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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In patients who present with TIA, RIND, or CVA, the cranial CT scan can rule out other etiologies for neurologic symptoms. In addition to the clinical presentation, the CT scan allows further stratification of patients being considered for carotid endarterectomy. We propose that patients be classified as TIA (+), TIA (-), RIND (+), or CVA (-). The CT scan has defined a new subgroup of patients, TIA (+) and RIND (+)--the Silent Cerebral Infarction. Patients who are categorized as TIA (+), RIND (+), and CVA (+) (cerebral infarction on CT or by history) are at increased risk for intraoperative ischemia and postoperative neurologic deficit. As such, they should be selectively shunted based on intraoperative EEG monitoring or routinely shunted. There is a strong association between ulcerative plaque at the carotid bifurcation and cerebral infarction on CT. The CT scan is a critical diagnostic procedure in evaluating the patient with an acute neurologic event. Patients with negative CT scans are candidates for early operation. Carotid endarterectomy should generally be delayed for 4 to 6 weeks in patients with positive CT scans.
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PMID:The role of cranial computed tomography in carotid surgery. 395

Sixty-three patients with lacunar-type of acute capsular infarction were treated in our service during the last 2 years. Their lesions were identified by computed tomography (CT) and classified into six types according to their locations: anterior, lateral, posterior, superior, inferior and multiple. The lesions were thought to be in the watershed areas of the regional arterial supplies, and the areas were considered to be prone to ischemia. The clinical course of each type showed characteristic features of ischemic strokes. In the majority of the patients with the lateral type, reversible ischemic neurological deficit (RIND) was seen as the predominant symptom, transient ischemic attack (TIA) was noted in the patients with the superior type, and major completed stroke was observed in those with posterior type.
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PMID:Acute capsular infarction. Location of the lesions and the clinical features. 401 Sep 25

The complications (stroke, myocardial infarction, and death) with 192 endarterectomies performed on 162 patients were evaluated and categorized according to the presenting syndrome: asymptomatic bruit, transient ischemic attack, stroke, stroke in progress, and posterior fossa ischemia. Each group's complication rate was then evaluated over several postoperative periods (0.5 hour to 30 days) and compared with rates in comparable studies. Overall mortality for the entire series was 0.5%. This study points out the need to separate patients having undergone endarterectomy into presenting groups before comparing with other studies having similar postoperative observations.
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PMID:Complications following carotid endarterectomy for all indications: report of 192 operations. 404 22

Sixty-eight patients (7.1% of all cases) underwent bilateral carotid thrombo-endarterectomy, with one peroperative death due to permanent vascular cerebral ischemia. Two patients were re-operated (saphenous vein) for a thrombosis which had given rise to a totally regressive transient ischemia. The usual surgical technique was not modified for bilateral lesions, and the follow-up was similar. The evolutive risk of bilateral lesions was higher than that for isolated lesions as the risk of an accident after unilateral surgery in bilateral cases remained higher. As regards the surgical technique, we did not observe significant differences between the stump pressures according to the side operated. A one-week interval between the two surgical stages seems necessary and sufficient. Operative indications are studied except in cases of bilateral lesions which are asymptomatic or with former TIA, where surgery is considered mandatory.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of bilateral carotid artery lesions. 652 9

The authors discuss the indications for emergency carotid endarterectomy, based on their experience between 1956 and 1975 when 15 patients with completed stroke and internal carotid occlusion (Group I) underwent this operation, and after 1975 when emergency revascularization was performed in 22 patients with unstable neurological deficit (Group II) and 21 patients with TIA's associated with preocclusive internal carotid stenosis (Group III). The good early and late results show that surgery was indicated in these cases. An attempt to identify the patients at high risk of acute ischemia on the basis of clinical or anatomical findings is made to ascertain the physiopathologic patterns of cerebral ischemia.
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PMID:Emergency carotid surgery. 652 8

Repeated CBF-measurements can be performed after inhalation or intravenous injection of 133Xe. After the development of a bicompartmental model by Obrist et al. in 1975 atraumatic CBF-measurements became widely used but there were still some difficulties concerning the sensitivity of different flow-indices towards CBF changes in normals under test conditions or ischemia in stroke patients. Due to the "slippage phenomenon" mostly noncompartmental flow-indices are used for the detection of ischemic brain areas. In this study a scintillation camera, that is usually available in every nuclear medicine department, was used for atraumatic CBF-studies. A collimator consisting of hexagonal lead tubes (septa 0.2 mm thick; FWHM 1.7 cm in 10 cm) was constructed for this purpose. The obtained counting rate varied between 2432 and 9081 cps over the whole hemisphere and 116-1094 cps in regions of approximately 2.5 X 2.5 cm. In 31 patients with CVD CBF was measured with the intracarotid (i.c.) technique and 1 hour later after i.v. 133Xe-injection. Intravenous flow values were comparable to those obtained after i.c. 133Xe injection (fB X MFr = 0.904; p less than 0.001). In 12 of the used 13 regions also significant correlation coefficients were found. In order to estimate the reproducibility of the intravenous injection method CBF-measurements were performed in both hemispheres of 10 patients on two consecutive days. Highly significant correlation coefficients were found for hemispheric blood flow (r = 0.933; p less than 0.001) and temporal, frontotemporal, temporoparietal and praecentral regions, while in the high parietal, frontal and occipital region lower reporducibility was found. Normal CBF-values were obtained from 12 healthy volunteers (MF right hemisphere: 50.7 +/- 4.6 ml/100 g/min; MF left hemisphere: 50.6 +/- 4.6 ml/100 g/min). MF did not show any hyperfrontality, while F1 and the ISI gave highest flow values in frontal regions. The clinical status of 76 patients suffering from cerebral ischemia (68 with flow disturbances in one hemisphere, 8 with vertebrobasilar insufficiency) was estimated by a semiquantitative scorescale at time of admission and after an observation period lasting from 6 to 35 months. In each case CBF was measured twice: once in the subacute stage after onset of symptoms and once after the observation period. The duration of neurologic symptoms (TIA, RIND, CS) was compared to the obtained flow values. A significant relationship was found between the duration of symptoms and impairment of CBF, thus showing the prognostic value of intravenous CBF measurements.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Noninvasive measurement of cerebrovascular circulation with the scintillation camera. A neurologic nuclear medicine study]. 659 71

Repeated cerebral blood flow (CBF) measurements with xenon-133 inhalation and single photon emission tomography were performed in a patient suffering a minor stroke with subsequent orthostatic-provoked transient ischemic attacks (TIA's). Angiography revealed a thread-like internal carotid artery and an occluded external carotid artery on the side of the ischemic neurological symptoms. Computerized tomography and technetium-99m-pertechnetate brain scintigraphy 2 weeks after stroke were both normal. Before reconstructive vascular surgery, resting CBF showed a hypoperfused area corresponding to the clinical symptoms. Diamox (acetazolamide, 1 gm) increased CBF by 24% in the unaffected hemisphere, whereas even a slight decrease in flow ("steal") was seen in the maximally affected region. In contrast, theophylline (220 mg) reduced CBF in the unaffected hemisphere and caused a slight increase in the previously maximally hypoperfused area ("inverse steal"). After surgery, the flow pattern practically normalized and the TIA's disappeared. The CBF measurements before surgery and also after the injection of the vasoactive drugs indicated that focal hemodynamic insufficiency elicited the TIA's, and pointed at a low mean arterial blood pressure of about 35 mm Hg in the affected hemisphere. The perioperative finding of a mean blood pressure in the internal carotid artery of 31 mm Hg on the symptomatic side confirmed that the brain tissue had a severely reduced perfusion pressure. On clamping the artery, a stump pressure of 22 mm Hg and electroencephalogram flattening was noted, so a temporary internal shunt was inserted. The findings demonstrate that preoperative CBF measurements, including studies of the regional vasoreactivity, may identify patients with hemodynamic TIA's. These patients are at particular risk of developing cerebral ischemia during carotid endarterectomy, as any further compromise of the inflow may precipitate frank ischemia.
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PMID:Hemodynamically significant stenosis of the internal carotid artery treated with endarterectomy. Case report. 660 27

Treatment with an anticoagulant (AC) or acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), chosen at random, was given to 241 patients with symptoms of carotid transient attacks of ischemia, some of whom recovered completely within 24 hours (TIA) while the others had slight residual symptoms (TIA-IR). Cerebral infarction was recorded in 4 patients in each of these treatment groups during a mean follow-up period of 20 months. The incidences of TIA and TIA-IR were also similar in the two groups. Severe hemorrhage occurred more often in the AC group, whereas other side reactions, including gastrointestinal disorders, were more common in the ASA group. Recurrent cerebral ischemic events were significantly more common among the patients that had had greater than or equal to 2 TIAs in the 14 days immediately preceding randomization, and in those with a history of CVS symptoms more than 14 days before randomization, or those with a carotid bruits. In the group experiencing greater than or equal to 2 TIAs in the 14 days prior to randomization the incidence of recurrent cerebral ischemic events was the same for the two types of treatment.
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PMID:Treatment after transient ischemic attacks: a comparison between anticoagulant drug and inhibition of platelet aggregation. 665 49

Essential thrombocythemia is a clonal myeloproliferative disorder, characterized predominantly by a markedly elevated platelet count without known cause. We report a case that was recognized during investigation of a transient ischemic attack, and review the neurologic findings in 33 patients with unequivocal essential thrombocythemia under prospective study by the Polycythemia Vera Study Group. Twenty-one patients had neurologic manifestations at some point during their course, including headache (13 patients), paresthesiae (10), posterior cerebral circulatory ischemia (9), anterior cerebral circulatory ischemia (6), visual disturbances (6) and epileptic seizures (2). All patients with neurologic symptoms responded satisfactorily to treatment, although continuous or repeated treatment was often required. Therapeutic recommendations include plateletpheresis for major thrombo-hemorrhagic phenomena, or megakaryocyte suppression with radioactive phosphorus, alkylating agents (such as melphalan), or hydroxyurea; minor symptoms may respond to platelet antiaggregating agents.
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PMID:Neurologic manifestations of essential thrombocythemia. 668 92

In patients with transient ischemic attack (TIA), the risk of stroke increases greatly, especially in the months immediately following the initial attack. Diagnosis of TIA is based primarily on the patient's cerebrovascular history, since results of neurovascular examination are usually normal. TIA is often related to atherosclerotic arterial disease but can have numerous causes. Migraine, focal seizures, and other neurologic conditions can closely mimic TIA. Surgical and medical therapies help minimize the risk of stroke. The choice of therapy depends on the vascular territory of ischemia, the cause of the attack, the patient's medical and neurologic condition, the availability of a skilled surgeon, and other factors.
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PMID:Transient ischemic attacks. Strategies for minimizing stroke risk. 671 81


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