<p>Moyamoya disease (MMD) was first reported as a new entity among vascular disorders in 1957. Named for the abnormal vascular networks found around the occluded distal internal carotid artery, it is the most common pediatric cerebrovascular disease in East Asia. In recent years large amounts of dat
Moyamoya Disease
β Scribed by Professor Jiro Suzuki M.D. (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 191
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The first mention of moyamoya disease as a distinct disease entity was in a paper I published in 1965. The abnormal netΒ like vessels at the base of the brain seen in cerebral angioΒ grams of this disease were described by most native speakers of Japanese as "moyamoya," a Japanese expression for someΒ thing hazy, such as a puff of cigarette smoke drifting in the air. In fact, prior to my advocacy of this term, this type of vascular network was often referred to as "moyamoya vessels" by Japanese researchers. In 1969, Dr. A. Takaku and I submitted a paper to the ArΒ chives of Neurology entitled "A Disease Showing Abnormal Net-like Vessels at the base of the Brain," with a subtitle of "Moyamoya Disease." The editor, however, interchanged the main title and the subtitle and brought this term "moyamoya" to fame! Since then, researchers throughout the world have been using this poetic word! For a nicknaming godfather like me, it is a special joy to have this Japanese word enter the honored ranks ofmedica1 terminology. My first publication concerning this lesion was a report discussing six cases in 1963. Therefore it is now 20 years since I first became aware of and started to study moyamoya disΒ ease. At first, I merely thought that it was a strange vascular network, unique to these first few patients, and I reported these cases as being cases of acquired collateral vessels.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XI
History and Definition....Pages 1-5
Epidemiology and Symptomatology....Pages 7-16
Cerebral Angiography....Pages 17-52
Mechanisms of Symptomatic Occurrence....Pages 53-62
Electroencephalography....Pages 63-72
Computerized Tomography....Pages 73-81
Positron Emission Computerized Tomography....Pages 83-87
Cerebral Hemodynamics....Pages 89-103
Treatment....Pages 105-117
Pathology....Pages 119-130
Etiology....Pages 131-143
Quasi-Moyamoya Diseases....Pages 145-168
Back Matter....Pages 169-189
β¦ Subjects
Neurosurgery
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