Cases reported "Spinal Cord Diseases"

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1/128. Pontine cryptococcoma in a nonimmunocompromised individual: MRI characteristics.

    The case of a pontine cryptococcoma in a nonimmunocompromised, previously healthy 16-year-old boy is presented. The patient had slowly progressive brainstem signs with right cranial nerves V, VII, and VIII palsies, and contralateral corticospinal and spinothalamic deficits. Magnetic resonance images (MRI) revealed, within the right pons, a 1-cm diameter round mass lesion, hypointense on T1-weighted images, hyperintense on T2-weighted images, and with rim enhancement after infusion of gadopentetate dimeglumine. This is the only report of the MRI findings in an isolated pontine cryptococcoma in an immunocompetent patient. Early recognition of this specific MRI pattern is essential, because complete recovery can be achieved with prompt antifungal treatment.
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2/128. Optic-spinal form of multiple sclerosis and anti-thyroid autoantibodies.

    The optic-spinal form of multiple sclerosis (OSMS), characterized by recurrent involvement of optic nerve and spinal cord with rare brain magnetic resonance imaging lesions, is relatively common among Asians. While individual cases of OSMS with anti-thyroid autoantibodies (ATABs) have been reported, the frequency of ATAbs in OSMS and classical multiple sclerosis has not been studied. We studied serum ATAbs and anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA) in 46 Japanese patients with multiple sclerosis: 14 with OSMS, and 32 with non-OSMS. Six patients were positive for ATAbs: five women with OSMS and one man with non-OSMS. The frequency of ATAbs in OSMS (5/14) was significantly higher than that in non-OSMS (1/32; P = 0.007), but the frequency of ANA did not differ between OSMS (3/14) and non-OSMS (6/32; P = 0.99). There may be a pathogenetic link between anti-thyroid autoimmunity and a subgroup of OSMS in Japanese.
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3/128. Myeloneuropathy following nitrous oxide anesthaesia in a patient with macrocytic anaemia.

    The neurological condition triggered by anaesthesia with nitrous oxide involves the cyanocobalamine pathway and is characterised by progressive demyelination and axonal lesions of the peripheral nerves and cervicothoracic spinal cord (posterior and anterolateral columns) giving a peripheral neuropathy and very frequently subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord. It is possible to show these demyelinating lesions by MRI of the spine, allowing early diagnosis and follow-up. We describe a case of myeloneuropathy with onset a few hours after nitrous oxide anaesthesia in a patient with macrocytic anaemia and possible subclinical vitamin B(12) deficiency and MRI evidence of a lesion of the cervical spinal cord. Neurological and haematological improvement followed cyanocobalamine replacement.
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4/128. ehlers-danlos syndrome associated with multiple spinal meningeal cysts--case report.

    A 40-year-old female with ehlers-danlos syndrome was admitted because of a large pelvic mass. Radiological examination revealed multiple spinal meningeal cysts. The first operation through a laminectomy revealed that the cysts originated from dilated dural sleeves containing nerve roots. Packing of dilated sleeves was inadequate. Finally the cysts were oversewed through a laparotomy. The cysts were reduced, but the postoperative course was complicated by poor wound healing and diffuse muscle atrophy. ehlers-danlos syndrome associated with spinal cysts may be best treated by endoscopic surgery.
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5/128. endoscopy of the spinal cord: cadaveric study and clinical experience.

    Recent improvements in instruments permit endoscopic examination of previously inaccessible sites. We report on the clinical use of a small-diameter endoscope to examine the spinal subarachnoid space, cord surface and syrinx cavities. Prior to clinical application, three types of endoscopes with external diameters of 0.5, 1.4 or 2.2 mm were inserted percutaneously in the lumbar region of five cadavers for preclinical evaluation of the procedure and the three endoscopes. The observations permitted us to perform spinal endoscopy preoperatively or intraoperatively using the 0.5-mm instrument in seven patients with spinal cord lesions between 1995 and 1997. The patients included two with spinal cord herniation through a dural defect, two with syringomyelia, one with spinal arachnoid cyst, one with spinal epidural cyst and one undergoing lumboperitoneal shunt for hydrocephalus. In patients in whom an endoscope was used preoperatively, the endoscope provided morphological information useful in preoperative diagnosis and planning surgical strategy. When the endoscope was used intraoperatively, areas outside the field of vision of a microscope could be examined, and physiological evaluation could include visualizing improved cord perfusion from the spinal subarachnoid space after surgery. endoscopes could be safely inserted and approached to the lesions under direct vision while avoiding blood vessels and nerve roots on the spinal cord surface. No changes in symptoms or complications occurred in association with endoscopy. Using a small-diameter endoscope, the contents of the spinal subarachnoid space could be examined. Further improvements to increase possible endoscopic manipulation and enhance safety may extend the possibilities for endoscopic examination and permit endoscopic treatment.
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6/128. Bilateral blindness and lumbosacral myelopathy associated with high-dose carmustine and cisplatin therapy.

    PURPOSE: To report the early ocular pathologic findings associated with high-dose carmustine and cisplatin therapy. methods: A patient with metastatic breast carcinoma developed an acute onset of branch retinal artery occlusion, bilateral blindness, and a myelopathy involving the lower extremities after high-dose chemotherapy and bone marrow transplant. RESULTS: Histopathologic examination of the eye and optic nerves at autopsy disclosed nerve fiber layer infarction secondary to right inferior temporal retinal artery thrombosis. Patchy necrosis of both optic nerves, medulla oblongata, and spinal cord was associated with focal small-vessel thrombosis. CONCLUSIONS: The syndrome of retinal vascular occlusion, optic neuropathy, and myelopathy is associated with the high-dose chemotherapeutic agents carmustine and cisplatin. The distribution of necrosis suggests an ischemic event rather than direct neurotoxic effects.
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7/128. Transganglionic gracile response following limb amputation in man.

    Gracile neuroaxonal dystrophy (nad) is an distinctive morphological alteration of central projecting axon terminals of dorsal root ganglion neurons. Experimentally, lower limb amputation has been shown to accelerate the formation of gracile nad, suggesting that the transganglionic response to peripheral axotomy may play a role in its development. To determine if a similar response occurs in the human sensory nervous system following peripheral nerve injury, we have performed postmortem histopathological examinations of the dorsal column nuclei of three patients (aged 15, 55, and 77 years old); all of whom had undergone accidental or therapeutic unilateral limb amputation (1 year, 38 years, and 1 year 8 months prior to death, respectively). In a 15-year-old man who underwent therapeutic leg amputation, the gracile nuclei on the transected side revealed reactive gliosis and many small axonal spheroids. The spheroids and fine neurites were immunolabelled with antibodies for growth-associated protein-43, ubiquitin and neuropeptide y (NPY). Neither routine histological nor immunohistochemical methods demonstrated comparable changes in the contralateral gracile nucleus. In a 77-year-old man who underwent leg amputation, the gracile nucleus on the amputated side was gliotic and showed several NPY and ubiquitin-immunoreactive spheroids, which were not seen in the contralateral non-transected side. A 55-year-old man with a history of accidental arm amputation showed well-developed nad in the cuneate nucleus only on the transected side. This study clearly demonstrates the occurrence of transganglionic response to limb amputation in human dorsal column nuclei. The extent of the regenerative and/or degenerative responses may vary depending on the age of the patient and the time interval following the peripheral axotomy.
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8/128. scrub typhus encephalomyelitis with prominent focal neurologic signs.

    BACKGROUND: encephalomyelitis with prominent focal neurologic signs and associated neuroradiologic abnormalities has not been previously described in scrub typhus. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 22-year-old woman was admitted because of fever and an altered mental state. neurologic examination revealed bilateral sixth and seventh nerve palsies, bilateral gaze evoked nystagmus, anarthria, dysphagia, quadriparesis, and sensory level at T1. serum and cerebrospinal fluid samples were positive for tsutsugamushi antibody. The patient's magnetic resonance images demonstrated the lesions responsible for the neurologic dysfunctions: in the lower brainstem, cerebellar peduncles, and spinal cord. It was interesting that the gray matter of the spinal cord was predominantly involved. CONCLUSIONS: The recognition of unusual manifestations and the clinical suspicion of this treatment-responsive disease may be important, particularly in the face of increasing international and intranational travel.
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9/128. Intraspinal haematoma following lumbar epidural anaesthesia in a neonate.

    A neonate with chromosomal 9 abnormality and omphalocele received a lumbar epidural catheter after laparotomy. Several attempts were needed to establish this catheter. Bleeding occurred from the operative wound after surgery. Using an epidural infusion with ropivacaine 0.1% for 48 h postoperative pain relief was sufficient. Four days after epidural catheter removal, dysfunction of the sacral parasympathetic nerves was noted. Motor and sensor function of the lower limbs were unaffected. magnetic resonance imaging showed a localized intraspinal haematoma in the lower lumbar region.
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10/128. Exclusively epidural arteriovenous fistula in the cervical spine with spinal cord symptoms: case report.

    OBJECTIVE AND IMPORTANCE: We describe the case of an epidural arteriovenous fistula (AVF) in the cervical spine draining only into the epidural and paravertebral plexus. An entirely epidural AVF having such drainage is extremely rare. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 24-year-old man presented with a 4-month history of gradually progressive sensory and motor disturbances of the upper and lower extremities. magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance angiography revealed a peridural vascular lesion within the canal compressing the spinal cord from C5 to T2. Diagnostic angiography revealed a perimedullary and/or dural high-flow AVF, fed mainly by branches of ascending cervical and deep cervical arteries. The fistula drained into the epidural and paravertebral venous plexus without reflux into intradural venous systems. INTERVENTION: Multiple feeders of the AVF were embolized with a Liquid coil and n-butylcyanoacrylate via a two-step procedure. One week after embolization, the AVF was surgically removed. CONCLUSION: Interesting points of this case were the exclusively epidural location of the lesion, the exclusively epidural drainage of the AVF, and the etiology of the symptoms. Venous drainage of the fistula had no relation to any dural or intradural veins. Initially, spinal cord and nerve root compression by extradural veins with varicose dilation seemed to cause the radiculopathy and/or the myelopathy, and subsequent myelopathy caused by spinal venous hypertension was believed to be the main etiology in this case.
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