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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Malignant stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (M-SHRSP), separated from SHRSP, develop severe hypertension and spontaneously develop stroke at early ages. Using this model of cerebrovascular stroke, influence of stroke-onset on the autonomic nervous system was investigated. Heart rate (HR), systolic and diastolic blood pressures (SBP and DBP) and locomotive activity were monitored during development of stroke using a telemetry system. Stroke-onset was assessed by neurologic symptoms, changes in body weight, fluid intake and serum NOx level. The rat displayed a nocturnal pattern of circadian rhythms. At stroke-onset, mean HR over 24 h increased by 20 to 30 bpm and rapidly increased at post stroke, approximately 100 bpm higher than that at pre stroke. Circadian variation in HR, which was normally 50 bpm higher during night than during day, attenuated at stroke-onset, and it was blunted or reversed at post stroke. BP variation, which was approximately 7 mmHg higher at night than at day, decreased one or two days before stroke-onset and reversed at post stroke, especially in DBP. Insufficient falls in HR and BP during the day mainly accounted for the disturbed circadian variations. Variation of locomotive activity also decreased. These changes serve as reliable and accurate markers for stroke-onset in evaluation of drugs for the prevention and outcome predictions of stroke.
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PMID:Disturbance of circadian rhythm in heart rate, blood pressure and locomotive activity at the stroke-onset in malignant stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. 1128 3

Hypertension is the main cause of stroke that represents the second most common cause of death in the industrialized world and a leading cause of inability of the elderly. Lowering blood pressure reduces cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality, but it is still controversial if blood pressure should be lowered in elderly individuals with concomitant cerebrovascular disease. The present study has analyzed comparatively the effect of treatment with the dihydropyridine-type Ca(2+) channel blockers lercanidipine, manidipine and nimodipine and with the non dihydropyridine-type vasodilator hydralazine on hypertension-dependent cerebrovascular changes in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). Analysis included medium and small sized pial arteries and intracerebral arteries of frontal cortex, hippocampus, striatum, and cerebellum. In control SHR, systolic pressure (SBP) values were significantly higher in comparison with WKY rats. Pharmacological treatment significantly decreased SBP values, with nimodipine reducing only moderately SBP. In control SHR, thickening of arterial wall accompanied by luminal narrowing with consequent increase of the wall-to-lumen ratio occurred both in pial and intracerebral arteries. Dihydropyridine-type Ca(2+) antagonists and to a lesser extent hydralazine countered these morphological alterations. Lercanidipine displayed a particular activity on small sized intraparenchymal brain arteries, where it was more effective than other compounds tested. This activity of lercanidipine on small-sized intracerebral arteries might represent an interesting property for the treatment of hypertensive brain damage with concomitant ischemia.
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PMID:Influence of treatment with Ca(2+) antagonists on cerebral vasculature of spontaneously hypertensive rats. 1133 9

We developed a mathematical model describing the interaction between the heart and the arterial system. The model was constructed and tested on basis of invasive hemodynamic data in six sheep. Data from a first group of three animals (49 cardiac cycles) were used to assess a template time-varying elastance curve for the left ventricle, while the baseline steady-state data of a second group of three animals were used to assess reference cardiac and arterial parameters in sheep. The model is fully characterized by nine parameters, which were converted into 6 dimensionless numbers using the Buckingham pi theorem. The model was then used to generate LV pressure and volume and aortic pressure and flow for 86 conditions obtained by varying parameters 50 to 200% of their reference value. Systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure and stroke volume (SV) were determined from these model-generated curves and multiple linear regression analysis yielded the following expressions: SBP = Pisovolumic [0.638 - 0.0773 Emax C + 0.0507 RC/T] (r2 = 0.89); DBP = Pisovolumic [0.438-0.0712 Emax C + 0.0655RC/T] (r2 = 0.88) and SV = LVEDV [1.265-1.040 LVEDV/(LVEDV - Vd) + 0.125 Emax C-0.0777RC/T] (r2 = 0.93) with Pisovolumic = Emax (LVEDV - Vd), Emax and Vd being the slope and intercept of the end-systolic pressure-volume relation, R and C the total peripheral resistance and compliance, LVEDV the left ventricular end-diastolic volume, and T the cardiac cycle length. These expressions were validated using data from the second group of three animals obtained during vena cava occlusion at baseline and during administration of dobutamine (61 cycles). The correlation between measured and predicted values was 0.98, 0.97 and 0.92 for SBP, DBP and SV, respectively. Compared to the measured values, SBP and DBP were, on average, underestimated by 5 and 6mmHg, respectively, and SV overestimated by 1.4 ml. We conclude that the derived expressions for blood pressure and stroke volume remain valid in the intact sheep for various hemodynamic conditions, and, taking into account their dimensionless form, may hold in other species and in humans.
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PMID:Predicting systolic and diastolic aortic blood pressure and stroke volume in the intact sheep. 1142 79

The long-acting calcium antagonist nifedipine reduces the incidence of stroke in Eastern Asia, as shown by the Shanghai Trial Of Nifedipine in the Elderly (STONE) and the Systolic Hypertension in China (Syst-China) trials. Recent trials in Japan have shown that benidipine may be more efficient than the former drug in preventing strokes in the elderly. Benidipine, commonly prescribed in Japan for a definite depressor effect, reportedly without causing remarkable fluctuations in blood pressure (BP), is investigated herein from a chronobiological viewpoint. Eighteen subjects (nine women and nine men, 39 to 87 years of age) with essential hypertension (office and ambulatory systolic, S/diastolic, D BP values above 160/95 mm Hg and 130/80 mm Hg, respectively) were enrolled in this investigation. Ambulatory BP was monitored at 30-min intervals for at least 24 h (ABPM-630, Colin Medical) before and after 4 weeks of crossover treatment with nifedipine tablets (twice daily, 20 mg/d) and benidipine (once daily, 4 mg/d, in the morning). The results indicate that: 1) benidipine and nifedipine reduce 24-h daytime (10:00-20:00) and nighttime (00:00-06:00) averages of SBP and DBP (P < 0.001); 2) the circadian double amplitude of BP is decreased after treatment with benidipine (from 28.6 to 21.1 mm Hg SBP and from 19.7 to 15.2 mm Hg DBP; P< 0.05), while the day-night difference in SBP is increased after treatment with nifedipine (18.6 vs 27.9 mm Hg, P< 0.01); and 3) the increase in the day-night difference of heart rate (HR) is significant after treatment with benidipine (13.6 vs 18.8 beats per minute, bpm; P< 0.05), but not with nifedipine. We have previously evaluated the usefulness of the circadian amplitude of BP as a prognostic tool of cardiovascular outcome, and found that an excessive circadian SBP or DBP amplitude was associated with an increased risk of vascular disease. The fact that benidipine reduces the circadian BP amplitude may be one reason for the superiority of this treatment over nifedipine in preventing an adverse outcome. A reduced heart rate variability (HRV) also predicts adverse cardiovascular outcomes in patients with overt cardiovascular disease and in hypertensive subjects. The fact that benidipine increases the day-night difference in HR may be another reason for the positive effects of this treatment.
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PMID:Impact of circadian amplitude and chronotherapy: relevance to prevention and treatment of stroke. 1177 59

To calculate the estimated relative and absolute risks for cardiovascular diseases according to alcohol consumption increase, we performed a cross-sectional study of men aged 40-79 years using the data from the National Survey of Circulatory Disorders 1990 in Japan. First, we investigated the association between alcohol intake and two types of biochemical variables: serum lipids and blood pressure, by using analysis of variance. Then, concerning the subjects aged 40-59 years, linear regression analyses between alcohol intake and these biochemical markers were done to calculate regression coefficients adjusted for confounding factors. Finally, we substituted these regression coefficients for previously reported regression coefficients in Cox proportional hazard models to calculate relative and absolute risks for coronary heart disease and stroke. Alcohol intake positively correlated to systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP) and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLC). However, there was no relation between alcohol intake and serum total cholesterol. Linear regression coefficients of SBP, DBP and HDLC were 2.25, 1.43, 2.70, respectively. We used two proportional hazard regression formulas of Japanese population: one for coronary disease (Circulation 89, 2533-39) and the other for stroke (NIPPON DATA80, a 14-year cohort study of randomly selected Japanese). The estimated relative risks of coronary heart disease and stroke were 0.89 and 1.06 for 1 "go" (23 g of ethanol) increment of alcohol intake. The results indicate that the mortality rates shift from 0.44 to 0.39 per 1,000 person-years for coronary heart disease and from 0.76 to 0.81 per 1,000 person-years for stroke in the representative Japanese population aged 40-59 years. The absolute risk of cardiovascular disease may be unchanged if we assume 23 g increment of ethanol intake in Japan because the risk reduction in coronary heart disease was nearly equal to the risk increment in stroke.
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PMID:[Estimated relative and absolute risk for cardiovascular disease according to alcohol consumption increase in Japanese general population]. 1182 15

In order to understand the changes of baroreflex gain due to postural changes in normal pregnancies, we measured percentage changes (% changes) in blood pressure (SBP, DBP), heart rate (HR), stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO), total peripheral resistance (TPR) as well as cardiac autonomic nervous function (HF as an index of parasympathetic and LF/HF as an index of sympathetic function) and compared these parameters in normal pregnancies with those found in hypertensive pregnancies, such as chronic hypertensive (CHP) and severe preeclamptic pregnancies (PE), in late pregnancy (after 32 wks). When the position was changed from supine to standing in normal and non-pregnant women, the % changes of HR, DBP, TPR and LF/HF were increased and SBP, SV, CO and HF were decreased. The % changes of these parameters, however, were gradually decreased as pregnancy progressed, especially after 20-24 wks of gestation. In hypertensive pregnancies, however, even in late pregnancy, the decreased SBP and increased TPR was still observed and the profound decrease of CO and SV and increase of TPR were characteristic in PE when compared to CHP.
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PMID:The effects of postural changes of baroreflex gain in normal and hypertensive pregnancies. 1184 66

Manipulation of blood pressure (BP) in acute stroke may improve outcome. Despite various studies, data on the prognostic significance of early BP in stroke remain unclear. Therefore, we studied the relationship between various BP variables in the acute phase of stroke and functional outcome at 3 months. Blood pressures were collected by reviewing BP records of 817 patients who were admitted to our stroke unit between 1987 and 1992. Besides the first systolic and diastolic admission BP (SBP and DBP), we also used the mean of the daytime as well as the night-time systolic and diastolic BP values. Finally, we studied the relationship between the decrease in BP between day 0 and 4 and outcome. As dependent outcome variable we used the Rankin handicap score at 3 months dichotomized in a score >3 (poor outcome) vs a score 3 (good outcome). A total of 430 patients were admitted within 24 h following stroke onset. There was no significant relationship between the systolic and diastolic BP and the outcome at 3 months. Only night-time systolic BP 165 mm Hg (odds ratio (OR) 2.8; 95% CI 1.1-6.8), night-time diastolic BP 60 mm Hg (OR 8.1; 95% CI 1.1-58.3), and a decrease in daytime diastolic BP between day 0 and 4 of 10 mm Hg (OR 3.0; 95% CI 1.1-7.9) showed a significant relationship with poor outcome. Our findings suggest that admission BP values may not reliably reflect any impact of BP on stroke outcome. They also suggest a potential differential effect of BP manipulation: increasing or decreasing BP may be beneficial for patients with BP extremes in one direction, but detrimental for those with BP values in the opposite direction.
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PMID:Prognostic value of blood pressure in acute stroke. 1185 Jul 68

Objective. To explore the effect of push-pull effect (PPE) simulated by lower body negative pressure (LBNP) rotating-table, and observe the physiological responses to push-pull maneuver. Method. A special LBNP rotating-table was used to simulate the push-pull maneuver. 8 healthy adults participated randomly in two experiments. One was simulated PPE test, which include a series of head-up stand (HUT, +1 Gz) for 1 min, then in head-down stand (HDT, -1 Gz) for 30 s and again in HUT combining LBNP (-50 mmHg) for 10 min. The other one was control test, which only consists of HUT combining LBNP (-50 mmHg) for 10 min. Changes of heart rate (HR), blood pressure (BP), basic impedance (Z0) , stroke output (SO) , cardiac output (CO) and total peripheral resistance (TPR) were monitored by electrical impedance instrument during the experiment. Result. During simulated PPE experiment, 3 subjects presented presyncopal symptoms, with average standing time of 8.99 +/- 1.47 min, while during control test, all the subjects completed HUT combining LBNP for 10 min. In simulated PPE experiment, as compared with HUT (control), HR, Z0 during HDT were significantly lowered, while SV and CO were increased significantly. During HUT + LBNP, HR, Z0 and TPR were significantly higher, while SV and CO were significantly lower than that of control and HDT. SBP was increased significantly than control value when "HUT + LBNP" started, but during the whole process of "HUT + LBNP ", it became significantly lowered. In control experiment, the above mentioned indexes showed the same trend of as change compared with the control, however, the percentage of the change was lower than simulated PPE test, the change percentage in HR was not including. Conclusion. After headstand, head-up stand combining LBNP caused cardiovascular function descends, the degree was larger than simple head-up stand combining LBNP. LBNP rotating-table can be used to simulated push-pull effect.
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PMID:[Effect of lower body negative pressure and rotating-table simulated push-pull effect in flight on cardiovascular function]. 1188 92

The incidence of arterial hypertension increases with age in such a way that by the age of 60 the incidence is greater than 50% in men and women. This increase is particularly relevant if we consider the changes in systolic blood pressure (increase) and diastolic blood pressure (decrease) in relation to age and as a consequence in the reduction of vascular compliance which is common in men and women over the age of 60. These disorders are associated to artheriosclerosis and the corresponding increase in pulse pressure. It is for these reasons that the most common form of hypertension is isolated systolic hypertension (SBP > 140 mmHg and SBP < 90 mmHg), which represents 50% of hypertensive patients in the elderly population. Isolated systolic hypertension is also associated to an increase in cardiovascular disease (MI, stroke), increasing the risk of mortality four times. In elderly people, hypertension and isolated systolic hypertension are risk factors that can be managed. Today there is sufficient evidence from clinical trials that show a clear benefit in the reduction of the cardiovascular and renal risk associated to the antihypertensive treatment in the elderly, at least when the blood pressure is greater than 160/90 mmHg. The target blood pressure figures to control in the elderly person, probably below 160/90 mmHg, still need to be determined.
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PMID:[Renal and cardiovascular protection associated to antihypertensive treatment in the elderly]. 1198 68

High blood pressure (BP) is common in acute stroke and might be associated with a poor outcome, although observational studies have given varying results. In a systematic review, articles were sought that reported both admission BP and outcome (death, death or dependency, death or deterioration, stroke recurrence, and hematoma expansion) in acute stroke. Data were analyzed by the Cochrane Review Manager software and are given as odds ratios (ORs) or weighted mean differences (WMDs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Altogether, 32 studies were identified involving 10 892 patients. When all data were included, death was significantly associated with an elevated mean arterial BP ([MABP] OR, 1.61; 95% CI, 1.12 to 2.31) and a high diastolic BP ([DBP] OR, 1.71; 95% CI, 1.33 to 2.48). Combined death or dependency was associated with high systolic BP ([SBP] OR, 2.69; 95% CI, 1.13 to 6.40) and DBP (OR, 4.68; 95% CI, 1.87 to 11.70) in primary intracerebral hemorrhage (PICH). Similarly, high SBP (+11.73 mm Hg; 95% CI, 1.30 to 22.16), MABP (+9.00 mm Hg; 95% CI, 0.92 to 17.08), and DBP (+6.00 mm Hg; 95% CI, 0.19 to 11.81) were associated with death or dependency in ischemic stroke. Combined death or deterioration was associated with a high SBP (OR, 5.57; 95% CI, 1.42 to 21.86) in patients with PICH. In summary, high BP in acute ischemic stroke or PICH is associated with subsequent death, death or dependency, and death or deterioration. Moderate lowering of BP might improve outcome. Acute BP lowering needs to be tested in 1 or more large, randomized trials.
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PMID:High blood pressure in acute stroke and subsequent outcome: a systematic review. 1517 Dec 24


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