polioencephalitis

English edit

 
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Etymology edit

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Noun edit

polioencephalitis

  1. Any encephalitis that is restricted to the gray matter.
    • 1890, Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease - Volume 17, page 320:
      First of all, in order to distinguish this from two other lesions which have been termed polioencephalitis inferior (progressive bulbar paralysis) and polioencephalitis superior (nuclear ophthalmoplegia), let us speak of this as polioencephalitis corticalis. What proof have we that there is such a condition? Anatomical proof, none; we are willing to concede, however, that some of the many cases of atrophy and sclerosis may have been due to this polioencephalitis, but it is unfortunate for Strümpell's theory that all of the autopsies made soon after the onset of the disease have shown other conditions, and not a polioencephalitis.
    • 1897, Thomas Lathrop Stedman, Twentieth Century Practice: Diseases of the nervous system, page 108:
      Before dismissing the subject of acute polioencephalitis it is necessary to devote a few paragraphs to the mention of a similar inflammatory process in other parts of the central nervous system.
    • 2013, Georg Gosztonyi, The Mechanisms of Neuronal Damage in Virus Infections of the .Nervous System:
      The restriction of the inflammatory process to the gray matter in the polioencephalitis group was explained by the presumption that viruses are present mainly in the cell bodies of neurons, as they have an affinity for the nerve cells themselves: gangliocytotropism or neurocytotropism (Környey 1933)
    • 2014, Paul Johns, Clinical Neuroscience, page 96:
      Encephalitic processes are further subdivided into three main types: □ Polioencephalitis (Greek: polios, grey) is grey-matter predominant. □ Leukoencephalitis (Greek: leukos, white) is white-matter predominant. □ Panencephalitis (Greek: pan-, all) affects both grey and white matter.

Usage notes edit

Historically, this term was applied to any inflammation of the gray matter, including poliomyelitis, rabies, and epidemic encephalitis. Some recent authors restrict the use of this term to poliomyelitis.