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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the Western Hemisphere, prior to 1950, there were few reliable data on the incidence, geographic distribution or population patterns of diseases of the nervous system. Impressions of prevalence were generally derived from the European literature and from a variety of case reports and relative frequencies based on clinic or hospital admissions or selected autopsy series. Since such data from different sources generally defy comparison, it has been necessary to develop data sources for defined populations to provide incidence and prevalence rates. Such an effort, initially concerned with multiple sclerosis, was launched in 1950 by NIH. International mortality statistics were also collected and analyzed and intensive population surveys in the United States and Canada were planned and carried out. In time, such efforts were extended to cover a wide variety of other chronic and subacute diseases of the nervous system, and support was provided by NIH and voluntary agencies for studies in many other countries. Independently, population studies were developed at various Universities and health care facilities in Latin America. ISSSTE in Mexico City provided a broad experience on multiple sclerosis, ALS, epilepsy,
stroke
and brain tumor; studies developed in the West Indies on Jamaican Neuropathy; and there were studies in several countries on
cysticercosis
, Chagas' disease and epilepsy. Also notable are recent studies in Guatemala and plans for geographic comparisons over the broad range of latitude in Chile. The advantages and limitations of mortality statistics will be discussed. The priorities in the selection of the disorders which were to be studied, the procedures which were developed, and the highlights of the results of such investigations will be presented. In addition to descriptive population surveys, case control comparisons and prospective studies are also being developed which seek to identify the risk factors or etiologic determinants that may account for the population pattern which have been observed.
...
PMID:25 years of neuroepidemiology in the Americas. 35 5
The pretectal syndrome occurred in 2.3% of patients personally examined over an 18-year period. The symptoms were nonspecific, but the signs (abnormal pupils in 198 patients, vertical gaze limitation in 180, disjunctive horizontal eye position in 90 and vertical in 79, lid retraction in 83, and convergence-retraction nystagmus in 71) were exquisitely localizing. The etiology, skewed by the local prevalence of
cysticercosis
, was hydrocephalus in 80 patients,
stroke
in 53, and tumor in 45. The importance of timely diagnosis was underscored by the relatively good prognosis of many patients.
...
PMID:The pretectal syndrome: 206 patients. 232 Feb 46
Three patients with
cysticercosis
developed a cerebral infarct secondary to the occlusion of the middle cerebral artery or its major branches. Histopathologic examination revealed a large subarachnoid cysticercus surrounding the occluded arteries in two patients and diffuse thickening of the leptomeninges in one. Blood vessels around the parasite showed inflammatory changes that caused either occlusive endarteritis or thrombosis due to disruption of the endothelium.
Cysticercosis
should be considered as a cause of occlusion of the major intracranial vessels, particularly in young patients living in areas where this disease is endemic.
Stroke
1989 Aug
PMID:Occlusion of the middle cerebral artery due to cysticercotic angiitis. 275 43
Computed tomography was performed and risk factors evaluated in 100 consecutive adult patients presenting to the two teaching hospitals in Harare with a clinical diagnosis of
stroke
. The mean age of the patients was 52; only 28 were 65 or older. Non-
stroke
lesions were found in seven patients and were predicted by a recent history of convulsions (p less than 0.0001). Five lesions (four subdural haematomas and one cerebral
cysticercosis
) were remediable. Hypertension was present in 27 (93%) of the 29 patients with cerebral haemorrhage and in 49 (53%) of the 93 patients with
stroke
lesions. In 22 (45%) of these patients the hypertension had not been diagnosed, and another 22 had defaulted from treatment. All 13 patients who died before computed tomography had hypertension, and over half showed evidence of haemorrhagic
stroke
. There was a cardiac source for all 12 cases of cerebral embolism. In eight of the 100 patients cerebral infarction was attributed to neurosyphilis. None of the patients had clinical evidence of atherosclerosis. Smoking and oral contraceptives did not seem important risk factors for
stroke
. Detection and control of hypertension remain the most important measures needed to reduce the incidence of and mortality from
stroke
in Zimbabwe.
...
PMID:Strokes among black people in Harare, Zimbabwe: results of computed tomography and associated risk factors. 308 59
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples of 200 patients who presented central nervous system (CNS) pathologies were evaluated for antibodies to Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi). The evaluation was made through: complement fixation test (CFT) in 69 patients, indirect (IgG) immunofluorescence test (IFT) in 118, and by CFT and IFT in 13. In 50 cases the IFT has been made also in concentrated (20 X) CSF samples. Results were evaluated in report to CNS pathology, CSF cells and proteins, and tests in the CSF for other CNS infections (syphilis,
cysticercosis
, schistosomiasis, toxoplasmosis). These tests were based on techniques similar to those adopted for the search of antibodies to T. cruzi, and were conducted concomitantly to tests for T. cruzi in the same CSF sample for everyone of the cases. Antibodies to T. cruzi were found in three patients. The first was a patient committed by the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in whom there occurred exacerbation of the acute stage of Chagas' disease. The second is a patient who is committed by epilepsy, and an acute
stroke
occurred in the third patient: Chagas' disease had been previously diagnosed in them through the demonstration of antibodies to T. cruzi in the blood serum.
...
PMID:[Trypanosoma cruzi antibodies in the cerebrospinal fluid: a search using complement fixation and immunofluorescence reactions]. 314 89
A 49-year-old man with meningeal
cysticercosis
presented with a pure motor hemiparesis. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging showed a capsular infarction and a suprasellar cyst with surrounding arachnoiditis. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis confirmed the diagnosis as it showed positive immunologic reactions to cysticerci. This is the first reported case of pure motor hemiparesis due to a parasitic disease of the central nervous system.
Stroke
1988 Sep
PMID:Neurocysticercosis and pure motor hemiparesis. 341 14
The presented material comprised 17 cases observed in four Warsaw hospitals in a period of 20 years. Nine patients with the pseudotumour syndrome were diagnosed correctly and referred to neurosurgical services. The remaining eight cases died in neurological hospital departments with the following clinical diagnoses: cerebral
stroke
3, subarachnoid haemorrhage 1, comatose state preceded by dementia 1, chronic meningoencephalitis 1, status epilepticus 2 cases postmortem investigations demonstrated cerebral
cysticercosis
in all cases. In four patients with predominant symptoms of cerebrovascular disease lesions were found of the type of residual vasculitis cysticercosa, the sequelae of which might have caused secondary complications independent of concomitant arteriosclerosis. Dementia appeared in a patient with huge hydrocephalus consequent to numerous cysticerci. The patient with the diagnosis of meningoencephalitis had an inflammatory reaction of the ependyma and meninges caused by a cysticercus floating in the IV ventricle. Of the patients dying in status epilepticus attention is called to a 6-year-old girl with a solitary cysticercus localised subcortically in the motor area. The authors suggest that the possibility of
cysticercosis
should be kept in mind, despite its rarity, in cases with a not completely clear clinical manifestations of cerebrovascular disease, chronic meningoencephalitis and epilepsy or dementia.
...
PMID:[Neuropathologic analysis of 8 undiagnosed cases of cerebral cysticercosis]. 344 11
We reviewed the clinical features, diagnosis, and treatment in 127 cases of
cysticercosis
cerebri. The chief syndromes were seizures (55.1%), hydrocephalus (37.8%), and
stroke
(11.8%). Serum or CSF indirect hemagglutination titers, determined in 101 patients, were positive in 84.1% of those with CSF pleocytosis but in only 42.1% of those without. Computed tomography (CT), employed in 85 patients, showed typical multiple calcifications in 64.7%. The CT scans were most useful in the surgical treatment of ventriculomeningeal infestation. Ventricular shunt implantation was performed in 40 patients with hydrocephalus and produced marked improvement in 32. Cyst resection was necessary only for patients with rapidly enlarging fourth ventricle cysts.
...
PMID:Cysticercosis cerebri. Review of 127 cases. 711 41
Cysticercosis
is the most common parasitic disease affecting the central nervous system.
Stroke
is a recognized complication of neurocysticercosis, occurring in 2 to 12% of cases, mostly in the form of small lacunar infarcts. We report a case of hemiparesis and aphasia in a 51-year-old Hispanic woman, which was secondary to complete occlusion of the left internal carotid and bilateral anterior cerebral arteries. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated the presence of enhancing subarachnoid material surrounding these occluded cerebral arteries, providing antemortem, noninvasive documentation of the inflammatory meningeal cysticercotic reaction that was presumably responsible for the occlusive arteritis causing the cerebral infarction. This represents the third reported case of internal carotid artery occlusion and the first reported case of anterior cerebral artery occlusion secondary to neurocysticercosis.
...
PMID:Subarachnoid neurocysticercosis with occlusion of the major intracranial arteries: case report. 770 57
Cysticercosis
in one of the most common parasitoses in the world but is rare in France. This is the case of a thirty two years old man who had a
stroke
which revealed a neurocysticercosis, the diagnosis of which appeared on CT-scan. MR-imaging gave a more precise topographical diagnosis of the
cysticercosis
lesions and allowed a physiopathological understanding of the
stroke
. The ischemic lesion in the lenticulostriate territory was due to cysts in the sylvian fissure at the level of the beginning of those arteries with a perilesional inflammatory reaction. We learned the link between
cysticercosis
and
stroke
studing the cases reported in the literature.
...
PMID:[Neurocysticercosis disclosed by cerebrovascular complication]. 771 63
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