Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Nervous System Diseases Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 9 of 9

Full-Text Articles in Nervous System Diseases

Physiological Response And Tissue Damage Following Different Depths Of Impact In A Rodent Model Of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury, Haven K. Predale, Christopher P. Knapp, Barry D. Waterhouse, Rachel L. Navarra May 2021

Physiological Response And Tissue Damage Following Different Depths Of Impact In A Rodent Model Of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury, Haven K. Predale, Christopher P. Knapp, Barry D. Waterhouse, Rachel L. Navarra

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is a serious public health concern that can result in significant neurological and behavioral deficit. mTBI results from impact to the head and can be repetitive in nature, especially in sports and domestic violence cases. Our laboratory studies the effects of repetitive mTBI on risky choice behavior in rodents using a closed-head controlled cortical impact (CH-CCI) model of injury and a well-established probabilistic discounting task that assesses risk-based decision-making behavior. We have recently found that females, but not males, display transient increases in risky choice behavior following three CH-CI’s delivered at 5.5m/s velocity and 2.5 …


A Novel Case Of Hhv-6 Meningoencephalitis In An Immunocompetent Adult, Justin Berkner, Kishan Patel May 2021

A Novel Case Of Hhv-6 Meningoencephalitis In An Immunocompetent Adult, Justin Berkner, Kishan Patel

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

We present a case of a 56-year-old female who presented with HHV6 encephalitis. She initially presented with altered mental status. Our patient ultimately made a full recovery several days later with only some mild intermittent episodes of confusion. Currently there are no other case reports of HHV6 encephalitis in the adult population.


Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (Pres), Brittany Fera, Andrew Caravello May 2021

Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (Pres), Brittany Fera, Andrew Caravello

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a clinical and radiographic syndrome that describes certain neuroimaging findings in association with clinical symptoms such as headache, seizure, encephalopathy and vision changes. Classically, PRES is associated with poorly controlled hypertension, and patients present with elevated blood pressure in addition to their symptoms. Most importantly, imaging findings and symptoms are typically reversible, and are a separate entity from ischemic or hemorrhagic cerebrovascular accidents or autoimmune causes of similar symptoms, such as multiple sclerosis.


Meralgia Paresthetica As A Complication Of Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy In A Post Partum Teenager, Puthenmadam Radhakrishnan, Wajihah Memon, Prasanna Tati May 2021

Meralgia Paresthetica As A Complication Of Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy In A Post Partum Teenager, Puthenmadam Radhakrishnan, Wajihah Memon, Prasanna Tati

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

An 18 year old G1P1 female, 3 months postpartum presented to the emergency department with abdominal pain that was diagnosed as cholelithiasis and choledocholithiasis. Following a cholecystectomy surgery, the patient developed weakness and gait abnormality that was diagnosed as neuralgia.

Meralgia paresthetica is such an understudied diagnosis that its incidence is unknown. Patients who are 30-85 years old, obese, diabetic, and/or pregnant are at an increased risk for the condition. This case calls attention to the underdiagnosis of meralgia paresthetica in pediatric patients with comorbidities. As aforementioned risk factors increase in the pediatric population due to societal and environmental factors, …


Initial Multiple Sclerosis Diagnosis In The Emergency Department, Adam Kandil, James Espinosa, Henry Schuitema May 2021

Initial Multiple Sclerosis Diagnosis In The Emergency Department, Adam Kandil, James Espinosa, Henry Schuitema

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Multiple sclerosis is a chronic autoimmune disease consisting of inflammation, demyelination and loss of axon integrity in the central nervous system. Like many autoimmune diseases, its severity, initial presentation and symptomatology vary. MS is typically onset in young adults between twenty to forty years old, and has been found two-three times more likely in women than in men. As a chronic illness, like many others, it can present in the emergency department as an undifferentiated neurologic complaint. This is a case report of new onset multiple sclerosis in the emergency department, outlining the importance of a broad set of differential …


Syncope Or Seizure?, Joseph Heron, Kevin Dwyer May 2021

Syncope Or Seizure?, Joseph Heron, Kevin Dwyer

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Syncope is a common complaint in the emergency departments, accounting for 1-2% of visits, and can approach admission rates of a staggering 85%. The causes and conditions can be numerous, ranging from benign to life threatening. A good background history can go a long way in determining the etiology of the patient’s syncope. We describe a case of an elderly male who presented with a reported chief complaint of seizures, another syncope-mimic seen in the emergency department. He had a history of CAD, HTN, AAA, and osteoarthritis but no prior history of cardiac arrhythmia, MI, or structural heart disease. The …


Spontaneous Conus Medullary Infarction In The Absence Of Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Bavica Gummadi, Jaffer Ahmed, Swarna Rajagopalan May 2021

Spontaneous Conus Medullary Infarction In The Absence Of Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Bavica Gummadi, Jaffer Ahmed, Swarna Rajagopalan

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Spinal cord infarction (SCI) is rare and most often occurs in individuals with predisposing cardiovascular risk factors and traumatic injuries

As there are no distinct diagnostic criteria for SCI, diagnosis is difficult in patients presenting without predisposing factors and is often mistaken for transverse myelitis.

Delay in early diagnosis contributes to the high case fatality rate of SCI.

This case highlights the importance of including SCI in the differential of a patient with acute paraparesis even in the absence of co-existing risk factors.


From Left Arm Numbness To Incidental Pituitary Macroadenoma, Melissa Itidiare Locke May 2021

From Left Arm Numbness To Incidental Pituitary Macroadenoma, Melissa Itidiare Locke

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Pituitary adenomas are the most common tumors in the sella turcica. The symptoms of vision loss or change is due to the anatomical location of the pituitary tumor beneath the optic nerve. (2) As the tumor grows in size it can compress the optic nerve and vision changes will occur. Our case demonstrates a 40 year old male who had one brief 1 time episode of blurry vison and dull intermittent headaches that was not debilitating in nature. A discovery of pituitary adenoma prior to onset of symptoms of constant vision changes or elevated hormones are crucial to a more …


C25: The “Spot Sign”: A Predictor Of Hematoma Expansion, Mckenzie Merritt Apr 2021

C25: The “Spot Sign”: A Predictor Of Hematoma Expansion, Mckenzie Merritt

Annual Research Symposium

No abstract provided.