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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The term "papilledema" describes optic disc swelling resulting from increased intracranial pressure. A complete history and direct funduscopic examination of the optic nerve head and adjacent vessels are necessary to differentiate papilledema from optic disc swelling due to other conditions. Signs of optic disc swelling include elevation and blurring of the disc and its margins, venous congestion, and retinal hard exudates, splinter hemorrhages and infarcts. Patients with papilledema usually present with signs or symptoms of elevated intracranial pressure, such as headache, nausea, vomiting, diplopia, ataxia or altered consciousness. Causes of papilledema include intracranial tumors, idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri), subarachnoid hemorrhage, subdural hematoma and intracranial inflammation. Optic disc edema may also occur from many conditions other than papilledema, including central retinal artery or vein occlusion, congenital structural anomalies and optic neuritis.
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PMID:Papilledema: clinical clues and differential diagnosis. 154 98

Between February 1986 and December 1988, 44 patients were treated with stereotactic radiosurgery using a standard linear accelerator. Twenty one patients were treated for cerebrovascular abnormalities and 23 patients were treated for intracranial tumors. Fifteen of the 23 patients treated for intracranial tumors had received previous radiotherapy. The range of doses given by radiosurgery was 1000-2500 cGy. Nausea and vomiting occurred in seven patients within six hours of treatment. The incidence and symptoms were correlated with the dose of radiation to the vomiting center (area postrema) with the median dose to the postrema in symptomatic patients being 618 cGy compared to a range of less than 5 to 184 cGy in the remaining 36 asymptomatic patients. Temporary alopecia occurred in a single patient who received 400 cGy to the scalp. Alopecia did not occur in the remaining 43 patients who received from less than 5 to 175 cGy. Two patients treated for arteriovenous malformations developed an enhancing lesion on CT scanning (one with cerebral edema) on follow-up CT scanning six and twenty-eight months following radiosurgery. The location of these enhancing lesions corresponded to the volumes treated. In one patient, the enhancing pattern and edema disappeared within 18 months of treatment and no neurological deficits developed. Aphasia occurred in one patient treated for a recurrent glioma two hours following treatment to the left temporal lobe and cleared within 12 h of radiosurgery. One patient with an arteriovenous malformation of the pons developed weakness of the contralateral arm and leg six weeks following treatment and this has slowly resolved over the last 12 months. In conclusion, the complications to date have been self-limited and appear to be directly related to the dose and area of brain treated. Prior radiation therapy has not been associated with increased risk of complication in patients treated with radiosurgery for recurrent tumors to date.
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PMID:Stereotactic radiosurgery of the brain using a standard linear accelerator: a study of early and late effects. 234 48

In a prospective trial anthropometric and biochemical data of 24 neurosurgical patients with primary intracranial tumors were measured to assess preoperative malnutrition in this special group of patients. In spite of starving because of invasive diagnostic procedures, high-dose dexamethasone therapy of peritumoral edema, and changes in food intake because of psychical alterations and repeated vomiting resulting from elevated intracranial pressure no abnormalities were found in the data measured. The authors conclude that in general preoperative malnutrition is absent in neurosurgical patients and preoperative nutrition to improve postoperative outcome is not indicated in this group.
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PMID:[Preoperative nutritional status of neurosurgery patients]. 250 51

Brain tumors remain the second most common neoplasm of childhood, however, there is no adequate study of this disease in Thai children. From the year 1971 to 1987, 468 children under 15 years of age were admitted to the Department of Pediatrics, Ramathibodi hospital with the diagnosis of brain tumor. Four hundred and forty-four patients had primary intracranial tumors, of these, 17 were excluded due to inadequate information and the remaining 427 patients were studied. Male to female ratio was 1.3:1, the age ranged from one day old to 14 years old. The duration of illness before admission ranged from a few days to 4 years, with over 70 per cent within 3 months. Headache, vomiting and papilledema were the three most common symptoms and signs. Supratentorial and infratentoral tumors were seen in 209 and 216 patients respectively, craniopharyngioma was the most common supratentorial tumor (51/209) and medulloblastoma was the most common infratentorial tumor (95/216), however, malignant astrocytoma is the overall most common tumor type. Early diagnosis and treatment were needed for good outcome.
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PMID:Brain tumors in children at Ramathibodi Hospital. 273 28

Twenty-eight patients with intracranial tumors symptomatic during the 1st year of life were managed from January 1970 to March 1988. Supratentorial location (19 cases) was dominant over the infratentorial. The most common histological type was astrocytoma; choroid plexus papilloma and ependymal tumors followed in frequency. Twenty-two infants (78.6%) had associated hydrocephalus. Macrocrania, vomiting, delayed milestones, and behavioral disturbances were the chief clinical manifestations. Four patients were admitted in extremely deteriorated condition and died preoperatively. Twenty cases underwent surgery for tumor removal with a 1-month mortality rate of 20%. Tumor excision provided permanent relief of hydrocephalus in the majority of the surviving cases. Five patients received conventional radiotherapy. Stereotactic brachytherapy yielded an excellent result in 1 case. Overall 13 cases are currently alive; 6 of them have survived longer than 6 years. Fourteen of the 15 patients who were dead at follow-up succumbed within 1 year after diagnosis.
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PMID:Intracranial tumors during the 1st year of life. 280 99

A 49-year-old man who had been suffering from disturbance of hearing for 5 years suddenly developed severe headache, nausea, and vomiting. Computed tomography (CT) scans both with and without contrast medium enhancement, performed on the day of admission, showed a nearly round high-density area in the left cerebellopontine angle. A left transaxillary vertebral angiogram showed no aneurysm or arteriovenous malformation. Hemorrhage from a tumor in the left cerebellopontine angle was suspected. CT scan without contrast medium enhancement, performed on the 17th day after onset, showed only a small, ill-defined high-density area in the cerebellopontine angle. An operation was performed on the 20th day after onset. The tumor was totally extirpated together with a clot. Histologically the tumor was an acoustic neurinoma with hemorrhage and necrosis. The postoperative course was favorable. Massive hemorrhage from primary intracranial tumors, especially acoustic neurinomas, is discussed. Radical operation on the tumor should be performed as soon as possible.
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PMID:Acoustic neurinoma presenting as subarachnoid hemorrhage. 660 70

The incidence of choroid plexus papilloma is about 0.5% of all intracranial tumors, but choroid plexus papilloma in the third ventricle is rare. Fortuna reported 56 cases of choroid plexus papilloma of the third ventricle in 1979. Among them, the neoplasm of the third ventricle in the neonatal period was not found. This report is a case of choroid plexus papilloma of the third ventricle in the neonatal period. A 34 day-old female was admitted to our service with complaints of head enlargement, vomiting, and convulsive seizures on January 8, 1981. Enlarged head had been noticed by her family within the first two weeks. On admission, a marked congenital hydrocephalus was diagnosed by CT scan with symmetrical dilated ventricles and no abnormal high or low density area, and V-P shunt was performed on the next day. But several days later, she suffered from progressive abdominal distension, which was disclosed due to CSF overproduction by a choroid plexus papilloma. When the tumor was recognised by enhanced CT scan, her general condition was too poor to attempt a surgical procedure, and she died on March, 19, 1981. Histologically the neoplasm was a typical choroid plexus papilloma of the third ventricle. So far as we know, this case is the first one of the choroid plexus papilloma of the third ventricle in the neonatal period.
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PMID:[A choroid plexus papilloma of the third ventricle in the neonatal period--a case report]. 662 95

One hundred infants with intracranial tumors symptomatic during the 1st year of life were studied. They differed from older children in having a higher percentage of supratentorial tumors and in the fact that 90% of the tumors were of neuroectodermal origin. Vomiting, alteration of psychomotor development, and macrocrania were the most common presenting features. The "diencephalic syndrome" was seen in 5 infants, and subarachnoid hemorrhage due to tumor was diagnosed in 4. Computed tomography as the primary investigation is increasing the number of neoplasms diagnosed in this age group, although review of the skull roentgenograms in the series disclosed an abnormality in 92%. Eighty of the tumors were verified, 68 by a cranial operation and the rest at autopsy. Of the verified neoplasms, 20% were medulloblastomas, 12.5% were choroid plexus papillomas, and 10% were cerebellar astrocytomas. The cumulative average survival was 27 months but, for those who underwent a tumor operation, the average survival was 37 months. The operative mortality was 30%. Thirty-nine patients were irradiated, and this subset had a 5-year survival rate of 43%. The morbidity was high irrespective of radiotherapy; 60% of those who survived 1 year were moderately or severely disabled. Those infants receiving more than 5000 rads of whole brain radiation tended to have greater deficits in the long term. When analyzed separately, patients treated after 1970 had greatly improved mortality and morbidity rates.
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PMID:Intracranial neoplasms during the first year of life: analysis of one hundred consecutive cases. 669 91

We report a case of triple intracranial tumors of different cell types without phacomatosis. The patient was a 77-year-old female who was hospitalized with left hemiparesis and vomiting. Computed tomography (CT) scans revealed a large tumor mass in the right frontal lobe and relatively small tumor masses in the medial right frontal and parietal lobes. Other tumors were also detected in the sella turcica, left sphenoidal wing, left anterior clinoidal process and left cerebellar convexity. This case was considered to be one of metastatic brain tumors, and surgery was performed for the right frontal tumor because of its mass effect. The tumor was so highly vascular that it could not be totally removed. Postoperatively, the mass effect showed a gradual increase on CT scans because of intratumoral hemorrhage and peritumoral edema. The patient's consciousness level gradually fell, and she died of pneumonia and cardiac insufficiency 1 month after the operation. The surgical specimen of the tumor was diagnosed as glioblastoma multiforme by histological examination. At autopsy, the small tumors in the medial frontal lobe and parietal lobe were found to be clearly separated from the large right frontal tumor and were diagnosed as multicentric glioblastoma multiforme. The sellar tumor revealed chromophobe pituitary adenoma and was diagnosed as a prolactinoma by immunohistochemical examination. The tumors in the left sphenoidal wing and left cerebellar convexity were diagnosed as transitional meningiomas. Multiple primary intracranial tumors of different cell types without phacomatosis are relatively rare, but almost 100 reported cases could be found in the literature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Triple primary intracranial tumors of different cell types: a case report]. 760 38

From 1982 to 1991, there were 57 patients diagnosed with various intracranial disorders manifested initially with acute hemiplegia at the Department of Pediatrics, National Taiwan University Hospital. There were 33 boys and 24 girls, aged 12 days to 18 years old. In etiological consideration, cerebrovascular disease (66.7%), intracranial tumors (12.3%) and head trauma (10.5%) accounted for most of the cases. Besides acute hemiplegia, cranial nerve palsy (47.4%), disturbed consciousness (42.1%), headache (42.1%), vomiting (31.6%), focal seizure (21.1%) and fever (21.1%) were also common manifestations. Neuroimage studies of CT/MRI scan and angiography were the most useful diagnostic tools. Treatment modalities included medical treatment in 25 patients and surgical intervention in 16 patients and supportive treatment in the others. There were 12 fatal cases, half of whom died directly of intracranial pathology. The survivors exhibited various neurological deficits, in which motor deficits, mental retardation, and subsequent seizures were the three most common sequelae.
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PMID:Acute hemiplegia in infancy and childhood. 817 42


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