Nō to shinkei = Brain and nerve
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We report a 65-year-old woman with progressive dysarthria, dysphagia, weakness, and gait disturbance. The patient was well until 59 years of age (January of 1986) when she noted bilateral ptosis. One year later, she noted a gradual onset of difficulty in speech (articulation). ⋯ Postmorten examination revealed marked myelin pallor in the anterior as well as lateral corticospinal tracts. Pyramidal tract degeneration was prominent starting at the level of the cerebral peduncle and was continued to be seen until the level of lumbar cord. The number of anterior horn cells showed only slight decrease in the cervical level, however, it was normal in the lumbar cord.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Case Reports
[A 74-year-old man with urinary incontinence, right leg weakness and multiple cranial nerve palsies].
We report a 74-year-old man with a lung cancer, who developed right leg weakness, neurogenic bladder, and multiple cranial nerve palsies. The patient was well until December of 1992, when he was 74-year-old, when he noted transient double vision; in February of 1993, he noted numb sensation and weakness in his right leg. Later in the same month, he developed overflow incontinence of urine and weakness in his right face. ⋯ He had overflow urinary incontinence with loss of bladder sensation. Marked nuchal stiffness was noted, however, no Kernig's sign or eye ball tenderness was present. Pertinent laboratory findings were as allows; WBC 8,100/microliters, Ht 42.5%, platelet 326,000/microliters, TP 6.8 g/dl, BUN 16 mg/dl, creatinine 0.54 mg/dl, glucose 95 mg/dl, Na 136 mEq/l, K 4.4 mEq/l, Cl 100 mEq/l; liver profile was normal; CEA 436.6 ng/ml, CA19-93 U/ml; urinalysis was normal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Japan coma scale in the prediction of outcome after early surgery for aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage].
The value of the 10-grade Japan Coma Scale (JCS) as a means of evaluating patients undergoing early aneurysm surgery was assessed in terms of its relationship to surgical outcome. The 13-grade Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) was also assessed, and comparisons were made between the two. A series of 765 patients who underwent aneurysm surgery within 7 days after hemorrhage were evaluated both by JCS and GCS immediately prior to surgery, and outcome was assessed by the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) 6 months postoperatively. ⋯ There was no significant difference between the correlation coefficients for outcome of the JCS and GCS. In general, the better the JCS or GCS score was, the better the surgical outcome was, however, outcome among those with a JCS score of 3 was poorer than among those with a score of 10, 20, or 30. The results of this study indicate that both JCS and GCS are useful in predicting surgical outcome, but the GCS may be better than the JCS because of the problem with the score of 3 in the latter.