Search results for "Spinal"

showing 10 items of 906 documents

Improved contrast for myeloma focal lesions with T2-weighted Dixon images compared to T1-weighted images

2019

International audience; Purpose: The purpose of this study was twofold. First, to compare the contrast between spinal multiple myeloma (MM) focal lesions and surrounding bone marrow obtained on T2-weighted Dixon fat-only MR images to that obtained on T1-weighted spin-echo images. Second, to search for correlation between bone marrow fat fraction assessed by T2-weighted Dixon sequence and International Myeloma Working Group myeloma defining events.Materials and methods: A total of 39 patients with 112 focal MM lesions were included. There were 25 men and 14 women with a mean age of 68.8±9.8 [SD] years (range: 49-88 years). Contrast between focal MM lesions and surrounding bone marrow was cal…

Malemedia_common.quotation_subject[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Signal-To-Noise Ratio030218 nuclear medicine & medical imagingLesion03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBone MarrowImage Interpretation Computer-AssistedmedicineT1 weightedHumansContrast (vision)Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingMagnetic resonance imaging (MRI)Correlation testMultiple myelomaAgedRetrospective Studiesmedia_commonAged 80 and overSpinal NeoplasmsRadiological and Ultrasound Technologybusiness.industryMean ageGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedImage Enhancementmedicine.diseaseDixon sequenceMagnetic Resonance Imaging[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]medicine.anatomical_structure030220 oncology & carcinogenesisFemaleBone marrowmedicine.symptomMultiple MyelomabusinessT2 weightedNuclear medicine
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Spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea: A clinical and anatomical study

2010

Objectives/Hypothesis: Spontaneous nasal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fistula represents a rare clinical entity. The possible etiology and the localization of the rhinorrhea remain an ongoing clinical challenge. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the localization of spontaneous CSF fistula and to correlate it with anatomical studies. Study Design: Retrospective clinical study, prospective anatomical study. Methods: Twenty-nine patients with spontaneous CSF rhinorrhea were retrospectively studied, 10 males and 19 females. Ages ranged from 10 to 92 years (mean, 50 years). In addition, 48 human skulls from newborns to adults were examined for the postnatal development of the anterior and m…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentSphenoid SinusCerebrospinal Fluid RhinorrheaSpontaneous cerebrospinal fluid leakCribriform plateMiddle cranial fossaYoung AdultCerebrospinal fluidEthmoid SinusRisk FactorsSphenoid BonemedicineHumansChildSinus (anatomy)AgedRetrospective StudiesAged 80 and overCranial Fossa AnteriorCranial Fossa Middlerhinorrheabusiness.industryAge FactorsInfant NewbornEthmoid boneAnatomyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingSurgeryLateral recessEthmoid Bonemedicine.anatomical_structureOtorhinolaryngologyFrontal SinusFemalemedicine.symptomTomography X-Ray ComputedbusinessThe Laryngoscope
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Abnormal subcortical somatosensory evoked potentials indicate high cervical myelopathy in achondroplasia

1999

Children with achondroplasia may have high cervical myelopathy due to stenosis of the cranio-cervical junction resulting in neurological disability and an increased rate of sudden death. To detect myelopathy we recorded somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) after median nerve stimulation in 30 patients with achondroplasia aged 13 months to 18 years (mean 6 years). In addition to the conventional technique of recording the cortical N20 and the central conduction time (CCT), we employed a noncephalic reference electrode recording the subcortical waveforms N13b and P13, generated near the cranio-cervical junction. The findings were related to the clinical status and MRI results. Eighteen pati…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentSudden deathAchondroplasiaMyelopathySpinal cord compressionEvoked Potentials SomatosensorymedicineHumansAchondroplasiaChildbusiness.industryInfantCervical cord compressionmedicine.diseaseMedian nerveSurgerySomatosensory evoked potentialChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemaleRadiologybusinessSpinal Cord CompressionMyelomalaciaEuropean Journal of Pediatrics
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Antibiotic single-dose prophylaxis of shunt infections.

1989

Shunt infections after implantation or revision of a shunt for CSF drainage in hydrocephalic patients are serious complications. In view of their frequency, this study investigated the efficacy of prophylactic administration of a single dose of the antibiotic cefazedone in reducing in the post-operative infection rate. Fifty children of up to 14 years of age suffering from hydrocephalus of various etiologies were treated prophylactically and compared with a similar untreated group. The diagnosis of infection was based mainly on microbiological and clinical observations and investigations. Classical infection parameters were also recorded and evaluated, but played only a secondary role in es…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentmedicine.drug_classmedicine.medical_treatmentAntibioticsInfectionsDrug Administration ScheduleCefazedoneCefazolinmedicineHumansDerivationProspective StudiesChildChemotherapyInfection Controlbusiness.industryInfant NewbornInfantDrug Resistance MicrobialGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseCerebrospinal Fluid ShuntsHydrocephalusShunt (medical)SurgeryAnti-Bacterial AgentsAnesthesiaChild PreschoolSurgeryFemaleNeurology (clinical)NeurosurgeryComplicationbusinessmedicine.drugNeurosurgical review
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Mesenchymal Stem Cells Improve Motor Functions and Decrease Neurodegeneration in Ataxic Mice

2014

The main objective of this work is to demonstrate the feasibility of using bone marrow-derived stem cells in treating a neurodegenerative disorder such as Friedreich's ataxia. In this disease, the dorsal root ganglia of the spinal cord are the first to degenerate. Two groups of mice were injected intrathecally with mesenchymal stem cells isolated from either wild-type or Fxntm1Mkn/Tg(FXN)YG8Pook (YG8) mice. As a result, both groups presented improved motor skills compared to nontreated mice. Also, frataxin expression was increased in the dorsal root ganglia of the treated groups, along with lower expression of the apoptotic markers analyzed. Furthermore, the injected stem cells expressed th…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAtaxiaCellular differentiationGene ExpressionBone Marrow CellsMice TransgenicMotor ActivityMesenchymal Stem Cell TransplantationTransplantation AutologousMiceGlutathione Peroxidase GPX1Neurotrophin 3Internal medicineGanglia SpinalIron-Binding ProteinsDrug DiscoverymedicineGeneticsAnimalsTransplantation HomologousNerve Growth FactorsMolecular BiologyInjections SpinalPharmacologyGlutathione PeroxidasebiologyBrain-Derived Neurotrophic FactorMesenchymal stem cellCell DifferentiationMesenchymal Stem CellsAnatomySpinal cordCatalaseDisease Models AnimalEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureFriedreich AtaxiaFrataxinbiology.proteinMolecular MedicineOriginal ArticleFemaleBone marrowmedicine.symptomStem cellAdult stem cell
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Traumatic fascicular neuroma

1988

A 72-year-old man had developed amiodarone neuropathy. He was found, at biopsy, to have a fascicular neuroma of his right sural nerve, unassociated with his underlying neuropathy, apparently due to blunt trauma, as electroneurographic needling of this nerve could safely be ruled out by the patient and his physicians. Such fascicular neuromas, which may remain without sensory deficits, may develop at an unknown frequency, and may only be uncovered by biopsy — or autopsy — in a coincidental neuropathic process.

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAutopsySural nerveAmiodaronePathology and Forensic MedicineNeuromaCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceSural NerveBiopsyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineHumansAgedDry needlingSpinal Neoplasmsmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryNeuromamedicine.diseaseSurgeryMicroscopy ElectronSpinal Nervesmedicine.anatomical_structureBlunt traumaNeurology (clinical)Perineuriumbusinessmedicine.drugActa Neuropathologica
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Free choline and choline metabolites in rat brain and body fluids: sensitive determination and implications for choline supply to the brain.

1993

In the central nervous system, choline is an essential precursor of choline-containing phospholipids in neurons and glial cells and of acetylcholine in cholinergic neurons. In order to study choline transport and metabolism in the brain, we developed a comprehensive methodical procedure for the analysis of choline and its major metabolites which involves a separation step, selective hydrolysis and subsequent determination of free choline by HPLC and electrochemical detection. In the present paper, we report the levels of choline, acetylcholine, phosphocholine, glycerophosphocholine and choline-containing phospholipids in brain tissue, cerebrospinal fluid and blood plasma of the untreated ra…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyBiological AvailabilityCholineCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundCerebrospinal fluidPhosphatidylcholineInternal medicineBlood plasmamedicineElectrochemistryCholineAnimalsCholinergic neuronRats WistarChromatography High Pressure LiquidPhosphocholineBrainCell BiologyAcetylcholineBody FluidsRatsEndocrinologychemistryBiochemistryCholine transportAcetylcholinemedicine.drugNeurochemistry international
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Small rises in plasma choline reverse the negative arteriovenous difference of brain choline.

1990

The concentrations of free choline in blood plasma from a peripheral artery and from the transverse sinus, in the CSF, and in total brain homogenate, have been measured in untreated rats and in rats after acute intraperitoneal administration of choline chloride. In untreated rats, the arteriovenous difference of brain choline was related to the arterial choline level. At low arterial blood levels (less than 10 microM) as observed under fasting conditions, the arteriovenous difference was negative (about -2 microM), indicating a net release of choline from the brain of about 1.6 nmol/g/min. In rats with spontaneously high arterial blood levels (greater than 15 microM), the arteriovenous diff…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyBlood–brain barrierBiochemistryCholineCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundCerebrospinal fluidInternal medicineBlood plasmamedicineExtracellularCholineAnimalsChemistryBrainBiological TransportRats Inbred StrainsRatsKineticsmedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyBiochemistryBlood-Brain BarrierCerebrovascular CirculationArterial bloodFemaleBlood vesselCholine chlorideJournal of neurochemistry
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Odontoid process and clival regeneration with Chiari malformation worsening after transoral decompression: an unexpected and previously unreported ca…

2015

Purpose: Transoral odontoidectomy followed by occipito-cervical fixation is a widely used approach to relieve ventral compressions at the craniovertebral junction (CVJ). Despite the large amount of literature on this approach and its complications, no previous reports of odontoid process and clival regeneration following transoral odontoidectomy are present in the English literature. Methods: We report the case of odontoid process and clival regeneration following transoral odontoidectomy. Results: A 7-year-old boy presented with symptoms of brainstem and upper cervical spinal cord compression due to a complex malformation at the CVJ including a basilar invagination with Chiari malformation…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyBone RegenerationDecompressionSynchondrosisBasilar invaginationChiari malformationBasilar invaginationClivusClivusRecurrencemedicineHumansOrthopedic ProceduresOrthopedics and Sports MedicineChildFixation (histology)Chiari malformationPeriosteumodontoid process transoral decompressionbusiness.industryTransoral odontoidectomySettore MED/27 - NeurochirurgiaDecompression Surgicalmedicine.diseaseArnold-Chiari MalformationSurgerymedicine.anatomical_structureCranial Fossa PosteriorSurgeryNeurosurgerytransoral decompressionbusinessSpinal Cord CompressionOdontoid processBone regrowth
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Uptake and storage of choline by rat brain: influence of dietary choline supplementation.

1991

In order to elucidate the regulation of the levels of free choline in the brain, we investigated the influence of chronic and acute choline administration on choline levels in blood, CSF, and brain of the rat and on net movements of choline into and out of the brain as calculated from the arteriovenous differences of choline across the brain. Dietary choline supplementation led to an increase in plasma choline levels of 50% and to an increase in the net release of choline from the brain as compared to a matched group of animals which were kept on a standard diet and exhibited identical arterial plasma levels. Moreover, the choline concentration in the CSF and brain tissue was doubled. In th…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyCentral nervous systemBiologyBlood–brain barrierBiochemistryCholineCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundCerebrospinal fluidReference ValuesInternal medicinemedicineCholineAnimalsBrainBiological TransportRats Inbred StrainsMetabolismRat brainDietRatsKineticsmedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologychemistryBlood-Brain BarrierCholine supplementationCholine chlorideJournal of neurochemistry
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