Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (hypercapnia)
7,939 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and the response to hypercapnia (cerebral reactivity) have been measured in 41 patients with unilateral or bilateral internal carotid artery occlusion in an attempt to identify those with limited collateral reserve. Normocapnic CBF was within normal limits in the majority of subjects. The response to hypercapnia varied from normal to absent, with impaired reactivity becoming increasingly likely when more than one artery was diseased. In 19 patients with unilateral carotid occlusion, hemisphere reactivity was well preserved in the majority, but was significantly lower on the side of the occlusion (mean 2.9%/mm Hg) compared to the normal side (mean 3.4%/mm Hg). Reactivity on the side of the occlusion was further reduced in 15 patients with occlusion and contralateral internal carotid artery stenosis (mean 1.7%/mm Hg) and was even lower in seven patients with bilateral occlusion (mean 1.1%/mm Hg). There was no difference in reactivity between asymptomatic hemispheres in the 41 patients (mean 2.7%/mm Hg) and hemispheres in which a previous stroke had occurred (mean 2.8%/mm Hg). In contrast the response in hemispheres subject to continuing transient ischaemic attacks was significantly impaired (mean 1.6%/mm Hg), suggesting that the cerebral symptoms in some of these patients may have had a haemodynamic origin more often than suspected from the clinical history.
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PMID:Reactivity of the cerebral circulation in patients with carotid occlusion. 309 71

Regional cerebral blood flow was measured by the 133Xe inhalation technique in 15 patients with severe unilateral internal carotid artery stenosis (75%) or occlusion, and in the absence of evidence of any sign of occlusive disease in other main afferent cerebral arteries. A comparison with normal subjects showed that lowered resting flow in both hemispheres was a common finding in all patients. Interhemispheric asymmetry was present only in patients with occlusion and the precentral, posterior temporal, and occipital regions were the most seriously affected. The CO2 reactivity was substantially reduced in both hemispheres of all stenotic and occluded patients, but occluded patients showed an increased reduction of CO2 reactivity only in the ipsilateral hemisphere. In addition to an hypothetical age effect, the atherosclerotic involvement of the cerebral vascular system leads to a reduction of flow and loss of CO2 reactivity in both hemispheres. In this context, the collateral supply capacity is not overloaded in case of a unilateral severe stenosis but fails in case of a unilateral occlusion of the internal carotid artery. A suitable estimate of the blood flow reduction as a result of occlusion is made by the hemispheric and regional laterality indices applied in resting and hypercapnia conditions. These indices could be used as indicators for endarterectomy or bypass surgery as well as a sensitive means for appreciating cerebral blood flow response to treatment.
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PMID:Resting and hypercapnic rCBF in patients with unilateral occlusive disease of the internal carotid artery. 312 76

Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured in 39 men at normocapnia and after 5% CO2 inhalation using the xenon-133 technique. Twenty-three patients had unilateral carotid artery occlusion with no angiographic evidence of contralateral carotid artery stenosis or ophthalmic collateral flow. Eleven of these patients had undergone extracranial-intracranial (EC-IC) bypass surgery. Sixteen age-matched normal men underwent CBF measurements at normocapnia and hypercapnia to provide control data. Mean hemispheric CBF was not different between hemispheres ipsilateral and contralateral to the carotid artery occlusion either in the patients who had undergone bypass surgery or in those with carotid artery occlusion alone. Considering all patients with carotid artery occlusion, mean CO2 reactivity was decreased in the hemisphere ipsilateral to the occlusion as compared to the contralateral hemisphere in both groups. Based on data from normal individuals, a hemispheric difference in CO2 reactivity of more than 0.94%/mm Hg PaCO2 or a global CO2 reactivity of less than 0.66%/mm Hg PaCO2 was considered abnormal for an individual patient. Six of 23 patients with carotid artery occlusion (three with an EC-IC bypass) had global or hemispheric abnormalities in CO2 reactivity. Patients with impaired CO2 reactivity were not distinguishable from other patients by neurological examination, presence of transient ischemic attacks, or evidence of infarction on computerized tomography scanning. This test was safe and simple to perform and may be a useful means of detecting impaired cerebrovascular collateral reserve capacity. If impaired CO2 reactivity after carotid artery occlusion proves to be associated with a high risk of subsequent stroke, the test would provide a physiological basis for selecting a subgroup of patients who could be helped by cerebral revascularization.
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PMID:Cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity after carotid artery occlusion. 313 40

We simultaneously performed near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and transcranial Doppler (TCD) to evaluate the effects of hypercapnia as well as of scalp ischemia on the blood flow at two different depth levels within the brain and of the scalp vessels. A decrease in the backscattered light intensity, meaning an increment of blood volume, was detected at the end of hypercapnia in all healthy subjects. This decrement was partly masked by ischemia in the cutaneous vessels. In 2 patients with a monohemispheric lesion in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory, an increase in NIRS response was found in the healthy hemisphere, while in the stroke side the CO2-induced changes were negligible. TCD data showed a similar increment of blood flow velocity to the hypercapnia in both hemispheres, with no differences between the affected and normal side in 1 patient, whereas in the second one, no increment was observed on the affected side, probably due to internal carotid artery stenosis. The two methods nicely integrate: TCD mainly tests subcortical changes in the MCA flow, while NIRS is exquisitely sensitive to cortical arterioles and capillary blood flow modifications.
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PMID:Near infrared spectroscopy and transcranial Doppler in monohemispheric stroke. 1020 48

The benefits of surgical correction of moderate internal carotid artery stenosis have been demonstrated only in symptomatic subjects. It is debatable whether patients with lacunar infarct ipsilateral to a moderate carotid stenosis may be considered symptomatic like those with large-artery stroke. The aim of the study was to seek markers capable of differentiating patients with lacunar or non-lacunar stroke ipsilateral to a moderate internal carotid artery stenosis. We enrolled 95 patients with a first stroke ipsilateral to a moderate (50-69 %) stenosis of the internal carotid artery and divided them into lacunar and non-lacunar stroke based on clinical presentation and neuroradiological findings; 34 subjects with asymptomatic moderate carotid stenosis and 31 normal individuals were also studied. Baseline characteristics; risk factors, cerebrovascular reactivity to hypercapnia evaluated by means of the breath-holding index (BHI), the presence and severity of carotid stenosis and intimamedia thickness (IMT) of the common carotid arteries were determined. There were 36 patients with lacunar and 59 with non-lacunar stroke. Degree of stenosis, and IMT and BHI ipsilateral to symptomatic stenosis were found to be significant independent predictors as each 10 % increase of stenosis carried a 4.3 higher probability of non-lacunar stroke (95 % CI: 1.91-9.51); each decimillimeter increment in IMT increased this probability by 1.45 (95 % CI: 1.10-1.92); and the risk odds ratio associated with each 0.1 increase in BHI was 1.88 (95 % CI: 1.33-2.66). A decrease in BHI of 0.1 thus carried a 90% greater probability of having a lacunar stroke. The results show that patients with moderate internal carotid artery stenosis and lacunar stroke can be differentiated from those with non-lacunar stroke on the basis of distinctive ultrasonographic findings. Further studies are needed to clarify whether our findings have pathogenetic implications and may be of help for the planning of different therapeutic strategies in patients with moderate internal carotid stenosis and lacunar or non-lacunar ipsilateral stroke.
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PMID:Markers of lacunar stroke in patients with moderate internal carotid artery stenosis. 1620 26

The aim of this 12-month prospective study was to establish whether severe internal carotid artery stenosis is associated with faster progression of the cognitive impairment in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Four hundred and eleven patients with AD underwent extracranial carotid Doppler ultrasound evaluation. Cerebrovascular reactivity to hypercapnia was measured by means of the breath-holding index (BHI) in those with severe carotid artery stenosis using transcranial Doppler ultrasonography. Cognitive status was quantified with the Mini Mental State Evaluation (MMSE). Ninety-eight patients had severe carotid artery stenosis, 41 right (group 1), and 57 left (group 2), while 313 had no significant stenosis (group 3). Group 1 and 2 patients showed an increased probability compared with group 3 patients to develop severe dementia (MMSE scores < 21) during the 12-month follow-up period: OR 2.36 (95% CI: 1.14-4.87) and OR 4.90 (95% CI: 2.65-9.04), respectively (p < 0.05, multiple logistic regression analysis). A BHI value ipsilateral to the stenosis < 0.69 predicted a worse MMSE score at 12 months irrespective of the side of the stenosis. These findings suggest that severe internal carotid artery stenosis can be considered as a marker of a faster rate of progression of the cognitive decline in AD. They also indicate that cerebral hemodynamic evaluation could be applied to identify patients at higher risk of rapid cognitive decline, who may benefit from aggressive treatment, and warrant investigation of the advantages of carotid revascularization procedures in these patients.
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PMID:The role of carotid atherosclerosis in Alzheimer's disease progression. 2150 32