Cases reported "Brain Ischemia"

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1/27. Pain affect without pain sensation in a patient with a postcentral lesion.

    We report findings from clinical examination and cutaneous laser stimulation in a 57-year-old male, who suffered from a right-sided postcentral stroke. In this patient, we were able to demonstrate (i) a dissociation of discriminative and affective components of pain perception and, for the first time in humans, (ii) the dependence of sensory-discriminative pain component and first pain sensation on the integrity of the lateral pain system.
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keywords = perception
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2/27. Central deafness in a young child with moyamoya disease: paternal linkage in a Caucasian family: two case reports and a review of the literature.

    A case of 'central deafness' is presented in a 3-year-old male Caucasian child with moyamoya disease (MMD); a rare, progressive and occlusive cerebrovascular disorder predominantly affecting the carotid artery system. documentation of normal peripheral auditory function and brainstem pathway integrity is provided by acoustic admittance, otoacoustic emission and brainstem auditory evoked potential measurements. The lack of behavioral response to sound, and absent middle and long latency auditory evoked potentials suggest thalamo-cortical dysfunction. magnetic resonance imaging showed diffuse ischemic damage in subcortical white matter including areas of the temporal lobes. In addition, there were multiple and focal cortical infarctions in both cerebral hemispheres, focused primarily in the frontal, parietal and temporal areas. Taken together, these structural and functional abnormalities in addition to severely delayed speech and language development are consistent with the diagnosis of central deafness and suggest a disconnection between higher brainstem and cortical auditory areas. The child's father also has MMD, but was diagnosed only recently. The presence of paternal linkage is informative since it rules out x-linked recessive and maternal inheritance. To our knowledge, this represents the first documented case of paternal linkage in MMD with central deafness in a Caucasian child with no apparent Japanese ancestry. Herein, we focus on central auditory dysfunction and consider how lesion-induced changes have contributed to a deficit in basic auditory responsiveness, including a severe disturbance in receptive and expressive auditory-based speech and language skills.
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ranking = 2.3715516088889
keywords = speech
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3/27. Alexia for Braille following bilateral occipital stroke in an early blind woman.

    Recent functional imaging and neurophysiologic studies indicate that the occipital cortex may play a role in Braille reading in congenitally and early blind subjects. We report on a woman blind from birth who sustained bilateral occipital damage following an ischemic stroke. Prior to the stroke, the patient was a proficient Braille reader. Following the stroke, she was no longer able to read Braille yet her somatosensory perception appeared otherwise to be unchanged. This case supports the emerging evidence for the recruitment of striate and prestriate cortex for Braille reading in early blind subjects.
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keywords = perception
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4/27. diffusion-weighted MRI in acute mutism.

    mutism defined as a complete loss of speech may be related to psychiatric or neurologic disorders. The ischemic stroke origins of mutism are often difficult to assess at the acute stage. Accordingly, the search for the underlying mechanism as the localization of the damages may be difficult by conventional radiological techniques. diffusion-weighted (DWI) MRI may accurately identify patients with acute ischemic stroke and distinguish them from those who mimic acute stroke better than clinical and conventional neuroradiological methods. This report aims to demonstrate the utility of DWI-MRI in the diagnosis of acute mutism.
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ranking = 1.1857758044444
keywords = speech
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5/27. Perceiving left and imagining right: dissociation in neglect.

    Signor Piazza, a patient with a left parieto-occipital haemorrhage and a right thalamic stroke, showed severe right personal neglect (e.g. touching own body parts) and right perceptual neglect in tasks with (e.g. cancelling tasks) or without (e.g. description of a complex picture) motor response. He had also right-sided neglect dyslexia (including single words), without language impairments. However, the patient also presented with a clear left-sided deficit in the representational domain (e.g. imagery tasks). Signor Piazza's pattern of performance suggests dissociation between imagery and perception within the neglect syndrome.
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keywords = perception
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6/27. Thalamic stuttering: a distinct clinical entity?

    A 38-year-old right-handed male with no history of speech or language problems presented with neurogenic stuttering following an ischaemic lesion of the left thalamus. He stuttered severely in propositional speech (conversation, monologue, confrontation naming, and word retrieval) but only slightly in non-propositional speech (automatic speech, sound, word and sentence repetition, and reading aloud). It is suggested that thalamic stuttering may constitute a distinct clinical entity.
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ranking = 4.7431032177778
keywords = speech
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7/27. acceleration perception and spatial distortion in a left unilateral neglect patient.

    To explain relative leftward overextension in a line extension task by left unilateral neglect subjects, Bisiach et al. (1998) suggested that the representation of space is distorted--i.e., dilated towards the left side. If perception of the velocity of a moving stimulus is due to a calculation of the distance covered per unit time in representational space, then a stimulus with uniform linear motion should be perceived as decelerating when moving leftwards in the visual field of a subject with left unilateral neglect. We investigated the perception of acceleration in a patient with left unilateral neglect and spatial distortion (revealed as relative left overextension in a line extension task) using a task in which the stimuli were right and left moving targets with variable acceleration. The patient's ability to perceive acceleration was much lower (higher acceleration threshold) for leftward movements than rightward movements. Fourteen months later unilateral neglect had improved, and the relative left overextension and decreasing acceleration threshold for leftward movements were reduced. By contrast, alterations in the perception of acceleration for leftward movements were not found in a patient with left unilateral neglect and left underextension and in a patient with right brain damage and left hemianopia. These findings in one patient with left spatial unilateral neglect and a relative left overextension in a line extension task are consistent with the hypothesis that representational space is distorted, with a disproportionate leftward expansion, that affects perception of movement.
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ranking = 8
keywords = perception
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8/27. Bimodal extinction without cross-modal extinction.

    Three patients with unilateral neurological injury were clinically examined. All showed consistent unilateral extinction in the tactile and visual modalities on simultaneous intramodal stimulation. There was virtually no evidence for cross-modal extinction, however, so that contralateral stimulation of one modality would have extinguished perception of ipsilateral stimuli in the other modality. It is concluded that the attentional system controlling the encoding of tactile and visual stimuli is not unified across the two sensory domains.
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ranking = 1
keywords = perception
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9/27. tinnitus evoked by speech.

    Modulation of tinnitus by a variety of somatosensory stimuli and alteration of gaze has been described. We present two cases of tinnitus induced by speech (voice). The tinnitus was troublesome in both patients, and both had hearing loss and ischemic changes in the central nervous system documented by magnetic resonance imaging. We discuss cross-modal plasticity and how it may explain the tinnitus in these two patients.
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ranking = 5.9288790222222
keywords = speech
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10/27. Bispectral index monitoring may not reliably indicate cerebral ischaemia during awake carotid endarterectomy.

    BACKGROUND: Intraoperative ischaemia during carotid cross-clamping in patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy (CEA) is a major complication and prompt recognition of insufficient collateral blood supply is crucial. Electroencephalogram (EEG) is believed to be one of the useful forms of monitoring cerebrovascular insufficiency during CEA. The aim of this study was to evaluate the utility of bispectral index (BIS) monitoring, a processed EEG parameter, for the reliable detection of intraoperative cerebral ischaemia during awake CEA. methods: We monitored 52 patients continuously with the BIS monitor together with assessment of neurological function (contralateral upper and lower limb strength and the verbal component of the glasgow coma scale for speech) in patients undergoing awake CEA. RESULTS: overall mean BIS value in all patients was 96 (SD 2.9). In five patients who showed clinical evidence of cortical ischaemia during carotid cross-clamping, there was no change in the original range of BIS values throughout the procedure (96.7 [3.2]). In one patient BIS values decreased to 38 about 5 min after the incision and recovered within the next 10 min. The mean BIS value in the remaining 46 patients who did not develop clinical signs of ischaemia was 95.4 (2.6). Three cases are presented which demonstrate the inability of the BIS monitor to detect cerebral ischaemia. CONCLUSIONS: Lack of correlation of BIS with the signs of cerebral ischaemia during CEA makes it unreliable for detection of cerebrovascular insufficiency. We conclude that awake neurological testing is the preferred method of monitoring in these patients.
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ranking = 1.1857758044444
keywords = speech
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