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- BookKaren L. Roos, editor.Summary: This book is an invaluable resource for the diagnosis and management of neurological illnesses in the emergency setting. It emphasizes the quality of prognosis to be contingent on the prompt management of these illnesses... Emergency Neurology, Second Edition is an excellent reference for neurologists, emergency room physicians, internists, neurology residents, emergency medicine residents, and internal medicine residents.
Contents:
1. Headache in the Emergency Department
2. Low Back Pain Emergencies
3. Dizziness and Vertigo Presentations in the Emergency Department
4. Syncope
5. Acute Visual Loss
6. Diplopia, Third Nerve Palsies, and Sixth Nerve Palsies
7. Facial Nerve Palsy
8. Evaluation and Management of Acute Ischemic Stroke
9. Intracerebral Hemorrhage
10. Seizures and Status Epilepticus
11. Central Nervous System Infections
12. Guillain-Barré Syndrome
13. Spinal Cord Compression and Myelopathies
14. Movement Disorder Emergencies.-15. Encephalopathy
16. Acute Respiratory Failure in Neuromuscular Disorders
17. Coma, Disorders of Consciousness, and Brain Death
18. Neurotoxicology Emergencies. - ArticleBravo Piris J.Med Cutan Ibero Lat Am. 1977;5(3):189-96.13 patients with Pityriasis Lichenoides are studied clinical and histologically, showing a clinical polymorphism of the lesions, mainly in the papulous, vesiculous, and necrotic ones. The data about age, sex, evolution and response to the treatment in the present study are similar to those found by other authors. Constantly, we found, a variable degree of vasculitis. In almost all the cases there was a damage of the epithelium --exoserosis and exocytosis--, as well as presence in some cases, of red cells extravasated within the epidermis. In upper dermis we found in all biopsies, divers degrees of perivascular cell infiltration mainly composed of lymphocytes and histiocytes with predominance of the last ones, in five cases. In the majority of our cases, there was a strong relationship between the clinical and the histological aspects, but in some cases, mild lesions showed an acute microscopical picture. We are of the opinion that Pityriasis Lichenoides must be considered as a different entity from Parapsoriasis. In addition, we think that PL, is a clinical picture that manifests itself as a chronic or an acute form, and both types can be seen in the disease evolution. Finally, we could not find an evident influence and a positive response to the treatment in our patients with the classical therapeutics.