Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Etiology, neuropsychological deficits, aphasia type, and recovery were retrospectively studied in 254 young adults with stroke. Cardiac embolism was the most common cause of stroke in patients younger than 40, while atherosclerosis was the most frequent etiology among those aged 41-50 years. In 166 aphasic patients, Broca's aphasia was the most common while Wernicke's and transcortical aphasias were rare. Compared with an older aphasic population, young patients had significantly more nonfluent aphasias and fewer comprehension deficits. These differences were related to stroke localization: the majority of infarcts localized by computed tomography in 37 patients involved either the entire middle cerebral artery territory or its superior or deep branches, explaining the preponderance of nonfluent aphasia. Prognosis of aphasia in our patients was better than has been reported for non-age-selected aphasia populations. Roughly one third of our patients recovered completely, one third improved, and one third had an unresolved language deficit. Complete recovery and significant improvement were observed even greater than 6 months after stroke. In some patients, recovery was much better than might have been predicted from lesion site and size depicted on computed tomograms.
...
PMID:Young adult stroke: neuropsychological dysfunction and recovery. 245 33

We report a 37-year-old man with cerebral infarction due to meningovascular neurosyphilis. He developed right hemiplegia and motor aphasia preceded by left retroorbital pain lasting a month. Bilateral tonic pupils were also observed. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) disclosed cerebral infarction in the distribution of perforating branches of the left middle cerebral artery. Abnormal enhancement was absent in the meninges on T1-weighted MRI examination. SPECT study with I-123 iodoamphetamine showed decreased perfusion in the area of the left middle cerebral artery on early phase. A delayed SPECT 4 hour later demonstrated redistribution of the cerebral blood flow in the area of its cortical branches. On cerebral angiograms, marked stenoses were disclosed at the supraclinoid segments of the bilateral internal carotid arteries as well as the M1 segment of the left middle cerebral artery. These stenoses were associated with increased collateral circulations on the left side. Atherosclerosis was not apparent, on angiography. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) showed pleocytosis and positive TPHA. The CSF/serum ratio of TPHA was 1/16. Oligoclonal IgG band was present in the CSF. CSF IgG index was elevated. These findings were consistent with meningovascular neurosyphilis. Causes of angiitis other than syphilis were excluded. A test for antibodies against human immunodeficiency virus was negative. The clinical course of his recovery was similar to that in patients with atherosclerotic thrombosis. The stenosis of the right internal carotid artery demonstrated by angiography could not be expected from the clinical manifestations and SPECT study.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Bilateral internal carotid artery stenoses in a patient with meningovascular neurosyphilis]. 826

To evaluate and review the clinical spectrum of anterior cerebral artery (ACA) territory infarction, we studied 48 consecutive patients who admitted to our stroke unit over a 6-year period. We performed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) in all patients, and diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) in 21. In our stroke registry, patients with ACA infarction represented 1.3% of 3705 patients with ischemic stroke. The main risk factors of ACA infarcts was hypertension in 58% of patients, diabetes mellitus in 29%, hypercholesterolemia in 25%, cigarette smoking in 19%, atrial fibrillation in 19%, and myocardial infarct in 6%. Presumed causes of ACA infarct were large-artery disease and cardioembolism in 13 patients each, small-artery disease (SAD) in the territory of Heubner's artery in two and atherosclerosis of large-arteries (<50% stenosis) in 16. On clinico-radiologic analysis there were three main clinical patterns depending on lesion side; left-side infarction (30 patients) consisting of mutism, transcortical motor aphasia, and hemiparesis with lower limb predominance; right side infarction (16 patients) accompanied by acute confusional state, motor hemineglect and hemiparesis; bilateral infarction (two patients) presented with akinetic mutism, severe sphincter dysfunction, and dependent functional outcome. Our findings suggest that clinical and etiologic spectrum of ACA infarction may present similar features as that of middle cerebral artery infarction, but frontal dysfunctions and callosal syndromes can help to make a clinical differential diagnosis. Moreover, at the early phase of stroke, DWI is useful imaging method to locate and delineate the boundary of lesion in the territory of ACA.
...
PMID:Spectrum of anterior cerebral artery territory infarction: clinical and MRI findings. 1245 77

Cerebral embolism has been considered to be the most common stroke mechanism when the resulting stroke has at least some amount of aphasia as part of its clinical manifestations. To determine stroke mechanism and risk factor profile in patients with isolated Broca's area aphasia (Broca's infarct), we studied 34 consecutive patients with recent infarcts whose only or predominant clinical feature was that of nonfluent speech and compared these cases with 68 control patients with cortical infarcts in the middle cerebral artery distribution whose clinical features were not restricted to an isolated aphasia. Controls were age- and sex-matched and were selected from ischemic infarcts seen at our institutions over the same observation period. Broca's infarct patients had significantly more cardiac-source emboli, more cardiac thrombi identified on echocardiography, and less large-artery atherosclerosis (each P = .02). These differences in stroke mechanism may suggest different diagnostic and therapeutic decision making for those ischemic stroke patients presenting with isolated Broca's aphasia.
...
PMID:Isolated Broca's area aphasia and ischemic stroke mechanism. 1790 16

The mechanism of thrombus formation in Trousseau syndrome remains unclear. The purpose of this study was to investigate specific pathological findings of the thrombi in Trousseau syndrome. The authors report on 2 cases of thrombi in Trousseau syndrome from large cerebral vessels removed by endovascular therapy and compared with thrombi in atherosclerosis or cardiac embolism. The first patient, a 67-year-old man, was transferred to our hospital for sudden onset consciousness disturbance and tetraparesis. He had been diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer. The magnetic resonance (MR) angiography demonstrated basilar artery occlusion. An endovascular thrombectomy was performed. The second patient, an 84-year-old woman, was transferred to our hospital for sudden onset motor aphasia and right-sided motor weakness. She has a history of stage IV pancreatic body cancer. The MR angiography demonstrated left middle cerebral artery occlusion. An endovascular thrombectomy was performed for the floating thrombus. Macroscopic findings of retrieved thrombi were observed immediately after thrombectomy. The thrombi in Trousseau syndrome were white in color and solid against manual compression, whereas thrombi from other causes were red and fragile. In terms of microscopic findings, the thrombi in Trousseau syndrome mainly contained fibrin. On the other hand, thrombi associated with atherosclerosis or cardiac embolism had smaller area of fibrin with a considerable amount of red and white blood cells. The thrombi in Trousseau syndrome, which caused occlusion of large cerebral vessel, almost exclusively consisted of fibrin.
...
PMID:Histological Examination of Trousseau Syndrome-Related Thrombus Retrieved Through Acute Endovascular Thrombectomy: Report of 2 Cases. 2772 May 26