Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-three cases suspected of skull base tumors were examined by CT cisternography (CTC) with CT scanner (EMI 1010) from April, 1977 to March, 1978. The lesions in 20 cases were diagnosed as positive and confirmed by operation and/or autopsies. These include five acoustic neurinomas, six pituitary adenomas, two craniopharyngiomas, two skull base meningiomas, one arachnoid cyst and miscellaneous tumors. Isotonic Metrizamide solution four of 2-10 ml was injected via lumbar route. Patients were kept in 30 degrees Trendelenburg position for 60 minutes until the first scanning. Scannings were obtained 1, 3, 6, 24 and in some cases 48 hours after lumbar injection. No side effects except for headache, nausea, vomiting occurred. There were no convulsions. In diagnosing cerebellopontine angle tumors, the indirect signs such as asymmetrical ambient cisterns are of importance, when combined with direct signs, i.e. a shadow defect. Parasellar tumors are usually difficult to diagnose with conventional CT due to streak artifact caused by adjacent bony structure. In CTC the extrasellar extension of pituitary tumors were clearly visible. The size, shape, dimensions and the relationship to the adjacent structures of the craniopharyngiomas were easily demonstrated with CTC especially when a coronal view was added. In arachnoid cyst, CTC demonstrated the delayed turnover of Metrizamide between the cyst cavity and the adjacent subarachnoid space. In conclusion, CTC is an useful neuroradiological diagnostic adjunct because of minimal bony streak artifact and high spatial resolution. It would be expected that small tumors of even 2-3 mm in diameter might be diagnosed, from the fact that the middle cerebral artery in the suprasellar cistern is clearly visible as a shadow defect.
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PMID:[Metrizamide CT cisternography in skull base tumors (author's transl)]. 41 46

Two patients with cervical diastematomyelia are reported here. A nineteen year-old-man (patient 1) admitted to our hospital because of muscular weakness of right upper limb. He noted muscular atrophy of right upper limb at 16 years old, and then paresthesia was gradually aggravated in the ulnar side of the right hand. Physical examination showed muscular atrophy of right upper limb and hypesthesia in the right eight cervical and first thoracic dermatomes. The deep tendon reflexes were decreased in the right upper limb and were increased in the lower limb without pathological reflexes. In electromyographic examination, neurogenic motor units were observed in the upper right limb, dominantly in 1st interosseous muscle (between the fourth cervical and the first thoracic dermatome). Metrizamide computed tomographic (CT) myelography revealed sagittal splitting of the spinal cord from the third to the sixth cervical vertebra, producing two asymmetrical hemicords. A osseous or fibrous septum were not seen. The right hemicord was smaller than the left one. Patient 2 was a twenty-four-year-old woman. She visited our hospital because of muscular weakness of the right upper limb. In physical examination, there were the muscular atrophy of right hand and hypesthesia in the right eighth and first thoracic dermatomes. The deep tendon reflexes were decreased in the right upper limb and were increased in the right lower limb without pathological reflexes. The EMG studies revealed the neurogenic NMU in the right upper limb (between the fourth cervical and the first thoracic dermatome). Magnetic resonance imaging showed marked narrowing of the dural sac in flexion of the neck.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Two patients with cervical diastematomyelia]. 275 66

Cerebrospinal fluid flow dynamics of 15 patients with occlusive cerebrovascular diseases was studied using RI cisternography (RIC) and Metrizamide CT cisternography (CTC) and these methods were compared. RIC demonstrated RI retention in 9 patients, which was noticed in all chronic stage patients (over one month after apopletic episode). Five patients had subarachnoid block in affected cerebral hemisphere. Ventricular reflux, however, was present in only one patient. Metrizamide CTC (170 mgI/ml) showed ventricular reflux or stasis in 11 of 16 patients. Seven patients revaaled asymmetrical metrizamide filling of Sylvian fissures at 3 or 6 hours after intrathecal injection of Metrizamide. Asymmetrical demonstration of Sylvian fissure after 3 hours in 3 patients corresponded with the finding of subarachnoid block at the same side on RIC. The clinical values of CTC were emphasized on the basis of this investigation. Ventricular reflux or stasis, which indicated one of the important findings on cerebrospinal fluid flow disturbance, was easily and clearly detected. Asymmetrical metrizamide filling of Sylvian fissures at 3 hours after injection was compatible with subarachnoid block on RIC.
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PMID:[Cerebrospinal fluid dynamics in occlusive cerebrovascular diseases--comparison with computed tomography and radioisotope cisternography (author's transl)]. 736 Mar 15