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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.
...
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.
...
PMID:Dementias. 75 96
Dementia is in addition to cerebral haemorrhage major symptom of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAa). In order to explore the pathological basis for dementia in CAa-related conditions, we made a clinicopathological analysis of CAa, with special attention to dementia. Among 150 patients (mean age 78.6 years) with autopsy-proven intracranial haemorrhage in Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Medical Center, CAa with cerebral haemorrhage accounted for 8.0% (12 cases), associated with
hypertension
and metastatic brain tumour. Among 38 patients with lobar haemorrhage, CAa represented the second most common cause (21.1%) of intracranial haemorrhage after
hypertension
. A total of 20 patients with CAa (mean age 82.5 years) were studies clinically and pathologically.
Hypertension
was present in 50%. Thirteen had a history of stroke and others had either ill-defined or no strokes. The average number of strokes 2.9. Fifteen patients (75%) had dementia. Based on the clinicopathological grounds for dementia, CAa-related conditions could be divided into three subtypes: "haemorrhagic", "dementia-haemorrhagic" and "dementia" type. Haemorrhagic type (30%, 6 cases) showed multiple recurrent lobar haemorrhages caused by CAa.
Hypertension
was present in only 1 patient. The incidence of senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles was generally correlated with age. Only 1 patient had dementia. The dementia-haemorrhagic type (40%, 8 patients) had recurrent strokes with cerebral haemorrhage after preceding dementia. There were two different neuropathological subsets: CAa with atypical
senile dementia
of Alzheimer type (SDAT) and CAa with diffuse leucoencephalopathy. Patients with CAa with atypical SDAT had multiple cerebral haemorrhages caused by CAa combined with atypical Alzheimer-type pathology. Patients with CAa with diffuse leucoencephalopathy had cerebral haemorrhages in combination with diffuse white matter damage like Binswanger's subcortical vascular encephalopathy (BSVE). The incidence of senile changes correlated with age. Patients with the dementia type (30%, 6 patients) showed progressive dementia with or without haemorrhage. All had
hypertension
. They had a combined condition of Alzheimer-type pathology with conspicuous CAa with BSVE. Dementia in CAa-related conditions may be responsible for multiple factors including not Alzheimer-type degeneration, but also diffuse leucoencephalopathy like Binswanger's disease. We also found an asymptomatic type, an ischaemic type, a vasculitis type and an hereditary type in this condition.
...
PMID:Dementia in cerebral amyloid angiopathy: a clinicopathological study. 144 72
RU-486 or mifepristone is best known as an antiprogestin and an abortifacient, but it has broad medical applicability. The drug is also a potent blocker of corticosteroid receptors, and it has shown promise in the treatment of breast cancer, inoperable meningioma, and cushing's disease. Cushing's is a model for the symptomatology of aging which may involve enhanced response to corticosteroid. RU-486 has reversed the osteoporosis, thinning of skin, muscle atrophy, obesity, adult onset diabetes, depression,
hypertension
, and immunosuppression associated with this disease. RU-486 may be of value in aiding cervical dilation, lactation, and the treatment of endometriosis. In addition, breast, bowel, kidney tumors, hepatomas, endometrial cancer, and fibrosarcomas can show corticosteroid dependency, suggesting that RU-486 may have clinical value against inoperable tumors. In a preliminary 1987 phase I study, in estrogen-positive, chemotherapy-refractory breast cancer patients in Montpelier, France, Ru-486 produced objective tumor regression (6 of 22) that was prolonged (3 months) in 4 patients. Clinical relief of bone pain was observed in 7 of 23 patients with a decline in carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) tumor makers in 8 patients. Growing in vitro data also show that RU-486 can directly inhibit breast cancer cell proliferation. RU-486 has application for HIV infection, based on data that there is a serum factor in AIDS patients that enhances corticosteroid lympholysis. IN addition, the immune restorative action of RU-486 suggests that it could counteract the immunosuppression seen in aging, in cancer, or in viral or stress-related disease, which has recently focused clinical attention on its potential in the treatment of
senile dementia
and depression. Scientific conferences and workshops are needed to alert scientists, physicians, and the public to the potential medical benefits of this drug.
...
PMID:RU 486: how abortion politics have impacted on a potentially useful drug of broad medical application. 150 96
The correlation between incidence of
senile dementia
and variables determined in baseline health examinations was analyzed in a retrospective cohort study. The study cohort was assembled in 1965 and followed up to 1985. A survey of dementia was performed on those alive in 1985, and on the decreased through their families who were queried about his or her condition just before death. The survey was conducted by public health nurses and assistants. The results obtained were as follows: 1. There was a slightly higher incidence in women and incidence for both sexes demonstrated an increase with age. 2. Analysis by cause of death showed increased death by cerebrovascular diseases for both men and women, and by cardiovascular disease for women, but decreased death from cancer. 3. Correlations of
senile dementia
with
high blood pressure
and albuminuria findings at the initial examination were seen. In addition, results of fundus oculi examination in men, and electrocardiography in women were also regarded as risk factors for the occurrence of
senile dementia
. 4. Comparative analysis showed higher incidence among farmers rather than fishermen, and in drinkers rather than nondrinkers, while no relation was found to smoking habits.
...
PMID:[Relationship between senile dementia and findings of an initial health examination--a 20 year retrospective cohort study of Kamo Village (1965 to 1985)]. 174 46
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.
...
PMID:[Pathogenesis and pathophysiology of ischemic leukoencephalopathy]. 209 78
Calcium deficiency is a constant menace to land-abiding animals, including mammals. Humans enjoying exceptional longevity on earth are especially susceptible to calcium deficiency in old age. Low calcium and vitamin D intake, short solar exposure, decreased intestinal absorption, and falling renal function with insufficient 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D biosynthesis all contribute to calcium deficiency, secondary hyperparathyroidism, bone loss and possibly calcium shift from the bone to soft tissue, and from the extracellular to the intracellular compartment, blunting the sharp concentration gap between these compartments. The consequences of calcium deficiency might thus include not only osteoporosis, but also arteriosclerosis and
hypertension
due to the increase of calcium in the vascular wall, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and
senile dementia
due to calcium deposition in the central nervous system, and a decrease in cellular function, because of blunting of the difference in extracellular-intracellular calcium, leading to diabetes mellitus, immune deficiency and others (Fig. 6).
...
PMID:Aging and calcium as an environmental factor. 294 80
Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging in the elderly have demonstrated the common occurrence of deep white-matter lesions in the aging brain. These radiologic lesions (leukoaraiosis) may represent an early marker of dementia. At autopsy, an ischemic periventricular leukoencephalopathy (Binswanger's disease) has been found in most cases. The clinical spectrum of Binswanger's disease appears to range from asymptomatic radiologic lesions to dementia with focal deficits, frontal signs, pseudobulbar palsy, gait difficulties, and urinary incontinence. The name
senile dementia
of the Binswanger type (SDBT) is proposed for this poorly recognized, vascular form of subcortical dementia. The SDBT probably results from cortical disconnection most likely caused by hypoperfusion. In contrast, multi-infarct dementia is correlated with multiple large and small strokes that cause a loss of over 50 to 100 mL of brain volume. The periventricular white matter is a watershed area irrigated by long, penetrating medullary arteries. Risk factors for SDBT are small-artery diseases, such as
hypertension
and amyloid angiopathy, impaired autoregulation of cerebral blood flow in the elderly, and periventricular hypoperfusion due to cardiac failure, arrhythmias, and hypotension. The SDBT may be a potentially preventable and treatable form of dementia.
...
PMID:Senile dementia of the Binswanger type. A vascular form of dementia in the elderly. 362 88
To compare the efficacy and side effects of haloperidol and thioridazine in the management of behavioral symptoms of
senile dementia
of the Alzheimer's type, 16 patients were studied in an open crossover design study. Following 2-week drug washout, patients were alternately assigned to either haloperidol (1, 2, and 5 mg/day for 2 weeks) or thioridazine (25, 50, and 75 mg/day for 2 weeks). After completing the first neuroleptic, patients were washed out and then tried on the second neuroleptic. Six patients completed the crossover design, 1 received only haloperidol, and 9 received only thioridazine. Both drugs were effective in managing target behaviors, which included hostility, uncooperativeness, bothersomeness, emotional lability, and irritability. Complaints of fatigue and extrapyramidal side effects were greater with haloperidol than with thioridazine. Neither compound produced significant impairments in cognition as assessed by the Mini-Mental State Examination score or caused orthostatic
hypertension
.
...
PMID:Haloperidol versus thioridazine in the treatment of behavioral symptoms in senile dementia of the Alzheimer's type: preliminary findings. 371 Oct 28
A comprehensive review of the multidisciplinary functional assessment and treatment of 800 patients seen at a community-based geriatric assessment center was performed to profile clinical characteristics of patients attending such a program and to evaluate possible predictors of institutionalization. The most common problems addressed were
senile dementia
(46%),
hypertension
(31%), clinically significant depression (30%), and burdened caregiver (24%). More than 90% of patients were able to remain in the community after multidisciplinary treatment of their problems and marshalling of support services. The most potent predictors of institutionalization in rank order of predictive value were: falls or unstable gait,
senile dementia
, caregiver strain, lack of support services, and moderate to severe impairment of ability to perform activities of daily living (multiple R = 0.45; P = .001). Advantages and impediments to community-based assessment are discussed.
...
PMID:Community-based geriatric assessment. 403 38
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