarction in the right paramedian region, which was confirmed on MRI. The angiogram revealed that the occlusion of the basilar artery extended further proximally to a point just distal to the bifurcation of AICA. So it was suspected that the perforating branches of the basilar artery to the pons were occluded with the extension of the thrombosis of the basilar artery. The hemodynamic changes associated with the EC-IC bypass was thought to be responsible for the occlusion of the previous stenotic lesion.
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PMID:[Basilar artery occlusion after STA-SCA anastomosis; case report]. 235 81

Central vertigo is most often expressed by a feeling of dizziness, non or badly systematized, but it can also appear, more seldom, like an isolated acute vertigo or associated to other neurological signs. A precise clinical exam can lead to evidence essential clinical informations (significant ataxia, neurological signs, gaze nystagmus, pursuit anomaly,...). Almost all acute lesions of central vestibular pathways, as for the peripheral ones, lead to a harmonious vestibular syndrome. The vascular lesion of the vertebro-basilar territory and multiple sclerosis are two main causes to it. The pseudo-labyrinthine forms are essentially described in occlusion infarcts of the AICA and PICA, but a hematoma can lead to the same picture; the diagnostic of multi- or monosymptomatic forms with a peripheral lesion is often very difficult, the classical classification of the central and peripheral vestibular syndromes has become obsolete and should be abandoned.
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PMID:[Vertigo and pathology of the cerebellospinal system]. 1649 49