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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
I studied 9 patients with migraine and posterior circulation
ischemia
. Inclusion criteria were (1) brainstem or cerebellar infarcts or transient ischemic attacks, (2) satisfactory vertebrobasilar angiograms, and (3) migraine. Excluded were patients with only occipital lobe
ischemia
, known arteriosclerosis, or other nonmigrainous vascular disease. Two women and 7 men, ages 6 to 58 years (mean, 34.7), had transient attacks only (2), single strokes (4), single stroke followed by attacks (1), or multiple strokes (2). Five had antecedent classic, 2
common migraine
, and classic migraine began only after the initial ischemic event in the other two. The 7 stroke patients all had CT- or MRI-documented brainstem (4) or cerebellar (6) infarcts. Angiography was normal (3) or demonstrated basilar artery (BA) narrowing (2) or occlusion (4), or branch occlusion (1). In 3 patients the initially occluded BA later reopened. At follow-up (average 4.3 years, range 1 to 9 years), 5 were normal and 4 had important clinical deficits. I conclude that (1) "basilar migraine" is not always benign; it affects both sexes and a wide age range; (2) the pattern of headaches, attacks, and strokes varies; (3) migraine may appear only after
ischemia
; (4) some patients have BA occlusion or diffuse narrowing; and (5) BA occlusion can be temporary.
...
PMID:Migraine and vertebrobasilar ischemia. 192 34
The CBF studies performed so far during attacks of migraine, may be interpreted as favouring "the vascular theory." This applies to migraine with aura as well as to migraine without aura.
Migraine without aura
may be due to mild focal CBF reduction--too mild to be detected by the available CBF techniques (i.e. 20% or less) and too mild to produce
ischemia
and aura phenomena. Migraine with aura may be due to focal CBF reduction severe enough to produce
ischemia
(i.e. 50% or more) and therefore also aura phenomena. The phenomenon termed "spreading oligemia" typically seen in CBF studies during migraine with aura, may be an artifact reflecting a gradual decrease of CBF in an area of constant size. The typical "march" of the aura symptoms may reflect differences in the ischemic threshold of various neurones leading to dysfunction of more and more neurones as the blood flow gradually decreases. It is concluded that migraine with and without aura may be due to the same disease process--the only difference being the intensity of vasospasm and CBF reduction.
...
PMID:Migraine with and without aura: the same disease due to cerebral vasospasm of different intensity. A hypothesis based on CBF studies during migraine. 209 26
Transient global amnesia (TGA) is an unusual form of the amnestic syndrome, clinically characterized by profound disturbance of short-term memory with preservation of immediate recall and long-term memory. Spontaneous recovery is the rule and is usually complete within several hours. The etiology of TGA is not clear. It is considered to be caused by transient
ischemia
confined to the medial temporal lobe, an area supplied by branches of the vertebrobasilar system. Basilar artery migraine is a well-known syndrome, first described by Bickerstaff. Besides pulsating headache, the dominant symptoms are vertigo, ataxic gait, tinnitus, dysarthria, paraeshesia in the hands, homonymous hemianopsia and sometimes drop-attacks. These symptoms are associated with vertebrobasilar system dysfunction. In this paper, three migraine patients, suffering from one episode of TGA, were reported. All patients were women. Case 1 was a 48-year-old woman with a history of
common migraine
. Case 2 was a 48-year-old woman with a history of classic migraine. Case 3 was a 59-year-old woman with a
common migraine
. Family history of migraine exists in case 1 and case 3. Their migrainous attacks began in their twenties and thirties. They suddenly suffered migraine with the symptoms of vertebrobasilar dysfunction. These symptoms are ataxic gait (Case 1, 2, 3), dysarthria (Case 1, 2), vertigo (Case 1, 3) and homonymous hemianopsia (Case 1, 3). Simultaneously three patients had TGA. Duration of retrograde amnesia were about twenty-four hours (Case 1), about thirty minutes (Case 2) and about three hours (Case 3).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Basilar artery migraine associated with transient global amnesia]. 262 11
Clinical and radiologic findings in 13 patients (11 women, 2 men) with extracranial vertebral artery dissection are reported. Dissection was spontaneous in 8 patients, occurred after neck manipulation in 2 and after a potential minor injury to the neck in 3. Six had a history of
common migraine
, 4 were using oral contraceptives at the time of dissection, and 3 had fibromuscular dysplasia. Dissection was bilateral in 8 patients and associated with carotid dissection in 3. It usually presented with neck or occipital pain preceding basilar ischemic symptoms by a few minutes to 1 month. In 3 patients, transient ischemic attacks were the only manifestation of basilar
ischemia
, and in 1 patient there was no symptom of basilar
ischemia
despite bilateral vertebral dissection. In 19 of the 21 dissected vertebral arteries, the angiographic appearance was that of an irregular stenosis, which was associated in 6 arteries with pseudoaneurysmal formation. In 2 patients, 1 vertebral artery was occluded but the contralateral artery showed the typical irregular stenosis. The dissection involved only the third segment in 33%, only the second segment in 24%, and 2 or more segments in 38%. Eleven patients were treated with anticoagulants and 2 with aspirin; 11 recovered without sequelae and 2 had residual deficit. No recurrence was observed (mean follow-up 34 months). At control angiography (n = 12) or ultrasonic study (n = 1), 63% of dissected vertebral arteries had returned to normal, 26% showed marked improvement, and 11% were occluded. Our patient characteristics are compared with those of previously published cases. The validity of the distinction between spontaneous dissection and dissection associated with minor trauma is discussed.
...
PMID:Extracranial vertebral artery dissections: a review of 13 cases. 331 2
Sixteen cases of vascular headache of the migraine type are referred in whom marked neurological manifestations occurred in a unilateral distribution as part of a migraine attack ("complicated migraine"). The neurologic disorders observed, in order of frequency, include 10 cases of motor hemiparesis, 3 cases of unilateral cerebellar syndrome, 1 case of sensory-motor hemiparesis and 1 case showing signs of the involvement of the motor nuclei of the bulb. The recovery of the motor, sensory, cerebellar and brainstem defects was very slow (average duration: 44.25 days; mode: 14 days) in twelve cases. Two patients showed residual neurological signs respectively after 1 and 7 years from the migraine attack. The patients histories indicate classic or
common migraine
with a relatively high frequency (80% of the patients experienced one or more crises per month). The most of cases (75%) were female patients. The patients, at time of the attack of complicated migraine, had a mean age years of 32. In ten cases first-grade relatives suffered from classic or
common migraine
; in no case was there any report of associated or complicated migraine among the relatives. In 4 of the 16 cases the CT scan showed an area of hypodensity consistent to the region of the brain expected to be suffering in view of the clinical type of neurological defect. The Authors take into consideration the controversial relation between complicated migraine with slow or incomplete resolution of neurologic signs and focal brain
ischemia
due to atherothrombotic infarct, pointing out that the present state of knowledge prevents the reaching of final conclusions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Migraine crisis and neurological focal signs of slow or absent resolution (complicated migraine)]. 333 Jun 26
Sudden, transient loss of vision in one eye (amaurosis fugax) is associated frequently with atherosclerosis of the internal carotid artery in adults and may herald a stroke. Thus, cerebral angiography is often performed. Amaurosis fugax in children is uncommon and an underlying cause is rarely demonstrated. Recurrent episodes of amaurosis fugax occurred in five adolescents. A characteristic evolution and pattern of visual loss, consistent with choroidal
ischemia
as the underlying mechanism, was described by four of them. Although none of the episodes were accompanied by headache, four patients had a history of
common migraine
at other times or a family history of migraine. These episodes of visual loss may represent a migraine variant, and cerebral angiography is not indicated in adolescents with such a history.
...
PMID:Amaurosis fugax in teenagers. A migraine variant. 334 21
The effect of 30 min voluntary toothclenching was studied in 48 patients with
common migraine
, randomized in two groups. Group 1 performed low-level tension at 5% and group 2, high-level tension at 30% of the individual maximum, as judged by surface EMG from the temporal muscle. Pericranial muscle tenderness was evaluated by manual palpation and a four-point verbal scale. Headache, nausea, and soreness of the chewing muscles were scored on visual analogue scales. Although surface EMG, soreness, blood pressure, heart rate and difficulty in completing the toothclenching session all showed that group 2 patients were subjected to significantly higher levels of muscle tension than group 1 patients, headache developed equally often in both groups (63%). Headache was even more pronounced in group 1 (n.s.). Five patients in group 1 and none in group 2 developed an attack of migraine during the following 24 h. Pericranial muscle tenderness was unaffected by the experimental procedure. There was no significant correlation between headache intensity and pericranial muscle tenderness. Muscle
ischemia
, muscle "fatigue", and strain on muscle insertions are thus unlikely to cause attacks of
common migraine
.
...
PMID:Experimental toothclenching in common migraine. 408 79
Temporal muscle blood flow (TMBF) was measured by the local 133-Xenon washout technique in 61 patients suffering from
common migraine
. Nineteen were re-examined in the course of spontaneous attacks. Muscle tension was quantified by surface EMG. During the attacks, median TMBF increased insignificantly, 33% on the ipsilateral and 24% on the contralateral side. During 15 unilateral attacks, the ipsilateral-contralateral ratio of TMBF was 1.02. Isometric and dynamic work tests showed intact metabolic regulation of TMBF. These results speak against a general vasomotor disturbance of the extracranial tissues during attacks of
common migraine
. There was also no indication that
ischemia
of the temporal muscle might explain the pain.
...
PMID:Temporal muscle blood flow in common migraine. 409 99
Vestibular symptoms frequently occur in patients with migraine headache. The
common migraine
is defined in neurology as a unilateral, pulsating headache, which may be associated with nausea and vomiting, and lasts one or several days. In the classic form patients have visual prodromal symptoms. Focal neurological signs in the migraine complique include, for example, oculomotor palsy and vestibular abnormalities. This so-called vestibular migraine is different from basilar migraine, which involves the irritation of the cervical sympathetic system, and can cause symptoms that resemble transient brainstem
ischemia
. In order to evaluate vestibular dysfunction electronystagmography (ENG) was used. Patients frequently had abnormal caloric test responses, especially with a directional preponderance, and most had a spontaneous nystagmus. In the migraine attack the patients are presumed to have hypersensitivity of the labyrinth with nausea and vomiting, while in the headache-free period the ENG was almost normal. At present, we have had a high success rate in treating patients with pyracetam. Diazepam was used to treat basilar migraine and flunarizine to prevent vestibular migraine.
...
PMID:Vestibular disorders in patients with migraine. 906 28