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Central nervous system AIDS – related diseases

Acta Neurochirurgica, 2004
The neurological complications of HIV contribute importantly to patient morbidity and mortality. Major common AIDS-related CNS diseases are ADC, metabolic encephalopaties, CMV encephalitis, TE, PCNSL, PML, criptococcal meningitis, and aseptic meningitis.
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The Complement System in Central Nervous System Diseases

Immunologic Research, 2001
The activation of complement system is an important factor participating in inflammatory, neurodegenerative, and cerebrovascular diseases. Astrocytes and neurons are able to synthesize complement components. Myelin and oligodendrocyte (OLG) activate the classical pathway of complement in vitro in the absence of antibodies. Sublytic C5b-9 in the absence
H, Rus, F, Niculescu
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Central Nervous System Manifestations of Lyme Disease

Archives of Neurology, 1989
We studied six patients with central nervous system manifestations of Lyme disease. Weeks to years after the initial infection, behavioral changes, ataxia, and/or weakness in bulbar or peripheral muscles developed. Four of the six patients had a lymphocytic pleocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid, and two of them had magnetic resonance imaging scans ...
A R, Pachner, P, Duray, A C, Steere
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Lyme Disease Mimicking Central Nervous System Lymphoma

Cancer Investigation, 2007
A 33-year-old male presented with a complaint of intermittently blurred vision and right facial weakness. MRI of the brain and orbits revealed numerous cranial nerve abnormalities. There were no focal brain or spinal cord lesions. Cerebral spinal fluid flow cytometry revealed a monoclonal population of B-lymphoid cells. No other evidence of disease was
Huzefa, Bahrain   +4 more
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Central Nervous System Imaging in Rheumatic Diseases

Rheumatic Disease Clinics of North America
Central nervous system (CNS) involvement is seen across a variety of rheumatic diseases. Common CNS manifestations include cerebrovascular events (such as ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes, cerebral venous sinus thrombosis), seizures, headaches, demyelinating lesions (such as optic neuritis, myelitis, parenchymal lesions), meningeal disease ...
Shervin, Badihian   +2 more
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Central Nervous System Whipple Disease

2017
Whipple disease (WD) is a multisystemic infection caused by the bacillus Tropheryma whipplei. Although the organism is ubiquitous in the environment, WD is rare. In affected individuals, the organism resides intracellularly within macrophages and can manipulate host immune responses to avoid clearance. Central nervous system (CNS) involvement can occur
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Parasitic diseases of the central nervous system

Seminars in Diagnostic Pathology, 2010
Parasitic infections, though endemic to certain regions, have over time appeared in places far removed from their original sites of occurrence facilitated probably by the increase in world travel and the increasing migration of people from their native lands to other, often distant, countries.
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Skin Lesions and Central Nervous System Diseases

Postgraduate Medicine, 1951
The recognition of skin lesions is very important and at once projects the physicians diagnostic interest from an apparent surface disability into a much more profound, complex and continuously progressing hopeless illness. In most instances colored illustrations have documented the correlated skin and central nervous system involvement as described ...
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Brain and other central nervous system tumor statistics, 2021

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021
Kimberly D Miller   +2 more
exaly  

Central nervous system Whipple’s disease

2004
Abstract Whipple’s disease was diagnosed when the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of the cerebrospinal fluid and small-bowel biopsy specimen were positive for Tropheryma  whippelii. Whipple’s disease is caused by a periodic acid-Schiff (PAS)-positive, weakly gram-positive rod-shaped bacillus, Tropheryma  whippelii, an organism difficult ...
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