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1
Intelligent Detection of Abnormal Neonatal Cerebral ...
2001-10-25

... INTELLIGENT DETECTION OF ABNORMAL NEONATAL CEREBRAL HAEMODYNAMICS IN A NEONATAL INTENSIVE CARE ENVIRONMENT ...

DTIC Science & Technology

2
Acute metabolic brain changes following traumatic brain injury and their relevance to clinical severity and outcome
2007-05-06

BackgroundConventional MRI can provide critical information for care of patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), but MRI abnormalities rarely correlate to clinical severity and outcome. Previous magnetic resonance spectroscopy studies have reported clinically relevant brain metabolic changes in patients with TBI. However, these changes were often assessed a few to several ...

PubMed Central

3
Neuronal Migration Disorders

... brain in the cerebral hemispheres, cerebellum, brainstem, or hippocampus. The structural abnormalities found in NMDs include schizencephaly, ...

MedlinePLUS

4
Computer modeling of gait abnormalities in cerebral palsy: application to treatment planning

in children with cerebral palsy is challenging. Musculoskeletal surgeries and other treatments, such as toneComputer modeling of gait abnormalities in cerebral palsy: application to treatment planning A. S, Stanford, CA, USA The treatment of gait abnormalities in persons with cerebral palsy is ...

E-print Network

5
Intelligent Detection of Abnormal Neonatal Cerebral Haemodynamics in a Neonatal Intensive Care Environment.
2001-01-01

In this paper, we investigate an advanced monitoring system for a neonatal intensive care unit The system intelligently detects abnormal neonatal cerebral Doppler ultrasound signals by means of principal component analysis and a non-normalised compensator...

National Technical Information Service (NTIS)

6
Abnormal norepinephrine clearance and adrenergic receptor sensitivity in idiopathic orthostatic intolerance
1999-01-01

BACKGROUND: Chronic orthostatic intolerance (OI) is characterized by symptoms of inadequate cerebral

NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

7
Assessment and treatment of movement disorders in children with cerebral palsy.
2010-10-01

Cerebral palsy is the most common motor disability in childhood. Orthopedic care depends on the appreciation and the identification of muscle tone abnormalities and how they affect growth and development of the child. Abnormal muscle tone is a common diagnostic feature of cerebral palsy and can include hypotonia or ...

PubMed

8
Cerebral white matter abnormalities in 6p25 deletion syndrome.
2006-03-01

Submicroscopic deletion of the terminal part of the short arm of chromosome 6, including 6p25, leads to developmental retardation, hearing impairment, ocular dysgenesis, and dysmorphic features. We diagnosed 3 patients referred because of white matter abnormalities of unknown origin. MR imaging showed multifocal areas of abnormal signal and enlarged ...

PubMed

9
Abnormal cerebral effective connectivity during explicit emotional processing in adults with autism spectrum disorder
2008-06-01

Several recent studies suggest that autism may result from abnormal communication between brain regions. We directly assessed this hypothesis by testing the presence of abnormalities in a model of the functional cerebral network engaged during explicit emotion processing in adults with high functioning autism or Asperger syndrome. ...

PubMed Central

10
Voxel-based morphometry of unilateral temporal lobe epilepsy reveals abnormalities in cerebral white matter

Voxel-based morphometry of unilateral temporal lobe epilepsy reveals abnormalities in cerebral April 2004; accepted 5 May 2004 Voxel-based morphometric (VBM) investigations of temporal lobe epilepsy identified the expected abnormalities in hippocampus and extrahippocampal temporal lobe, as well as more

E-print Network

11
Correlation of CT cerebral vascular territories with function. 3. Middle cerebral artery
1984-05-01

Schematic displays are presented of the cerebral territories supplied by branches of the middle cerebral artery as they would appear on axial and coronal computed tomographic (CT) scan sections. Companion diagrams of regional cortical function and a discussion of the fiber tracts are provided to simplify correlation of clinical deficits with coronal and ...

Energy Citations Database

12
How Abnormal Reflexes Influence Movements in Cerebral Palsy.
1982-12-01

Some of the more frequently observed reflex patterns in cerebral palsy are examined, and descriptions are given of how they affect movement. A chart outlines: (1) desirable movement patterns; (2) typical abnormal movement of the cerebral palsied child; (3) possible physical cause of abnormal movements; and (4) ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

13
Genetics Home Reference: Miller-Dieker syndrome

... a condition characterized by a pattern of abnormal brain development known as lissencephaly. Normally the exterior of the brain (cerebral cortex) is multi-layered with folds and ...

MedlinePLUS

14
General Disclaimer One or more of the Following Statements may ...

Cerebral palsy is a type of neurological disease which results in major ...... increased or decreased pressure in the middle ear. These abnormal pressures ...

NASA Website

15
Development of Advanced Active Haptic System for ...
2005-08-31

... on the brains of subjects that have come in for surgery to monitor brain ... Use of hidden Markov models to classify gait abnormalities in cerebral palsy. ...

DTIC Science & Technology

16
Three-dimensional In Vivo Quantification of Knee Kinematics in Cerebral Palsy
2008-01-10

Cerebral palsy is the most common disabling condition in childhood, involving a diverse group of movement and posture disorders of varying etiologies. Yet, much is unknown about how cerebral palsy affects individual joints because currently applied techniques cannot quantify the three-dimensional kinematic parameters at the joint level. We quantified the ...

PubMed Central

17
Cerebral abnormalities: use of calculated T1 and T2 magnetic resonance images for diagnosis
1984-01-01

The potential clinical importance of T1 and T2 relaxation times in distinguishing normal and pathologic tissue with magnetic resonance (MR) is discussed and clinical examples of cerebral abnormalities are given. Five patients with cerebral infarction, 15 with multiple sclerosis, two with Wilson disease, and four with tumors were ...

Energy Citations Database

18
Antenatal causes of cerebral palsy: associations between inherited thrombophilias, viral and bacterial infection, and inherited susceptibility to infection.
2003-03-01

Cerebral palsy rates of 2 in every 1,000 births have varied little over the last 40 years, despite improvements in obstetric care. In the past, cerebral palsy was thought to be due to poor obstetric care and management; however, epidemiological studies have refuted this, suggesting that there is usually an antenatal timing to the neuropathology of ...

PubMed

19
A New Method to Derive White Matter Conductivity from Diffusion Tensor MRI
2008-10-01

We propose a new algorithm to derive the anisotropic conductivity of the cerebral white matter (WM) from the diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DT-MRI) data. The transportation processes for both water molecules and electrical charges are described through a common multi-compartment model that consists of axons, glia or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The volume fraction ...

PubMed Central

20
Visualization of cerebral and vascular abnormalities by NMR imaging. The effects of imaging parameters on contrast
1982-09-01

The relationship between data acquisition parameters and contrast in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) images was studied. NMR imaging by the pulse echo technique selectively enhanced intracranial abnormalities; imaging by the inversion recovery technique heightened the difference between cerebral gray and white matter. Using a blood flow model, the authors ...

Energy Citations Database

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21
Limb-shaking transient ischemic attacks in an adult PHACE syndrome: a case report and review of the literature.
2011-06-28

PHACE syndrome is a neuro-cutaneous syndrome characterized by malformations of the Posterior fossa, facial Hemangiomas, Arterial anomalies, Cardiac anomalies, and abnormalities of the Eye. The arterial abnormalities usually involve the cervical and cerebral vasculature and include congenital abnormalities and ...

PubMed

22
Gallium-67 citrate in cerebral infarction
1976-01-01

Cerebral scans were obtained on 30 ''stroke'' patients first with /sup 99m/Tc pertechnetate and subsequently with /sup 67/Ga citrate. Of the 26 patients with abnormal /sup 99m/Tc static scans, 17 (65 percent) showed the same abnormality in gallium citrate scans also. In 4 patients with positive ...

Energy Citations Database

23
Cerebral blood flow studies using N-isopropyl I-123 p-iodoamphetamine

Twenty patients who had strokes were studied for cerebral blood perfusion abnormalities using N-isopropyl I-123 p-iodoamphetamine (IMP) and rotating dual gamma camera emission computed tomography (ECT). After a single scan, multiple transverse, coronal and sagittal section images were reconstructed with a minicomputer. In eighteen patients, the authors ...

Energy Citations Database

24
Depressed brainstem auditory function in children with cerebral palsy.
2010-09-07

Brainstem auditory evoked responses were studied to examine brainstem auditory function in 80 children with cerebral palsy. The response waveform, particularly later waves, tended to be depressed. Thirty-three (41.3%) showed abnormal results. The main abnormality was reduced wave V amplitude. Other abnormalities ...

PubMed

25
White matter abnormality in cerebral atrophy: clinicoradiological correlations.
1980-02-01

The computed tomography (CT) scans in 1.6% of patients with cerebral atrophy showed the additional feature of areas of reduced attenuation in the deep cerebral white matter. Analysis of the clinical data showed a significant association with both hypertension and dementia. Etat cribl� in vascular hypertension is suggested as the possible cause.Images

PubMed Central

26
White matter abnormality in cerebral atrophy: clinicoradiological correlations.
1980-02-01

The computed tomography (CT) scans in 1.6% of patients with cerebral atrophy showed the additional feature of areas of reduced attenuation in the deep cerebral white matter. Analysis of the clinical data showed a significant association with both hypertension and dementia. Etat cribl� in vascular hypertension is suggested as the possible cause. ...

PubMed

27
Venous cerebral infarction in a patient with peripheral hemodialysis shunt and occlusion of the left brachiocephalic vein.
2010-07-24

Intracranial venous congestion is a rare condition in hemodialysis patients with central venous occlusion. We report a patient with cerebral venous infarction resulting from high reflex flow into the cranium induced by an arteriovenous hemodialysis shunt in the arm and occlusion of the brachiocephalic vein. This case illustrates that abnormal extracranial ...

PubMed

28
ORIGINAL ARTICLE Prevalence of Specific Gait Abnormalities

Influence of Cerebral Palsy Subtype, Age, and Previous Surgery Tishya A. L. Wren, PhD,* Susan Rethlefsen, PT and their families. Key Words: gait analysis, cerebral palsy, natural history, surgery (J Pediatr Orthop 2005 flexion after hamstring surgery in cerebral palsy patients: prevalence and severity. J Pediatr Orthop

E-print Network

29
Fractal dimension of cerebral surfaces using magnetic resonance images
1988-11-01

The calculation of the fractal dimension of the surface bounded by the grey matter in the normal human brain using axial, sagittal, and coronal cross-sectional magnetic resonance (MR) images is presented. The fractal dimension in this case is a measure of the convolutedness of this cerebral surface. It is proposed that the fractal dimension, a feature that may be extracted ...

Energy Citations Database

30
Cerebral Lateralization and Aggression.
1993-12-01

A resurgence of interest in the relationship between cerebral lateralization (the functional asymmetry of the cerebral cortex) and aggression has occurred. Most recent studies have found that individuals with abnormal patterns of lateralization are overrepresented among violent individuals. Intervening variables (such as drug and ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

31
Adaptive evolution of ASPM, a major determinant of cerebral cortical size in humans

enlargement of the cerebral cortex. The ASPM (Abnormal spindle-like microcephaly associated ) gene has to be validated by empirical data. Microcephaly (small head) is a congenital condition char- acterized by severe underdevelopment of the cerebral cortex and its supporting structures (3,4). Primary (or true) microcephaly

E-print Network

32
Cranial ultrasound lesions in the NICU predict cerebral palsy at age 2 years in children born at extremely low gestational age.
2009-01-01

Our prospective cohort study of extremely low gestational age newborns evaluated the association of neonatal head ultrasound abnormalities with cerebral palsy at age 2 years. Cranial ultrasounds in 1053 infants were read with respect to intraventricular hemorrhage, ventriculomegaly, and echolucency, by multiple sonologists. Standardized neurological ...

PubMed

33
Cranial Ultrasound Lesions in the NICU Predict Cerebral Palsy at Age 2 Years in Children Born at Extremely Low Gestational Age
2009-01-01

Our prospective cohort study of extremely low gestational age newborns evaluated the association of neonatal head ultrasound abnormalities with cerebral palsy at age 2 years. Cranial ultrasounds in 1053 infants were read with respect to intraventricular hemorrhage, ventriculomegaly, and echolucency, by multiple sonologists. Standardized neurological ...

PubMed Central

34
Magnetic resonance imaging evidence for a defect of cerebral cortical development in autism.
1990-06-01

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were performed on 13 high-functioning male autistic subjects and 13 male nonautistic control subjects comparable in age and nonverbal IQ. Scans were rated for the presence of cerebral cortical malformations. Five autistic subjects had polymicrogyria, one had schizencephaly and macrogyria, and one had macrogyria. None of the control ...

PubMed

35
Development of near-infrared spectroscopy for monitoring cerebral regional blood oxygenation and volume in the human newborn
1997-08-01

Human newborns can suffer from neuro-developmental abnormalities, when they are born as preterms. With near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) it is possible to investigate any brain disease occurring together with these neuro- abnormalities. The specific absorption properties of haemoglobin and oxygenated haemoglobin in the near infrared region allow to measure ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

36
Abnormal radionuclide cerebral angiograms and scans due to seizures
1975-10-01

The effect of recent seizures on the brain scan was determined in a retrospective study of patients who had had seizures. All patients who underwent brain scanning within eight days of seizures and who did not have a specific intracranial lesion were included. The /sup 99m/Tc-pertechnetate cerebral angiogram and/or delayed scan was abnormal in 73 ...

Energy Citations Database

37
Cerebral ultrasound abnormalities in infants born to mothers with autoimmune disease.
2011-01-17

Objectives Cerebral abnormalities detected by cranial ultrasound (cUS) have been reported in infants born to mothers with autoimmune disease. However, the pathogenesis of the infants' brain injury remains unclear. The authors aimed to study the possible association between abnormalities on neonatal cUS and perinatal factors related to ...

PubMed

38
Xenon enhanced CT for analysis of cerebral integrity, perfusion, and blood flow
1978-01-01

Enhancement of the brain substance for CT evaluation using inhaled xenon is confirmed. This technique was applied to the study of the normal and the embolized adolescent baboon. Healthy cerebral tissue enhances symmetrically, while abnormal areas show significantly diminished enhancement. At maximal enhancement, an indication of gross comparative ...

Energy Citations Database

39
Three-dimensional regional cerebral blood perfusion images with single-photon emission computed tomography. [/sup 81m/Kr
1981-09-01

Twenty-seven patients were studied for cerebral blood perfusion abnormalities using krypton 81m. A solution of /sup 81m/Kr was continuously infused into an internal carotid artery, and single-photon emission computed tomograms were recorded. The transverse section images using /sup 81m/Kr represented the three-dimensional regional ...

Energy Citations Database

40
Three-dimensional regional cerebral blood perfusion images with single-photon emission computed tomography
1981-09-01

Twenty-seven patients were studied for cerebral blood perfusion abnormalities using krypton 81m. A solution of 81mKr was continuously infused into an internal carotid artery, and single-photon emission computed tomograms were recorded. The transverse section images using 81mKr represented the three-dimensional regional cerebral blood ...

Energy Citations Database

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41
Left globus pallidus abnormality in never-medicated patients with schizophrenia
1987-01-01

Schizophrenia is a severe psychiatric disorder characterized by onset in young adulthood, the occurrence of hallucinations and delusions, and the development of enduring psychosocial disability. The pathophysiology of this disorder remains unknown. Studies of cerebral blood flow and metabolism designed to identify brain abnormalities in schizophrenia have ...

Energy Citations Database

42
Os odontoideum as a rare but possible complication in children with dyskinetic cerebral palsy: a clinical and neuroradiologic study.
2011-05-26

The authors describe a 12-year-old boy with dyskinetic (athetoid-dystonic subtype) cerebral palsy and os odontoideum. Dystonic and choreoathetotic components in cerebral palsy are movement disorders that are difficult to treat and cause major disability. Dystonic posturing causes excessive flexion, extension, and rotation of the neck. Repetitive ...

PubMed

43
Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prevention of Cerebral Palsy in Near-Term/Term Infants
2008-12-01

Cerebral palsy is the most prevalent cause of persisting motor function impairment. In a majority of cases, the predominant motor abnormality is spasticity; other forms of cerebral palsy include dyskinetic (dystonia or choreoathetosis) and ataxic cerebral palsy. The care of individuals with ...

PubMed Central

44
Prenatal Diagnosis of Transient Abnormal Myelopoiesis in a Down Syndrome Fetus
2009-03-03

We report a case of transient abnormal myelopoiesis in a Down syndrome fetus diagnosed at 28+3 weeks of gestation that rapidly progressed to intrauterine death 10 days later. Fetal hepatosplenomegaly with cerebral ventriculomegaly, although not specific, may be a suggestive finding of Down syndrome with transient ...

PubMed Central

45
Eye movement abnormalities in multiple sclerosis.
2010-08-01

Patients with multiple sclerosis commonly describe visual symptoms that result from several eye movement abnormalities that occur from disruption of critical pathways in the brainstem, cerebellum, and cerebral hemispheres. These abnormalities include internuclear ophthalmoplegia, ocular motor palsy, ocular misalignment, pathologic ...

PubMed

46
Abnormal brain scan with subacute extradural haematomas
1970-10-01

Four patients are described with proven subacute extradural haematomas, each with an abnormal cerebral scan of diagnostic assistance. A possible mechanism of production of the subacute extradural haematoma is discussed, and appears to be similar to the mechanism involved in the subacute subdural haematoma. The means by which the ...

PubMed Central

47
Reversal of focal ''misery-perfusion syndrome'' by extra-intracranial arterial bypass in hemodynamic cerebral ischemia. A case study with 15O positron emission tomography

Tomographic images of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) using the 15O continuous inhalation technique, and positron emission tomography, were obtained from a patient with cerebral ischemia distal to an occluded left internal carotid artery. There was a focal mismatch between CBF and oxygen metabolism in the brain supplied by ...

Energy Citations Database

48
Glucose metabolism as the site of the primary abnormality in early-onset dementia of Alzheimer type?
1988-01-01

Global cerebral blood flow, oxidative brain metabolism, and the cerebral arteriovenous differences of amino acids and ammonia were studied in 20 clinically diagnosed patients with early-onset dementia of Alzheimer type (DAT). Eleven healthy age-matched subjects and 15 healthy young volunteers served as controls. The most prominent ...

PubMed

49
Disturbances in the cerebral perfusion of human immune deficiency virus-1 seropositive asymptomatic subjects: A quantitative tomography study of 18 cases
1990-10-01

Quantitative measurements of cerebral blood flow (CBF) by xenon-133 ({sup 133}Xe) tomography, together with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), electroencephalography (EEG), psychometric tests, and laboratory analyses were performed on 18 human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) seropositive asymptomatic subjects. Abnormalities of cerebral ...

Energy Citations Database

50
Differential diagnosis of bilateral parietal abnormalities in I-123 IMP SPECT imaging
1990-12-01

This report discusses the clinical significance of bilateral parietal abnormalities on I-123 IMP SPECT imaging in 158 patients with cerebral disorders. This pattern was seen in 15 out of 21 patients with Alzheimer's disease; it was also seen in 4 out of 5 patients with Parkinson's disease with dementia, in 3 out of 17 patients with ...

Energy Citations Database

51
Brain scan in cerebrovascular 'Moyamoya' disease
1975-08-01

Cerebrovascular Moyamoya disease is characterized by peculiar angiographic features which consist of an abnormal net-like blood vessel pattern in the base of the brain associated with narrowing or occlusion of both internal carotid arteries at the level of the siphon. Brain scans using /sup 99m/Tc- pertechnetate were abnormal in 2 of 6 patients ...

Energy Citations Database

52
Electrophysiological evidence of cerebral dysfunction in childhood opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome.
2010-05-15

To address cerebral involvement in childhood opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (OMS), electrophysiological investigations including electroencephalograms and evoked potentials were performed in three children affected by nonparaneoplastic OMS. Most patients displayed abnormalities in visual- and somatosensory-evoked potentials, consisting of delayed latency or ...

PubMed

53
Somatosensory evoked potentials in children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy.
2011-03-01

Alterations were monitored of somatosensory evoked potentials in children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy and these findings correlated with relevant clinical and laboratory parameters. Fifty-one children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy (31 boys, 20 girls; age range 24-168 months) participated in the study. Abnormal ...

PubMed

54
Middle cerebral artery flow velocity waveforms in normal and small-for-gestational-age fetuses.
1992-04-01

The middle cerebral artery flow velocity waveforms were obtained in 16 normal fetuses in a longitudinal study and in 128 normal fetuses in a cross-sectional study with pulsed Doppler ultrasonography. The pulsatility index values of the middle cerebral artery were higher at 25 to 30 weeks' gestation than those observed during the two periods of major ...

PubMed

55
Imaging the neocortex in epilepsy with double inversion recovery imaging.
2006-02-07

The neocortices of 10 patients with partial seizures and acquired lesions, 14 patients with malformations of cortical development (MCD) and 33 patients with partial seizures and normal conventional MRI were quantitatively evaluated using whole brain double inversion recovery imaging (DIR) and Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM). Compared to a group of 30 control subjects, DIR and objective ...

PubMed

56
Abnormalities in blood pressure homeostasis that contribute to falls in the elderly.
1985-08-01

Aging is associated with abnormalities in blood pressure homeostasis and may precipitate falls through transient underperfusion of the brain. Age-related declines in baro-reflex sensitivity, cerebral blood flow, and renal sodium conservation threaten normal blood pressure regulation and cerebral perfusion. Common clinical conditions ...

PubMed

57
Abnormal development of the cerebral cortex and cerebellum in the setting of lamin B2 deficiency
2010-02-09

Nuclear lamins are components of the nuclear lamina, a structural scaffolding for the cell nucleus. Defects in lamins A and C cause an array of human diseases, including muscular dystrophy, lipodystrophy, and progeria, but no diseases have been linked to the loss of lamins B1 or B2. To explore the functional relevance of lamin B2, we generated lamin B2-deficient mice and found that they have ...

PubMed Central

58
Intravoxel incoherent motion imaging using spin echoes.
1991-06-01

The purpose of this paper is to review the basic principles of diffusion measurement with spin echoes. These principles can be combined with those of MR imaging to generate maps of diffusion coefficients. Diffusion imaging can be extended to imaging of other intravoxel incoherent motions (IVIM), such as blood microcirculation. Some of the technical problems encountered when ...

PubMed

59
Combined cardiological and neurological abnormalities due to filamin A gene mutation
2010-08-22

BackgroundCardiac defects can be the presenting symptom in patients with mutations in the X-linked gene FLNA. Dysfunction of this gene is associated with cardiac abnormalities, especially in the left ventricular outflow tract, but can also cause a congenital malformation of the cerebral cortex. We noticed that some patients diagnosed at the neurogenetics ...

PubMed Central

60
Revisiting normal perfusion pressure breakthrough in light of hemorrhage-induced vasospasm
2010-06-28

Cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) have abnormally enlarged arteries and veins prone to spontaneous hemorrhage. Immediately following surgical excision of a cerebral AVM, even normal brain tissue surrounding the lesion is subject to hemorrhage, a phenomenon termed normal perfusion pressure breakthrough (NPPB) syndrome. ...

PubMed Central

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61
Modeling and mechanobiology of cerebral aneurysms.

The purpose of this work is to review the computational models of the adaptive behavior of the cerebral vascular wall aimed at simulating aneurysm formation and enlargement. Cerebral aneurysms are localized abnormal enlargements of the intracranial arterial vessels. The origin of this pathology is still unclear: however, aneurysm ...

PubMed

62
Cerebral blood flow measurement techniques in infants and children
1985-05-01

The tremendous growth of interest in neurologic intensive care and in the pathophysiology of the cerebral circulation in the past few years has resulted in increasing numbers of studies that document alterations in cerebral flow during the course of various diseases or as a response to treatment of them. Before pediatricians come to conclusions based on ...

Energy Citations Database

63
Acute cerebral paragonimiasis presenting as hemorrhagic stroke in a child.
2008-08-01

A hemorrhagic stroke in children is rarely secondary to cerebral paragonimiasis. We describe a 9-year-old boy in whom an intracerebral hemorrhage was the leading clinical indication of acute cerebral paragonimiasis. He was hospitalized because of a sudden onset of headache, right hemiparesis, and dysarthria. A computed tomography scan revealed an ...

PubMed

64
thebrain INITIATIVEFOR

damaging normal brain function stem cell transplant research, which shows promise of decreasing frequency ultrasound that may break up blood clots in the brain; a specific snake venom that stops clotting abnormal development of specific neurons in the cerebral cortex of the brain with common illnesses

E-print Network

65
THE DEVELOPMENT OF COGNITIVE FLEXIBILITY AND LANGUAGE ABILITIES

to the external stimuli and experience. Critical periods are seen in many animals and in many sensory systems the physiological concentrations of neuromodulators, which may lead to abnormalities in the development of a fetus rupture, cerebral ischemia and death. Cocaine can rapidly diffuse across placenta to the fetus and cause

E-print Network

66
Suppressed Cytokine and Immunoglobulin Secretions by Murine Splenic Lymphocytes Infected In Vitro with Toxoplasma ...

... endocrine and phenotypic abnormalities found in individuals with autism spectrum disorders, Down syndrome and Alzheimer disease may ... and/or acquired chronic cerebral toxoplasmosis. Research in Autism S...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

67
Long-Term Survival of Toxoplasma gondii Sporulated Oocysts in Seawater

... endocrine and phenotypic abnormalities found in individuals with autism spectrum disorders, Down syndrome and Alzheimer disease may ... and/or acquired chronic cerebral toxoplasmosis. Research in Autism S...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

68
It's a trap: bone abnormalities and autoimmune disorders resulting from TRAP deficiency.
2011-04-25

Genetic deficiency of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase associated with skeletal dysplasia, cerebral calcifications and autoimmunity Lausch et al. (2011) Nature Genetics 43(2):132-137. PMID:21476995

PubMed

69
Frequency and patterns of abnormality detected by iodine-123 amine emission CT after cerebral infarction
1986-03-01

Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) was performed in 31 patients with cerebral infarction and 13 who had had transient ischemic attacks, using iodine-123-labeled N,N,N'-trimethyl-N'-(2-hydroxyl-3-methyl-5-iodobenzyl)-1,3-propanediamin e (I-123-HIPDM) as the radiopharmaceutical. SPECT scans were compared with computed tomographic (CT) scans. ...

Energy Citations Database

70
Eastern Equine Encephalitis in a Captive Harbor Seal (Phoca vitulina)

... was negative. It has been reported that cerebral spinal fluid abnormalities in horses infected with EEEV and Venezuelan ... Porter, and M. T. Long. 2002. Findings in cerebrospinal fluids of horses infecte...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

71
Abnormal posturing: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia
2011-08-03

Tests may include: Cerebral angiography EEG Head CT scan Head MRI scan Head x-ray ICP monitoring (monitoring of the pressure inside the brain) Alternative Names Pathologic...

Science.gov Websites

72
Effects of hypoxaemia and bradycardia on neonatal cerebral haemodynamics.
1991-04-01

Near infrared spectroscopy has been used to assess the effects of bradycardia and hypoxia on the cerebral circulation in the premature neonate. The technique is well tolerated and can be applied in almost any infant. Continuous monitoring of changes in cerebral oxygenated, deoxygenated, and total haemoglobin is possible. Total haemoglobin is analogous to ...

PubMed Central

73
Cerebral venous angiomas
1984-04-01

Several unusual cases of cerebral venous angiomas as well as some characteristic cases are reported. The characteristic angiographic feature is that of a collection of dilated medullary veins draining into a single large draining vein, which appears first in the early venous phase and persists into the late venous phase of the arteriogram. Computed tomography (CT) was ...

Energy Citations Database

74
Brain scanning in unilateral and bilateral occlusion of the posterior cerebral arteries
1977-05-01

Nineteen patients with unequivocal angiographic evidence of unilateral or bilateral posterior cerebral artery occlusion were scanned during the acute phase of the stroke. In 12 of them an abnormal accumulation of radioactivity was apparent on the posterior view, but only 2 also exhibited abnormal uptake on the corresponding lateral ...

Energy Citations Database

75
[Correction of the influence of clinostatic hypokinesis on encephalitic circulatory dynamics during the sleep in patients with hypertensive disease].
2011-01-01

During the sleep person is in the state of antiorthostasis, this state provokes vascular cerebral abnormalities (night cerebral hypervolemia). The nature of encephalon blood supply is changing in this horizontal state, in the result there is lowering of hydrostatic blood pressure, rise of the encephalon blood supply and more difficult ...

PubMed

76
[Symptomatic SUNCT with cerebral abscess and subdural empyema].
2007-09-01

SUNCT syndrome is a rare form of a primary headache disorder, although secondary causes, particularly posterior fossa abnormalities, are well known. We report a new case in a 67-year-old man suffering SUNCT syndrome secondary to pyogenic cerebral abscess and empyema localized in the convexity portion of the right frontal lobe. PMID:17878810

PubMed

77
The advantage of coronal scanning in cerebral computed angiotomography for diagnosis of moyamoya disease
1982-12-01

The advantage of coronal scanning in cerebral computed angiotomography for diagnosis of and screening for moyamoya disease is demonstrated. Characteristic features on the coronal CT scan include (a) attenuation of and difficulty in following the supraclinoid internal carotid arteries and carotid fork and (b) abnormal ...

Energy Citations Database

78
Teaching Postural Reactions to Students with Severe Cerebral Palsy: An Evaluation of Theory and Technique.
1983-12-01

The theoretical basis and effectiveness of a neuromotor intervention were investigated across seven cerebral palsied, severely disabled children, (2 1/2-12 years old). Results suggested a training effect in the data of three children. Theoretical relationships among abnormal tonic reflexes and normal motor patterns were not supported by the data. (Author)

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

79
Superimposition of Krypton-81m single photon emission CT and X-ray CT images for cerebral blood flow evaluation.
1983-02-01

Selective arteriographic infusion of krypton-81m was used to obtain cerebral single photon emission computed tomograms. These were then superimposed on X-ray computed tomograms to assess topographically the perfusion of the entire brain. This method enhances the detecting capability for abnormal perfusion areas and has been used in 21 patients with various ...

PubMed

80
Superimposition of /sup 81m/Kr single photon emission CT and X-ray CT images for cerebral blood flow evaluation
1983-02-01

Selective arteriographic infusion of /sup 81m/Kr was used to obtain cerebral single photon emission computed tomograms. These were then superimposed on X-ray computed tomograms to assess topographically the perfusion of the entire brain. This method enhances the detecting capability for abnormal perfusion areas and has been used in 21 patients with various ...

Energy Citations Database

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First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next Page Last Page
 
81
Reversible Vasoconstriction Syndrome with Bilateral Basal Ganglia Hemorrhages.
2011-09-01

Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (RCVS) is an increasingly recognized acute cerebrovascular condition that may produce myriad transient and sustained neurologic deficits as well as a host of radiologic features. We report the case of a woman with RCVS and a severe clinical syndrome with bilateral basal ganglia hemorrhages, cerebral ...

PubMed

82
Reversible Cerebral Vasoconstriction Syndrome in a Patient with Takayasu's Arteritis.
2011-08-01

We herein present the first reported case of reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (RCVS) in Takayasu's arteritis (TA), in a patient with severe thunderclap headache and generalized tonic-clonic seizure. Magnetic resonance imaging and angiography revealed posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, followed by severe vasoconstriction in multiple arteries. RCVS should ...

PubMed

83
Livedo reticularis and cerebro-vascular disease
1982-02-01

Three cases are described in which extensive livedo reticularis was associated with premature cerebrovascular disease. The patients presented with transient cerebral ischaemic attacks and gradually developed permanent neurological damage with intellectual impairment. The value of detailed neuropsychological testing to identify bilateral cortical ...

PubMed Central

84
Hemodynamics of Cerebral Aneurysms
2009-01-01

The initiation and progression of cerebral aneurysms are degenerative processes of the arterial wall driven by a complex interaction of biological and hemodynamic factors. Endothelial cells on the artery wall respond physiologically to blood-flow patterns. In normal conditions, these responses are associated with nonpathological tissue remodeling and adaptation. The ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

85
Ginkgo biloba and cerebral bleeding: a case report and critical review.
2011-03-01

Ginkgo biloba is a herbal medication that is often used worldwide. Although side effects are uncommon, G. biloba has been associated with serious bleeding complications, especially intracranial hemorrhage. We report the case of a young woman who made chronic use of G. biloba and suffered from cerebral bleeding without any structural abnormalities. Several ...

PubMed

86
Delayed death after attempted suicide by hanging.
1997-01-01

In cases of hanging death usually occurs immediately after strangulation and is caused by ischemic cerebral damage due to neck compression in some cases in combination with respiratory obstruction. We report on a case of delayed death 4 days after an attempted suicide by hanging where the individual was conscious and showed no neurological abnormalities. ...

PubMed

87
Timing and topography of cerebral blood flow, aura, and headache during migraine attacks.
1990-12-01

Ten years of study has resulted in considerable but fragmented knowledge about regional cerebral blood flow in migraine with aura (classic migraine). In the present study, the number of repeatedly studied patients (n = 63) was large enough to determine statistically significant sequences of events and statistically significant spatial relations. The first observable event was ...

PubMed

88
Stress Cardiomyopathy Complicated by Left Ventricular Thrombi and Cerebral Infarctions in a Patient with Essential Thrombocythemia
2011-06-30

The prognosis of stress induced cardiomyopathy (SCMP) is generally known to be excellent, however, several fatal complications such as cardiac rupture and left ventricular (LV) thrombosis with subsequent embolic complications have been described. We report a rare case of SCMP complicated by LV thrombosis and multiple cerebral infarctions in a patient with essential ...

PubMed Central

89
Pharmacological manipulation of brain glycogenolysis as a therapeutic approach to cerebral ischemia.
2010-10-01

Brain ischemia resulting from multiple disease states including cardiac arrest, stroke and traumatic brain injury, is a leading cause of death and disability. Despite significant resources dedicated to developing pharmacological interventions, few effective therapeutic options are currently available. The basic consequence of cerebral ischemia, characterized by energy failure ...

PubMed

90
Lower urinary tract dysfunction in cerebral palsy.
1993-06-01

The clinical features and management of 27 children with cerebral palsy referred with symptoms of lower urinary tract dysfunction were reviewed. The mean age at referral was 9.9 years. Daytime urinary incontinence was the commonest presenting symptom. Videourodynamic studies were abnormal in 23 patients (85%). Only two children had evidence of upper renal ...

PubMed

91
Electrical Cerebral Stimulation Modifies Inhibitory Systems
2003-09-01

Electrical stimulation of the nervous tissue has been proposed as a method to treat some neurological disorders, such as epilepsy. Epileptic seizures result from excessive, synchronous, abnormal firing patterns of neurons that are located predominantly in the cerebral cortex. Many people with epilepsy continue presenting seizures even though they are under ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

92
Value of routine cerebral radionuclide angiography in pediatric brain imaging. [/sup 99m/Tc tracer techniques
1976-09-01

In addition to static brain images, cerebral radionuclide angiograms (CRAGs) were performed in 1,051 children to determine the value of routine radionuclide angiography. The CRAG resulted in a statistically significant increase in detection of abnormalities (p less than 0.01), as it provided the only evidence of confirmed abnormalities ...

Energy Citations Database

93
Persistence of cerebral metabolic abnormalities in chronic schizophrenia as determined by positron emission tomography
1985-05-01

Local cerebral metabolic rates were determined by positron emission tomography and the deoxyglucose method in a group of 10 chronic schizophrenic subjects before and after somatic treatment and in eight normal subjects. Before treatment, schizophrenic subjects had markedly lower absolute metabolic activity than did normal controls in both frontal and temporal regions and a ...

Energy Citations Database

94
Thallium-201 accumulation in cerebral candidiasis: Unexpected finding on SPECT
1990-06-01

The authors present an unexpected finding of Tl-201 uptake in the intracerebral lesions due to candidiasis. SPECT demonstrated the extent of the lesions and a high target-to-background ratio. The regions where abnormal Tl-201 accumulation was seen were nearly consistent with CT scans of those enhanced by a contrast agent. After treatment, most of the ...

Energy Citations Database

95
ECG-gated multi-slice computed tomography in the detection of atrial septal aneurysms.
2008-05-01

An atrial septal aneurysm (ASA) is an uncommon cardiac abnormality. Clinical manifestation of this abnormality remains unclear: some authors have suggested an association between ASA and arrhythmias or between ASA and cerebral ischaemia. A major role in the diagnosis of ASA to date has been played by transoesophageal echocardiography ...

PubMed

96
Vascular response to carbon dioxide in areas with and without diaschisis in patients with small, deep hemispheric infarction
1988-07-01

The reactivity of cerebral blood vessels to changes in PaCO/sub 2/ in areas of the cerebral cortex with or without diaschisis was investigated in 13 patients in a subacute or chronic stage after a small capsular infarct. A focal area of hypoperfusion (area of diaschisis) was detected in the ipsilateral sensorimotor cortex in each patient. Hyperventilation ...

Energy Citations Database

97
Sequence learning in cerebral palsy.
2011-03-01

We investigated sequence-learning skills in 64 children with cerebral palsy (aged 4.01-14.7 years; 49 with bilateral, two with dystonic, and 13 with unilateral cerebral palsy), compared with a matched control group of typically developing children. Participants' motor and handling abilities were classified according to the Gross Motor Function ...

PubMed

98
MELAS with diffuse degeneration of the cerebral white matter: report of an autopsy case.
2009-06-03

Up to now diffuse white matter demyelination of the cerebrum has been reported in only a few cases of mitochondrial encephalopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS). Here we document an autopsy case with this rare neuropathology. Most MELAS cases are diagnosed antemortem by A3243G transition of mitochondrial DNA. While cerebral damage including necrotic ...

PubMed

99
Computed tomography of cerebral palsy: evaluation of brain damage by volume index of CSF space.
1979-01-01

Between 1976 and 1978, we examined 110 Japanese children with cerebral palsy using a CT 1000 and a CT 1010 (EMI). In 92% of all patients, there were abnormal findings. Cortical atrophy was seen in 51%, ventricular dilatation in 86%, localized low density areas in 22%, brain anomalies in 10% and asymmetry of cerebral hemisphere in 31%. ...

PubMed

100
Children With Retinopathy-negative Cerebral Malaria: A Pathophysiological Puzzle.
2011-06-20

BACKGROUND:: Cerebral malaria, defined as otherwise unexplained coma in a patient with circulating parasitemia, is a common disease in the developing world. The clinical diagnosis lacks specificity and children with other underlying causes of coma might be misdiagnosed as having cerebral malaria. The presence of malarial retinopathy can be used to ...

PubMed

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101
Arteriovenous Malformation with an Occlusive Feeding Artery Coexisting with Unilateral Moyamoya Disease
2010-12-31

BackgroundArteriovenous malformations (AVMs) with vascular abnormalities, including aneurysms, have been reported frequently. However, the coexistence of AVM and unilateral moyamoya disease is rare. We report herein an AVM patient who presented with acute ischemic stroke with unilateral moyamoya disease and occlusion of the feeding artery.Case ReportA-41-year old man was ...

PubMed Central

102
[Myopathy with cerebral white matter abnormality--a case report].
1998-09-01

A 45-year-old man noticed mild numbness of the feet at the age of 40 years and difficulty in standing up from squatting position at 43 years. His birth and developmental milestones were normal and the family history was unremarkable. He was alert and intelligent with global IQ of 91. There was mild muscle weakness as well as atrophy in bilateral hips and thighs. The serum creatine kinase level was ...

PubMed

103
Cerebral glucose metabolism in neurofibromatosis type 1 assessed with [18F]-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose and PET.
1994-12-01

Cerebral PET with [18F]-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose has been performed in four patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) to assess the relation between cerebral metabolic activity, MRI, and the presence of neurological symptoms, including seizures, as well as mental and language retardation. Widespread hypometabolism occurred in three of the patients. ...

PubMed Central

104
Congenital mirror movements.
1981-07-01

In this report are described seven patients assessed clinically and neuropsychologically in whom mirror movements affecting predominantly the hands occurred as a congenital disorder. These mirror movements, representing a specific type of abnormal synkinesia, may arise as a hereditary condition, in the presence of a recognisable underlying neurological ...

PubMed Central

105
Smooth pursuit eye movement deficits after pontine nuclei lesions in humans.
1993-07-01

Eye movements were recorded electroculographically in four patients with basal pontine lesions, demonstrated by MRI. The most prominent eye movement abnormality observed was mild to severe impairment of smooth pursuit and optokinetic nystagmus, mainly ipsilateral to the lesion. This abnormality is thought to result from damage to the pontine nuclei, which ...

PubMed Central

106
Cerebral venous angioma: correlation of radionuclide brain scan, transmission computed tomography, and angiography
1979-11-01

Three cases of intracerebral venous angioma, a rare vascular malformation, were studied by radionuclide brain scan, transmission computed tomography (TCT) and angiography. In each case, the radionuclide flow study demonstrated a typical area of abnormal increase in activity during the venous phase; in two of the cases the arterial phase was also abnormal. ...

Energy Citations Database

107
A clinicopathological study of autism.
1998-05-01

A neuropathological study of autism was established and brain tissue examined from six mentally handicapped subjects with autism. Clinical and educational records were obtained and standardized diagnostic interviews conducted with the parents of cases not seen before death. Four of the six brains were megalencephalic, and areas of cortical abnormality were identified in four ...

PubMed

108
Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in Very Low-Birth-Weight Infants in Korea: 1998-2007 vs 1989-1997.
2011-06-21

The authors reviewed the medical records of very low-birth-weight infants admitted from 1998 to 2007 and compared neurodevelopmental outcomes with their previously reported data from 1989 to 1997. The recent group included 824 infants, and the previous group included 471 infants. Neurodevelopmental outcomes were classified into cerebral palsy and ...

PubMed

109
I-123 hydroxyiodobenzyl propanediamine (HIPDM) cerebral blood flow imaging demonstrating transtentorial diaschisis
1990-09-01

To assess the clinical significance of transtentorial diaschisis (TTD) as demonstrated by I-123 HIPDM brain imaging, SPECT and/or planar images of 35 patients with stroke, 26 patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), 2 patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), and 1 patient with a schizoaffective disorder were analyzed. TTD was observed in 21 of the 35 patients with strokes. In 13 ...

Energy Citations Database

110
Effects of age on tissues and regions of the cerebrum and cerebellum.

Normal volunteers, aged 30 to 99 years, were studied with MRI. Age was related to estimated volumes of: gray matter, white matter, and CSF of the cerebrum and cerebellum; gray matter, white matter, white matter abnormality, and CSF within each cerebral lobe; and gray matter of eight subcortical structures. The results were: 1) Age-related losses in the ...

PubMed

111
Characterization of paramagnetic effects of molecular oxygen on blood oxygenation level-dependent-modulated hyperoxic contrast studies of the human brain.
2011-05-23

In hyperoxic contrast studies modulated by the blood oxygenation level-dependent effect, it is often assumed that hyperoxia is a purely intravascular, positive contrast agent in T?2*-weighted images, and the effects that are not due to blood oxygenation level-dependent contrast are small enough to be ignored. In this study, this assumption is re-evaluated and non-blood oxygenation level-dependent ...

PubMed

112
EEG patterns and imaging correlations in encephalopathy: encephalopathy part II.
2011-06-01

The EEG patterns seen with encephalopathies can be correlated to cerebral imaging findings including head computerized tomography and MRI. Background slowing without slow-wave intrusion is seen with acute and chronic cortical impairments that spare subcortical white matter. Subcortical/white matter structural abnormalities or hydrocephalus may produce ...

PubMed

113
Brain perfusion abnormalities in patients with compromised venous outflow.
2011-02-19

Elevated intracranial intravenous pressure is not routinely measured in clinical practice. Indirect evidence of increased venous pressure is reflected in the size change of the cerebral sinuses and the presence of venous infarctions. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the role of brain perfusion venous time-density curves in the diagnosis of cerebral ...

PubMed

114
Noninvasive testing of cerebral perfusion reserve prior to coronary artery bypass graft surgery
1988-05-01

Cerebral perfusion reserve testing using fluorine-18-fluoromethane and positron emission tomographic brain scanning to define cerebral blood flow abnormalities was performed in 5 patients being considered for combined coronary and carotid reconstructive surgery. Blood flow testing during normocapnia and following hypercapnia was ...

Energy Citations Database

115
Multimodality MRI and MRA for decision making in minor stroke: a case with internal carotid and distal middle cerebral artery occlusion.
2011-04-01

We report the case of a 65-year-old man who presented with mild, rapidly improving stroke symptoms. Acute magnetic resonance imaging disclosed no diffusion abnormalities but a tandem internal carotid artery/distal middle cerebral artery occlusion associated with a large corresponding deficit on perfusion imaging. In addition, there was a cross-flow to the ...

PubMed

116
Involuntary masturbation and hemiballismus after bilateral anterior cerebral artery infarction.
2007-10-24

Ischemia of the areas supplied by the anterior cerebral artery is relatively uncommon. In addition, combined hemiballismus and masturbation have rarely been reported in patients with cerebrovascular disease. We describe herein a 62-year-old right-handed man simultaneously exhibiting right side hemiballismus and involuntary masturbation with the left hand after bilateral ...

PubMed

117
Cysticercosis and cerebrovascular disease: a review.
1992-04-01

Ischaemic cerebrovascular disease is a relatively common but under-recognised complication of neurocysticercosis. It is usually caused by inflammatory occlusion of the arteries at the base of the brain secondary to cysticercotic arachnoiditis. In most cases, the involved vessels are of small diameter and the neurological picture is limited to a lacunar syndrome secondary to a small ...

PubMed Central

118
meta-DENSE complex acquisition for reduced intravoxel dephasing
2004-08-01

Displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE) with a meta-DENSE readout and RF phase cycling to suppress the STEAM anti-echo is described for reducing intravoxel dephasing signal loss. This RF phase cycling scheme, when combined with existing meta-DENSE suppression of the T1 recovering signal, yields higher quality DENSE myocardial strain maps. Phantom and human images ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

119
Retrospective study on PET-SPECT imaging in a large cohort of myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients.
2010-09-15

The aim was to study brain involvement in myotonic dystrophy type 1 by single photon emission tomography (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET). 58 DM1 patients were subjected to SPECT; 17 to both SPECT and PET. SPECT patients were grouped as 'normally perfused' and 'abnormally perfused'; PET patients as 'normal performers' and 'abnormal ...

PubMed

120
Neurodevelopmental outcome of acute bilirubin encephalopathy.
2010-02-01

The aim of the study was to determine the neurodevelopmental outcome of acute bilirubin encephalopathy (ABE) in children who underwent double volume exchange transfusion (DVET). The 25 referred newborns of ? 35 weeks gestation with total serum bilirubin >20 mg dl(-1) and signs of ABE were enrolled and followed up at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. Denver Development Screening Test (DDST), Neurological ...

PubMed

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121
The Effects of Binge Alcohol Exposure in the 2nd Trimester on the Estimated Density of Cerebral Microvessels in Near-Term Fetal Sheep
2008-07-15

Heavy fetal alcohol exposure is associated with a spectrum of neurological abnormalities, although the mechanism of injury is largely unknown. We previously reported attenuated cerebral blood flow response to hypoxia in fetal and newborn sheep which were exposed to alcohol earlier in pregnancy. One possible mechanism for this effect of alcohol on the ...

PubMed Central

122
Regional quantitative noninvasive assessment of cerebral perfusion and function with N-Isopropyl-(/sup 123/I)p-iodoamphetamine
1985-01-01

Although several reports on the clinical usefulness of N-isopropyl-(/sup 123/I)p-iodoamphetamine (IMP) in the diagnosis of cerebral disease have appeared in the literature, quantitative, noninvasive measurements of regional cerebral blood flow with this method pose difficulties because cerebral IMP uptake not only depends on ...

Energy Citations Database

123
Neurophysiologic findings in children with spastic cerebral palsy

Context:Cerebral palsy (CP) is a heterogeneous group of permanent, non-progressive motor disorders of movement and posture caused by chronic brain injuries. It is the most common cause of physical disability in childhood; spastic cerebral palsy being the most prevalent of its various forms. There is scanty information about the neurophysiologic ...

PubMed Central

124
Regional cerebral blood flow in mood disorders. I. Comparison of major depressives and normal controls at rest
1990-01-01

We measured regional cerebral blood flow with the xenon 133 inhalation technique in 41 patients with major depressive disorder and 40 matched, normal controls during an eyes-closed, resting condition. The depressed group had a marked reduction in global cortical blood flow. To examine topographic abnormalities, traditional multivariate analyses were ...

Energy Citations Database

125
Cardiac Output as a Potential Risk Factor for Abnormal Brain Aging
2010-01-01

Heart failure has served as a clinically useful model for understanding how cardiac dysfunction is associated with neuroanatomic and neuropsychological changes in aging adults, theoretically because systemic hypoperfusion disrupts cerebral perfusion, contributing to clinical brain injury. This review summarizes more recent data suggesting that subtle cardiac dysfunction or low ...

PubMed Central

126
Correlation of defects in regional cerebral blood flow determined by 99mTc SPECT with residual neurocognitive testing abnormalities during and 3 months post exposure in acutely poisoned patients with organophosphates.
2011-08-02

Introduction. Following acute organophosphate exposure, morphological changes in certain regions of the brain have been reported to develop within a few hours and involve neuronal degeneration. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) has been used to determine changes in the regional cerebral blood flow and attempts have been made to correlate these changes with ...

PubMed

127
Imaging analysis of the brain in a primate model of cerebral malaria.
2009-05-23

This paper reviews our studies concerning imaging analysis of the brain in a primate model of cerebral malaria. To elucidate the clinical features of cerebral malaria, we performed positron emission tomography with (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG-PET) scanning and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain in Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) infected ...

PubMed

128
Cerebral lesions in patients with connective tissue diseases and systemic vasculitides: are there specific patterns?
2010-04-01

This study was performed to evaluate whether specific patterns of cerebral lesions can be identified in different rheumatic disease entities. In 132 patients with different connective tissue diseases and vasculitides (systemic lupus erythematosus [SLE], systemic sclerosis [SSc], mixed connective tissue disease [MCTD], Wegener's granulomatosis [WG], immunocomplex vasculitides, ...

PubMed

129
Canine model of ischemic stroke with permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion: clinical and histopathological findings
2007-12-31

The aim of the present study was to assess the clinical and histopathological findings in a canine model of ischemic stroke. Cerebral ischemic stroke was induced by middle cerebral artery occlusion in four healthy beagle dogs using silicone plugs. They showed neurological signs of forebrain dysfunction such as reduced responsiveness, head turning, ...

PubMed Central

130
[Ischemic cortical neuronal damage and cognitive impairments in atherosclerotic occlusive disease of the major cerebral artery: a PET study].
2011-09-01

In atherosclerotic internal carotid artery (ICA) or middle cerebral artery (MCA) disease, selective neuronal damage can be detected as a decrease in central benzodiazepine receptors (BZRs) in an apparently normal cerebral cortex. To investigate the association between cortical BZRs decreases and executive dysfunctions, we measured BZRs using positron ...

PubMed

131
Selective neuronal damage and Wisconsin Card Sorting Test performance in atherosclerotic occlusive disease of the major cerebral artery
2010-08-27

BackgroundIn atherosclerotic internal carotid artery (ICA) or middle cerebral artery (MCA) disease, selective neuronal damage can be detected as a decrease in central benzodiazepine receptors (BZRs) in the normal-appearing cerebral cortex. This study aimed to determine whether a decrease in the BZRs in the non-infarcted cerebral cortex ...

PubMed Central

132
Predominant abnormality in cerebral glucose utilization in late-onset dementia of the Alzheimer type: a cross-sectional comparison against advanced late-onset and incipient early-onset cases.
1991-01-01

Global cerebral blood flow and the cerebral metabolic rates of oxygen, CO2, glucose and lactate were studied in 11 patients aged 61-78 years who had been clinically diagnosed as suffering from incipient late-onset dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT), and in 7 patients aged 66-83 years, in whom advanced late-onset DAT had been diagnosed, using the ...

PubMed

133
Brain perfusion and markers of neurodegeneration in rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder.
2011-05-03

Potential early markers of neurodegeneration such as subtle motor signs, reduced color discrimination, olfactory impairment, and brain perfusion abnormalities have been reported in idiopathic rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder, a risk factor for Parkinson's disease and Lewy body dementia. The aim of this study was to reproduce observations of regional ...

PubMed

134
Multiple q-Shell ODF Reconstruction in q-Ball Imaging.
2009-01-01

Q-ball imaging (QBI) is a high angular resolution diffusion imaging (HARDI) technique which has been proven very successful in resolving multiple intravoxel fiber orientations in MR images. The standard computation of the orientation distribution function...

National Technical Information Service (NTIS)

135
Computerized tomography of brain in infantile spasms (West syndrome).
1990-01-01

Computerized tomographic scanning of the brain was performed in 26 infants with Infantile spasms. Majority of the patients, 18 (69%) had some abnormality. Changes noted were cerebral atrophy in 12, calcifications in 5 and dysgenesis of the corpus callosum in 3 patients. One infant each had porencephaly, hydrocephalus and cavum septum pellucidum. Five ...

PubMed

136
Cognitive Dysfunction and White Matter Abnormalities in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus.
2011-02-22

Brain abnormalities have been documented by neuropsychological assessment as well as a variety of neuroimaging techniques in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Conventional neuroimaging in patients with neuropsychiatric disease (NPSLE) typically discloses periventricular white matter (WM) hyperintensities, infarcts, hemorrhages, and cerebral ...

PubMed

137
Cardiac abnormalities discovered during long-term monitoring for epilepsy.
2008-09-01

During routine EEGs, ambulatory EEGs, prolonged EEGs in the intensive care unit, and long-term monitoring for epilepsy (LTME), trained technologists record cerebral activity as well as a basic electrocardiogram (ECG). The traditional use of this ECG tracing is to differentiate ECG artifact from abnormal brain activity. The past few years of LTME have given ...

PubMed

138
Efficiency of flexible derotator in walking cerebral palsy children.
2011-08-16

INTRODUCTION: The flexible derotator is one of the therapeutic resources used to combat primary and secondary abnormalities in walking cerebral palsy children. It was developed to reduce abnormal femoral and tibial torsions and lessen the latter's negative functional impact. OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of wearing a flexible ...

PubMed

139
Cerebral infarction in POEMS syndrome
2009-10-20

Objectives:To determine the risk factors and incidence of cerebral infarction associated with POEMS (polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, monoclonal gammopathy, and skin changes) syndrome.Methods:The Mayo Clinic dysproteinemia database was queried to identify patients with coded diagnosis of POEMS syndrome. Patients with cerebral infarction, ...

PubMed Central

140
Increased cerebral blood flow after external carotid artery revascularization
1981-06-01

Ten patients with symptoms of cerebral ischemia were found to have totally occluded internal carotid arteries with significant external carotid artery stenosis or occlusion. Eight patients underwent external carotid endarterectomy, and two patients underwent saphenous vein bypass to the external carotid artery from the subclavian artery. Cerebral blood ...

Energy Citations Database

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