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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
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A case of accessory middle cerebral artery associated with internal carotid artery aneurysm was reported. A 50-year-old female was admitted to our hospital with complaints of headache, nausea, vomiting and conciousness disturbance. Lumbar puncture showed bloody CSF. Right carotid angiogram revealed saccular aneurysm of the internal carotid-posterior communicating artery and accessory middle cerebral artery originating from the horizontal portion of the right anterior cerebral artery. No other vascular lesion was observed on other angiograms. Operation was performed 2 days after admission. The neck of the aneurysm was clipped. Postoperative aseptic meningitis was cured by frequent lumbar punctures, and her course was uneventful. The etiological hypothesis of these cerebral vascular anomalies was briefly discussed.
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PMID:[A case of accessory middle cerebral artery associated with internal carotid artery aneurysm (author's transl)]. 53 Mar 68

In April 1989 the MMR vaccination program had started, and until October, 1989, 630,000 children received vaccination. In is, however, well known that many children developed various complication including aseptic meningitis after vaccination, and the MMR vaccination program has discontinued. This report described a case of bilateral acute profound deafness most likely due to MMR vaccination. The cause of this deafness was presumed to be mumps vaccination. The bases of the presumption are as follows: the meningitis after MMR vaccination was elicited by PCR method to be caused by mumps vaccine, and the complication of CNS after measles vaccination occurs within 14 days after injection, while the onset of vomiting and gait disturbance of the case was 24 days after vaccination.
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PMID:[Bilateral acute profound deafness after MMR vaccination--report of a case]. 196 May 95

During 1988, an endemic outbreak of aseptic meningitis was noted in the Kaohsiung area. Throughout the year, a total of 89 cases were identified by cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination at the Pediatric Department of Kaohsiung Medical College. The peak incidence was from June to October. Scattered cases still occurred during November and December. The male to female ratio was 1.7:1 and the age distribution ranged from 1 month to 15 years old. Two peaks of age distribution were observed; one in infancy and the other in the 4-7 year old age group. Most of them exhibited fever (94.4%), headache (68.9%), and vomiting (68.5%). Other associated symptoms and signs included neck stiffness, sore throat, cough, Brudzinski's sign, abdominal pain, seizure, dizziness, rhinorrhea, diarrhea, Kernig's sign, skin rash, hyperemic conjunctiva, apnea, and oral ulcers. Most of them had CSF white blood cell (WBC) counts less than 1000/mm3, normal or mild elevated protein, and normal CSF/plasma sugar ratio. Three patients were found to have a virus in their CSF without pleocytosis. Virus isolations from CSF throat swabs and/or rectal swabs were performed in 65 patients, half of them (35/65, 53.8%) had positive results including echovirus type 9 (sixteen), echovirus type 30 (eighteen), and adenovirus type 3 (one). Echovirus type 9 was predominant during July and August whereas echovirus type 30 became predominant after September. All patients recovered spontaneously without any sequelae.
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PMID:Clinical observations and virological study of aseptic meningitis in the Kaohsiung area. 198 74

A retrospective review of charts for 650 children who had lumbar puncture for suspected meningitis was undertaken to determine the characteristics of patients with and without meningitis, identify other conditions suggesting meningitis, and evaluate the predictive value of signs and symptoms of meningitis. The incidence of positive lumbar punctures increased with patient age. Younger infants did not present with classical features of meningitis. Bulging fontanel, lethargy, and irritability were nonspecific symptoms. Vomiting and headache, although not specific, proved to be more sensitive indicators of meningeal infection. Most patients with meningitis (75%) had at least one sign of meningeal irritation, but so did 25% of patients without meningitis. Brudzinski's sign was not specific. In contrast, nuchal rigidity and Kernig's sign had high predictive value. Up to age five, the diseases most often suggesting meningitis were right-sided pneumonia, gastroenteritis, otitis, tonsillitis, exanthema subitum, and urinary tract infections. Of 171 patients with febrile convulsion, one (0.5%) had bacterial meningitis and four had aseptic meningitis.
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PMID:Diseases that mimic meningitis. Analysis of 650 lumbar punctures. 220 11

During the summer and fall of 1969 an outbreak of aseptic meningitis occurred in Montreal and its environs. Forty-four patients were admitted to the infectious disease ward of The Montreal Children's Hospital in August, September and October. Half of the patients were in the age group 6 to 10 years. The ratio of males to females was two to one. Patients showed the typical signs and symptoms of aseptic meningitis, namely fever, vomiting, headache, neck stiffness and pleocytosis of the cerebrospinal fluid.Viruses were recovered from 19 (43%) of the 44 cases. The predominant virus in the outbreak was a non-hemagglutinating strain of echovirus 6. Other virus types isolated in the outbreak were echovirus 7, coxsackievirus A9 and coxsackievirus B4. Serological investigations confirmed the validity of the echovirus isolations and identified additional cases.
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PMID:Aseptic meningitis, Montreal, 1969: a clinical and laboratory study. 510 41

Ten to 28 days after hospital admission cell count and/or total protein concentration showed no decrease or further increase in 33 children (25 boys, 8 girls) between 2 to 15-years of age who suffered from acute aseptic meningitis (causative agents: mumps virus in 9 children, enterovirus in 5 children). Three of these children had cerebral palsy as a possible predisposing factor. The onset of prolonged aseptic meningitis was protracted in some children. At hospital admission the clinical features of this disorder differed not from those in uncomplicated acute aseptic meningitis. In 4 children a one-sided and in 4 patients a doublesided peripheral facial paralysis occurred as a transitory complication. One child showed transient arterial hypertension. EEG was normal in most of the children or revealed a slight general slowing only. Apart from a slight enlargement of the ventricles in 3 children cerebral CT showed no abnormality. Complaints like vertigo, headache, and vomiting persisted for weeks or months in part of the children. During the course of the disease CSF reflected two different reactions: 1. further increase of total protein in combination with a minimal cellular response, affecting 2-10 years old boys and girls equally; protein electrophoresis revealing the pattern of severe blood-CSF barrier disturbance, 2. persistant elevation or further increase of both cell count and total protein occurring nearly exclusively in 6-15 years old boys, associated with the CSF-protein pattern of severe blood-CSF barrier disturbance and of oligoclonal gamma-fractions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Prolonged nonbacterial meningitis: clinical aspects and cerebrospinal fluid findings]. 651 22

Four hundred and fifty-six patients with signs and symptoms of potential central nervous system infection were evaluated from June 28, 1978, to September 30, 1978. The majority of the children had a relatively brief and mild illness characterized by a constellation of features previously described with central nervous system infections. Fever, headache, and vomiting were typical. Altered sensorium and nuchal rigidity were inconstant. One distinct and another infrequently reported feature of enteroviral disease, hypoglycorrhachia and cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis in excess of 2,000 cells/mm3, occurred independently or in concert in 18% of the cases. When these unexpected findings were associated with a presumptive clinical diagnosis of aseptic meningitis, watchful observation and repeat lumbar puncture precluded the necessity to administer antibiotics in every case. The possibility of enteroviral aseptic meningitis being a definitive diagnostic entity manageable on a group, yet individual basis utilizing a disposition protocol is discussed.
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PMID:Management of central nervous system infections during an epidemic of enteroviral aseptic meningitis. 735 59

The antigen reactive with murine monoclonal antibody (MAb) KS1/4 is expressed on epithelial malignancies and some normal epithelial tissues. Studies were undertaken to evaluate KS1/4-methotrexate (KS1/4-MTX) immunoconjugate in patients with advanced non-small cell carcinoma of the lung. Eleven patients in two different groups received KS1/4-MTX in two different escalating dose infusion schedules with a maximal tolerated dose of 1,750 mg/M2 and a cumulative dose of MTX of 40 mg/M2. Toxicities were similar in both groups and included fever, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, guaiac positive stool, and hypoalbuminemia. Two patients had an associated aseptic meningitis. One patient had a 50% decrease in two lung nodules without a change in lymphangitic infiltrates. This patient received a second course of treatment and developed an immune complex-mediated arthritis and serum sickness. Four patients mounted a human antimouse antibody response. Post-treatment tumor biopsies documented binding of MAb KS1/4. These studies document the feasibility and potential usefulness of a MAb directed against tumor-associated antigens with the targeting of chemotherapeutic drugs in patients with non-small cell lung carcinoma.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibody KS1/4-methotrexate immunoconjugate studies in non-small cell lung carcinoma. 792 45

Non-polio enteroviruses are currently the most common agents of the central nervous system viral infection, and are the major causes especially in patients with aseptic meningitis. The practical problems with enterovirus meningitis revealed from the investigation of our patients are as follows. (1) The triad of symptoms of meningitis (fever, headache, vomiting) were seen only in 50% of the older children affected. The only manifestation of neonates with aseptic meningitis was fever. (2) In more than half of the patients, the cerebrospinal fluid showed polymorphonuclear predominance within 3 days from the onset. (3) The causal viruses were isolated frequently (70%) from the cerebrospinal fluid of the children with aseptic meningitis. (4) The patients more than 1 year of age had no sequela clinically. Among neonates and early infants, transient abnormalities of brain CT findings were seen in 40% and delayed speech in 30%. Their prognosis should be investigated more precisely.
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PMID:[Enterovirus infections]. 846 Nov 63

A case of cerebral cysticercosis is reported in a 49-year-old female who presented with headache, nausea, and vomiting. Lumbar CSF showed the findings of mild aseptic meningitis. CT scan revealed an enlargement of the left ambient cistern and a small cystic lesion in the left frontal cortex. MRI demonstrated multilobular cysts in the left ambient cistern with enhancement of their capsules, which compressed and distorted the midbrain. The cysts were surgically excised, and histological examination of the specimen disclosed characteristic features of cysticercus with viable larva. An excellent value of MRI in the diagnosis of intracisternal cysticercosis is emphasized.
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PMID:Cerebral cysticercosis: a case report. 851 45


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