Publications by authors named "Delandsheer E"

This study of juvenile distal cerebral ischaemia is based on 55 patients aged from 18 to 30 years. The authors describe the circumstances of discovery, as well as the clinical features and the course of the disease which may be severe and lead to non-resolutive neurological accidents and sometimes dementia. Paraclinical evaluation includes capillaroscopy, finger and toe pads biopsy (which clearly shows a pathological process with fibrocellular promontories narrowing the lumen of arterioles), and above all angiography which displays two typical signs: arterial narrowness and bands of peripheral ischaemia.

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Amyloid angiopathy is a common pathological finding in Alzheimer's disease. It usually involves leptomeningeal and cortical vessels but spares the white matter. It may cause lobar cerebral hemorrhages at a late stage of the disease.

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A case of femoral palsy associated with chronic pain sensible to Carbamazepine, secondary to iliacus haematoma during anticoagulant therapy is reported. Late femoral nerve decompression followed by transcutaneous neurostimulation permit the normalization of the sensory nerve conduction and a complete clinical recovery. The localizations of hemorrhage and nervous compression are discussed.

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SEP contribution to diagnosis is interesting but limited to hardly examined complete syndromes in an emergency care unit. The predictive value of SEP is high if electrophysiological data are correlated the 10th. day with the clinical status.

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Juvenile distal cerebral ischemia has been attributed to small artery atherosclerosis (Arnold, Benoit, Merlen, Dobbelaere, Delandsheer, 1979), based on clinicopathologic findings in one male patient and results of big toe pulp biopsy in three other cases. Pathological findings were obstruction of small artery lumens by hypertrophic endothelium and loose fibrocellular bands, their origin being the result possibly of partial intimalization of media by elastic neogenesis. Appearances were similar to those described by Dahl in human cerebral atherosclerosis in 1976, and approached those of the initial stages of experimental atheroma (Ross, Glomset, 1976).

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The use of Leão's spreading depression for studying the action of connections between central structures is examined. Extracellular recordings of cortical and striatal spreading depressions with single microelectrodes are presented using both a DC channel and spike recordings systems. Striatal spreading depression was produced by peristaltic perfusion of a KC1 solution via a push-pull cannula system.

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Twenty-six years after a total right hemispherectomy for tumor when thirteen years old, a right-handed patient presented with disturbances of equilibrium, urinary incontinence, and a marked reduction in motor impulses, in spite of a subnormal intelligence quotient (0.85). Computed tomography examinations suggested the presence of a normal pressure hydrocephalus.

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