Cases reported "Paresthesia"

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1/43. A case of referred pain evoked by remote light touch after partial nerve injury.

    An unusual case of referred pain is presented in which a 63-year-old man, who suffered a severe injury to his right hand and arm during young adulthood, describes the later development of dysesthesia and shooting pain in his arm subsequent to stimulation of the ipsilateral scalp, the temporal and infrazygomatic region of the face, and the back. Referred sensations of this type are usually reported following amputation of an arm. Clinical examination of the sensory and motor function of the arm and hand revealed partial damage to the radial, ulnar and median nerves as well as possible brachial plexus involvement. Interestingly, pain could be evoked by repeated light touches applied to the remote trigger areas suggesting the involvement of a 'wind-up'-like process.
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ranking = 1
keywords = process
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2/43. movement-related cerebellar activation in the absence of sensory input.

    movement-related cerebellar activation may be due to sensory or motor processing. Ordinarily, sensory and motor processing are obligatorily linked, but in patients who have severe pansensory neuropathies with normal muscle strength, motor activity occurs in isolation. In the present study, positron emission tomography and functional magnetic resonance imaging in such patients showed no cerebellar activation with passive movement, whereas there was prominent movement-related cerebellar activation despite absence of proprioceptive or visual input. The results indicate that motor processing occurs within the cerebellum and do not support the recently advanced view that the cerebellum is primarily a sensory organ.
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ranking = 3
keywords = process
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3/43. Parietal and cingulate processes in central pain. A combined positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study of an unusual case.

    Parietal, insular and anterior cingulate cortices are involved in the processing of noxious inputs and genesis of pain sensation. Parietal lesions may generate central pain by mechanisms generally assumed to involve the 'medial' pain system (i.e. medial thalamic nuclei and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC)). We report here PET and fMRI data in a patient who developed central pain and allodynia in her left side after a bifocal infarct involving both the right parietal cortex (SI and SII) and the right ACC (Brodmann areas 24 and 32), thus questioning the schematic representation of cortical pain processing. No rCBF increase was found in any part of the residual cingulate cortices, neither in the basal state (which included spontaneous pain and extended hypoperfusion around the infarct), nor during left allodynic pain. Thus, as previously observed in patients with lateral medullary infarct, neither spontaneous pain nor allodynia reproduce the cingulate activation observed after noxious pain in normal subjects. Conversely, both PET and fMRI data argue in favour of plastic changes in the 'lateral discriminative' pain system. Particularly, allodynia was associated with increased activity anteriorly to the infarct in the right insula/SII cortex. This response is likely to be responsible for the strange and very unpleasant allodynic sensation elicited on the left side by a non-noxious stimulation.
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ranking = 6
keywords = process
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4/43. An unusual supracondylar process syndrome.

    We report a case of a supracondylar process that was located beneath the neurovascular bundle and caused tenting of the bundle with elbow extension and supination.
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ranking = 5
keywords = process
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5/43. Atypical presentation of churg-strauss syndrome: another "forme fruste" of the disease?

    vasculitis is a clinicopathologic process characterized by inflammation and damage to blood vessels. A broad and heterogenous group of syndromes may result from this process, because any type, size, and location of blood vessel may be involved. The cause of these conditions remains unclear, but an autoimmune inflammatory process, characterized by involvement of both neutrophils and endothelial cells, seems to play an important role. In 1951, Churg and Strauss described a clinical syndrome of severe asthma, hypereosinophilia with eosinophilic infiltrates, eosinophilic vasculitis, and granulomata in various organs. asthma may precede this vasculitis by many years. We report a case of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-positive, pauci-immune, crescentic, necrotizing glomerulonephritis with peripheral and interstitial eosinophilia but without asthma. This is very unusual in churg-strauss syndrome.
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ranking = 3
keywords = process
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6/43. Deblocking effect of TRH-T in three cases of chronic progressive multifocal neuropathy.

    Three cases of acquired demyelinating multifocal neuropathy with persistent conduction blocks are reported. In one of them protyreline tartrate (TRH-T) had an evident deblocking effect; similar but milder effects were seen in the other two cases. The course and consistency of this effect is analyzed on the grounds of clinical and electromyographic findings. The nature of the THR-T responsive conduction block is analysed as a mild variant of CIDP with regard to its occurrence in a late and chronic phase without signs of active immune processes.
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ranking = 1
keywords = process
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7/43. Displaced calcium hydroxide paste causing inferior alveolar nerve paraesthesia: report of a case.

    A patient presented with an intraoral red, painful, and hard swelling in the lower right jaw. Radiographs showed a 2 x 1 cm area of radiopaque material surrounding the apex of the second premolar. The material, according to the patient's dentist, was calcium hydroxide paste used as a temporary dressing material in the root canal. The patient developed paraesthesia in her lower lip probably due to a neurotoxic effect caused by calcium hydroxide. The foreign material was surgically excavated from the spongious bone, directly adjacent to the nerve, and the patient later regained her sensation in the lip. A histopathological analysis revealed necrosis, deposits of foreign bodies, and inflammatory cells and foreign-body giant cells. This report illustrates the toxicity and adjacent clinical symptoms of calcium hydroxide paste when displaced into bone tissue close to the alveolar inferior nerve. It also demonstrates the benefits of removing such displaced material before symptoms progress.
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ranking = 594.65504188974
keywords = alveolar
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8/43. Newtom QR-DVT 9000 imaging used to confirm a clinical diagnosis of iatrogenic mandibular nerve paresthesia.

    This article describes conventional orthodontic treatment of an adult patient leading to lower lip paresthesia. The paresthesia subsided when the cross elastics to correct the patient's single molar crossbite were removed. It was determined with Digital Volumetric tomography that the inferior alveolar nerve was located lingual to the lower second molar root and was impinged upon with the tipping force of the cross elastic. Treatment to resolve the crossbite without further paresthesia is discussed.
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ranking = 118.93100837795
keywords = alveolar
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9/43. infection-related inferior alveolar and mental nerve paresthesia: case reports.

    Nerve injury can be related to mechanical, chemical, and thermal factors. infection-related paresthesia is usually related to mechanical pressure and ischemia associated with the inflammatory process. Another cause of paresthesia could be the toxic metabolic products of bacteria or inflammatory products released following tissue damage. This article presents cases of inferior alveolar and mental nerve paresthesia caused by an infected impacted tooth, an infected cyst, and periapical infection. The possible pathophysiologic mechanism of nerve injury, therapy, and prognosis for recovery are also discussed.
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ranking = 595.65504188974
keywords = alveolar, process
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10/43. Successful inferior alveolar nerve decompression for dysesthesia following endodontic treatment: report of 4 cases treated by mandibular sagittal osteotomy.

    Endodontic overfilling involving the mandibular canal may cause an injury of the inferior alveolar nerve (IAN) resulting in disabling sensory disturbances such as pain, dysesthesia, paresthesia, hypoesthesia, or anesthesia. Two fundamental mechanisms are responsible for the injury: the chemical neurotoxicity and the mechanical compression caused by the extruded material. Although spontaneous resorption has been described for some materials, early surgical exploration with removal of the material and decompression of the IAN should be performed, irrespective of the material used, given that the importance of nerve damage increases with the duration of the injury. We report 4 cases of disabling dysesthesia and paresthesia following endodontic treatment of lower molars in which sagittal osteotomy was used to remove the endodontic paste and to perform nerve decompression. All the patients experienced immediate relief of dysesthesia and paresthesia.
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ranking = 594.65504188974
keywords = alveolar
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