Publications by authors named "Ryuichiro Hayashi"

A 33-year-old woman developed paresthesia in her right thumb approximately 30 minutes after receiving the BNT162b2 (Pfizer-BioNTech) severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccine. The paresthesia gradually spread to her right-side limbs and trunk, and cervical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a localized lesion in the right dorsal column. After glucocorticoid therapy, her symptoms and MRI findings improved.

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An 80-year-old woman presented with subacute right lower limb pain and bilateral lower limb weakness. MRI of the spine showed marked cauda equina enlargement with contrast enhancement. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examination showed elevated cell count, decreased glucose, and elevated protein.

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A 78-year-old woman in complete remission of mass-forming primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) showed diffuse leukoencephalopathy as well as corticospinal tract lesions with intense gadolinium enhancement on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). She died 3 months later. In line with the MRI findings, pathological examination revealed dense infiltration of atypical lymphoid cells, consistent with a diagnosis of lymphomatosis cerebri (LC)-type PCNSL.

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Foix-Chavany-Marie syndrome, which has been reported since the 19th century, is a cortical type of pseudobulbar palsy. Although previously most cases were due to acute recurrent stroke, recent reports have indicated that there are various causes, including infectious, developmental, epileptic and degenerative processes and various clinical courses, which may be transient or slowly progressive. Moreover, modern imaging techniques have revealed the significance of the injury of the white matter tract, such as the frontal aslant tract, rather than classical lesions of bilateral motor cortices.

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We report a 60-year-old woman with posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) who presented with left homonymous hemianopsia persisting for 5 years; the patient's condition was observed using static, but not kinetic, perimetry. This statokinetic dissociation of hemianopsia, which is often called Riddoch syndrome, might have been caused by a dysfunction of the right primary visual and visual association cortices, representing a functional imbalance within a disturbed visual cortex. In patients with PCA and visual field defects, both static and kinetic perimetry may be useful for understanding the extent of degeneration in the visual cortex, in addition to examinations of unilateral neglect.

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A 52-year-old woman, previously treated for gastric cancer, began hemodialysis (HD) to treat the onset of severe acidemia. After her initial HD sessions, she suffered from a prolonged coma for approximately ten days. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed diffuse leukoencephalopathy, with increased apparent diffusion coefficient.

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We herein report the case of a 19-year-old woman with facial diplegia and paresthesias (FDP) preceded by flu-like symptoms. We diagnosed the patient with a regional variant of Guillain-Barré syndrome due to decreased tendon reflexes, albuminocytological dissociation in the cerebrospinal fluid and demyelinating features on nerve conduction studies. The patient also had IgM anti-GalNAc-GD1a antibodies, and treatment with glucocorticoids was effective for treating the facial diplegia, but not paresthesia.

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Room tilt illusion, a misperception that the entire room is tilted, is a rare but nonspecific neurological symptom. We report a patient with Parkinson's disease who developed typical room tilt illusion. Single photon emission computed tomography demonstrated hypoperfusion of the posterior area of the right intraparietal sulcus, which is related to discriminating the surface orientation of three-dimensional objects.

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We report a case in which convergence movement was substituted for bilateral horizontal gaze palsy due to a pontine tegmental hemorrhage. When visual fixation was suppressed with Frenzel goggles (FG), substituted convergence movements were prominent in our patient. The observation suggests that both vergence eye movements and horizontal gaze movements act synergistically and lesioning of the version system results in overactivity of the convergence system after a pontine hemorrhage.

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A 72-year-old right handed woman developed amnesia, confabulation and abnormal (bizarre) verbal response after the left thalamic infarction. Clinical features including disorientation, euphoria and various kinds of paraphasia coincided in nonaphasic misnaming. MR images showed that lesions involved the genu of the internal capsule, the anteroventral nucleus, the lateroventral nucleus, intralaminar nuclei, the mamillothalamic tract and the region around the ventral thalamus.

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