Neurology Specific Literature Search   
 
[home][thesaurus]
    

Enter your terms
above and click
the 'Search' button.
Showing articles 0 to 26 of 26

Filter Applied: corpus callosum,lesion of (Click to remove)

Clinical Reasoning: A Young Man with Reversible Paralysis, Cerebral White Matter Lesions, and Peripheral Neuropathy
Neurol 79: e70-e72, Zhong, L.,et al, 2012

A 47-Year-Old Man With an Upper Respiratory Infection, Acute Confusion, Dysarthria, and Ataxia
Neurol 100:978-983, Kubicki,K.,et al, 2023

A Woman in her 40s with Transient Neurological Symptoms, Migraine Headaches, and Hearing Loss
JAMA Neurol 76:504-505, Roshal, D.A.,et al, 2019

Cytotoxic Lesions of the Corpus Callosum Caused by Thermogenic Dietary Supplements
AJNR 40:1304-1308, Galnares-Olalde, J.A.,et al, 2019

Clinicopathologic Conference, Susacs Syndrome
NEJM 379:2152-2159, Case 37-2018, 2018

Man with Recurrent Paralysis and Cerebral White Matter Lesions
JAMA Neurol 74:599-600, Xiao, F., 2017

Cytotoxic Lesions of the Corpus Callosum That Show Restricted Diffusion: Mechanisms, Causes, and Manifestations
RadioGraphics 37:562-576, Starkey, J.,et al, 2017

Rotavirus-Associated Mild Encephalopathy with a Reversible Splenial Lesion (MERS)
BMC Infect Dis 15:446, Karampatsas, K.,et al, 2015

Early Diffusion MR Imaging Findings and Short-Term Outcome in Comatose Patients wtih Hypoglycemia
AJNR 33:904-909, Johkura, K.,et al, 2012

Clinical and Radiological Features of Rotavirus Cerebellitis
AJNR 31:1591-1595, Takanashi,J.,et al, 2010

Multiple Reversible MR Signal Changes Caused by Epstein-Barr Virus Encephalitis
AJNR 27:1447-1449, Hagemann,G.,et al, 2006

Clinicopath Conf., Primary Diffuse Large-B-Cell Lymphoma of the Brain
NEJM 352:185-194, Case 1-2005, 2005

Transient Lesion in the Splenium of the Corpus Callosum and Antiepileptic Drug Withdrawal
Neurol 65:1032-1036, Gurtler,S.,et al, 2005

Reversible Abnormalities of DWI in High-Altitude Cerebral Edema
Neurol 62:335-336, Wong,S.H.,et al, 2004

Influenza-Associated Encephalitis/Encephalopathy with a Reversible Lesion in the Splenium of the Corpus Callosum: A Case Report and Literature Review
AJNR 25:798-802, Takanashi,J.,et al, 2004

Clinically Mild Encephalitis Encephalopathy with a Reversible Splenial Lesion
Neurol 63:1854-1858, Tada,H.,et al, 2004

Reversible Corpus Callosum Lesion in Legionnaires Disease
JNNP 75:651-654, Morgan, J.C.,et al, 2004

Transient Lesion in the Splenium of the Corpus Callosum in an Epileptic Patient
Neurol 60:1838-1841, Mirsattari,S.M.,et al, 2003

Diffusion-Weighted Imaging Abnormalities in the Splenium After Seizures
Epilepsia 44:852-854, Oster,J.,et al, 2003

Transient Lesion in the Splenium of the corpus callosum: Three Further Cases in Epileptic Patients and a Pathophysiological Hypothesis
JNNP 70:459-463, Polster,T.,et al, 2001

Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging in 23 Patients with Mucopolysaccharidoses and the Effect of Bone Marrow Transplantation
Ann Neurol 50:79-92, Seto,T.,et al, 2001

Focal Lesion in the Splenium of the Corpus Callosum in Epileptic Patients:Antiepileptic Drug Toxicity
AJNR 20:125-129,131, Kim,S.S.,et al, 1999

Pregnant, Vomiting, and Coma
Lancet 353:1584, Hillbom,M.,et al, 1999

Susac Syndrome
Medicine 77:3-11, Papo,T.,et al, 1998

Marchiafava-Bignami Disease:Reversibility of Neuroimaging Abnormality
J Comput Assist Tomogr 22:503-504, Gass,A.,et al, 1998

Diffusion-Weighted MRI Characterized the Ischemic Lesion in Transient Global Amnesia
Neurol 51:901-903, Ay,H.,et al, 1998



Showing articles 0 to 26 of 26