Brain pathology
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Case Reports
May 2003: 57-year-old-woman with acute loss of strength in her right upper extremity and slurred speech.
The May 2003 COM. A 57-year-old woman presented with slurring of her speech and right arm weakness. Her past medical history included idiopathic hypertrophic subendocardial stenosis (IHSS), arthritis, asthma, congestive heart failure, hypertension and NIDDM. ⋯ Little is known regarding the pathogenesis of Rosai-Dorfman disease. Most have suggested that it represents either an autoimmune disease or a reaction to an infectious agent that has yet to be discovered. Currently it is best considered a benign, idiopathic histiocytosis.
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Physiological cell death (PCD), a process by which redundant or unsuccessful neurons are deleted by apoptosis (cell suicide) from the developing central nervous system, has been recognized as a natural phenomenon for many years. Whether environmental factors can interact with PCD mechanisms to increase the number of neurons undergoing PCD, thereby converting this natural phenomenon into a pathological process, is an interesting question for which new answers are just now becoming available. In a series of recent studies we have shown that 2 major classes of drugs (those that block NMDA glutamate receptors and those that promote GABAA receptor activation), when administered to immature rodents during the period of synaptogenesis, trigger widespread apoptotic neurodegeneration throughout the developing brain. ⋯ Thus, there is a period in pre- and postnatal human development, lasting for several years, during which immature CNS neurons are prone to commit suicide if exposed to intoxicating concentrations of drugs with NMDA antagonist or GABAmimetic properties. These findings are important, not only because of their relevance to the FAS, but because there are many agents in the human environment, other than ethanol, that have NMDA antagonist or GABAmimetic properties. Such agents include drugs that may be abused by pregnant mothers (ethanol, phencyclidine [angel dust], ketamine [Special K], nitrous oxide [laughing gas], barbiturates, benzodiazepines), and many medicinals used in obstetric and pediatric neurology (anticonvulsants), and anesthesiology (all general anesthetics are either NMDA antagonists or GABAmimetics).
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The August COM: Acute methanol poisoning is an uncommon, but well-recognized, cause of central nervous system injury. We present two autopsy cases showing the classic neuropathologic injuries in acute methanol poisoning: putamen and white matter necrosis and hemorrhage. ⋯ Direct toxicity of metabolites, particularly formic acid, as well as ischemic injury and acidosis likely play a role. Methanol is readily available in many commercial products, and may be ingested accidentally or intentionally.
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A 12-year old boy presented with new onset of seizures and a CT scan showed a left frontal lobe tumor which was removed completely. Neuropathological examination showed a pleomorphic ganglion cell tumor with necrosi, and endothelial proliferation. The diagnosis was extraventricular atypical neurocytic neoplasm ("cystic ganglioneurocytoma").