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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a 30-year-old man with agammaglobulinemia and chronic aseptic meningomyelitis. The patient was diagnosed as having X-linked recessive agammaglobulinemia at 4 years of age and gammaglobulin supplementation was started. He had TIA-like episodes several times since 25 years of age. He developed difficulty in micturition and impotence at 29 years of age. Neurological examination revealed bilateral deafness, contracture of knee joints, slight weakness and areflexia in the lower extremities, Babinski sign and dysuria. There was sensory disturbance in the lower extremity on the left. There was not consciousness disturbance or meningeal irritation sign. The cerebrospinal fluid findings included pleocytosis and increase in protein. Enterovirus RNA was detected in the cerebrospinal fluid by the modified polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method.
MRI
of lower spinal cord showed syrinx formation in the lumbosacral cord and CT of the brain showed bilateral temporal lobe atrophy and temporoparietal subdural fluid collection on the left. 123I-IMP SPECT showed decrease in the cerebral blood flow in the whole brain. EEG showed diffuse slow activity, suggesting the subclinical
encephalopathy
. Chronic enteroviral meningoencephalitis with agammaglobulinemia (CEMA) is one of the complications of agammaglobulinemia. However, myelitis without apparent
encephalopathy
is very rare. To our knowledge, there have been no reports of spinal sylinx formation in CEMA.
...
PMID:[A case of agammaglobulinemia with chronic enteroviral meningomyelitis]. 875 85
We reported a family with early onset cerebrovascular disease. Patient 1 (a 36-year-old man) demonstrated a combination of livedo reticularis and cerebral infarction as previously described as Sneddon syndrome. He also showed transient focal neurologic symptoms and mild dementia. Patient 2 (an elder sister of Patient 1) was suffering from migraine. Their father and paternal uncle died of cerebral infarction, which had developed in their thirties or forties. Patients 1 and 2 showed
MRI
findings compatible with
encephalopathy
with Binswanger-type. Contrary to the previous reports on Binswanger-type
encephalopathy
, both of these patients demonstrated decreased levels of fibrinogen as well as those of factor V, together with negative antiphospholipid antibody. Thus, juvenile onset, autosomal dominant inheritance, the diversity of clinical findings and the coagulopathy in this family were characteristic features. The level of thrombin-antithrombin III complex (TAT) was markedly increased in Patient 1. Treatment with antithrombin (argatroban 20mg i.v. everyday for 28 days) not only reduced the level of TAT but also improved the livedo reticularis and neurological findings. Although gene analysis has not been performed yet on this family, this condition is similar to cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarct and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), which involve juvenile cerebral infarction and dementia as well as migraine.
...
PMID:[Familial Binswanger-type encephalopathy with Sneddon syndrome]. 875 90
The clinical course of MELAS syndrome (mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis, stroke-like episodes) is described in five cases. The age of onset was 9.2 years on average. Cerebral symptoms occurred at an age of 24.6 years on average. The diagnosis was only made later. Three patients died during the follow-up period. The mean age at death was 33.3 years, the average duration of the disease, 19.6 years. All patients suffered from progressive hearing loss, multiple strokes, and complex-partial and generalized seizures. They all had short stature, normal early development and 'ragged red fibers' in the muscle biopsy. Imaging studies (CT and
MRI
) showed bilateral calcification of basal ganglia and multiple strokes. One patient, admitted with epileptic status as initial symptom, showed lymphocytic pleocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid; thus, in her case the differential diagnosis included encephalitis. Four patients were studied by dynamic endocrinological testing. Endocrinological disturbances were detected in three patients. Two of them suffered from hypothalamic-pituitary failure and one patient exhibited hyperprolactinemia. Endocrinological disturbances were considered an expression of the underlying cytopathy. Cerebral symptoms occurred rather late in the course of the disease and indicated poor prognosis.
...
PMID:[Follow-up studies and disorders of endocrinologic function in MELAS syndrome]. 876 1
Cranial
MRI
was obtained in 13 of a group of 57 children receiving long-term parenteral nutrition, who were being investigated for hypermanganasaemia. Increased signal intensity on T1-weighted images has been reported in adult patients on long-term parenteral nutrition and with
encephalopathy
following chronic manganese exposure in are welding. It has been postulated that these changes are due to deposition of the paramagnetic trace element manganese. In excess manganese is hepato- and neurotoxic and we present the correlation of whole blood manganese levels with imaging findings. The age range of our patients was 6 months to 10 years, and the duration of therapy 3 months to 10 years. In 7 children we found characteristic increased signal intensity on T1-weighted images, with no abnormality on T2-weighted images. All patients had elevated whole blood manganese levels, suggesting that the basis for this abnormality is indeed deposition of manganese within the tissues.
...
PMID:MRI in children receiving total parenteral nutrition. 891 28
Reversible bilateral lesions of the claustrum and external capsule in a 12-year-old girl suffering from a severe, transitory
encephalopathy
are reported. After a prodromal stage of feeling uncomfortable a sudden onset of status epilepticus occurred, followed by recurrent complex partial and myoclonic seizures for 3 weeks, with psychotic symptoms and temporary loss of vision, speech and hearing. After treatment with phenytoin the patient became free of seizures and recovered completely without neurological deficit. The initial cranial CT was normal; however, cranial
MRI
7 days later showed bilateral selective lesions of the claustrum and external capsule, which disappeared completely 5 weeks later. The aetiology of these lesions remains obscure; repeated cerebrospinal fluid and blood tests were negative for herpes simplex virus and other infectious agents. The clinical and radiological improvement were concomitant. This may indicate a functional disturbance of the claustrum grey matter, rather than lesions of the white matter of the external and extreme capsules.
...
PMID:Severe transitory encephalopathy with reversible lesions of the claustrum. 892 73
To investigate changes in water diffusion in the cerebral white matter in Alzheimer-type dementia (AD), diffusion
MRI
studies were performed on 11 patients with AD without hyperintensity lesions on T2-weighted images, and 10 age-matched controls. In the anterior and posterior white matter around the lateral ventricule, and the splenium of the corpus callosum, the apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs), in which the diffusion gradient was applied perpendicular to the predominant fiber direction, were significantly higher in patients with AD than in the controls. However, those in which the diffusion gradient was applied parallel to the predominant fiber direction, there were no significant difference in ADCs between patients and controls. Therefore, diffusional anisotropy was lost in the white matter. These results suggest that demyelination occurs in patients with AD even in apparently normal white matter (without signal abnormalitis). Degeneration related to grey matter
encephalopathy
may be a possible explanation of the demyelinating process in the white matter.
...
PMID:[Diffusional anisotropy in the cerebral white matter in Alzheimer-type dementia]. 895 65
Vascular dementia (VAD) is currently considered to be the second most common cause of dementia in Europe and the USA, second to dementia of the Alzheimer's type (DAT). However, in Asia and many developing countries the incidence of VAD exceeds that of DAT. The positive clinical diagnostic workup for VAD requires six steps: (1) clear-cut quantitative assessment of cognitive deficits utilizing standard neuropsychological tests to establish and quantify the dementia syndrome and rule out pseudo-dementia OF depression; (2) ascertaining the presence of risk factors for stroke; (3) identifying cerebral vascular lesions by neuroimaging (
MRI
, Iodine or Xenon contrasted CT, PET and SPECT); (4) exclusion of other causes of dementia; (5) differential diagnosis of possible, probable or definite VAD versus DAT and ascertaining when there are mixtures of the two; and (6) temporal identification of causality between onset and progression of the dementia with identified cerebral vascular lesions. There are eight subtypes of VAD: (1) multi-infarct dementias. These are due to large cerebral emboli, and are usually readily identifiable; (2) strategically placed infarctions causing dementia; (3) multiple subcortical lacunar lesions. Patients with these develop VAD at least five to twenty-five times more frequently than those in age-matched general population samples; (4) Binswanger's disease (arteriosclerotic subcortical leuko-
encephalopathy
). This form is rare. Neuroimaging confirms the diagnosis during life but the diagnosis can not be made by neuroimaging alone; (5) mixtures of two or more of above VAD subtypes; (6) hemorrhagic lesions causing dementia; (7) subcortical dementias due to cerebral autosomally dominant arteriolopathy with subcortical infarcts and leuko-
encephalopathy
(CADASIL), or to familial amyloid angiopathies and coagulopathies all of which present with multiple subcortical lacunar lesions similar to Binswanger's disease; (8) mixtures of DAT and VAD. The clinical significance of leukoaraiosis and its suspected relationships to VAD remains to be better established. The presence of ischemic infarctions, single or multiple large or multiple small (lacunar) by neuroimaging are necessary for the diagnosis of VAD, but identifying their presence, by neuroimaging alone, does not permit the diagnosis of dementia which can only be established by neuropsychological assessments. VAD is a clinical entity, identifiable in at least 30-70% of patients after strokes but mechanisms responsible for the cognitive impairments are complex. Some of these mechanisms are incompletely understood but provide subjects for important future research.
...
PMID:Vascular dementia: still a debatable entity? 898 Dec 95
In 34 perinatally HIV infected children time of manifestation, type and treatability of neurologic disorders were investigated for a period of 7 years (1987-1994). Neurological investigations were done every 6 months; EEG and
MRI
/CT were examined initially in the asymptomatic stage and were repeated when neurologic Symptoms occurred. Zidovudine therapy was started after onset of symptoms, dosage was raised, when treatment with Zidovudine had already begun (600-720 mg/m2/day). Various neurological manifestations were seen in 4 of 12 patients in stage B (33%) and in 11 of 14 children in AIDS (80%). 7 of the 14 AIDS-patients (50%) developed a subacute progressive course or progressive plateau course and 4 of 14 (30%) a static course of
encephalopathy
. Pathological changes in EEG were seen in 54% of investigated patients with neurological deficits. Neuroimaging revealed pathological findings in all symptomatic subjects, 6 of 11 patients in AIDS (55%) has a severe general cerebral atrophy and multifocal white matter lesions. Zidovudine had a positive temporary effect from 6 to 12 months in 5 of 11 treated patients (45%). At present a thorough neurological examination is the most sensitive method to detect neurological impairment in HIV infected children. In most cases CT/
MRI
scan provides information about the course of the
encephalopathy
. Antiretroviral therapy has a limited benefit, if neurologic symptoms start after the second year of life.
...
PMID:[Nervous system manifestations in HIV infected children]. 899 98
A case of reversible
encephalopathy
during treatment with Amphotericin-B (AMB) is described. The comparison of the clinical course of AMB
encephalopathy
with total dose of AMB, cranial radiotherapy and
MRI
data available in previously reported cases, shows that this complication is characterized by a progressive, dose-dependent course, possibly influenced by cranial irradiation.
...
PMID:Reversal of encephalopathy during treatment with amphotericin-B. 899 26
A case of cerebral infarction after viper bite is described; the patient also had features of diffuse
encephalopathy
. Findings on
MRI
were suggestive of subacute hemorrhagic infarcts. Possible mechanisms for cerebral infarction in these circumstances were discussed. The mechanism of cerebral infarction in this case seemed to be vasospasm due to the action of the toxin, hemorrhagin, present in the venom.
...
PMID:Cerebral infarction after envenomation by viper. 902 66
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