Rinshō shinkeigaku = Clinical neurology
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Review Case Reports
[Successful treatment in a patient with a focal form of stiff-person syndrome using plasma exchange and intravenous immunoglobulin therapy].
We report a 42-year-old female with continuous muscle stiffness and painful muscle spasms of the right leg. The symptoms developed suddenly and worsened over the week after onset. At hospitalization, the right leg had a fixed posture of extension and the foot was plantar-flexed and internally rotated. ⋯ Plasma exchange therapy alleviated the clinical symptoms and decreased the anti-GAD antibody titer. After IVIg therapy, the symptoms and signs have dramatically disappeared to date but the titer of anti-GAD antibodies in serum recurred after an initial fall. To our knowledge, this is the first case of stiff-leg syndrome in Japan.
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We report a sporadic case of unusual cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) with prominent capillary involvement. A 67-year-old doctor developed gait disturbance, resting tremor and rigidity. He was diagnosed to have Parkinson's disease, for which the treatment with levodopa was effective. ⋯ Regarding the development of his severe dementia, the limbic pathology of Lewy body disease might be one of the potential causes, but A beta angiopathy appears more likely because of its severity. We speculate that widespread A beta deposition disregulates the blood-brain barrier of the capillaries leading to a disturbance of the microcirculation throughout the cerebral cortex without obvious ischemic disintegration of the neuropil. We should take into consideration that A beta angiopathy can present as progressive dementia without cerebrovascular disease.
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Review Case Reports
[Two patients with pseudogout manifested by severe neck pain].
We reported 2 patients with pseudogout manifested by severe posterior neck pain. Patient 1 was a 78-year-old woman. She had experienced attacks of posterior neck pain several times for 4 years. ⋯ The ligamenta flava at the level of C3-C6 and transverse ligament of the atlas are most commonly involved. Pseudogout of the cervical spine should be considered as a differential diagnosis when we examine the elderly patients with back neck pain. Cervical spinal CT is the most sensitive and useful examination to diagnose this disease.
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During the last decade, it has become clear that deep brain stimulation (DBS) therapy provides a dramatic improvement in the symptoms of movement disorders. We have experienced DBS in 110 patients with various types of involuntary movements, and confirmed the benefits of stimulation of the thalamic nucleus ventralis intermedius (Vim), internal globus pallidus (GPi) and subthalamic nucleus (STN) in these patients. DBS therapy affords the best effect on tremor when the Vim is selected as the stimulation site. ⋯ Ablative procedures for control of involuntary movement disorders, such as thalamotomy and pallidotomy, always carry a risk associated with creating additional lesions in an already damaged brain. In contrast, there is not such a risk in DBS therapy. This modality of therapy is an important option in treating involuntary movements.
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Status epilepticus (SE) is a condition requiring emergency care. There are convulsive SE, non-convulsive SE including complex partial status and absence status, non-convulsive electric SE and pseudostatus epilepticus, although convulsive SE is the most common. Diagnosis of status epilepticus of complex partial seizures (CPS) and absence seizures was significantly delayed because delays in seeking medical attention were common. ⋯ Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) led to a prolonged latency for seizure induction after an intraperitoneal injection of pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) and effectively prevented the development of status epilepticus of PTZ-induced convulsions in the rats. Our data suggest that rTMS has suppressive effects on the neuronal excitability in rats. These effects are anticonvulsive and suggest the possibility of therapeutic use of rTMS in the patients with refractory seizures.