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

This study was undertaken to examine the effect of uridine 5'-diphosphate, administered intravenously or intraperitoneally, on cold injury-induced brain edema in rabbits. Bolus injection or continuous intravenous infusion of uridine 5'-diphosphate 26 hours after a lesion was established had adverse effects, such as increased intracranial pressure and lowered systolic arterial blood pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure for approximately 10-29 minutes, but these parameters did not change appreciably from 29 minutes to 3 hours after administration. Intraperitoneally administered uridine 5'-diphosphate did not affect these parameters appreciably during 3 hours. Thus, the intravenous administration of uridine 5'-diphosphate is harmful under neurosurgical conditions. In contrast, 10 mg/kg/day i.p. uridine 5'-diphosphate pretreatment and posttreatment, beginning 24 hours before and continuing until 24 hours after the insult, significantly reduced neurologic abnormalities, Evans blue extravasation, water content in the injured gray matter, and intracranial pressure without affecting water content in the white matter. Intravenous dexamethasone pretreatment and posttreatment in this setting significantly reduced only neurologic abnormalities. However, there were no significant differences between intraperitoneal uridine 5'-diphosphate and intravenous dexamethasone effects on cold-injured brain.
Stroke 1989 Dec
PMID:Effect of uridine 5'-diphosphate on cryogenic brain edema in rabbits. 259 32

We investigated changes in the pulmonary carbon monoxide diffusing capacity (DLco) during the cold pressor test (CPT) on 25 normal subjects. In 10 of them we also observed changes in circulatory parameters by a computerized dual cadmium telluride detector system, using an equilibrium radionuclide blood-pool label. DLco and DLco per unit of alveolar volume (DLco/VA) averaged in the control period were 29.4 +/- 4.1 ml/min/mm Hg, 6.1 +/- 0.8 ml/min/mm Hg/l (mean +/- SD). During the 2nd minute of CPT, DLco increased by 3.6 +/- 1.5% and DLco/VA by 5.1 +/- 1.5% (mean +/- SE). The systemic blood pressure increased by 17% (mean increase) whereas the heart rate and the stroke volume remained unchanged. The increases were small but significant (p less than 0.05, p less than 0.01, respectively). We conclude that the increase in DLco is due to cold-induced systemic vasoconstriction followed by a passive shift of blood into the pulmonary vasculature.
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PMID:Effect of cold pressor test on carbon monoxide diffusing capacity in normal subjects. 260 71

The effects of pulmonary flush with cold cardioplegic solution were investigated in 55 patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting. Extracorporeal circulation with bicaval cannulation was used in all cases, and single-dose cardioplegic solution was injected into the aortic root. In one of two randomly selected groups (n = 27) the cardioplegic solution was allowed to pass through the lungs and then evacuated via a left ventricular vent. In a second group (n = 28) the vent was first temporarily placed in the right atrium for evacuation of the cardioplegic solution, and the aortic root was vented later. Hemodynamic, metabolic, hematologic and radiographic changes were studied during the early postoperative period. No harmful effects of the pulmonary passage could be demonstrated. On the contrary, a protective effect was indicated, as the pulmonary vascular resistance index was reduced immediately and for 2 hours postoperatively. The ratio of left ventricular to right ventricular stroke work in the early postoperative period gave the same indication.
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PMID:Is cold, cardioplegic solution harmful to the lungs? 261 43

In this study, peripheral circulatory responses during dental treatment under local anesthesia were observed. Changes in hemodynamics data, ECG, systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), digital and ear-lobe plethysmogram (PT), and radials and external carotid artery ultrasonic doppler blood flow (FW) were recorded by means of a multipurpose monitoring system. An improved fixed probe was devised for the purpose of stabilizing the external carotid artery FW record, and the ear-piece facebow system (Hanau, No. 153) was remodeled. Radial FW index D/S1 and external carotid FW index d/S1 were analyzed to determine systolic velocity S1 and diastolic velocity D or d. Pressure tests and cold stimulation tests were performed as fundamental research. Comparative investigations were made of changes in PT and FW in the light of SBP, DBP and heart rate (HR). A total of 71 instances of dental treatment was performed on 25 non-hypertensive patients (N-HT) and 25 patients with essential hypertension (HT). The patients were divided into 2 groups according to the local anesthetic employed: the E group, to whom 1:80,000 epinephrine with an addition of 2% lidocaine was administered, and the NE group, to whom 1:25,000 norepinephrine was administered. Results and conclusions 1. When peripheral blood flow was interrupted during the pressure test, digital PT and radial FW were disappeared. 2. Digital PT, radial diastolic FW D, and index D/S1 decreased greatly as a result of the cold stimulation test. It was suggested that changes in digital PT accord with the diastolic velocity D of radial FW. 3. At the stage of local anesthesia, SBP rose most in the HT-NE group. There was a tendency for digital PT and radial FW D either to decrease or to increase. It was assumed that cardio-stroke volume increased when PT and FW increased. Decreases in digital PT and radial FW apparently indicate increased capillary resistance. 4. Greatest increases in HR at the stage of local anesthesia occurred in the N-HT-E group. Digital PT and radial FW D tended to decrease. In cases of increased HR, PT and FW tended to decrease. In comparison with conditions immediately before treatment, digital PT and radial FW D decreased more in the N-HT group than in the HT group.
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PMID:[Peripheral circulatory responses during dental treatment under local anesthesia. Comparison between plethysmogram and ultrasonic Doppler blood flow]. 262 88

Activated leukocytes release oxygen free radicals and cause microvascular occlusion. This experiment tests the hypothesis that reperfusion with leukocyte-depleted blood reduces injury after extended ischemic preservation. An in vitro model consisting of an isolated, working neonatal piglet heart and an adolescent support pig was used. Hearts were arrested with a cold crystalloid cardioplegic solution, excised, and stored in 4 degrees C saline for 12 hours. Two groups were compared. In group 1 piglets (n = 8), reperfused with whole blood, the maximum stroke work index was 0.91 +/- 0.29 x 10(3) erg/gm (mean +/- standard error of the mean). Group 2 piglets (n = 6), reperfused with blood depleted of leukocytes by a polyester filter, had a maximum stroke work index of 11.6 +/- 1.0 x 10(3) erg/gm. This difference was highly significant (p less than 0.0001). Group 1 exhibited severe injury with myofibrillar necrosis, mitochondrial disruption, nuclear chromatin clumping, and moderate interstitial edema. Group 2 had normal ultrastructure on electron microscopic examination. We conclude that reperfusion with leukocyte-depleted blood prevents reperfusion injury and results in excellent myocardial function after long-term heart preservation.
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PMID:Prevention of reperfusion injury in the neonatal heart with leukocyte-depleted blood. 270 58

Nine men were subjected to four temperature exposures: (A) sauna and head-out ice water immersion; (B) sauna and 15 degrees C shower; (C) sauna and room temperature; (D) head-out ice water immersion and room temperature. Exposures were repeated and ended with a 30-minute recovery. Heart rates were recorded continuously and blood pressures were determined six times during each experiment. Rate pressure products and indications of cardiac stroke work were calculated from the data. The results demonstrated decreased total peripheral resistance (TPR) to the blood flow in response to the heat of the sauna (C), with concurrent increase in cardiac oxygen demand and negligible increase in the stroke work. Cold exposures (D) increased the TPR. Cold did not increase the cardiac oxygen demand but increased the stroke work. The alternation of heat and cold (A) or cool (B) presented the most intensive strain on the heart.
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PMID:Sauna, shower, and ice water immersion. Physiological responses to brief exposures to heat, cool, and cold. Part II. Circulation. 273 2

To evaluate intraoperative changes in myocardial performance during valvular operations, ventricular functional measurements were obtained in 16 patients before and after elective cardiac valvular replacement. Six patients had mitral regurgitation, four had mitral stenosis, and six had calcific aortic stenosis; all patients underwent isolated mitral or aortic valve replacement. Cold potassium crystalloid cardioplegia, topical hypothermia, and low-flow systemic hypothermia were employed uniformly. Just before and 10 minutes after cardiopulmonary bypass was discontinued, left ventricular pressure and volume data were recorded at four to five different steady-state levels of filling produced by blood infusion or withdrawal from the aortic cannula (mean end-diastolic pressure range, 10-22 mm Hg; mean end-diastolic volume range, 120-168 ml). Portable first-pass radionuclide ventriculography and simultaneous micromanometry were used for construction of left ventricular pressure-volume loops from which stroke work and end-diastolic volume were calculated. Two-dimensional transesophageal echocardiograms also were recorded, and epicardial pacing maintained heart rate as constant as possible. As compared with prebypass measurements, echocardiographic left ventricular wall volume changed insignificantly after the valvular procedures (178-181 ml/m2, p greater than 0.5). The stroke work-end-diastolic volume relationship before and after operation was highly linear in all studies (mean = 0.97). The slope and x intercept of this relationship did not change significantly after operation, indicating a stable level of left ventricular function (from 12.7 x 10(4) to 10.0 x 10(4) ergs/ml and from 67 to 57 ml, respectively; p greater than 0.3).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Assessment of left ventricular functional preservation during isolated cardiac valve operations. 280 86

Eighty consecutive patients receiving maximum inotropic and intraaortic balloon support underwent emergency coronary artery bypass grafting 3.4 +/- 1 days (mean +/- standard error) after infarction for severe left ventricular power failure (stroke work index less than 25 gm-m, left atrial pressure greater than 20 mm Hg). All underwent induction of cardioplegia with a 37 degrees C glutamate/aspartate blood cardioplegic solution, multidose cold (4 degrees C) replenishment, and warm reperfusate. Viable areas were grafted first to ensure cardioplegic distribution. Left ventricular power failure was reversed in 94% of patients; 75 of 80 patients had discontinuation of inotropic drugs and intraaortic balloon support. The early mortality rate (less than 30 days) was only 7% (3/45) with early operation (less than 18 hours) and rose to 31% (11/35, p less than 0.05) if operation was delayed more than 18 hours. Six of 14 early deaths were due to progression of preoperative organ failure despite reversal of shock. Eighteen of 66 early survivors died of end-stage heart failure (21/80), a 26% late mortality rate. Nonsurvivors (early and late) had a higher incidence of extending versus evolving infarction (33/64 versus 2/16, p less than 0.05), a longer delay from shock to operation (11/45 versus 24/35, p less than 0.05), more preoperative organ failure (9/9 versus 26/71, p less than 0.05), and a greater incidence of previous infarction (22/43 versus 13/37, p greater than 0.05). Thirty of 45 late survivors (67%) remain physically active. We conclude that left ventricular power failure should be considered a medical/surgical emergency that necessitates prompt angiography and can be reversed in selected patients. Postoperative mortality (early and late) is due principally to delay of operation leading to progression of preoperative organ failure or progression of underlying cardiac disease if infarction becomes established.
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PMID:Studies on prolonged acute regional ischemia. VI. Myocardial infarction with left ventricular power failure: a medical/surgical emergency requiring urgent revascularization with maximal protection of remote muscle. 281 6

Clinical observations of the apparent clustering of daily stroke admissions to a regional hospital in an arid climate prompted our investigation of possible meteorologic factors associated with stroke admissions. Daily hospitalization and meteorologic data were studied for 895 patients with stroke admitted to Soroka Medical Center, Beer-Sheva, Israel, during 1981, 1982, and 1983. The average daily incidence of stroke was about twice as great on relatively warm days as on relatively cold ones. This increase may be explained by increases in thromboembolic mechanisms secondary to physiologic changes in response to heat. When heat waves are predicted, information on the added risk for stroke needs to be disseminated to both the population and to health care providers so preventive measures can be instituted. Special attention should be devoted to air conditioning and adequate consumption of liquids, and antiplatelet aggregation medication such as aspirin should be considered.
Stroke 1989 Jan
PMID:Clustering of strokes in association with meteorologic factors in the Negev Desert of Israel: 1981-1983. 291 37

The intention of the present study was to characterize patients with central post-stroke pain (CPSP) with regard to type and location of the cerebrovascular lesion (CVL), the characteristics of the pain and the neurological symptoms and signs in addition to the pain. Twenty men and 7 women with a mean age of 67 years and a mean pain duration of 44 months were examined 9-188 (mean 53) months after their stroke. The clinical symptoms and signs and the CT scans indicated that the CVL were located in the lower brain-stem in 8 patients, involved the thalamus in 9 patients and were located lateral and superior to the thalamus in 6 patients. In the remaining 4 patients the location of the CVL could not be determined with certainty. The 3 identified hematomata were all located in the thalamus. The onset of the pain was immediate in 4 patients, within the first post-stroke months in 10 patients and delayed by 1-34 months in the rest. The pain was on the left side in 18 patients. Twenty patients had hemipain. Most patients experienced more than one type of pain. The most common qualities were burning, aching, pricking and lacerating, with some differences in the frequencies according to the location of the CVL. Burning pain was most common, except among the patients with thalamic CVL, in whom lacerating pain was more common. Aching and pricking pain were also frequent. All patients considered the pain to be a great burden and most rated the pain intensity as high on a visual analogue scale. The intensity was increased by external stimuli, the most common being joint movements, cold and light touch. Five patients reported aggravation by emotional stimuli. Besides pain, the only neurological symptom common to all patients was decreased temperature sensibility, as shown by quantitative methods. It is possible that pain sensibility was also abnormal in all. Hypersensitivities to cutaneous stimuli, including evoked dysesthesias were found in 88% of the patients, while the detection thresholds for touch and vibration were abnormal in only 52% and 41%, respectively. Similarly, low figures were found for paresis and ataxia, which were present in 48% and 62%, respectively. It is concluded that only a minority of patients with central pain after stroke have thalamic lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Central post-stroke pain--neurological symptoms and pain characteristics. 291 91


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