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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cerebrovascular accidents (CVA) constitute a major cause of adult cardiac cardiovascular mortality in Chile. From July 87 to August 89 we prospectively studied 300 patients with CVA utilizing a multidisciplinary approach. Besides clinical evaluation this included brain CT scan (48 hrs), glucidic and lipid profile. Occlusive CVA were additionally studied with 2D-Echocardiogram, 24 hr Holter, Cerebral Angiography and/or carotid Duplex Echotomograph, and a second brain CT scan was performed within the first week. We found a 62.3% incidence of cerebral infarcts, 28.3% of cerebral hemorrhages and 9.3% of transient ischemic attacks.
Cerebral infarcts
were found to be cardiac related in 33.5% of cases, whereas 13.2% were lacunar, 4.4% were atherothrombotic and 14% had no precise etiology.
Hypertension
was associated to cerebral hemorrhages in 76% of cases, 26% of which were intracranial. At 2 months of follow-up 16.3% of patients were severely handicapped and mortality was 19.3%. We have confirmed that cerebral infarcts constitute the most common cause of CVA and most of them are cardiac related.
Hypertension
appears to be the most important cause of cerebral hemorrhage. A multidisciplinary approach to cerebrovascular accidents allowed a more precise diagnosis and contributed to implement appropriate therapeutic and preventive strategies. Proper identification of high risk patients could contribute to decrease the high incidence and mortality of CVA in our community.
...
PMID:[Multidisciplinary study of cerebrovascular accidents: I. Definition, design, and general results]. 134 84
We reviewed outcome for ruptured anterior communicating artery (ACoA) aneurysm in 40 patients and attempted to establish its relationships with circulating pattern and complicating factors. Circulation Type-1 and Type-2 were associated with a better outcome than Type-3 and Type-4. Apart from arterial
hypertension
and
cerebral infarction
, all the complicating factors, i.e., vasospasm, brain oedema, intraparenchymal and/or intraventricular haemorrhage and hydrocephalus were related with an increased risk for poor outcome, but the broad outcome was more depended on circulating pattern for anterior cerebral territories.
...
PMID:Effect of circulating pattern and complicating factors on outcome for ruptured anterior communicating artery aneurysms. 135 88
Atrial fibrillation is a common disorder and the incidence increases with each decade of life. Previously, rheumatic mitral valve disease has been the condition most highly associated with atrial fibrillation. However, with the decreasing incidence of rheumatic heart disease, other conditions have assumed greater importance and now congestive cardiac failure, coronary artery disease, and
hypertension
are the most commonly associated conditions. Nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation is associated with an approximately five-fold increase in the risk of ischemic stroke and a 5% to 7% yearly risk that increases with age. In addition, atrial fibrillation is associated with an increased incidence of silent
cerebral infarction
and increased mortality. However, whether atrial fibrillation is independently associated with the risk of stroke or is a marker of underlying cardiac disease is contentious. Until recently, the use of preventive therapy has been controversial. However, data from four recently published, prospective randomized studies clearly support the use of warfarin prophylaxis in nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation. Within the diverse group of patients with nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation there are high and low risk subgroups and identification of these may influence decisions regarding antithrombotic prophylaxis. With a few exceptions, however, this remains an area in which there are contradictory findings in the literature. The role of aspirin for prophylaxis in nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation remains unclear and further evaluation awaits the publication of ongoing studies.
...
PMID:Atrial fibrillation: epidemiology and the risk and prevention of stroke. 138 92
A 64-year-old right hemiplegic woman, who had been treated for
hypertension
for 15 years, was admitted to our hospital. Neurologic examination on admission disclosed right hemiplegia and motor aphasia; however, ophthalmoparesis, pupillary abnormality, and blepharoptosis were not evident. Excessive sweating on the right side of the body, which was most marked on the face, was observed. Amount of sweating on the left side of the body was normal. Unilateral hyperhidrosis persisted for more than 2 months. MRI revealed hemorrhagic infarctions in the left basal ganglia, internal capsule, thalamus, hypothalamus, and medial part of the cerebral peduncle. 123I-IMP SPECT disclosed hypoperfusion in the left striatum, thalamus, occipital cortex, and right cerebellar hemisphere. Cerebral angiography revealed arteriosclerotic changes in the basilar artery, but that the left posterior cerebral artery and its branches were not occluded. Unilateral persistent hyperhidrosis is rare after ischemic stroke. Hypothalamic lesion was thought to be responsible for the hyperhidrosis in this patient. As the hypothalamus receives its blood supply from the posterior cerebral artery, unilateral persistent hyperhidrosis may be an important sign of
cerebral infarction
in the posterior cerebral artery region.
...
PMID:[Unilateral persistent hyperhidrosis after ischemic stroke]. 139 37
Sixty-seven patients (27.9%) between 16 and 45 years, out of 240 cases of stroke seen over 33 months were further studied with respect to stroke type, aetiological and social factors. The frequency of non-embolic
cerebral infarction
was 58.2%, cerebral embolism 7.5%; cerebral haemorrhage 17.9%; primary subarachnoid haemorrhage 11.9%.
Hypertension
was the commonest aetiological factor occurring in 35.8% of the cases. Cervical spine hyperflexion, stenosing carotid arteritis, cocaine ingestion, mitral valve prolapse, non-valvular atrial fibrillation and chorion cancer featured among other less frequent but important factors presenting different diagnostic problems. The frequency of unexplained stroke was under 12%. The authors suggest that previously encountered cervical spine trauma among young stroke cases represent underreporting and that the relationship between young age, grand-multiparity and non-valvular atrial fibrillation be further elucidated.
...
PMID:Stroke at the prime of life: a study of Nigerian Africans between the ages of 16 and 45 years. 139 94
In a consecutive series of 328 carotid endarterectomies there were two cases of postoperative intracerebral hemorrhage. The patients with transient ischemic attacks and subsequent major
cerebral infarction
had repair of their very tight carotid stenosis. Each developed intracerebral hemorrhage after a symptom free interval and
hypertension
was uncontrolled during the postoperative period.
Hypertension
is a significant complication of carotid endarterectomy and may be a prominent factor in the development of intracerebral hemorrhage after carotid endarterectomy. Also defective cerebrovascular autoregulation in chronic ischemic brain regions may predispose patients to intracerebral hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage following carotid endarterectomy. Experience of 328 operations from 1983-1988. 139 75
After a ruptured aneurysm has been clipped in patients with multiple aneurysms, the question often arises whether to use volume expansion and/or hypertensive treatment to prevent delayed cerebral ischemia (vasospasm). There is understandable concern regarding the possible rupture of unprotected aneurysms under additional hemodynamic stress. In a series of 199 patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage who underwent early surgery, 31 were left with one or more unprotected aneurysms postoperatively. All patients were treated with prophylactic volume expansion based on a previously reported protocol. Mean central venous pressure during treatment was 10.3 cm H2O and mean arterial blood pressure 141/76 mm Hg; volume expansion was continued for 7 to 10 days. Eight patients developed symptoms of delayed cerebral ischemia and required additional volume expansion and induced
hypertension
. After institution of
hypertension
, four of these patients experienced a reversal of their symptoms, while four others developed cerebral infarcts. One patient died from massive
cerebral infarction
following vasospasm refractory to all measures. No patient suffered rupture of an unprotected aneurysm during hypervolemic treatment. It is concluded that the benefit of prophylactic hypervolemic
hypertension
in postoperative aneurysm patients warrants its use even in patients with unprotected aneurysms.
...
PMID:Unruptured aneurysms and postoperative volume expansion. 833 19
The incidence, number, size, and location of silent
cerebral infarction
on 0.1 T magnetic resonance imaging was investigated in 66 hypertensive patients (63 +/- 9 years old; mean +/- SD) and 42 age-matched normotensive subjects (61 +/- 9 years old) to determine the clinical significance of
hypertension
in silent
cerebral infarction
. Cerebrovascular risk factors and the severity of hypertensive changes in other major target organs were also investigated. The incidence of silent infarction in hypertensive patients (47%) tended to be higher than that of normotensive subjects (33%) and increased significantly with advancing age. In hypertensive patients, a significantly higher incidence of silent lesions was noted in patients with hypertensive changes in major target organs (72-73% in patients with organ involvement versus 33-39% in those without). The average number of lesions in hypertensive patients was significantly higher than that in normotensive subjects (6.0 versus 2.1), and the lesions in the hypertensive patients were more frequently detected in the brain areas supplied by perforating arteries than those in normotensive subjects (47% versus 24%). These results clearly demonstrate that silent
cerebral infarction
is frequently seen in older hypertensive patients, especially when moderate hypertensive changes are noted in major target organs, and suggest that hypertensive arterial changes play a crucial role in the occurrence of silent infarction.
Hypertension
1992 Dec
PMID:Silent cerebral infarction as a form of hypertensive target organ damage in the brain. 145 97
Moyamoya disease is a rare vascular anomaly of the cerebral arteries. The etiology of the disease has not yet been clearly identified. We report the noninvasive diagnosis of Moyamoya disease in a patients with a very early onset of symptoms in infancy. The diagnosis was made by colour coded Doppler sonography and confirmed by angiography at the age of 6 months, following two episodes of
cerebral infarction
. A bilateral encephalodurosynangiosis was performed at the age of 7 months with subsequent slight improvement of the neurological deficits. Colour Doppler sonography revealed early vascularisation from the fascia temporalis graft into the arachnoid space. At the age of 10 months the patient developed arterial
hypertension
caused by left renal artery stenosis. Our case suggests, that in infancy Moyamoya disease can be suspected noninvasively by colour Doppler sonography of the cerebral arteries. Patients should be carefully screened for possible extracranial arterial stenoses which may develop in the course of time. Encephalodurosynangiosis seems to be a good therapeutic option for patients with severe neurological symptoms.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of moyamoya disease with additional renal artery stenosis by colour coded Doppler sonography. 149 13
We report our experience of stroke in 136 young adults aged from 18 to 45 years seen in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia over a 10-year period. They constituted 25% of all our stroke cases. Thirty-eight percent were Saudi nationals and 62% expatriates. Males largely outnumbered females. The frequency of
cerebral infarction
(54%) was not very different from that of intracranial hemorrhage (45%). Atherosclerosis and embolism of cardiac origin were the major causes of infarction. The main causes of intracranial bleeding were arterial aneurysms, arteriovenous malformations and
hypertension
. However, the causes of 29% of ischemic strokes and 44% of hemorrhagic ones remained undetermined. Interethnic comparison of the causes showed that hemorrhages were significantly more frequent in Far East immigrants. Sixty five percent of cerebral infarctions in Asiatic patients remained of undetermined origin. The local variant of sickle cell gene did not seem to play a major role in the pathogenesis of stroke in the Saudi young adult. These data are commented and compared with similar reported data. The influence of the demographic structures of the Saudi population and immigrants communities is analyzed.
...
PMID:[Cerebrovascular disorders in young adults in Saudi Arabia. A study of 136 cases]. 149 27
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