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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The incidence of both atherosclerosis and demential increases with age and therefore the terms "cerebral atherosclerosis" or "cerebro-vascular dementia" are commonly used for any mental deterioration in elderly persons. These names depend on the proposition of a gradual narrowing of cerebral arteries as an inevitable accompaniement of ageing which ends in dementia through a progressive reduction of cerebral blood flow. This apparently reasonnable hypothesis has now been shown to be wrong. ;t has been established that first, senile dementia is not due to cerebral atherosclerosis in spite of the frequent coexistence of degenerative and vascular lesions; and secondly, true cerebro vascular dementia results from the destruction of brain tissue following cerebral infarction; hence the proper term is "multi-infarct dementia". This neuronal destruction leads to decrease in cerebral metabolism and blood flow and to intellectual deterioration. The diagnostic criteria are therefore those of cerebral infarcts i.e: arterial hypertension and/or signs of atherosclerosis, sudden onset and/or stepwise progression, and focal neurological signs. If one follow those criteria, multi-infarct dementia accounts for only about 10% of all dementias; if one does not, the diagnosis will continue to be made to the exclusion of other potentially curable causes of dementias. Five clinico-pathological forms can be distinguished according to the size, number and site of the infarcts: lacunar state, large multiple infarcts, watershed infarction, single infarct and Binswanger's encephalopathy. This distinction is always arbitrary because the association of lacunes and large infarcts is very common in multi-infarct dementia. The almost invariable failure of all therapeutic measures once multi-infarct dementia has been established stresses the importance of prevention. This depends on prevention of cerebral infarcts, i.e. on the correction of risk factors amongst which arterial hypertension is by far, the most important. Some cases benefit also from carotid surgery, anticoagulants, and antiplatelet drugs but antihypertensive drugs are the most essential part. It is very likely that if all cases of arterial hypertension are properly treated, the incidence of multi-infarct dementia will decrease greatly.
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PMID:[Modern concepts of "cerebrovascular dementia"]. 61 Oct 16

Senile dementia of the Alzheimer type is becoming one of the most common of the malignant diseases as our society ages. Currently, research has identified several pathophysiological changes, including the bihelical filament and the loss of the enzyme choline acetyltransferase from the cortex. Although genetic factors play some role in this disease, the important environmental risk factors have not yet been identified and there is, at present, no specific treatment. The second most common cause of dementia, cerebrovascular disease, produces dementia only when there is destruction of brain tissue, as in individuals who have multiple strokes or who have hypertensive vascular disease leading to multiple lacunae. In both multi-infarct dementia and in the lacunar state, hypertension appears to play a greater role than it does in other forms of vascular disease. Many of the other causes of dementia, including normal pressure hydrocephalus, CNS infections or tumors, metabolic disorders produced by thiamine or vitamin B12 deficiency or thyroid dysfunction, are often reversible. Every patient, whatever the age, with a developing dementia deserves a thorough workup to identify these treatable disorders.
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PMID:Dementias. 75 96

A retrospective analysis of the medical charts of 117 patients (50 men and 67 women) with multi-infarct dementia took place. All patients admitted to the psychogeriatric nursing home 'Joachim en Anna' in Nijmegen between 1980 and 1989 were studied. The aim of the study was to obtain epidemiological information and to investigate the prevalence of comorbid conditions, prognosis and mortality. The results were compared with patients with Alzheimer's disease. The patients remained in the institute for 1.4 years and the mean total duration of the disease was 5.3 years. About twenty-five percent died in the first three months of admission. Life expectation, counted from time of admission, was 6 years shorter in comparison with Dutch mortality tables. Morbidity frequently seen at admission included circulatory system diseases and cerebrovascular accidents. The risk factor hypertension was seen in a smaller percentage of patients than expected. During the stay the diseases most frequently diagnosed were respiratory and urinary tract infections, adverse effects of drugs, constipation and chronic ulcers of the skin. About twenty percent of the patients were struck by a (recurrent) cerebrovascular accident or a transient ischaemic attack. Most patients died of dehydration or bronchopneumonia. There was, apart from the diagnosis of multi-infarct dementia, no single patient aspect that could predict a poor prognosis. Nursing home patients with multi-infarct dementia are clearly different from patients with Alzheimer's disease. Time spent in the nursing home and duration of disease are shorter. They have more comorbid conditions, especially of a cardiovascular nature, and they have a poor life expectation.
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PMID:[Multi-infarct dementia in nursing home patients; more comorbidity and shorter life expectancy than in Alzheimer's disease]. 143 2

Multi-infarct dementia (MID) and dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT) are the main syndromes in the elderly. This study aims at evaluating the possible differentiation of these syndromes on a clinical basis. The patient population consisted of demented patients hospitalized during the period April 1, 1988-September 30, 1990 at the Department of Cerebrovascular Diseases. The study included 40 patients with MID and 25 with DAT. The clinical diagnosis of dementia included medical history, neurological examination, psychiatric interview and laboratory diagnostic investigations. The severity of the dementia symptoms was rated by many rating scales and a battery of neuropsychological tests. This model of clinical procedure permitted for differential diagnosis between vascular and degenerative dementia, according to DSM-III-R criteria. Patients with multi-infarct dementia of the Alzheimer type did not differ significantly with regard to age, mean duration of cognitive impairment and level of education. In the DAT group women outnumbered men, and this was statistically significant. It should be emphasized, that a great majority of patients with cerebrovascular lesions developed early cognitive impairment, that means within the first year after stroke. In the MID group hypertension, heart disease and smoking were statistically more frequent than in the DAT group. For the preliminary evaluation the severity of cognitive impairment was quantified by Mini-Mental State and Dementia Scale. These scales showed that the degree of dementia was significantly greater in DAT patients as compared to MID patients, whereas the severity of depression assessed by Hamilton's Scale was mild and similar in both group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical and differential diagnosis of multi-infarct dementia and Alzheimer's disease]. 152 70

Neurogenic mechanisms are important in the maintenance of most forms of hypertension, yet the brain is highly vulnerable to the deleterious effects of elevated blood pressure. Hypertensive encephalopathy results from a sudden, sustained rise in blood pressure sufficient to exceed the upper limit of cerebral blood flow autoregulation. The cerebral circulation adapts to chronic less severe hypertension but at the expense of changes that predispose to stroke due to arterial occlusion or rupture. Stroke is a generic term for a clinical syndrome that includes focal infarction or hemorrhage in the brain, or subarachnoid hemorrhage. Atherothromboembolism and thrombotic occlusion of lipohyalinotic small-diameter end arteries are the principal causes of cerebral infarction. Microaneurysm rupture is the usual cause of hypertension-associated intracerebral hemorrhage. Rupture of aneurysms on the circle of Willis is the most common cause of nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage. Stroke is a major cause of morbidity and mortality, particularly among persons aged 65 years or older. Treatment of diastolic hypertension reduces the incidence of stroke by about 40%. Treatment of isolated systolic hypertension in persons aged 60 years and older reduces the incidence of stroke by more than one third. Blood pressure management in the setting of acute stroke and the role of antihypertensive therapy in the prevention of multi-infarct dementia require further study.
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PMID:Hypertension and the brain. The National High Blood Pressure Education Program. 158 Jul 19

Hypertensive vascular lesions in the brain include increased formation of atheroma, lacunae and lacunar infarctions, atherothrombotic brain infarction and vascular dementias such as multi-infarct dementia and Binswanger's disease. Hypertension is also associated with an increased risk of intracerebral and subarachnoid hemorrhage. Reduction of arterial pressure with antihypertensive agents can prevent the occurrence and limit the extent of stroke.
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PMID:[Cerebral vascular damage in hypertension]. 184 89

The prevalence of hypertension increases with age. The majority of the hypertensive population is over age 55. Although the treatment of systolic hypertension remains incompletely understood, the reduction of diastolic hypertension with pharmacotherapy has been shown to reduce complications from hypertension in persons over age 55. The older hypertensive patient is at risk for the same complications as the younger patient: angina, myocardial infarction, arteriosclerosis obliterans, stroke, myocardial hypertrophy, congestive heart failure, and renal failure; the risk of sudden death and multi-infarct dementia in the older patient may be somewhat higher. The older hypertensive individual may have reduced plasma volume and defective salt and water conservation, reduced renal function, impairment of baroreceptor reflexes and sympathetic reactivity, and altered drug pharmacokinetics, or may have arteriosclerosis leading to pseudohypertension. Many circumstances interfere with adequate compliance with therapeutic regimens among the elderly. Concomitant medical conditions increase the possibility of drug interactions and require that the practitioner be able to adjust the antihypertensive program to the patient.
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PMID:Treatment considerations for the hypertensive patient over age 55. 189 46

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

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

To evaluate the relative potency of diabetes mellitus as a risk factor for stroke, the relative frequency of stroke symptoms was compared among cohorts with and without diabetes. Stroke symptoms were classified as atherothrombotic cerebral infarctions, transient ischemic attacks, reversible ischemic neurologic deficits, and multi-infarct dementia. The groups were compared according to the occurrence of these symptoms, and both cross-sectional and longitudinal designs were used to study 293 consecutive patients referred to this laboratory and to contrast groups with and without diabetes. Hypertension, heart disease, and stroke symptoms and signs were more frequent among diabetics than among age-matched nondiabetics. Among diabetics, strokes occurred at an earlier age and were more common among men. Regression analyses assigned diabetes second to hypertension as a risk factor for stroke, followed by heart disease and smoking. Diabetes associated with hypertension or hyperlipidemia added significantly to stroke risk. Initially, cerebral blood flow values and cognitive test scores were equivalent among diabetics and nondiabetics; after 3 years, cognition became significantly impaired among diabetics, despite better maintenance of cerebral blood flow among treated diabetics compared with nondiabetics. Diabetes acts to compound risk for stroke not only by promoting cerebral atherogenesis but also by aggravating other risk factors including hypertension, heart disease, and hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus as a risk factor for stroke. 238 56


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