Search results for "Postmortem studies"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Pigment variant of neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis

1995

A 6-year-old girl had progressive ataxia, and visual disturbances resulting in blindness. She died in her sleep at age 22 years. She shared with her sister and paternal relatives bilateral pes cavus deformities and impaired deep-tendon reflexes which suggested Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. Her sister, who also had both polyneuropathy and a progressive central nervous system (CNS) disease, did not have pigmentary retinopathy. At autopsy, the patient was found to have neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis (NCL) marked by intraneuronal accumulation of autofluorescent granular lipopigments in ballooned perikarya and conspicuous extraneuronal pigmentation of subcortical grey matter, but without axonal s…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyPostmortem studiesNeurologyCentral nervous systemAutopsyBiologyGrey matterEpitheliumNuclear FamilyDiagnosis DifferentialCharcot-Marie-Tooth DiseaseNeuronal Ceroid-LipofuscinosesmedicineNeuropilHumansChildGenetics (clinical)Cerebral CortexNeuronsPigmentationPigments BiologicalAnatomymedicine.diseaseMicroscopy ElectronKidney Tubulesmedicine.anatomical_structureSpinal CordFemaleNeuronal ceroid lipofuscinosisPolyneuropathyAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics
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Functional genomics indicate that schizophrenia may be an adult vascular-ischemic disorder

2015

AbstractIn search for the elusive schizophrenia pathway, candidate genes for the disorder from a discovery sample were localized within the energy-delivering and ischemia protection pathway. To test the adult vascular-ischemic (AVIH) and the competing neurodevelopmental hypothesis (NDH), functional genomic analyses of practically all available schizophrenia-associated genes from candidate gene, genome-wide association and postmortem expression studies were performed. Our results indicate a significant overrepresentation of genes involved in vascular function (P<0.001), vasoregulation (that is, perivascular (P<0.001) and shear stress (P<0.01), cerebral ischemia (P<0.001), neurode…

Candidate genemedicine.medical_specialtyPostmortem studiesLong-Term PotentiationBiologySynaptic TransmissionBrain IschemiaBrain ischemiaCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceInternal medicinemedicineHumansGenetic Predisposition to Diseaseddc:610Biological PsychiatryNeuronal PlasticityNeurogenesisGlutamate receptorLong-term potentiationGenomicsmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthEndocrinologySchizophreniaSynaptic plasticitySchizophreniaOriginal ArticleNeuroscienceGenome-Wide Association Study
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Computed Tomography in Brain Tumors

1981

Craniocerebral injury and brain tumor are the two most important indications for CT studies. There is unanimous agreement that computed tomography is unequalled in its diagnostic accuracy in demonstration of intracranial tumors. Our own experience is based on observations in 3,750 patients with brain tumors or cerebral metastases who were studied in the period from December 1974 to March 1980 (Table 1). Initial CT studies demonstrated the intracranial tumor or tumors in 3,589 cases (95.7%). Several CT examinations were necessary for diagnosis of a brain tumor in 112 patients (3.0%). Other diagnostic procedures or postmortem studies revealed a brain tumor which had not been demonstrated with…

medicine.medical_specialtyPostmortem studiesPilocytic astrocytomabusiness.industryBrain tumormedicine.diseaseFourth ventricleMeningiomaSkullmedicine.anatomical_structurePituitary adenomamedicineRadiologybusinessPreclinical imaging
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Does velocity of dilatation influence the result of dilatation? A postmortem study.

1988

We evaluated the influence of velocity of dilatation on the success of and the vascular damage produced by dilatation. Nonatheroslerotic segments of distal superficial femoral arteries were dilated "fast" (n = 69) or "slow" (n = 45) under standard conditions with balloon catheters. The arterial wall was overstretched between 1% and more than 60%. The success of dilatation rose continuously with increasing overstretching during dilatation. The damage to the arterial wall by dilatation increased discontinuously with increasing overstretching. Dilatation success and damage patterns did not differ in the "slow" and "fast" groups.

Rupturemedicine.medical_specialtyPostmortem studiesbusiness.industryBalloon catheterGeneral MedicineFemoral ArteryInternal medicineCardiologymedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingArterial wallbusinessAngioplasty BalloonInvestigative radiology
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The Mode of Calcification in Atherosclerotic Lesions

1977

Calcific deposits in atherosclerotic plaques are usually considered to be an end stage of advanced atheroma formation. Postmortem studies of coronary arteries showed that pronounced atherosclerotic calcifications are strongly associated with stenosis of the involved segments and ischemic myocardial lesions (Eggen et al. 1965; McCarthy and Palmer 1974). A close correlation has also been found between calcific lesions detected by fluoroscopy or cinefluorography and clinical coronary artery disease (Oliver et al. 1964; Wartburton et al. 1968). Therefore, arterial calcification detected during life may be of important prognostic significance. Moreover, larger calcific plaques may influence the …

Postmortem studiesPathologymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.diseaseCoronary artery diseaseCoronary arteriesArterial calcificationStenosisAtheromamedicine.anatomical_structuremedicineCinefluorographybusinessCalcification
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