Moyamoya in Hispanics: not only in Japanese

Moyamoya disease was first described in 1957 as <em>hypoplasia of the bilateral internal carotid arteries</em>, the characteristic appearance of the associated network of abnormally dilated collateral vessels on angiography was later likened to something hazy, like a puff of cigarette sm...

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Main Authors: Sarmad Said, Chad J. Cooper, Haider Alkhateeb, Juan M. Galvis, German T. Hernandez, Hasan J. Salameh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-06-01
Series:Neurology International
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/ni/article/view/5369
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spelling doaj-0fda55e8ba024775ad975aefce9b799c2021-01-02T11:24:56ZengMDPI AGNeurology International2035-83852035-83772014-06-016210.4081/ni.2014.53692828Moyamoya in Hispanics: not only in JapaneseSarmad Said0Chad J. Cooper1Haider Alkhateeb2Juan M. Galvis3German T. Hernandez4Hasan J. Salameh5Department of Internal Medicine, Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso, TXDepartment of Internal Medicine, Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso, TXDepartment of Internal Medicine, Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso, TXDepartment of Internal Medicine, Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso, TXDepartment of Internal Medicine, Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso, TXDepartment of Internal Medicine, Paul L. Foster School of Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso, TXMoyamoya disease was first described in 1957 as <em>hypoplasia of the bilateral internal carotid arteries</em>, the characteristic appearance of the associated network of abnormally dilated collateral vessels on angiography was later likened to something hazy, like a puff of cigarette smoke, which, in Japanese, is <em>moyamoya</em>. This paper describes two cases of moyamoya presentations, including moyamoya disease and moyamoya syndrome. Moyamoya may rarely occur in North American Hispanic patients. The presentation can vary significantly and ranges bwtween fulminant outcome and prolonged survival. Awareness about moyamoya and its different presentations may be beneficial for the patients and can improve the outcome.http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/ni/article/view/5369moyamoya disease, moyamoya syndrome, stroke, Hispanic population
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarmad Said
Chad J. Cooper
Haider Alkhateeb
Juan M. Galvis
German T. Hernandez
Hasan J. Salameh
spellingShingle Sarmad Said
Chad J. Cooper
Haider Alkhateeb
Juan M. Galvis
German T. Hernandez
Hasan J. Salameh
Moyamoya in Hispanics: not only in Japanese
Neurology International
moyamoya disease, moyamoya syndrome, stroke, Hispanic population
author_facet Sarmad Said
Chad J. Cooper
Haider Alkhateeb
Juan M. Galvis
German T. Hernandez
Hasan J. Salameh
author_sort Sarmad Said
title Moyamoya in Hispanics: not only in Japanese
title_short Moyamoya in Hispanics: not only in Japanese
title_full Moyamoya in Hispanics: not only in Japanese
title_fullStr Moyamoya in Hispanics: not only in Japanese
title_full_unstemmed Moyamoya in Hispanics: not only in Japanese
title_sort moyamoya in hispanics: not only in japanese
publisher MDPI AG
series Neurology International
issn 2035-8385
2035-8377
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Moyamoya disease was first described in 1957 as <em>hypoplasia of the bilateral internal carotid arteries</em>, the characteristic appearance of the associated network of abnormally dilated collateral vessels on angiography was later likened to something hazy, like a puff of cigarette smoke, which, in Japanese, is <em>moyamoya</em>. This paper describes two cases of moyamoya presentations, including moyamoya disease and moyamoya syndrome. Moyamoya may rarely occur in North American Hispanic patients. The presentation can vary significantly and ranges bwtween fulminant outcome and prolonged survival. Awareness about moyamoya and its different presentations may be beneficial for the patients and can improve the outcome.
topic moyamoya disease, moyamoya syndrome, stroke, Hispanic population
url http://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/ni/article/view/5369
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AT juanmgalvis moyamoyainhispanicsnotonlyinjapanese
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