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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous studies have shown that magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is sensitive to white matter changes in children receiving cranial radiation of 3000 cGy or greater. The current study used MRI to investigate the integrity of white matter in children receiving 1800 to 2400 cGy of cranial radiation. Ten survivors of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who received intrathecal methotrexate (MTX) and either 1800 or 2400 cGy of cranial radiation were studied with MRI and neuropsychologic testing. Magnetic resonance (MR) scans were normal in nine of ten patients. One patient had prominent and
asymmetrical
lateral ventricles and mildly enlarged cortical sulci. White matter tracts were normal in appearance. However, seven of nine children had below average intellectual functioning. Results indicate that children receiving less than 2500 cGy of cranial radiation fail to show white matter changes on MRI, despite evidence of
cognitive impairment
.
...
PMID:Absence of white matter changes on magnetic resonance imaging in children treated with CNS prophylaxis therapy for leukemia. 342 80
Six hundred and sixty-one patients with stroke, confirmed by CT scan or at autopsy, were reviewed in order to evaluate the frequency of presentation with altered mental state. Nineteen patients (3%) had presented with delirium, an organic delusional state, the acute onset of dementia, or mania, mimicking psychiatric illness. All had focal cerebrovascular lesions which were usually, but not invariably, right sided. None had a previous history of
cognitive impairment
, psychiatric disease, drug abuse, or alcohol excess. Neurological signs were absent or mild and transient, and therefore easily missed. Post-mortem examinations in four patients showed localised cerebral infarctions with no evidence of multiple lesions, Alzheimer's disease, or metabolic encephalopathies. The possible causative factors are discussed and the evidence of
asymmetrical
cerebral representation of emotion, and for a relationship with epilepsy, is reviewed.
...
PMID:Inobvious stroke: a cause of delirium and dementia. 347 Nov 94
A standardized pegboard task was used to investigate changes in manipulative skill as a function of age in 119 right-handed subjects. The typical pattern of
cognitive impairment
in old age indicates a relative preservation of functions which depend on the integrity of the left hemisphere. In accord with these observations, we predicted that, with increasing age, right hand motor skills would be better preserved than left hand skills. We found this on initial exposure to the task (P less than 0.01); however, the phenomenon was masked by practice, because older subjects (over 60 years of age) derived more improvement to their left hand motor skill, as a result of practice, than they did to their right hand skill (P less than 0.05). The
asymmetrical
effects of ageing on motor skill may be relevant to the increasing prevalence of emotional lability and neurosis in the elderly, since emotional control is thought to be dependent on right hemisphere mechanisms.
...
PMID:Increasing right hand dominance with age on a motor skill task. 408 Aug 90
It is well established that generalized epileptiform EEG discharges unaccompanied by overt clinical change may nevertheless be associated with transitory
cognitive impairment
(TCI) detectable by appropriate psychological testing. However, the tests employed in most research studies of this phenomenon are of little use for routine clinical application. They are suitable for administration only over short periods of time and are therefore applicable only to patients with a high discharge rate, a serious limitation, as the discharges are generally depressed by the tests themselves. We have developed two short-term memory tasks, one using verbal, the other nonverbal material presented in the form of television games which patients are generally prepared to perform for up to an hour or longer. Forty-six patients with subclinical EEG discharges have been studied. They were screened by video monitoring before and during testing to exclude any with overt clinical changes during the discharges. Despite this rigorous selection, in 50 per cent TCI was demonstrable with a confidence level (within the individual patient) of 10 per cent. Discharges during stimulus presentation were most disruptive of performance and those confined to the period when the patient was responding were without demonstrable effect. A significant association was found between the laterality of focal or
asymmetrical
generalized discharges and impairment of one or other task, left-sided discharges being associated with errors in the verbal task and right-sided with impairment of the nonverbal test. Two case histories are cited illustrating patients who were clearly handicapped by TCI and whose functioning improved when the subclinical discharges were suppressed by medication. To determine how many patients suffer such disabilities or can be helped by appropriate medication, further prospective studies are required.
...
PMID:Selective cognitive impairment during focal and generalized epileptiform EEG activity. 642 54
Two patients with a slowly progressive and severe motor apraxia are presented. In one case, there was only apraxia; in the other there was moderate memory disturbance and a mild decline of global intellectual ability, suggesting a more widespread
cognitive dysfunction
. In this second case, recognition of the correct use of objects was also severely impaired, suggesting a disturbance of motor knowledge. In both cases, apraxia was
asymmetrical
, and associated with a contralateral atrophy of the upper parietal cortex, suggesting a differential involvement of separate action systems for each hand.
...
PMID:Slowly progressive apraxia: two case studies. 833 74
Hypoglycaemia may cause transient
cognitive impairment
and neurological deficits that are frequently unilateral. The effect of mild hypoglycaemia (serum glucose level 3.4 +/- 0.1 mmol/l; mean +/- SEM) on regional cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular resistance was studied in eight right-handed children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (age 14.9 +/- 0.7 years; diabetes duration 7.4 +/- 1.1 years; six males) using the intravenous xenon-133 clearance method. Global mean cerebral grey and white matter blood flow, adjusted to mean pCO2 of cohort, showed a trend towards an increase from 54.7 +/- 3.5 ml.100 g-1.min-1 at baseline euglycaemia to 58.0 +/- 4.1 ml.100 g-1.min-1 during hypoglycaemia (p = 0.075). Statistically significant changes were seen in global mean cerebral grey matter blood flow, as indexed by initial slope, which increased from 88.0 +/- 6.5 min-1 before hypoglycaemia to 96.3 +/- 7.2 min-1 during hypoglycaemia (p < 0.05). Cerebral grey matter blood flow was significantly higher in the right hemisphere compared to the left during hypoglycaemia (p < 0.01) but not at baseline euglycaemia. Measurements of global cerebrovascular resistance showed a borderline decrease from 1.64 +/- 0.11 to 1.54 +/- 0.11 mm Hg.ml-1.100 g-1.min-1 (p < 0.09). In conclusion, mild hypoglycaemia is associated with increases in cerebral blood flow which are greater in grey matter flow indices and in the right hemisphere. We speculate that
asymmetrical
cerebral blood flow changes may explain the frequent laterality of neurological deficits during severe hypoglycaemia.
...
PMID:Regional cerebral blood flow during hypoglycaemia in children with IDDM. 859 24
Five patients with Parkinson's disease, unilaterally transplanted with foetal mesencephalic cells into putamen (n=1) or putamen and caudate (n=4), were followed throughout a period of 15-36 months after surgery, according to the recommendations of the core assessment programme for intracerebral transplantations (CAPIT). All these patients exhibited an increase in the fluorodopa uptake in the grafted putamen, which was most significant in the first and last patient of the series. Long-term bilateral improvement of skilled hand movements was observed, starting between the third and sixth month after grafting, and confirmed by the statistical analysis of CAPIT timed tests. A mild to moderate effect on the amount of 'off' time and 'on-off' fluctuations was observed, whereas, apart from one case, no other clear effect on gait, walking and speech was found. One patient included in the study, already suffering slight
cognitive impairment
, clearly exhibited progression of a dementia process after surgery. Daily living activities were clearly improved in only one of the other four patients. At the end of the study period, all patients needed L-dopa therapy at a similar or higher dose than before grafting, but, in most of them, other dopaminergic drugs were reduced or stopped. All patients exhibited bilateral dyskinesias before grafting that were greatly decreased in intensity a few months after surgery. Delayed
asymmetrical
dyskinesias, occurring on the side displaying the better motor improvement, i.e. contralateral to the graft, were observed in three patients. These results suggest that neural transplants may influence two central mechanisms involved in motor function and the onset of dyskinesias. These effects are likely to occur through complex interactions with the post-synaptic dopaminergic receptors. The occurrence of dyskinesias might simply reflect increased presynaptic storage and release of dopamine. Alternatively, it might, in part, represent some other long-term deleterious effect of the graft. Since PET-scan data indicate that the reinnervation obtained is sub-optimal, it will be of interest to obtain a larger and denser reinnervation of the host striatum and to try, thereafter, to reduce the dose of L-dopa.
...
PMID:Long-term outcome of unilaterally transplanted parkinsonian patients. I. Clinical approach. 862 93
We investigated the possible correlation between functional and anatomical imaging techniques and clinical exams in patients with Alzheimer's and vascular dementia. We examined 24 patients affected with dementia, 16 of them with Alzheimer's disease. 7 with multiinfarct and 1 with mixed dementia. All patients were submitted to clinical, morphological (MRI, CT) and functional (SPECT, cerebral flowmetry) studies. The severity of hypoperfusion revealed by SPECT was highly correlated with
cognitive impairment
in Alzheimer's dementia patients. The abnormal perfusion was mostly bilateral, in the temporal-parietal region, and involved the frontal regions only in the most severe cases. CT and especially MRI showed aspecific cortical and subcortical atrophy, most evident in the medial temporal region. In the patients with multiinfarct dementia, the hypoperfused cortical regions revealed by SPECT were sometimes related to vascular lesions proved at MRI and CT. In the patients with multiinfarct dementia, MRI showed more or less apparent white matter lesions referrable to ischemic insult, besides cortical and subcortical atrophy. MRI allows a differential diagnosis between these two cerebral pathologic conditions of aging. Cerebral flowmetry by Xenon 133 inhalation showed reduced cerebral blood flow in both dementia types. In Alzheimer patients, regional flow was reduced especially in the posterior parietal regions. In multiinfarct dementia patients, flow was more diffusely reduced and
asymmetrical
. Brain function imaging appears to yield useful information for the differential diagnosis in the most common dementia syndromes. Since the neuropathologic data from brain biopsy are rarely available, clinical and instrumental findings must be integrated for diagnostic and pathogenetic insights of the diseases causing
cognitive impairment
.
...
PMID:[Clinical and instrumental diagnosis of Alzheimer's and multi-infarct dementia]. 896 68
The purpose of this study was to investigate patterns of 99mTc-HMPAO single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) abnormality in Lewy body disease (LBD) and to compare findings with those encountered in Alzheimer's disease (AD). The study group comprised 20 consecutive patient referrals fulfilling clinical criteria for LBD. All patients had fluctuating
cognitive impairment
and 'subcortical' dysfunction with or without perceptuospatial and/or linguistic impairment. Six patients had
asymmetrical
signs of parkinsonism (three left-sided and three right-sided), and 14 patients had symmetrical features of extrapyramidal involvement. 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT imaging was performed on LBD patients and findings compared with those of 57 patients with 'probable' AD and 11 normal age-matched controls. Within the LBD and AD groups, patterns of cortical and subcortical blood-flow abnormality were compared with patterns of cognitive and neurological breakdown. LBD was associated with bilateral posterior cortical blood flow abnormality, a pattern strikingly similar to that found in AD. Within the LBD group, cortical blood-flow abnormality was found to reflect patterns of neurological dysfunction (parkinsonism) indicative of subcortical involvement. In contrast, cortical blood-flow changes did not reflect patterns of neuropsychological impairment suggestive of cortical dysfunction. Within the AD group, cortical blood-flow changes were mirrored by the pattern of neuropsychological impairment. Findings support the notion that cortical blood-flow abnormality in LBD might reflect a combination of direct cortical pathology and cortical deafferentation secondary to subcortical Lewy body pathology. It would appear that 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT imaging is of limited value in the clinical differentiation of LBD and AD.
...
PMID:A 99mTc-HMPAO single-photon emission computed tomography study of Lewy body disease. 924 19
Depressions of regional cerebral metabolism beyond the epileptogenic zone have been demonstrated in patients with intractable temporal lobe epilepsy. However, their clinical relevance, and the causes of prefrontal metabolic asymmetries are less well understood. We investigated 96 temporal lobe epilepsy patients by FDG-PET and neuropsychological assessment who had a corresponding unilateral temporal hypometabolism, left hemisphere speech dominance, full scale IQ of > 70 and no extratemporal lesion in MRIs. The regional glucose metabolism was determined in each patient in homologous regions including prefrontal cortex, and normalized to whole brain metabolism. Regional differences of > 10% were regarded as
asymmetrical
. Prefrontal metabolic asymmetries were more frequent in patients with left temporal lobe epilepsy (21 left, six right) and a history of secondarily generalized seizures. A multivariate analysis of variance revealed a main effect for prefrontal metabolic asymmetry on neuropsychological 'frontal lobe measures', including verbal and performance intelligence measures. Prefrontal metabolic asymmetry was not related to 'measures of episodic memory', presence of psychiatric symptoms or frontal interictal epileptiform discharges. We conclude that prefrontal metabolic asymmetry is associated with
cognitive impairment
. Patients with temporal lobe epilepsy of the left speech dominant hemisphere and a history of secondarily generalized seizures are at considerable risk of developing prefrontal metabolic asymmetry.
...
PMID:Prefrontal asymmetric interictal glucose hypometabolism and cognitive impairment in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy. 944 82
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