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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (
hypertension
)
170,190
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To evaluate and review the clinical spectrum of anterior cerebral artery (ACA) territory infarction, we studied 48 consecutive patients who admitted to our stroke unit over a 6-year period. We performed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) in all patients, and diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (
DWI
) in 21. In our stroke registry, patients with ACA infarction represented 1.3% of 3705 patients with ischemic stroke. The main risk factors of ACA infarcts was
hypertension
in 58% of patients, diabetes mellitus in 29%, hypercholesterolemia in 25%, cigarette smoking in 19%, atrial fibrillation in 19%, and myocardial infarct in 6%. Presumed causes of ACA infarct were large-artery disease and cardioembolism in 13 patients each, small-artery disease (SAD) in the territory of Heubner's artery in two and atherosclerosis of large-arteries (<50% stenosis) in 16. On clinico-radiologic analysis there were three main clinical patterns depending on lesion side; left-side infarction (30 patients) consisting of mutism, transcortical motor aphasia, and hemiparesis with lower limb predominance; right side infarction (16 patients) accompanied by acute confusional state, motor hemineglect and hemiparesis; bilateral infarction (two patients) presented with akinetic mutism, severe sphincter dysfunction, and dependent functional outcome. Our findings suggest that clinical and etiologic spectrum of ACA infarction may present similar features as that of middle cerebral artery infarction, but frontal dysfunctions and callosal syndromes can help to make a clinical differential diagnosis. Moreover, at the early phase of stroke,
DWI
is useful imaging method to locate and delineate the boundary of lesion in the territory of ACA.
...
PMID:Spectrum of anterior cerebral artery territory infarction: clinical and MRI findings. 1245 77
Acute stroke presents an emergency that requires immediate referral to a specialized hospital, preferably with a stroke unit. Disability and mortality are reduced by 30% in patients treated in stroke units compared to those treated on regular wards, even if a specialized team is present on the ward. Systolic blood pressure may remain high at 200-220 mmHg in the acute phase and should not be lowered too quickly. Further guidelines for basic care include: optimal O2 delivery, blood sugar levels below 100-150 mg%, and lowering body temperature below 37.5 degrees C using physical means or drugs. Increased intracranial pressure should be treated by raising the upper body of the patient, administration of glycerol, mannitol, and/or sorbitol, artificial respiration, and special monitoring of Tris buffer. Decompressive craniectomy may be considered in cases of "malignant" media stroke and expansive cerebellar infarction. Fibrinolysis is the most effective stroke treatment and is twice as effective in the treatment of stroke than myocardial infarction. Fibrinolysis may be initiated within 3 h of a stroke in the anterior circulation. If a penumbra is detectable by "PWI-
DWI
mismatch MRI," specialized hospitals may perform fibrinolysis up to 6 h after symptom onset. In cases of stroke in the basilar artery, fibrinolysis may be performed even later after symptom onset. Intra-arterial fibrinolysis is performed in these cases using rt-PA or urokinase. Follow-up treatment of stroke patients should not only address post-stroke depression and neuropsychological deficits, but also include patient education about risk factors such as
high blood pressure
, diabetes mellitus, and cardiac arrhythmias.
...
PMID:[Basics of acute stroke treatment]. 1586 21
A 67-year woman with
hypertension
rapidly noted weakness of the right upper and lower extremities with posterior cervical pain. At admission to our hospital, she showed right hemiparesis without facial palsy, and bilateral pathological reflex. Chest X-ray demonstrated enlargement of the mediastinal shadow. We suspected that she developed aortic arch dissection extending into the vertebral arteries and subsequent medial medullary infarction. However, enhanced thoracic CT, brain MRI-
DWI
and MRA examinations were negative. Her symptoms rapidly recovered three hours after the onset. A cervical MRI study revealed cervical epidural hematoma locating between the C3 and C6, which suppressed right side of the spinal cord. In conclusion, cervical epidural hematoma as well as medial medullary infarction complicated by the vertebral arterial dissection should be urgently explored when a patient had a sudden onset of cervical pain and hemiparesis without facial palsy.
...
PMID:[A case of acute cervical epidural hematoma mimicking medial medullary infarction complicated by arterial dissection]. 1624 97
The case of a 63-year-old female patient affected by arterial
hypertension
under home therapy, with disordered consciousness and confusion, is discussed. At the emergency department of another hospital she underwent cranial CT which showed mild swelling of right cerebral hemisphere. Based on the clinical suspicion of herpes simplex encephalitis compatible with a first MRI examination of the brain, the patient was admitted to the department of infectious disease of the polyclinic to confirm the diagnosis and plan the therapeutic approach. MRI was repeated and completed with EPI-
DWI
sequences and PRESS spectroscopy. It did not rule out categorically the infectious/inflammatory pattern but, based on a careful evaluation of the anatomic distribution of acute lesions, the most likely diagnostic hypothesis was the presence of multiple watershed cerebral infarcts on the right side.
...
PMID:Multiple watershed cerebral infarcts. 1651 65
Stroke in spontaneously-hypertensive, stroke-prone (SHRSP) rats is of particular interest because the pathogenesis is believed to be similar to that in the clinical setting. In this study, we employed multi-modal MRI-ASL,
DWI
, T(2), GRE, T(1) (pre/post contrast)-to investigate the natural history of spontaneous cerebral infarction and the specific role of cerebral perfusion in disease development. Twelve female SHRSP rats (age: approximately 1 year) were imaged within 1 to 3 days of symptom onset. The distribution of ischemic lesions was the following: 28.1% visual, 21.9% striatal, 18.8% motorsensory, 12.5% thalamic, 12.5% auditory, 3.1% frontal/prelimbic, and 3.1% multiple areas. Ischemic lesions had significantly reduced blood flow in comparison with healthy tissue. Ischemic lesions were characterized by hyperplastic, thrombosed, and compressed vessels. These findings suggest that ischemic lesion development is related to
hypertension
-induced vascular remodeling and persistent hypoperfusion. This model should be useful for studying the relationship between chronic
hypertension
and subsequent stroke, both in terms of primary and secondary prevention.
...
PMID:Hypertension-induced vascular remodeling contributes to reduced cerebral perfusion and the development of spontaneous stroke in aged SHRSP rats. 1995 1
We report a case of branch atheromatous disease (BAD) presenting capsular warning syndrome, who subsequently showed a complete recovery by the combination therapy as described below. A 54-year-old man with untreated
hypertension
was admitted to our hospital because of dysarthria and right hemiplegia. The NIHSS on admission was 12 points, but his symptoms soon completely disappeared during examination. After admission administration of aspirin, heparin, atorvastatin and t-PA were started, but stereotyped episodes of dysarthria and the right hemiplegia occurred repeatedly. We added plasma expander, and he thereafter revealed no further ischemic episodes at 22 hours from admission. Over all, he had 15 times of transient ischemic attack with no lasting deficit. The
DWI
scan obtained 5 hours after the onset demonstrated a high-intensity region in the left putamen to corona radiata. MRA showed no significant abnormalities. He had been diagnosed as having branch atheromatous disease with capsular warning syndrome. The present case suggests that combination therapy including t-PA and plasma expander may be effective to BAD presenting capsular warning syndrome.
...
PMID:[Case of branch atheromatous disease presenting capsular warning syndrome]. 2053 81
We present a patient with an acute cervical spinal cord infarction resulting from the use of sildenafil (Viagra) in combination with his
hypertension
medication. Symptoms were acute and rapidly progressive, and MR imaging with
DWI
was crucial in confirming the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Sildenafil-induced cervical spinal cord infarction. 2190 16
To investigate the correlation between the SWI findings and prognosis of the cerebrovascular disorders. From July 2008 to July 2010, 299 ischemic stroke patients were found in our hospital. The gender ratio is as male and female being 157 to 142. The mean age of all patients is 65.4, mean female age is 69.1, and mean male age is 62.6. There were 86 patients who had satisfactory pre-and post-treatment of CT, MRI with SWI. 23 of these 86 patients had catheter cerebral angiography. 50 of these 86 patients had MR angiogram or CT angiogram. 13 of these 86 patients did not have angiogram. We have also collected 7 severe cardiac arrested and cessation of cerebral circulation and 2 patients with chronic venous
hypertension
. Among the 86 patients, 23 patients who had negative with deoxygenated vessel on SWI were with small infarction on
DWI
. Thirty-one patients had negative on initial CT head scan. CT finding did not accord with presence of hypointense vessel on SWI. Sixty-three patients had varied degree of abnormal hypointense vessels on SWI as deoxygenated vessels. The initial small foci on
DWI
may result with a larger infarction if there were with prominent hypointense vessels.
...
PMID:Susceptibility weighted imaging and cerebrovascular disorders. 2405 79
The risk of recurrent ischemic stroke after a transient ischemic attack (TIA) has been reported to be 5-10%, and is elevated especially within the first days after the index event. Since TIA primarily has a good outcome without persisting new deficits, interest has been growing to predict stroke recurrence after TIA. This has led to the development of scores, initially for long-term prognosis such as the Stroke Prognosis Instrument (SPI) or the Hankey score, which both have shown a good predictive value at 1 or 2 years after TIA. Risk factors such as age,
hypertension
or cardiovascular disease were integrated in these systems. Since the early risk prediction for stroke in patients presenting within 24 h after onset of symptoms became clinically more and more relevant in emergency stroke units, the ABCD score (for the predictive factors Age, Blood pressure, Clinical symptoms, Duration of symptoms) was developed. Validation was promising, and hence further scores were developed, which entailed a large number of studies trying to validate these systems or to improve them (e.g. ABCD(2), ABCD(2)I, ABCD(3), ABCD(3)I, CIP model, ASPIRE approach, ABCDE+ etc.). The main approaches were to include imaging results (such as
DWI
positivity) or etiologic considerations (e.g. carotid stenosis or atrial fibrillation). However, these new scores necessitate an extensive diagnostic workup, and therefore can only be used in large stroke centers. Currently, for acute TIA management, the use of ABCD(2) is recommended in several guidelines.
...
PMID:Risk scores for transient ischemic attack. 2415 56
The clinical manifestation of acute corpus callosum (CC) infarction is lack of specificity and complex, so it is easily missed diagnosis and misdiagnosis in the early stage. The present study aims to describe the clinical features of the acute CC infarction. In this study, 25 patients with corpus callosum infarction confirmed by the brain MRI/
DWI
and the risk factors were summarized. Patients were classified into genu infarction (3 cases), body infarction (4 cases), body and genu infarction (4 cases), body and splenium infarction (1 case), splenium infarction (13 cases) according to lesion location. Clinical manifestation and prognosis were analyzed among groups. The results indicated that CC infarction in patients with high-risk group accounted for 72%, moderate-risk group accounted for 20%, low-risk group (8%). The main risk factors are carotid intimal thickening or plaque formation,
hypertension
, hyperlipidemia, cerebral artery stenosis, and so on. The CC infarction often merged with other parts infarction, and splenium infarction had the highest incidence, the clinical symptoms in the body infarction which can appear typical signs and symptoms, but in other parts infarction which always merged many nerve defect symptoms. The body infarction prognosis is poor; the rest parts of infarction are more favorable prognosis. In conclusion, CC infarction has the highest incidence in the stroke of high-risk group; neck color Doppler and TCD examination can be found as early as possible to explore the pathogenic factors. Prognosis is usually much better by treatment according to the location and risk factors.
...
PMID:Clinical features of acute corpus callosum infarction patients. 2519 90
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