Results 191 to 200 of about 8,628 (221)
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Reversible central pain

Neurological Sciences, 2001
We report two cases of central pain which receded completely after treatment of the inciting lesion. These cases highlight the intrinsic reversibility of central pain and the focal nature of central pain mechanisms.
S, Canavero, V, Bonicalzi
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Reversible Central Pontine Abnormalities

Journal of Neuroimaging, 1993
Two patients developed central pontine signal changes on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), one after heart transplantation and one during the puerperium. In one, no lesion was found in the pons at necropsy. The other recovered clinically and the MRI lesion resolved completely.
Conrado J. Estol, Louis R. Caplan
openaire   +1 more source

Reversible Central Hypoventilation Syndrome in Basilar Invagination

World Neurosurgery, 2019
A noninvasive approach for basilar invagination (BI) and moreover, cervical traction to reduce odontoid invagination, has not been thoroughly described in the literature. We report a case of BI with Arnold-Chiari malformation in which preoperative reduction using Gardner well cervical traction was attempted and the patient developed central ...
Abhinandan Reddy Mallepally   +4 more
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Reversal of Central Sleep Apnea With Oxygen

Chest, 1997
To examine the effect of oxygen on apneas and sleep quality in patients with frequent central apneas during sleep.Prospective intervention study of 20 consecutive patients with predominant central apnea identified from 570 patients referred for suspected sleep apnea syndrome.
K A, Franklin   +3 more
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REVERSAL OF CENTRAL ANTICHOLINERGIC SYNDROME BY GALANTHAMINE

Survey of Anesthesiology, 1978
Ten volunteers were given 2 mg scopolamine intravenously (IV) to produce substantial drowsiness and sleepiness. Galanthamine, 0.5 mg/kg IV, effectively reversed the central anticholinergic syndrome produced by scopolamine. Electroencephalographic monitoring of two subjects matched the observed changes of consciousness: scopolamine replaced the dominant
A, Baraka, S, Harik
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Reversal of Fortune: Central Nervous System Blastomycosis

The American Journal of Medicine, 2016
PRESENTATION When a patient presents with simultaneous lung and brain lesions, the clinician is likely to invokemetastatic malignancy as the unifying explanation, which will usually be the correct one—but not always. In our case, a 73-year-old man originally from Bangladesh with a history of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and curatively resected ...
Jessica Gupta   +2 more
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Reversible Central Pain

Archives of Neurology, 1961
"Central pain" has been defined as spontaneous pain with painful over-reaction to external stimuli resulting from lesions confined to the central nervous system. 12 As Walker 15 pointed out, central pain can originate from any level of the nervous system—peripheral, spinal, bulbar, or cortical.
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Reversal of Central Sleep Apnea Using Nasal CPAP

Chest, 1986
Based on the theory that obstructive (OSA) and central (CSA) sleep apneas share common pathophysiologic mechanisms, we attempted to treat eight patients with predominantly CSA by continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). All patients exhibited repetitive episodes of CSA and mixed sleep apneas (MSA) in the supine position with a mean duration of 23.7 +
F G, Issa, C E, Sullivan
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Reversal of synaptic vesicle docking at central synapses

Nature Neuroscience, 1999
We used quantitative fluorescence imaging of vesicles labeled with membrane-soluble dyes to determine rates of undocking and spontaneous exocytosis of vesicles docked to the active zone of hippocampal synapses in culture. Individual vesicles undock about once per two minutes and spontaneously exocytose about once per eight minutes.
V N, Murthy, C F, Stevens
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Reversible central nervous system dysfunction in folate deficiency

Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 1975
An epileptic patient on chronic anticonvulsant drug therapy is described, in whom anaemia and neurological abnormalities including progressive dementia, bilateral pyramidal tract signs, incontinence and ataxia developed. Vitamin B12 serum levels and absorption were normal, but serum folic acid levels were low.
E, Melamed, A, Reches, C, Hershko
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