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)

We report a 85-year-old woman who died after one year history of convulsion, dementia, and consciousness disturbance. She was apparently well until January 6, 1995 when she was 85 year old; on that evening, she suddenly stated that some one was in her room and she became confused. A local MD gave her diazepam and she fell into sleep. At 3 o'clock in the following morning, she developed tonic-clonic convulsion in her right lower extremity which showed a march to her right upper extremity and the left lower extremity. She was admitted to our hospital. On admission, she was comatose with respiratory acidosis. She was intubated and placed on a ventilator. She was treated with intravenous phenytoin. She gradually gained consciousness and became alert. Respiration became normal. Her MRI revealed ventricular dilatation, fronto-parietal cortical atrophy, and a T1-low and T2-high signal intensity lesion in the left occipital lobe. She was discharged for out patient follow-up on February 4, 1995. Since then, she noted loss of memory and small step gait. A follow-up CT scan revealed a mass lesion which showed a ring-shaped enhancement in the left occipital lobe and was admitted again. On admission, she was alert but markedly demented. The optic fundi was unremarkable, but she appeared to have right homonymous hemianopsia. No motor weakness was noted. In Gd-DTPA enhanced MRI, the above tumor showed a ring enhancement. The diagnosis of glioblastoma was entertained, however, considering her age, she was treated with intravenous glycerol and intramuscular steroid. She was discharged for out-patient follow-up on July 15, 1995. Her gait disturbance had progressively become worse and she developed nausea and vomiting and was admitted again on October 2, 1995. On admission, she was somnolent and markedly demented. Brain stem responses were retained normally. She was unable to stand or walk. Deep tendon reflexes were slightly increased in the right upper extremity and the plantar response was extensor on the right. Her hospital course was complicated by respiratory tract infection and respiratory acidosis. She expired on November 2, 1995. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that she had a glioblastoma involving the left occipital lobe and the adjacent areas. Post-mortem examination revealed an infiltrating tumor in the left occipital lobe. On microscopic examination, the tumor was very cellular; nuclear atypism was marked and tumor cells undergoing mitosis were seen. In some areas, capillary proliferation was seen. Histologic characteristics were consistent with glioblastoma.
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PMID:[A 85-year-old woman with one year history of convulsion, dementia, and consciousness disturbance]. 936 96

We hypothesized, that with atrophy, the correlation between water content and specific gravity of brain solids would break down signifying the onset of the atrophic process. The correlation between tissue water content, specific gravity of solids and ventricular size was studied in an impact acceleration model of closed head injury of the rat. Adult Sprague Dawley rats weighing 350 to 375 grams (n = 63) were separated into two groups: Group 1: Sham (n = 21), Group II: Trauma (n = 42). Water content was assessed using both gravimetric method and drying-weighing method at 1 hour, on days 1, 3, 7, 14, 28, and 42 in the trauma group as well as in the control group. Ventricular size was measured in cm2 on the MRI computer console in the coronal section at the coronal suture at the same time points. In the trauma group we found a significant increase (p < 0.01) in water content during the first week except on day 3 and there was a good correlation between the results of water content using both methods (p < 0.001). However, this relationship was poorly correlated after day 14 (p = 0.25). Although the ventricular size was the smallest at 1 hour post trauma, it significantly increased over the next 3 days (p < 0.001). On day 7 and 14 ventricular size decreased to normal size, yet gradually increased and then reached a significantly larger size on 42 days post trauma again (p < 0.01). We may consider, that brain edema following CHI begins immediately following trauma and resolves within 2 weeks. After 14 days degenerative change occurs in the cortex, as detected by specific gravity measurements which signifies the onset of the atrophic process and subsequent post traumatic ventricular dilatation.
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PMID:Detection of brain atrophy following traumatic brain injury using gravimetric techniques. 941 83

To provide histological diagnoses of brain diseases, CT-guided stereotactic brain biopsy (CT-SBB) has been widely used because of its less invasive technique compared with open brain biopsy (OBB). However, CT-SBB is not always diagnostic. We report a case of multiple intracranial tuberculoma whose diagnosis was not made by CT-SBB but by OBB. The patient is a 46-year-old man with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus who had been receiving immunosuppressive agents (azathioprine, cyclosporin, and prednisolone) after renal transplantation for diabetic renal failure for 9 years. He gradually developed febrile, headache and unsteady gait. Brain MRI demonstrated multiple intracranial lesions involving left fronto-temporal and right parietal lobes, left cerebellar hemisphere, and the fourth ventricle. Although the MRI findings were consistent with those of previously reported cases of intracranial tuberculoma, other conditions, such as malignant lymphoma and toxoplasmosis, were not ruled out. Therefore, CT-SBB targeting the left temporal lobe lesion was done for definitive diagnosis, but it revealed only mild perivascular infiltration of mononuclear cells and hemorrhage. He was transferred to our clinic for further evaluation. On examination, mild truncal and limb ataxia on the left were noted in addition to the neurological findings corresponding to diabetic retinopathy and neuropathy. Despite vigorous laboratory examinations, including repeated bacterial cultures and PCR of cerebrospinal fluid, no evidence of tuberculous infection was obtained. A tentative diagnosis of multiple intracranial tuberculoma was made, and anti-tuberculous drugs (isoniazid 400 mg, ethambutol 750 mg, and pyrazinamide 1.5 g) were administered. Since his symptoms deteriorated because of ventricular dilatation resulting from the enlarged lesion in the fourth ventricle after a temporary clinical improvement, VP-shunting and OBB from the left temporal lobe lesion were done. The excised lesion was firmly encapsulated and the histological examination revealed typical pathology of tuberculoma. Ziehl-Neelsen staining and PCR for Mycobacterium tuberculosis of the biopsied specimen were also positive. Further administration of increased doses of anti-tuberculous drugs (isoniazid 600 mg, ethambutol 500 mg, pyrazinamide 2.0 g and intramuscular injection of streptomycin 0.3 g twice a week) eventually ameliorated the symptoms and shrank the lesions. In case of intracranial tuberculoma, the needle of CT-SBB may not penetrate the firm capsule of tuberculoma and only the surrounding brain tissue may be obtained as in the present case. Therefore, it is recommended to consider OBB from the beginning for definitive diagnosis of intracranial tuberculoma. Paradoxical worsening of the clinical and laboratory findings of tuberculosis in spite of appropriate anti-tuberculous therapy as seen in the present case has been described in both pulmonary and extra-pulmonary tuberculosis. The phenomenon, called transient worsening, could happen and we have to keep it in mind during the treatment of intracerebral tuberculoma.
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PMID:[A case of multiple intracranial tuberculoma diagnosed by open brain biopsy]. 949 Sep

The siblings of Sanfilippo syndrome type A (MPS III A) have been reported. The relationship of their parents was the first cousins. Case 1: A 30-year-old Japanese man was hospitalized because of gait disturbance and mental impairment. His early somatic and mental development was normal until 9 years of age when mental deterioration had developed. Speech and gait disturbances and double incontinence occurred at 18 years of age. He could not walk at 21 years of age. Those symptoms were slowly progressive. Case 2: A 32-year-old Japanese man, the elder brother of case 1, had a similar clinical history to that of case 1. Their neurological findings revealed mental impairment, coarse face, positive forced grasp and sucking reflexes, and pyramidal signs. Lumbar X-ray showed platyspondylitis, compression fracture of L 1 and osteoporotic changes. Brain MRI of both cases showed brain atrophy, ventricular dilatation and abnormal high intensity signals near the posterior horn of the lateral ventricles on T2 weighted image. Low perfusion images of fronto-parietal regions were seen in the early phase of SPECT using 123I-IMP. This siblings were diagnosed as Sanfilippo syndrome type A because of heparan sulfaturia and deficiency of heparan sulfate sulfamidase of the lymphocytes. Average life span of Sanfilippo syndrome type A is not so long but the age of our cases is over 30 years of age.
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PMID:[Clinical and neuroradiological evaluation of the long-term surviving siblings of Sanfilippo syndrome A type]. 951 6

This follow-up study reports on cerebral MRI findings in 20 very-low-birthweight (VLBW) infants without disabilities at age 1 year in relation to motor, intellectual, and perceptual function at age 6 years. MRI findings, anthropometrics, and Bayley Scales of Infant Development scores at age 1 year as predictors of psychomotor status at age 6 years are also evaluated and compared. Outcome parameters were the Peabody Developmental Motor Scales and the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence. The results show that infants with myelin hyperintensities including the centrum semiovale or with occipital hyperintensities with associated ventricular dilatation at age 1 scored lower on the Peabody Gross Motor Locomotion Scale at age 6 than infants with normal myelination or with isolated occipital hyperintensities. This may indicate damage to motor fibers caused by perinatal periventricular leukomalacia. No relation was found between abnormal MRI findings at age 1 and later fine motor, intellectual, and perceptual function. Comparing different age 1-year predictors, an abnormality score defined by MRI was used as an independent predictor of gross motor locomotion function at age 6 years. However, the Bayley Mental Development Index scores and weight at age 1 were more important predictors of later motor and intellectual outcome, respectively, than MRI findings. It is recommended that cerebral MRI should not be used routinely to examine VLBW infants without disabilities at 1 year of age.
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PMID:Can cerebral MRI at age 1 year predict motor and intellectual outcomes in very-low-birthweight children? 959 97

In order to clarify the flow dynamics of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), a phase-contrast cine magnetic resonance (MR) imaging technique with retrospective cardiac gating was used to measure the quantitative flow velocity of CSF in the aqueduct in patients with NPH after subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH-NPH group, n = 17), idiopathic NPH (1-NPH group, n = 2), asymptomatic ventricular dilatation or brain atrophy (VD group, n = 7) and healthy volunteers (control group, n = 19). Intracranial pressure (ICP) and pressure volume response (PVR) were also measured during the shunt operation in six of the SAH- NPH group. The maximum CSF flow velocity (Vmax) in the aqueduct was significantly larger in the SAH-NPH group (9.21 +/- 4.12 cm/sec, mean +/- SD) than in the control group (5.27 +/- 1.77, p < 0.001) and the VD group (4.06 +/- 1.81, p < 0.005). Vmax was not different between the control and VD groups. There was a positive correlation between the PVR and the peak CSF flow velocity in the SAH-NPH group. These findings suggest that the changes of CSF flow velocity in the SAH-NPH group might be caused by a moderate decrease of intracranial compliance. The CSF flow study using MRI is useful to differentiate NPH from brain atrophy or asymptomatic ventricular dilatation and also to estimate the intracranial compliance.
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PMID:Quantitative analysis of CSF flow dynamics using MRI in normal pressure hydrocephalus. 977 27

We reported a male patient with X-linked myotubular myopathy in whom MTM 1 gene mutation was first identified in Japan. The patient had 9-nucleotide insertion between exons 11 and 12 due to aberrant splicing. The patient showed severe hypotonia and generalized muscle weakness at birth. Mechanical ventilation and tube feeding were necessary because of poor spontaneous respiration and sucking. On muscle biopsy, most of the muscle fibers were small and round, and had peripheral halos, showing immaturity. He had a moderate ventricular dilatation and mild brain atrophy on brain CT and MRI. However, whether these findings are causally related to the splice-site mutation remained obscure.
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PMID:[X-linked recessive myotubular myopathy with a splice-site mutation in the myotubularin gene]. 984 18

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether children with congenital hemiplegia show abnormal hand function on the non-hemiplegic side and whether this, if present, can be related to the type and extent of brain lesions on MRI. Twenty-two children with congenital hemiplegia of age ranging between 4.8 and 12.3 years, were assessed with a clinical and MRI assessment. Clinical assessment included a structured neurological examination, assessment of hand grips and the Movement Assessment Battery for Children which also includes one item assessing speed and accuracy in each hand. The results showed that 64% of the children studied showed some degree of functional impairment of the non-hemiplegic hand. Manual dexterity 1 from the Movement ABC was, in our experience, a more sensitive tool to detect minor functional abnormalities than the evaluation of hand grips. The severity of the impairment on the non-hemiplegic side was not significantly related to the severity of impairment in the hemiplegic hand (p > 0.05). In contrast, a significant association was found with the site of lesions as hand function in the non-hemiplegic hand was always normal in children with unilateral lesion and abnormal in the ones with bilateral parenchymal lesions (p < 0.05). Children with predominantly unilateral lesions but with bilateral ventricular dilatation or periventricular changes showed more variable results.
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PMID:Congenital hemiplegia in children at school age: assessment of hand function in the non-hemiplegic hand and correlation with MRI. 1022 54

Twelve cases of multiple system atrophy (MSA) were studied for clinical and MRI findings of the cerebral hemispheric involvement. The subjects consisted of five olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA) type and seven striatonigral degeneration (SND) type. The age at onset was 56.7 +/- 8.0 (M +/- SD) years, duration of illness at the first MRI study 3.2 +/- 1.1 years, duration of illness at the last study 8.1 +/- 2.2 years, and the following up duration 4.9 +/- 2.0 years. The grasping phenomenon was observed in 70% of the cases examined, snout reflex in 80%, slowness of verbal response in 88%, and decrease of spontaneous speech in 100%. Three cases finally fell into the state of mutism. Three out of ten cases were categorized as dementia by HDS-R (Hasegawa Dementia Scale-Revised) test. Besides the progression of the pontocerebellar atrophy and putaminal changes, MRI study revealed progressive frontal lobe atrophy in most cases. At six years after the onset, SND type showed significantly higher incidence of conspicuous frontal lobe atrophy and dilatatation of the Sylvian fissure than OPCA type. Cerebral ventricular dilatation was common feature, and atrophy of the temporal and occipital lobes were observed in several cases. We indicated the possible involvement of the cerebral hemisphere, especially the frontal lobe, and higher nervous function in MSA.
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PMID:[Clinico-MRI study of hemispheric disorder in long-term follow-up cases of multiple system atrophy]. 1034 44

To clarify the relationship between long-term prognosis of patients with stroke and their MRI findings, 103 patients with initial cerebral thrombosis, who survived more than three months after the ictus, were studied for five years. The mean age of 98 patients (T group), who were followed up completely, was 73.1 years-old and 65 were men. The age-matched controls consisted of two groups: 65 subjects, who had hypertension and/or diabetes without a history of stroke (R group), and 85 subjects, who had any hypertension, diabetes and stroke (N group). MRI findings were divided into six categories: 1) types of causative lesion, 2) grades of periventricular hyperintensity (none, rims/caps, patchy, diffuse PVH), 3) number of spotty lesions, 4) presence of silent infarction. 5) ventricular dilatation, and 6) extents of brain atrophy. Types of causative lesion were subdivided into 3 subtypes; infarction of the perforating artery territory (P type), infarction of the cortical artery territory (C type), and brainstem infarction (B type). The presence of vascular risks and dementia, and the extent of activity of daily living (ADL) were assessed. The P, C, and B types were identified by MRI in 46, 36, and 16 of the T group, respectively. Motor impairment, dementia, and an ADL status of complete dependence at discharge were also seen in 84, 44, and 22, respectively. In the T group, 33 patients died during five years, which resulted in a cumulative mortality rate of 33.7% and an annual mortality rate of 8.2%. Based on log-rank analysis, the survival rate of the T group revealed was significantly lower than those of the R and N groups. The recurrent rate in the T group (annual stroke recurrence rate was 4.0%) was higher than in the R and N groups, but stroke recurrence was not the cause of death and two thirds of deaths were due to aspiration pneumonia and/or asphyxia. Cox hazard regression analysis for death due to respiratory diseases showed that the hazard ratios of infarction, patchy PVH, and more than 4 spotty lesions were 8.87 (p < .001), 0.31 (p = .058), and 0.44 (p = .098), respectively. Compared to the survival group, rates of complete dependence in ADL, dementia, and brain atrophy were significantly higher in the death group with low incidences of the P type and patchy PVH, which indicated small vessel disease. These findings suggested that in patients with cerebral thrombosis, even in the chronic phase, care should be taken to prevent pneumonia and/or asphyxia due to bulbar palsy. Furthermore, no MRI findings were distinct predictors of long-term prognosis, although infarction based on the small vessel disease had rather good outcome in terms of respiratory disease.
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PMID:[Long-term prognosis of patients with initial cerebral thrombosis and the MRI findings]. 1036 31


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