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Query: UMLS:C0751295 (
memory loss
)
3,619
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The introduction of multiphasic screening and the development of sensitive parathormone assays have changed the demography and clinical symptomatology of patients presenting with primary hyperparathyroidism. This retrospective review includes 158 patients operated on for primary hyperparathyroidism at the Medical College of Georgia from 1973-1987. Compared to the 46 patients managed prior to 1973, the frequency of subclinical hyperparathyroidism has increased from 46% to 64%. The median patient age has increased from 50 to 59 years. Recognition of primary hyperparathyroidism in a more geriatric population modifies indications for surgical intervention in subclinical disease. Osteoporosis, myalgias, fatigue, arthralgias,
memory loss
, or constipation occurred in 50% of patients. These complaints are frequent in normocalcemic elderly people. They represent disease, not normal aging. Their exacerbation by hypercalcemia should not go uncorrected if neck exploration can be tolerated by the patient.
...
PMID:The changing face of primary hyperparathyroidism. 143 43
Cognitive impairments are usually the most disabling sequelae of CHI. The earliest stage of recovery from moderate to severe closed head injury is a period of PTA that typically includes
memory loss
for events preceding and surrounding the injury and
memory loss
for events occurring since the injury. Following resolution of PTA, deficits may be present in a number of cognitive domains. Memory and attention/information processing speed and efficiency are typically the cognitive domains most severely affected by head injury. Intellectual, language, and perceptual skills tend to be relatively preserved. Neurologic variables such as pupillary reactivity and worst GCS score are prognostic of cognitive impairment at 1 to 2 years postinjury. Following mild head injury, impairments of memory and information processing may be apparent within the first week of recovery. These deficits usually resolve in 1 to 3 months, although chronic complaints persist in a minority of individuals. The long-term cognitive effects of CHI are typically more severe for younger children than older children. Neuropsychologic assessment provides an objective way to measure the presence and severity of cognitive impairment.
...
PMID:Cognitive impairment following closed head injury. 143 62
Differential responding to changes in the stimulus situation, long central to the concept of stimulus control, also provides the implicit conceptual basis for assessing the nature of a variety of associative relationships. However, there is substantial evidence that the perception of stimulus similarity is not a static property. Generalization gradients to contextual as well as discriminative stimuli flatten over time, and this increase in perceived similarity presumably reflects forgetting of the detailed characteristics or attributes of stimuli. Methodologically, the flattening of the gradient imposes an important constraint: The effect of a stimulus shift will be highly sensitive to the length of the delay interval between training and testing. Conceptually, the
loss of memory
for stimulus attributes also implies that the sources of interference in retention can increase over time.
...
PMID:Forgetting of stimulus attributes: methodological implications for assessing associative phenomena. 143 37
In four separate studies, the existence of specific
memory loss
after magnetic resonance (MR) imaging at 1.5 T was assessed by means of recognition and recall tests for faces, common objects, lexical items, and by digit span, in a pre-post paradigm. Although specific
memory loss
was demonstrated, it was shown that the loss was not due to the main magnetic field of the imager or to radio-frequency pulse sequences, but rather to probable psychological (not physical) factors. No gross or subtle memory changes could be attributed to MR imaging, because control groups showed similar patterns of
memory loss
.
...
PMID:Does memory loss occur after MR imaging? 144 17
This patient remained hospitalized for several weeks, and her stay was relatively uneventful. She extubated herself 2 days after admission, after an operative procedure to remove the cannulas and repair the right femoral cutdown site. A fasciotomy of her right calf was done for compartment syndrome. The patient had minor neurologic deficits of short-term
memory loss
and spatial depth perception loss. These deficits, attributed to postresuscitative hypoxia, eventually resolved. Extensive cardiac testing performed to pinpoint the underlying cause of her cardiac dysfunction were inconclusive. Because no cause was found, an automatic implantable cardiodefribrillator was recommended to prevent future cardiac events. The patient agreed and the device was implanted before her discharge. With expert occupational therapy, physical rehabilitation, nursing care, and medical treatment the patient regained her previous level of functioning. Her October wedding was postponed to December, but she was able to return to work in November 1990.
...
PMID:Cardiopulmonary bypass in the successful resuscitation of a 28-year-old woman with cardiac arrest. 147 29
This study extends previous work analysing functional dissociations occurring in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) by demonstrating that material-specific
memory loss
is common. The pattern of neuropsychological dysfunction in 191 patients with probable AD was examined and 13% presented with material-specific
memory loss
. Thirteen patients had impaired immediate verbal recall, but normal non verbal recall and 12 had impaired non verbal recall and normal verbal memory. These patterns appeared to be related to a specific memory deficit and were probably not secondary to associated cognitive impairments. These data confirm earlier observations that the memory defect in AD can be material-specific, and suggest that these patterns of impairment should be viewed as a focal sparing of function.
...
PMID:Material-specific memory loss in probable Alzheimer's disease. 147 97
The hypothalamus, in addition to regulating the anterior and posterior pituitary, controls water balance through thirst, regulates food ingestion and body temperature, influences consciousness, sleep, emotion and other behaviors. Much has been learned of these effects in human disease through the clinical manifestations that occur with hypothalamic lesions. This study reviews the clinical pathologic correlations that have been made in recent years showing that regions of the hypothalamus exert functions in humans that are similar to those identified in experimental animals. Clinical pathologic correlations have not always provided precise analysis of hypothalamic function. The hypothalamus is small and often lesions that come to clinical attention achieve considerable size before their recognition, making local anatomic dissections of the effects of the lesions difficult. Nevertheless, the use of modern non-invasive techniques including CT scans and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have provided new information not previously available. This paper reviews several cases of hypothalamic disorder recognized recently. (1) A 33-year-old black man with hypothalamic sarcoidosis. Manifestations of hypothalamic dysfunction included panhypopituitarism, aggressive hyperphagia, polydipsia (partially due to hyperglycemia secondary to diabetes mellitus), drowsiness, depression, and irritability. (2) A 37-year-old woman with a large intrahypothalamic tumor (biopsy showed pituitary adenoma), with drowsiness, poikilothermia, lack of satiety, confusion, and
memory loss
. She becomes depressed when she is transiently more alert (as after hypertonic contrast-dye infusion). (3) A 60-year-old man with hypothalamic compression by a pituitary tumor, associated with syndrome of inappropriate ADH (SIADH), severe anorexia,
memory loss
, but preserved thirst. After surgical decompression of the tumor his appetite acutely recovered, but he developed severe hypo(poikilo)thermia. (4) A 45-year-old woman with a suprasellar craniopharyngioma presented with severe drowsiness, hyperphagia, depression, and
memory loss
post-operatively, which responded to antidepressants (except for the
memory loss
). She had extremely labile blood pressures and serum Na for about 1 week post-operatively.
...
PMID:Neurologic manifestations of hypothalamic disease. 148 Jul 55
Using a three-panel runway task, the influence of dorsal hippocampal lesions on working and reference memory in rats was investigated. Despite 20 postoperative training sessions, rats with hippocampal lesions were unable to perform the working memory task. In the acquisition process of the reference memory task, however, there was no significant difference between hippocampal- and sham-lesioned rats. On the other hand, rats trained preoperatively with a working memory procedure, and then subjected to hippocampal lesions, showed more errors (pushes made on the two incorrect panels of the three panel-gates located at four choice points) than did sham-lesioned rats. The increase in working errors induced by hippocampal lesions was not reduced during 10 subsequent re-training sessions. Hippocampal lesions had no effect on retention of the reference memory performance. The increase in working errors in hippocampal-lesioned rats was significantly reduced by treatment with the cholinesterase inhibitor physostigmine at 0.1 mg/kg and the cholinergic activating drug minaprine at 10 mg/kg. These findings suggest that lesions of the dorsal hippocampus selectively impair the ability to carry out the working memory task whether rats are trained preoperatively or postoperatively, and that the working
memory loss
in hippocampal-lesioned rats is mediated by lowering of the cholinergic function.
...
PMID:Working and reference memory in rats in the three-panel runway task following dorsal hippocampal lesions. 150 23
We report two cases of Langerhans' cell histiocytosis with unusual central nervous system (CNS) involvement. The first patient had behavioural disturbances,
memory loss
and diabetes insipidus. His response to a range of treatments was poor. The second patient presented with seizures and headaches suggestive of raised intracranial pressure. Etoposide (VP16) chemotherapy led to a dramatic clinical and radiological improvement. The various CNS manifestations of Langerhans' cell histiocytosis and their management are discussed.
...
PMID:Langerhans' cell histiocytosis and the nervous system. 151 12
A cross sectional study of biological markers of neurochemical function in peripheral blood cells, and self reported nervous system symptoms, was conducted among 60 workers exposed to styrene in three reinforced plastics plants and 18 reference workers not exposed to styrene or other solvents. Concentrations of styrene in the air at the plants ranged from less than 1 to 160 ppm. Biomarkers of neurochemical function measured were: sigma receptor binding in lymphocytes, monoamine oxidase type B (MAO-B) activity in platelets, and serotonin uptake by platelets. Blood styrene concentration was used as the exposure index to take account of the use of protective equipment and dermal uptake. Four blood styrene exposure groups were defined as: non-exposed (reference) and exposed to less than 0.05, 0.05-0.19, and greater than or equal to 0.20 micrograms/ml. The prevalences of headache, dizziness, light headedness, fatigue, irritability,
memory loss
, and feeling "drunk" at work increased with increasing blood styrene concentration. No effect on sigma receptor binding was seen. A slight positive correlation was found for uptake of serotonin, which has been used as an exposure related effect indicator in previous studies of workers exposed to solvents. The MAO-B activity decreased with increasing blood styrene concentration; the mean (SE) MAO-B values for the four groups were 34.2 (3.0), 28.1 (5.3), 20.1 (4.8), and 16.9 (7.7) pmol/10(7) cells/min. The MAO-B activity also correlated negatively with the number of reported nervous system symptoms, whereas no associations were seen between prevalence of symptoms and either serotonin uptake or sigma receptor binding. The findings for MAO-B activity are consistent with previously reported experimental data, and suggest that MAO-B may be a useful marker of styrene neurotoxicity.
...
PMID:Peripheral markers of neurochemical function among workers exposed to styrene. 151 48
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