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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical and pathologic findings in 20 patients with
hypertensive encephalopathy
were reviewed. The dominant central nervous system (CNS) symptoms were altered state of consciousness and severe headache.
Nausea
, vomiting, and visual disturbances were less common. Seizures and focal signs were infrequent. The changes seen were invariably accompanied both by the characteristic ophthalmoscopic alterations of malignant hypertension and by uremia. The neuropathologic changes consisted of severe vascular alterations (fibrinoid necrosis of arterioles, thrombosis of arterioles and capillaries), and of parenchymal lesions (microinfarcts, petechial hemorrhages) secondary to the vascular lesions. The vascular changes were not confined to the brain but were diffuse, affecting the eyes, kidneys, and other organs. In the CNS the brainstem was most severely affected. Cerebral edema was not observed, even in those patients who had increased cerebrospinal fluid pressure and papilledema.
...
PMID:Hypertensive encephalopathy: a clinicopathologic study of 20 cases. 56 64
2 cases reports are described of patients with renal artery stenosis who presented with
hypertensive encephalopathy
, normal blood pressures having been recorded within the previous 6 months while taking oral contraceptives (OCs). A 27-year-old woman, admitted to the hospital following 2 grand mal fits, had suffered from increasing headaches,
nausea
, and vomiting over the previous month. Her blood pressure had been elevated at 160/110 mmHg 1 week prior to admission but had been normal over previous 11 years while taking OCs (various formulations of combined estrogen and progestogen) which she had stopped taking 2 months previously. She was a nonsmoker. Her blood pressure was controlled with atenolol, nifedipine, and bendrofluazide, and her conscious level returned to normal with no further fits. An intravenous urogram revealed a small left kidney with a delayed nephrogram, and subsequent arteriography showed bilateral medial fibromuscular dysplasia with a narrow stenosis of the left renal artery. Attempted balloon angioplasty was unsuccessful due to arterial spasm. 4 months after presentation she became pregnant. Blood pressure was controlled with methyl dopa during pregnancy which progressed uneventfully to full term. In the 2nd case, a 19-year old girl became confused and suffered a grand mal convulsion. She had complained of headaches over the previous 3 days. Her blood pressure had been normal over the previous 6 months while taking Logynon (phased formulation of ethinylestradiol and levonorgestrel). She was a nonsmoker. On admission to the hospital, she suffered further generalized convulsions. Despite control of her convulsions with intravenous chlormethiazole, her blood pressure rose to 220/140 mmHg, and this was controlled with intravenous hydralazine and propranolol. The following day she was conscious and was changed to oral therapy. A renogram and DMSA scan showed normal sized kidneys, but there was evidence of decreased blood flow to the left kidney with an increased transit time. Renal arteriography showed a stenosis of the left renal artery, typical of intimal fibromuscular dysplasia, which was dilated by balloon angioplasty. Anti-hypertensive medication was withdrawn postoperatively, and her blood pressure has remained well controlled. In both of the cases the onset of hypertension was rapid with encephalopathy being the presenting feature.
Hypertensive encephalopathy
is well recognized as a presenting feature of renal transplant artery stenosis but not in cases of native renal artery stenosis. 1 of the patients had stopped using OCs 2 months before presentation, suggesting that although there may have been an association between OC use and the development of fibromuscular dysplasia, it could not be implicated in the mode of presentation.
...
PMID:Encephalopathy in renovascular hypertension associated with the use of oral contraceptives. 311 27
A seventy-two-year-old man with hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage acutely developed severe headache,
nausea
, vomiting, agitation, and disorientation with abrupt rise in blood pressure on the sixth day after the onset. At that time, there were no remarkable changes in focal neurologic deficits, and repeated brain CT scans revealed a small hematoma located in the right basal ganglia without further enlargement or herniation. Blood chemistry and arterial gas analysis were within the normal ranges except for a slight rise in blood urea nitrogen. Similar episodes occurred three times within two days, and each time the cerebral symptoms disappeared in accordance with lowering of blood pressure by antihypertensive therapy. Complication of
hypertensive encephalopathy
was strongly suggested. The authors discuss the pathophysiology of this encephalopathy in relation to cerebral hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Transient encephalopathy related to rapidly and markedly elevated blood pressure in acute stage of hypertensive cerebral hemorrhage--relationship to hypertensive encephalopathy--a case report. 317 64
Cerebral symptoms were registered in a multicenter study including 64 patients with severe hypertension, diastolic blood pressure (DBP) greater than or equal to 135 mmHg, and more or less pronounced
hypertensive encephalopathy
. The symptoms were: headache (70%), dizziness (35%), consciousness disturbances (28%),
nausea
(27%), paresis (23%), blurred vision (22%), paraesthesia (21%) and vomiting (14%). None had convulsions or coma. Initial treatment was furosemide i.v., and if DBP was greater than or equal to 125 mmHg after one hour, patients were randomized to treatment with either i.v. diazoxide (bolus injections of 75-150 mg) or i.m. dihydralazine (bolus injections of 6-12.5 mg). A gradual fall in blood pressure (BP) was obtained in all three groups. Along with BP reduction a substantial regression of neurological symptoms was registered. After 5 hours only minor cerebral symptoms were present without significant difference between diazoxide and dihydralazine. None developed cerebral complications. The study failed to show a significant correlation between BP reduction and regression of neurological symptoms graded semiquantitatively. Reduction of BP by titration using small repeated bolus injections is recommended, but oral treatment should be considered in the patients who are able to ingest peroral medication in spite of neurological symptoms.
...
PMID:Reversibility of cerebral symptoms in severe hypertension in relation to acute antihypertensive therapy. Danish Multicenter Study. 353 94
Computed tomographic (CT) scans were evaluated in 11 patients with acute
hypertensive encephalopathy
.
Hypertensive encephalopathy
is characterized by an acute, severe rise in blood pressure associated with headache,
nausea
, vomiting, altered mental status, and focal neurologic deficits, and rapid improvement after control of blood pressure. The systolic blood pressure range is 200-280 mm Hg; diastolic is 130-170 mm Hg. The most common CT finding was white-matter edema, diffuse or focal, affecting the supratentorial compartment in all cases and the infratentorial compartment in eight. These changes resolved after the blood pressure was lowered in all six patients studied by follow-up CT. Permanent areas of infarction were demonstrated in three patients. These abnormalities are correlated with the neuropathologic findings in
hypertensive encephalopathy
.
...
PMID:Computed tomographic changes of hypertensive encephalopathy. 392 95
Patients with renal failure may manifest a variety of neurologic disorders. Patients with chronic renal failure who have not yet received dialytic therapy may develop a symptom complex progressing from mild sensorial clouding to delirium and coma, with tremor, asterixis, multifocal myoclonus, and seizures. After the institution of adequate maintenance dialysis therapy, patients may continue to be afflicted with more subtle nervous dysfunction, including impaired mentation, generalized weakness, and peripheral neuropathy. These central nervous system disorders are referred to as uremic encephalopathy. The dialytic treatment of end-stage renal disease has itself been associated with the emergence of two distinct, new disorders of the central nervous system; dialysis dysequilibrium and dialysis dementia. The dialysis disequilibrium syndrome consists of headache,
nausea
, muscle cramps, obtundation, and seizures, and is a consequence of the initiation of dialysis therapy in some patients. Dialysis dementia is a progressive, generally fatal encephalopathy which affects patients on chronic hemodialysis. There are at least three different forms of dialysis encephalopathy: sporadic, epidemic; and that associated with renal disease in children. In addition to the foregoing neurologic diseases which are specifically related to uremia and/or dialysis, a number of other neurologic disorders occur with increased frequency in patients with end-stage renal disease on chronic hemodialysis. These include subdural hematoma, electrolyte disorders, vitamin deficiencies, drug intoxication,
hypertensive encephalopathy
, and acute trace element intoxication. Renal transplantation is associated with a variety of central nervous system infections, reticulum cell sarcoma, and central pontine myelinosis. The present manuscript will review the clinical, structural, and biochemical components of those neurologic disorders which are peculiar to the uremic state and its treatment with dialysis.
...
PMID:Uremic encephalopathies: clinical, biochemical, and experimental features. 675 30
Spontaneous intracranial hematoma is not rare, but with bad prognosis, complication in patients on maintenance hemodialysis (HD). Diagnostic difficulties result from a fact that symptoms of acute hematoma such as headaches,,
nausea
, vomitis, apathy, sleepiness, parestesia and seizures may also suggest dysequilibrium syndrome, dialytic dementia as well as
hypertensive encephalopathy
. We describe a case of female patient with 20-year interview data of hypertension on HD since 1981 because of end-stage renal failure in a course of chronic glomerulonephritis, who developed spontaneous epi- and subdural hematoma four year ago in 47 age of life. Performed CT examination confirmed diagnosis and on the same day the patient underwent right frontoparietotemporal craniotomy and the hematoma was removed. During postoperative period, HD sessions were performed without heparin. After surgery the patient developed transcient hypertonia, epileptic sizures and left-sided paresis. Currently, 48 months after craniotomy the patient is fully rehabilitated, with normal blood pressure, without epileptic sizures or palsy. Gradually we discontinued anticonvulsans and antihypertensives.
...
PMID:[Long-term good results of surgical treatment for spontaneous epi- and subdural hematoma in a female patient on maintenance hemodialysis]. 1139 5
The posterior reversible leukoencephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a recently proposed cliniconeuroradiologic entity. The most common causes of PRES are
hypertensive encephalopathy
, eclampsia, cyclosporin A neurotoxicity and the uremic encephalopathies. Most patients are markedly hypertensive at presentation, although some have only mildly elevated or even normal blood pressure. Symptoms may include headache,
nausea
, vomiting, altered mental status, seizures,stupor, and visual disturbances. On CT and MR studies, edema has been reported in a relatively symmetrical pattern, typically in the subcortical white matter and occasionally in the cortex of the occipital and parietal lobes. These often striking imaging findings usually are resolved on follow-up studies obtained after appropriate therapy. Diffusion-weighted images would not show hyperintense signal because of the presence of interstitial rather than cytotoxic edema. We report a case of PRES due to
hypertensive encephalopathy
studied by CT and MRI.
...
PMID:[Reversible posterior encephalopathy syndrome: case report]. 1224 91
Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLES), previously known as posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES), is characterized by the presence of bilateral lesions located within the posterior border zones of the cerebral hemisphere and cerebellum. This condition commonly presents with headache,
nausea
, vomiting, decreased vision and level of consciousness, and seizures. RPLES has been associated with
hypertensive encephalopathy
, eclampsia, renal failure, and immunosuppressive therapy following transplant. We report the development of RPLES in a boy following implantation of a left ventricular assist device (LVAD). To our knowledge, this is the first report of RPLES in association with the use of LVAD.
...
PMID:Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome associated with left ventricular assist device. 1638 57
Hypertensive encephalopathy
rarely presented with widespread edema in the cerebral white matters, deep structures and whole brainstem. A 80-year-old woman manifested as high arterial blood pressure, visual disturbance, severe headache,
nausea
, and vomiting. T2-weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery magnetic resonance imaging showed high signal-intensity lesions in the cerebral white matter, cerebellum, basal ganglia, thalamus, and brainstem. Diffusion-weighted brain MRI did not show hyperintense signals in these lesions. These findings suggested the pathological basis of vasogenic edema. After control of hypertension, clinical symptoms and these edematous lesions on MRI gradually reduced.
...
PMID:Hypertensive encephalopathy involving the brainstem and deep structures: a case report. 1642 46
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