Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Health_Conditions - Ophthalmoplegic Migraine

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-91 of 91    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Ophthalmoplegic Migraine:     more detail

81. Welcome To Zellers Pharmacy Online
2 weeks; has certain types of migraine headaches (including hemiplegic,basilar or ophthalmoplegic migraine); has severely reduced
http://www.mediresource.com/zellers/health/DrugInfo.asp?BrandNameID=1116

82. ::: Fondazione Pierfranco E Luisa Mariani :::
Translate this page ophthalmoplegic migraine Emicrania oftalmoplegica JM Prats Departementode Pediatria Hospital de Cruces, Barakaldo, Vizcaya, Spagna.
http://www.fondazione-mariani.org/italiano/formazione/corsi_aggiornamento/lanzi/
XIV° Corso di aggiornamento Emicrania e cefalea tensiva in età evolutiva
Migraine and tension-type headache in childhood and adolescence in collaborazione con:
IRCCS Istituto Neurologico Casimiro Mondino, Università degli Studi, Pavia
Università dell'Insubria, Varese
Istituto Nazionale Neurologico Carlo Besta, Milano Milano, Aula Magna dell'Università degli Studi
13 - 15 marzo 2002 Programma mercoledì 13 marzo 2002 mattino Introduzione al Corso
Giovanni Lanzi
Dipartimento di Clinica Neurologica e Psichiatria dell'Età Evolutiva
IRCCS Casimiro Mondino, Università degli Studi di Pavia Epidemiologia e clinica
Epidemiology and clinical issues
Chairs
Giuseppe Nappi Centro Cefalee IRCCS Casimiro Mondino, Università degli Studi di Pavia Camillo Mastropaolo Istituto di Neuropsichiatria Infantile, Università degli Studi di Sassari

83. Migraine1
Headache Jun, P29195, 1993. Harris, Stommel, Ward. MRI Findings in a Case ofophthalmoplegic migraine. Headache May, 33(5) P234-7, 1993. R. Lodi MD.
http://www.ibd.nrc.ca/~lee/Migraine.html

84. Migraine Headaches: One Type Of Vascular Headache
In ophthalmoplegic migraine, the pain is around the eye and is associatedwith a droopy eyelid, double vision, and other sight problems.
http://fmscanberra.tripod.com/mh.htm
Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated
Lyn Kelly
Best:
Enable Javascript Click here
and donate $20
to help our work.
FMS Canberra
Your safe place for personal healing
Click here to provide the hungry with the value of 1.1 cups of staple food. Please visit every day. By accessing this Web site you agree to be bound by the terms of our What's on our site? Search our Site:
Take a second to press our button.
Home

I look so good
The silver bullet Who we are ... Donations
Migraine Headaches: One Type Of Vascular Headache
The most common type of vascular headache is migraine. Migraine headaches are usually characterized by severe pain on one or both sides of the head, an upset stomach, and at times disturbed vision. Former basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar remembers experiencing his first migraine at age 14. The pain was unlike the discomfort of his previous mild headaches. "When I got this one I thought, 'This is a headache'," he says. "The pain was intense and I felt nausea and a great sensitivity to light. All I could think about was when it would stop. I sat in a dark room for an hour and it passed." Symptoms Of Migraine Abdul-Jabbar's sensitivity to light is a standard symptom of the two most prevalent types of migraine-caused headache: classic and common.

85. Is It A Migraine Or Heart Problem?
First let me describe the usual ophthalmoplegic migraine, usual jpresents with acuteattacks of third nerve palsy (which for the person with the migraine would
http://www.medhelp.org/forums/neuro/archive/12004.html
Advertisement
Welcome to
Med Help International

A not-for-profit organization Questions in The Neurology Forum are being answered by doctors from
The Cleveland Clinic , consistently ranked one of the best hospitals in America. Subject: Is it a migraine or heart problem?
Topic Area: Headache
Forum: The Neurology and Neurosurgery Forum
Question Posted By: Lori on Wednesday, November 18, 1998
About a year ago I began to have moments of extreme nausea and disorientation
when waking. I often feel a tingling in the back off my throat and eye. Usually, my heart
rate is increase also. My doctor diagnosed this as occular miagraines, and gave me nausea and pain medication for it. However, the nausea if very brief usually only ten to twenty minutes, and there is no pain so I never bothered to take it because they only make me drowsy after the fact. I have had migraines since the age of twelve and these episodes have no similar symptoms, i.e. Headache, sensitivty to sound and light, pain on one side of head. I have tried to link them to triggers like "regular" migrains but have been unable to do so as of yet. I only have them in the morning when waking

86. MIGRAINE
4. Complicated. basilar artery; hemiplegic; ophthalmoplegic. 5. migraine Variants. 3.ophthalmoplegic. 3rd nerve palsy ipsilateral to headache. 4. migraine Variants.
http://www.icondata.com/health/pedbase/files/MIGRAINE.HTM
  • Pediatric Database (PEDBASE)
  • Discipline: CNS
  • Last Updated: 5/22/94
    MIGRAINE
    DEFINITION:
    A recurrent headache separated by symtpom-free intervals accompanied by specific criteria.
    EPIDEMIOLOGY:
    • incidence: 4 - 10% of school-aged children
      • most common cause of recurrent headache in children
    • age of onset:
      • rare before age 5
    • risk factors:
      • familial (90%)
      PATHOGENESIS:
      • headaches in children first described in 1873 by William Henry Day and thought to be as a result of "bad arrangements in their lives".
      • classification of migraine into 2 groups first proposed by the Ad Hoc Committee on Classification of Headaches in 1962: classic and common
      • migraines may be caused by an inherited predisposition to vasomotor instability resulting in an unusual reactivity of the blood vessels so that initially the BV contract (aura) and then overexpand a few minutes later producing a throbbing headache
      • complicated migraine refers to the development of neurologic signs during a headache that persists following the termination of the HA
      TYPES:
      1. Classic
  • 87. Language French German Norwegian Spanish Italian Portuguese
    Glaser JS. 4 J Neuroophthalmol 2002 Sep;22(3)21521 Oculomotor ophthalmoplegicmigraine is it really migraine? Carlow TJ. Oculomotor
    http://www.ophthal.org/ORJ/journal/J Neuroophthalmol.shtml

    88. Neurology - Basilar Artery Migraine
    A good, though brief, description of basilar artery migraine from Vanderbilt Medical Center.Category Health Conditions and Diseases migraine Basilar...... Some migrane variants are common in children during the first years of life (ophthalmoplegicmigraine,and alternating hemiplegia of childhood), while others do
    http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/peds/pidl/neuro/basil.htm

    PIDL Home/ Contents
    Development Nutrition Acute Illness ... Psychosocial
    Neurology
    BASILAR ARTERY MIGRAINE There are a number of signs and symptoms which are related to the brainstem, cerebellum, and occipital cortex ischemia. Patients have been noted to have paresthesia around the mouth, tinnitus, nausea, vomiting, vertigo, ataxia, deafness, drop attacks, third nerve palsy, unilateral or bilateral visual loss, and diplopia. The most frequent neurologic symptom in Lapkin and Golden series was vertigo. Half of the children had one or more visual symptoms with transient bilateral blindness occurring in 5 of the 30. REFERENCES Lapkin, ML and Golden, GS. Basilar artery migraine. AJDC139: 278- 281; 1978. Appleton, R et al. Amaurosis fugax in teenagers. AJDC 142: 331- 333; 1988. Brown, JK. Migraine and migraine equivalents in children. Develop. Med. Child. Neurol. 19: 683- 692; 1977. Holquin, J and Fenichel G. Migraine. Journal of Pediatrics 70: 290- 297; 1967.

    89. Giant Cell Arteritis
    Headache onset Young Child Hemiplegic migraine Headache; Ophthalmoplegicmigraine Headache. Older Child, Adolescent and Young adult
    http://www.fpnotebook.com/NEU103.htm
    Home About Links Index ... Editor's Choice Paid Advertisement (click above). Please see the privacy statement Neurology Ophthalmology Headache Giant Cell Arteritis Examination Eye Neurologic Exam Oculocephalic Reflex Nystagmus Giant Cell Arteritis Cranial Arteritis Temporal Arteritis Granulomatous Arteritis Book Home Page Cardiovascular Medicine Dental Dermatology Emergency Medicine Endocrinology Gastroenterology General Medicine Geriatric Medicine Gynecology Hematology and Oncology HIV Infectious Disease Jokes Laboratory Neonatology Nephrology Neurology Obstetrics Ophthalmology Orthopedics Otolaryngology Pediatrics Pharmacology Prevention Psychiatry Pulmonology Radiology Rheumatology Sports Medicine Surgery Urology Chapter Neurology Index Autonomic Cerebellum Chorea Cranial Nerve Cognitive CSF Cardiovascular Medicine Demyelinating Disability Examination Ophthalmology Gynecology Headache Infectious Disease Laboratory General Level of Consciousness Motor Obstetrics Pediatrics Pharmacology Procedure Psychiatry Radiology Seizure Sensory Sports Medicine Surgery Tremor Page Ophthalmology Index Headache Temporal Arteritis
  • See Also Headache Headache Evaluation Epidemiology Closely associated with Polymyalgia Rheumatica Prevalence : 133 per 100,000 over age 50 years
  • 90. Karyn S. Huntting's Basilar Artery Migraine Page > Complicated Migraines
    category of complicated migraine. They are Retinal migraine, Ophthalmoplegicmigraine, and Hemiplegic migraine. They are not discussed
    http://s-2000.com/bam/bam_complicated_mig.html
    Home About New Bookstore ... Feedback Complicated Migraines
    What Are Complicated Migraines?
    Complicated migraines are migrainous infarctions (inadequate oxygenation of tissue) with neurologic or visual symptoms which continue past associated pain (if any at all) for at least 24 hours. They are a complicated phenomenon involving biochemical, neurogenic, and vascular components.
    Types of Complicated Migraine
    Aside from Basilar Migraine, several additional different types of migraines exist under the category of complicated migraine. They are Retinal Migraine, Ophthalmoplegic Migraine, and Hemiplegic Migraine. They are not discussed in detail in this site, though as a possibly very close "relative" of BAM, Hemiplegic Migraine, is discussed elsewhere in this site. Click Here to Visit Karyn's Other Web Sites! free stuff humor sweepstakes living ...
    Karyn S. Huntting
    and Solutions 2000

    91. UK Department Of Ophthalmology - Dr. Pearson's Publications
    Neurology 5322042205, 1999. O'Halloran HS, Lee WB, Baker RS, PEARSON PA OphthalmoplegicMigraine With Unusual Features. Headache 39 670-673, 1999.
    http://www.mc.uky.edu/eye/pearson.asp
    Dr. Pearson's Publications: PUBLICATIONS Cheng CK, Berger A, PEARSON PA , Jaffe GJ, Ashton PA: Intravitreal Sustained-Release Dexamethasone Device in the Treatment of Experimental Uveitis. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 36:442-453, 1995. Hainsworth D, PEARSON PA , Conklin J, Ashton P: Sustained release intravitreal dexamethasone. J. Ocular Pharm, 12:57-63, 1996. PEARSON PA , Jaffe GJ, Martin DF, Cordahi GJ, Grossniklaus H, Schmeisser ET, Ashton P: Evaluation of a delivery system providing long term release of cyclosporine. Arch Ophthalmol, 114/3:311-317, 1996. Arch Ophthalmol (Indian edition), 3:437, 1996. Enyedi L, PEARSON PA , Ashton P, Jaffe GJ: An intravitreal device providing sustained release of cyclosporine and dexamethasone. Current Eye Res, 15/5:549-557, 1996. Handa JJ

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 5     81-91 of 91    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

    free hit counter