Extractions: Vol Page [Advanced] This Article Full Text Full Text (PDF) Submit a response ... Citation Map Services Email this link to a friend Similar articles in ADC Online Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal ... Cited by other online articles PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Debus, O. Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed F121-F124 ( March ) Otfried Debus, Hans Georg Koch, Gerhard Kurlemann, Heinrich Vielhaber, Peter Weber, Department of Paediatrics, University Hospital Munster, Germany
Extractions: This Article Full Text (PDF) Alert me when this article is cited Alert me if a correction is posted Services Email this article to a friend Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal ... Rights and Permissions PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Friedman, J. M. Articles by Aster, R. H. JM Friedman and RH Aster We report a brother and sister, both of whom have porencephaly, hydrocephalus, optic atrophy, severe mental retardation, and spastic quadriplegia. In the younger child, abnormal intracranial structure was demonstrated by sonography at 32 weeks' gestation and was suspected earlier. Both children had transient severe thrombocytopenia as newborns. The mother is healthy and has never had purpura or other bleeding symptoms. However, her serum was found to react strongly with platelets from the
Extractions: Vol. 251 No. 19, May 18, 1984 Featured Link E-mail Alerts ARTICLE Article Options Send to a Friend Similar articles in this journal Literature Track Add to File Drawer Download to Citation Manager PubMed citation Articles in PubMed by Michejda M Hodgen GD Contact me when this article is cited M. Michejda, N. Patronas, G. Di Chiro and G. D. Hodgen The postnatal course of a form of infantile porencephaly under pressure in monkeys was evaluated by comparing brain development between animals that had received the hydrocephalic antenatal vent for intrauterine treatment and those that had not been treated antenatally. Brain development was assessed by computed tomographic scans. The studies showed asymmetric malformations and associated porencephalic lesions in infant monkeys not treated in utero, despite installation of a conventional postnatal
Gigablast Search Results Ci?ia Rural CEREBELLAR HYPOPLASIA AND porencephaly IN CHAROLAIS - Translate this page Mild hydrocephalus and porencephaly were observed in the cerebrum. It was discussedthe possible etiologies and suggested the possibility of the disease has http://dir.gigablast.com/Health/Conditions_and_Diseases/Neurological_Disorders/P
Neuroguide.com - Human Neurological Diseases porencephaly. * porencephaly Information (NINDS) Pinched Nerve, Pituitary Tumors,Poliomyelitis and the Post Polio Syndrome, Polymyositis, porencephaly http://www.neuroguide.com/cgi-bin/pdistoc.pl?file=Porencephaly
Extractions: Vol Page [Advanced] This Article Submit a response Alert me when this article is cited Alert me when eLetters are posted Alert me if a correction is posted Services Email this link to a friend Similar articles in ADC Online Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal ... Cited by other online articles PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Cross, J. Articles by Durbin, G. JH Cross, CJ Harrison, PR Preston, DI Rushton, SJ Newell, ME Morgan and GM Durbin Birmingham Maternity Hospital, Queen Elizabeth Medical Centre. A previously unrecognised and distinctive pattern of severe brain injury in extreme preterm neonates was observed recently. Fifteen neonates of birth weight 600-1270 g and gestation of 24-32 weeks showed relatively late development on cerebral ultrasound scan of extensive dense and cystic lesions involving the periphery of the brain. The extent of the changes was
Research Children with porencephaly, Stroke, and Cerebral Palsy Sought for Study.Investigators at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke http://www.pachs.org/research.htm
Extractions: Language Development Project at the University of Chicago Seeking children between the ages of 8 and 58 months to participate in a multi-year study of language learning. University of Chicago , Department of Psychology, 5848 S. University Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637. Telephone: (773)834-9914; Fax: (773)834-5261; Email: language@listhost.uchicago.edu Have you ever wondered how children learn language? Do all children learn language in the same way? How do children communicate before they speak? Your family can help us answer these questions and many more by being a part of the Language Development Project. We are currently seeking families with children between the ages of 8 and 58 months to participate in our study. Specifically, we are looking for children with unilateral brain injury that live within a 100 mile radius of the Chicago area. In order to help us understand how children learn and use language, we will visit children in their homes three times per year for approximately two hours at each visit. Families will receive $50 per home visit for participating in the study. If children are in daycare or preschool, we will also visit them there one time per year. If you are interested in finding out about the Language Development Project, please contact Dr. Susan Levine at the University of Chicago by phone at (773)834-9914 or by email at
Www.resourcenet.org.uk/Health/Conditions_and_Disea Focal Nervous System LesionsThe cause of porencephaly is local ischemia after the 26 weeks gestational age.The evaluation of a neonate with porencephaly should be similar to the http://www.resourcenet.org.uk/Health/Conditions_and_Diseases/Neurological_Disord
Cleveland Clinic Health System - Health Information Search Results. The following information is available for the topic porencephaly.Please select one. Care Treatment. , porencephaly http://www.cchs.net/health/getcontents.asp?DocID=do-query&TopicId=1343
Porencephaly - Talk Medical directory.virtek.com/Directory/Health/Conditions_a JobAble.gov.auporencephaly is an extremely rare disorder of the central nervous system Individuals with porencephaly may have poor or absent speech development, http://www.talkmedical.com/medical-dictionary/11387/Porencephaly
Extractions: Tell a friend Porencephaly: A disorder of the central nervous system involving a cyst or cavity in a cerebral hemisphere of the brain. The cysts or cavities are usually the remnants of destructive lesions, but are sometimes the result of abnormal development. The disorder can occur before or after birth. Porencephaly has a number of different causes including absence of brain development and destruction of brain tissue. The presence of porencephalic cysts can sometimes be detected by transillumination of the skull in infancy (when a strong light is shined through the head). The diagnosis may be confirmed by CT, MRI, or ultrasonography. More severely affected infants show symptoms of the disorder shortly after birth, and the diagnosis is usually made before age 1. Signs may include delayed growth and development, spastic paresis (slight or incomplete paralysis), hypotonia (decreased muscle tone), seizures (often infantile spasms), and macrocephaly or microcephaly. Individuals with porencephaly may have poor or absent speech development, epilepsy, hydrocephalus, spastic contractures (shrinkage or shortening of muscles), and mental retardation. An extreme form of porencephaly is called hydranencephaly. Treatment may include physical therapy, medication for seizure disorders, and a shunt for hydrocephalus.
Extractions: Vol. 134 No. 7, July 1980 Featured Link E-mail Alerts ARTICLE Article Options Send to a Friend Readers Reply Submit a reply Similar articles in this journal Literature Track Add to File Drawer Download to Citation Manager Articles in PubMed by Pasternak JF Volpe JJ Contact me when this article is cited J. F. Pasternak, J. F. Mantovani and J. J. Volpe In two thirds of the premature infants who survived large periventricular intracerebral hemorrhage, a porencephalic cyst developed at the site of parenchymal hemorrhage. The porencephaly seems to develop as a result of local parenchymal destruction by the hemorrhage itself. These cysts can occur in the absence of posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus or increased intracranial pressure. Three of four infants who were observed for at least
Portal Toolkit Invalid Site URL porencephaly and hydranencephaly are fluid filled cavities in the cerebral 1 The aetiology and pathogenesis of porencephaly and hydranencephaly are http://ppv.ovid.com/pt/re/adcn/fulltext.00042223-199803000-00009.htm
Portal Toolkit Invalid Site URL Factor V Leiden and genetic defects of thrombophilia in childhood porencephaly . thrombophilia affect the risk of porencephaly in neonates and infants. http://ppv.ovid.com/pt/re/adcn/abstract.00042223-199803000-00009.htm