Results 151 to 160 of about 12,722 (201)
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Endocrinopathy and Dysautonomia

Neurosurgery Clinics of North America
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is associated with endocrinopathies affecting all major hypothalamic-pituitary hormone axes and dysautonomia due to injury to sympathetic structures, inhibitory networks, or the spinal cord. Identification and management of dysregulated hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, antidiuretic hormone, and thyroid function are ...
Gianna M, Fote   +2 more
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Sympathetic Cardioneuropathy in Dysautonomias

New England Journal of Medicine, 1997
The classification of dysautonomias has been confusing, and the pathophysiology obscure. We examined sympathetic innervation of the heart in patients with acquired, idiopathic dysautonomias using thoracic positron-emission tomography and assessments of the entry rate of the sympathetic neurotransmitter norepinephrine into the cardiac venous drainage ...
D S, Goldstein   +4 more
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Intelligence in Dysautonomia

Pediatrics, 1979
The study of 53 patients with dysautonomia by Welton et al (Pediatrics 63:708, 1979) is the most extensive survey of mental ability in this condition yet published. The conclusion is drawn "that the same proportion of the dysautonomic population scored within the average range of intelligence as if found in the general population." The ...
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Dysautonomias in amyloidosis

Nervenheilkunde, 2013
SummarySystemic amyloidosis is a life-threatening and frequently unrecognized cause of dysautonomia. Autonomic neuropathy is a common manifestation of AL amyloidosis (caused by deposition of an immunoglobulin free light chain produced by an underlying plasma cell clone) and of autosomal dominant hereditary ATTR amyloidosis (caused by a transthyretin ...
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Dysautonomia and autonomic neuropathies

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 2002
The autonomic nervous system can be affected as part of a more diffuse peripheral nerve disease such as inflammatory polyneuropathy or diabetes, or as a primary disease, such as dysautonomia. Dysautonomia is being diagnosed with increasing frequency in dogs and other species in the Midwest.
Dennis P, O'Brien, Gayle C, Johnson
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Cutaneous Nerves in Dysautonomia

Pediatrics, 1967
We were interested to read the communication in your December 1966 issue from Drs. Winkelmann, Bourlond, and Smith (Pediatrics, 38:1060) in which they described normal nerve endings in a patient with familial dysautonomia. They stated that nerve conduction studies would be interesting but had not so far been done in dysautonomia.
J C, Brown, P W, Brunt, R J, Johns
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Dysautonomia in the pathogenesis of migraine

Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics, 2017
Migraine is a common complex neurological disorder involving multiple brain areas that regulate autonomic, affective, cognitive, and sensory functions. This review explores autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysfunction in migraine headache sufferers. Areas covered: Reference material for this review was obtained through PubMed searches.
Gazerani, Parisa; id_orcid 0000-0003-0109-3600   +1 more
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The pupil in familial dysautonomia

Neurology, 1981
We performed infrared pupillography on 10 patients with familial dysautonomia. Pupillary constriction to light and accommodation was normal. There was no evidence for light-near dissociation, and tonic responses were not observed. Dilatation in darkness was normal.
A D, Korczyn   +3 more
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DIAGNOSIS AND MANAGEMENT OF DYSAUTONOMIA

Pediatrics, 1956
The variability of severity and of presenting complaint in both classical and variant forms of dysautonomia is stressed. Psychological evaluation of these children has not borne out the initial clinical impression of mental retardation.
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Dysautonomia in Parkinson Disease

Comprehensive Physiology, 2014
Abstract Dysautonomias are conditions in which altered function of one or more components of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) adversely affects health. This review updates knowledge about dysautonomia in Parkinson disease (PD).
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