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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0700208 (
scoliosis
)
8,574
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Six cases of children diagnosed as having osteoid osteoma with different localization are reviewed. They constitute 0.04% of all those admitted to the paediatrics department. The average age is 8 1/12 years and three exists a male predominance over the female in the proportion of 2/1. The clinic has shown it self through characteristic pain, with nocturnal paroxysms, which disappears with aspirin, in addition to functional
impotence
and muscular atrophy. In the case of vertebral localization,
scoliosis
was detected. Both, the radiography and the computerized axial tomography showed to be efficient for the diagnosis, which was confirmed anatomo-pathologically in the case operated on. The evolution was satisfactory in all of them.
...
PMID:[Osteoid osteoma in childhood: apropos of 6 cases]. 323
Recently, there is renewed interest in anterior fusion for spondylolisthesis and congenital and paralytic
scoliosis
with pelvic obliquity. Some of the candidates are prepubertal boys. Sterility after surgery in urogenitally normal prepubertal boys will not be determined until these patients mature. A worldwide survey of 20 surgeons with 15-20 years of experience (4,500 cases) reports the frequency of sterility (retrograde ejaculation) to be 19 cases (0.42%) and
impotence
20 cases (0.44%). One-fourth of the retrograde ejaculation cases resolved and became normal.
Impotence
is non-organic. The complication of retrograde ejaculation does not appear to be related to approach, though it was related to technique. While the complications of sterility and
impotence
following anterior fusion have been over-exaggerated, caution and informed consent from adult males and parents of prepubertal male children is advisable.
...
PMID:Sexual complications of anterior fusion of the lumbar spine. 649 12
We report a patient with late-onset tethered cord syndrome who presented with slowly progressive spastic paraparesis. Final diagnosis was made with spinal MRI. A 55-year-old man developed disturbance in gait at 52 years. He had severe congenital
scoliosis
of the thoracic spine and skin anomaly and hypertrichosis in the midline of the sacral region. His feet revealed pes equinovarus and pes cavus. Deep tendon reflexes in the lower extremities were hyperactive with positive Babinski signs. Vibration sense was diminished in the lower extremities. He had sexual
impotence
but no vesical or rectal disturbances. The plain X-rays revealed
scoliosis
at the fourth and fifth thoracic vertebrae, multiple costal fusion from the fourth through the eighth ribs on the left, and spina bifida occulta at the lumbosacral vertebrae. On MRI, the conus was tethered downward at the level between the forth and fifth vertebral bodies, and a thickened filum terminale connected the conus with a coccygeal cyst. Tethered cord syndrome, though rare in adults, should be differentiated from other diseases which produce late-onset spastic paraparesis, and MRI of the lumbo-sacral region is very useful for its diagnosis.
...
PMID:[A case of late-onset tethered cord syndrome presenting with spastic paraparesis]. 766 30