Protox inhibitors are applied as foliar sprays, thus causing very rapid cellular collapse and desiccation of many troublesome weeds in the presence of light. In many respects, they appear to be ideal herbicides, because they act rapidly and do not harm mammals under normal conditions. The main limitation to their widespread adoption is that few crops are naturally resistant to them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIR 5790, an arylthiadiazolone herbicide structurally related to oxadiargyl and oxadiazon, was synthesized. The herbicidal activity and mode of action of IR 5790 were investigated. This herbicide has broad-spectrum pre-emergence activity against both dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous weeds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Nephrol
September 2000
We report a 20-month-old girl with postdiarrheal (Shiga toxin) hemolytic uremic syndrome and severe encephalopathy. Magnetic resonance (MR) images were obtained in the acute phase of the disease and after 10 months. The first MR images showed widespread high signal intensity on T2-weighted and low signal intensity on T1-weighted images, in deep and subcortical white matter; the splenium of the corpus callosum was also involved, as well as cerebellar hemispheres.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Nephrol
August 2000
Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is associated with vascular lesions, such as renal artery stenosis, and secondary hypertension. The real prevalence is largely unknown, particularly in children. We observed 27 patients with NF1, mean age 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bone Miner Res
November 1999
Low bone mineral density (BMD) and increased bone turnover are common features of untreated hyperthyroidism in adult patients. The effect of treatment on BMD is still controversial. BMD and bone metabolism in hyperthyroid children have not been thoroughly investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is a recently described inherited disorder. The pathologic gene maps on chromosome 19. The clinical spectrum of the disease consists of recurrent strokes, migraine, transient ischemic attacks, mood changes, and dementia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC) is a form of peripheral lung adenocarcinoma growing as a single layer of malignant cells along the walls of terminal airways. The existence of BAC as a separate clinico-pathological entity has been a matter of controversy, mainly because its histogenesis is uncertain and it is not easily distinguishable from conventional lung adenocarcinoma (CLA). Three subtypes of BAC have been described using histological and cytological criteria: mucinous, non-mucinous, and sclerosing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAJNR Am J Neuroradiol
October 1994
Purpose: To describe the CT and MR findings in the brain and spinal cord of patients with cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis and to seek possible correlations between clinical, biochemical (cholestanol levels), and neuroimaging findings.
Methods: Ten patients with well-defined clinical and biochemical diagnoses of cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis were examined. Brain CT was performed in eight cases.
A series of cases of epilepsy with associated bilateral occipital calcifications (EBOC) without signs of phakomatosis and without any disorders known to produce cerebral calcifications have been reported. It is unclear whether EBOC is an incomplete variant of Sturge-Weber disease (SWD) or if it is a different, as yet undefined encephalopathy. We describe four new cases of EBOC that are different clinically by age of onset, type, course, severity of epilepsy, and associated cognitive deficits but that are linked by similar neuroradiologic findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors describe magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings in 15 subjects with different clinical stages of Leber's disease. A few and no characteristic abnormalities of the optic nerve signal were found. Nevertheless, MRI can be considered as a useful tool to differentiate optic neuritis together with visual and brainstem auditory evoked potentials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
February 1991
The presence of a dense appearance of the horizontal part of the middle cerebral artery (the "dense middle cerebral artery sign") was looked for on CT scans taken on admission in 90 consecutive patients with ischemic stroke in the carotid artery distribution. The outcome of the 14 patients with the sign was poorer than that of 76 patients without the sign (Odds ratio 4.3).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of Herpes Simplex Encephalitis with a benign course was present in a 66-year-old patient. A year after the acute phase of the illness, the patient continued to suffer from inability to fix verbal material in memory. During the acute phase, cerebral NMR revealed a large evolving lesion in the right temporal region, and an old lesion located in the same region of the opposite hemisphere.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMulti-infarct dementia (MID) indicates a dementia disorder primarily caused by multiple cerebral infarcts. Since other pathogenetic mechanisms cause vascular dementia we evaluated clinical, CT scan and CSF neurochemical parameters of 134 MID and 67 PVD (probable vascular dementia) patients. We found no differences with regard to the presence of major risk factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne case of cystic lesion of the third ventricle is reported. The authors stress the importance of CT combined with ventriculography for the diagnosis of the intraventricular cystic lesions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFItal J Neurol Sci
December 1985
A series of 100 consecutive new outpatients attending the neuroradiology service for a cranial CT scan between 1 October and 24 December 1984 were analyzed. On the day of the investigation each patient was examined by a neurologist, who gave his opinion on the value of a CT scan. The neurologist's ratings were then compared with the CT reports.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 3-yr follow-up study on the trend of memory performance in 9 elderly subjects with selective memory defects, which was carried out in an attempt to clarify the evolution of the disorder, revealed marked worsening of sensory visual memory, retention capacity and recent memory. No other mental function was compromised. The results of this study suggest that the onset of a selective memory defect in the elderly is not necessarily the expression of a demential amnestic syndrome, but rather the manifestation of a senile brain deterioration limited to the anatomo-functional memory system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neurochir (Wien)
March 1985
Neoplasms of the third ventricle are lesions arising within the ventricular cavity, often free but more often pedunculated. True third ventricle tumours are surgically removable. In a consecutive surgical series of 580 intracranial tumours the authors operated on 27 lesions of the third ventricle, 7 of which were benign gliomas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a case of bilateral orbital sarcoidosis without other systemic lesions. Steroid therapy did not improve the clinical status of the patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBecause of the frequency and seriousness of side effects observed after radiculography, due to, among the other things, the amount of contrast medium, the authors describe a method that gives diagnostically satisfactory results using a low dose of contrast and a tangent-beam technique. Among 106 patients undergoing radiculography with a tangent-beam technique and Iopamidol, only 4 developed mild side effects, namely headache in three cases and headache with nausea in one.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThrombolytic therapy was carried out on four patients with brain stem stroke due to thromboembolism of the vertebrobasilar system. Diagnosis was confirmed by angiography. Clinical and instrumental findings indicated a very poor prognosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors report an atypical case of Goldenhar syndrome characterized by hemifacial and cranial hypoplasia associated with severe microtia and anophthalmia on the right side, antimongoloid palpebral fissures, epibulbar epidermoid, corneal anesthesia and preauricular tags on the left side. The bilateral presence of characteristic features of Goldenhar syndrome is rare and lends support to the possibility that the patient presents an intermediate form of developmental defect of the first branchial arch. The differential diagnosis is discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF