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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 40-year-old hypertensive black female, who suddenly developed aphasia, lethargy, and a right
hemiparesis
, and a 42-year-old non-hypertensive black male, who suddenly developed intractable headache, drowsiness, and
vomiting
, were found by angiography to have moyamoya disease. This condition is characterized by a decreased caliber of the internal carotid arteries and bilateral occlusion of the anterior and middle cerebral arteries with visualization of an extensive collateral network of tortuous blood vessels of the rete mirabile type at the base of the brain.
...
PMID:Moyamoya disease in black adults. 44 57
Three cases of brain abscess following an occlusion of the internal carotid artery were reported. Case 1: A 6-year-old girl with congenital heart disease was admitted with headache, disturbance of consciousness and left
hemiparesis
. Right carotid angiography revealed an occlusion of the right internal carotid artery. After 6 months, she was readmitted with high fever. CT scan revealed a low density area and a ring-like shadow at the same site of cerebral infarction. Case 2: A 69-year-old man was admitted in semicoma and with right hemiplegia. Left angiography revealed an occlusion of the left internal carotid artery. After 2 months, a brain abscess was noted in the infarcted area. Case 3: A 20-year-old man with congenital heart disease, was admitted due to headache,
vomiting
and high fever. CT scan revealed a brain abscess in the right frontal lobe. Carotid angiography showed bilateral internal carotid artery occlusion. We concluded that diminution of cerebral oxygen and encephalomalacia are predisposing factors to the evolution of brain abscess.
...
PMID:[Brain abscess (Part 5)--Brain abscess following internal carotid occlusion (author's transl)]. 49 56
A case of cryptococcal granulomatous arachnitis of the spinal cord was reported. A 12-year-old boy suffered from sudden occipitalgia and left
hemiparesis
. The symptoms disappeared spontaneously in about a half year. The next year, he consulted an orthopedist because of lumbago and gait disturbance. Myelography through the cisternal route showed complete block at the level of L1. Exploratory laminectomy of D12 and L1 revealed adhesive arachnitis. Symptoms were improved immediately after the operation. At the age of 15, he was admitted to our clinic, because of sudden onset of headache and
vomiting
. Computed tomography showed marked hydrocephalus. He recovered by ventriculoperitoneal shunt, and was discharged. The next year, sudden back pain occurred. Gait disturbance, sensory disturbance of the legs and trunks below the mamilla, and dysuria appeared gradually. He was readmitted and laminectomy of D2-4 was performed. The arachnoid membrane was white and 2 mm in thickness diffusely. Thickened arachnoid membrane was removed at the level of D2-4. Histological diagnosis was granulomatous arachnitis. Cryptococcus was seen in the removed tissue. Symptoms were improved after operation. One thousand milligrams of amphoterisin B was injected intermittently. He was discharged on food. Spinal symptoms in cryptococcosis are rare. Operative procedures were effective before the administration of amphoterisin B.
...
PMID:[Cryptococcal granulomatous arachnitis of the spinal cord--a case report (author's transl)]. 49 61
A 3 1/2-year-old girl with a huge optic glioma was reported. On February 26, 1978, she was hospitalized for signs of increased intracranial pressure, namely headache,
vomiting
and consciousness disturbance. Before admission she did not complain of her visual disturbance. A huge mass lesion in the subfrontal-suprasellar region was found by neuroradiological examination. The operation was performed on March 7, 1978, and the tumor arising from the right optic nerve, about 170 grams in weight, was totally removed in piecemeals. Histopathological diagnosis was pilocytic astrocytoma. Immediately after operation diabetes insipidus and hypernatremia developed, but two months later these symptoms disappeared. Post-operative CT scan demonstrated no mass lesion in the subfrontal-suprasellar region. After radiation therapy, she was discharged with slight left
hemiparesis
on August 31, 1978. Though her right eye was blind, visual acuity remained 0.2 in the left eye. No other neurologic deficits could be found.
...
PMID:[Giant optic glioma--case report (author's transl)]. 49 74
We have reported a rare case of spontaneous 3rd ventriculostomy with spontaneous arrest of obstructive hydrocephalus. A 41 year old man, who had had an intermittent headache for about a year, was admitted to the department of neurosurgery Kitasato University with chief complaints of sudden onset of severe headache,
vomiting
and disturbance of consciousness. At the time of admission, 30 minutes after the onset of symptoms, the positive neurological findings were delirious state of consciousness, miotic pupils with sluggish reaction to light, mild
hemiparesis
on the left site and slight nucnal rigidity. He lapsed into coma after two hours, however he gradually relieved from these symptoms since the forth hospital day. Cerebrospinal fluid was bloody. Radiograms of the skull revealed decalcification of posterior clinoid process and postero-inferior displacement of pineal calcification. Brain scanning and vertebral angiography demonstrated tumor stain in the posterior portion of the 3rd ventricle. Dimer-X ventriculography revealed the obstruction of posterior portion of the 3rd ventricle and the leakage of Dimer-X through the floor of the 3rd ventricle into the intrasellar subarchnoid space. The patient died after about one year from the onset of symptoms. Any signs of increased intracranial pressure had not been noticed since the forth hospital day; At autopsy we confirmed the posterior portion of the 3rd ventricle was obstructed by tumor. In the floor of the 3rd ventricle there was a round opening which was patient and measured about 3 mm in diameter. Microscopic examination of the tumor showed an oligodendroglioma. Neoplastic cells partially infiltrated into the surface facing to the 3rd ventricle and slight gliosis was observed around the site of rupture. The surface along the subarachnoid space was lined with pia-aracnoid membrane except at the site of rupture. In the past literatures only 6 cases of spontaneous 3rd ventriculostomy have been reported. Three cases were observed spontaneous arrest of obstructive hydrocephalus. Our case is the first reported case of spontaneous 3rd ventriculostomy through the floor of the 3rd ventriculostomy through the floor of the 3rd ventricle. We suggested the pathogenesis of spontaneous 3rd ventriculostomy is a result of destruction at normally weak points of 3rd ventricle (ex. anterior, posterior wall and floor of 3rd ventricle), which has the reultant internal hydrocephalus caused by recurrent obstruction of C.S.F. pathway or long-standing obstructive hydrocephalus.
...
PMID:[A case of spontaneous 3rd ventriculostomy (author's transl)]. 55 83
A case of hypertensive intracerebellar hematoma surgically treated and cured was reported. The 41-year-old male had two cerebrovascular attacks with headache and
vomiting
followed by left
hemiparesis
. Drowsiness and dysarthria appeared the next day. The patient was admitted to a hospital, where right facial palsy, loss of right gag reflex and paralytic hemiplegia on the left side were noted. On the 7th day, the patient's consciousness became clear byt the other neurological evidences did not change. On the 14th day, bradycardia and central hyperventilation appeared and he became drowsy again. The patient was transferred to the authors' clinic. When the patient was admitted, he showed typical cerebellar signs such as nystagmus, ataxia, and slurring speech with pyramidal sign on left side and cranial nerves paralysis on right side, and also showed the changes of vital signs as a medullary syndrome in the late stage of the course. The vertebral angiogram revealed a space taking process in the right cerebellar hemisphere. The old blood (30g) was removed by suboccipital craniectomy. The hematoma cavity had a communication with the IVth ventricle through a small perforation in the medial wall of the hematoma. Spontaneour intracerebellar hematoma including of hypertensive origin is not rare in the reports of autopsy but surgically treated case has only rarely been reported. The main reason of few survivals should be in its fulminate course.
...
PMID:[A cured case of hypertensive intracerebellar hematoma (author's transl)]. 94 80
A case of central nervous system actinomycosis is reported. A 33-year-old male complained of headache,
vomiting
and blurred vision lasting for eight days prior to admission. On examination, a right
hemiparesis
, as well an intracranial hypertension were detected. The cerebrospinal fluid showed mild lymphomononuclear hypercytosis. Necropsy disclosed three abscess in the cerebral hemispheres, in addition to moderate cerebral edema on the left side but without purulent leptomeningitis. Actinomyces filaments and granules were demonstrated in the cerebral and lung abscessess. The Brazilian literature on actinomycosis is reviewed and six published cases with nervous system involvement were found. Relevant clinical and anatomical aspects of the cases and of the present one are discussed.
...
PMID:[Cerebral actinomycosis. Anatomo-clinical case report and review of the Brazilian literature]. 110 3
The clinical spectrum of juvenile head trauma syndromes was derived from an analysis of 50 attacks in 25 patients. Attacks were grouped into four clinical types: (1)
hemiparesis
; (2) somnolence, irritability, and
vomiting
; (3) blindness; and (4) brain stem signs. Our evidence shows that these four types are different manifestations of a common underlying process. All attacks followed mild head trauma after a latent interval, generally of one to ten minutes. Forty of the 50 attacks occurred in patients under 14 years of age. Full recovery occurred after a variable time in all but one instance. This patient, and one other, had an angiographically demonstrable occlusion of a branch of the middle cerebral artery. In clinical and laboratory features, these attacks resemble classical migraine and presumably have a similar underlying mechanism.
...
PMID:Juvenile head trauma syndromes and their relationship to migraine. 118 Jul 41
The occipital-vertebral anastomosis is one of the anastomotic channels between the external carotid system and the intracranial vessels. In this paper, we have reported a large, left external carotid-basilar anastomosis which was incidentally revealed in a patient with left
hemiparesis
due to arteriosclerotic occlusion of the right internal carotid artery. A 55-year-old man suddenly developed left
hemiparesis
without headache, unconsciousness or
vomiting
on the morning of January 15, 1973. When he was referred to our service on April 11, the noticeable neurological findings were left
hemiparesis
and left homonymous hemianopsia. The right carotid angiogram revealed occlusion of the internal carotid artery associated with collateral channels from the external carotid artery. Also a segment of the vertebral artery was visualized via the muscular branch of the occipital artery. In the left carotid angiogram, the posterior circulation was markedly visualized throught the left vertebral artery originating from the external carotid artery trunk. This anastomotic vessel had a large branch with constant caliber leading to the occipital fossa. But the posterior cerebral artery was directly visualized from the internal carotid artery without connection to the basilar artery. Repeated bilateral brachial angiograms revealed hypoplasis of the vertebral arteries. It was suggested that the persistent external carotid-basilar anastomosis might be constantly associated with hypoplasia or aplasia of the bilateral vertebral arteries.
...
PMID:[External carotid-basilar anastomosis: case report (author's transl)]. 123 83
Dengue encephalopathy or dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) with CNS involvement used to be considered a relatively rare condition; but the number of cases reported in human studies has been increasing every year. Diagnosis of dengue encephalopathy is based on clinically diagnosed DHF according to the W.H.O. criteria (1980), with CNS manifestations consisting of abrupt onset of hyperpyrexia, non-transient alteration of consciousness, headache,
vomiting
--with or without seizures--and normal CSF. Many factors may be considered to be directly or indirectly associated with CNS signs and symptoms in DHF, the main pathology being leakage of plasma into serous spaces and abnormal hemostasis, leading to hypovolemic shock and hemorrhage in many organs of the body. Acute liver failure is considered to be one of the main factors causing brain pathology. One hundred fifty-two cases of dengue encephalopathy admitted during 3 periods at the Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital in Jakarta were studied retrospectively. The overall incidence was 152 out of 2,441 DHF cases, or 6.2%. The most pronounced symptoms were hyperpyrexia, alteration of consciousness and convulsions. Laboratory examination showed an unusually high increase of serum transaminases, hyponatremia, and hypoxia. Neurologic abnormalities detected were
hemiparesis
and tetraparesis of the extremities, and second nerve atrophy; such abnormalities were found in 10 out of the 152 cases, or 6.5%.
...
PMID:Dengue encephalopathy. 150 81
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