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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Attempt at evaluation of the operative risk depending on seven factors. 1--For benign tumours (Example: meningiomas): 1--greater than 65 years; 2--functional insufficiency, depending on the type of tumour; 3--the volume of the tumour; 4--site of the tumour; 5--foreseeable operative difficulties; 6--the importance of intra-cranial
hypertension
and the level of pre-operative consciousness; 7--life expectancy, quantitative and qualitative. II--Extrapolation of the previous equation to malignant tumours, chronic sub-dural hematoma, intra-
cerebral hematoma
and surgery of pain.
...
PMID:[Age and other factors in the prognosis and operative indications for brain surgery]. 2 39
Coronary thrombolysis with streptokinase or tissue plasminogen activator is useful for the treatment of acute myocardial infarction in selected patients. This treatment is associated with local hemorrhagic complications and age-related cerebral hemorrhage. Coronary thrombolysis is contraindicated in patients with transient cerebral ischemia and stroke, arterial
hypertension
, cerebral trauma, cerebral aneurysms, and arteriovenous malformations, because of the risk of cerebral hemorrhage. We report the occurrence of a cerebral hemorrhage related to cerebral amyloid angiopathy in a patient who underwent thrombolysis and treatment with heparin for acute myocardial infarction. Despite normal coagulation parameters, the
cerebral hematoma
enlarged over 36 hours, as documented by sequential computed tomographic scans, to produce significant mass effect, which prompted surgical evacuation. Histological examination of the resected specimen demonstrated the strong affinity for Congo red and yellow-green birefringence that are characteristic of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Hemostasis was difficult to achieve, as the divided or disrupted amyloid-laden cortical vessels failed to vasoconstrict, their contractile elements replaced by amyloid beta protein. The patient died of recurrent myocardial ischemia 3 days postoperatively. The incidence of cerebral amyloid angiopathy increases with advancing age. It must be considered as a potential source of cerebral hemorrhage in elderly patients undergoing thrombolysis for cardiac ischemia. Such an occurrence presents a difficult challenge because cardiac function is compromised, the coagulation profile may be altered, the
cerebral hematoma
is life threatening, and intracranial hemostasis is difficult to achieve.
...
PMID:Cerebral hemorrhage from amyloid angiopathy and coronary thrombolysis. 140 40
In cerebral amyloid angiopathy, the contractile elements of the leptomeningeal and cortical arteries are replaced by noncontractile amyloid beta protein. The incidence of amyloid angiopathy increases with advancing age. It is associated with Alzheimer's disease and spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage. The latter can have the characteristic acute computed tomographic appearance of a hematoma at the cortex-white matter junction with extension of blood into the subarachnoid, subdural, and intraventricular spaces. Multiple hemorrhages are frequent. Additional bleeding can occur after evacuation of the hematoma, and postoperative hemorrhage can occur after cortical biopsy. To elucidate the role of surgery in this condition, we have reviewed 20 consecutive operated cases of cerebral amyloid angiopathy. A first group of 8 patients with senila dementia underwent cortical biopsy without resultant hemorrhage. A second group of 6 patients in good clinical condition had delayed evacuation of a spontaneous
cerebral hematoma
from cerebral amyloid angiopathy because of the radiological misdiagnosis of a hemorrhage within a tumor. One patient died of a pulmonary embolism, and another had subsequent multiple hemorrhages that were ultimately fatal. A third group of 6 patients in poor neurological condition had the acute evacuation of a spontaneous
cerebral hematoma
to relieve intracranial
hypertension
. All died or were severely disabled. One had repeated hemorrhages which added a progressively more severe organic dementia onto an initial hemiplegia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Surgical considerations in cerebral amyloid angiopathy. 196 1
In a case-control study of 73 cases of
cerebral hematoma
diagnosed by CT scan, significant risk factors were history of
hypertension
, chronic alcoholism, evidence of hepatic disease, EKG abnormalities and high hematocrit values. Initial blood pressure was significantly higher in cases, but blood pressure on the third day after admission was not different from controls.
Hypertension
and alcoholism did not show a clear correlation, but data from other studies explain the role of alcoholism in vascular disease through a relation with
high blood pressure
. Risk factors were similar in lobar and basal ganglia hematomas.
...
PMID:Risk factors for spontaneous cerebral hematomas. Case-control study. 381 Jul 10
This retrospective study from two hospitals is about a hundred patients who have been operated upon a spontaneous
cerebral hematoma
. By a spontaneous
cerebral hematoma
we mean a hematoma without a proven tumor, without aneurysm, without arteriovenous malformation, without preceding trauma, without aortical phlebitis and without pathology of the vessel-wall. In this study patients with coagulopathy, arterial
hypertension
and artherosclerosis are included. In order to comply with these conditions an angiography will have to take place pre-operatively as well as postoperatively. Moreover histological examination of the wall of the hematoma will have to be done. The etiology of the spontaneous
cerebral hematoma
is not clear in most cases. The indication to operate, the way of operating and the moment in which the operation takes place, vary strongly in medical literature. We operate when there is an aggravation of the clinical picture, persisting severe headache and neurological paresis which does not improve. As a rule we abide for one week before operating, if the clinical picture allows this. After the operation unconscious patients may recover and a hemiparesis may improve. The best way of diagnosing a
cerebral hematoma
is computerised tomography.
...
PMID:[The spontaneous cerebral hematoma (author's transl)]. 744 12
Hemorrhagic infarction and
cerebral hematoma
are feared events that may follow cerebral ischemia. Newly developed thrombolytic agents may be effective stroke therapy, but may also promote hemorrhagic complications after ischemic stroke. It is therefore critically important to understand the true incidence of hemorrhagic transformation after ischemic stroke, and to identify if possible the mechanisms underlying the phenomenon. In recent years, studies using serial computed tomography to identify hemorrhage have shown that transformation occurs in 15 to 43% of patients presenting with ischemia. Experimental and clinical evidence support the notion that hemorrhage results from augmented collateral circulation into the ischemic zone, perhaps in concert with
hypertension
. Recanalization and distal migration of the thrombus are not factors that are associated with transformation. Pharmacologic recanalization using thrombolytic drugs are not likely to be associated with hemorrhage if reperfusion is accomplished very soon after the onset of neurologic symptoms.
...
PMID:Hemorrhagic transformation after cerebral ischemia: mechanisms and incidence. 845 59
We encountered a case of acute cerebral hemorrhage secondary to capillary telangiectasia in a 10-year-old female. She was diagnosed as having Rendu-Osler-Weber disease (ROW). In this case, the
cerebral hematoma
did not result in neurologic damage and the final outcome was excellent. ROW is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by the presence of vascular malformations of varying types in several tissues, including the brain, nasal mucosa, lungs, gastrointestinal tract, and liver. Neurological complications occur in 8 to 12 percent of patients with ROW. The pons is the most common site of capillary telangiectasia, but most of the malformations caused are clinically silent. Massive
cerebral hematoma
due to capillary telangiectasia is rare.
Cerebral hematoma
due to
hypertension
in a child is less than that found in an adult. So in a child it is important to investigate the origin of
cerebral hematoma
.
...
PMID:[Rendu-Osler-Weber disease with cerebral hemorrhage due to a capillary telangiectasia: a case report]. 1036 62
Cerebral venous thrombosis is a rare disorder with highly variable and nonspecific clinical presentations. For these reasons, specific treatment should be given only when the diagnosis has been firmly established. Etiologic diagnosis should begin in the emergency department to identify underlying conditions that require specific treatment. The mainstay of treatment is anticoagulation with heparin, even in the case of cerebral hemorrhage, followed as soon as possible by oral anticoagulant administration. The optimal duration of oral anticoagulation has not been established. By analogy with systemic venous thrombosis, it should be prolonged 3 to 6 months. When a high risk of recurrence is present, treatment should be continued until the risk disappears. In contrast to arterial stroke, complete recovery of prolonged or severe neurologic deficit is possible, justifying initiation of anticoagulation even when the clinical situation seems desperate. For the same reason, aggressive treatment of intracranial
hypertension
and seizures or status epilepticus is warranted. Screening for extraneurologic venous thrombosis should be done by means of clinical examination and, if necessary, specific imaging procedures. Local thrombolysis is not yet of proven efficacy and safety. It can be used in patients with clinical worsening related to documented extension of the venous thrombosis despite anticoagulation and in the absence of
cerebral hematoma
. Surgical treatment is limited to external ventricular drainage and suboccipital craniotomy in the very rare cases of cerebellar vein thrombosis with edematous cerebellar infarct.
...
PMID:Cerebral Venous Thrombosis. 1109 59