Cases reported "Cerebrovascular Disorders"

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1/421. stroke and seizures as the presenting signs of pediatric hiv infection.

    The authors report two pediatric patients with definite human immunodeficiency virus infection whose initial presentation was stroke and seizure. The first patient was a 3-year-old female who developed acute hemiparesis as the first manifestation. The other, a 2-month-old infant, had focal seizures secondary to cerebral infarction. Investigations revealed ischemic infarction of the thalamus, hypothalamus, and internal capsule in the first patient and cerebral cortex in the second. Further investigations failed to demonstrate any other causes of these cerebral infarctions. Opportunistic infection of the central nervous system was not documented. The authors emphasize that cerebrovascular accident may be the initial presentation in human immunodeficiency virus infection in children. Human immunodeficiency virus infection must be included in the differential diagnosis, and testing for the disease is mandatory in the investigation of stroke in any child who is at risk of having this infection.
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keywords = central nervous system
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2/421. stroke-like episodes in autosomal recessive cytochrome oxidase deficiency.

    stroke-like episodes, defined as periods of acute localized neurological dysfunction during which brain imagery suggests cerebral ischemia but vascular anatomy is normal, occurred in 3 patients with autosomal recessive Saguenay-Lac St-Jean (SLSJ) cytochrome oxidase (COX) deficiency. The patients developed focal neurological deterioration and frontal hypodensities on cerebral computerized tomography (CT). Arteriography, performed in 1 patient during an acute episode, showed normal vascular anatomy. Nevertheless, capillary shunting was evident both in regions that appeared abnormal on the initial cerebral CT study and in regions that appeared normal but subsequently developed leigh disease. stroke-like episodes did not exacerbate systemic acidosis, and acidotic decompensations occurred independently of stroke-like episodes. In conclusion, stroke-like episodes occur in autosomal recessively inherited congenital lactic acidoses as well as in those caused by mitochondrial dna mutations. In some cases, acute localized neurovascular changes occur in regions that subsequently develop Leigh disease.
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ranking = 1.3307488393075
keywords = brain
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3/421. Does vestibular stimulation activate thalamocortical mechanisms that reintegrate impaired cortical regions?

    Caloric stimulation induced a transient reversal of multimodal hemispatial cognitive deficits in an 81-year-old woman with an acute left cerebral hemisphere stroke. The patient had unawareness of her right hand (asomatognosia), right-sided visual unawareness (hemineglect), aphasia and right-sided weakness (hemiplegia) prior to the stimulation. Transient improvements in impaired sensory, motor, linguistic and cognitive function developed within 30 s following application of the caloric stimulus and onset of horizontal nystagmus. The effect persisted for 3 min and ceased completely after 5 min. While several recent reports have described the capacity of caloric stimulation to transiently improve or reverse a wide range of attentional, cognitive and motor impairments, most examples are in right-hemisphere-damaged patients with long-standing brain injury. Typically, patients have been tested several months or years after the onset of the deficit. A possible mechanism for the temporary reintegration of multiple cognitive functions in this patient is discussed.
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ranking = 1.3307488393075
keywords = brain
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4/421. Plasticity of language-related brain function during recovery from stroke.

    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: This study was undertaken to correlate functional recovery from aphasia after acute stroke with the temporal evolution of the anatomic, physiological, and functional changes as measured by MRI. methods: Blood oxygenation level-dependent contrast and echo-planar MRI were used to map language comprehension in 6 normal adults and in 2 adult patients during recovery from acute stroke presenting with aphasia. Perfusion, diffusion, sodium, and conventional anatomic MRI were used to follow physiological and structural changes. RESULTS: The normal activation pattern for language comprehension showed activation predominately in left-sided Wernicke's and Broca's areas, with laterality ratios of 0.8 and 0.3, respectively. Recovery of the patient confirmed as having a completed stroke affecting Broca's area occurred rapidly with a shift of activation to the homologous region in the right hemisphere within 3 days, with continued rightward lateralization over 6 months. In the second patient, in whom mapping was performed fortuitously before stroke, recovery of a Wernicke's aphasia showed a similar increasing rightward shift in activation recruitment over 9 months after the event. CONCLUSIONS: Recovery of aphasia in adults can occur rapidly and is concomitant with an activation pattern that changes from left to a homologous right hemispheric pattern. Such recovery occurs even when the stroke evolves to completion. Such plasticity must be considered when evaluating stroke interventions based on behavioral and neurological measurements.
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ranking = 5.32299535723
keywords = brain
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5/421. Infantile hiv encephalopathy associated with cerebral and cerebellar telangiectases.

    We describe a paediatric case of hiv encephalopathy associated with cerebral and cerebellar telangiectases. Although immunohistochemistry failed to show hiv in the walls of dilated blood vessels, or in their vicinity, brain capillary telangiectases might be an additional complication indirectly related to paediatric hiv infection.
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ranking = 1.3307488393075
keywords = brain
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6/421. Somatosensory extinction for meaningful objects in a patient with right hemispheric stroke.

    Implicit, high level processing of extinguished objects has often been described in the visual modality. In the tactile domain, however, research on this topic is meagre and it is still uncertain whether processing of tactually presented stimuli can be affected by the same attentional disorders as visual stimuli. In this paper we describe a patient, ENM, with visual neglect and light touch extinction who, in a naming task of objects presented in the tactile modality, simultaneously to both hands, showed extinction for left hand objects. He was, nevertheless, able to make above chance Same/Different judgements on the two stimuli. We also tested two neurologically intact subjects who performed the test wearing a ski-glove on the left hand to impair the recognition of left hand objects. In these subjects, Same/Different judgements were at chance level when recognition rate was as low as that found in patient ENM. This happened when either the objects, although sharing the same name were different in shape (conditions Same-Different) or when the two objects were different with respect to the category name but were actually physically similar (conditions Different-Similar). However, when the objects were either identical or completely different, i.e., in a condition where judgement could be based simply on the physical analysis of the object shape (condition Same Identical and Different Dissimilar), their Same/Different judgements were above chance, despite the tactual deficit. Our conclusion was that patient ENM showed implicit recognition of left hand objects, at least in the Same Different and in the Different-Similar conditions, whereas, in the same conditions, normal subjects with an artificial sensory impairment did not. Our results also show that Same/Different judgements may be, in some conditions, less demanding than naming tasks, as suggested by Farah et al. Furthermore, patient ENM performed the test both with uncrossed and crossed hands. We found that extinction always affected the hand contralateral to the brain damage, although there was a tendency for a decrement of the ipsilesional hand performance in the crossed condition. We discuss these findings with reference to the most recent theories on the existence of a body centered spatial frame of reference.
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ranking = 1.3307488393075
keywords = brain
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7/421. Near infrared spectroscopy and transcranial Doppler in monohemispheric stroke.

    We simultaneously performed near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and transcranial Doppler (TCD) to evaluate the effects of hypercapnia as well as of scalp ischemia on the blood flow at two different depth levels within the brain and of the scalp vessels. A decrease in the backscattered light intensity, meaning an increment of blood volume, was detected at the end of hypercapnia in all healthy subjects. This decrement was partly masked by ischemia in the cutaneous vessels. In 2 patients with a monohemispheric lesion in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory, an increase in NIRS response was found in the healthy hemisphere, while in the stroke side the CO2-induced changes were negligible. TCD data showed a similar increment of blood flow velocity to the hypercapnia in both hemispheres, with no differences between the affected and normal side in 1 patient, whereas in the second one, no increment was observed on the affected side, probably due to internal carotid artery stenosis. The two methods nicely integrate: TCD mainly tests subcortical changes in the MCA flow, while NIRS is exquisitely sensitive to cortical arterioles and capillary blood flow modifications.
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ranking = 1.3307488393075
keywords = brain
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8/421. Complete mutism after midbrain periaqueductal gray lesion.

    Several neurophysiological studies have highlighted the role of the midbrain periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) in the initiation of vocalization in various animal species, from frogs to primates. With regard to humans, only two cases of complete mutism following a lesion to the PAG have been reported so far. This article describes a new case of a patient (GM) who, following an ischemic lesion to the periaqueductal gray region of the midbrain, presented with complete and irreversible mutism, though her language comprehension functions and her non-verbal expression capacity were preserved. This clinical case provides evidence that in humans the PAG also acts as a link between different vocalization-eliciting external and internal stimuli (which reach the PAG from sensory and emotional structures) and the vocal-motor coordinating mechanisms in the lower brain stem.
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ranking = 9.3152418751525
keywords = brain
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9/421. Successful cerebral artery stent placement for total occlusion of the vertebrobasilar artery in a patient suffering from acute stroke. Case report.

    A 64-year-old man suffering from crescendo brainstem symptoms due to acute total occlusion of the vertebrobasilar artery was successfully treated by cerebral artery stent placement. The total occlusion of a long segment of the vertebrobasilar artery was completely recanalized by implanting two flexible, balloon-expandable coronary stents. The patient's clinical outcome 30 days later was favorable. No complications occurred during or after the procedure. This therapeutic option may prove to be a useful means to revascularize an acute total occlusion of the vertebrobasilar artery.
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ranking = 1.3307488393075
keywords = brain
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10/421. stroke--a medical emergency.

    Acute ischaemic stroke as an urgent-to-treat condition has gained a more prominent role in the consciousness of emergency physicians and neurologists over the past decade. This is mainly due to an increasing insight into the pathophysiological mechanism of ischaemia, the definition of therapeutical goals, such as reperfusion or neuroprotection, and the recent application of respective treatment strategies in large multicentre studies. This review article will focus on the emergency assessment of stroke patients, on general treatment strategies, and particularly on specific measures of intensive care therapy of stroke including thrombolysis, decompressive surgery, hypothermia and treatment of brain oedema.
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ranking = 1.3307488393075
keywords = brain
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