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

The aim of the intensive care of the injured is the coupling of the availability and the requirement of the cerebral metabolic substates. The measurement of the cerebral blood flow is not currently available at the bedside and less direct monitoring is required. The cerebral perfusion can be estimated looking at the cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP), that can be easily measured using intracranial pressure (ICP) and the systemic arterial pressure (MAP) monitoring. Hundred-twenty-one consecutive head injured admitted to an Intensive Care Unit were studied assessing the severity of the neurological injury, the CT-Scan diagnosis of the intracranial lesion, the Trauma Score and the behavior of the ICP and MAP. The outcome was classified according to a modified version of the Glasgow Outcome Scale. More than 77% of the patients suffered raised intracranial pressure above 20 mmHg and 16 of them had a CPP less than 60 mmHg for more than 5 minutes. The outcome was directly related to the degree of intracranial hypertension and to the severity of insufficient CPP. The treatment of the severe head injured must be aimed at maintaining a good CPP, because of the close relationships between this value and the prognostic result. The monitoring of the ICP is a reliable and relatively safe procedure in this series, where the rate of infections complicating the intracranial recording is less than 3%.
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PMID:[Cerebral perfusion pressure in endocranial hypertension in comatose head-injured patients]. 221 79

We studied 143 cases of cerebral cysticercosis over a 30-year period. In 46 there was hydrocephalus due to cysts obstructing the cerebrospinal fluid pathways, with signs of hydrocephalus and cerebellar dysfunction. In 97 there were cysts in the cerebral parenchyma, causing symptoms of intracranial hypertension alone in 22 cases, with additional neurological deficits in the remainder. Before 1980 diagnosis was made by pneumoencephalography and ventriculography, but since then it has mostly been done by computed tomography. In 28 cases scanned, typical abnormalities were present in 25. Complement fixation tests were positive in serum in 74% of cases and in cerebrospinal fluid in 73%, and the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay test was positive in serum in 90% and in cerebrospinal fluid in 92%. Treatment of cases with hydrocephalus was by removal of the cysts at craniotomy, with placement of a shunt where necessary. Intracranial hypertension caused by parenchymal cysts was treated with steroids and osmotic agents, if possible. In resistant cases subtemporal decompression was needed, unilateral in 55 cases and bilateral in eight. Mortality in the acute stage was 11%, with a further 20% at follow up.
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PMID:Cerebral cysticercosis. 221 47

The empty sella turcica is defined as a sella which, regardless of its size, is completely or partly filled with cerebrospinal fluid. An empty sella of normal size is a frequent and probably normal finding in unselected autopsy series. In clinical series an empty sella usually appears enlarged and is often associated with a variety of clinical disorders, constituting the so-called empty sella syndrome. Several causes of an enlarged empty sella have been suggested: a congenitally missing (deficient) sellar diaphragm with or without altered cerebrospinal fluid dynamics, previous pituitary gland hypertrophy or the outcome of a pituitary tumor necrosis. Increased intracranial pressure will induce a sellar enlargement in some patients and, consequently, also the emptiness. This pathogenesis is, however, applicable only in a minority of patients with an empty enlarged sella. Data from the literature and from own studies suggest that the enlarged empty sellae and the associated findings in the majority of cases are caused by spontaneous necrosis of a previous pituitary adenoma. This theory explains the frequent presence of pituitary insufficiency, pituitary hypersecretion, and visual field defects in patients with an empty sella. Furthermore, it offers an explanation of the finding of an empty enlarged sella in some patients with non-traumatic cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea and probably also benign intracranial hypertension. Thus, an empty enlarged sella is a stage in the spontaneous course of some pituitary adenomas and the associated findings constituting the empty sella syndrome are an occasional part of the clinical presentation of pituitary adenomas.
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PMID:The empty sella. A reappraisal of etiology and pathogenesis. 179 61

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) hypertension during aortic surgery is a poorly understood, multifactorial event that may increase the risk of spinal cord injury. To assess the factors that may contribute to changes in CSF pressure during aortic surgery, measurements of ascending arterial and CSF pressures were made in 17 anesthetized mongrel dogs. Changes in CSF patterns were monitored under several conditions tested in random sequence. These included systemic hypertension produced by an infusion of phenylephrine, cross-clamping of the descending thoracic aorta, and manual, superior displacement of the transverse aortic arch (arch elevation), either alone or in conjunction with the cross-clamp. Hypertension, cross-clamping, and cross-clamping combined with arch elevation all produced significant increases in ascending mean arterial pressure (204 +/- 20, 170 +/- 8, and 158 +/- 11 mm Hg, respectively, vs. 117 +/- 8 mm Hg [control]; (p less than 0.01). Small, nonsignificant increases in CSF pressure were detected in the cross-clamp group, but none were detected with hypertension alone, despite significant increases in ascending arterial blood pressure in both groups. Thus, neither arterial hypertension nor cross-clamping alone could be demonstrated directly to cause significant CSF hypertension. However, when aortic elevation (displacement) was combined with cross-clamping, the rise in CSF pressure increased to significant levels, even though the ascending arterial hypertension was least severe in this group. In contrast, arch elevation alone did not produce any significant increase in ascending arterial pressure but did produce an approximately 114% increase in CSF pressure (15.2 +/- mm Hg vs. 7.7 +/- 1 mm Hg [control]; p less than 0.01.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Reappraisal of the mechanism for cerebrospinal fluid hypertension during aortic surgery. 222 35

Communicating normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is an important remote complication of traumatic brain injury (TBI). The diagnosis of this hydrocephalus depends largely on clinical signs and symptoms, including cognitive deterioration, gait changes and incontinence. However, many of these signs are also seen during post-traumatic amnesia, making early recognition of this syndrome difficult. A case study of one man post-TBI, who presented with new-onset hypertension as a sign of NPH, prompted a retrospective chart review of all patients admitted over a 2-year period with a diagnosis of NPH. Ninety per cent of patients had one or more of the classic triad of NPH and 25% of patients had symptoms suggestive of raised intracranial pressure (unexplained nausea, headache and visual disturbance). Mean systolic and diastolic blood pressures among the 20 subjects for six consecutive days pre-operatively compared with those for days 8-14 and 15-21 post-operatively showed no significant differences; a subgroup of five patients (25%), however, demonstrated a significant change in blood pressure temporally related to shunting. We suggest that demonstration of new-onset systemic hypertension may also be a clinical sign suggestive of NPH useful in the evaluation of the TBI patient.
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PMID:Relationship of new-onset systemic hypertension and normal pressure hydrocephalus. 239 Jun 49

Long-term neuropsychological recovery of 24 severe head-injured patients was examined and correlated with acute measurements of intracranial pressure (ICP) and diffuse computed tomographic (CT) lesions. Intracranial hypertension (ICP greater than or equal to 20 mm Hg) was present acutely in 12 patients and absent in 12 patients. CT diagnoses of diffuse swelling (DS) was present in 12 patients, and diffuse axonal injury (DAI) in 12 patients. During chronic recovery, neuropsychological dysfunctioning was found in all cases. Patients with acute ICP elevations showed more intellectual and memory losses than those without acute ICP elevations. No neuropsychological differences were found between patients with DS and DAI injuries. The findings suggest secondary brain insults caused by intracranial hypertension may be more disruptive to long-term neuropsychological functioning than diffuse lesion type.
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PMID:Relation between intracranial pressure, computed tomographic lesion, and neuropsychological outcome. 239 21

An experimental model to simulate acutely raised intracranial pressure due to a rapidly expanding intracranial space-occupying lesion was used to produce neurogenic shock. Forty-one rats in neurogenic shock (defined as a mean systemic arterial pressure (SAP) of less than 60 mm Hg) were subjected to various treatments to increase the mean SAP to a level of more than 80 mm Hg. The control group with neurogenic shock received no treatment, and the six treatment groups received infusions of: whole blood, packed cells, plasma, normal saline, dopamine, or a combination of dopamine and saline. Detrimental effects were observed after transfusion of packed cells or whole blood, which caused further deterioration of mean SAP. Although dopamine or the combination of dopamine and saline were both effective (p = 0.0001) for reversing hypotension, the combination was the most effective. If this rat paradigm correlates with human disease, these results indicate that, in the absence of hypovolemia, neurogenic shock due to acute intracranial hypertension should be treated with a combined transfusion of dopamine and normal saline, but not blood since the latter could have a detrimental effect.
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PMID:Effect of blood transfusion, dopamine, or normal saline on neurogenic shock secondary to acutely raised intracranial pressure. 271 22

Intracranial hypertension complicating fulminant hepatic failure has a mortality in excess of 90% in the presence of renal failure if not rapidly responsive to mannitol and ultrafiltration. Based on data which suggest that barbiturates can be of value in controlling the intracranial hypertension of head injury, intravenous thiopental was assessed in 13 patients with fulminant hepatic failure. All had developed acute renal failure complicated by intracranial hypertension unresponsive to other modes of therapy and were likely by all published criteria to have little chance of survival. The dosage of thiopental was adjusted incrementally until intracranial pressure, measured by extradural transducers, fell to within normal limits or adverse hemodynamic changes occurred. The intracranial pressure was reduced, in each case, by 185 to 500 mg (median: 250 mg) thiopental given over 15 min, and in eight cases continuing infusion achieved stable normal intracranial pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure. Five of the patients made a complete recovery and there were only three deaths from intracranial hypertension. Side effects were few and included minor hypotension controlled by dose reduction. The response of otherwise intractable intracranial hypertension and the 38% survival rate was remarkable for a group of patients with such a poor prognosis.
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PMID:Thiopental infusion in the treatment of intracranial hypertension complicating fulminant hepatic failure. 275 48

There are many reports on the disequilibrium syndrome due to dialysis in patients with chronic renal failure. However, they do not mention the findings of CT cisternography and MRI. We intend to investigate the mechanism of CSF dynamics in a patient with disequilibrium syndrome by means of these radiological examinations. A 31 year-old woman who had suffered from renal failure for 18 years was found to have prominent increase of serum creatinine (18.1 mg/dl) and BUN (127 mg/dl) 3 years ago. At that time, digital marking of the skull was already present by X-ray examination without other destruction in bone survey of the whole body. She was hemodialysed by the hollow fiber kidney three times weekly (dialysis time 4.5 hours, dialysate osmotic pressure 270 mOsm/kg H2O). Three months ago, she began to complain of severe headache, nausea and vomiting 2 hours after the beginning of dialysis, so that she was referred to Kosei Hospital. On admission, she showed exophthalmus, concentric narrowing of the visual field, optic atrophy and hyperreflexia in jaw and four extremities. After admission, she received hemodialysis therapy thrice weekly (dialysis time 5 hours, dialysate osmotic pressure 290 mOsm/kg H2O). At the same time, 200 ml of glycerol (contents of glycerin 10, fructose 5, NaCl 0.9%) was administered intravenously during dialysis, which ameliorated the symptoms of intracranial hypertension. Laboratory studies revealed marked decrease of serum creatinine, BUN and uric acid levels and osmotic pressure, and increase of blood pH at the time of postdialysis compared with predialysis. Manometric CSF pressure increased up to 310 mmH2O at the day without dialysis before the glycerol administration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of chronic renal hemodialysis and intracranial hypertension--a study on CSF dynamics]. 276 3

180 severe neurosurgical cases were monitored by intraventricular, epidural and subdural measurements. Intracranial infection rate was 1.1% and the intracranial hypertension rate was 83.3%. Increased intracranial pressure was most often seen in group of head injury. The outcome was poor in cases of uncontrol intracranial hypertension. It was found that intracranial pressure monitoring is useful for diagnosis, treatment and estimation of prognosis and has practical clinical value. This method and indications should be used appropriately according to the different situations. The patients with acute intracranial hypertension should be monitored intensively.
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PMID:[Intracranial pressure monitoring in clinical practice. Report of 180 cases]. 276 56


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