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

The authors report the results of a study realized at National Hospital of Niamey (Republic of Niger) from october 1981 to may 1986. Among 4820 patients living in Western Niger, 410 (8.5%) had neurological disorders. Out of 16 recognized syndromes 6 constitute 75.2%: comas, paraplegias, cranial nerves palsies, convulsions, hemiplegias and sciaticas. An etiological diagnosis is made in 269 patients. From 15 diseases 4 totalize 73.5%: there are medullar compressions, infections of the central nervous system (bacterial meningitis, cerebral malaria), cerebral vascular disturbances and metabolic encephalopathies. POTT's disease is the most common cause of medullar compression with paraplegia and arterial hypertension is a very important etiologic factor of cerebral vascular attack (42.2 and 44.4% respectively). Parkinsonian syndrome and multiple sclerosis seem rare. The diagnosis of cerebral tumor is very uncommon but this is in relation to the absence of autopsy and of recent investigation (scanner). No case of tuberculous meningitis is noted and this can't be explained by the authors in a major tuberculous endemic area.
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PMID:[Neurologic diseases in Niger]. 189 15

The development of persistent hypertension in young, previously healthy paraplegic individuals is unusual; it could be postulated that hypertension is a cardiovascular response peculiar to patients who sustained spinal cord injury after surgical repair of the aorta with trauma-related injuries. In a retrospective study of 712 patients sustaining spinal cord injury during the last decade, seven sustained paraplegia after aortic repair that was necessitated by trauma-related injuries. Despite the low incidence of new-onset hypertension in paraplegic patients, five of the seven developed hypertension, of which three required chronic antihypertensive medications. It is well documented that patients with lesions of the neuraxis above the sixth thoracic segment are prone to the phenomenon of autonomic hyperreflexia. This results from interruption of the baroreceptor reflex and the descending tracts of the spinal cord. There is evidence that the renin-angiotensin system, catecholamines, and receptor-site activity play an important role in the control of blood pressure in spinal cord injured patients. Additional investigation of this rare subgroup of spinal cord injured patients may further illuminate the effect of spinal cord injury on autonomic control of the cardiovascular system.
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PMID:Persistent hypertension in young spinal cord injured individuals resulting from aortic repair. 192 98

Paraplegia is a fearful and not uncommon complication of aortic clamping in surgical procedures involving thoracic and abdominal aorta. We report a case of transient spinal cord ischemia during the early postoperative period of aortobifemoral bypass in a 69-year-old male with arteriosclerosis obliterans, hypertension, type II diabetes mellitus and COLD. The anesthetic procedure was combined (peridural + intubation and mechanical ventilation + isofluorane). Two hypotensive episodes of about 80 mmHg developed, one after induction and another in the Reanimation area. The first one had a short duration, whereas the second one required the administration of colloids, crystalloids and blood. The infrarenal aortic clamping time was 35 minutes. In the early postoperative period the patient had clinical features consistent with spinal ischemia, which progressively recovered. To prevent spinal ischemia during surgery a shorter duration than 30 minutes of aortic clamping, a higher distal perfusion pressures higher than 60 mmHg during clamping, and the attempt to exclude the least possible number of intercostal and/or lumbar vessels are recommended. Drugs (corticosteroids, naloxone) and hypothermia can be useful.
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PMID:[Spinal cord ischemia in the postoperative period of aortic surgery]. 207 98

Between January 1987, and December 1988, 14 cases of descending thoracic or thoraco-abdominal aortic aneurysm underwent operation using a prosthetic graft replacement. In order to avoid hypoperfusion to distal organs and proximal hypertension during aortic cross-clamping, two different adjuncts were used and the effectiveness of those methods were compared according to the results of surgery. Seven patients were treated with a temporary shunt of heparin-bonded tube from the left axillary artery to left femoral artery, or else Dacron vascular prosthesis from right axillary artery to right femoral artery (Group I). In Group II (seven patients), left heart bypass was performed, using a centrifugal pump from the left atrium to the left femoral artery with minimal heparinization. In Group I, there were two hospital deaths, due to respiratory and hepatic failure respectively, and paraplegia has occurred in one case. In Group II, there was no death during a post-operative observation period of 5-15 months, and there was no case of paraplegia. We think that temporary left heart bypass with a centrifugal pump seems to be the most useful method today for graft replacement of the descending thoracic or thoraco-abdominal aorta.
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PMID:A centrifugal pump for graft replacement of the descending thoracic or thoraco-abdominal aorta. 213 Jul 67

Paraplegia is a devastating complication of surgery on the descending thoracic aorta. During surgical repair, the aorta is cross-clamped, and nitroprusside is often used to treat arterial hypertension that can occur above the cross-clamp. Twenty-one dogs were studied to determine the effects of nitroprusside on intraspinal pressures, mean aortic pressures below the cross-clamp, and spinal cord perfusion pressure. Perfusion pressure in spinal radicular arteries originating below the aortic cross-clamp was estimated as the distal aortic pressure minus intraspinal pressure. Nitroprusside was used to return the mean arterial pressure above the cross-clamp to values similar to the pre-cross-clamp levels in 7 dogs. Fourteen animals did not receive sodium nitroprusside. Aortic cross-clamping resulted in small but significant increases in intraspinal pressure (4.3 +/- 0.8 to 7.5 +/- 0.9 mm Hg in non-nitroprusside-treated dogs, and 3.4 +/- 1.0 to 5.6 +/- 1.5 mm Hg in the nitroprusside group before nitroprusside). Nitroprusside caused a further increase in intraspinal pressure (5.6 +/- 1.5 to 8.3 +/- 2.2 mm Hg) and a decrease in aortic pressure below the cross-clamp (26 +/- 5 to 18 +/- 4 mm Hg). The increase in intraspinal pressure and the decrease in aortic pressure below the cross-clamp after nitroprusside resulted in a decrease in spinal cord perfusion pressure from 19 +/- 5 mm Hg to 11 +/- 4 mm Hg. Because nitroprusside decreases spinal cord perfusion pressure and may increase the risk of spinal cord ischemia, the avoidance of large doses of nitroprusside to arbitrarily return mean arterial pressure above the cross-clamp to pre-cross-clamp levels is recommended.
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PMID:Sodium nitroprusside decreases spinal cord perfusion pressure during descending thoracic aortic cross-clamping in the dog. 213 65

Paraplegia caused by spinal haemorrhage is a very rare but disastrous complication of spinal or epidural insertion. The risk in uncomplicated surgical and obstetric patients is outlined. Bleeding disorders in pregnant patients may prevent the use of major regional anaesthesia. Factors which influence the choice of anaesthetic technique for patients with pregnancy-induced hypertension, von Willebrand's disease, and anticoagulation therapy, are discussed.
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PMID:Epidurals, spinals and bleeding disorders in pregnancy: a review. 222 24

Even in patients with complete loss of sensation and paraplegia after cervical spinal trauma, abdominal operations usually require general or spinal anesthesia due to spasms and increased muscle tone. Both anesthetic types have serious drawbacks under these circumstances, e.g. hyperkalemia induced by relaxation or the impossibility of adequate monitoring of the level of spinal blockade. After an onset time of 1-2 h the intrathecal injection of approx. 100 micrograms baclofen, a spinally acting GABAB-agonist, led to complete and long-lasting suppression of surgically induced spasticity. This could be demonstrated by neurological examination (spasticity scores: Ashworth score, spasm score, clonus score) during 5 neurosurgical operations in 3 patients with paraplegia. Except for slight sedation, the patients had no discomfort during operation. Intrathecal baclofen was also effective against autonomic hyperreflexia, i.e. vegetative dysregulation such as bradycardia or hypertension, provoked by catheterization or bladder surgery.
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PMID:[Intraoperative suppression of spasticity using intrathecal baclofen]. 230 48

Six patients underwent translumbar amputation (TLA), a life-saving procedure, after standard modalities of therapy failed to control the progression of the disease. The primary diagnoses were as follows: pelvic arterial-venous (A-V) malformation, 1; sacral chordoma, 3; giant cell tumor of the sacrum, 1; and paraplegia with squamous cell cancer arising in intractable decubitus, 1. There were no operative deaths. The following postoperative complications developed in five patients: urinary fistulae, 2; small bowel obstruction, 1; intraabdominal bleeding, 1; hypertension, 2; small bowel fistula, 1; and dehiscence of skin closure, 1. Two patients died with distant metastases (24 months) and distant metastases with local recurrence (6 months). The remaining four patients were alive and well 72, 56, 48, and 18 months after the surgical procedure. All of these patients have reached the rehabilitation goals.
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PMID:Translumbar amputation. 234 Apr 66

A case of non-traumatic spinal epidural hematoma (SEH) with spontaneous resolution was reported. A 80-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital for her paraplegia of acute onset. She had had no specific previous history, and she did not either receive any drug or suffer from hypertension. On admission, general status was unremarkable. Flaccid paralysis of lower extremities and bilateral sensory disturbance of all modalities below the level of Th4 were observed. Deep tendon reflexes were normal in upper extremities, while absent in lower extremities. Babinski's sign was not elicited. From the findings of CT and metrizamide CT myelography, SEH of ventral type was presumed. MRI revealed hematoma compressing spinal cord over two vertebral segments, and widely spreading even to C7 rostrally and to Th10 caudally. Urgent surgical intervention was taken into consideration, but was not performed because of her rapid improvement: sensory disturbance alleviated from day to day, and she became able to walk within the 3rd day of hospitalization. Almost complete recovery from motor and sensory dysfunction was achieved in about 7 days after admission. Only 4 cases of spontaneous recovery of SEH have been reported so far, and this patient is the 5th such case. Although CT and metrizamide CT myelography are useful in diagnosing SEH, MRI is also proved to be an accurate and efficacious method for evaluation of its size, location and extent in the spinal canal.
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PMID:[A case of acute spinal epidural hematoma with spontaneous resolution and its MRI]. 258 89

Appropriate diagnostic procedure for spinal epidural hematomas has not been established yet. The authors reported a case of spontaneous epidural hematomas at the thoracic level, in which correct diagnosis was made with MRI and good results were obtained by surgery. A 63-year-old female experienced a severe back pain which appeared suddenly during a walk and was followed by motor weakness in both legs deteriorating quickly to paraplegia. The patient had no history of hypertension, trauma or bleeding tendency. The laboratory data were normal. On admission, neurological examination revealed flaccid paraplegia, total sensory loss below the level of Th 6 and urinary and fecal incontinence. Myelograms showed incomplete block at the Th 6 level and postmyelographic CT scan showed an isodense mass, which was suspected to be an epidural tumor located behind the spinal cord. Emergent MRI confirmed an epidural hematoma as a high intensity area extending from Th 3 through Th 11. Sixty-five hours after onset, laminectomy of Th 4 through Th 11 and the evacuation of epidural hematoma were performed without identification of the origin of the bleeding. Neither vascular malformation nor tumor was recognized during operation. Neither was it noticed on histological examination. The patient made favorable progress after the surgery. During the first two weeks in the postoperative period, she regained muscle strength enough to do standing exercise, and satisfactory improvement was made in sensory function including urination and defecation. We emphasize that MRI is indispensable to make a differential diagnosis of thoracic lesions. In the reported case, a correct diagnosis was made with MRI, and an extremely good result was obtained by an emergency operation.
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PMID:[Spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma diagnosed by MRI: a case report]. 259 57


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