Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0344232 (
blurred vision
)
2,072
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Data from the early stages of the thrombosis prevention trial (TPT) have been used to establish and quantify the risk of extracranial bleeding due to low dose aspirin (75 mg) and low intensity oral anticoagulation with warfarin (international normalised ratio, INR, 1.5) singly or in combination, in men aged between 45 and 69 who are at high risk of ischaemic heart disease (IHD). The design of the trial is factorial, the four treatments being combined low dose aspirin and low intensity anticoagulation (WA), low intensity anticoagulation alone (W), low dose aspirin alone (A) and double placebo treatment (P). The trial is being carried out through the Medical Research Council's General Practice Research Framework, with participating practices throughout the United Kingdom. Results are based on the first 3,667 men entered. The risk of major gastrointestinal bleeding due to active treatment is probably about 1 in 500 man-years of treatment, there currently being no difference between the three active regimes (WA, W, A). Intermediate and minor bleeding episodes occur more frequently with WA than with W or A on their own, the excess being mainly due to minor nose bleeds and bruises. In turn, both W and A on their own cause more such minor episodes than placebo treatment, P. There is no evidence that any of the three active regimens increases the risk of peptic ulceration, nor do they increase reports of indigestion. Aspirin increases reports of constipation and reduces reports of
blurred vision
. Minor bleeding occurs less frequently in smokers than in non-smokers but is not influenced by age. The antithrombotic regimes used are feasible and acceptable.
...
PMID:Extra-cranial bleeding and other symptoms due to low dose aspirin and low intensity oral anticoagulation. 151 66
A 68-year-old woman with
blurred vision
had a foveal spot of fluorescein leakage that later was found to be a transient leakage. The clinical picture resembled central serous chorioretinopathy, a rare diagnosis in older patients. Other possible diagnoses (e.g., subretinal neovascular membrane or epiretinal membrane) are discussed as is the need for laser treatment.
...
PMID:Transient fluorescein leakage simulating subretinal membrane: a diagnostic dilemma. 151 46
The allocation of some symptoms of acute hypoglycaemia to autonomic and neuroglycopenic groups has proved problematical, with possible misinterpretation of studies which depend upon the use of diverse symptom questionnaires. Two hundred and ninety-five randomly selected insulin-treated diabetic patients were asked to report the symptoms which they usually experienced and believed to be caused by hypoglycaemia. Sweating, trembling, inability to concentrate, weakness, hunger and
blurred vision
were the most frequently reported symptoms. To classify symptoms of hypoglycaemia objectively, Factor Analysis was used to identify related symptoms which grouped together. This resulted in five groups or clusters of symptoms, four of which could be denominated as groups with a presumed common aetiology, and were labelled: 'neuroglycopenic', 'general malaise', 'autonomic', 'motor dysfunction', and 'sensory dysfunction'. The groups of symptoms derived by Factor Analysis were assessed in relation to partial or absent symptomatic awareness of hypoglycaemia based on historical evidence from the 295 insulin-treated diabetic patients. Neuroglycopenic symptoms were reported more commonly by the patients who had reported partial awareness of hypoglycaemia (number of symptoms 2.6 +/- 1.8 (mean +/- SD] than by the patients who had reported normal hypoglycaemia awareness (1.4 +/- 1.5 symptoms) (p less than 0.05). By contrast autonomic symptoms were reported less frequently by the patients who had reported absent hypoglycaemia awareness (1.3 +/- 1.4 symptoms) than by those with normal awareness (2.2 +/- 1.4 symptoms) (p less than 0.05), which was similar to the number of autonomic symptoms reported by the patients who had partial hypoglycaemia awareness (2.1 +/- 1.3 symptoms).
...
PMID:Classification of symptoms of hypoglycaemia in insulin-treated diabetic patients using factor analysis: relationship to hypoglycaemia unawareness. 155 13
1. Movements of the visual scene evoke short-latency ocular following responses. To study the neural mediation of the ocular following responses, we investigated neurons in the dorsolateral pontine nucleus (DLPN) of behaving monkeys. The neurons discharged during brief, sudden movements of a large-field visual stimulus, eliciting ocular following. Most of them (100/112) responded to movements of a large-field visual stimulus with directional selectivity. 2. Response amplitude was measured in two components of the neural response: an initial transient component and a late sustained component. Most direction-selective DLPN neurons showed their strongest responses at high stimulus speeds (80-160 degrees/s), whether their response components were initial (63/87, 72%) or sustained (63/87, 72%). The average firing rates of 87 DLPN neurons increased as a linear function of the logarithm of stimulus speed up to 40 degrees/s for both initial and sustained responses. 3. Not only the magnitude but also the latency of the neural and ocular responses were dependent on stimulus speed. The latencies of both neural and ocular responses were inversely related to the stimulus speed. As a result, the time difference between the response latencies for neural and ocular responses did not vary much with changes of stimulus speed. 4. Response latency was measured when a large-field random dot pattern was moved in the preferred direction and at the preferred speed of each neuron. Seventy-three percent (56/77) of the neurons were activated less than 50 ms after the onset of the stimulus motion. In most cases (67/77, 87%), their increase of firing rate started before the eye movements, and 34% of them (26/77) started greater than 10 ms before the eye movements. 5.
Blurring
of the random dot pattern by interposing a sheet of ground glass increased the latency of both neural responses and eye movements. On the other hand, the blurred images did not change the timing of the effect of blanking the visual scene on the responses of the neurons or eye movements. 6. When a check pattern was used instead of random dots, both neural and ocular responses began to decrease rapidly when the temporal frequency of the visual stimulus exceeded 20 Hz. When the temporal frequency of the visual stimulus approached 40 Hz, the neurons showed a distinctive burst-and-pause firing pattern. The eye movements recorded at the same time showed signs of oscillation, and their temporal patterns were closely correlated to those of the firing rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Neural activity in dorsolateral pontine nucleus of alert monkey during ocular following responses. 157 51
This study of a series of 40 mildly head injured (concussed) patients suggests that different physiologic pathways underlying the tests done in a six-part resting EEG, and for the 11 evoked electrical potential shifts occurring in the cerebral terrain, are testable. Further work seems likely in order to ascertain which clinical signs and symptoms may be related to specific individual types of recorded electronic brain imaging (EBI) abnormality. Which of the 11 parameters studied, EEG, VER, AER, and SER, would be more or less likely to be abnormal in their individual patterns (as being deviant from normal controls) also remains to be defined. The relationship of these neurophysiologic abnormalities to certain postconcussive symptoms, i.e., headache, dizziness,
blurred vision
, etc., at this point in time remains to be evaluated more precisely. The authors suggest that further research is necessary in evaluating the clinical use of somatosensory evoked responses as an additional parameter in electronic brain imaging (EBI) technology.
...
PMID:Somatosensory evoked responses via electronic brain imaging (EBI). 158 53
We present a 66-year old woman suffering from a chronic disorder characterized by multiple paroxysmal symptoms precipitated by coughing. These included cephalalgia, syncope, binocular photopsia phenomena with
blurred vision
, and an "electric-like" paroxysmal tingling of the hands. In addition to a central spinal cord cavity and hindbrain herniation, magnetic resonance imaging showed multiple skeletal anomalies and the craniospinal junction which included a narrow clivo-axial angle, basilar impression of the skull and a tight foramen magnum. Resonance magnetic imaging showed a high-signal intensity lesion on T2-weighted images at the posterior medullo-spinal junction suggesting focal demyelination. We propose that paroxysmal symptoms induced by coughing in patients bearing hindbrain ectopia and skeletal anomalies at the foramen magnum region may involve different pathogenetic mechanisms, including ectopic axonal activity and ephaptic transmission at the sensory pathways. This caused a Lhermitte-like phenomenon precipitated by coughing, rather than by forward flexion of the neck. However, increased pressure at the posterior fossa presumably underlies all these phenomena, and may therefore be potentially relieved by suboccipital decompressive craniotomy.
...
PMID:[Arnold-Chiari malformation with multiple paroxysmal manifestations induced by coughing]. 845 93
The influence of defocus, artificial media opacities and pupil size on perimetric thresholds in automated light sense and flicker perimetry was investigated in 20 eyes of 20 normal subjects. Thresholds were determined at 13 locations in the central visual field.
Blurring
the retinal image by a small defocus or by slight artificial media opacities causes a measurable reduction in light-difference sensitivity. Flicker fusion frequency, however, is much more resistant to degradation of the retinal image. Artificial pupil size has a similar effect on both light-difference sensitivity and flicker fusion frequency. The present study shows that perimetric methods using temporal threshold criteria should be more suitable for the detection of neuronal damage in the presence of factors disturbing the quality of the retinal image than methods using static criteria.
...
PMID:[Light perception and flicker perimetry. Effect of refractive error, artificial media opacities and pupillary size]. 160 Mar 26
We reported a case of 21 years old man of chronic toluene intoxication with abnormal intensity areas on MRI in cerebral white matter, basal ganglia, internal capsule (especially posterior limb), brain stem and middle cerebellar peduncle. The patient developed various neurological abnormalities such as
blurred vision
, ataxic speech, gaze evoked horizontal nystagmus, bilateral pyramidal tract sign and limb ataxia after 8 years sniffing of thinner (mainly toluene). MRI examination revealed diffuse high intensity areas in cerebral white matter on T1 weighted image. On T2 weighted image, high intensity areas of deep cerebral white matter, internal capsule (especially posterior limb), cerebral peduncle, ventral pons and middle cerebellar peduncle were noted. Basal ganglia (caudate nucleus, lenticular nucleus and thalamus) were displayed as low intensity area on T2 weighted image. These high intensity areas of internal capsule, brain stem and middle cerebellar peduncle on T2 weighted image would be significant for understanding pyramidal tract sign and cerebellar sign of this case. On the basis of neuropathological descriptions of chronic toluene intoxication, these high intensity areas of T2 weighted image were presumed to be demyelinating lesions of the central nervous system.
...
PMID:[A case of chronic toluene intoxication with abnormal MRI findings: abnormal intensity areas in cerebral white matter, basal ganglia, internal capsule, brain stem and middle cerebellar peduncle]. 162 43
A 10-year-old girl had complained of headache, vomiting and
blurred vision
for one month before admission to our hospital. Her neurological findings were normal, except that the examination of the fundi revealed papilledema. The cerebrospinal fluid pressure was elevated to 220 mmH2O. The brain MRI showed bilateral and approximately symmetrical hyperintense areas located in the thalamus. These disappeared on the repeated MRI, and her symptoms regressed spontaneously within a month. Her illness was diagnosed as benign intracranial hypertension because of the favorable clinical course. These reversible thalamic lesions might be due to circulatory insufficiency associated with intracranial hypertension.
...
PMID:[A case of benign intracranial hypertension with bilateral reversible thalamic lesions on magnetic resonance imaging]. 162 59
We examined two patients who had sudden decrease in vision after intranasal cocaine or methamphetamine abuse. A 38-year-old woman with a history of systemic arterial hypertension developed a central retinal artery occlusion four hours after intranasal use of cocaine. A 26-year-old woman had
blurred vision
and intraretinal hemorrhages shortly after using methamphetamine nasally. The adrenomimetic response and sudden increase in blood pressure associated with the intranasal use of these drugs may have contributed to the retinal vascular manifestations observed in these patients.
...
PMID:Sudden retinal manifestations of intranasal cocaine and methamphetamine abuse. 146 57
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>