G. H. Du Boulay
St Thomas' Hospital
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Featured researches published by G. H. Du Boulay.
The Lancet | 1977
D.J. Thomas; John Marshall; R. W. Ross Russell; G. Wetherley-Mein; G. H. Du Boulay; T.C. Pearson; L. Symon; E. Zilkha
Abstract Cerebral blood-flow (C.B.F.) was measured in 38 patients with haematocrit values (Hct) in the range 0·47-0·53 and was found to be significantly lower than in 43 patients with Hct in a lower range (0·36-0·46). After reduction of Hct in the higher Hct group by venesection, flow increased by a mean of 50%. This improvement in flow was largely due to a reduction in viscosity. Hct around the generally accepted upper limit of normal may be an important factor in the causation of occlusive vascular disease.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 1979
M.J.G. Harrison; D.J. Thomas; G. H. Du Boulay; John Marshall
Abstract Fifty-two patients presenting with dementia were divided into a group in whom clinical features suggested an ischaemic basis (multi-infarct dementia) and a group in whom a primary degenerative process seemed more likely. Focal EEG changes and angiographic evidence of ischeamic areas and atheromatous disease of intracranial vessels were more common in the “ischaemic” than in the primary degenerative group. CBF was significantly reduced in the former but the regional pattern was equally distorted in the two groups. These findings strengthen the belief that the ischaemic score can identify those patients whose dementia is associated with vascular disease.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1986
I E Ormerod; W. I. McDonald; G. H. Du Boulay; B. E. Kendall; I. F. Moseley; A. M. Halliday; R. Kakigi; A Kriss; E Peringer
Thirty five adults and two children with clinically isolated optic neuritis were examined by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to determine the presence of disseminated lesions within the brain at presentation and to compare these findings with the results of evoked potential studies. Of the adult patients, 61% showed lesions on the scans whereas the evoked potentials suggested the presence of lesions outside the visual system in 30%. MRI is a sensitive method for the demonstration of clinically unsuspected lesions in patients with uncomplicated optic neuritis.
The Lancet | 1979
P.R.D. Humphrey; John Marshall; R. W. Ross Russell; G. Wetherley-Mein; G. H. Du Boulay; T.C. Pearson; L. Symon; E. Zilkha
Abstract Cerebral blood flow (CBF), red-cell mass, and plasma volume were measured in 39 patients with venous haematocrit values in the range 0·47-0·58. Patients with true polycythaemia were thus excluded. The 39 patients studied fell into two groups—those with a measured red-cell mass in the high-normal range and those with normal red-cell-mass values but reduced plasma-volume values (the relative-polycythaemia, low-plasma-volume group). The mean CBF was low in both the high-normal red-cell-mass (HNRCM) group (45·8 ml/100 g/min) and low-plasma-volume (LPV) group (48·8 ml/100 g/min). The haematocrit in the HNRCM group was 0·504 and in the LPV group 0·513. In a control group of subjects with a mean haematocrit of 0·421 CBF was 68·6 ml/100 g/min. Venesection was associated with a significant rise in CBF in both groups of patients—to 59·7 ml/100 g/min in the HNRCM group and 65·0 ml/100 g/min in the LPV group. Whole-blood viscosity fell significantly in both groups. Both groups demonstrated significant inverse relationships between CBF and haematocrit and between CBF and blood viscosity.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1976
G Ladurner; E. Zilkha; D Iliff; G. H. Du Boulay; John Marshall
Computerized tomography has been used for the estimation of regional cerebral blood volume in a group of 18 patients. Sodium iothalamate was injected intravenously (1.75 ml/kg) to increase the absorption of x-rays in the cerebral circulation. A mean value of 5.7 ml/100 g was found for the cortex and 5.1 for tha thalamus.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1990
A M Bronstein; P. Rudge; M A Gresty; G. H. Du Boulay; J Morris
The site of lesions responsible for horizontal gaze palsy and various types of internuclear ophthalmoplegia (INO) was established by identifying the common areas where the abnormal MRI signals from patients with a given ocular-motor disorder overlapped. Patients with unilateral gaze palsy had lesions in the paramedian area of the pons, including the abducens nucleus, the lateral part of the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis and the nucleus reticularis pontis oralis. Patients with abducens nucleus lesions showed additional clinical signs of lateral rectus weakness. Lesions responsible for bilateral gaze palsy involved the pontine tegmental raphe. Since this region contains the saccadic omnipause neurons, this finding suggests that damage to omnipause cells produces slowing of saccades rather than opsoclonus, as previously proposed. All INOs, regardless of the presence of impaired abduction or convergence, had similar MRI appearances. Frequently the lesions in patients with INO, were not confined to the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) but also involved neighbouring structures at the pontine and mid-brain levels. There was a statistically significant association between the clinical severity of the INO and the presence of abnormal abduction or convergence. The findings suggest that the lesions outside the MLF, which may affect abducens, gaze or convergence pathways, are responsible for the presence of features additional to INO, depending on the magnitude of functional disruption they produce.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1976
G D Hungerford; G. H. Du Boulay; K. J. Zilkha
Patients suffering from severe migraine, usually for many years, have been examined by the EMI scanner between attacks. Judged by criteria validated originally by comparison with pneumoencephalography, about half of the patients showed evidence of cerebral atrophy. Perhaps of more significance than generalised atrophy was the frequency of areas of focal atrophy and of evidence of infarction.
The Lancet | 1980
J.R. Willison; G. H. Du Boulay; E.A. Paul; R. W. Ross Russell; D.J. Thomas; John Marshall; T.C. Pearson; L. Symon; G. Wetherley-Mein
Patients with high-normal or above-normal haematocrit were found to have impaired alertness when compared with a control group matched for age and occupation. On retesting the controls had improved alertness scores attributable to a practice effect; but the patients, when retested after reduction of haematocrit by venesection, had improved significantly more than the controls. Improvement in alertness correlated very well with the increase in cerebral blood flow which followed venesection. Levels of venous haematocrit that are generally accepted as normal may not necessarily be optimum.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1976
J. Gawler; G. H. Du Boulay; J. W. D. Bull; John Marshall
Computerized tomography, using the EMI Scanner, allows the diagnosis of cerebral atrophy or hydrocephalus to be made with the same degree of accuracy as conventional neuroradiological methods. Ventricular measurements made on EMI scans have been compared with those from pneumoencephalograms and ventriculograms. A range of normal ventricular measurements for the EMI scan is suggested.
British Journal of Radiology | 1975
H. A. Swanson; G. H. Du Boulay
Endocrinologists tend to accept minor variations of the pituitary fossa as evidence of the presence of a pituitary gland abnormality. Neuroradiologists tend to be sceptical. Normal criteria have not been established. In a consecutive series of 85 cases without any clinical evidence of a pituitary lesion, the plain films in 31.7 per cent demonstrated minor duplication of the floor or anterior wall of the pituitary fossa (with or without associated thinning and possible erosion of the lamina dura), which could be mistaken for the early signs of pituitary enlargement by an intrasellar tumour. 16.5 percent showed thinning of the lamina dura on tomography a feature previously taken as suggesting early enlargement. It is suggested that these particular diagnostic signs should be interpreted with caution.