Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (ventricular dilatation)
2,163 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This community-based study analyzed 54 patients with definite or probable tuberculous meningitis (TBM) in New Mexico from 1970 through 1990. Patients ranged in age from 4 months to 86 years. The highest age-specific incidence occurred in the elderly, but 22% of patients were less than 10 years old. Native American patients were overrepresented. Patients were as likely to live in small towns as in large urban cities. Symptoms were present for a median of 13 days before admission. The majority of patients had fevers, headache, stiff neck, and mental changes, such as confusion or lethargy. No patient was admitted comatose. Focal neurologic signs were present in 33%. Laboratory testing found hyponatremia in 79%, pulmonary infiltrates on chest x-ray in 40%, ventricular dilatation on CT or MRI in 52%, and tuberculomas in 16%. PPD skin tests were positive in 64%. CSF cultures grew Mycobacterium tuberculosis in 50%, but colony counts were always lower than 10(2)/ml. As a consequence, acid-fast stains of CSF sediment were reported as positive in only 4%. Six patients were not diagnosed during the hospitalization and died of complications. Twenty-three percent of patients who were appropriately treated also died of complications during the initial hospitalization. Tuberculous meningitis continues to be an important disease in small communities, and affects all ages and ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds.
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PMID:Tuberculous meningitis in the southwest United States: a community-based study. 841 30

Recently extension of malignant glioma to the spinal cord (meningeal gliomatosis: MG) has been described with increasing frequency as the advancement of the therapy for brain tumor. However, the study for clinicopathological features of MG has not been established and its therapy has still been difficult. We tried to produce experimental models of MG using nude mice and study experimental immunotherapy with human monoclonal antibody (CLN-IgG MoAb). U87-SC1 human glioma cells (5 x 10(5) in 20 microliters) were inoculated transcutaneously into the cisterna magna of BALB/c nu/nu mice using a 27-gage needle. Daily weights, neurological findings and survival time were examined. MRI scan was performed after neurological deterioration and histological examination was also performed after death. CLN-IgG MoAb was used for treatment and 15 nude mice which were inoculated with tumor cells into the cisterna magna (Day 0) were divided into three groups of 5 mice each. Group A was control group which received saline into the cisterna magna, Group B and C received 50 micrograms of CLN-IgG into the cisterna magna on Day 2 or Day 7 following inoculation of tumor cells. Efficacy of experimental immunotherapy was statistically evaluated by the difference of median survival time (MST) among three groups. All of the nude mice lost weight within 4 or 5 days after inoculation of tumor cells and developed paraplegia or tetraplegia with incontinence and died. MRI of the nude mice which showed neurological deteriorations revealed ventricular dilatation, infiltration of tumor cells to the spinal cord and spread of tumor cells into the subarachnoid space.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Experimental study on immunotherapy of meningeal gliomatosis with monoclonal antibody]. 847 56

In the present investigation, we estimated both the evolution and the severity of ischemic damage following unilateral carotid occlusion (UCO) in Mongolian gerbils by using conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI, i.e. T2 weighted imaging) and histological techniques. Immediately after UCO, the animals showed different clinical effects. The mortality (46%) detected within the first 48h was considered an "stroke-sensitivity", the "stroke-resistant" animals showed wide variability in terms of both temporal evolution and the extent of ischemic damage. The signal hyperintensity and negative MRI observed during the first 30h after UCO did not always correlate with the cerebral damage presented after 14 days, although a close correlation was established between the T2 weighted images taken more than 30h after UCO and neuropathology: the gerbils negative to imaging showed no morphological changes, whereas an enhanced signal was always prognostic of ischemic injury. Moreover, late MRI documented ventricular dilatation. Histopathology showed that the ischemic damage differed among the stroke-resistant gerbils and was often bilateral. The present study confirms the differences in gerbil susceptibility to hemispheric infarction after permanent UCO and suggests that conventional MRI may be a useful non-invasive method for i) identifying the stroke-resistant animals prone to mature ischemic injury and ii) monitoring the evolution of therapeutic efficacy without sacrificing animals.
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PMID:Variable response of the Mongolian gerbil to unilateral carotid occlusion: magnetic resonance imaging and neuropathological characterization. 861 12

To determine the frequency and nature of MRI lesions in children with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1), 50 patients aged 8 to 16 years were evaluated prospectively with cranial MRI. Forty-one children were asymptomatic with respect to central nervous system pathology, and 50% were macrocephalic. Sixteen patients (32%) had normal MRI examinations. Thirty-two patients (64%) had high intensity lesions on T2-weighted images and 16 patients (32%) had hyperintense lesions on T1-weighted images. Seven patients (14%) had ventricular dilatation (associated with increased intracranial pressure in 2) and 11 patients (22%) had optic pathway lesions (optic glioma in 7). MRI was superior to CT in differentiating optic sheath thickening and optic nerve tortuosity from optic glioma in four patients. An intracranial tumour (ependymoma) and sphenoid wing dysplasia were evident in individual patients. Findings previously unreported in NF1 included an aqueductal web resulting in hydrocephalus, intraocular neurofibroma resulting in retinal detachment, and asymptomatic enlargement of the septum pellucidum. T1 and T2 signal abnormalities in isolation were not associated with neurological deficits or the occurrence of macrocephaly, and all lesions that required intervention were suspected clinically. Macrocephaly in the absence of increased intracranial pressure or accelerated head growth is not an indication for neuroimaging in children with NF1. However, the majority of children (68%) had disease-specific abnormalities and thus MRI may provide a useful adjunct to clinical evaluation in the diagnosis of equivocal cases.
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PMID:MRI findings in children with neurofibromatosis type 1: a prospective study. 866 66

Nine children with congenital rubella syndrome were examined with respect to the relation between clinical symptoms and the findings of computed tomography (CT, 9/9 cases) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI, 7/9 cases). All patients had deafness, and three had relatively severe sequelae in the central nervous system (CNS), such as mental retardation (MR), cerebral palsy (CP) or microcephaly. In four patients, dilatation of the lateral ventricles was found by CT; in four patients, low-density areas were noted in the periventricular white matter and/or the subcortical white matter; one patient showed a spotty calcified area in the lenticula. No abnormal findings were found by CT in other three patients. MRI in seven children demonstrated areas of prolonged T1 and T2 relaxation times in the white matter in all of them. In relation to clinical symptoms, five patients without dilatation of the lateral ventricles had no sequelae except deafness. On the other hand, in four patients with dilation of the lateral ventricles, three had MR, CP or microcephaly. This study showed that there was a close relation between the ventricular dilatation and sequelae with in CNS, whereas abnormal intensity areas in the white matter found by MRI were not related well to the sequelae of CNS.
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PMID:[Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain in congenital rubella syndrome]. 883 Dec 40

The aim of this study is to further clarify the relation between the pattern of cognitive impairment in spastic diplegic children born preterm and MRI features of cerebral lesions. The cognitive profile by Wechsler Scale of a sample of 30 children aged 6 years, 8 months to 14 years, 7 months was assessed, and the correlations between the Full Scale, Verbal, and Performance IQ and periventricular leukomalacia features on MRI were investigated. A significant difference was observed between the mean Verbal and Performance IQ, indicating a specific failure in the visuoperceptual functions of spastic diplegic children born preterm. Periventricular leukomalacia was detected in all children. The severity of ventricular dilatation, the degree and extent of white matter reduction, optic radiation involvement, and the thinning of the posterior corpus callosum correlated significantly with the Full Scale and Performance IQ: no correlation was observed between the Verbal IQ and any of the MRI features analyzed. In spastic diplegic children, an MRI examination between the ages of 1 and 2 years may be helpful in predicting a specific neuropsychological pattern of dysfunction and in defining an early intervention program.
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PMID:MRI features of cerebral lesions and cognitive functions in preterm spastic diplegic children. 891 57

In the classical form of congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD), subclinical brain involvement is frequent. In order to establish the natural evolution of CNS alterations in this type of CMD, the cerebral functions of 12 cases were examined longitudinally for a mean period of 8 years. There were 7 boys and 5 girls, with a mean age of 5 years at first evaluation and 13 at the last one. Merosin expression in muscle fiber basement membrane, evaluated in 10 of them, was normal in 6 and deficient in 4. CNS conditions were followed up by repeated neuropsychiatric examinations, intelligence tests, EEG and brain CT scan and/or MRI. Eight of the 12 patients (including the 4 with merosin-deficiency) had normal intelligence, while 4 had mild to moderate mental retardation: in all the intellectual ability was unchanged during the follow-up study. CT scan detected minor brain alterations in 9 patients: 6 of these, the 4 with merosin deficiency and 2 others in whom merosin was not evaluated, presented leukoencephalopathy: on neuroimaging reappraisal it was unchanged in 3, improved in 2 and worse in 1 (a merosin-deficient case). Cerebellar alterations or mild ventricular dilatation were detected in 8 cases, including 3 merosin-non-deficient ones: these abnormalities were unchanged at the last study by CT and MRI, as were the normal neuroimaging findings observed in 3 other cases. Overall, during our study the brain alterations found in classical CMD showed a stationary or an improving course; progressive worsening was observed only in 1 of 4 merosin-deficient cases with leukoencephalopathy.
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PMID:Brain alterations in the classical form of congenital muscular dystrophy. Clinical and neuroimaging follow-up of 12 cases and correlation with the expression of merosin in muscle. 893 20

Progressive rubella panencephalitis (PRP) is a slow virus infection of the central nervous system. PRP was first reported in 1974, and fewer than 20 cases have been reported since then. All patients were male who were between the ages of 8 and 21 years at onset, and most had signs of congenital rubella syndrome. Although PRP may exhibit clinical features resembling SSPE, the age at onset is much older and the clinical course is more benign. The main neurological features of PRP are dementia, cerebellar ataxia, and seizures. Increases in antirubella antibody titer and IgG are found in the CSF and diffuse atrophy of the brain with ventricular dilatation may be found on MRI. The pathomechanism of PRP remains unclarified.
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PMID:[Progressive rubella panencephalitis]. 910 95

We report a 76-year-old man who developed blurred vision and dementia. He was apparently well until April 4, 1990 (70-year-old at that time) when he had a sudden onset of bilateral loss of vision. Corrected vision was 0.1 (right) and 0.09 (left). He was admitted to the ophthalmology service of our hospital on April 9, 1990, and neurological consultation was asked on April 11. Neurologic examination revealed alert and oriented man without dementia. Higher cerebral functions were intact. He had bilateral large visual field defects with loss of vision; he was only able to count the digit number with his right eye and to recognize hand movement with his left eye. Otherwise neurologic examination was unremarkable. General physical examination was also unremarkable; he had no hypertension. Cranial CT scan was normal on April 11; lumber spinal fluid contained 1 cell/microliter, 63 mg/dl of sugar, and 97 mg/dl of protein; myelin basic protein was detected, however, oligoclonal bands were absent. He was treated with methylprednisolone pulse therapy and oral steroid, however, no improvement was noted in his vision. He started to show gaze paresis to left, ideomotor apraxia, agnosia of the body, and dementia. Cranial CT scan on June 11 revealed a low density area in the deep left parietal white matter facing the trigonal area of the lateral ventricle. He was discharged on July 2, 1990. Hasegawa dementia scale was 2/32.5 upon discharge. In the subsequent course, he showed improvement in his mental capacity and Hasegawa dementia scale was 22.5/32.5 in 1991, however, no improvement was noted in his vision. In 1994, he started to show mental decline in that he became disoriented, and showed delusional ideation of self persecution and depersonalization with occasional confusional state. He also showed unsteady gait. Cranial MRI on February 13, 1996 revealed a T2-high signal intensity lesion on each side of the parietal deep white matter more on the left and another T2-high signal intensity lesion in the left pons as well as in the right thalamus. He complained of right hypochondrial pain and was admitted to another hospital on April 22, 1996. He was markedly confused and demented. He continued to show bilateral loss of vision, but no motor palsy was noted. Cranial CT scan on April 23, 1996 revealed diffuse cortical atrophy and ventricular dilatation in addition to the low density areas in both parietal deep white matter. He developed jaundice in the middle of May. Abdominal CT scan revealed multiple low-to iso-density areas in the liver and marked iso-to high-density swelling of the right kidney. The patient expired on June 9th, 1996. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had had a carcinomatous limbic encephalitis with optic neuropathy and a choleduct carcinoma. Other opinions entertained included acute disseminated encephalomyelitis with optic neuritis, and granulomatous angiitis of the central nervous system. Some participants thought the primary site of the carcinoma was the right kidney with metastasis to the liver. Post mortem examination revealed a mixed type carcinoma in the right kidney with liver metastases. Neuropathologic examination revealed an incomplete softening in the optic chiasm and the left optic nerve, and in the left parieto-occipital areas. (The right hemisphere was frozen for future biochemical assay.) One of the adjacent cortical arteries had an organized thrombus. Other arteries and arterioles also showed sclerotic changes. Some of the leptomeningeal arteries were positive for Congored staining as well as for beta-amyloid immunostaining. Many senile plaques were seen diffusely in the cerebral cortex and neurofibrillary tangles were seen in the CA1 area and the parahippocampal gylus. No cellular infiltrations or demyelinated foci were seen. The neuropathologic features were consistent with circulatory disturbance based on the amyloid angiopa
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PMID:[A 76-year-old man with loss of vision and dementia]. 928 74

We performed 34 antenatal MRI, in utero in 29 foetuses with cerebral malformations depicted by US. For five patients, a second antenatal MRI was performed because of a technical failure or of diagnosis doubt. We considered that MRI is a valuable imaging method. We have observed 2 false negatives (myelomeningocele, gyration abnormality) on MR study (n = 34). MRI is more contributive that US for the etiological diagnosis of ventricular enlargement: 83% versus 46%. MRI depicted corpus callosum agenesis misdiagnosed in 5 patients by US. MR results modified the therapeutic procedure in 37% of our patients. We think that the optimal term to perform MRI study is after 28 weeks gestational age because of the size of the fetus and for the timing of cerebral development. Ventricular dilatation (criteria: occipital horn size more that one centimeter at 25 weeks of term) is the main indication of MR study.
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PMID:[Prenatal MRI of the brain. Retrospective study apropos of 34 tests]. 929 30


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