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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transcranial Doppler ultrasound is a relatively new diagnostic modality which allows the noninvasive assessment of intracranial circulation. A total of 10 migraine patients were studied and compared to healthy controls without
headaches
. Migraineurs during the
headache
-free interval demonstrated excessive cerebrovascular reactivity to
CO2
, evidenced by an increase in middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity of 47% +/- 15% compared to 28% +/- 14% in controls (p = 0.026). Differences between the two study groups revealed no significant decrease in middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity with hypocapnia. However, the differences between middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity during hyperventilation and
CO2
inhalation were significantly different (p = 0.004) comparing migraineurs and controls. Instability of the baseline blood flow velocities was also noted in migraineurs during the interictal period. Characteristics which may allow differentiation of migraineurs from other
headache
populations could possibly be obtained from transcranial Doppler ultrasound flow studies.
Cephalalgia
1990 Apr
PMID:Cerebrovascular reactivity in migraineurs as measured by transcranial Doppler. 219 14
We present further evidence for a sympathetic defect of vasomotor control of the anterior cerebral artery (ACA) on the side of the
headache
during cluster periods. In 119 cluster
headache
patients, utilizing transcranial Doppler, we measured
CO2
reactivity of the major intracranial vessels, in and out of cluster. Reactivity was significantly lower during the cluster period, but only in the ACA on the side of the
headache
. Nineteen patients followed sequentially for a full cycle (ie/both in and out of a cluster period) showed the same changes. In 3 out of 6 patients in an active cluster period, we describe a lesion on Gallium single-photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT) in the region of the cavernous sinus which fades as the patient moves out of cluster. It is felt that this lesion may represent the cavernous sinus plexus lesion postulated as the central lesion in cluster. Changes in the sympathetic outflow at this point could explain the changes we have described in ACA
CO2
reactivity during cluster.
Headache
1990 Oct
PMID:The cluster diathesis. 227 16
This study was designed to investigate the hemodynamic characteristics of cavernous angiomas of the brain. Five adult patients with a cavernous angioma underwent local cortical blood flow studies and vascular pressure measurements during surgery for the excision of the cavernous angioma. Clinical presentation included
headache
in four patients, seizures in four patients, and recurring diplopia in one patient. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated the cavernous angiomas in all patients and revealed an associated small hematoma in two. Four patients with a cerebral cavernous angioma were operated on in the supine position and the remaining patient, whose lesion involved the brain stem, was operated on in the sitting position. Mean local cortical blood flow (+/- standard error of the mean) in the cerebral cortex adjacent to the lesion was 60.5 +/- 8.3 ml/100 gm/min at a mean PaCO2 of 35.0 +/- 0.6 torr. Mean
CO2
reactivity was 1.1 +/- 0.2 ml/100 gm/min/torr. The local cortical blood flow results were similar to established normal control findings. Mean pressure within the lesion in the patients undergoing surgery while supine was 38.2 +/- 0.5 mm Hg; a slight decline in cavernous angioma pressure occurred with a drop in mean systemic arterial blood pressure and PaCO2. Mean pressure in the cavernous angioma in the patient operated on in the sitting position was 7 mm Hg. Jugular compression resulted in a 9-mm Hg rise in cavernous angioma pressure in one supine patient but no change in the patient in the sitting position. Direct microscopic observation revealed slow circulation within the lesions. The hemodynamic features demonstrated in this study indicate that cavernous angiomas are relatively passive vascular anomalies that are unlikely to produce ischemia in adjacent brain. Frank hemorrhage would be expected to be self-limiting because of relatively low driving pressures.
...
PMID:Vascular pressures and cortical blood flow in cavernous angioma of the brain. 239 87
Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured in 16 cranial regions in 23 children and adolescents with frequent
headaches
using the non-invasive Xenon-133 inhalation technique. Blood flow response to 5% carbon dioxide (
CO2
) was also determined in 21 patients, while response to 50% oxygen was measured in the two patients with hemoglobinopathy. Included were 10 patients with a clinical diagnosis of migraine, 4 with musculoskeletal
headaches
, and 3 with features of both types. Also studied were 2 patients with primary thrombocythemia, 2 patients with hemoglobinopathy and
headaches
, 1 patient with polycythemia, and 1 with
headaches
following trauma. With two exceptions, rCBF determinations were done during an asymptomatic period. Baseline rCBF values tended to be higher in these young patients than in young adults done in our laboratory. Localized reduction in the expected blood flow surge after
CO2
inhalation, most often noted posteriorly, was seen in 8 of the 13 vascular headaches, but in none of the musculoskeletal
headache
group. Both patients with primary thrombocythemia had normal baseline flow values and altered responsiveness to
CO2
similar to that seen in migraineurs; thus, the frequently reported
headache
and transient neurologic signs with primary thrombocythemia are probably not due to microvascular obstruction as previously suggested. These data support the concept of pediatric migraine as a disorder of vasomotor function and also add to our knowledge of normal rCBF values in younger patients. Demonstration of altered vasomotor reactivity to
CO2
could prove helpful in children whose
headache
is atypical.
Headache
1989 Jun
PMID:Regional cerebral blood flow in childhood headache. 250 64
The authors describe the case of a 37-year-old patient, who, after a minor craniocerebral trauma suffered in 1970, was admitted to hospital because of progressive
headache
, unsteady gait and balance disturbances, deglutition disorders and diplopia. Computed tomography (CT) scan showed a large median hyperdense tumour of posterior fossa with the fourth ventricle involvement. Operation under microscope was performed to remove a considerably large cystic tumour, occupying the fourth ventricle and cisterna magna, displacing the cerebellar lobes and pushing the vermis upward. The tumour was waxy and grey, whereas the cystic liquid had the colour and consistency of oily fluid. The capsule was occluded with the
CO2
laser. Postoperative course was good.
...
PMID:Dermoid tumour of the fourth ventricle with hyperdense aspect demonstrated on CT scan. Case report. 258 31
The side-effects of two opioid agonist-antagonists, nalbuphine and pentazocine, were assessed when used for patient-controlled postoperative analgesia. Forty ASA I or II patients scheduled for upper abdominal surgery were randomly allocated to two equal groups. The anaesthetic technique was the same for all the patients: premedication with atropine and diazepam, induction with thiopentone and suxamethonium and maintenance with fentanyl, pancuronium, nitrous oxide and halothane. Patient-controlled computer assisted analgesia (On-Demand Analgesia Computer) was started in the recovery room at least 2 h after the last administration of fentanyl. The parameters used were: a routine hourly dose (the half of that received during the previous hour), with on demand delivery of nalbuphine (15 micrograms.kg-1) or pentazocine (45 micrograms.kg-1) aliquots respectively, with a refractory period between two demands of 4 min and a total hourly maximum dose of 16 mg and 48 mg respectively. The following parameters were measured before the start of self-administration, and every hour afterwards for 24 h: systolic (Pasys) and diastolic blood pressures, heart rate, pressure-rate product (PRP), respiratory rate, end-tidal
CO2
and pain (by way of a three point scale). Analgesia was assessed on a four-point scale every 6 h. The total doses of nalbuphine and pentazocine administered were 94 +/- 43 mg and 251 +/- 150 mg respectively. The only parameters significantly different between the two groups were Pasys and PRP, being higher in the pentazocine group. There were no significant differences in the side-effects (drowsiness, nausea, vomiting,
headache
, amnesia, logorrhoea and urine retention). All patients in both groups were satisfied with this technique.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Comparison of nalbuphine and pentazocine in the treatment of postoperative pain by self-administration]. 266 Jun 40
The ferrihaemoglobin (HbFe3+) formation by amyl nitrite (AN) or sodium nitrite (NaNO2) was studied in different species including man, in vivo and in vitro. In in vivo studies AN was administered intravenously (i.v.), intramuscularly (i.m.), by inhalation, or orally. NaNO2 was injected i.v.. AN i.v. produced HbFe3+ much more rapidly than NaNO2 in dogs, cats, rabbits, and rats. In dogs, i.m. injection of AN was followed by a very slow linear increase in the HbFe3+ content. Inhalation of AN did not lead to HbFe3+ formation in dogs unless it was rebreathed in a closed (bag) or not completely open (gas mask) system. HbFe3+ was produced by oral AN in dogs, the effect being enhanced by addition of DMSO. Inhalation of AN by human volunteers in a gas mask and from ampoules crushed close to the nose did not induce haemoglobin oxidation to a practically significant extent, but it was associated with
headache
, tiredness, dizziness, and a fall in blood pressure. In in vitro studies, in contrast to NaNO2, AN produced HbFe3+ instantaneously in erythrocytes of various species and in purified human haemoglobin. AN 1 mol yielded 2 mol Fe3+. Only 20% of the oxygen released during the oxidation of haemoglobin by AN or NaNO2 was recovered. In 0.2 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, 0.01 mol O2/mol AN was consumed.
CO2
was released in the presence of AN, but not of NaNO2, from blood, plasma, and 0.02 M NaHCO3 solution. The ratio (lactate)/(pyruvate) decreased when HbFe3+ was formed by AN or NaNO2.
...
PMID:Ferrihaemoglobin formation by amyl nitrite and sodium nitrite in different species in vivo and in vitro. 290 49
Profound transient nocturnal hypoxemia is common during REM sleep in "blue bloaters" with chronic obstructive lung disease, these patients having hypoxemia and
CO2
retention when awake, when breathing air. These hypoxemic episodes appear to be due to a combination of reduced ventilation in REM sleep with a possible increase in the maldistribution of ventilation to perfusion within the alveoli at that time, and a reduction in functional residual capacity. The episodes are associated with exacerbations of pulmonary vasoconstriction, which can be reversed by oxygen therapy throughout sleep. Cardiac arrhythmias and alterations in ST segments are also found in these patients during sleep when breathing air. It is probable that the severity of hypoxemia in REM sleep can be predicted from knowledge of the arterial PO2 when breathing air when awake in patients with COPD. If so, expensive sleep studies are not essential to indicate the presence of hypoxemia in sleep in these patients, but such studies may be required in obese patients, in those who snore, or those who complain of
headache
following nocturnal oxygen therapy to demonstrate the presence of the overlap syndrome, in which obstructive sleep apnea is combined with chronic obstructive lung disease in the same patient. Nocturnal oxygen therapy may be dangerous in such patients with the overlap syndrome but appears to cause little rise in PCO2, in patients with COPD and REM-associated hypoxemia alone. Hypoxemia and sleep quality can probably be improved by oxygen therapy in "blue bloaters," and this treatment can also reverse pulmonary hypertension in REM sleep. The new ventilatory stimulant almitrine can also correct hypoxemia, without disturbing sleep quality, but the effects of this drug on pulmonary vasoconstriction during REM sleep are as yet unknown.
...
PMID:Sleep in chronic obstructive lung disease. 293 59
Stimulated by positive reports of patients who were treated with
CO2
-gas injections during a sanatorium stay in the CSSR and after evaluation of the literature, we began with the
CO2
-gas injection in our patients in 1983. The following disturbances and groups of diseases were included as indication to this form of therapy: 1. Cervico-cranial syndrome, in particular pains in the neck, contractions of the neck,
headache
including migraine and vertigo 2. Cervico-brachial syndrome 3. Lumbalgia with and without root-irritation syndrome 4. Other pain conditions at the apparatus of locomotion (by degenerative changes, muscular contractions and others). Before the beginning of the therapy the diagnoses were clinically and paraclinically clarified. The therapeutic mechanism is explained by the physiological irritation, which is evoked by the high
CO2
-concentrations in the tissue and leads to an increase of the blood supply in the adequate region. The results of the therapy are convincing.
...
PMID:[CO2 gas injection--indications and results]. 312 16
Seventeen patients with low-grade cerebral gliomas, fourteen of them low-grade astrocytomas, were operated using CT/ultrasound-guided operative technique. The mean age of the patients was 34 years, and the mean follow-up time 13 months. The patients usually presented with symptoms of
headache
and/or epilepsy. Craniotomy was performed, and all lesions could be visualized as hyperechogenic masses using intraoperative ultrasound imaging. This paper describes the preliminary results of treatment with conventional resection methods, and discusses methods which could be readily adapted to the CT/ultrasound-based imaging system:
CO2
and Nd-YAG laser, ultrasound aspirator, intense focused ultrasound lesioning and immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies. Finally the evaluation of treatment results with quality of life studies is suggested, especially for longitudinal follow-up of patients treated with alternative therapeutic methods. The role of quality of life studies is particularly important in assuring the longest and most useful survival of patients with small low-grade cerebral tumors.
...
PMID:Treatment of low-grade cerebral astrocytoma: new methods and evaluation of results. 354 36
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