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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The etiologic and prognostic features which characterize cerebrovascular disease in the later decades of life are not applicable in younger patients. The records of 58 patients who had suffered cerebral infarction between the ages of 15 and 40 were reviewed in order to study these features. Fifty-five percent of the patients were found to have had an identifiable etiology for their cerebral infarction, with nearly half of these suffering from embolic infarction of cardiac origin. In 45% no clear etiology could be established but
hypertension
was prevalent in those patients between 31 and 40 years of age. Follow up data were obtained on 68% of the hospital survivors; nearly 3/4 of them had completely recovered or had improved.
Stroke
PMID:Cerebral infarction in young adults. 62 42
The possible risk factors were evaluated in 249 patients with cerebral infarction and in the control group consisting of 190 subjects of the same age and sex distribution. The following factors were significantly associated with brain infarction: elevated blood pressure, cardiac abnormalities, elevated blood glucose content, abnormal glucose tolerance, elevated blood cholesterol and beta-lipoproteid content and hemoglobin level. It was concluded that at present the key to
stroke
prevention is the early detection and control of
hypertension
and cardiac activity impairment.
...
PMID:[Cerebral infarct risk factors]. 62 40
Using the life table method, 962 cases of infarction, 279 cases of hemorrhage, and 243 cases of undetermined type of
stroke
, occurring in Manitoba between Jan 1, 1970, and June 30, 1971, were analyzed for factors affecting survival. Survival until Dec 31, 1973, was found to be adversely affected by the presence of coma or unconsciousness and the absence of localizing signs and symptoms. Also, the prognosis was poor if the heart was enlarged on the x-ray film or the ECG was abnormal. On the other hand, the presence of individual clinical entities such as
hypertension
, hypertensive heart disease, myocardial infarction, atrial fibrillation, or diabetes did not affect the survival significantly. These findings will help in predicting the prognosis and in planning for management of
stroke
cases.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in the survival of 1,484 stroke cases observed for 30 to 48 months. II. Clinical variables and laboratory measurements. 63 54
Pulmonary and systemic hemodynamics in 16 hypertensive subjects (group I) with left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (ECG and echo criteria) and in 17 hypertensive subjects with ECG signs of LV strain (group II), were compared with those in 14 normal individuals. An augmented pulmonary arteriolar resistance (PAR) in group I and to a larger extent in group II accounted for the pulmonary pressure elevation in both groups. Increase in PAR was unrelated to pulmonary blood flow and volume, pleural pressure, arterial PO2, PCO2 and pH, and could not be explained entirely by the left ventricular end-diastolic pressure changes. In group I, left (L.MSEJR) and right (R;MSEJR) mean systolic ejection rate,
stroke
index (SI) and mean velocity of circumferential fiber shortening (VCF) were enhanced in spite of the heightened pressure load on both sides of the heart. In group II, a large reduction of SI, L.MS.EJR, R.MSEJR and VCF, as well as the relationship between ventricular filling pressures and SI, documented a compromised performance of both ventricles, Findings indicate that:
systemic hypertension
is associated with elevation of pulmonary arterial pressure and of PAR which is not necessarily a consequence of impairment in LV function; LV hypertrophy is associated with enhanced performance of either ventricle; in coincidence with development of ECG signs of LV strain, the performance of both sides of the heart deteriorates. A functional interdependence of the two ventricles is suggested.
...
PMID:Pulmonary hemodynamics and right ventricular function in hypertension. 63 42
Cerebral blood flow autoregulation (CBFA) to changes in perfusion pressure has not been previously reported in the rat. A modification of the Kety and Schmidt technique employing 133Xenon was used to measure cerebral blood flow (CBF) in paralyzed adult Sprague Dawley rats passively ventilated with 70% nitrous oxide and 30% oxygen. At a mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) of 121 +/- 19 mm Hg, and a mean arterial PCO2 of 36.2 +/- 2.9 mm Hg, mean CBF was 103 +/- 22 ml/min/100 gm of brain. CBF responses to hypercarbia were 4.9 ml/min/100 gm per mm Hg change in arterial PCO2. CBF was measured during steady state levels of hypo- and
hypertension
induced by phlebotomy, or by intravenous metaraminol, over the MABP range of 48-205 mm Hg. From a MABP of 80 to 160 mm Hg. CBF remained nearly constant, indicating the presence of CBFA. However, when MABP exceeded 160 mm Hg, CBF became pressure dependent, indicating a "breakthrough" of autoregulation in acute severe
hypertension
.
Stroke
PMID:Cerebral blood flow autoregulation in the rat. 64 8
Eighty-seven patients with either amaurosis fugax (40 patients) or hemispheric transient ischemic attacks (47 patients) were studied to determine whether the two symptom groups could be differentiated clinically and arteriographically. Clinical data assessed were age of patient, incidence of cardiac disease, and presence of claudication,
hypertension
, diabetes, and carotid bruits. Contrary to a prior report, our results indicate no significant difference between the 2 patient groups based on clinical and arteriographic findings.
Stroke
PMID:Clinical and arteriographic comparison of amaurosis fugax with hemispheric transient ischemic attacks. 64 24
Circumscribed atherosclerotic involvement of secondary and tertiary branches of major cerebral arteries is a common angiographic finding whose nature is rarely in question. However, widespread and severe changes are unusual, and radiologic interpretation may be more difficult. We recently cared for a patient whose angiogram demonstrated extensive involvement of leptomeningeal vessels and were prompted to review the clinical courses and autopsy findings of a number of other patients with similar angiographic findings. Our observations suggest that the radiological appearance of leptomeningeal artery atherosclerosis can be confused with that of an arteritis. Atherosclerosis of leptomeningeal arteries is strongly associated with a history of arterial
hypertension
and seems to parallel arterial lesions thought responsible for lacunar infarction and intraparenchymal hemorrhage.
Stroke
PMID:Leptomeningeal artery atherosclerosis visualized by angiography: clinical correlates. 64 27
Myocardial performance in the immediate postoperative period was studied 49 cardiac surgical patients treated with nitroprusside alone. With a thermodilution catheter positioned in the pulmonary artery, cardiac output was calculated and cardiac index, systemic vascular resistance index, and
stroke
work index were derived before after treatment with nitroprusside. The drug was a administered to all patients because of elevated systemic vascular resistance index. Based on their mean arterial pressure and cardiac index before treatment, the patients fell into two groups. Group I patients (N = 25) had elevated mean arterial pressure and normal cardiac index. Group II patients (N = 24) had normal mean arterial pressure and subnormal cardiac index. Nitroprusside administration resulted in a significant reduction of systemic vascular resistance index in all patients. In Group I the mean arterial pressure was lowered significantly while cardiac index increased only slightly. In Group II there was no change in arterial pressure, but cardiac index improved significantly. The results not only confirm that nitroprusside is effective in managing postoperative
hypertension
, but also demonstrate that in patients with postoperative left ventricular failure, the drug can improve cardiac output by reducing systemic vascular resistance without significantly lowering arterial blood pressure.
...
PMID:Improved myocardial performance in postoperative cardiac surgical patients with sodium nitroprusside. 64 13
The effects of discrete increases in the volume of an artificial space-occupying lesion on intracranial pressures and the systemic circulation were studied in six anaesthetised and artificially ventilated dogs. Each increase in volume, accompanied by an increase in supratentorial intracranial pressure, a decrease in supratentorial perfusion pressure, and an increase in transtentorial pressure gradient, induced alterations in the systemic circulation. There were a decrease in heart rate, marked alterations in the arrhythmia index, and increases in
stroke
volume and systemic vascular resistance. A period of transient
systemic hypertension
was noted to accompany each discrete increase in intracranial pressure.
...
PMID:Systemic vascular responses to increased intracranial pressure. 3. Effects of individual balloon inflations on intracranial pressure and the systemic circulation. 65 Feb 41
A population of 199 patients from Rochester, MN, was followed from the time of their first carotid or vertebral-basilar transient ischemic attack (TIA). Patients treated with anticoagulants had no significant difference in survival from untreated patients. Among patients with carotid TIA who received anticoagulants, the net probability of
stroke
was slightly but not significantly lower than in untreated patients. The difference favoring treated patients with vertebral-basilar TIA was significant starting at three months. The rate of intracranial hemorrhage was higher higher among all patients receiving anticoagulant treatment than among untreated patients and was significantly higher among those 55 to 74 years old. Almost all the hemorrhages occurred after a year or more of anticoagulant treatment and in patients more than 65 years old. Patients with high diastolic blood pressure had a significantly higher net probability of
stroke
than did patients with lower blood pressure and those receiving antihypertensive drugs. By implication, treatment of
hypertension
was effective in preventing
stroke
in patients with TIA. Linear discriminant analysis and actuarial analysis indicated that diastolic blood pressure and anticoagulant therapy were the only factors that influenced
stroke
occurrence. There was no suggestion that previous myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, valvular heart disease, cardiac arrhythmia, or congestive heart failure--individually or in combination--influenced the occurrence of
stroke
or survival.
...
PMID:Carotid and vertebral-basilar transient ischemic attacks: effect of anticoagulants, hypertension, and cardiac disorders on survival and stroke occurrence--a population study. 65 61
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