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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a study of 10 patients suffering from hypertension the results showed that combination treatment with prazosin, cyclopenthiazide and a beta-blocker produced a significant fall in blood pressure. Side-effects such as palpitations, headache, syncope and drowsiness which may occur with prazosin alone were obviated by combining prazosin with a beta-blocker.
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PMID:Prazosin combined with thiazide diuretic and beta-blocker in the treatment of hypertension. 59 23

A case of papilloedema secondary to respiratory failure is reported which caused considerable diagnostic difficulty and led to extensive neurological investigation. Neurological complaints of headache and visual impairment overshadowed respiratory symptoms and were associated with gross haemorrhagic papilloedema. The case is compared with previous reports and the pathogenesis of papilloedema in respiratory failure is reviewed briefly. The similarity between the pathogenesis of this condition and benign intracranial hypertension is discussed.
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PMID:Papilloedema associated with respiratory failure. 59 98

The author analysed from the standpoint of familial history of headaches 89 cases of headaches treated at a neurological outpatient clinic in a period of 3 years. In 14 cases migraine was diagnosed, in 31 cases vasomotor headaches, in 16 post-traumatic headaches, in 7 psychogenic headaches, in 5 cases sinusitis, in 4 intracranial hypertension, in 12 cases the aetiology was unclear. In cases of vasomotor headaches in 90% of cases strong headaches were present in close relatives of the patients while in other groups the familial factor was infrequent.
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PMID:[Role of familial factor in vasomotor headache in children]. 60 Mar 46

The syndrome of autonomic dysreflexia often occurs in quadriplegic subjects and is characterized by paroxysmal hypertension, headache, vasoconstriction below and flushing of the skin above the level of transection, and bradycardia. These attacks may cause hypertnesive encephalopathy, cerebral vascular accidents, and death. In five patients during crises, the mean arterial pressure changed from 95 to 154 mm Hg, heart rate 72 to 45 beats/min, cardiac output 4.76 to 4.70 L/min, and peripheral resistance 1650 to 2660 dynes.sec.cm-5. In eight subjects the control plasma, red cell, and total blood volumes were 19.1, 10.5, and 29.6 ml/cm body height, respectively, and when hypertensive, the plasma protein concentration increased by 9.9% and the hematocrit by 9.5%. Plasma volume was only reduced by an estimated 10-15%. At that time, arterial dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DbetaH) activity increased 65% and prostaglandin E2 concentration by 68%. Thus, the augmented DbetaH activity presented primarily an elevated sympathetic tone and not hemoconcentration of that protein. The rise in prostaglandin may contribute to the severe headaches during hypertensive episodes.
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PMID:Hypertensive crises in quadriplegic patients. Changes in cardiac output, blood volume, serum dopamine-beta-hydroxylase activity, and arterial prostaglandin PGE2. 61 23

Blood pressure should be routinely measured in all infants and children. Measurements should be performed with an appropriate size cuff and observed pressures compared to normal values for age. Elevated blood pressure is seen in one to ten percent of children, depending on the age group surveyed and the definition of hypertension selected. Thirty to fifty percent of children with elevated blood pressures are asymptomatic. The remainder have symptoms which are nonspecific, including headaches, visual disturbances, seizures, congestive heart failure, and facial palsy. Hypertension in children, unlike hypertension in the adult, usually has a definite cause which often responds to adequate medical and/or surgical treatment. For this reason, children with well-confirmed hypertension should be thoroughly evaluated. The most common causes of hypertension found in children are renal disease (pyelonephritis, vascular disease, structural malformations) and coarctation of the aorta. An approach to the child with transient or persistent hypertension is described. Diagnostic studies should be individualized and should follow clinical clues where possible. Medical management of the child with acute hypertension is discussed.
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PMID:Elevated blood pressures in infants and children. 62 65

The characteristic clinical features and morphological findings of five cases of (clinically not diagnosed) fusiform aneurysm of the basilar or vertebral arteries were recurring attacks of positional occipital headache, pain and stiffness in the neck, cranial nerve disturbances, expecially oculomotor palsies and anisokoria, nystagmus, attacks of nausea, vomiting and sweating, tachycardia, pyramidal tract symptoms, and pareses. Severe hypertension had been present in four instances. The aneurysm, which is usually thrombosed, pressed against the pons and medulla oblongata as a space-occupying mass. In addition to hypertension and atheromatosis, congenital defect in the arterial wall are probably significant causative factor. To mistake an aneurysm for a cervical syndrome may be fatal to the patient.
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PMID:[Basilar or vertebral artery aneurysm as a cause of presumed cervical spine injury (author's transl)]. 63 Oct 51

The data of 140 patients with polycythemia vera during the period 1955--1975 were analyzed with regard to clinical signs and prognosis. The average age was 53,4 years. The sex ratio was 1.9:1 in favor of men. The most frequent symptoms were headache and vertigo. In more than half of the cases hepatosplenomegaly and hypertension were found. Besides typical changes in the blood count with elevated erythrocytes, hemoglobin, hematocrit, leukocytes and thrombocytes, increased levels of alkaline leukocyte phosphatase and uric acid were found. As to therapy, after 32P-medication the survival was two years longer than after phlebotomy. In 9 patients osteomyelofibrosis developed, and in 7 cases chronic myeloic leukemia. The mean age of death was 61 years.
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PMID:[Polycythemia vera, clinical aspects and disease course]. 64 97

A 24-year-old woman was found comatose after 2 days of cephalalgia and vomiting. An immediate diagnosis of carbon monoxyde poisoning was disclaimed when blood carbon monoxyde was found to be 1.75 ml/100. A diagnosis of acute intracranial hypertension led to trephination with ventricular punction and brain biopsy on the third day. The patient died on the eleventh day. Ultrastructural study of biopsy tissue showed nearly normal cortex, and injured white matter, with disrupted or destroyed myelin and pycnotic oligodendroglia in contrast with nearly normal axons, astrocytes, and capillaries. Autopsy showed a typical semioval center myelinopathy. After discussion of the histotoxic, vascular, and edema theories for myelinopathy pathogenesis, primary oligodendrogial lesion is considered, and correlated with the diphasic evolution often observed in the course of carbon monoxyde myelinopathy.
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PMID:[Myelinopathy due to carbon monoxyde poisoning. A study in ultrastructural neuropathology (author's transl)]. 67 80

A very rare case of a myxosarcoma with metastases to the brain is reported. A 33-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of lassitude, fever, slight left hemiparesis, headache and other signs of intracranial hypertension and cardiac symptoms such as dyspnea and palpitation. She had the cardiac symptoms once 14 years before, which reappeared and rapidly aggravated two months before the admission. Cerebral angiography revealed a mass in the right temporal lobe and physical and laboratory examinations revealed mitral value failure and hyperthyroidism. On the next day, March 19, 1976, a grossly cystic 60 gm tumor was totally removed which was largely imbedded in the subcortex of the right temporal lobe. The symptoms except for the cardiac symptoms and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy rapidly improved, but headache and left hemiparesis returned 13 days postoperatively. She died suddenly 18 days after the operation due to acute cardiac failure. Autopsy revealed two separate hard and solid tumors both attached to the mitral valve and occupied the whole left atrium and another metastasis to the frontal lobe which had not been diagnosed before the death. Microscopic examinations including electronmicroscopic study established the diagnosis of myxosarcoma in all the four tumors.
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PMID:[Brain metastases from primary cardiac myxosarcoma--report of a case (author's transl)]. 71 43

Hypertensive encephalopathy is a dramatic syndrome characterized by severe elevation of blood pressure, headache, visual disturbances, altered mental status, and convulsions. Although the syndrome is uncommon, to recognize and treat it promptly is important or the condition may prove to be fatal. Hypertensive encephalopathy should be distinguished from other cerebral complications of severe hypertension by obtaining careful history and performing thorough physical examination. The only definitive criterion for the diagnosis of this syndrome is its prompt response to therapy. If the patient's condition does not improve with hypotensive therapy, the physician should immediately search for alternate diagnoses. Potent drugs are available for prompt reduction of blood pressure. There are few medical emergencies in which the objective response to therapy is so strikingly apparent as in hypertensive encephalopathy.
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PMID:Hypertensive encephalopathy: recognition and management. 71 53


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