Annals of neurology
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Annals of neurology · Dec 1986
ReviewAcute herpetic and postherpetic neuralgia: clinical review and current management.
The pain of acute herpes zoster (HZ) may be severe, but it is usually transitory. A minority of patients, with the elderly at particular risk, go on to develop persistent, severe, often disabling pain called postherpetic neuralgia. Though the clinical features of these conditions are well known, the pathology of PHN is poorly described and the pathogenesis of the pain in both remains conjectural. ⋯ Relatively few treatments have been studied in a controlled manner, and fully reliable, safe, and effective therapeutic approaches for preventing and treating postherpetic neuralgia have not yet been found. This review summarizes current information on the epidemiology, clinical features, and pathology of herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia, and critically examines the accumulated experience with the various treatments. Guidelines for management are suggested.
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Annals of neurology · Dec 1986
Sickle cell anemia and central nervous system infarction: a neuropathological study.
CNS infarcts were demonstrated in 12 of 24 autopsied patients with sickle cell anemia. The infarcts occurred most extensively in the territory supplied by the distal branches of the internal carotid artery, especially the anterior-middle cerebral artery boundary zone. They were regularly associated with organizing and recanalizing thrombi involving the distal cervical and proximal intracranial divisions of the internal carotid system. On the basis of these findings, we infer that the pathogenesis of the infarction involves perfusion failure or intraarterial embolization in addition to intravascular sickling.