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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (atherosclerosis)
77,401 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Many authors have postulated that angulation of the carotid artery is a cause of stroke and recommend corrective operation. Symptoms attributed to such lesions are often nebulous and unrelieved by the operation, and proof is lacking that unselected patients who have this condition have a risk of stroke exceeding operative risk. A review of 282 cerebral angiograms showed an incidence of elongation and potential angulation of 43 percent in children and 20 percent in adults. Acutal angulation was not found in children, however, and no child was suspected of having cerebral ischemia. Of 47 adults with potential angulation, 17 were suspected of having cerebral ischemia, the remainder having a variety of other lesions, such as tumors, aneurysm, and intracranial hemorrhage. Of the 17 having suspected cerebral ischemia, all had alternative explanations for their symptoms (hypertension, intracranial atherosclerosis), except one whose symptoms were completely inappropriate to the carotid distribution. A single patient had a completed stroke, demonstrable angulation, and only mild hypertension. Elongation and potential angulation of the carotid artery is common but usually coexists with other lesions. If the finding is postulated as the cause for neurologic morbidity the surgeon must be assured that symptoms are clearly neurologic, that no other cause exists, that angulation reduces the carotid lumen significantly and reproduces symptoms, and that the risk of operation is less than the expected risk of stroke in untreated patients.
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PMID:The significance of elongation and angulation of the carotid artery: a negative view. 16 14

Study of the blood platelet functional activity and intensity of hemolysis in 41 patients with transient disorders of cerebral circulation and comparison of the results with the corresponding indices in healthy individuals, in 40 patients with hypertensive disease free of crisis, and in 25 patients with cerebral atherosclerosis led to the conclusion that the character of cerebral stroke is already determined in the pre-stroke period. It depends on the functional state of the blood platelets in many respects. In patients with hypertensive disease in a period clear of crisis, for instance, there is a tendency towards hypoaggregation possible associated with the presence of latent hemolysis. Platelet hypofunction progresses in the period of hypertensive encephalopathy and still more during its transformation into hemorrhagic stroke. On the contrary, in patients with atherosclerosis but no symptoms of cerebral ischemia the adhesion-aggregation activity of the platelets does not differ essentially from that in healthy individuals. With the development of signs of ischemia of the brain, the platelet activity grows considerably, particularly when transient cerebral circulatory disorders transform into ischemic stroke.
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PMID:[Importance of the thrombocytes and hemolytic syndrome in the pathogenesis of transient cerebral circulatory disorders in hypertension patients]. 63 13

Lipid and carbohydrate metabolism abnormalities are reviewed with particular emphasis on the role of insulin and interrelationships between carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. The pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is discussed in terms of the association of abnormal circulating insulin levels. Some of the conditions associated with abnormal insulin levels and atherosclerosis are diabetes mellitis, hypertriglyceridemia, obesity, uremia, and oral contraceptive use. There is evidence that a proportion of subjects who have atherosclerosis or at risk have elevated circulating insulin levels. There is also increasing evidence that the arterial wall is an insulin-sensitive tissue. More women with myocardial infarction take oral contraceptives than controls do. Those who take the pill have 9 times the risk of others to develop cerebral ischemia or thrombosis. Many oral contraceptives cause abnormalities in glucose tolerance associated with elevated plasma insulin levels, and a degree of insulin resistance is induced. A number of the metabolic consequences of the pill may be caused by the elevated insulin levels.
Atherosclerosis 1977 May
PMID:The relationship of abnormal circulating insulin levels to atherosclerosis. 85 12

Observations of a series of fifteen surgically treated coiled and kinked internal carotid arteries are reported. The kinked internal carotid artery may be clinically significant and can cause cerebral infarction, even in the absence of atherosclerosis. Each patient must be thoroughly investigated and evaluated individually. One must distinguish simple tortuosity without blood flow obstruction from critical kinking of the internal carotid artery. If a patient with angiographic confirmation is symptomatic and other causes are eliminated, surgical correction should be carefully considered, especially if rotational cerebral ischemia is present. The surgical treatment of choice is resection of the redundant internal carotid artery with reimplantation and thromboendarterectomy of any associated plaque. Kinking of the internal carotid artery may lead to aneurysm formation requiring a difficult surgical resection. Although the evidence for a precise causal relationship between kinking of the internal carotid artery and cerebrovascular symptoms is sometimes difficult to establish, it is our belief that a more aggressive surgical approach may be warranted in this potentially disabling and even fatal condition.
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PMID:Kinking of the internal carotid artery. Clinical significance and surgical management. 87 13

The authors analysed clinically 108 patients (61 males and 47 females), aged below 50 years treated at the department of neurology, because of acute cerebral ischaemia. Attention is called to risk factors such as arterial hypertension, heart disease, atherosclerosis, obesity and diabetes which may be the cause of earlier development of ischaemic changes in the central nervous system. In the analysed group in 18 cases cerebral thrombosis, in 23 cases embolism, in 31 cerebral circulatory failure were diagnosed. In 36 cases the cause could not have been established.
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PMID:[Acute cerebral ischemic disease in patients under the age of 50]. 88 1

Systemic disorders (eg, cardiac, hematologic) are commonly recognized as predisposing and sometimes actual precipitating events in cerebral ischemia. From available studies, the incidence of precipitation is not clear. To determine this, we undertook a comprehensive investigation of all patients with ischemic brain disease for a one-year period. Results reveal that brain ischemia is more commonly precipitated by systemic illness than usually supposed, particularly transient ischemic attacks of the vertebrobasilar circulation and completed infarcts in the carotid distribution. Cardiac disorders outnumber all other precipitating events. As they are more amenable to therapy than atherosclerosis, a diligent search for such precipitating events is warranted in patients with ischemic symptoms.
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PMID:Associated systemic factors in cerebrovascular ischemia. 93 99

Cyclandelate, a vasodilator, was administered to 24 patients with dementia. The dementia in these patients was presumed to be due to cerebral ischemia caused by atherosclerosis in cerebral vessels after other possible causes were ruled out. In a double-blind, cross-over study, patients received 200 mg of cyclandelate four times daily for six weeks and a placebo for six weeks. Six psychological tests, which reflect various aspects of higher cortical ability, were used to evaluate the effect of cyclandelate on the dementia. Cyclandelate was found to be no more effective than placebo in improving higher cortical function in these demented patients.
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PMID:Effect of cyclandelate on dementia. 110 57

Male and female, arteriosclerotic (breeder) and nonarteriosclerotic (virgin), Sprague-Dawley rats were made severely diabetic with alloxan. Two weeks later experimental animals had both carotid arteries ligated to induce a state of acute cerebral ischemia. After six weeks of cerebral ischemia either with or without severe diabetes the animals were killed. Animals which survived either the acute induction of diabetes or cerebral ischemia did not manifest any new episodes of cerebral ischemia. Subjects with combined diabetes and cerebral ischemia manifested the greatest loss in body weight, adrenal hypertrophy and thymus gland involution, increased levels of serum CPK and SGOT, but decreased SGPT and LDH, hyperglycemia and hypertriglyceridemia, and the most extensive cerebral edema. It is suggested that diabetic rats may have a greater predilection toward cerebrovascular accidents because the diabetic state contributes not only to an exacerbation of atherosclerosis, but also complicates any condition of cerebrovascular ischemia by creating extracerebral edema.
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PMID:Chronic diabetes followed by chronic cerebral ischemia induced by bilateral carotid artery ligation in arteriosclerotic versus nonarteriosclerotic rats. 117 43

Thromboembolic phenomena and transient ischaemic attacks (TIA) are considered the basis of ischaemic pathologies. The aim of the present research is to investigate the involvement of k-opioid receptors in cerebral blood flow (CBF) impairment which results in experimental stroke or dietary atherosclerosis in rabbits. CBF measurement showed a significant decrease in rabbits submitted to embolization and/or atherosclerosis. Binding studies showed that massive cerebral ischaemia and atherosclerosis produced a significant increase in the number of k-opioid receptors (Bmax), without changing (KD) affinity values. In conclusion, the results obtained seem to indicate that the increase in k-opioid receptors might play a crucial role in a common cerebral biochemical mechanism both in ischaemic and atherosclerotic pathologies.
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PMID:K-opioid receptor changes in experimental models of cerebral ischaemia and atherosclerosis in the rabbit. 136 91

Etiology and longterm prognosis were prospectively investigated in 155 consecutive patients (96 men, 50 women) ages 16-45 years who were referred to the Neurosurgical Unit with cerebral transient ischemic attacks or infarction during the period 1978-88. All patients underwent neurological and medical-cardiological evaluation, cerebral computerized tomography scanning, electrocardiogram, and laboratory tests. 2-dimensional echocardiography was performed in 123 cases (79%), cerebral angiography in 147 (95%). Atherosclerosis was the leading etiology, occurring in 48 patients (31%). A cardioembolic disorder was considered the probable cause of ischemia in 8 cases (5.1%). Further possible etiologies were though to be: oral contraceptives (5.8% of the total, but 15.3% within the females), spontaneous arterial dissection (4.5%), migraine (4%), puerperium (2.6%), cervical trauma (2.6%), and other, more uncommon conditions. Despite extensive evaluation, the cause of cerebral ischemia remained unknown in 40% of the cases. All patients received antiplatelet medication and 16 underwent surgery. The longterm outcome at a mean followup of 5.8 years was favorable in that 91% of the subjects resumed their workload on a full or parttime basis.
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PMID:Etiopathogenesis and prognosis of cerebral ischemia in young adults. A survey of 155 treated patients. 177 5


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