Cases reported "Paresis"

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1/97. Anterior lumbosacral radiculopathy after intrathecal methotrexate treatment.

    Intrathecal chemotherapy with methotrexate or cytosine arabinoside is the standard approach to prophylaxis and treatment of central nervous system leukemia in children. Progressive paraplegia, one of the devastating neurologic complications related to this mode of treatment, has been attributed to spinal cord toxicity. Reported are three children who developed progressive paraparesis after intrathecal methotrexate administration followed by complete or partial recovery. gadolinium enhancement of anterior lumbosacral spinal nerve roots was demonstrated in all three patients, and an elevation of cerebrospinal fluid immunoglobulin g synthesis was evident in two patients with more severe symptoms. The clinical data suggest that anterior lumbosacral radiculopathy is also a type of neurologic complication associated with intrathecal methotrexate treatment.
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ranking = 1
keywords = central nervous system, nervous system
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2/97. Pure motor monoparesis of a lower limb due to a small infarction in the contralateral motor cortex.

    Pure motor monoparesis (PMM) is a rare condition characterized by weakness limited to one limb without sensory disturbance. We report a 42-year-old woman with PMM of the right lower limb caused by a small infarction in the contralateral motor cortex that could be detected by the magnetic resonance imaging of the brain. This case suggests that small lesions, missed by carelessly performed scans, could be a potential cause of PMM. This is especially true in the case of lower limb PMM, because the lesion may be located in the top of the frontal lobe cortex, an area that can be easily missed by routine scans. Therefore, we should pay careful attention to the opposite side of the motor cortex in examining neuroimages of PMM cases.
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ranking = 0.7436584129721
keywords = brain
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3/97. Sequestrum-like appearance of a multiple sclerosis brain lesion on serial magnetic resonance images.

    Using serial magnetic resonance imaging, we monitored an unique lesion of the brain in a 15-year-old girl with clinically definite and laboratory-supported remitting-relapsing multiple sclerosis. During initial phases of the disease course, cystic necrosis around the plaque was observed. Later, remyelination of the central core of the lesion was speculated, as similarities in signal intensity between the core and the normal appearing white matter were partially recovered both on the T1- and the T2-weighted images.
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ranking = 3.7182920648605
keywords = brain
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4/97. sagittal sinus thrombosis associated with transient free protein s deficiency after L-asparaginase treatment: case report and review of the literature.

    Cerebral sinus thrombosis associated with acquired free protein s deficiency is very rare. We report the case of an adult patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia who presented with repeated transient ischemic attacks followed by a seizure during consolidation treatment with L-asparaginase. Magnetic resonance of the brain showed a small cortical hemorrhagic infarct. Superior sagittal sinus thrombosis was demonstrated by cerebral angiogram. A marked decrease of the free form of protein S was documented. One month later, when the patient was free of symptoms, the follow-up free protein S antigen level was restored to the normal range. We suggest that the sagittal sinus thrombosis in this patient was caused by acquired, transient free protein s deficiency. This case also extends the clinical spectrum of cerebral sinus thrombosis to include recurrent transient ischemic attacks alternating with seizures.
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ranking = 0.7436584129721
keywords = brain
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5/97. Primary CNS lymphoma associated with streptococcal abscess: an autopsy case.

    This report describes a case of streptococcal abscess in the nodules of a primary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma. magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain revealed multiple lesions with ringlike enhancement over the bilateral frontal, right temporal, and left parietal lobes. On admission, acute brain edema occurred following angiography, which resulted in respiratory arrest. autopsy findings showed that the ringlike enhanced lesions on MRI were streptococcal abscesses localized in the lymphoma nodules. The lymphoma was classified as non-Hodgkin, diffuse large cells of B-cell lineage. No other lymphoma mass was found extracranially. An immunohistochemical study showed that the lymphoma cells were positive for leukocyte common antigen, Epstein-Barr virus, bax. and bcl-XL, and negative for L-26 and bcl-2. This case demonstrated that an opportunistic streptococcal abscess developed in primary CNS lymphoma in a patient without acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), though a few similar cases have been reported in patients with AIDS.
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ranking = 2.4873168259442
keywords = central nervous system, brain, nervous system
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6/97. Toxoplasmic encephalitis in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome--four case reports.

    Four patients, all males aged 40-64 years, presented with toxoplasmic encephalitis associated with human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) infection manifesting as nonspecific neurological deficits such as epilepsy or hemiparesis. magnetic resonance imaging showed single or multiple lesions with ring enhancement, mimicking metastatic brain tumor or brain abscess. Marked eosinophilia was noted in three patients. Two patients who received anti-toxoplasma chemotherapy in the early stage had a good outcome. However, the other two patients suffered rapid neurological deterioration and needed decompressive surgery, resulting in a poor outcome. toxoplasma diffusely infects the whole central nervous system from the early stage. The outcome for patients who needed emergency surgery was poor. Therefore, this rare but increasingly common infectious disease must be considered in the differential diagnosis of a patient with neuroimaging findings similar to those of metastatic tumor or brain abscess. Appropriate chemotherapy should be started immediately after hiv-positive reaction is identified in patients with single or multiple mass lesions with ring enhancement.
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ranking = 3.2309752389163
keywords = central nervous system, brain, nervous system
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7/97. Blue rubber bleb nevus syndrome with central nervous system involvement.

    An 11-month-old female patient presented with focal seizures. She was born at term with multiple scattered tiny protuberances and dark purple soft compressible nevi over her entire body. She had clumsiness and decreased muscle power in her left extremities. magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance angiography revealed cerebral atrophy of the right central area around the anomalous venous sinus and multiple small enhancing lesions throughout the brain with gadolinium-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid enhancement. Despite right partial neonatal seizures, she had no further seizures for 3 years while receiving carbamazepine, and no change was observed in the number and size of the nevi. At last evaluation, language and psychomotor development were normal for her age.
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ranking = 4.7436584129721
keywords = central nervous system, brain, nervous system
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8/97. Hypoperfusion of right hemisphere on brain SPECT in a patient with exanthem subitum and left hemiparesis.

    Left hemiparesis exhibited during the post-eruptive stage of exanthem subitum (ES) in an 11-month-old girl. Tc-99m HMPAO brain SPECT showed diffuse hypoperfusion in right hemisphere. Hemiparesis has occasionally been reported as central nervous system (CNS) complications of ES, and Tc-99m HMPAO brain SPECT was useful for evaluating of CNS involvement.
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ranking = 5.4619504778326
keywords = central nervous system, brain, nervous system
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9/97. radiation-induced rhombencephalopathy.

    We report the case of a patient who underwent radiotherapy of the neck because of an epidermoid carcinoma in Rosenmuller's fossa. Eleven months later, T1-weighted brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a bulbo-pontine lesion, and the clinical course and sequential MRI results led to a diagnosis of radionecrosis-induced rhombencephalopathy. At a distance of more than three years, the lesion is no longer visible on MRI images but the severe neurological deficits remain. The clinical picture has not been improved by treatment with prednisone, hyperbaric oxygen, symptomatic therapies or anticoagulants.
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ranking = 0.7436584129721
keywords = brain
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10/97. affect of deep brain stimulation on limb paresis after stroke.

    A deep brain stimulator was implanted in the periventricular grey matter of the third ventricle for pain after stroke in a man aged 48 years. As well as a beneficial analgesic effect, the patient reported improved function in the contralateral paretic arm, which was confirmed on formal testing.
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ranking = 3.7182920648605
keywords = brain
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