
@article{ref1,
title="Juvenile head trauma syndromes and their relationship to migraine",
journal="Archives of neurology",
year="1975",
author="Haas, D. C. and Pineda, G. S. and Lourie, H.",
volume="32",
number="11",
pages="727-730",
abstract="The clinical spectrum of juvenile head trauma syndromes was derived from an analysis of 50 attacks in 25 patients. Attacks were grouped into four clinical types: (1) hemiparesis; (2) somnolence, irritability, and vomiting; (3) blindness; and (4) brain stem signs. Our evidence shows that these four types are different manifestations of a common underlying process. All attacks followed mild head trauma after a latent interval, generally of one to ten minutes. Forty of the 50 attacks occurred in patients under 14 years of age. Full recovery occurred after a variable time in all but one instance. This patient, and one other, had an angiographically demonstrable occlusion of a branch of the middle cerebral artery. In clinical and laboratory features, these attacks resemble classical migraine and presumably have a similar underlying mechanism.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0003-9942",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}