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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The surgical management of large AVMs (those greater than 6 cm in maximal diameter) should be based on a thorough understanding of the chronic hemodynamic changes produced by lesions and the acute stress placed on the cerebral vasculature by their removal. In addition to haemorrhage, seizure, and
headache
, these larger lesions often present with symptoms of
cerebral vascular insufficiency
. Angiography frequently demonstrates a high-flow arteriovenous shunt with evidence of vascular steal from the surrounding brain. In many cases there is a virtual absence of normal hemispheric filling. When the steal is sufficient to produce an area of chronic ischaemia in the brain surrounding the AVM, there is an increased risk of swelling and haemorrhage associated with complete excision. We have developed a strategy for the surgical management of these large lesions that involves a stepwise reduction of flow through the AVM using pre- and intraoperative embolization, followed by complete excision. The details of this management strategy are described, and results in 24 patients with exceptionally large AVMs are presented.
...
PMID:Surgical management of large AVMs. 318 23
In a group of 99 patients with unilateral or bilateral carotid artery loop the data in case records were analysed. In 11 cases no abnormalities were found, apart from the presence of carotid loop, that could be related to the presence of symptoms of cerebrovascular insufficiency observed in them. In 7 of them these symptoms appeared before the age of 40 years. Frequently, the appearance of symptoms was preceded by
headaches
and 6 patients had episodes of transient
cerebral ischaemia
. On lateral angiograms during lateral rotation of the head in 9 cases kinking of the arterial wall was seen which had been not observed in the anteroposterior projection. It is thought that in a small group of patients carotid loop may be the cause of cerebrovascular failure.
...
PMID:[Clinical significance of a vascular loop in the internal carotid artery]. 322 57
The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of nimodipine on non-migrainous vascular headache in patients with chronic
cerebral ischemia
. Eighty-six patients were examined in a double-blind trial for 16 weeks (12 weeks of nimodipine or placebo, followed by a 4-week placebo period). Fifty-six patients were studied in an open trial for 12 months. In the total material of the double-blind study there was no difference as far as improvement of
headache
was concerned when comparing the patients treated with nimodipine with those receiving placebo. However, in a group of 38 patients with a higher degree of
headache
intensity, selected in accordance with the Sandoz Clinical Assessment Geriatric scale, a statistically significant difference was found in favor of nimodipine. The results obtained in the long-term open trial seem to confirm the effect of nimodipine on
headache
. The underlying mechanisms of the beneficial effect of the drug have been discussed.
Cephalalgia
1986 Sep
PMID:Nimodipine in the treatment of headache in chronic cerebral ischemia. 353 70
Neurologic deficits evident when patients initially awaken from surgery are generally due to intraoperative embolization or inadequate cerebral protection in patients with marginal cerebral perfusion; neurologic deficits occurring in the immediate postoperative period are usually related to acute carotid occlusion or embolization. However, in a small subset of patients, transient postoperative neurologic dysfunction seems to be related to a syndrome of cerebral hyperperfusion rather than a lack of adequate cerebral blood flow. This study describes the courses of 10 patients with classic findings of cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome. Typically, this syndrome occurred in patients with longstanding severe chronic
cerebral ischemia
and occurred after correction of a very high-grade carotid stenosis. Intraoperatively, there was often a dramatic increase in xenon-labeled cerebral blood flows, with postocclusion flows sometimes attaining three to four times baseline levels. Postoperatively, the patients initially did well. However, over the next several days, many of them began to complain of unilateral
headache
on the operated side and subsequently had seizures. Electroencephalography obtained during this period uniformly revealed periodic lateralizing epileptiform discharges on the side of the brain ipsilateral to the endarterectomy. Although neurologic dysfunction fully resolved in all of the patients in this group, it is possible that intracerebral hemorrhage may occur in some patients with hyperperfusion syndrome. The pathophysiology of this syndrome is believed to be related to preoperative loss of cerebral autoregulatory mechanisms caused by chronic
cerebral ischemia
.
...
PMID:Cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome: a cause of neurologic dysfunction after carotid endarterectomy. 356 Mar 56
Two cases of spontaneous dissecting aneurysm extending from the supraclinoid portion of the internal carotid artery to the middle cerebral artery are reported in two teenaged patients. Both patients collapsed with a
headache
on the right side, left hemiparesis, and altered consciousness due to
cerebral ischemia
. One patient became alert in 2 days; however, his condition rapidly deteriorated 4 days later and he died on the 8th day from massive cerebral infarction. The other patient received a right superficial temporal artery (STA)-middle cerebral artery (MCA) anastomosis 50 hours after his initial symptoms. He improved gradually and is able to walk without help. Cerebral angiograms 3 months after the operation disclosed progressive attenuation of the MCA and dilatation of the anastomosed STA. Artificial collateral flow demonstrated in the postoperative angiogram may have been useful in preventing massive cerebral infarction.
...
PMID:Dissecting aneurysms of the anterior circle of Willis arteries. Report of two cases. 359 92
Calcium-channel entry blockers are drugs with different chemical properties and a common pharmacological characteristic. Calcium is very important in many physiological mechanisms and could be involved in neuronal damage following
cerebral ischemia
. Thus, calcium-channel blockers agents could be of interest in medical treatment of cerebrovascular diseases,
headache
and subarachnoid hemorrhage. Calcium-channel blockers seem to have a direct protective role against neuronal ischemic damage and/or a direct action on cerebral vessels. Some clinical experiences have suggested a protective role of nimodipine in the prevention of ischemic complications related to cerebral vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage.
...
PMID:[Vascular and neuronal mechanisms of calcium antagonists. Significance in neurological therapy]. 372 33
Clinical and neuroradiological evaluation of 40 adult patients, suffering from migraine-type
headache
, produced evidence of a relationship between migraine, increased CSF pressure in the posterior fossa and cerebellar herniation. These findings have led to an alternative pathophysiological concept of migraine. A disturbance of CSF circulation is thought to be the underlying factor, which causes increased pressure in the basal cisterns and posterior fossa. This results in
headache
, acquired cerebellar herniation and, in severe cases, spasm of the vertebral arteries with subsequent
cerebral ischemia
. There seems to be no essential difference in pathophysiology between common and classic migraine.
...
PMID:Migraine, a result of increased CSF pressure: a new pathophysiological concept (preliminary report). 373 95
A retrospective study was conducted on a young adults population affected by permanent symptoms of cerebral focal ischemia. Within 6 years, 24 patients between the ages of twenty and fifty were admitted to the Neurological and Medical department of our Hospital because of cerebral ischemic stroke. In 7 (29.2%) there was a previous history of common or classic migraine. No patients suffered
headache
at the time of neurologic deficit onset. In the other 17 patients in the study, 6 (25%) had valvular heart disease, 2 (8.3%) had signs suggestive of vasculitis, 2 (8.3%) had a story of head and neck injury, and in the remaining 7 (29.2%) patients no discernible etiology was demonstrated. Our data confirm the hypothesis that migraine may be considered an etiologic factor for persistent
cerebral ischemia
in young adults.
...
PMID:[Hemicrania and cerebral ischemia in young adults]. 377 93
Consistent literature data on the cerebrovascular risk in migraineous patients are lacking. Available preliminary clinical data (Italian Cooperative Cross-Sectional Case-Control Study) suggest that migraine can hardly be considered a relevant pathogenetic associated risk factor of focal
cerebral ischemia
.
Cephalalgia
1985 May
PMID:Focal cerebral ischemia and migraine. 401 36
The cases of 127 consecutive patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), in whom cerebral panangiography revealed no cause for the bleeding nor any sign of an intraparenchymatous hemorrhage, were reviewed in a study of the long-term prognosis and the possible prognostic factors in this condition. Data for all 127 patients in the study were obtained, with an average follow-up period of 5.4 years. After the 1st week post-SAH, only three rebleeds had occurred. In all, 80% of the patients had returned to full activity, 91% to at least part-time work; if the patients with hypertension were excluded, these figures rose to 86% and 95%, respectively. Decreased wakefulness on admission related to a slightly poorer prognosis, whereas age and red blood cell count in the cerebrospinal fluid had no prognostic significance. Of those patients who, at the end of the 2nd week following the SAH, were fully awake and had not developed any symptoms of delayed
cerebral ischemia
(87% of all patients admitted), 88% returned to full activity, 97% to at least part-time work. The survival rate for this group, as well as causes of death, seem to be within the range for normal individuals. It should thus be possible to inform these patients (at least the normotensive ones) of the benignity of their condition, directly after normal angiography. Even among the patients who were able to return to full activity, symptoms attributable to the SAH were common: 22% experienced problems such as frequent
headaches
, vertigo, irritability, and increased fatigability.
...
PMID:Subarachnoid hemorrhage of unknown origin: prognosis and prognostic factors. 402 Apr 60
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