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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A right handed man had a massive left middle cerebral artery
stroke
. CT and MRI revealed extensive destruction of both anterior and posterior areas typically associated with language. There was, however, no
aphasia
, but instead a marked limb apraxia, dyscalculia, dense right visual neglect, and anosognosia. These uncommon dissociations and associations support the hypothesis that cerebral control of motor function of the limbs is not fundamentally related to the motor control involved in speech, and the notion that handedness is related to laterality of motor control, and only accidentally to laterality of language control.
...
PMID:Limb apraxia without aphasia from a left sided lesion in a right handed patient. 171 36
In a 44-year-old female acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) presented with abrupt onset of right hemiplegia and
aphasia
due to occlusion of the left carotid artery at bifurcatio. There was laboratory evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Thrombotic complications are unusual in APL, even in cases with evidence of DIC. This report aims at underlying the important implication of a correct timely diagnosis in young patients presenting with
stroke
.
...
PMID:Occlusion of the carotid artery as presenting symptom of acute promyelocytic leukemia. 171 25
A hemiparetic and aphasic patient, 3 days after acute traumatic transection of the left internal carotid artery requiring life-saving total embolic occlusion, revealed ipsilateral increased peripheral hemispheric 99mTc-HMPAO activity. Ten days postocclusion, HMPAO peripheral cortical flow normalized as hemiparesis and
aphasia
significantly cleared. The initial lateralized HMPAO hyperactivity pattern may reflect reactive hyperemia, a sign previously identified by contrast angiography and often associated with a better prognosis in evolving
CVA
. Evanescent peripheral cerebral hyperemia may represent beneficial cortical collateralization of the periinfarct area of a deeper lacunar (white matter)
CVA
.
...
PMID:Reversible increased technetium-99m-HMPAO cerebral cortical activity: a scintigraphic reflection of luxuriant hyperperfusion. 173 Sep 75
To gain insight into neurologic signs relevant to the diagnosis of cardiogenic embolism, we analyzed data from 1,290 patients with cerebral infarcts in the NINDS
Stroke
Data Bank. Based solely on the presence of potential cardiac sources of embolism, we divided patients into groups of high (N = 250), medium (N = 167), and low (N = 873) risk of a cardiogenic mechanism for their
stroke
. Diminished level of consciousness was highly associated with the presence of a cardiac source of embolism. Of the four primarily cortical deficits assessed, three (visual field abnormalities, neglect, and
aphasia
) showed a highly significant graded relationship to the cardiac risk groups. For the fourth cortical deficit (other nonlanguage cognitive functions), this relationship did not attain statistical significance. Conversely, hemiparesis without sensory or cortical deficits had a strong inverse association to the presence of a cardiac source of embolism. This inverse association was weaker for sensorimotor strokes and nonexistent for pure sensory strokes. Although some neurologic findings had highly significant associations with the presence of a cardiac source of embolism, their predictive value for an embolic source was low.
...
PMID:Infarcts with a cardiac source of embolism in the NINDS Stroke Data Bank: neurologic examination. 173 57
A 54-year-old non-right-handed man with positive familial sinistrality showed a pure right hemisphere syndrome following a left hemisphere
stroke
. Severe right side hemineglect, transcortical motor dysprosodia, spatial dysgraphia and visuo-constructive impairments were observed. At no time were the expected left hemisphere abnormalities such as
aphasia
, alexia, right-left disorientation or finger agnosia noted. A left fronto-temporal subcortical lesion was documented on CT scan. A Tc-99m HM-PAO SPECT study revealed no cerebral blood flow changes in the right hemisphere while in the left hemisphere a fronto-temporo-parietal cerebral blood flow reduction was evident. This case of a complete reversed laterality of cognitive functions argues for a distinction to be made between 'anomalous' cerebral dominance and 'atypical' cerebral dominance.
...
PMID:Reversed laterality of cerebral functions in a non-right-hander: neuropsychological and spect findings in a case of 'atypical' dominance. 173 72
In a rehabilitation setting, pulmonary embolism is a relatively frequent and life-threatening complication. Deciding when a patient may be experiencing this condition is difficult, however, because of frequent deficits in patient communication skills (eg,
aphasia
and cognitive deficits) and the multisystem illnesses affecting many rehabilitation patients. We reviewed the charts of 30 rehabilitation patients transferred emergently during the years 1986 to 1988 with a diagnosis of pulmonary embolism, which was subsequently documented by ventilation-perfusion scanning. The average age of the 30 patients was 65; 63% were women and 20 (67%) had an admitting diagnosis of
stroke
. The most common new-onset clinical findings in the 24 hours before discharge were unusual facial skin color changes (pale, flushed, or cyanotic) (57%), chest or upper back pain (47%), tachycardia (heart rate more than 100 bpm) (40%), hypoxemia (arterial oxygen saturation less than or equal to 90%) (40%), and fever less than 101F (37%). In 63% of the patients, either anxiety, restlessness, diaphoresis, or dyspnea was also noted in the 24 hours before discharge. The data suggest that careful physician and nursing scrutiny may identify clinical signs characteristic of pulmonary embolism, and that the de novo appearance of these constellations of findings may help to select candidates for ventilation-perfusion scanning.
...
PMID:Clinical findings associated with pulmonary embolism in a rehabilitation setting. 185 63
16 right hemisphere and 16 left hemisphere, nonaphasic brain-injured
stroke
patients were compared with 16 matched normal controls on the verbal and visuospatial paired-associate tasks developed by Stark in 1961 as a partial replication to a more severely impaired population. Right brain-injured patients showed a significant visuospatial deficit and contralateral motor impairment; while left brain-injured patients, screened for
aphasia
, showed contralateral motor impairment but did not show impairment on the verbal task. Examination of the areas of infarct resulting from the
cerebrovascular accident
in the left-hemisphere patients suggested that the presence of a contralateral motor deficit without verbal impairment results from specific focal occlusions of branches of the middle cerebral artery in this selective group of patients.
...
PMID:Cognitive and motor deficits in selected unilateral brain-injured patients. 189 14
The medical records and autopsy data of patients over the age of 70 years at death with a diagnosis of cortical artery infarction (CAI) in the Yokufukai Geriatric Hospital were reviewed. Among 690 autopsied cases from 1981 to 1988, there were 45 cases (21 men and 24 women) with CAI available for this study. Fourteen cases (31.1%) suffered CAI while hospitalized for another disorder. Their ages at death ranged from 70 to 102 years with a mean of 82.4 years. From the results of this neurological and psychological analysis, the residuals of senile
stroke
were classified into six subtypes: 1) cerebrovascular dementia, 2) cerebrovascular Parkinsonism, 3) pseudobulbar palsy, 4) chronic stage of
aphasia
, 5) slowly-progressive decreased motivation or spontaneity without dementia, 6) the so-called bedridden state (prolonged vegetative or apallic state). Sixty-nine percent had anamnetic hypertension before the
stroke
. The ages at which they became bedridden ranged from 69 to 102 years with a mean of 81.8 years. Within one year after becoming bedridden, 83.3% of all patients died. The bedridden state in the elderly with residual CAI indicated a poor prognosis within one year after
stroke
. Causes of death included brain death in 22.3% of all patients, pneumonia in 20.0%, and digestive bleeding in 8.9%.
...
PMID:[Cerebrovascular disease in the elderly--a clinicopathological study of 45 autopsied cases with cortical artery infarction]. 189 27
We treated five patients with hemispheric ischemic
stroke
with intravenous recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA), within 3-6 h after
stroke
onset. Regional cerebral blood flow was evaluated with single photon emission computed tomography (rCBF-SPECT) before and after treatment. One patient with
aphasia
and a moderately severe hemiparesis, who had a small flow deficit, was treated 5 h and 30 min after the onset of his
stroke
and had a prompt and complete recovery. The post treatment rCBF-SPECT showed normal flow. One patient with a very large flow deficit died of transtentorial herniation. In three other patient clinical condition remained unchanged, in one of them despite restoration of flow, demonstrated by transcranial doppler examination. In all these patients the rCBF-SPECT remained abnormal. rCBF-SPECT is a valuable tool in the explanatory analysis of fibrinolytic treatment in ischemic
stroke
.
...
PMID:Thrombolysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator in acute ischemic stroke: evaluation with rCBF-SPECT. 190 72
Thirty-two patients whose first
stroke
was due to double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere were identified among 1,911 consecutive patients from the Lausanne
Stroke
Registry. The double infarct involved territories of the superficial middle cerebral artery, superficial posterior cerebral artery, lenticulostriate, anterior choroidal artery, or borderzone. The most common combination involved territories of the anterior middle cerebral artery plus the posterior middle cerebral artery. In the patients with the double infarct, the prevalence of potential cardiac sources of embolism (19%) was similar to that found in the registry in general, but the double infarct was closely associated with tight (greater than or equal to 90% of the lumen diameter) stenosis or occlusion (75%) of the internal carotid artery. The most common neurological picture mimicked large infarction in the middle cerebral artery territory, but nearly half of the patients with double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere had a specific clinical syndrome, which was not found in the 1,879 remaining patients from the registry, including hemianopia-hemiplegia (in 6), acute conduction aphasia-hemiparesis (in 2), and acute transcortical mixed
aphasia
(in 6), in relation to characteristic combinations of infarcts. These unique clinical and etiological correlates warrant the recognition of double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere from other acute ischemic strokes.
...
PMID:Double infarction in one cerebral hemisphere. 192 25
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