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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
2 cases of serious complications from oral contraception are presented. The first patient, on oral contraception for some time, died of a temporal hernia due to severe intracranial
hypertension
. Autopsy and angiography revealed thrombosis of the venous sinuses. The second patient, on oral contraception for 20 months, developed sudden
aphasia
and epilepsy without ever losing consciousness; tests showed intracranial
hypertension
, but a normal angiography. She recovered rapidly after treatment and after suspension of oral contraception. Oral contraceptives might alter the mechanism of production and reabsorption of cerebrospinal fluid, and also disturb the hypothalamo-hypophyseal function. The article includes a short review of studies on the problem.
...
PMID:[Benign intracranial hypertension and thrombosis of the venous sinuses during contraceptive treatment: anatomo-clinical and neuroradiological observations (author's transl)]. 9 25
Seven cases of SLE with concomitant neurological syndromes are reported. In 2 cases brain stroke with right-sided hemiplegia and
aphasia
developed, in the remaining cases brain-stem stroke with subarachnoid haemorrhage, progressive hemiparesis and signs of intracranial
hypertension
, chorea, status epilepticus in terminal uraemia were observed. In one case myasthenia coexisted. Severe neurological syndromes were preceded by signs of involvement of other organs and in most cases by low-grade signs of central nervous system involvement. Treatment with corticosteroids and immunosuppressants resulted in significant improvement without complete remission. A retrospective survey of clinical material showed that modern therapeutic methods have improved the prognosis in systemic lupus erythematosus independently of central nervous system involvement.
...
PMID:[Neurological syndromes in the course of systemic lupus erythematosus]. 52 35
A 45-year-old man suddenly developed right hemiparesis and
aphasia
during work and lost conciousness next day, when he was admitted to us. Lumbar puncture showed bloody C.S.F. with the initial pressure of 220 mm H2O. Physical examination revealed
hypertension
and arteriosclerosis. Cerebral angiogram revealed an arteriovenous malformation in the left frontoparietal-parasagittal region and a saccular aneurysm at the left internal carotid-posterior communicating artery junction. In addition, the existence of putaminal hematoma was suspected on account of the displacement of the left anterior cerebral artery and the left lenticulostriate arteries. On the fourth day after admission his consciousness returned and the right hemiparesis gradually improved. One month later the disappearance of the displacement of the anterior cerebral artery was demonstrated by cerebral angiogram. A frontoparietal craniotomy was done and no hematoma was found around the arteriovenous malformation and the basis of the aneurysm did not adhere to the temporal lobe. Taking these findings into consideration, it is presumed that the hematoma in putaminal region was due to neither arteriovenous malformation nor aneurysm but was a hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage.
...
PMID:[A case of hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage associated with cerebral arteriovenous malformation and aneurysm (author's transl)]. 55 34
The clinical features of 102 cases with transient attacks due to cerebral ischemia were evaluated, and 94 out of 102 cases were followed for an average of 6 years. 1) The clinical study makes comparisons between two groups of patients grouped under the somewhat new definition of Reversible Ischemic Attacks (RIA): classical Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIA) and Stroke with Full Recovery (SFR), in which a complete recovery took place over a longer period, on the average 3 weeks. 2) SFR constitutes the 34.31% of the total cases with transient ischemic episodes. In the carotid district the onset was more frequently gradual in SFR than in TIA and
aphasia
more frequent in TIA than in SFR. Multiple attacks prevailed in TIA over the SFR group. The definition of transient attack due to ischemia is discussed. 3) Completed strokes occurred in 11 cases (11.7%) with RIA.
Hypertension
and cardiac disease were significantly frequent in cases with subsequent stroke. The conclusion was reached that TIA is a symptom, not a pathological state, and TIA should be considered an important symptom but not a specific harbinger of completed stroke.
...
PMID:Clinical features and long-term follow-up of patients with reversible ischemic attacks (RIA). 69 35
Cyclosporine is a specially useful immunosuppressor agent in children subjected to renal transplantation, minimizing the deleterious effect of steroids on growth and the development of Cushing syndrome. However, side effects which require close supervision are well known, including liver, kidney and central nervous system toxicity. Seizures, cerebellar ataxia,
aphasia
, paresthesia and behavioral disorders are characteristic of the latter.
Hypertension
and hypomagnesemia have been identified as risk factors. In contrast to nephrotoxicity, CNS toxicity is not related to plasma levels of cyclosporine. In this paper 2 patients, 10 and 11 year old, manifesting cyclosporine neurotoxicity after renal transplant, are reported.
...
PMID:[Neurotoxicity caused by cyclosporin A in renal transplantation in children]. 134 84
The medical records and autopsy data of patients over the age of 70 years at death with a diagnosis of cortical artery infarction (CAI) in the Yokufukai Geriatric Hospital were reviewed. Among 690 autopsied cases from 1981 to 1988, there were 45 cases (21 men and 24 women) with CAI available for this study. Fourteen cases (31.1%) suffered CAI while hospitalized for another disorder. Their ages at death ranged from 70 to 102 years with a mean of 82.4 years. From the results of this neurological and psychological analysis, the residuals of senile stroke were classified into six subtypes: 1) cerebrovascular dementia, 2) cerebrovascular Parkinsonism, 3) pseudobulbar palsy, 4) chronic stage of
aphasia
, 5) slowly-progressive decreased motivation or spontaneity without dementia, 6) the so-called bedridden state (prolonged vegetative or apallic state). Sixty-nine percent had anamnetic
hypertension
before the stroke. The ages at which they became bedridden ranged from 69 to 102 years with a mean of 81.8 years. Within one year after becoming bedridden, 83.3% of all patients died. The bedridden state in the elderly with residual CAI indicated a poor prognosis within one year after stroke. Causes of death included brain death in 22.3% of all patients, pneumonia in 20.0%, and digestive bleeding in 8.9%.
...
PMID:[Cerebrovascular disease in the elderly--a clinicopathological study of 45 autopsied cases with cortical artery infarction]. 189 27
We describe one male, 49-year-old diabetic patient in whom regressive stroke with
aphasia
and right-sided hemiparesia was related to multiple small emboli in the left paraventricular cortex. Simultaneous presence of several cholesterol emboli in the left eye ground and detection of an atheromatous plaque at the homolateral carotid bifurcation let assume that the cerebral emboli originated from that plaque and also consisted of cholesterol crystals. The patient was discharged on low-dose aspirin (100 mg/day) after neurologic improvement. Follow-up at one year revealed clinical stability, recurrence of the cholesterol emboli at the eye ground examination and no change of the carotid plaque. Cholesterol embolization with renal failure,
hypertension
and peripheral arterial occlusions causing skin ulcerations is classical in case of atheromatous aortic disease but stroke has rarely been reported in this syndrome. However, more frequent use of invasive procedures (arteriography, transluminal angioplasty, vascular surgery) or thrombolytic treatment might increase its incidence in the near future.
...
PMID:Stroke secondary to multiple spontaneous cholesterol emboli. 203 5
Review of 2,859 autopsy reports disclosed lacunar infarctions in 169 patients (6%). Review of the charts of 167 of these patients revealed
hypertension
in 64%, diabetes in 34%, smoking in 46%, and no known risk factor for cerebrovascular disease in 18%. As many as 81% of the patients with lacunes were asymptomatic. Symptomatic lacunes presented most commonly as pure motor hemiparesis (31%),
aphasia
plus right hemiparesis (20%), or sensorimotor dysfunction (11%); none presented as pure sensory stroke. These results suggest that the spectrum of lacunar infarction is more heterogeneous than previously thought. Most lacunes are asymptomatic, and the majority of symptomatic patients do not present with "classical" lacunar syndromes.
...
PMID:Risk factors and clinical manifestations of pathologically verified lacunar infarctions. 247 7
To investigate the relationship between middle cerebral artery (MCA) trunk lesions and the etiology of Binswanger type (B type) infarction, which was demonstrated as a diffuse subcortical low density area/high intensity area by CT/MRI, patients with both MCA lesions and B type infarction were studied clinically. Eighteen patients with B type infarction were diagnosed among 224 patients with MCA occlusion/stenosis on angiography accounting for 8%. The incidence was as high as 25% in M2 stenosis. The mean age of B type infarction patients was 64 years and 16 of them were men. Chronologically stepwize/slowly-progressive deterioration of clinical manifestations were observed in 14. All patients had hemiplegia, though half of them were mild or moderate in severity. Furthermore,
aphasia
, Gerstmann syndrome and dementia were present in 10, 1 and 2 patients, respectively. Twelve had a history of
hypertension
, while 11 showed transient decreases with marked changes (more than 31 mmHg in mean arterial blood pressure) in arterial blood pressure during their clinical course. Out of 9 patients in whom cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured by 133Xe injection method/inhalation method, 7 demonstrated mild to moderate decreases in mean CBF (more than 30 ml/100 g/min) with no relation to the severity of MCA lesions. These findings suggested that hemodynamic mechanisms associated with hypoperfusion due to marked fluctuations in blood pressure are accelerating factors of B type infarction and MCA lesions, even though ischemia in the subcortical area due to leptomeningeal anastomosis may be mild or moderate.
...
PMID:[Clinical study on the relationship between middle cerebral artery lesions and Binswanger type infarction]. 260 75
A 61-year-old right-handed man with a history of lacunar cerebrovascular disease and
hypertension
had the sudden onset of right-sided numbness and difficulty speaking. Neurologic evaluation revealed a dense right hemianesthesia that included the face, trunk, arm, and leg. Neuropsychological examination documented a conduction aphasia, which resolved nearly completely several months later. Computed tomographic and magnetic resonance imaging studies showed a lesion in the left hemisphere that involved the posterior insula and disrupted thalamocortical connections but entirely spared the thalamus proper. We suggest that the combination of hemianesthesia and
aphasia
indicates a white matter lesion subjacent to inferior parietal and posterior temporal cortices.
...
PMID:Hemianesthesia and aphasia. An anatomical and behavioral study. 230 79
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