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1.
Neurology Asia ; : 59-63, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-628585

RESUMO

Background: Nummular headache is a new category of primary headache disorder characterized by consistent location, size, and shape of painful areas. The pathogenesis is uncertain. Bifocal painful areas are rare manifestations but may expand the clinical diversity of nummular headache. Methods: The clinical characteristics of 5 bifocal nummular headache patients were reported and those of 11 patients in previous studies were reviewed. Bifocal nummular headache was classifi ed into two types. Type I was defi ned as a simultaneous activation of two painful areas while type II was defi ned as two painful areas occurring in different times. Results: All 16 patients were female, with mean age of onset and initial presentation of 54.7 years and 58.2 years, respectively. There were seven type I and nine type II patients. The parietal area, especially the tuber parietale, was the leading site of involvement in both types of patients. The shape and size of painful areas were also similar between these two groups. There was an equal frequency of ipsilateral and contralateral painful areas. The pain intensity was similar in both types of patients but was milder in new painful areas than in previous painful areas in type II patients. Conclusions: Bifocal nummular headache suggests a central role of nummular headache but does not debunk the peripheral theory of nummular headache. The accumulated fi ndings in bifocal NH patients do not support a generalization of pain occurrence or a reproduction of local process of epicranial neuralgia at multiple sites in nummular headache.

2.
Neurology Asia ; : 255-258, 2012.
Artigo | WPRIM | ID: wpr-628650

RESUMO

A unilateral tinnitus occurred at right ear in a hypertensive and diabetic woman shortly after an ipsilateral peripheral facial palsy. Audiometric tests showed a predominant sensorineural hearing impairment at right ear. Her tinnitus was abolished after an administration of a low dose of gabapentin. In view of a controversy of gabapentin and tinnitus in previous trials, the fi ndings in this patient support that low dose gabapentin can benefi t specifi cally the subgroup of tinnitus patient with sensorineural impairment due to secondary contributing factor.

3.
Neurology Asia ; : 21-29, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-628537

RESUMO

Objective: This is a review of our cases and published literature on cheiro-oral syndrome (COS), to better understand its localization, etiology and outcome. Methods: In addition to our database, we reviewed the medical database (including PUBMED, BIOSIS, EMBASE, and SCOPUS) and other sources, searched by the keyword of “cheiro-oral”. The defi nition of COS was a subjective or an objective sensory disturbance confi ned to the perioral area and the fi nger(s)/hand without a detectable abnormality in mental, motor or cerebellar function. Only cases of COS where the clinicoanatomic correlation could be identifi ed by neuroimaging study, autopsy or stereotatic surgery was included. Results: There were a total of 174 patients; 85 patients from our database, 76 patients from medical database, and 13 patients from other sources. They were 111 men and 63 women. Their age ranged from 12 to 85 years; average being 58.2 years. Stroke is the leading etiology and constituted 74% of the patients. The most common location of lesion was thalamus, followed by pons and cortex. Classical unilateral COS was seen in 81% of patients, atypical COS in 19%. Whereas the lesions were from cortex to cervical spinal cord in unilateral COS, atypical COS was associated with lesions in pons or medulla oblongata. An early deterioration was seen in 16.5% of patients, especially in large cortical infarction and subdural hemorrhage. Structural lesions were found in 85% of patients. Conclusion: Classical unilateral COS do not have a high localizing value, the atypical COS is associated with lesion in pons or medulla.

4.
Neurology Asia ; : 349-352, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-628812

RESUMO

Cold-stimulus headache is a primary headache syndrome which is provoked by an external application or ingestion or inhalation of cold stimulus. It has not been reported to occur secondary to another focal structural brain lesion, or as a reversible illness. This is a report of two women who developed cold-stimulus headache on taking ice cold food after the onset of thalamic hemorrhage. The headache was typical of cold-stimulus headache except a relatively long duration of pain lasting half an hour. There was spontaneous remission after a few months. Our patients suggest that cold-stimulus headache can be secondary to thalamic hemorrhage..

5.
Neurology Asia ; : 345-348, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-628811

RESUMO

Exertional headache is one entity of Valsalva maneuver-related headache syndrome. It is usually idiopathic, but has occasionally been reported to be associated with secondary causes. However, central nervous system infection has not been mentioned before. We encountered a young man who suffered an isolated exertional headache and was found to have an active varicella-zoster virus central nervous system infection without typical intracranial hypertension or outfl ow obstruction. Intracranial vasoconstriction was detected during headache when the patient performed acute lifting or heavy exertion. The fi ndings in this patient suggest a specifi c relationship between varicella-zoster virus-related vasculopathy and exertional headache from other Valsalva maneuver-related headache syndrome

6.
Yonsei Medical Journal ; : 777-783, 2009.
Artigo em Inglês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-43533

RESUMO

PURPOSE: After a century, cheiro-oral syndrome (COS) was harangued and emphasized for its localizing value and benign course in recent two decades. However, an expanding body of case series challenged when COS may arise from an involvement of ascending sensory pathways between cortex and pons and terminate into poor outcome occasionally. MATERIALS AND METHODS: To analyze the location, underlying etiologies and prognosis in 76 patients presented with COS collected between 1989 and 2007. RESULTS: Four types of COS were categorized, namely unilateral (71.1%), typically bilateral (14.5%), atypically bilateral (7.9%) and crossed COS (6.5%). The most common site of COS occurrence was at pons (27.6%), following by thalamus (21.1%) and cortex (15.8%). Stroke with small infarctions or hemorrhage was the leading cause. Paroxysmal paresthesia was predicted for cortical involvement and bilateral paresthesia for pontine involvement, whereas crossed paresthesia for medullary involvement. However, the majority of lesions cannot be localized by clinical symptoms alone, and were demonstrated only by neuroimaging. Deterioration was ensued in 12% of patients, whose lesions were large cortical infarction, medullary infarction, and bilateral subdural hemorrhage. CONCLUSION: COS arises from varied sites between medulla and cortex, and is usually caused by small stroke lesion. Neurological deterioration occurs in 12% of patients and relates to large vessel occlusion, medullary involvement or cortical stroke. Since the location and deterioration of COS cannot be predicted by clinical symptoms alone, COS should be considered an emergent condition for aggressive investigation until fatal cause is substantially excluded.


Assuntos
Adulto , Idoso , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Transtornos Cerebrovasculares/classificação , Doenças do Sistema Nervoso/patologia , Estudos Prospectivos , Síndrome
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