Arch Neurol Chicago
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To review the state-dependent nature of violence and present a clinically useful classification of sleep violence, this article reviews our experience with sleep-related violence, establishing a differential diagnosis, methods of evaluation, and treatment options. The study occurs in a full-service clinical sleep disorders center evaluating approximately 1000 patients annually with an active participation of 16 physicians representing seven specialties. The patients were self-, physician-, or court/social service-referred for evaluation of violent or injurious behaviors associated with the sleep period. ⋯ Violence may be state-dependent. It is clear that violent behaviors may arise from the sleep period, often without conscious awareness on the part of the subject. This has social, forensic, and clinical implications, and may help contribute to the understanding of violence in general.
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Arch Neurol Chicago · May 1992
Headaches preceded by visual aura among adolescents and young adults. A population-based survey.
Clinical descriptions of migraine preceded by visual aura often include a composite of striking and severe symptoms of several attacks in individual patients, but few studies have characterized the spectrum of such attacks. In a population-based telephone survey of 8920 Washington County, Maryland, residents 12 through 29 years old, the attack rate for visual aura headaches during the week prior to the standardized interview was 3.7% in male and 6.1% in female subjects. Among female subjects, the risk for visual aura headache with tension-type symptoms increased with age, whereas the risk for visual aura headache without tension symptoms decreased with increasing age. ⋯ The severity of visual aura headache with and without tension symptoms increased with age among female subjects, but showed an inconsistent pattern among male subjects except for decreasing disability with increasing age. The median interval between the onset of aura symptoms and the onset of headache (aura interval) was 15 minutes in male subjects and 25 minutes in female subjects, with aura intervals longer than 60 minutes reported by 12% of male subjects and 20% of female subjects. In one of the first large population-based studies to characterize the spectrum of visual aura headache, differing age, gender, and subtype patterns were found.
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Arch Neurol Chicago · Jan 1992
Case ReportsCerebral hemorrhage with biopsy-proved amyloid angiopathy.
Clinical, radiological, and immunohistochemical findings in brain biopsy specimens from six patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy-associated intracerebral hemorrhage were reviewed. Acute clinical presentations included headache, nausea and vomiting, loss of consciousness, and focal neurological deficits such as hemiplegia and blindness. Transient ischemic attacks experienced by one patient and referable to one hemisphere did not indicate impending hemorrhage in that region. ⋯ Immunoreactive senile plaques were few compared with the numbers of stained microvessels. Reactive astrocytes in some patients were labeled by both antiserum samples, suggesting uptake or production of these proteins by the astrocytes. This study demonstrates the heterogeneous clinical and radiological features of cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related brain hemorrhage and the value of anti-A4 and anti-gamma-trace immunohistochemical study of biopsy material from patients with suspected cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related intraparenchymal bleeding.
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Postural hand tremor was quantitatively investigated on both sides in 21 patients suffering from unilateral reflex sympathetic dystrophy of the upper extremity. On the affected side, enhanced tremor amplitude, with a mean tremor frequency of 7.2 Hz, was found in 57% of the patients. The appearance of tremor did not correlate to the occurrence of a single clinical symptom of reflex sympathetic dystrophy. ⋯ This would suggest that the sympathetic supply of the affected extremity contributes to the tremor in reflex sympathetic dystrophy. In conclusion, it is suggested that reflex sympathetic dystrophy should be included among the causes of tremor. According to our findings, tremor in reflex sympathetic dystrophy should be regarded as an enhanced physiological tremor.