Nō to shinkei = Brain and nerve
-
Neuropsychiatric disturbances are common and burdensome symptoms of dementias. Assessment and measurement of neuropsychiatric disturbances are indispensable to the management of patients with dementia and for clinical research. No standardized instruments have been developed for these purposes in Japan. The Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI), developed by Cummings et al., is a standardized, validated, and reliable tool to assess a wide range of neuropsychiatric derangements in patients with dementia, and has been used in clinical studies in North America. In this study, we prepared a Japanese version of the NPI and tested its reliability and usefulness in dementia patients. ⋯ This Japanese version of NPI, whose reliability and competency are comparable to those of the original version, is a reliable and useful tool for measuring neuropsychiatric disturbances in dementia patients.
-
We report a 91-year-old man who had a stroke and died of renal failure. He had been treated for hypertension since 20 years before the onset of the present illness. In addition, he was operated on a gastric cancer 17 years previously. ⋯ Small infarcts were also seen in the putamen and in the thalamus. This patient appeared to have had circulatory disturbance of the white matter which is the basic abnormality causing Binswanger's disease. However, white matter changes in this patient were not quite severe enough to make a pathologic diagnosis of Binswanger's disease.
-
To identify early prognostic value of brain injury, a comparison was made between computerized tomography (CT) findings, coagulation abnormalities, and clinical features in 51 patients with closed head injury. The patients were divided into three groups according to their plasma level of fibrin-fibrinogen degradation product (FDP): normal group (FDP 10 micrograms/ml or less) in 20 patients; moderately abnormal group (FDP 10-40 micrograms/ml) in 15 patients; and highly abnormal group (FDP 40 micrograms/ ml or more) in 16 patients. Cases with a fatal clinical course were mostly associated with very high FDP level. ⋯ Although severe head injury (GCS 8 or less) was found in 44% of the highly abnormal group and 13% of the moderately abnormal group, normal group only had one case (5%). Very high FDP concentrations were found to be associated with combined hemorrhagic lesions and mass effect on CT scan, but not with a specific localization of brain damage. In summary, the evaluation of coagulation and fibrinolytic function in patients following closed head injury might have both diagnostic and prognostic value.
-
Case Reports Comparative Study
[Gamma knife treatment of AVM of the basal ganglia and thalamus].
Arteriovenous malformatios (AVMs) in the basal ganglia (BG) and thalamus (Thal) are difficult to treat by microsurgery or intravascular embolization alone, and the role of stereotactic gamma radiosurgery (gamma knife) of these AVMs is discussed. We have treated 324 cases of AVM with gamma knife since May 1991, and in 71 of these cases (19%) the AVM was in the BG or Thal. The results of gamma radiosurgery on AVMs of the BG and Thal were compared with the results of treating AVMs at other intracranial locations by gamma radiosurgery. ⋯ The complete obliteration rate of AVMs in the BG and Thal 1 and 2 years after treatment was 54.3% and 92.0%, respectively, and the rate at the other locations was 42.9% and 76.0%, respectively. Adverse effects of this treatment in the AVM cases overall were rebleeding from the nidus in 5 cases (1.5%) and radiation necrosis in 4 cases (1.2%). In conclusion, AVMs of the BG and Thal were effectively and safely treated with the gamma knife, and stereotactic radiosurgery is a definitive alternative treatment for deep seated AVMs.
-
MR diffusion-weighted imaging was performed to investigate changes in water diffusion in patients with cerebral infarction, and diffusion-weighted images (DWI) were compared with T2-weighted images (T2WI). Acute and subacute infarcts were seen as areas of high intensity on DWI and showed lower apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs), while chronic infarcts showed a relative increase in ADCs. ⋯ On DWI, infarcts as small as 5 to 6 mm in diameter and lesions adjacent to the ventricular or subarachnoid space could be readily identified. DWI was useful for distinguishing acute lesions from chronic lesions in patients with multiple cerebral infarction, and provided valuable pathophysiologic information on the course of ischemic stroke evolution.