Chapter · 2020
While signs and symptoms of peripheral neuropathy may appear to be similar among all patients, further evaluation both at the bedside and beyond demonstrate distinct differences in the pattern of certain neuropathies. A working knowledge of these differenc ...
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Journal ArticleMuscle Nerve · October 2016
INTRODUCTION: At our institution, core muscle biopsies are performed on muscles selected using electromyography (EMG). Ultrasound (US) guidance is not used routinely. The aim of this study was to determine if US guidance of EMG selected muscles would incre ...
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Chapter · September 19, 2014
Hemorrhagic and ischemic brain damage causing stroke ranks third among the causes of death in the United States. The evaluation of patients with stroke must be extensive and the approach is reviewed. Epidemiologic data suggest a decreased incidence of both ...
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Journal ArticleContinuum (Minneap Minn) · February 2014
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This article provides an overview of the most common peripheral neuropathic disorders in pregnancy with a focus on clinical recognition, diagnosis, and treatment. RECENT FINDINGS: The literature on this topic consists primarily of case r ...
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Journal ArticleHandb Clin Neurol · 2014
Diving exposes a person to the combined effects of increased ambient pressure and immersion. The reduction in pressure when surfacing can precipitate decompression sickness (DCS), caused by bubble formation within tissues due to inert gas supersaturation. ...
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Journal ArticleNeurol Clin · August 2012
Preexisting and coincident neuromuscular disorders in pregnancy are challenging for clinicians because of the heterogeneity of disease and the limited data in the literature. Many questions arise regarding the effect of disease on the pregnancy, delivery, ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol · July 2009
Given that the physiology of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) encompasses mitochondrial biogenesis, we tested the hypothesis that the HO-1 product, carbon monoxide (CO), activates mitochondrial biogenesis in skeletal muscle and enhances maximal oxygen uptake (Vo(2m ...
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Journal ArticlePhys Med Rehabil Clin N Am · February 2009
Interest in scuba (self-contained underwater breathing apparatus) diving increased in the 1970s, and undersea diving continues to be a popular sport early in the 21st century, with approximately 3 million certified divers in the United States. The Divers A ...
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Journal ArticleSemin Neurol · February 2009
The spinal accessory nerve, primarily a motor nerve, innervates the sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles. Proximally, lesions can occur intracranially at the skull base or just outside the jugular foramen producing ipsilateral weakness of trapezius an ...
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Journal ArticleOphthalmology · June 2008
OBJECTIVE: To assess visual function 15 years after acute unilateral optic neuritis. DESIGN: Longitudinal follow-up of a randomized clinical trial. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred ninety-four patients who were randomized in the Optic Neuritis Treatment Trial bet ...
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Journal ArticleArch Neurol · June 2008
OBJECTIVE: To assess the risk of developing multiple sclerosis (MS) after optic neuritis and the factors predictive of high and low risk. DESIGN: Subjects in the Optic Neuritis Treatment Trial, who were enrolled between July 1, 1988, and June 30, 1991, wer ...
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Journal ArticleNeurol Clin · February 2008
Interest in scuba (self-contained underwater breathing apparatus) diving increased in the 1970s, and undersea diving continues to be a popular sport early in the 21st century, with approximately 3 million certified divers in the United States. The Divers A ...
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Journal ArticlePhys Med Rehabil Clin N Am · February 2008
Peripheral neuropathy, mononeuropathy and polyneuropathy, are not common in pregnancy. When complaints occur, however, even if minor, they can be bothersome to the pregnant woman. Peripheral nerve function may threaten the mother and fetus in various ways ...
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Journal ArticleJ Neuroimaging · October 2007
There is growing clinical evidence supporting a connection between copper deficiency and subacute combined degeneration. While nearly half of patients with copper deficiency myelopathy exhibit MRI abnormalities, signal changes are often ill-defined in dist ...
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Journal ArticleMuscle Nerve · October 2006
Isolated sural neuropathy is an uncommon diagnosis. We identified 36 patients with isolated sural neuropathy. Sixteen had various forms of ankle trauma, in three of whom the associated sural neuropathies developed following medical intervention. Three pati ...
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Journal ArticleUndersea Hyperb Med · 2002
Although diving with compressed air is generally safe, neurological problems resulting from infarction in SCUBA diving are well known, including arterial gas embolism and decompression sickness (caisson's disease, bends) involving the brain and spinal cord ...
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Journal ArticleSemin Neurol · 1998
The clinical neurologist frequently encounters patients with a variety of focal sensory symptoms and signs. This article reviews the clinical features, etiologies, laboratory findings, and management of the common sensory mononeuropathies including meralgi ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · August 1996
We reviewed 44 cases of ischemia and infarction of the spinal cord at two university hospitals. Three patients experienced transient ischemic attacks. Etiologies of completed strokes were diverse and included rupture and surgical repair of aortic aneurysms ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · November 1994
When radiation is used to treat nervous system cancer, exposure of adjacent normal nervous system tissue is unavoidable, and radiation-induced injury may occur. Acute injury is usually mild and transient, but late forms of radiation-induced nervous system ...
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Journal ArticleCirculation · October 1994
BACKGROUND: In selecting patients with acute myocardial infarction for thrombolytic therapy, it is important to identify patients who are at high risk for intracranial hemorrhage, for whom thrombolytic therapy is ill advised. We hypothesized that presentin ...
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Journal ArticleUndersea Hyperb Med · June 1994
The objective assessment of the extent of cerebral insult and the effects of therapy in decompression injury patients has proven to be difficult by most imaging modalities. In this pilot study we evaluated the ability of 18-F-2-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose (FDG) ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · April 1994
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether anticoagulation practices have changed when heparin and warfarin are used to treat cerebrovascular disease, and to determine the dosage of aspirin used to treat carotid territory transient ischemic attacks (TIAs). BACKGROUND ...
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Journal ArticleAJNR Am J Neuroradiol · March 1994
A 37-year-old woman developed Wernicke encephalopathy after prolonged psychogenic food refusal. MR revealed characteristic signal abnormalities in the midbrain and dorsal thalamus. Follow-up scans showed atrophy and third ventricular enlargement. Wernicke ...
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Journal ArticleJ Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry · May 1993
Two cases of ipecac myopathy, one with associated cardiomyopathy are reported. Both patients were young women with eating disorders who came to medical attention because of diffuse muscle weakness. Clinical and electromyographic data suggested ipecac myopa ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · February 1993
We validated the predictive accuracy of an "old" regression model in a "new" sample of bilateral stroke patients (N = 38). Abnormal gag reflex and impaired voluntary cough accurately predicted radiographically verified aspiration in both samples. A final m ...
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Journal ArticleJ Neural Transm Suppl · 1993
Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with changes in the substantia nigra, which communicates with subcortical nuclei. This study investigates subcortical nuclei volume in PD in vivo by magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Caudate, putaminal, and thalamic nu ...
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Journal ArticleNeurol Clin · November 1992
Underwater diving may cause several unique neurologic injuries because of exposure to rapid changes in pressure and volume. DCS, which results from extended deep dives and too rapid ascent, is a systemic disease that frequently causes spinal cord injury bu ...
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Journal ArticleJ Comput Assist Tomogr · 1992
Mycosis fungoides (MF) is a malignant T-cell lymphoma that primarily involves the skin, but may, in its advanced stages, metastasize to internal organs. From autopsy series, CNS involvement of MF can be seen in 14% of patients. We describe the CT and MR fi ...
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Journal ArticleRadiology · November 1991
Computed tomographic (CT) patterns of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) were determined in 1,696 patients undergoing thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction. ICH occurred at 33 sites in 0.77% of patients (n = 13). Thirty-six percent of hemorrhages ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · April 1991
Swallowing is a brief but intricate process. When this process is interrupted, as in patients with neurologic disorders, problems such as aspiration and risk of malnutrition can occur. The authors of this article discuss an individualized approach to evalu ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · November 1990
Seventy patients with bilateral strokes underwent neurologic and videofluoroscopic barium swallowing examinations; 34 (48.6%) aspirated. Patients with aspiration were more likely to have posterior circulation strokes, abnormal cough, abnormal gag, and dysp ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · October 1990
Bell's palsy is thought to be an idiopathic polyneuritis and must be distinguished from other disorders that cause facial weakness. In most cases, differentiation can be accomplished on the basis of the history, physical examination, and clinical course. R ...
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Journal ArticleStroke · September 1990
We evaluated the safety and possible efficacy of large doses of the heparinoid ORG 10172 in 57 patients with acute or progressing ischemic stroke. Patients received a loading bolus of the drug followed by a maintenance intravenous infusion for 7 days. The ...
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Journal ArticleJ Am Coll Cardiol · September 1990
Thirteen (1.8%) of 708 patients with acute myocardial infarction treated with recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator in the Thrombolysis and Angioplasty in Myocardial Infarction (TAMI) I, II and III trials developed a stroke. Four strokes were hemor ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · February 1, 1990
Over the past 20 years, public and physician awareness of tic disorders, including Tourette's syndrome, has increased remarkably. In fact, Tourette's syndrome is now "diagnosed" by many families before they consult a physician. Patients seek help not only ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · September 1, 1989
Changes in personality and behavior are fairly specific when they are caused by damage to the frontal lobe of the cerebral cortex. They are characterized by changes in affect and in emotional response and may be pseudopsychopathic, pseudodepressive, or a c ...
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Journal ArticleNeurol Clin · August 1989
Hematologic diseases may affect the nervous system. Abnormalities in the cellular components, impaired flow, abnormal clotting, or tendency to bleed may all produce neurologic symptoms and signs. A systematic approach to these etiologies is important. ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · March 1989
Weakness of the hand is a common problem in the elderly. When joint and vascular diseases have been ruled out, a systematic anatomic approach to the possible neurologic causes can be used to sort through nonspecific symptoms and the complexity of hand anat ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · February 1989
An intravenous infusion of a low molecular weight heparinoid, with a reduced risk of hemorrhage, may be an alternative to heparin in the management of acute ischemic stroke. To evaluate this hypothesis, we studied the safety of the heparinoid, ORG 10172, i ...
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Journal ArticleNeurorehabilitation and Neural Repair · January 1, 1989
We studied the severity and task-specific nature of neglect in relation to brain lesion size and locus in 23 right hemisphere stroke patients. We used five visuospatial tasks, including reading and writing. No single task identified hemispatial neglect in ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · 1989
An intravenous infusion of a low molecular weight heparinoid, with a reduced risk of hemorrhage, may be an alternative to heparin in the management of acute ischemic stroke. To evaluate this hypothesis, we studied the safety of the heparinoid, ORG 10172, i ...
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Journal ArticleArch Neurol · January 1989
In 1896, Joseph François Babinski first described his well-known sign of dorsiflexion of the big toe on stimulating the sole of the foot. However, unknown to Babinski, several painters had previously demonstrated this phenomenon in their paintings. Sandro ...
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Journal ArticleAJR Am J Roentgenol · November 1988
Diving accidents related to barotrauma constitute a unique subset of ischemic insults to the CNS. Victims may demonstrate components of arterial gas embolism, which has a propensity for cerebral involvement, and/or decompression sickness, with primarily sp ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · September 1988
Among 47 patients with stroke evaluated clinically and videofluoroscopically, one-half aspirated. Patients with combined cerebral-brainstem strokes with bilateral cranial nerve signs were at greatest risk, but aspiration also occurred in the context of uni ...
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Journal ArticleJ Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry · September 1988
Granulomatous angiitis is an uncommon necrotising vasculitis of unknown cause restricted to vessels of the central nervous system. Five tissue-proven cases emphasise the protean manifestations of this disease and the difficulties encountered in reaching a ...
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Journal ArticleInt J Epidemiol · March 1988
International comparisons of average annual age-adjusted mortality rates for primary tumours of the nervous system for 1951 through 1958 and 1967 through 1973 showed marked geographical variation for both study periods. For the majority of countries, the m ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · February 1988
Neurogenic dysphagia following stroke is not limited to brainstem involvement. Among 21 patients with stroke, one-third demonstrated only unilateral signs. In eight patients with silent aspiration, less subjective complaints, weaker cough, and dysphonia oc ...
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Journal ArticleAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology · January 1, 1988
Diving accidents related to barotrauma constitute a unique subset of ischemic insults to the CNS. Victims may demonstrate components of arterial gas embolism, which has a propensity for cerebral involvement, and/or decompression sickness, with primarily sp ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · December 1987
Some authors have reported that the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) is elevated in almost all patients with biopsy-proven temporal arteritis, while others believe it may be normal in up to 30% of such patients. We studied 62 patients with biopsy-prove ...
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Journal ArticleArch Neurol · December 1987
Anticoagulation with heparin and warfarin is used in the treatment of several diseases including cerebrovascular disease. While the most effective therapeutic range of anticoagulation is unclear, some investigators have found an increased risk of bleeding ...
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Journal ArticleN Engl J Med · November 5, 1987
We performed a double-blind crossover trial of challenges with 30 mg of aspartame per kilogram of body weight or placebo in 40 subjects who reported having headaches repeatedly after consuming products containing aspartame. The incidence rate of headache a ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Med Genet · October 1987
Chorea-acanthocytosis (CHA) is a rare inherited neurologic disorder with peripheral red cell acanthocytes and normal serum lipoprotein levels. To date, 8 families with the disorder have been reported outside of Japan. We describe 4 patients in 3 families w ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · November 1986
In a 61-year-old man with facial diplegia and new onset of congestive heart failure (CHF), electroneuromyography indicated diffuse axonal degeneration, but sural nerve biopsy showed mild changes and no amyloid. Four months later, after the onset of diplopi ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · October 1986
Five adult patients (four of them men) had episodic brachioradial pruritus associated with forearm paresthesia and hypalgesia. No cervical, shoulder, or forearm trauma was known. Onset was variable, but two had had the condition for more than ten years. In ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · April 1986
In four patients who received periocular injections of botulinum toxin for blepharospasm, abnormal neuromuscular transmission was demonstrated by single-fiber EMG in arm muscles. The time course with which the abnormalities developed and cleared, as well a ...
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Journal ArticleElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol · April 1986
Visual, brain-stem auditory and somatosensory evoked potentials were obtained in two patients with choreoacanthocytosis. Only minor SSEP amplitude reduction was found in one patient. Therefore evoked potentials were not helpful in identifying patients with ...
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Journal ArticleJ Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry · April 1986
A 59-year-old, right-handed, college-educated male examined after stroke presented spelling alexia with relative sparing of writing. He was not aphasic. A striking feature of the alexia was preserved recognition of letters printed in view by the clinician. ...
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Journal ArticleSouthern Medical Journal · January 1, 1986
Five adult patients (four of them men) had episodic brachioradial pruritus associated with forearm paresthesia and hypalgesia. No cervical, shoulder, or forearm trauma was known. Onset was variable, but two had had the condition for more than ten years. In ...
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Journal ArticleClin Neuropharmacol · 1986
The clinical diagnosis of granulomatous angiitis can be extremely difficult because of the diversity of presentation. A clinical presentation of progressive multifocal encephalopathy is most common but signs suggesting isolated mass lesions or dementia may ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · November 1985
Rocky Mountain spotted fever, a serious systemic infectious illness, is common in the southeastern United States. Approximately one fourth of the cases in the United States occur in North Carolina. Widespread organ involvement occurs, with central nervous ...
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Journal ArticleJ Urol · September 1985
The modified lithotomy position is used to provide simultaneous operative exposure to the abdomen and perineum. We report 3 lumbosacral plexus complications following use of this position. A mechanism involving stretch secondary to hyperabduction seems mos ...
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Journal ArticleAnn Neurol · September 1985
Sickle cell disease is known to predispose patients to the risk of cerebral infarction. However, only scattered reports exist of the neurological sequelae of the sickle cell trait. Only 8 cases are reported in the English literature, in some of which the s ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · May 1985
In a retrospective study of scuba divers with neurologic injuries, we found that mild symptoms were common. Seventy divers had decompression sickness, most often with paresthesias or numbness, rarely with paresis. Thirty-nine divers had air embolism that o ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · March 1985
We evaluated four patients with an initial and predominant voice tremor. All were referred for evaluation for suspected parkinsonism, though vocal tremor was the only symptom. These three women and one man ranged in age from 37 to 59 years. Neurologic eval ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · December 1984
In the two cases reported here, acute respiratory failure developed as a manifestation of motor neuron disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis). Both patients complained of systemic weakness before respiratory failure occurred. In one patient, respiratory s ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · November 1984
We used a computer data bank to evaluate 740 consecutive patients admitted to a cardiac care unit with myocardial infarction. Stroke occurred in 18 (2.4%) patients in the hospital; the anterior circulation was involved in 76% of strokes. Hospital mortality ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · September 1984
We have described a 22-year-old woman who manifested clinical seizures after treatment with lithium carbonate was initiated. Serial electroencephalograms showed both nonspecific activation and activation of an epileptiform discharge with serum levels of li ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · July 1984
Arsenic-induced deaths have been known to occur from accidental poisoning, as a result of medical therapy, and from intentional poisonings in homicide and suicide. Twenty-eight arsenic deaths in North Carolina from 1972 to 1982 included 14 homicides and se ...
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Journal ArticleClin Neuropharmacol · 1984
Epidemics of epilepsy, a form of mass hysteria, were known in Eastern and Western cultures in the 17th and 18th centuries. A unique situation in the United States during the 19th centurey was the frontier religious movement, the setting in which the "jerks ...
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Journal ArticleClin Neuropharmacol · 1984
Five patients with the "on-off" phenomenon of parkinsonism who developed dyskinesias associated with a reduction in akinesia during treatment with lithium carbonate are described. The data show that lithium-induced dyskinesias may occur in the absence of l ...
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Journal ArticleStroke · 1984
During the past seven years 347 patients have been entered into a data bank at the Duke University Medical Center for evaluation of transient neurologic ischemia. One hundred fifty eight of these patients had carotid endarterectomies of whom 24 (15.1%) dev ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · November 1983
We reviewed 1,669 patients who survived coronary artery bypass graft surgery between 1969 and 1981. A total of 75 cerebral complications were identified, including (1) altered mental state, (2) stroke, and (3) seizure in 64 patients (3.8%). Altered mental ...
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Journal ArticleAnn Intern Med · October 1983
Essential thrombocythemia is a clonal myeloproliferative disorder, characterized predominantly by a markedly elevated platelet count without known cause. We report a case that was recognized during investigation of a transient ischemic attack, and review t ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · July 1983
Two cases demonstrate the digital neuropathy of rheumatoid arthritis with hyperpathia. This phenomenon occurs in types II and IV, but the paresthetic character has not been emphasized previously. ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · May 1983
Head trauma frequently results in frontal lobe dysfunction. This can cause a number of personality changes characterized by disturbances in affect and in regulation of emotions. Behavioral changes and alterations in cognition may occur also and are often a ...
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Journal ArticleJ Am Geriatr Soc · April 1983
Hand weakness is an important but frequently overlooked problem in the elderly. The exact diagnosis is often difficult because of the complexities of innervation and muscle function. An anatomic approach to the diagnosis of isolated hand weakness in the el ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · March 1983
An elderly woman who had spinal epidural anesthesia thereafter had headache, anorexia, nausea and vomiting, dehydration, seizures, and cardiovascular collapse. CAT scan revealed air in the posterior fossa, probably caused by intradural injection of air dur ...
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Journal ArticleNeuroepidemiology · January 1, 1983
Average annual cerebrovascular disease (CVD) mortality rates (age-adjusted to the 1950 US population) were calculated using data from 1967 through 1973 for 33 countries. Rates range from 35.8/100, 000/year (Philippines) to 196.7/100, 000/year (Japan). Ther ...
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Journal ArticleNeuroepidemiology · January 1, 1983
International comparisons of average annual age-adjusted mortality rates for primary tumors of the nervous system for 1951-1958 and 1967-1973 showed marked geographic variation for both study periods. For the majority of countries, the mortality rates incr ...
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Journal ArticleBrain Lang · January 1983
A late onset progressive dysfluency following a right hemisphere stroke occurred in a 62-year-old male. Dysfluency was characterized by pronounced word and phrase reiterations, and sound and syllable reiterations to a lesser degree. Spontaneous speech was ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · September 1982
A patient with atypical ocular bobbing resulting from metabolic encephalopathy is described. Neurologic examination showed no signs of brainstem dysfunction, and postmortem examination failed to disclose any changes in sites associated with ocular bobbing ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · May 1982
Dementia due to degenerative changes or to some chronic disorders involves gradual loss of function, and it is important that the patient, spouse, and family know what to expect. Counseling from the physician at an early stage can help the patient maintain ...
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Journal ArticleCan J Neurol Sci · February 1982
Two sisters developed benign intracranial hypertension (BIH) two weeks following the resolution of a major depressive episode. The association of BIH and a major affective disorder in genetically related individuals has not been previously reported to our ...
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Journal ArticleActa Diabetologica Latina · January 1, 1982
Separation of two distinct clinical entities occurring in diabetes mellitus seems important. Mononeuritis multiplex occurs with a worsening of the diffuse neuropathy and seems unrelated to control. Multiple mononeuropathy is likely related to entrapment wh ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · December 1981
Congenital bicuspid aortic valve, one of the most common congenital heart abnormalities, may become infected, may calcify, and may cause progressive stenosis or progressive insufficiency. While no previous reports suggested cerebral emboli in the absence o ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · October 1981
Nineteen patients with mental neuropathy secondary to systemic cancer are described. In nine patients, the numb chin was the presenting symptom of a neoplasm. Nine patients had lymphoreticular malignancies, and the others had a variety of solid tumors. Rad ...
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Journal ArticleSouth Med J · May 1981
Hysterical "epidemics" of "epilepsy" are well known in Eastern and Western cultures. A unique situation in the United States in the 19th and 20th centuries was the American religious movement, the setting in which "the jerks" occurred. Descriptions of vari ...
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Journal ArticleJ Am Geriatr Soc · January 1981
Intermittent claudication in the lower extremities is often manifested in either of two treatable forms, i.e., neurogenic or vascular. A thorough history and examination are necessary to distinguish between these two types. The main differential point is w ...
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Journal ArticleJ Am Geriatr Soc · November 1980
In the case of an elderly patient with transient loss of consciousness, the chief differential diagnosis is syncope versus seizure. The most helpful diagnostic aid is a thorough history obtained from both the patient and an observer. The tentative diagnosi ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · October 1980
Peripheral neuropathy may be a minor, even unrecognized, clinical problem, or it may be severe and virtually disabling. As in any chronic disorder, the physician's role is to look for treatable disease and to teach patients about the symptoms and natural h ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · September 1980
When patients have a clear understanding of the etiology and pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease, management is easier for the physician and the patient is better able to cope with the disease. Patients also should be made aware of the proper use of ant ...
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Journal ArticleJ Clin Psychiatry · June 1980
Porphyria is a rare disorder in medical practice; however, its clinical manifestations are primarily neuropsychological. This paper reviews this entity regarding diagnosis, treatment, metabolic, and genetic features. ...
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Journal ArticleJ Am Geriatr Soc · April 1980
Patients with diabetes mellitus and an underlying mixed axonal and demyelinating polyneuropathy are particularly prone to compression neuropathies with consequent axonal degeneration and a poor prognosis for recovery. This hazard should be taken into accou ...
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Journal ArticleJ Trauma · April 1980
Many causes of meralgia paresthetica (neuropathy of lateral cutaneous nerve of thigh) have been suggested. This is a case of a 42-year-old man who developed sensory loss and dysesthesia in the anterolateral thigh following an incision for pelvic bone graft ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · February 1980
A review of hospital charts revealed that only 3 (7.5%) of 40 inpatients with a diagnosis of epilepsy had received counseling about the disorder, its treatment, and its social ramifications. Although it is often neglected--as indicated by this small sample ...
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Journal ArticleActa Diabetol Lat · 1980
Fifteen diabetic subjects wih thoracic radiculopathy were studied wih paraspinal electromyography. The majority were elderly, mature onset diabetics presenting with unilateral hyperesthesia in a thoracic radicular pattern. None was under adequate control a ...
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Journal ArticleAnnals of Ophthalmology · January 1, 1980
A 42-year-old female with amaurosis fugax in the right eye and an ipsilateral postganglionic congenital Horner's syndrome was found to have fibromuscular dysplasia of the right internal carotid artery on arteriography. The proposed etiological mechanisms o ...
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Journal ArticleArch Dermatol · August 1979
Notalgia paresthetica, possibly an isolated sensory neuropathy involving the posterior primary rami of thoracic nerves T2 through T6, and appearing as pruritus of the back, is apt to be encountered by both dermatologists and neurologists. Two cases illustr ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · August 1979
In three patients we found unilateral asterixis in limbs contralateral to a discrete lesion adjacent to the internal capsule. Etiology was vascular in each, with no metabolic or toxic disturbance. Unilateral asterixis bespeaks focal disease arising from le ...
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Journal ArticlePostgrad Med · May 1979
In patients with diabetes, a carefully taken history and meticulously performed neurologic examination enable the clinician to separate superimposed mononeuropathy from more generalized symmetric polyneuropathy. Recognition of mononeuroparhy is important, ...
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Journal ArticleArch Neurol · May 1979
The syndrome first described in 1904 by the Spanish otolaryngologist, Antonio Garcia Tapia, has been variously interpreted by subsequent authors such that there is little current agreement as to the site of the lesion responsible for the condition or the s ...
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Journal ArticleObstet Gynecol · February 1979
A 40-year-old woman presented to her gynecologist with an apparent unilateral neuropathy of the lateral cutaneous femoral nerve of the thigh (meralgia paresthetica). On examination, the sensory disturbance extended outside the usual distribution of the lat ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · December 1978
Cheiralgia paresthetica has been reported in the past, but the exact etiology is unknown. We present two cases that occurred secondary to handcuff placement. ...
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Journal ArticleNeurology · December 1978
Notalgia paresthetica was described by Astwazaturow in 1934. We have seen six cases in the past year, suggesting that it is not rare. This sensory neuritis affects the posterior rami of several spinal nerves (arising from thoracic segments T2 to T6), causi ...
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Journal ArticleJ Clin Psychiatry · April 1978
In the psychiatric patient cross leg palsy can be a subtle but significant problem. The patient, rendered inactive by a depressive illness, who has lost weight, whose activities include much sitting, or who has a disease that may predispose to a neuropathy ...
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Journal ArticleObstet Gynecol Surv · March 1978
The signs and symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome in pregnant patients are outlined and the diagnostic methods are reviewed. Carpal tunnel syndrome that occurs during pregnancy almost invariably abates postpartum. Due to the benign course and excellent prog ...
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Journal ArticleMuscle Nerve · 1978
This case report documents the clinical entity of median nerve supply to the first dorsal interosseous muscle, which occurs in 3% of individuals. This must be remembered in evaluation of neuropathy involving the hand muscles. ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Sports Med · 1978
We have reported upon three different mononeuropathies that we believe were directly attributable to jogging. At this time it is presumed that this complication is not common, but as jogging increases as a routine form of exercise for the general populace ...
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Journal ArticleDiabetes Care · 1978
Cheiralgia paresthetica is a sensory mononeuropathy of the superficial ramus of the radial nerve. A case is presented here in a patient with diabetes mellitus. ...
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