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Query: UMLS:C0751295 (
memory loss
)
3,619
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This case study describes the long-term course of behavioral alterations and
MRI
findings in a patient with a combined limbic and cerebellar paraneoplastic syndrome, which was associated with a squamous lung carcinoma. Clinical equivalents were cerebellar ataxia, as well as severe anterograde
memory loss
, frontal executive dysfunction and behavioral alterations.
MRI
revealed inflammatory changes followed by progressive atrophy affecting the cerebellum and both temporal lobes. Tumor surgery yielded only a partial and transient recovery of neurological symptoms, and paraneoplastic atrophy continued to progress despite radical excision of the carcinoma. This case of paraneoplastic encephalitis suggests that the related atrophy may present as a chronic, progressive, multifocal encephalopathy and that the associated cognitive impairments may include several cognitive domains.
...
PMID:Long-term cognitive and MRI findings in a patient with paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis. 1501 90
Parkinson syndrome occurs in the course of chemical intoxication, especially Mn, CS2, CO. It is rarely caused by chronic mercury intoxication. We present the case of 55 year old man who was exposed to metallic mercury vapor during 33 years of working in the chemical plant at the production of chlorine. On several occassions patient was removed from contact with Hg because of the symptoms of increased Hg absorption. At the age of 52 he developed hand tremor, balance and gait disturbance with bradykinesia, paresthesias of the upper extremities, neurobehavioral abnormalities, slight
memory loss
, and spatial disorientation. Psychoneurological examination revealed dementia, Parkinson's syndrome and ataxia of the lower limbs. Mercury excretion in the urine, which equaled 18.3 mu\g creatinine, confirmed exposure to Hg.
MRI
of the head revealed cortical and cerebellar atrophy. Electroneurography examination found features of subclinical peripheral sensory axonopathy of the upper limbs. Despite atypical clinical course (parkinsonismus) chronic mercury encephalopathy was diagnosed based on documented occupational exposure and diagnostic test results.
...
PMID:[Parkinsonism in chronic occupational metallic mercury intoxication]. 1509 29
We report about a 63-year-old male patient who complained of a recent onset of confusion. A mediastinal mass had been detected in his chest X-ray three days before admission to our clinic. Surprisingly, a CT scan of the brain revealed no signs of cerebral masses or oedema.
MRI
demonstrated bright hyperintens signals in the medial aspect of both temporal lobes. Biopsy by mediastinoscopy showed small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC). No distant metastases were found by staging procedures. Cerebrospinal fluid and serum contained antineuronal antibodies (anti-Hu). The combination of symptoms,
MRI
findings and paraneoplastic antibodies established the diagnosis of paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis in a patient with SCLC. Chemotherapy combined with immunosuppression by corticosteroids was started immediately. The primary tumour responded to therapy but improvement of cerebral symptoms was unsatisfactory. Severe
memory loss
and personality changes remained unchanged while there was a slight improvement in confusion and hallucinations.
...
PMID:[Paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis in small cell lung carcinoma]. 1516 56
Recently, it has become important to diagnose Alzheimer's Disease (AD) at an early stage due to the development of AD therapy. Also, there is increasing recognition of a class of elderly people with complaints of
memory loss
but who nevertheless do not meet the criteria for dementia. "Mild cognitive impairment" (MCI) is the term used for this disorder, and amnestic MCI is highly converted to AD. In this study we evaluated the accuracy of diagnosis of amnestic MCI by cerebrospinal fluid total-tau protein (CSF/total-tau), cerebrospinal fluid amyloid beta 1-42 protein (CSF/A beta 1-42), and cerebral blood flow in the posterior cingulate cortex using SPECT. CSF/total-tau was the most appropriate to discriminate between normal cognitive individuals and those with amnestic MCI. We also evaluated the CSF/total-tau and
MRI
images between patients with stable MCI and those with progressive MCI, including those who converted to AD in the following two years. The stable type was characterized by normal CSF/total-tau levels and relatively high grade periventricular white matter lesions (PWML). Conversely, the progressive type was characterized by high CSF-tau levels and relatively low grade PWML. We speculate that stable MCI is due to ischemic change with in the white matter lesion, while progressive MCI may represent a previous stage of AD.
...
PMID:[Diagnosing the mild cognitive impairment stage of Alzheimer's disease]. 1516 76
Limbic encephalitis was identified as a clinicopathological entity in 1968. Up to a few years ago, 200 cases were described, most associated with lung cancer and more infrequently with other tumors. The recent identification of patients with this syndrome, idiopathic limbic encephalitis, who never develop cancer and have high titers of antibodies to voltage-gated potassium channels (VGKC) and an excellent response to immunosuppressive therapy, has extended the etiological spectrum and suggests that the syndrome may be under-recognized. The disorder, which develops in a few days or weeks, is characterized by the development of short-term
memory loss
, seizures, confusion and psychiatric features. The presence of symptoms beyond the limbic system is highly suggestive of a paraneoplastic origin. When limbic encephalitis is suspected, the following tests should be performed in order to demonstrate: a) involvement of the temporal lobes (EEG and brain
MRI
); b) presence of inflammatory abnormalities in the CSF, and c) the presence of onconeural antibodies or anti-VGKC. Once the diagnosis is confirmed by the clinical picture and
MRI
findings, treatment must be initiated without waiting for the antibody results because its negativity does not exclude the diagnosis. Detection of an onconeural antibody will confirm that the limbic syndrome is paraneoplastic and will help us to search for an underlying tumor and to predict possible response to the treatment. The recommended treatment is cycles of methylprednisolone (1 g/day for 3 to 5 days). Therapeutic response in the idiopathic limbic encephalitis is excellent and may be good in limbic encephalitis with anti-Ma2 or without onconeural antibodies. On the contrary, immunosuppressant treatment is not usually effective in limbic encephalitis associated to anti-Hu antibodies.
...
PMID:[Limbic encephalitis: a probably under-recognized syndrome]. 1570 18
We report the case of a chess player with superior premorbid cognitive function who presented to the Cognitive Disorders clinic at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery with a 2-year history of symptoms of possible
memory loss
. Initially the
MRI
scan appearance was within normal limits and his cognitive scores inside the normal range; subsequently his cognitive function deteriorated and he fulfilled criteria for Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) two years later. Unexpectedly he died of an unrelated illness seven months later and post mortem examination of the brain was carried out, revealing advanced Alzheimer's disease (CERAD definite and NIA-Regan Institute high likelihood). This case highlights the difficulties encountered in assessing patients with superior premorbid function in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease, and reveals the value of serial
MRI
and neuropsychological assessment in detecting and monitoring early neurodegenerative disease.
...
PMID:Knight's move thinking? Mild cognitive impairment in a chess player. 1580 21
We report seven patients, six from a single institution, who developed subacute limbic encephalitis initially considered of uncertain aetiology. Four patients presented with symptoms of hippocampal dysfunction (i.e. severe short-term
memory loss
) and three with extensive limbic dysfunction (i.e. confusion, seizures and suspected psychosis). Brain
MRI
and [(18)F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-PET complemented each other but did not overlap in 50% of the patients. Combining both tests, all patients had temporal lobe abnormalities, five with additional areas involved. In one patient, FDG hyperactivity in the brainstem that was normal on
MRI
correlated with central hypoventilation; in another case, hyperactivity in the cerebellum anticipated ataxia. All patients had abnormal CSF: six pleocytosis, six had increased protein concentration, and three of five examined had oligoclonal bands. A tumour was identified and removed in four patients (mediastinal teratoma, thymoma, thymic carcinoma and thyroid cancer) and not treated in one (ovarian teratoma). An immunohistochemical technique that facilitates the detection of antibodies to cell surface or synaptic proteins demonstrated that six patients had antibodies to the neuropil of hippocampus or cerebellum, and one to intraneuronal antigens. Only one of the neuropil antibodies corresponded to voltage-gated potassium channel (VGKC) antibodies; the other five (two with identical specificity) reacted with antigens concentrated in areas of high dendritic density or synaptic-enriched regions of the hippocampus or cerebellum. Preliminary characterization of these antigens indicates that they are diverse and expressed on the neuronal cell membrane and dendrites; they do not co-localize with VGKCs, but partially co-localize with spinophilin. A target autoantigen in one of the patients co-localizes with a cell surface protein involved in hippocampal dendritic development. All patients except the one with antibodies to intracellular antigens had dramatic clinical and neuroimaging responses to immunotherapy or tumour resection; two patients had neurological relapse and improved with immunotherapy. Overall, the phenotype associated with the novel neuropil antibodies includes dominant behavioural and psychiatric symptoms and seizures that often interfere with the evaluation of cognition and memory, and brain
MRI
or FDG-PET abnormalities less frequently restricted to the medial temporal lobes than in patients with classical paraneoplastic or VGKC antibodies. When compared with patients with VGKC antibodies, patients with these novel antibodies are more likely to have CSF inflammatory abnormalities and systemic tumours (teratoma and thymoma), and they do not develop SIADH-like hyponatraemia. Although most autoantigens await characterization, all share intense expression by the neuropil of hippocampus, with patterns of immunolabelling characteristic enough to suggest the diagnosis of these disorders and predict response to treatment.
...
PMID:Treatment-responsive limbic encephalitis identified by neuropil antibodies: MRI and PET correlates. 1603 Jan 81
The diagnosis of Gliomatosis cerebri (GC) is known to be difficult and is still a matter of debate. We describe an in vivo case of GC associated with a pituitary tumor. A 47-year-old woman presented with short-term
memory loss
. A
MRI
revealed the presence of a pituitary enhancing tumor and a diffuse lesion involving the brain. A left pterional craniotomy with partial temporal lobectomy and removal of the pituitary lesion were performed in order to obtain diagnosis. The histological analyses showed a pituitary non-functioning tumor and a GC consisting of neoplastic oligodendrocytes and astrocytes. Both lesions showed nuclear immunoreactivity for progesterone receptors (PGr) and estrogen receptors (EGr). This result could suggest there is a common receptor substrate in these tumors. In this case hormones could constitute a common step in tumorigenesis of both lesions.
...
PMID:Gliomatosis cerebri and pituitary adenoma: case report and literature review. 1613 22
Subject KN has a persistent anterograde amnesia as a result of brain injury following meningitis in 1993.
MRI
scans reveal a bilateral decrease in the volume of his hippocampal region (dentate gyrus, CA1-4, subicular cortices) of approximately 45% in both the right and left hemispheres, although the volume of his perirhinal cortex appears normal. Aside from some changes to his occipital lobe and bilateral shrinkage of the amygdala, the rest of his brain appears normal on recent quantitative
MRI
scans. A striking feature of his
memory loss
is his ability to perform at normal levels on some tests of recognition, despite his consistent deficit on tests of recall. Two tests designed specifically to distinguish performance of two putative divisions of recognition memory (the Remember/Know procedure and the use of receiver operating characteristics to distinguish familiarity and recollection), provide evidence for a selective sparing of the familiarity component of recognition. The dissociation within recognition memory supports dual-process models of recognition, and also supports proposals that anatomically linked regions within the medial temporal lobe make qualitatively different contributions to recognition.
...
PMID:Sparing of the familiarity component of recognition memory in a patient with hippocampal pathology. 1615 57
Postoperative complications resulting from bariatric surgery can lead to severe vitamin-deficiency states, such as Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE). We present a 29-year-old woman with BMI 41.7 with no history of alcoholism who developed acute WE after a gastric bypass for morbid obesity. After persistent vomiting for 2 weeks postoperatively, symptoms began with headache, vertigo, diplopia, nystagmus, tingling and weakness in both upper and lower extremities, urinary incontinence, and
memory loss
to recent events. All investigations, including upper GI endoscopy, Gastrografin meal and even
MRI
, were normal. A dramatic improvement occurred in 24 hrs after starting 100 mg thiamine infusion daily. We recommend that patients undergoing bariatric surgery should be started on thiamine supplementation once oral intake begins, because this case showed that postoperative acute WE can develop before 6 weeks, unlike other reports.
...
PMID:Very early onset of Wernicke's encephalopathy after gastric bypass. 1668 41
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