84 research outputs found
Non-progressive cerebellar ataxia with previous acute cerebellar injury of undetermined origin: a puzzling neurological disorder
Is Perceived Discrimination in Pregnancy Prospectively Linked to Postpartum Depression? Exploring the Role of Education
Cardiovascular malformation in infant deaths. 10-year clinical and epidemiological study
The infant mortality from cardiovascular malformations in a region with a population of 2 million inhabitants during a 10-year period has been studied. The study involved validation of the diagnoses and judgement whether the cardiovascular malformation was the dominating or a contributing cause of death. It is shown that the incidence of fatal cardiovascular malformations is probably overestimated in the official death statistics. Evaluation of the clinical findings and necropsy reports are important aids in obtaining more reliable figures of the incidence. The rate of referral of infants with cardiovascular malformations has increased during the period of this study, so that the number of operable lesions not referred has decreased. The infant mortality rate, found in this study, of 1.33 per 1000 liveborn babies constitutes about 20 per cent of all liveborn infants with cardiovascular malformations. The most common lesions found in those who died belonged to the group constituting the hypoplastic left heart syndrome. The proportion of this type of malformation, about 20 per cent of all those dying, is higher than in other similar studies. This difference can probably be explained by variations in selection and classification.</p
Non-progressive ataxia: origins, brain pathology and impairments in 78 swedish children
This population-based study refers to 78 Swedish children with non-progressive ataxia from a total population of 3.1 million inhabitants. Inclusion criteria were ataxic gait without any signs of spasticity, dyssynergia, dysmetria and intention tremor. CT and/or MRI studies were available from 70 patients (90%). Infratentorial pathology was revealed in 27%, and findings were considered normal in 61%. If CT was normal, of recent date and of good quality, MRI did not add any new information. In half of the cases with pathological CT, however, MRI provided new information. The origin was considered prenatal in 45% (familial in 17%), perinatal in 4% and unclassifiable in 51%. 60% were mentally retarded; in the rest, cognitive development was near normal (18%) or normal (22%). Speech development was delayed in 88%, and 58% had visual dysfunction
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