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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Women's Health Initiative (WHI) hormone trials have been widely interpreted as demonstrating that combined menopausal hormone therapy (HT) fails to protect against-and may increase-cardiovascular disease (CVD),
stroke
, and dementia in menopausal women, regardless of whether initiated early in the menopause or later. This conclusion does not agree with results of large epidemiological studies showing protection by HT and by estrogen replacement alone (ET) against CVD and dementia. One possible reason for this inconsistency is that the epidemiologic data are confounded by "healthy user bias." Another possible explanation is that most women in the observational studies initiated ET or HT at or near the menopausal transition, at which point there is little or no arterial injury, whereas, in the WHI studies, older women, averaging approximately 12 years postmenopausal, many of whom would have had significant asymptomatic atherosclerosis, were treated. Substantial data demonstrate atheropreventive effects of estrogen before vascular damage occurs, whereas adverse effects of oral estrogen on thrombosis and inflammation may predominate once complex atheromas are present. Similarly, the excess of dementia observed in older WHI women treated with oral conjugated estrogen could be due to cerebral thromboses (
multi-infarct dementia
). Given the uncertain relevance of the WHI (and other published randomized clinical trials) to initiation of HT in perimenopausal women, and its subsequent continuation for atheroprevention, new trials will be needed to resolve whether early intervention with estrogen may prevent CVD and/or dementia. The Kronos Early Estrogen Prevention Study (KEEPS), which began in mid-2005, is a randomized, controlled multicenter trial of HT in recently menopausal women. It will examine surrogate end points as well as risk factors for atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Is the estrogen controversy over? Deconstructing the Women's Health Initiative study: a critical evaluation of the evidence. 1602 50
Vascular cognitive impairment, the recent modification of the terminology related to vascular burden of the brain, reflects the all-encompassing effects of vascular disease or lesions on cognition. It incorporates the complex interactions between vascular aetiologies, risk factors and cellular changes within the brain and cognition. The concept covers the frequent poststroke cognitive impairment and dementia, as well as cerebrovascular disease (CVD) as the second most common factor related to dementia. CVD as well as vascular risk factors including arterial hypertension, history of high cholesterol, diabetes or forms of heart disease are independently associated with an increased risk of cognitive impairment and dementia. Traditional vascular risk factors and
stroke
are also independent factors for the clinical presentation of Alzheimer's disease (AD). In addition to these vascular factors, CVD/strokes, infarcts and white-matter lesions may trigger and modify the progression of AD as the most common cause of neurodegenerative dementia. The main subtypes of previously defined vascular dementia (VaD) include the cortical VaD or
multi-infarct dementia
also referred as poststroke VaD, subcortical ischaemic vascular disease and dementia or small-vessel dementia and strategic-infarct dementia. Whilst CVD is preventable and treatable, it is clearly a major factor in the prevalence of cognitive impairment in the elderly worldwide.
...
PMID:Vascular cognitive deterioration and stroke. 1797 55
Vascular cognitive impairment (VCI) comprises a range of cognitive disorders related to cerebral vessel disease and has generally replaced the term
multi-infarct dementia
. Despite the heterogeneity of the VCI construct, some clinical patterns can be discerned, which enable subtypes, such as mixed dementia and VCI-no dementia, to be recognised. Diagnostic criteria for vascular dementia do not encompass the full range of the VCI construct, and clinical investigators now recognise the need for harmonised standards to study the many manifestations of VCI seen in daily practice and to inform the development of diagnostic criteria. Although executive dysfunction is a recognised feature of VCI, some data suggest a less exclusive role than was previously proposed. VCI might be preventable, although the evidence for this is not as complete as it is for the prevention of
stroke
. Future studies into specific therapies for VCI will need to consider the clinical features and outcomes carefully.
...
PMID:Vascular cognitive impairment: current concepts and clinical developments. 1827 26
Cerebrovascular accidents (CVAs) and
multi-infarct dementia
have rarely been reported as presenting symptoms of giant cell arteritis (GCA), although 3%-4% of patients with GCA may present with CVAs during the course of the disease. We describe 7 patients with biopsy-proven GCA who presented with
stroke
or
multi-infarct dementia
. Most of them had other symptoms of GCA when the disease began that were misdiagnosed or not noticed. The internal carotid arteries were involved in 4 patients and the vertebrobasilar arteries in 3, with bilateral vertebral artery occlusion in 1. Small cerebral infarction foci on cranial computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were found in 5 cases, and cerebellar infarction, in 2. MR angiography showed intracranial arteritis in 4 cases. Treatment with glucocorticoids and adjunctive antiplatelet or anticoagulant therapy was given in all cases, with neurologic improvement in 5. Two patients died. Necropsy demonstrated generalized GCA involving the medium and small cerebral vessels in 1 case. Central nervous system involvement is a rare complication in GCA but is important to recognize, as it can be reversible if diagnosed and treated promptly. Suspicion should arise in elderly patients suffering from strokes with a quickly progressing stepwise course and associated headache, fever, or inflammatory syndrome. In these cases, temporal artery biopsy should be performed without delay. Early diagnosis of GCA and immediate initiation of corticosteroid treatment may prevent progressive deterioration and death. Additional antiplatelet or anticoagulant therapy should be evaluated according to the individual risk and benefit to the patient under care.
...
PMID:Stroke and multi-infarct dementia as presenting symptoms of giant cell arteritis: report of 7 cases and review of the literature. 1901 5
Vascular cognitive impairment (VCI) is the modern term related to vascular burden of the brain,reflecting all encompassing effects of cerebrovascular disease (CVD) on cognition. VCI include all levels of cognitive decline from mild deficits in one or more cognitive domains to a broad dementia-like syndrome. VCI incorporates the complex interactions between vascular risk factors, CVD etiologies and cellular changes within the brain and cognition. Vascular risk factors towards VCI include,e.g. arterial hypertension, high cholesterol, and diabetes. VCI includes the common poststroke dementia and vascular dementia (VaD). The main subtypes of VaD include the cortical VaD or
multi-infarct dementia
also referred as poststroke VaD and subcortical ischemic vascular disease and dementia or small vessel dementia. Traditional vascular risk factors and
stroke
are also independent factors for the clinical presentation of Alzheimer's disease. In addition to these vascular factors, CVD/strokes, infarcts and white matter lesions may trigger and modify progression of Alzheimer's disease.Whilst CVD is preventable and treatable, it clearly is a major factor in the prevalence of cognitive impairment in the elderly worldwide.
...
PMID:The concept of vascular cognitive impairment. 1918 65
Vascular cognitive impairment (VCI) encompasses vascular dementia and is the second most common cause of dementing illness after Alzheimer's disease. The main causes of VCI are: cerebral small vessel disease;
multi-infarct dementia
; strategic infarct (i.e. located in a functionally-critical brain area); haemorrhage/microbleed; angiopathy (including cerebral amyloid angiopathy); severe hypoperfusion (e.g. cardiac arrhythmia); and hereditary vasculopathy (e.g. cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy, CADASIL). In this systematic analysis, we aimed to relate cognitive and neuropathological features of experimental models to clinical VCI. We extracted data from 107 studies covering 16 models. These included: brief global ischaemic insults (in rats, mice or gerbils); chronic global hypoperfusion (rats, mice, gerbils); chronic hypertension (in primates or
stroke
-prone, spontaneously-hypertensive rats); multiple ischaemic lesions because of intra-vascular emboli (in rodents, rabbits or primates); strategic ischaemic lesions (in rats or mini-pigs); generalised vasculopathies, because of mutant Notch3, hyperhomocysteinaemia, experimental diabetes mellitus or lack of cerebral vasodilator M(5) receptors (rats or mice). Most cognitive testing showed deficits in working and reference memory. The lesions observed were microinfarcts, diffuse white matter lesions, hippocampal neuronal death, focal ischaemic lesions and micro-haemorrhages. The most-used model was bilateral carotid artery occlusion in rats, leading to chronic hypoperfusion and white matter injury.
...
PMID:Experimental models of vascular dementia and vascular cognitive impairment: a systematic review. 2073 63
Although vascular dementia (VaD) represents the second most common cause of dementia after Alzheimer's disease (AD) in the elderly, and is referred as the "silent epidemic of the twenty-first century", there is still a controversy on terminology, classification and diagnostic criteria of VaD. The diagnosis of VaD resides in clinical criteria determining a cognitive impairment, the presence of cerebrovascular disease and, only in the case of post-
stroke
dementia or
multi-infarct dementia
, a temporal relationship between these. The search for a reliable biochemical tests helping in the diagnosis of VaD is so far not available. Several vascular risk factors have a role in the development of VaD and their identification and treatment are among the major aspects of management of VaD. A new line of research in this field is the study of genetic factors underlying vascular cognitive impairment which are: (1) genes predisposing to cerebrovascular disease, and (2) genes that influence brain tissue responses to cerebrovascular lesions. Evidence in favour of a coexistence of vascular and degenerative components in the pathogenesis of dementia in an elderly population comes from neuropathological and epidemiological studies. There is now a great debate whether VaD and AD are more than common coexisting unrelated pathologies and, instead, represent different results of synergistic pathological mechanisms. Preventive approaches aiming at reducing incident VaD by targeting patients at risk of cerebrovascular disease (primary prevention), or acting on patients after a
stroke
(secondary prevention) to prevent
stroke
recurrence and the progression of brain changes associated with cognitive impairment are mandatory therapeutic strategies.
...
PMID:Vascular cognitive disorder. A biological and clinical overview. 2112 67
Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is an autoimmune disease characterized by recurrent thrombotic events, miscarriages and thrombocytopenia with persistently positive antiphospholipid antibodies.( 1,2 ) APS may be isolated (primary APS) or associated to a connective tissue disease, most often systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).( 1,2 ) APS usually affects young patients before the fifth decade( 3 ) with
stroke
being the commonest neurological manifestation.( 4 ) Various other neurological manifestations are being recognized in patients with APS including migraine, epilepsy,
multi-infarct dementia
and chorea.( 2 ) The pathological process underlying the neurological manifestations remains obscure.( 1,2 ) Herein we report a case of primary APS presenting with a group of unusual neurological manifestations in a 68-year-old woman.
...
PMID:Primary antiphospholipid antibody syndrome presenting with encephalopathy, psychosis and seizures. 2176 80
Many cases of age-related cognitive dementia are caused by cerebrovascular lesions, and various vascular syndromes can lead to cognitive impairment and dementia. Repeated cortical infarcts due to embolic disease of the heart or major cerebral vessels can cause progressive deterioration towards dementia and incapacitation. In classic
multi-infarct dementia
, cognitive deterioration is stepwise rather than smoothly progressive. While diagnostic technologies have vastly improved and added to general knowledge of the pathology of cerebrovascular disease, MRI, PET, and transcranial Doppler scans have demonstrated that significant white matter change is possible without clinically recognized TIA or completed
stroke
. In addition, patients may have initial complaints that are not serious enough to produce changes on mental status examination. Many patients have mixed dementia, exhibiting aspects of both degenerative brain disease and clinical evidence of strokes or significant changes on MRI scan. The overlap between vascular and degenerative disease is significant, yet the exact interaction of the pathophysiology of the vascular lesions and the degenerative changes is not known. The treatment of vascular or mixed dementia involves control of the risk factors for continued vascular events and treatment with the cholinesterase inhibitors.
...
PMID:Vascular dementia. 2247 Feb 55
We describe an extraordinarily protracted case of varicella zoster virus (VZV) multifocal vasculopathy in a man who presented initially with ischemic optic neuropathy and then suffered 4 episodes of
stroke
manifesting as
multi-infarct dementia
over a 2-year period. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and angiography (MRA) revealed cortical and subcortical infarctions as well as vasculitic occlusion and stenosis. The patient was treated with corticosteroids and later with cyclophosphamide. More than 2 years after the onset of neurological disease, two cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examinations revealed the presence of anti-VZV IgG antibody with reduced serum-to-CSF ratios of anti-VZV IgG compared with ratios for total IgG and albumin, indicative of intrathecal synthesis of anti-VZV IgG. After definitive diagnosis, immunosuppressive drugs were discontinued and he was treated with intravenous acyclovir; both mental status and gait improved and no further episodes of neurological dysfunction ensued. The favorable outcome in this patient indicates that VZV vasculopathy can be treated successfully even after 26 months. VZV must be considered as a possible cause of neurological disease in any patient with idiopathic multifocal vasculopathy.
...
PMID:Varicella zoster virus vasculopathy: a treatable form of rapidly progressive multi-infarct dementia after 2 years' duration. 2293 6
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