[PDF] Top 20 Análisis de métodos de valoración financiera : caso Produbanco
Has 10000 "Análisis de métodos de valoración financiera : caso Produbanco" found on our website. Below are the top 20 most common "Análisis de métodos de valoración financiera : caso Produbanco".
Clinical Reasoning: A woman with subacute progressive confusion and gait instability
... variable clinical course that can sometimes be predicted by the affected individual ’ s initial ...by subacute headaches, neuropsychiat- ric symptoms, long tract signs, and (less commonly) seizures with ... See full document
10
Clinical Reasoning: A 52-year-old woman with 3 weeks of progressive gait ataxia and dysarthria
... 52-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital with a 3-week history of progressive gait instability with multiple falls and slurred ... See full document
78
Clinical Reasoning: A woman with rapidly progressive apraxia
... At the time of her first visit to a neurologist, the pa- tient ’ s vital signs were normal. On cognitive testing, the patient ’ s Mini-Mental State Examination score was 28/30, with difficulties in figure copying and ... See full document
30
Clinical Reasoning: An unusual case of subacute encephalopathy
... of progressive cognitive decline. He complained of months of confusion, fatigue, depression, hypersom- nolence, headaches, and, subsequently, urinary inconti- nence and unsteady ... See full document
39
Clinical Reasoning: An 83-year-old woman with progressive hemiataxia, tremor, and infratentorial lesions
... PML is due to JCV infection of oligodendrocytes and astrocytes, primarily in hosts with impaired cel- lular immunity. It typically presents subacutely with visual, motor, sensory, cognitive, and gait dysfunc- ... See full document
48
Clinical Reasoning: A 48-year-old woman with progressive spastic-ataxic gait
... a subacute onset of a spastic- ataxic gait with impaired proprioception of the lower ...mary progressive multiple sclerosis, myelitis in the ... See full document
18
Clinical Reasoning: A 28-year-old man with progressive gait disturbance and encephalopathy
... Due to the patient’s progressive multifocal cere- bral lesions and unremitting encephalopathy, he underwent a brain biopsy of the right frontal lobe. Biopsy revealed intravascular large B-cell lymphoma. Lactate ... See full document
11
Clinical Reasoning: A 61-year-old woman with a swollen optic nerve and progressive visual loss
... A 61-year-old Caucasian woman was referred for eval- uation of a nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neu- ropathy (NAION) of the right eye. Two months before the referral, she experienced the acute onset of ... See full document
10
Clinical Reasoning: A 48-year-old woman with confusion, personality change, and multiple enhancing brain lesions
... CT of the head revealed both ring-enhancing and non- enhancing hypodensities associated with edema, the largest of which was in the left frontal lobe with midline shift. Multiple intracranial hypodensities can represent ... See full document
33
Clinical Reasoning: A middle-aged woman with progressive symmetric weakness and a CSF pleocytosis
... On examination, the patient’s vitals were stable. Mental status and cranial nerves were normal. Motor strength was decreased symmetrically in the upper and lower extremities (4/5) with areflexia and absent plantar ... See full document
10
Clinical Reasoning: A 70-year-old woman with acute-onset weakness and progressive hemiataxia
... Antibodies against GAD have been associated with a variety of systemic and neurologic conditions including type 1 diabetes mellitus, polyendocrine autoimmunity, stiff-person syndrome (classic and variant), pure ... See full document
5
Clinical Reasoning: A 66-year-old woman with seizures and progressive right-sided weakness
... The most accepted pathologic hypothesis is progressive stenosis or occlusion of dural venous sinus. DAVF can be an asymptomatic incidental finding. They can present with mild symptoms (e.g., paresthesia) or severe ... See full document
6
Clinical Reasoning: Rapidly progressive gait disorder and cranial nerves involvement in a 9-year-old boy
... continuing clinical deterioration, surgical resection of the su- praorbital lesion was performed on day 7 in order to obtain pathologic and microbiological ... See full document
11
Clinical Reasoning: Subacute paresis in a 28-year-old man with HIV
... A 28-year-old man with a history of HIV infection (genotype 1 subtype B) who was not on antiretroviral treatment presented with 2–3 months of progressive weakness of his extremities. He had been on fluconazole ... See full document
42
Clinical Reasoning: A 14-year-old girl with headache, seizures, and confusion
... The case expands the phenotypes and mutation spectrum of CBS resulting in homocystinuria. This discovery is helpful in presymptomatic molecular diagnosis, prenatal diagnosis, management of patients with homocystinuria, ... See full document
16
Clinical Reasoning: A 60-year-old woman with ataxia
... Two days later, the patient was readmitted to the hospital after repeatedly falling and injuring herself. She complained of difficulty controlling her body, voice, and swallowing. She denied weakness or sensory changes. ... See full document
23
Clinical Reasoning: A pregnant woman with chin numbness
... pregnant woman (G1P0) presented to the emergency department with a 5-day history of paresthesias involving the left side of her chin beginning at the midline and extending towards the corner of her mouth as well ... See full document
8
Clinical Reasoning: A 47-year-old man with progressive gait disturbance and stiffness in his legs
... AMN, which is often misdiagnosed as MS, HSP, or PLS, presents in adults (second to fourth decade of life) as a slowly progressive spastic paraparesis syndrome, with sensory and sphincter disturbances, and impo- ... See full document
6
Clinical Reasoning: A 57-year-old man with subacute gait difficulty and hand tremor
... During the hospital stay, the patient developed intermittent, spontaneous posturing of hands (car- pal spasms). Carpopedal spasms are clinical indica- tors of hypocalcemia. Other important clinical signs ... See full document
5
Clinical Reasoning: A 44-year-old woman with rapidly progressive weakness and ophthalmoplegia
... Botulinum toxin is extremely potent and irreversibly cleaves SNAP-SNARE-complex proteins, important facilitators of vesicle fusion at the synaptic membrane, thereby preventing synaptic vesicle release. Antitoxin binds ... See full document
6
Related subjects