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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (
ischemia
)
91,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
In 1980, 120 cases with late-life migrainous accompaniments resembling transient ischemic attacks were presented. In the present paper, 85 further cases examined in the past five years are analyzed. The findings support the concept advanced previously. In general, the cases are divided into the same categories: visual--21 cases, visual and paresthesias--6, visual and speech disturbance--2, visual, paresthesias and speech disturbance--3, visual, paresthesias, speech disturbance, and weakness--20, visual and brainstem symptoms--3, and cases without visual symptoms--32. The ages ranged from 40 to 73 years.
Headache
occurred in association with the episodes in only 40% of cases. There was a history of recurrent
headache
in 65%. The condition can justifiably be regarded as benign. Migrainous accompaniments account for some of the cases of transient
ischemia
with normal angiograms. Knowledge of the condition helps in the planning of rational management.
...
PMID:Late-life migraine accompaniments--further experience. 353 32
We report a case of FIRDA associated with a pial-dural arteriovenous malformation (AVM). The patient presented with
headaches
, papilledema and partial oculomotor nerve palsy. CT scan had failed to discover the AVM. After partial embolization of the AVM, the patient's symptoms and signs resolved, and the FIRDA disappeared. FIRDA has been thought to be caused by frontal lobe
ischemia
or periventricular edema. It has not been reported in benign intracranial hypertension (BIH). We postulate that the FIRDA in this case was due to the circulatory "steal" effect of the AVM, and not to the intracranial hypertension. Five percent of patients with dural AVM's present with a picture consistent with BIH. We recommend a diligent search for additional pathology if FIRDA is seen in association with presumed BIH.
...
PMID:Frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity (FIRDA) in pial-dural arteriovenous malformation. 366 10
A retrospective study was conducted on a young adults population affected by permanent symptoms of cerebral focal
ischemia
. Within 6 years, 24 patients between the ages of twenty and fifty were admitted to the Neurological and Medical department of our Hospital because of cerebral ischemic stroke. In 7 (29.2%) there was a previous history of common or classic migraine. No patients suffered
headache
at the time of neurologic deficit onset. In the other 17 patients in the study, 6 (25%) had valvular heart disease, 2 (8.3%) had signs suggestive of vasculitis, 2 (8.3%) had a story of head and neck injury, and in the remaining 7 (29.2%) patients no discernible etiology was demonstrated. Our data confirm the hypothesis that migraine may be considered an etiologic factor for persistent cerebral ischemia in young adults.
...
PMID:[Hemicrania and cerebral ischemia in young adults]. 377 93
Neurologic accidents are today the first cause of mortality following bacterial endocarditis through
ischemia
or mycotic aneurysm rupture. Authors propose a protocol management by complete cerebral angiography and CT scan as soon as the least neurologic sign appears. A
headache
is the most frequent of these signs. 35 patients were explored during 3 years and 10 treated surgically. These authors conclude that: mycotic aneurysm must be detected aneurysm with subarachnoid haemorrhage must be operated on as soon as possible. With unruptured aneurysm, surgical decision is more difficult: sequential angiography after excision of the most dangerous aneurysm, demonstrates that an aneurysm can appear, enlarge, diminish or spontaneously resolve. Carrying on with this protocol should allow an answer to this question.
...
PMID:[Should the aneurysms of Osler's disease be investigated and operated on prior to hemorrhage?]. 380 68
Despite its efficacy in preventing rebleeding, the anticipated strong trend in favor of early intracranial surgery has not been achieved. Early intracranial operation remains a useful choice in the management of recent SAH in good-risk patients, but patients must be carefully selected on an individual basis. Many patients will undoubtedly benefit from early surgery but it is not a panacea. Further investigation of surgical treatment in combination with improved preoperative and postoperative medical therapy will be required to ameliorate the outcome of SAH. In particular, the prevention and treatment of cerebral infarction deserves attention. The results of the antifibrinolytic and timing of intracranial surgery studies point to the need for an effective prevention treatment regimen for vasospasm. Further studies about the efficacy of calcium channel blocking drugs in prevention of
ischemia
after SAH are needed among patients given antifibrinolytic drugs or having early operation. All the advances in treatment are predicated on prompt diagnosis of SAH in good-condition patients. The medical community needs to maintain a high degree of vigilance for the diagnosis of SAH in all patients complaining of a new, unusual or severe
headache
. Early referral to properly equipped and staffed medical facilities remains a keystone to effective treatment of SAH.
...
PMID:Early management of the patient with recent aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. 381 Jul 3
Cardiac and noncardiac side effects were studied in 293 consecutive patients referred for nonexercise stress thallium imaging with intravenous dipyridamole. Six minutes after the initiation of infusion, there was a mean 9-beat/min increase in heart rate and a mean 12-mm Hg decrease in systolic blood pressure. The largest increase in heart rate exceeded 20 beats/min in only 13% of patients and the largest decrease in systolic blood pressure exceeded 20 mm Hg in 31%. Noncardiac side effects were
headache
(11%), lightheadedness or dizziness (5%) and nausea (4%). Only 9 patients required intravenous aminophylline for relief of noncardiac side effects: severe
headache
in 7 and nausea in 2. Cardiac side effects included chest pain in 76 patients (26%), of whom 70% were given aminophylline for relief of symptoms. Sixty patients (20%) had ischemic ST-segment depression and 56 (19%) had arrhythmias (ventricular in 50 and atrial in 6). There were no deaths, myocardial infarctions or sustained arrhythmias due to dipyridamole administration. Among 62 patients also undergoing cardiac catheterization, side effects except for arrhythmias were unrelated to the number of vessels with coronary artery disease. Intravenous dipyridamole is safe for nonexercise stress testing and has few serious side effects. However, the possibility of
ischemia
requires careful selection of patients and monitoring of vital signs and the electrocardiogram during the test.
...
PMID:Safety of intravenous dipyridamole for stress testing with thallium imaging. 381 27
The administration of digitalis glycosides causes a variety of extracardiac effects. In both normal human subjects and in other species, digitalis increases smooth muscle tone of resistance and capacitance vessels. The vasoconstriction is mediated, in part, by a direct action of these glycosides on smooth muscle and, in part, by an increase in alpha-adrenergic tone. Constriction of coronary and splanchnic vessels may lead to myocardial or mesenteric
ischemia
. In contrast to normal subjects, patients with congestive heart failure demonstrate arteriolar and venodilation in response to these glycosides, possibly because the myocardial effect, to increase cardiac output and peripheral blood flow, overcomes the vasoconstrictor properties of these drugs. Other important actions of digitalis glycosides occur in the central and peripheral nervous systems. Their effects on the area postrema of the medulla oblongata are largely responsible for the alpha-adrenergic-mediated peripheral vasoconstriction, as well as the nausea and vomiting that frequently accompany digitalis intoxication. Actions of glycosides on the cerebral cortex are responsible for the wide range of neurotoxic effects that range from visual disturbances and
headaches
to seizures and coma. Finally, peripheral neurologic effects of digitalis glycosides on baroreceptor and cardiac afferent fibers may: improve the depressed function of these receptors in the situation of heart failure, and reflexly lower peripheral vascular resistance, thereby partially preventing the vascular constrictor action of these glycosides.
...
PMID:Extracardiac and coronary vascular effects of digitalis. 388 56
The presence of intracranial aneurysm in association with arteriovenous malformation has been well documented. Aneurysms have been described in typical proximal sites along the feeding system to the arteriovenous malformation, in abnormal distal locations along feeding vessels, and in sites remote and apparently hemodynamically unrelated to the arteriovenous malformation. Little attention has been focused on the most appropriate medical and surgical care of patients harboring these lesions. Since 1977, 22 patients with this combination of lesions have been evaluated at our institution. Nine patients (41%) presented after intracranial hemorrhage. The remaining 13 patients were investigated because of seizures in 5 patients (23%),
headaches
in 4 patients (18%), and progressive
ischemia
in 4 patients (18%). Among the patients suffering intracranial hemorrhage, 78% had bled from an aneurysm, with 22% having hemorrhaged from their arteriovenous malformation. All 7 of the patients who suffered aneurysmal hemorrhage bled from atypical distal aneurysms on major feeding vessels. Our experience and that of others has led us to believe that the safest approach to patients with this combination of lesions is to treat the aneurysm before microsurgical resection of the associated arteriovenous malformation. Hemodynamic changes associated with the abrupt elimination of an arteriovenous malformation may place associated aneurysms at immediate risk.
...
PMID:Intracranial arteriovenous malformations associated with aneurysms. 394 76
Periventricular arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) have often been deemed inoperable because of their location in critical structures. Furthermore, the excision of large lesions may be complicated by the potential for serious brain swelling and hemorrhage due to "autoregulation breakthrough." Nonetheless, the unfavorable natural history of the untreated disease in a symptomatic young patient has induced us to approach these lesions using staged microsurgical excision combined with elective barbiturate coma for maximal cerebral protection. Between 1979 and 1983, six patients (four female, aged 12 to 60 years, and 2 male, aged 14 and 29) who harbored large AVMs in the basal ganglia, thalamic, and hypothalamic areas presented with subarachnoid hemorrhage (2 cases), progressive neural deficits (3 cases), and intractable
headache
(1 case). Nineteen staged operations were performed for the complete excision of these lesions. Among the first three patients, there was one death due to "autoregulation breakthrough" hemorrhage into the lateral ventricle during the excision of a lesion approached through the sylvian fissure using standard anesthesia techniques. This led to the adoption of the transventricular surgical approach and elective barbiturate coma to facilitate exposure of the lesion and to protect the adjacent vital structures from potential
ischemia
. Three patients were treated in this fashion uneventfully. Of the five successfully treated patients, two have returned to their preoperative status and one has completely recovered from global hemispheric
ischemia
and hemiplegia. The hemiparesis in one patient worsened as a result of postoperative hypertensive intraventricular hemorrhage, and one patient developed mild dysphasia and hemiparesis. This experience suggests that this approach offers a valid therapeutic regimen for the treatment of this disease. During the same period, three patients--one man (age 23) and two women (aged 29 and 22)--harboring four intraventricular AVMs presented with intraventricular hemorrhage. After the acute effects of chemical ventriculitis and hydrocephalus were overcome with cerebrospinal fluid diversion, all four lesions were excised microsurgically using the transtemporal approach. One patient demonstrated significant and progressive improvement of her preoperative memory deficit. The remaining two patients have both returned to their preoperative employment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Microsurgical excision of paraventricular arteriovenous malformations. 398 6
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