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

The major changes in clinical condition during and after encephalography may be explained by intracranial pressure variations. If neither intracranial hypertension nor CSF dynamic perturbations exist, minimal complications may be predicted, but in intracranial hypertension immediate deterioration may occur. Despite an apparently good level of tolerance, complications may develop if the compensation phenomena cannot occur: normal pressure hydrocephalus, craniosynostosis. In the cases with good clinical tolerance, minimal changes occur when air injection is administered at a slow rate and with a small volume.
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PMID:[Effect of fractionated pneumoencephalography on intracranial pressure]. 20 16

In"cerebral arteriosclerosis" the diffuse sclerotic involvement of the cerebral vessels may produce acute softening of cerebral tissue. However this paper concentrates mainly on the clinical symptomatology which, in the absence of major vascular accidents, is characterized from the psychopathologic viewpoint by acute confusional states, aggressive behaviour, fluctuating loss of memory, disturbances of concentration and finally dementia. The chief neurologic symptoms are motor disturbance with short-stepping gait, stooped position of the body, pseudobulbar symptoms with dysarthric speech and disturbances of swallowing, and increased perioral reflexes. A complete case history and a thorough neurologic and psychopathologic examination are the most important factors in diagnosis, while ancillary methods are of value only for differential diagnosis. Prophylaxis and therapy (cardiotherapy, treatment of diabetes and hypertension, lowering of serum cholesterol and sedation) are discussed. In the differential diagnosis of dementia in the elderly patient consideration should be given to chronic vascular diseases, degenerative cerebral atrophies, brain tumors, low pressure hydrocephalus, progressive paralysis and some other rare brain conditions.
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PMID:[Cerebral sclerosis. Diagnostic criteria and differential diagnostic consideration in practice]. 23 20

In a young man and a pregnant young woman presenting since childhood of tuberous sclerosis without epilepsy or mental disorders severe intracranial hypertension developped secondary to obstructive hydrocephalus. Ventriculo-peritoneal shunting unilateral in the first case, bilateral in the second, releaved the patients of all their symptoms. Angiographic studies in both cases showed the existence of extracerebral visceral lesions. After a short review of similar published cases and the proposed treatments the authors suggest as only treatment a shunting procedure without attempt of removal of intracerebral nodules.
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PMID:[Tumoral forms of tuberous sclerosis. The clinical and therapeutic importance of concomitant hydrocephalus (author's transl)]. 30 1

Based on the results of quantitative isotope ventriculography (QIV) a group of 25 patients was divided into 17 hydrocephalic and 8 non- or doubtfully hydrocephalic patients. An atrio-ventricular shunt (A-V shunt) was inserted in all 25 patients. Eight of the hydrocephalic patients improved or became well, while nine hydrocephalic patients were unchanged, worse or dead at the time of follow-up. These nine patients suffered either from severe brain damage, chronic alcoholism over several years, arterial hypertension, severe diabetes, or acute meningo-encephalitis caused by a virus infection. None of the eight non- or doubtfully hydrocephalic patients improved after the operation. From this it was concluded that QIV is of considerable diagnostic value in acquired hydrocephalus.
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PMID:Acquired hydrocephalus VI. The influence of some competitive diseases in the treatment of acquired hydrocephalus. 31 65

Hypothalamic hypopituitarism has been associated with the intermittent intracranial hypertension of "normal-pressure" hydrocephalus. Six patients with this condition were studied endocrinologically; five showed evidence of hypothalamohypophyseal insufficiency, and, though only one needed treatment, all needed continued assessment of their endocrine state during follow-up. Thus, hypothalamohypophyseal dysfunction is more common than might be expected. Tests of anterior pituitary function should be preformed before surgical intervention, as such dysfunction may adversely affect survival and the response to ventricular shunting.
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PMID:Hypopituitarism in normal-pressure hydrocephalus. 44 13

The authors report the case of a patient submitted to an operation of spinal tumors with multiple localization which, beside enriching the rare observations existing in literature, presents and hypertensive hypertension hydrocephalus with non common pathogenesis and points out considerable difficulties of interpretation of the histologic picture. After examining literature and describing the case in detail, the authors discuss the etiopathogenesis of hydrocephalus and examine the histologic aspect of extirpated tumors.
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PMID:[Primary spinal tumors of multiple localization]. 45 7

In 18 cases of perinatal intraventricular haemorrhage, continuous ventricular drainage was applied. As a result, ICP hypertension was inhibited and thus brain damage prevented. The early intervention prevented the formation of hydrocephalus (evoidence of shunt dependence) and aspiration of the bleeding prevented DIC and maintained coagulation factors.
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PMID:Successful treatment of perinatal intraventricular haemorrhage. 54 18

Subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy, a chronic vascular dementia with hydrocephalus, was characterized pathologically in five patients by severe thickening of small vessels and by diffuse regions of white matter loss with gliosis. Lacunar infarcts were also present. The clinical picture in 11 patients was characterized by: (1) persistent hypertension and systemic vascular disease; (2) acute strokes; (3) subacute accumulation of focal neurologic symptoms and signs over weeks to months; (4) long plateau periods; (5) lengthy clinical course; (6) dementia; (7) prominent motor signs and pseudobulbar palsy and; (8) hydrocephalus. The pathogenesis of subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy is unknown; possible mechanisms include diffuse ischemia and fluid transudation with subsequent gliosis related to subacute hypertensive encephalopathy.
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PMID:Clinical features of subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy (Binswanger disease). 56 79

A correlative study is done between observation of cases of shunted hydrocephalus with mesencephalic signs such as Parinaud's syndrome and a multiunitary recording of mesencephalic and bulbar reticular formation activities during acute and chronic intracranial hypertension in cats. Clinical and experimental data are first separately analysed and then superimposed. This results in analysing the evolution of such intracranial hypertension in three stages: first stage of "tolerance" with minimal clinical signs and no change of reticular activity; second stage of "uncompensation" when mesencephalic signs appear and with increased mesencephalic activity and unchanged bulbar activity; third stage of "exhaustion" where can be noted disorders of consciousness, decerebration fits, and cardiorespiratory disorders; mesencephalic activity falls down to lower levels than basal ones, bulbar activity increases first and then also decreases rapidly. This suggests a mechanism of exhausting stocks of monoamines but also of change of the local cerebral blood flow. Increase and then fall of the reticular activity may be the general way, even without any herniation, of evolution of any intracranial hypertension of traumatic or tumoral origin.
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PMID:[Attempt at explaining decompensation of hydrocephalus by modifications of reticular activity]. 59 84

Seven children studied because of clinical macrocephaly and suspected hydrocephalus ultimately proved to have megalencephaly apparently due to an increase in sagittal sinus venous pressure as established from infusion studies. Unexplainably, these patients were all males. All were seen initially between 2 and 8 months of age. Head enlargement exceeded two standard deviations in all seven. Pneumoencephalography, ventriculography, or computerized tomography demonstrated normal or minimally enlarged ventricles that did not progress in size. Isotope cisternography was abnormal. Studies of CSF formation and absorption demonstrated normal absorption rates but high calculated sagittal sinus pressures. Though therapy was usually not required, in one unusual infant, severe progressive macrocephaly with minimal hydrocephalus required a shunt. Another had a transient episode of acute hydrocephalus associated with a low CSF absorption rate and ventricular enlargement. In this report, we review the intracranial hydrodynamics of benign intracranial hypertension (BIH), communicating hydrocephalus, and the pathogenesis of megalencephaly. Benign intracranial hypertension and the type of megalencephaly demonstrated by our patients appear to develop similarly except that the presence of open cranial sutures may allow a transient nonhydrostatic loading of brain parenchyma in infants, resulting in mild, nonprogressive macrocephaly.
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PMID:Megalencephaly in infants and children. The possible role of increased dural sinus pressure. 64 83


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