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Borrelia burgdorferi
Bacterial spirochete that causes Lyme disease transmitted by ticks
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)
"Degeneration upper and lower motor neurons in the cerebral cortex, brainstem, and spinal cord characterized by progressive muscle weakness leading to respiratory failure and death (2 to 5 years from symptom onset). Person has normal intellectual and sensory function until death
Arteriovenous malformation
Arteries feed directly into veins through a vascular tangle of vessels
Autonomic hyperreflexia (dysreflexia)
A syndrome resulting from afferent stimuli which causes intense sympathetic discharge originating with spinal cord injury above the major splanchnic outflow characterized by hypertension, bradycardia, sweating of the forehead, severe headache, and piloerection on distention of the bladder and rectum.
Cavernous angiomas
Sinusoidal collections of blood vessels without interspersed brain tissue
Cerebellar astrocytoma
Brain tumor of the right or left cerebellar hemisphere and cause symptoms on the same side as the tumor including head tilt, limb ataxia, and nystagmus.
Cerebral infarction
Area of the brain loses blood supply because of vascular occlusion
Chronic paroxysmal hemicrania
Cluster-type headache that occurs with more daily frequency (4 to 12/day) but with shorter duration (20-120 minutes)
Classic cerebral concussion
Diffuse brain injury with cerebral disconnection from the brainstem reticular activating system and is a phenomenon of physiologic, neurologic dysfunction without substantial anatomic disruption. Immediate loss of consciousness for less than 6 hours with retrograde and anterograde amnesia.
Cluster headache
Headache characterized by unilateral severe pain over the eye and forehead that lasts 30 minutes to 2 hours, several attacks per day can occur over a period of days followed by long periods of remission
Contrecoup
Brain injury resulting from the brain hitting the inside of the skull on the side opposite the site of blunt force trauma.
Contusion
Bruise produced by bleeding into the skin or underlying tissues from an insult that did not break the skin but did rupture blood vessels.
Coup
Brain injury that occurs on the same side of a blunt force to the head; it results from the rapid acceleration and then deceleration of the brain as it hits the inside of the skull. Injury directly below the point of impact.
Diffuse brain injury (diffuse axonal injury)
Injury to neuronal axons in many areas of the brain caused by stretching and shearing forces received during brain injury.
Embolic stroke
Stroke caused by blockage of cerebral vessels.
Encephalitis
Inflammation of the brain usually caused by a virus.
Ependymoma
Intracranial tumor that is most commonly found in children and typically arises from the inner lining of the fourth ventricle and the spinal canal.
Extradural Hematoma
Hemorrhaging usually from an artery most commonly associated with a skull fracture after a head injury
Extramedullary tumors
Tumor originating from tissues outside the spinal cord including the meninges, epidura tissue or vertebral structures
Fasciculation
Involuntary muscular twitching
Fusiform aneurysm (giant aneurysm)
Large aneurysm that stretches to affect the entire circumference of the arterial wall.
Guillain-Barré syndrome
Acute, inflammatory, autoimmune disease triggered by a preceding bacterial or viral infection that causes demyelination of neurons resulting in denervation and atrophy of muscle with numbness, pain, parasthesis or weakness
Hemorrhagic stroke (intracranial hemorrhage)
Hypertension or ruptured aneurysms that result in bleeding in the brain, typically increases intracranial pressure and may lead to death.
Intramedullary tumors
Tumor originating within neural tissue
Lacunar stroke
Strokes caused by the occlusion (microinfarct) of a small branch of a larger blood vessel associated with smoking, diabetes and hypertension
Lyme disease
Tick-borne spirochete bacterial (Borrelia burgdorferi) infection that is characterized by a rash in the area of the bite, headache, neck stiffness, chills, fever, myalgia, arthralgia, malaise, fatigue, and possible development of arthritis in large joints.
Meningioma
A slow-growing, often encapsulated mass of cells derived from arachnoid tissue in the dural membrane that is usually benign but increases intracranial pressure.
Meningitis
Inflammation of the membranes covering the brain and spinal cord associated with an infection from bacteria, viruses, parasites or toxins
Metastasis
Spread of cancer to other parts of the body
Migraine
Headache that usually begins in the temporal region unilaterally after vascular changes of cranial arteries and may cause irritability, nausea, vomiting, constipation or diarrhea, and photophobia.
Mild concussion
Temporary axonal disturbances without the loss of consciousness in response to a violent blow, jarring, shaking, or other closed head injury.
Multiple sclerosis
Chronic, autoimmune, demyelinating disease of the central nervous system that causes inflammation, axonal degeneration and scarring of myelin sheaths.
Myasthenia gravis
Neuromuscular disorder caused by an autoimmune response in which antibodies to acetylcholine receptors impair neuromuscular transmission.
Mycotic aneurysm
Aneurysm that is caused by bacterial or fungal growth in the vessel wall or infection of a arteriosclerotic aneurysm.
Myelopathy
Degeneration of the spinal cord
Neurofibroma or schwannoma
Benign nerve sheath tumor in the peripheral nervous system
Neurogenic shock
Sudden loss of the sympathetic nervous system signals to the smooth muscle in vessel walls, causing vasodilation, hypotension, bradycardia and hypothermia
Neuropathy
Degeneration of the nervous system
Capillary telangiectasis
Dilated capillaries with interspersed brain tissue deep in the brain
Oligodendroglioma
Benign nerve sheath tumor in the central nervous system
Radiculitis
Inflammation of a spinal nerve root
Saccular aneurysm (berry aneurysm)
A slowly progressinganeurysm that affects only a portion of the circumference of the arterial wall and may be the result of congenital anomalies or degeneration.
Spinal shock
A complete loss of reflex function in skeletal muscles, bladder, bowel, sexual function and automic control below the level of the lesion
Stenosis
Narrowing or stricture of a passage or vessel
Spondylolisthesis
Stress factor allowing the vertebra to slide forward I relation to the vertebra below
Spondylolysis
Degenerative process of the vertebral column and associated soft tissue
Subdural hematoma
Collection of blood between the inner surface of the dura mater and the surface of the brain caused by rupture of veins
Tension headache
Headache caused by emotional strain or overwork that tends to be focused in the occipital region and can be continuous for months.
Thrombotic stroke (cerebral thrombosis)
Arterial occlusions in vessels supplying the brain or intracranial vessels caused by atherosclerosis or inflammation.
Transient ischemic attack
Brief episode of neurologic dysfunction, symptoms typically last less than 1 hour, no evidence of infarction
Venous angioma
Primitive embryologic veins in a radial pattern feeidng a central vein