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  1. Moyamoya Disease Update
  2. Moyamoya Disease
  3. The Official Parent's Sourcebook on Moyamoya Disease: A Revised and Updated Directory for the Internet Age by Icon Health Publications, 2002-11
  4. Moyamoya Disease by Jiro Suzuki, 1986-06
  5. Moyamoya disease: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Neurological Disorders</i> by Dawn, MS, CGC Cardeiro, 2005
  6. Moyamoya disease and aortic coarctation in a patient with common brachiocephalic trunk/Moyamoya hastaligi ve aort koarktasyonunun eslik bir brakiyosefalik ... of Cardiology (Anadolu Kardiyoloji Dergisi) by Kadir Babaoglu, Tevfik Demir, et all 2007-03-01
  7. Nursing issues in caring for children with moyamoya vasculopathy and their families.(Disease/Disorder overview): An article from: Journal of Neuroscience Nursing by Selina Y.C. Hune, Gabrielle A. deVeber, et all 2007-02-01
  8. The Official Parent's Sourcebook on Moyamoya Disease A Revised and Updated Directory for the Internet Age by Icon Health Publications, 1980
  9. Tracking recovery in a case of Moyamoya-induced dysarthria.(Report): An article from: Journal of Medical Speech - Language Pathology by Cheryl L. Giddens, Glenda J. Ochsner, 2009-09-01
  10. Moyamoya: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Genetic Disorders, 2nd ed.</i> by David, MD Greenberg, 2005

41. Arch Neurol -- Page Not Found
Hemidystonia and Hemichoreoathetosis as an Initial Manifestation of moyamoya diseaseAuthor Information Chul Hyoung Lyoo, MD; Seung Hun Oh, MD; JinYang Joo, MD
http://archneur.ama-assn.org/issues/v57n10/abs/nob00014.html
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42. Moyamoya Disease
only. moyamoya disease,, Print this article, a moyamoya disease, Fig.1 a, b. Lateral and AP right carotid angiogram. The supraclinoidal
http://www.amershamhealth.com/medcyclopaedia/Volume VI 1/MOYAMOYA DISEASE.asp
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*For Medical Professionals only, registration required Moyamoya disease, a progressive occlusive disease of the basal cerebral vessels forming the circle of Willis, of unknown aetiology. The clinical presentation is characterized by repeated ischaemic episodes in children and adolescents; the severity of the neurological deficits depends on the rapidity of progression, and the extent of the disease. Progressive occlusion of the distal portion of the internal carotid arteries and of the proximal segments of the middle cerebral arteries is the angiographic hallmark of the disease together with a peculiar collateral circulation that involves meningeal vessels with transdural anastomosis and penetrating vessels of the basal ganglia. Hypertrophy of lenticulostriate arteries and thalamoperforating arteries leads to the characteristic appearance first described in the Japanese literature as the "puff of smoke" or Moyamoya. Although MR can show the infarcted areas of the brain the diagnostic modality of choice is cerebral angiography ( Fig.1

43. Moyamoya Disease
by only one click … For Medical Professionals only. moyamoya disease,,Print this article, meaning 'puff of smoke' in Japanese, a
http://www.amershamhealth.com/medcyclopaedia/Volume VII/MOYAMOYA DISEASE.asp
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Browse entry words starting with: A B C D ... Other characters
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*For Medical Professionals only, registration required Moyamoya disease, meaning 'puff of smoke' in Japanese, a term used to describe the appearance of multiple collateral vessels, usually lenticulostriate and thalamostriate vessels, seen on cerebral angiography in patients with a vasculopathy characterised by progressive stenosis of the distal internal carotid arteries and the major intracranial arteries. The posterior circulation is less commonly involved. Though the condition is seen in adults 50% of reported cases of moya-moya syndrome occur in patients under 10 years, with 70% under 20% years. Patients usually present with transient ischaemic attacks, headache or seizures. Familial cases of the condition have been reported in Japan. The condition may also be seen in patients with phakomatosis, such as neurofibromatosis type 1 and tuberous sclerosis Downs syndrome , following radiation therapy, polyarteritis nodosa and Takayasus arteritis , and sickle cell diseases . When no cause is found the condition is known as moya-moya disease. The definitive diagnosis is made on cerebral angiography where stenoses in the distal internal carotid and intracranial circulation are seen in association with multiple small collateral vessels in the region of the thalamostriate and lenticulostriate arteries.

44. Nature Publishing Group
Case Report. moyamoya disease associated with renovascular disease in a young AfricanBrazilianpatient. Keywords. moyamoya disease; renovascular hypertension.
http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/jhh/journal/v15/n7/abs/1001207a

45. Health Library - Moyamoya Disease
moyamoya disease. None. General Discussion. moyamoya disease is a progressivedisease that affects the blood vessels in the brain (cerebrovascular).
http://www.laurushealth.com/library/healthguide/illnessconditions/topic.asp?hwid

46. 1Up Health Moyamoya Disease - Rare Disorders
moyamoya disease . Read detailed information about moyamoya disease . Search 1Up Health.1Up Health Diseases Conditions Rare Disorders moyamoya disease.
http://www.1uphealth.com/medical/disease/rare-disorder-disease/moyamoya-disease.

47. 1Up Health > Health Links Directory > Conditions And Diseases: Rare Disorders: M
Sites. Chorus Notecard Document A definition of moyamoya disease alongwith clinical and radiographic finding. EMedicine MMD An
http://www.1uphealth.com/links/rare-disorders-moyamoya.html
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... Rare Disorders : Moyamoya Description
See Related Categories Health: Conditions and Diseases: Cardiovascular Disorders: Vascular Disorders
Health: Conditions and Diseases: Neurological Disorders: Brain Diseases

Sites Chorus Notecard Document A definition of moyamoya disease along with clinical and radiographic finding. E-Medicine: MMD An in depth look at moyamoya disease, an introduction, clinical features, differentials, work up, treatments, medication and follow up. Moyamoya Disease Medical information of this disease is provided by a Japanese neurosurgeon. Also available in the Japanese language. Moyamoya Disease Information sheet compiled by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS). NORD - Moyamoya Disease A general discussion about this disorder followed by resources.

48. MOYAMOYA DISEASE : A Mystery Of Inherited Human Afflication. Can Mendelian Genom
moyamoya disease A mystery of inherited human afflication. Can Mendeliangenomics solve the puzzle? Find out. 1. moyamoya disease.
http://databank.oxydex.com/compendium_bibliographium/awaiting_human_genome/MOYAM
MOYAMOYA DISEASE : A mystery of inherited human afflication. Can Mendelian genomics solve the puzzle? Find out. If not, at least check some basic references. For medical professionals and scientists. Special Item Alerts - These deserve your attention.
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49. Cardiovascular Diseases
moyamoya disease MoyaMoya Syndrome - Neurology Web Forum (US); AboutMoya-Moya and Surgery - Columbia Univ Coll (US); Re Moyamoya
http://www.mic.ki.se/Diseases/c14.html
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Cardiovascular Diseases
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50. Moyamoya Disease Information Page Diseases Database
moyamoya disease Information Page. 2 synonyms or equivalents were found.moyamoya disease aka/or MoyaMoya disease related topics
http://www.diseasesdatabase.com/sieve/item1.asp?glngUserChoice=8384

51. Moyamoya Disease - General Practice Notebook
moyamoya disease. moyamoya disease may present with stroke in childrenand young adults. The cause of the disease is unknown. It
http://www.gpnotebook.co.uk/cache/939917343.htm
Moyamoya disease Moyamoya disease may present with stroke in children and young adults. The cause of the disease is unknown. It was first described in 1963; early reports were predominantly in Japanese patients although later reports include non-Japanese. It arises in the presence of bilateral occlusion of the carotid arteries resulting in the development of an extensive fine network of collateral arteries and arterioles at the base of the brain - collaterals resemble a puff of smoke. Children typically present with sudden ischaemic strokes whilst young adults more commonly present with a sub-arachnoid haemorrhage. There is no specific treatment but surgical revascularisation may be tried.
Click here for more information...

52. Advanced Respiratory - Airway Clearance Indications Of Moyamoya Disease
Airway Clearance Indications of moyamoya disease moyamoya disease is acerebrovascular disease which, as it progresses, is characterized
http://www.abivest.com/conditions/factsheets/moyamoya.asp?printVersion=1&gs=pati

53. NORD - National Organization For Rare Disorders, Inc.
moyamoya disease. To purchase fulltext report ($7.50) View Cart/Checkout.Copyright 1989, 1996 Synonyms of moyamoya disease Moya-moya Disease.
http://www.rarediseases.org/search/rdbdetail_abstract.html?disname=Moyamoya Dise

54. Sbox Error
moyamoya disease. moyamoya disease causes blood vessels leading to the brain tonarrow and close. It is rare and can occur during childhood or adulthood.
http://cgi.stanford.edu/~amlin/cgi-bin/find_specialist?action=get_description&di

55. Lasion Europe-Table Of Contents
MRA OF OCCLUSIVE CEREBRAL ANGIOPATHIES (moyamoya disease). moyamoya diseasegeneral considerations moyamoya disease imaging strategies
http://sme.belgium.eu.net/lasion/trmri2.htm
APPLIED MR NEURO-ANGIOGRAPHY AUTHORS' LIST Authors' list ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Acknowledgements INTRODUCTION Introduction PART I: THEORETICAL AND TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS MR signal of static blood and hemorrhage EFFECTS OF SPIN MOTION ON THE MR SIGNAL: BASIC FLOW PHENOMENA TIME-OF-FLIGHT EFFECTS In-flow effects: flow-related enhancement
Outflow-effects: flow-void due to washout effects PHASE EFFECTS In-plane motion-induced spin phase effects
Even-echo rephasing
Intravoxel phase dispersion ARTIFACTS Motion artifacts
Flow artifacts
Magnetic susceptibility artifacts
Flow compensation
Presaturation pulses MAGNETIC RESONANCE ANGIOGRAPHY Magnetic resonance angiography: general principles TIME-OF-FLIGHT MR ANGIOGRAPHY Time-of-Flight MR angiography: general principles
Time-of-Flight MR angiography: 2D TOF
Time-of-Flight MR angiography: 3D TOF PHASE CONTRAST MR ANGIOGRAPHY Phase contrast MR angiography: general principles
Phase contrast MR angiography: bipolar gradients Phase contrast MR angiography: image subtraction Phase contrast MR angiography: velocity-encoding and aliasing Phase contrast MR angiography: multiplexing schemes Phase contrast MR angiography: image types Phase contrast MR angiography: 2D PC Phase contrast MR angiography: 3D PC Image presentation and postprocessing TECHNIQUES FOR IMPROVEMENT OF VESSEL CONTRAST IN MRA Contrast media Cardiac synchronization Multislab 3D Time-of-Flight MRA

56. Moyamoya Disease ȯÀÚÀÇ Á¦¿Õ Àý°³¼ú ½ÃÀÇ ¸¶Ãë °ü¸®
The summary for this Korean page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://medicine.chungbuk.ac.kr/~march/self/moya/moya.htm
  • Á¤»ó Áú½ÄºÐ¸¸ ½¿¡ ÅëÁõÀ¸·Î °úÈ£ÈíÀ¸·Î hypocapnea°¡ »ý±â°í ÀÌ·Î ÀÎÇؼ­ ³úÇãÇ÷ÀÌ À¯¹ßµÉ ¼ö ÀÖ´Ù. ±×·¯³ª, ¹«ÅëºÐ¸¸À¸·Î Áú½ÄºÐ¸¸ ÇÏ´Â °ÍÀº ³ª»Ú´Ù°í ÇÒ ¼ö´Â ¾ø´Ù.
moyamoya ȯÀÚÀÇ Á¦¿ÕÀý°³¼ú ½¿¡ ¸¶ëÀÇ ¼±Å spinal anesthesia º¸Åë »ç¿ëµÇÁö ¾Ê´Â´Ù : Ç÷¾ÐÀÇ ÇÏ°­ÀÌ ºó¹øÇÑ °ÍÀÌ °¡Àå Å«ÀÌÀ¯ moyamoyaȯÀÚ¿¡¼­´Â µ¿¹ÝµÇ´Â ³úµ¿Á¤¸Æ ±âÇüÀ̳ª µÎ°³³» âÇ÷ÀÌ ¸¹´Ù.
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57. Health Library - Moyamoya Disease
Saint Luke's Health System eLibrary. moyamoya disease. moyamoya disease is a progressivedisease that affects the blood vessels in the brain (cerebrovascular).
http://hvelink.saint-lukes.org/library/healthguide/IllnessConditions/topic.asp?h

58. ICP Monitors
moyamoya disease. Historical. • Defintion. Etiology. • moyamoya disease, seenin Japanese population, young and old. Etiology of disease remains unknown.
http://www.ucch.org/sections/neurosurg/NeuroReview/05-Vascular/MoyaMoya.html
Moyamoya Disease Historical Defintion . A chronic occlusive cerebrovascular disease characterized by progressive stenosis of the proximal internal carotid artery and its branches, with concommitant enlargement of tiny subsidiary and proximal penetrating arteries at the base of the brain to form the characteristic moyamoya vessels. (From Pediatric Neurosurgery , p. 518, Scott, et al). described this condition affecting Japanese families in 1969. Th e hallmark of the condition, referring to the angiographic appearance of the dilated collateral vessels, was called moyamoya or "puff of smoke". Etiology seen in Jap anese population, young and old. Etiology of disease remains unknown. nonspecific angiographic appearance seen with: meningitis (tuberculous and leptospirosis) a therosclerosis radiation therapy sickle cell anemia (and other inherited disorders such as NF) (Moyamoya seen on MARS Pathology Moyamoya vessels are basically markedly dilated intracerebral perforating arteries and arterioles without abnormal histology . Microaneurysms can be present. Stenotic/occluded vessels show nonspecific changes such as intimal thickening and hyperplasia, and irregularities of the internal elastic lamina.

59. ÄÊÁ êáé Stroke - Moyamoya
Annual report of 1978 of the Research Committee on Spontaneous Occlusion of theCircle of Willis (moyamoya disease) of the Ministry of Health and Welfare
http://users.med.auth.gr/~georgak/sel_top/sickle/moyamoya.html
Ç ÍÏÓÏÓ moyamoya Ðñéí ðñï÷ùñÞóïõìå óôçí åñìçíåßá ôùí åíäïêñáíéáêþí áéìïññáãéþí óå áóèåíåßò ìå ÄÊÁ åßíáé áíáãêáßï íá áíáöåñèïýìå óôç íüóï moyamoya, áöïý öáßíåôáé ðùò ðïëý óõ÷íÜ ïé áããåéáêÝò âëÜâåò ôùí áóèåíþí áõôþí äåí åßíáé ôßðïôå Üëëï áðü ìéá ðåñßðôùóç öáéíüìåíïõ moyamoya. Moyamoya åßíáé ìéá ãéáðùíÝæéêç ëÝîç ðïõ ìåôáöñÜæåôáé ‘‘ôïëýðç êáðíïý’’ êáé ôç ÷ñçóéìïðïßçóå ï Suzuki íüóïò moyamoya öáéíüìåíï moyamoya.
  • áðïõóßá êÜèå íüóïõ ðïõ èá ìðïñïýóå íá ó÷åôßæåôáé ìå ôçí áíÜðôõîç öáéíüìåíïõ moyamoya, üðùò åßíáé ç áèçñïóêëÞñùóç, ç áêôéíïâïëßá,ç íåõñïúíùìÜôùóç, ôï ó. Down, ç äñåðáíïêõôôáñéêÞ áíáéìßá, ç ìçíéããßôéäá êáé ôá íåïðëÜóìáôá ôçò ðåñéï÷Þò. Åðßóçò, ôï öáéíüìåíï moyamoya Ý÷åé ó÷åôéóôåß ìå ôï áíôéöùóöïëéðéäéêü óýíäñïìï êáé ôç ëÞøç áíôéóõëëçðôéêþí, ðéèáíþò óå óõíäõáóìü ìå ôï êÜðíéóìá.
¼ôáí ïé ÷áñáêôçñéóôéêÝò áõôÝò áããåéáêÝò áëëïéþóåéò áíåõñßóêïíôáé åôåñüðëåõñá êáé éó÷ýåé êáé ôï êñéôÞñéï 3, ôüôå ç äéÜãíùóç ìðïñåß íá ôåèåß ùò ðéèáíÞ (probable).

60. Moya Moya Syndrome: Homefield Info
.......Moya Moya. moyamoya disease is a progressive cerebrovascular occlusive disease thatoccurs in children. The etiology is unknown. moyamoya disease.
http://www.swis.net/midgley/moya1.htm

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Moya Moya
Moyamoya disease is a progressive cerebrovascular occlusive disease that occurs in children. The etiology is unknown. It is rare in Exeter
Moyamoya Disease
Description
Moyamoya disease affects the cerbrovascular circulation by increasingly narrowing and in some cases eventually occluding the terminal portion of the internal carotid artery.
Signs and symptoms
The age of onset appears to dictate the manifestations. For example, children may experience seizures or involuntary movements and even exhibit signs of mental retardation. In young patients, moyamoya disease is usually associated with headaches, speech difficulties, paralytic episodes involving the feet, legs or upper extremeties, hemorrhage and anemia. In adults, disturbance of consciousness or subarachnoid hemorrhage is prominent. The patient may have syncopal episodes. In addition, these visual abnormalities may occur alone or in combination, hemianopia, diplopia, bilaterally diminished visual acuity, and the inability to recognize objects: papilledema may indicate subarachnoid or cerebral hemorrhage.
Aetiology
Moyamoya disease is idiopathic. In a few patients, it has been attributed to an autosomal recessive trait. Studies have implicated oral contraceptives in a small number of female patients, but this has not been substantiated. Pregnancy may also be a factor.

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