1/36. Non-typhoid salmonella meningitis complicated by a infarction of basal ganglia.A previously healthy 16-month-old Korean girl with symptoms of fever, vomiting, and generalized tonic seizure was diagnosed to have Group D non-typhoid salmonella meningitis. The patient was treated with ceftriaxone (100 mg/kg/day) and amikin (22.5 mg/kg/day) initially and ciprofloxacin (30 mg/kg/day) was added later because of clinical deterioration and disseminated intravascular coagulation. Brain CT performed on the second day showed a well-demarcated low density lesion in the right lentiform nucleus and both caudate nuclei, without evidence of increased intracranial pressure. MRI performed on the 11th day confirmed CT scan findings as well as right subdural fluid collection, brain atrophy, and ventriculomegaly. She underwent subdural drainage and later ventriculo-peritoneal shunt operation. Despite receiving intensive treatment, she still has severe neurologic sequelae. Our case shows that infarctions of basal ganglia and thalami are not specific for tuberculous meningitis and that meningitis complicated by infarction is indicative of grave prognosis.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
2/36. Psychiatric symptoms as late onset of Wilson's disease: neuroradiological findings, clinical features and treatment.We describe a case of Wilson's disease with late psychiatric onset. Major depressive disorder was the first clinical manifestation at the age of 38 years. After pharmacotherapy with antidepressive agents, a manic episode was observed. Extrapyramidal hand tremor and micrography were the first neurological signs. Emotional lability occurred during worsening of extrapyramidal signs. diagnosis was based on urinary and serum copper levels, ceruloplasmin serum level, Kayser-Fleischer ring, and liver biopsy that detected cirrhosis. magnetic resonance imaging revealed basal ganglia hyperintensity on T1-weighted images, and hypodensity in the central part and hyperintensity in the peripheral part of the lentiform nucleus on T2-weighted images. Hyperintensity on T2-weighted images was also observed in the dorsal part of the midbrain. 123I-iodobenzamide single photon emission computed tomography (IBZM-SPECT) detected a normal distribution of the drug in the brain, with better signal in the right side and deficit of D2-dopaminergic receptors in the basal ganglia. Abnormal manganese erythrocyte level was observed. Treatment was based on penicillamine, zinc salts, low-copper diet, antidepressant agents, interpersonal psychotherapy and neurorehabilitation.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
3/36. Vascular Parkinsonism: a case report and review of the literature.Vascular Parkinsonism (VP) is characterised by sudden onset and rapid progression of clinical symptoms, absent or poor response to dopamine substitution therapy, and postural instability with shuffling gait and absence of tremor, making it a clinically distinct entity from idiopathic Parkinson's disease (IPD). Furthermore, it displays certain typical findings in neurological investigations. We report on a patient presenting features of VP associated with an intracerebral lesion not ascribed to VP to date, namely an isolated ischaemic focal lesion located in the left cerebral peduncle between the substantia nigra and nucleus ruber as evidenced by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The pathophysiological organic correlate for contralateral extrapyramidal symptoms in this patient may be an interruption of nigro-thalamic projection, interrupting the final subcortical station in the cortic-striato-pallido-nigro-thalamico-cortical loop central to the pathophysiology of parkinsonian syndromes. Non-response t o levodopa therapy could be a consequence of disruption of the cortico-basal ganglia-cortical loop on account of ischaemic destruction of subcortico-cortical axons, the underlying pathology, therefore, not being the result of a loss of nigral dopaminergic neurons or striatal dopamine deficiency pathogonomonic of IPD. To our knowledge, this is the first case of clinically manifest VP to be described with a single lesion in the contralateral cerebral peduncle between the substantia nigra and nucleus ruber, and suggests alternative intracerebral patterns for the distribution of disease-causing lesions in VP, and possibly new pathophysiological explanations for the nature of this disease.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 2keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
4/36. Cytochrome c oxidase partial deficiency-associated leigh disease presenting as an extrapyramidal syndrome.leigh disease is a subacute neurodegenerative disorder characterized by symmetric necrotic lesions in the basal ganglia, cerebellum, thalamus, brain stem, and optical nerves and caused by altered oxidative phosphorylation. We describe the clinical, biochemical, neuroimaging, and molecular studies of a 19-year-old boy with early-onset leigh disease manifesting as severe extrapyramidal disorder with generalized dystonia and choreoathetosis. He was born of healthy parents after an uneventful pregnancy and delivery. At the age of 2 1/2 years, after a minor respiratory infection, he developed unstable, broad-based gait and tremor of the hands. These symptoms persisted for the next several years, when ataxia became more prominent. Difficulty in swallowing, dysarthria, trunk dystonia, and marked dyskinesia of the arms and hands gradually developed. Nystagmus, transient ptosis, and strabismus also appeared. Abnormal laboratory findings included elevated plasma and cerebrospinal fluid lactate and pyruvate, with an abnormal lactate/pyruvate ratio. Cranial computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated signs of cerebellar atrophy, bilateral and symmetric hypodensities in the lentiform nucleus and thalamus, and transient hyperintensities of cerebral peduncles in T2-weighted sequences suggestive of leigh disease. Muscle biopsy revealed isolated fiber atrophy, necrotic fibers undergoing phagocytosis, and no ragged-red fibers. The measured catalytic activity of cytochrome c oxidase in skeletal muscle homogenates demonstrated a partial cytochrome c oxidase deficiency No abnormalities in the mitochondrial genome and in the SURF-1 gene were found. The boy is currently receiving levodopa therapy, creatine monohydrate, and a high dosage of thiamine and lipoic acid, his condition is stabilized, and extrapyramidal symptoms are less pronounced.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
5/36. Cavernous hemangioma in a child presenting with hemichorea: response to pimozide.The case of a 9-year-old boy with hemichorea due to cavernous hemangioma in the left caudate nucleus is presented. To our knowledge, only two children have been reported with hemichorea associated with cavernous hemangioma. Hemichorea in our patient responded to pimozide, a neuroleptic that blocks central nervous system dopaminergic receptors.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
6/36. Distribution of basal ganglia lesions in diffuse neurofibrillary tangles with calcification: a clinicopathological study of five autopsy cases.We investigated five Japanese autopsy cases of diffuse neurofibrillary tangles with calcification (DNTC), both clinically and pathologically, and examined the degree and distribution of the basal ganglia lesions, especially in the amygdala, striatum, pallidum, and substantia nigra. The lesions in the amygdala, striatum, and pallidum were classified into three categories (mild, moderate, and severe). The lesions in the substantia nigra were qualitatively judged, compared with normal controls. Severe dementia was observed in four cases neuropathologically showing pronounced neuronal loss in the cerebral cortex, but one case without neuronal loss in the cerebral cortex showed mild memory disturbance. Extrapyramidal signs were evident in three cases. Obvious neuronal loss in the substantia nigra with the presence of lewy bodies was noticed in four cases. basal ganglia lesions in all five cases were uniform: the amygdala showed severe to moderate lesions, the caudate nucleus moderate to slight lesions, and the putamen and pallidum slight lesions to normal. Furthermore, the lesions in the amygdala were more prominent in the basolateral group than in the corticomedial group, inconsistent with those in the amygdala of Alzheimer's disease. Moderate lesions were evident in the basolateral group of the amygdala in the case without neuronal loss in the cerebral cortex. In DNTC, the degree and distribution of the basal ganglia lesions, except for nigral lesions, were analogous to those found in Pick's disease with Pick bodies. These clinicopathological findings may contribute to the elucidation of the clinicopathological hallmarks in this disorder.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
7/36. Familial infantile bilateral striatal necrosis: clinical features and response to biotin treatment.BACKGROUND: Infantile bilateral striatal necrosis (IBSN) encompasses several syndromes of bilateral symmetric, spongy degeneration of the caudate nucleus, putamen, and globus pallidus. The familial form of IBSN is rare, and inheritance is either autosomal recessive or maternal. METHOD: The authors describe an Israeli Bedouin kindred in which 15 children born to consanguineous parents were affected with familial IBSN. They evaluated the clinical and radiologic evolution of the disease in 11 patients and the cerebral pathologic findings in one patient. Three of the children were treated with oral biotin 100 mg/day. RESULTS: Inheritance was apparently autosomal recessive. The untreated children had a similar clinical picture including developmental arrest beginning at the age of 7 to 15 months, choreoathetosis, and dysphagia. Pendular nystagmus appeared at a late stage. MRI, performed at various stages of the disease, showed severe basal ganglia atrophy. Postmortem study in one patient showed severe atrophy of the lenticular nuclei with gliosis and loss of neurons. biotin, 100 mg/day, administered to the proband over a period of 15 months, may have slowed progression. In two other children treatment was initiated earlier and appeared to arrest or improve disease. CONCLUSIONS: Familial infantile bilateral striatal necrosis was inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. Clinical features included developmental arrest, dysphagia, and choreoathetosis. Imaging and pathology showed atrophy and degeneration of the basal ganglia. Oral biotin may have benefited three children.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
8/36. Focal dystonia secondary to cavernous angioma of the basal ganglia: case report and review of the literature.The case of a young woman with focal dystonia of the hand due to a cavernous angioma of the basal ganglia is presented. The lesion involved the anterior third of the lentiform nucleus and a large portion of white matter anterior to this nucleus and lateral to the head of the caudate, as shown by magnetic resonance imaging; it was completely removed through a computed tomography-assisted stereotactic craniotomy by microsurgical technique, resulting in the cure of the patient. These facts support the pathophysiological hypothesis of a disruption of the striatopallidothalamic projection to the premotor cortex as the cause of symptomatic dystonia. A review of the reported cases of cavernous angiomas of the deep cerebral gray nuclei shows that this is the first case of cavernous angioma associated with movement disorder.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 2keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
9/36. A case of adult onset pure pallidal degeneration. II. Analysis of neurotransmitter markers, with special reference to the termination of pallidothalamic tract in human brain.We analyzed neurotransmitter markers in a brain of a very rare case of pathologically confirmed adult-onset pure pallidal degeneration (PPD) as compared with 16 controls. Neurotransmitter concentrations are significantly altered in the globus pallidus (GP), subthalamic nucleus (ST) and the thalamic nuclei. Concentrations of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the external segment (GPe) and internal segment (GPi) of GP and ST are decreased to 62, 45 and 55% of the control mean, respectively. Concentrations of glutamic acid are increased in GPi (144%) and ST (134%). choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activities are increased in GPe (232%), GPi (218%), ST (161%), and ventroanterior (VA, 210%) and ventrolateral nucleus (VL, 193%) of the thalamus. Noradrenaline (NA) concentrations in GPe and GPi are 56 and 43% of the control mean, respectively. Dopaminergic and serotonergic systems show no remarkable change. The grid microdissection analysis demonstrates a patchy GABA distribution in the thalamus of 3 controls, whereas a small GABA-rich area in the ventro-oral nucleus (VO) according to the atlas of Hopf disappears in adult onset PPD. These results strongly suggest that (1) GP gabaergic neurons are selectively degenerated and striatopallidal GABAergic nerve terminals are hypoactive; (2) ChAT activities in GP, ST, VA and VL are increased; (3) the subthalamopallidal glutamatergic system is not hypoactive; (4) activity of the noradrenergic system in GP is decreased; and that (5) VO in the thalamus specifically receives GABAergic nerve terminals from GP in human brain.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 15.354854757571keywords = subthalamic nucleus, subthalamic, nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
10/36. Three cases of anomic aphasia after lesions in and/or around the basal ganglia.The present paper reports 3 cases of aphasia with small lesions in the region of the basal ganglia to discuss whether neostrial dysfunction can cause aphasic symptoms. The Standard language tests of aphasia (SLTA) was used to assess the type and degree of aphasia. Two patients with infarction either in the left putamen or in the head of the left caudate nucleus showed severe disturbance only in recalling words, especially nouns. The other patient showed the same symptom, in addition to writing disturbance that developed shortly after surgical extirpation of an arteriovenous malformation (AVM) in the left caudate nuclei. The symptoms common to the 3 patients corresponded well to the "anomic aphasia" proposed by Benson. The aphasic symptoms disappeared completely or largely within several months. This easy reversibility suggests that the aphasic disorder in the three patients was caused by damage not to the basal ganglia themselves, but to the affecting axons passing through or by the nuclei.- - - - - - - - - - ranking = 1keywords = nucleus (Clic here for more details about this article) |
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