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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (
hemiplegia
)
3,997
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One hundred and seventy-one patients with
dissecting aneurysm
seen between 1951 and 1976 at three hospitals in Manchester were studied. There were 60 proximal dissections, 80 distal dissections, 10 abdominal dissections and in 21 the site of origin was uncertain. Pain was the major symptom in 88 per cent of patients; radiation of pain to the interscapular region was much more common in distal dissections. Systemic hypertension was present in 77 per cent, being commoner in distal dissections (83 per cent) than in proximal dissections (70 per cent). Aortic incompetence,
hemiplegia
and shock were all more common in proximal dissections. Post-mortem examination was performed in 125 patients. Eighty-four per cent of proximal dissections had ruptured, 74 per cent into the pericardium and five per cent into the left pleural cavity. Seventy per cent of distal dissections had ruptured, 11 per cent into the pericardium and 41 per cent into the left pleural cavity. The extent of the dissection was analysed, and it was shown that 25 per cent of distal dissections had extended proximally into the ascending aorta and arch. This implies that diagnosis of the site of origin of dissection from clinical signs and the plain chest-radiograph is inaccurate. Aortography is required for precise assessment. Since treatment often varies with the site of dissection, aortography should be performed in most patients surviving the first few hours. Attention is drawn to the frequency (10.4 per cent) of multiple aortic lesions, and to the occasional aetiological significance of giant-cell arteritis, and, possibly, hypothyroidism.
...
PMID:Dissecting aortic aneurysms: a clinicopathological study. I. Clinical and gross pathological findings. 48 91
The authors present a case of the sudden onset of
hemiplegia
in an eight-year-old boy secondary to a
dissecting aneurysm
of the right internal carotid artery and middle cerebral artery.
...
PMID:Dissecting aneurysm of intracranial arteries. 83 17
Since 1959, 51 patients underwent open heart surgery for correction of an acute
dissecting aneurysm
of the ascending aorta. Upon admission, 33 patients were severely hypotensive or in progressive heart failure. Acute aortic insufficiency was found in 24 patients, and
hemiplegia
or hemiparesis in four. In 45 patients the ascending aorta was reconstructed with a woven Dacron graft. After excision of the dissected part of the aorta, primary anastomosis or patch aortoplasty was performed in six patients. The aortic valve remained intact in 26 patients, and resuspension of the commissures restored competence of the aortic valve in another nine. Sixteen patients required aortic valve replacement because of disrupture of the commissures. Dissection extended into the coronary ostia in nine cases. Reconstruction of the coronary system was accomplished by reimplantation of the ostia, interposition of a vein graft or aortocoronary bypass. Nine patients died within the early postoperative course from uncontrollable hemorrhage (four), further dissection (three) and myocardial infarction (two). Within the first year after surgery, another five patients died from acute aortic dissection (two), pseudomonas infection causing rupture of the proximal graft anastomosis (one) and myocardial infarction (two). Contraindications of antihypertensive treatment of acute dissection of the ascending aorta are discussed. We recommend prompt surgical intervention in acute dissecting aneurysms of the ascending aorta.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of acute dissecting aneurysm of the ascending aorta. 83 90
Since 1959, 51 patients underwent open heart surgery for correction of acute dissection of the ascending aorta. Upon admission 33 patients were severely hypotensive or in porgressive heart failure. Acute aortic insufficiency was found in 24 patients, and
hemiplegia
or hemiparesis in 4. In 45 patients the ascending aorta was reconstructed with a woven graft. After excision of the dissected part of the aorta primary anastomosis or patch aortoplasty was performed in 6 patients. The aortic valve remained intact in 26 cases, and resuspension of the commissures restored competence of the aortic valve in another 9 patients. Sixteen patients required aortic valve replacement because of disrupture of the commissures. Dissection extended into the coronary ostia in 5 cases. Reconstruction of the coronary system was accomplished by reimplantation of the ostia, interposition of a vein graft or aorto-coronary bypass. Nine patients died within the early postoperative course from uncontrollable hemorrhage (4), further dissection (3) and myocardial infarction (2). Within the first year after surgery another 5 patients died from acute aortic dissection (2), pseudomonas-infection causing rupture of the proximal graft anastomosis (1), and myocardial infarction (2). The contraindications of antihypertensive treatment of actue dissection of the ascending aorta are discussed. We recommend prompt surgical intervention in acute
dissecting aneurysm
of the ascending aorta.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of acute dissection of the ascending aorta (author's transl)]. 108 May 86
Nontraumatic intracranial dissecting aneurysms have rarely been reported as the cause of acute infantile and childhood
hemiplegia
. The present case is unique because dissecting aneurysms occurred bilaterally in two clinically distinct episodes. A recent
dissecting aneurysm
of the right intracranial internal carotid artery was present with a healed
dissecting aneurysm
of left internal carotid artery in an 8-year-old boy.
...
PMID:Bilateral dissecting aneurysms of the intracranial internal carotid arteries in an 8-year-old boy. 116 77
A case of
dissecting aneurysm
of the cervical internal carotid artery due to rare mechanism by non-penetrating injury is described. A 45-year-old right-handed man had complaints of the right lateral neck pain during exercise of KENDO wearing a tight headneck protector. Following sudden dysarthria and left
hemiplegia
, he developed loss of consciousness and generalized convulsion. Five hours after admission, he became alert and had no neurological deficits. Four days after these episodes, he loss visual acuity of the right eye, and a few days later he showed left
hemiplegia
, hypotension, hypersomnia and right-sides Horner's syndrome. Right retrograde brachial angiography revealed so-called "string sign" in the right extracranial internal carotid artery and delayed circulation in the right cerebral hemisphere. He was diagnosed as having traumatic
dissecting aneurysm
due to blunt (rubbing) injury. He was treated with STA-MCA anastomosis 3 weeks after the accident. Usually, carotid
dissecting aneurysm
due to blunt injury is produced by hyperextension and contralateral rotation of the neck or direct blow to the neck, but our case shows a possible mechanism of rubbing injury such as simple anteroposterior flexion under tight neck fixation.
...
PMID:[Carotid dissecting aneurysm due to blunt (rubbing) injury of the Kendo protector]. 395 67
Dissecting intracranial arterial aneurysms were identified in a 16-year-old girl and a 48-year-old man with moyamoya disease.
Hemiplegia
or tetraplegia rapidly developed. Angiography revealed bilateral stenoses or occlusion of the bifurcation of the internal carotid arteries (ICA's) and an unusual vascular network at the base of the brain. Autopsy confirmed massive hemorrhage from the thalamus and putamen, with intraventricular extension. The intracranial segments of both ICA's were markedly stenotic in both patients, due to eccentric fibroelastic intimal thickening. In one patient, a
dissecting aneurysm
was identified microscopically, involving the proximal segment of the left anterior cerebral artery. In the other patient, the right middle cerebral artery (MCA) was dissected beneath the internal elastic lamina along the entire length of the horizontal segment of the MCA. Thus, cerebral dissecting aneurysms may be present in patients with moyamoya disease.
...
PMID:Cerebral dissecting aneurysms in patients with moyamoya disease. Report of two cases. 684 98
A 19-year-old white man developed aphasia and right
hemiplegia
after several falls while waterskiing. Cerebral angiography displayed a ripple appearance and a "string of beads" sign along the left middle cerebral artery, with occlusion or stenosis of most of its branches. The patient died after 6 days, of transtentorial herniation due to massive left cerebral infarction. At necropsy, the infarct was found to be due to a subintimal
dissecting aneurysm
of the left middle cerebral artery. Multifocal areas of intimal fibroelastic thickening (IFT) were found not only at the site of dissection, but also in the other cerebral arteries, most prominent at the bifurcations of the vessels. A systematic study of cerebral arteries performed in six control cases revealed that IFT was present in a similar distribution to that seen in the patient described. However, the degree of IFT in this patient was greater than in the controls. Some individuals with excessive IFT may be more susceptible to cerebral
dissecting aneurysm
under a variety of stresses, especially trauma.
...
PMID:Cerebral dissecting aneurysm and intimal fibroelastic thickening of cerebral arteries. Case report. 706 29
Children presenting after trauma with headache, seizures,
hemiplegia
and coma may have an intracranial
dissecting aneurysm
. Specific angiographic findings provide confirmation of this diagnosis. The dissection occurs subintimally and differs clinically and pathologically from dissecting aneurysms of extracranial arteries. The course in children beyond infancy is catastrophic, justifying consideration of potentially life saving surgical intervention.
...
PMID:Intracranial dissecting aneurysms in childhood. 706 92
Fibromuscular dysplasia of the internal carotid artery is the most frequent extracranial localization of the disease. It can produce TIA or cerebral infarct through formation of fibrinous thrombi or complete occlusion of the artery. Seven cases are presented with disease localized in the distal segment of the carotid artery, usually considered inaccessible through standard exposure. A surgical approach is described to treat these lesions by performing a mandible osteotomy. This allows a resection of the internal carotid and its replacement with autologous saphenous vein graft as performed in six cases. The distal anastomosis was performed 1 or 2 cm. below the base of the skull. One case could not be corrected due to disease extending into the skull. All patients were operated on for TIA and one had a cerebral infarct. Six patients had an uneventful recovery and no further neurological symptoms. One patient had a postoperative
hemiplegia
. Pathologic specimens were described as fibromuscular dysplasia in all cases. Three of them had also a
dissecting aneurysm
, two of these also showed a ruptured intima. Intraluminal dilatation is regarded as a potentially risky procedure; resection and replacement through a mandible osteotomy is recommended for very distal internal carotid lesions.
...
PMID:Fibromuscular dysplasia of the distal cervical internal carotid artery. 727 76
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