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170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The objective of this study was to examine diabetic patients at the time of admission to maintenance haemodialysis and to follow them for 36 months in order to define predictors of cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular death. This prospective study comprised all consecutive diabetic patients admitted to 28 German dialysis centres between January 1985 and October 1987; 196 patients were examined, 67 Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetic (43 male, 24 female; median age 49 years, range 22-73) and 129 Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetic patients (54 male, 75 female; 64 years, range 37-82). Outcome measures were death, i.e. myocardial infarction, sudden death, cardiac death of other causes, stroke and non-cardiovascular death. Actuarial survival 36 months after the beginning of dialysis was similar in Type 1 (40%) and Type 2 diabetic patients (43%) despite the age difference. Causes of death were myocardial infarction (18%), sudden death (18%), other cardiac causes (18%); stroke (6%); septicaemia (17%) mostly originating from diabetic foot problems; and interruption of therapy. Survival rates and the proportion dying from cardiac causes were similar in patients with diabetic nephropathy or with other primary chronic renal disease and coincidental diabetes. On dialysis, de novo amaurosis or de novo amputation was not observed in any patient. The strongest predictor of myocardial infarction or sudden death was serum lipids on admission. Duration of hypertension, blood pressure at the time of admission to dialysis, left ventricular hypertrophy or end-diastolic diameter by echocardiography, Sokolow index and average predialysis blood pressure, smoking, interdialytic weight gain and type of dialysis were not predictive of cardiovascular death or death by all causes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Survival and predictors of death in dialysed diabetic patients. 824 64

From January 1985 to October 1992 ten patients were submitted to reconstruction of the external carotid artery (ECA). Nine were males and one female with age that ranged from 64 to 74 years, mean 68. All were symptomatic due to TIAs in seven and amaurosis fugax in four of this group, previous completed stroke plus TIAs in two and chronic low perfusion in one. Associated risk factors were smoking (8 pts: 80%), coronary disease (5 pts: 50%), hypertension (4 pts: 40%), diabetes (4 pts: 40%) and peripheral arterial obstructive disease (2 pts: 20%). All patients were submitted to non invasive (Doppler C. W., Echo-color Doppler) studies as well as angiography. All the patients had an occlusion of the internal carotid artery (ICA) unilateral and homolateral to external carotid stenosis in 8 and bilateral in 2; in addition three patients had a non haemodynamic stenosis of the contralateral ICA. One patient had an occlusion of the common carotid artery with collateral supply to the ECA; nine had severe stenosis of the ECA at the origin. In one case a homolateral vertebral stenosis was detected as well as a prevertebral contralateral subclavian stenosis in another one. Surgery was advised to correct amaurosis fugax, to increase external-internal collateral supply in order to avoid cerebral ischaemia and prior to contralateral ICA endarterectomy. All patients were operated upon under general anesthesia; an endarterectomy with a PTFE patch was performed in 9 cases, while in one a subclavian-ECA bypass was carried out using an autologous vein segment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:External carotid artery repair in cerebrovascular insufficiency. 825 54

A total of 167 carotid endarterectomies by the eversion technique were completed in 158 patients at a teaching hospital during the 6-year period ending July 1995. The average patient age was 66 years with a range of 39 to 89 years, and 99 (63%) were male. General anesthesia was employed routinely, and temporary indwelling shunts, were not used. Indications for endarterectomy included hemispheric transient ischemic attack (43), amaurosis fugax (20), stroke (41), and asymptomatic stenosis (63). Associated patient risk factors were not significantly different for men and women, and included diabetes mellitus (22%), tobacco abuse (72%), hypertension (69%), hypercholesterolemia (76%), cardiac disease (54%), and renal disease (21%). One (0.6%) permanent operative stroke and two (1%) 30-day hospital deaths occurred. Vascular laboratory follow-up was accomplished by duplex scanning with a documented sensitivity of 98 per cent in detecting a > or = 40 per cent stenosis. Eighty-nine per cent (148) of the 167 endarterectomies were tested at least once postoperatively. Overall laboratory follow-up averaged 17 months and ranged from one to 69 months. Residual stenosis, included perioperative thrombosis, occurred in 8 (5%) arteries. Recurrent stenosis was detected in four (2%) cases at 9, 24, 54, and 66 months after endarterectomy. Statistical analyses failed to implicate any specific patient risk factor, age, sex, or operative indication relevant to recurrent stenosis. Residual stenosis was correlated with younger patient age (P = 0.002), female gender (P = 0.12), and endarterectomy on the right side (P = 0.008). Carotid eversion endarterectomy appears to be a universally applicable, safe, and durable operative technique.
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PMID:Technical results from the eversion technique of carotid endarterectomy. 861 62

The role of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) in stroke prevention is now better defined. However, its role in patients older than 79 years of age is controversial. This group of patients has been excluded in most clinical trials. In this study the authors reviewed their experience with CEA patients >79 years old. The records of all patients older than 79 years of age who underwent a CEA in a recent time period from January 1988 to December 1996 were retrospectively reviewed. Forty-one patients (31 men, 10 women) were identified by computer search. The indication for operation included transient ischemic attack in 12 (29.3%), amaurosis fugax in nine (22%), stroke in two (4.9%), and nonhemispheric symptoms in three (7.3%). Fifteen patients (36.6%) were asymptomatic. Medical risk factors included coronary artery disease in 26 (63.4%), hypertension in 22 (53.7%), and smoking in 12 (29.3%). The procedure was performed under EEG monitoring in all patients. General anesthesia was administered in 37 (90%) and regional anesthesia in four (10%). Shunts were used in four (10%) patients. The internal carotid artery was patched in 16 patients (39%). One patient (2.4%) developed a perioperative stroke and only one patient developed perioperative myocardial infarction (MI). None of the patients died within 30 days of surgery. In addition to the one MI case, five patients developed minor complications. The average length of time for stay after CEA was 3.4 days. Patients were followed up for an average of 20.7 months. Six patients died during follow-up. Four of those died from an MI and two from a stroke. The authors conclude that with proper selection of patients, CEA is safe in the octogenarian. Age alone should not be a contraindication for CEA.
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PMID:Entering the ninth decade is not a contraindication for carotid endarterectomy. 955 30

Report of a girl with the epileptic, hydrocephalic and encephalitic form of neurocysticercosis, diagnosed by cerebrospinal fluid and computed tomography exams, during her second year of life and an evolution with multiple types of seizures, prolonged periods of intracranial hypertension due to obstruction in the ventriculoperitoneal shunt, psychomotor regression and blindness until she was 10 years old, when the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome was diagnosed. Nowadays the patient is 16 years old and presents complex partial seizures with automatism not completely controlled with clobazan and oxcarbazepine, associated to left spastic hemiparesis, universal hyperreflexia, psychomotor agitation, self-mutilation, amaurosis and severe mental retardation. The association between neurocysticercosis and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome was first described in 1973 by Frochtengarten & Scarante in a Brazilian girl with a similar clinical picture.
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PMID:[Neurocysticercosis and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome: case report]. 1092 Apr 20

The aim of this review is to present the current knowledge regarding stroke. It will appear in three parts (in part II the pathogenesis, investigations, and prognosis will be presented, while part III will consist of the management and rehabilitation). In the current part (I) the definitions of the clinical picture are presented. These include: amaurosis fugax, vertebrobasilar transient ischemic attack, and stroke (with good recovery, in evolution and complete). The role of the following risk factors is discussed in detail: age, gender, ethnicity, heredity, hypertension, cigarette smoking, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, obesity, fibrinogen and clotting factors, oral contraceptives, erythrocytosis and hematocrit level, prior cerebrovascular and other diseases, physical inactivity, diet and alcohol consumption, illicit drug use, and genetic predisposition. In particular, regarding the carotid arteries, the following characteristics are analyzed: atheroma, carotid plaque echomorphology, carotid stenosis, presence of ulcer, local variations in surface deformability, pathological characteristics, and dissection. Finally the significance of the cerebral collateral circulation and the conditions predisposing to cardioembolism and to cerebral hemorrhage are presented.
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PMID:Stroke: epidemiology, clinical picture, and risk factors--Part I of III. 1110 23

The pathogenesis of anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (AION) primarily involves interference with the posterior ciliary artery blood supply to the prelaminar optic nerve. Uremic patients often have coexisting pathology such as hypotension (decreased blood delivery), or hypertension, atherosclerosis (increased resistance to blood supply), and anemia (low blood oxygen carrying capacity), predisposing them to AION. We describe a 49-year-old patient on dialysis for many years. He had long-standing hypotension, worsened during each dialysis treatment. He awoke one morning at age 48 complaining of blurred vision in the left inferior field. Based on the clinical course, funduscopic and fluorangiographic examination and visual field defects, AION was diagnosed. Nine months after the loss of vision in the left eye, vision in the right eye became blurred and worsened over the next 24 hours. The diagnosis of AION in the right eye was made. At the last examination ten months later, the patient, still amaurotic, was given a very poor prognosis for further recovery of the visual defects. Surprisingly, very few cases of AION have been reported in chronic uremic patients on dialysis: to the best of our knowledge, only 12 including ours. Most of these cases share some features, including hypotension above all and anemia as common risk factors. Neither the type of dialysis treatment (hemo-, peritoneal dialysis) nor sex seem to have any influence on the occurrence of AION. Uremic children can be affected. What is striking in the three published pediatric cases is that they all had polycystic kidney disease. Treatment of AION in all 12 cases consisted of a combination of steroids, i.v. saline, blood transfusions and rhEpo. AION was more frequently bilateral and irreversible, ending in permanent amaurosis. In conclusion, this study aims to stress that most cases of AION occurring in chronic uremic patients on dialysis have some common features, including hypotension above all and anemia as common risk factors.
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PMID:Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy and dialysis: role of hypotension and anemia. 1173 Feb 78

To clarify the characteristics of cerebrovascular lesions in subtypes of vascular ocular syndrome, including amaurosis fugax(AF), retinal artery occlusion(RAO), and retinal vein occlusion(RVO), 93 patients with vascular ocular syndrome were studied by means of carotid ultrasonography(US) and brain computerized tomography(CT). The subjects comprised 21 patients with AF, 37 with RAO, and 35 with RVO who were sequentially given these diagnoses by the department of ophthalmology. On the basis of US findings, carotid lesions were defined as the presence of plaque or stenotic changes. CT findings were assessed for the presence and distribution of low-density areas(LDAs). Mean age was similar in each group, ranging from 64.5 to 67.4 years. The RAO group had high rates of men, hypertension, and smokers. US showed that the prevalence of carotid lesions ipsilateral to the affected eye was high in the RAO group and that severe stenosis and ulcerated plaque were present in 28.6% of the AF group and 45.9% of the RAO group. On CT examination, cerebral infarctions appeared as LDAs in about 10% of the patients in each group, and the incidence and distribution of LDAs were similar. Of 13 patients with cerebral infarction, only 2 were presumably due to carotid lesions; the others had a variety of causes. The discrepancy between US and CT findings was attributed to the small number of patients with cerebral infarction, since most patients had visual defects as an initial symptom. Our results suggest that extracranial carotid lesions, considered to be a major risk factor for stroke, should be carefully assessed in patients with AF or RAO to prevent further stroke.
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PMID:[Carotid ultrasonographic and brain computerized tomographic findings in patients with vascular ocular syndromes]. 1188 57

The significance of the risk factors and the rapid diagnosis of encephalic vascular disease (EVD) is the reason for this research, where the authors decided to register and analyze the non-medical people knowledge about these risk factors and the symptoms of this group of disease. For this purpose a questionnaire with questions about these facts was applied to 500 voluntaries without pre-selection, 72.6% of them with ages between 16-35 years old, and the answers analyzed by statistical methods. The authors recognized that the risk factors has a good level of knowledge by this population (87.8 % for hypertension, 76.8 % for smoking, 70.8 % for obesity, 68.7 % for sedentary persons, 66.7 % to stress, 66.3 % to alcohol ingest, 60.7 % for fat diet, 59 % to illicit drugs) while the signs and symptoms of EVD has a minor level of knowing and correction: lost sensitivity 70.3 %, headache 64.2 %, twisted mouth 59.5 %, lost or altered speech 57.5 %, dizziness 56 %, syncope 51.7 %, amaurosis 50.3 %, disequilibrium 45 %, deafness 31.2 %, weakness 41.1 %, nervousness 20.7%, chest pain 20.2 %, fatigue 15.3 % and tinnitus 18.9 %. According this data, the authors suggest that the correction or prevention of risk factors as well the precocious medical attention by the recognition of symptoms of EVD must be the object of public health programs.
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PMID:[Lay knowledge about stroke]. 1459 81

Idiopathic intracranial hypertension in children is rare. We analyzed clinical presentation and outcome in eight patients (six girls and two boys) diagnosed with idiopathic intracranial hypertension. The mean age was 11.1 years. The most common clinical features were headache, papilledema and visual disturbance (visual loss and diplopia). Response to treatment was satisfactory in all patients except one who presented almost complete bilateral amaurosis requiring extracranial shunting and who later developed optic atrophy. Outcome is usually is benign, but given the possibility of severe loss of visual function, close ophthalmic follow-up is recommended until complete resolution.
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PMID:[Idiopathic intracranial hypertension: clinical features and outcome]. 1463 26


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