1.Complete Paraparesis Following Resection of Parasagittal Meningioma: Recovering Function with an Early Intensive Neurorehabilitation Program
Mazlina Mazlan ; Aishah Ahmad Fauzi
The Medical Journal of Malaysia 2011;66(4):371-373
Paraparesis can occur as a primary presentation of brain
pathology at the motor strip along the parasagittal region. It could also occur as a neurological complication especially following resection of parasagittal meningioma with infiltration of the superior sagittal sinus (SSS). We report a case of a complete paraparesis immediately following resection of bilateral parasagittal meningioma with infiltration of the middle third of the SSS. A gradual
improvement in neurological recovery and functional
outcome was observed over a period of one year after
undergoing an intensive neurorehabilitation program
beginning from the acute inpatient phase post surgery.
2.Risk factors of diabetic foot Charcot arthropathy: a case-control study at a Malaysian tertiary care centre.
Aishah Ahmad FAUZI ; Tze Yang CHUNG ; Lydia Abdul LATIF
Singapore medical journal 2016;57(4):198-203
INTRODUCTIONThis study aimed to determine the risk factors of diabetic Charcot arthropathy of the foot among diabetic patients with and without foot problems.
METHODSThis was a case-control study involving diabetic patients attending the Diabetic Foot Care and Wound Management Clinic at University Malaya Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, from June 2010 to June 2011. Data on sociodemographic profiles, foot factors and diabetes characteristics was collected and analysed.
RESULTSA total of 48 diabetic patients with Charcot arthropathy of the foot were identified. Data from these 48 patients was compared with those of 52 diabetic patients without foot problems. Up to 83.3% of patients with diabetic Charcot arthropathy presented with unilateral Charcot foot, most commonly located at the midfoot (45.8%). Patients with a history of foot problems, including foot ulcer, amputation, surgery or a combination of problems, had the highest (26-time) likelihood of developing Charcot arthropathy (odds ratio 26.4; 95% confidence interval 6.4-109.6). Other significant risk factors included age below 60 years, more than ten years' duration of diabetes mellitus and the presence of nephropathy.
CONCLUSIONA history of prior diabetic foot problems is the greatest risk factor for developing diabetic Charcot arthropathy, compared with other risk factors such as diabetes characteristics and sociodemographic profiles. Preventive management of diabetic foot problems in the primary care setting and multidisciplinary care are of paramount importance, especially among chronic diabetic patients.
Arthropathy, Neurogenic ; diagnosis ; epidemiology ; etiology ; Diabetic Foot ; complications ; epidemiology ; Female ; Follow-Up Studies ; Humans ; Incidence ; Malaysia ; epidemiology ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Retrospective Studies ; Risk Assessment ; Risk Factors ; Tertiary Care Centers ; statistics & numerical data