R.D. Adams’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Pathologic features of herpes zoster: A note on “Geniculate Herpes”
  • Article

March 1944

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31 Reads

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219 Citations

Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry

D. Denny-Brown

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R.D. Adams

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P.J. Fitzgerald

Herpes zoster, or zona, is a common nervous disease known since ancient times but still possessing many enigmatic features. From the contributions of von Bärensprung,¹ Head and Campbell,² Lhermitte and Nicolas³ and many others the broad outlines of this condition may be sketched. The present day conception of herpes zoster embraces the following assumptions and facts: The disease is probably due to a filtrable virus, similar to, if not identical with, that of varicella, which provokes an acute inflammatory reaction in isolated spinal or cranial sensory ganglia, the posterior gray matter of the spinal cord and the adjacent leptomeninges. The clinical manifestations are a vesicular cutaneous eruption, radicular neuralgia and, less often, segmental palsies and sensory loss. The association of the cutaneous eruption with a disease of the peripheral nerves was brilliantly deduced from clinical data by von Bärensprung1a in 1861, and in 1862 he described

Citations (1)


... Nearly 80% of the patients with motor nerve palsy recover to almost a normal condition after 3-6 months; however, palsy persists in 11%-25% of the patients (9). A histopathological analysis of the autopsy samples collected from patients with motor neuropathy associated with VZV confirmed the marked proliferation of the microglia in the gray matter of the anterior horn as well as extensive degeneration of the ventral root attributed to an intense inflammatory reaction (10). ...

Reference:

An Ultrasonographic Evaluation for the Early Detection of Nerve Root Changes in Herpes Zoster-associated Motor Paresis
Pathologic features of herpes zoster: A note on “Geniculate Herpes”
  • Citing Article
  • March 1944

Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry