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170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We identified 85 patients in a longitudinal study of dementia who had uncomplicated Alzheimer's disease and in whom computed tomography of the head and psychometric testing were conducted within a 6-month period following their entry into the study. Thirty-four patients (40%) had leukoaraiosis, which was disproportionately common in female patients (62% vs 15% in male patients). Analysis of covariance demonstrated a relative reduction of scores on the Extended Scale for Dementia in those patients who had leukoaraiosis, after adjusting for the confounding effects of age, sex, educational level, and duration of illness. Leukoaraiosis was also much more common in women, even after adjusting for the possible confounding effects of age, duration of illness, Extended Scale for Dementia score, and hypertension. Multiple regression analysis showed that leukoaraiosis accounted for 11.6% of the variance of the Extended Scale for Dementia scores. Leukoaraiosis, together with duration of illness, accounted for 18.2% of the variance. Leukoaraiosis is associated with a greater degree of cognitive impairment in patients with Alzheimer's disease.
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PMID:Improved recognition of leukoaraiosis and cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease. 192 92

In cerebral amyloid angiopathy, the contractile elements of the leptomeningeal and cortical arteries are replaced by noncontractile amyloid beta protein. The incidence of amyloid angiopathy increases with advancing age. It is associated with Alzheimer's disease and spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage. The latter can have the characteristic acute computed tomographic appearance of a hematoma at the cortex-white matter junction with extension of blood into the subarachnoid, subdural, and intraventricular spaces. Multiple hemorrhages are frequent. Additional bleeding can occur after evacuation of the hematoma, and postoperative hemorrhage can occur after cortical biopsy. To elucidate the role of surgery in this condition, we have reviewed 20 consecutive operated cases of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. A first group of 8 patients with senila dementia underwent cortical biopsy without resultant hemorrhage. A second group of 6 patients in good clinical condition had delayed evacuation of a spontaneous cerebral hematoma from cerebral amyloid angiopathy because of the radiological misdiagnosis of a hemorrhage within a tumor. One patient died of a pulmonary embolism, and another had subsequent multiple hemorrhages that were ultimately fatal. A third group of 6 patients in poor neurological condition had the acute evacuation of a spontaneous cerebral hematoma to relieve intracranial hypertension. All died or were severely disabled. One had repeated hemorrhages which added a progressively more severe organic dementia onto an initial hemiplegia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Surgical considerations in cerebral amyloid angiopathy. 196 1

Vascular dementia is the second most common type of dementia in the elderly after the dementia of Alzheimer's disease. Six forms of vascular dementia have been described: multi-infarct dementia, lacunar dementia, Binswanger's subcortical encephalopathy, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, white-matter lesions associated with dementias, and single-infarct dementia. Each is described. Severe dementia is found in 5% of persons over age 65 and in 15% to 20% of persons over age 80 years. Alzheimer's disease accounts for 50% to 60% of cases of severe dementia and vascular dementia for 10% to 20%; 20% of the patients have both disorders. The incidence of vascular dementia, which seems to be declining, is about 7/1,000 persons/year. Hypertension is the most powerful risk factor for all vascular dementias. Vascular dementias can be accurately diagnosed by using clinical and mental state examinations, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders criteria, ischemic scores, and computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. The most successful treatment of vascular dementia is the prevention of cerebral infarcts. Study of the incidence of vascular dementias and their treatment will be included in the European Trial on Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly (SYST-EUR) of 3,000 elderly hypertensive patients.
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PMID:Hypertension and the risk of dementia in the elderly. 200 54

A stratified random sample of 83 black and 81 white community residents aged 65 years and older in a five-county area in the Piedmont region of North Carolina was evaluated for dementia, using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition, and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke--Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Association criteria. Of 164 subjects, 26 were found to be demented, resulting in an estimated prevalence rate of dementia in the five-county area of 16% (95% confidence interval, 7.92 to 24.08) for blacks and 3.05% (95% confidence interval, 0 to 6.91) for whites. The estimated prevalence of dementia for white women (2.9%) was similar to that for white men (3.3%), but the rate for black women was distinctly higher than for black men (19.9% and 8.9%, respectively). Blacks were more likely than whites to have a history of stroke, hypertension, and other chronic disorders that might have contributed to the development of dementia. Apart from differences in rates of institutionalization, no other relevant factors were identified that might explain the difference in the prevalence of dementia in these black and white community residents.
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PMID:Estimated prevalence of dementia among elderly black and white community residents. 203 81

Accurate volume determination of the encephalic ventricles is of importance in several clinical conditions, including Alzheimer's presenile dementia, schizophrenia, and benign intracranial hypertension. Previous studies have investigated the accuracy with which magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be used in clinical practice to evaluate the encephalic ventricles. However, adequate evaluation of pathological conditions depends on a sufficient amount of morphometric data from normal subjects. To begin establishing this data base for "normal" subjects, we evaluated the MRI scans of 38 subjects found to have no apparent pathology and calculated the ventricular volume in each case by using methods previously developed in our laboratory. The results were then compared with published volumes determined from studies that used either ventricular casts or computerized tomographic scans. The average total ventricular volume for all 38 subjects was 17.4 cm3, while that for males was 16.3 cm3 and that for females was 18.0 cm3. A small but significant correlation was found between age of subject and ventricular volume, with ventricular size increasing with age.
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PMID:Evaluation of encephalic ventricular volume from the magnetic resonance imaging scans of thirty-eight human subjects. 209 64

The cerebral white matter is highly susceptible to ischemic damage because of its location in the end-fields of penetrating arteries. Our studies have shown that hypertension, short-term variability of blood pressure, decreased oxygen dissociation of hemoglobin, and increased resistance of cerebral arterioles play important roles in the pathogenesis of Binswanger type dementia. While hypoperfusion was most remarkable in the frontal area and dopamine metabolism in the cerebrospinal fluid was impaired in Binswanger type dementia, cerebral blood flow decreased most conspicuously in the parietal area and there was an impairment of noradrenaline metabolism in the cerebrospinal fluid in senile dementia of Alzheimer type. Previous anatomical studies have indicated that the ascending dopaminergic system predominantly innervates the frontal cortex, while the noradrenergic system projects all cortical areas, including the parietal cortex. Our findings suggest frontally-dominant dysfunctions in Binswanger type dementia.
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PMID:[Pathogenesis and pathophysiology of ischemic leukoencephalopathy]. 209 78

As it has been recently postulated that patients with dementia have some altered neural transmission, these patients are speculated to accompany autonomic dysfunctions. The present study was aimed at investigating autonomic nervous functions in dementia of Alzheimer type (DAT) and multi-infarct dementia (MID). Hemodynamic autonomic functional tests were carried out on 14 patients with DAT (66.9 +/- 11.4 YO; mean +/- SD) and 9 patients with MID (73.1 +/- 7.5) and 16 age-matched healthy volunteers as controls. Blood pressure, pulse rate and respiration were continuously measured. The degree of reflex bradycardia in Aschner's test, a parameter for parasympathetic functions, was significantly lower in MID than in DAT and in the healthy volunteers (p less than 0.01, p less than 0.05, respectively), but there was no significant difference between DAT and the healthy volunteers in this reaction. The degree of reflex hypertension in cold pressor test, a parameter for sympathetic functions, was not significantly different among 3 groups. The degree of orthostatic hypotension also failed to show any significant difference among the groups. From the above data, it is suggested that the patients with DAT have preserved autonomic nervous functions, but that the patients with MID have impaired parasympathetic and normal sympathetic nervous functions.
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PMID:[Autonomic nervous functions in Alzheimer type and multi-infarct dementia--a hemodynamic study]. 226 1

We describe six patients with chronic hypertension, atherosclerotic vascular disease and periventricular leukoencephalopathy (PVL) on CT. PVL was combined with cortical infarcts in one and with lacunar infarcts in five patients. On neuropsychological examination all patients showed the characteristic features of a subcortical type of mental deterioration. Clinico-radiologic correlation suggests a direct association of PVL and subcortical dementia, and it is argued that prominent cortical features in the dementia of patients with vascular disease and PVL suggest the concomitant presence of Alzheimer's disease.
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PMID:Mental changes in subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy. 243 47

The hemodynamic modifications during anesthesia induction with etomidat or thiopentalum, with and without pretreatment with fentanyl, were studied in 60 ASA I-II patients. The patients were randomly divided into six subgroups, as a function of the induction agent (etomidat, 0.15 mg/kg, or thiopentalum, 3 mg/kg) and of the pretreatment used (fentanyl, 5 micrograms/kg, or 0.9% 1 ml/kg saline solution). Systolic, diastolic ATs and pulse were followed and measured during induction and after tracheal intubation. During induction the presence or absence of the thoracic rigidity, after fentanyl administration, and also the appearance of myoclonias and of local pain after etomidat injection were noted. Measurement of hemodynamic constants showed, in the control subgroups unprotected by fentanyl, that AT and pulse frequency increase following laryngoscopy and intubation irrespective of the induction agent used. Association of thiopentalum with fentanyl influenced partially tachycardia and postintubation hypertension. Administration of 5 micrograms/kg fentanyl prevented the SAT and pulse modifications but not the DAT variation. Association of 10 micrograms/kg fentanyl ensured a complete protective effect versus the tracheal intubation but, it led, first, to a SAT decrease by intensification of the myocardial depressing effect of the barbiturate. On the other hand, use of fentanyl as induction adjuvant with etomidat ensured the blockage of the pressure response to intubation, with hemodynamic stability during anesthesia induction, irrespective of the dose of fentanyl injected. Thoracic rigidity and the side effects generated by etomidate were absent.
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PMID:[The effect of fentanyl as an adjuvant to etomidate and thiopental on the hemodynamic response to the induction of anesthesia and endotracheal intubation]. 253 39

Binswanger's encephalopathy is reviewed in respect to history, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, epidemiology, pathology, clinical picture, laboratory findings, differential diagnosis, and treatment. The various viewpoints on the pathogenesis of the process are discussed, in particular the role of ischemia, vascular disease, high blood pressure, lacunar infarction, hypoxia, edema, and hydrocephalus. The white matter hypomyelination of congophilic angiopathy and Alzheimer's disease should provide clues. A unifying hypothesis has not been attained.
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PMID:Binswanger's encephalopathy: a review. 265 69


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