Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Drugs such as stimulants, sedatives, sleeping pills, and narcotics are associated with
drug abuse
and are therefore regulated by law. Physical dependence on these drugs is sometimes difficult to control despite an awareness of the problems they cause in daily life and the harm they can cause to the body. Drug dependence is a social problem worldwide, and the physical implications are serious. Many of these drugs cause cerebrovascular and cardiovascular diseases, which often require emergency medical treatment. Differential diagnosis is essential because of the likelihood of life-threatening events, especially among young people who exhibit cerebrovascular and cardiovascular diseases without any of the typical risk factors. Drugs of abuse, especially stimulants, induce a hyperadrenergic state that evokes vasoconstriction and tachycardia, as well as subsequent ischemic and hemorrhagic
stroke
, acute coronary syndrome, arrhythmias, and aortic dissection. Chronic drug abuse can also cause cardiac hypertrophy and left ventricular dysfunction. As a treatment for these conditions, sedative drugs can be effective but the use of vasodilators may also be required. There are concerns that the use of both alpha- and beta-adrenergic receptor blockers may cause tachycardia and increased blood pressure. Therefore, careful differential diagnosis and selection of therapeutic agents is required.
...
PMID:Cerebrovascular and cardiovascular diseases caused by drugs of abuse. 3180 94
For the first time in the history of the modern era smoking tobacco is not the most popular inhaled product. After a flurry of legislature, cannabis has come to the forefront of both medicinal and
recreational drug use
. A confluence of evidence suggests, however, that marijuana consumption may confer a particularly worrisome cardiovascular risk profile. While combustible forms still contain many of the same harmful chemicals found in tobacco such as aromatic amines, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and nitric oxide, some in even greater concentrations than tobacco, edible preparations have been evidenced to cause more cardiovascular-related emergency department visits. Importantly, this body of evidence suggests that cannabis use may be placing a younger, healthier population at risk of suffering major cardiovascular accidents particularly in the moments immediately following consumption. With males in their 30's apparently bearing the brunt of this burden, cannabis consumption has been associated with an increase in ischemic
stroke
-a blockage in the cerebral or cerebellar vasculature-and almost a fivefold increase in myocardial infarction. THC containing compounds have also been linked to vascular complications ranging from mild plaques to total arterial occlusion resulting in claudication, rest pain, ischemic ulceration and gangrene-recently termed cannabis arteritis. While this research remains in a nascent stage, marijuana consumption seems to be predisposing a youthful, traditionally low health risk cohort to a variety of major adverse cardiovascular events.
...
PMID:Reevaluating America's Latest Pharmaceutical Trend: The Cardiovascular Risk of Cannabis. 3278 22
Irrespective of the route of administration, heroin abuse is attributed to severe medical complications and a high risk for addiction. Complications of acute heroin insufflation vary greatly from epistaxis, anosmia, rhabdomyolysis,
stroke
, and transverse myelitis. Transverse myelitis is considered a rare but serious complication with associated long-term morbidity. Here we present a case of a 20-year-old male patient who presented with paraplegia hours after nasal insufflation of heroin, consuming Xanax, and smoking marijuana and was incidentally diagnosed with cervical transverse myelitis. Patients with a history of
drug abuse
who present with acute neurological symptoms such as limb paralysis, and reduced sensation, should raise concern for transverse myelitis. The clinical presentation of heroin associated myelopathy is equivocal and requires prompt recognition and treatment to minimizing long-term sequelae.
...
PMID:Acute cervical-transverse myelitis following intranasal insufflation of heroin. 3295 50
Substance use disorders-and their associated neurologic complications-are frequently encountered by neurologists as well as emergency room physicians, internists, psychiatrists, and medical intensivists. Prominent neurologic sequelae of
drug abuse
, such as seizure and
stroke
, are common and often result in patients receiving medical attention. However, less overt neurologic manifestations, such as dysautonomia and perceptual disturbances, may be initially misattributed to primary medical or psychiatric illness, respectively. This article focuses on the epidemiology, pharmacology, and complications associated with commonly used recreational drugs, including opioids, alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, and hallucinogens.
...
PMID:Neurotoxicology Syndromes Associated with Drugs of Abuse. 3304 Aug 73
Genome-wide association studies have identified putative ischemic
stroke
risk genes, yet, their expression after
stroke
is unexplored in spite of growing interest in elucidating their specific role and identifying candidate genes for
stroke
treatment. Thus, we took an exploratory approach to investigate sexual dimorphism, alternative splicing, and etiology in putative risk gene expression in blood following cardioembolic, atherosclerotic large vessel disease and small vessel disease/lacunar causes of ischemic
stroke
in each sex compared to controls. Whole transcriptome arrays assessed 71 putative
stroke
/vascular risk factor genes for blood RNA expression at gene-, exon-, and alternative splicing-levels. Male (
n
= 122) and female (
n
= 123)
stroke
and control volunteers from three university medical centers were matched for race, age, vascular risk factors, and blood draw time since
stroke
onset. Exclusion criteria included: previous
stroke
,
drug abuse
, subarachnoid or intracerebral hemorrhage, hemorrhagic transformation, infection, dialysis, cancer, hematological abnormalities, thrombolytics, anticoagulants or immunosuppressants. Significant differential gene expression (fold change > |1.2|,
p
< 0.05, partial correlation > |0.4|) and alternative splicing (false discovery rate
p
< 0.3) were assessed. At gene level, few were differentially expressed: ALDH2, ALOX5AP, F13A1, and IMPA2 (males, all
stroke
); ITGB3 (females, cardioembolic); ADD1 (males, atherosclerotic); F13A1, IMPA2 (males, lacunar); and WNK1 (females, lacunar). GP1BA and ITGA2B were alternatively spliced in both sexes (all patients vs. controls). Six genes in males, five in females, were alternatively spliced in all
stroke
compared to controls. Alternative splicing and exon-level analyses associated many genes with specific etiology in either sex. Of 71 genes, 70 had differential exon-level expression in
stroke
patients compared to control subjects. Among
stroke
patients, 24 genes represented by differentially expressed exons were male-specific, six were common between sexes, and two were female-specific. In lacunar
stroke
, expression of 19 differentially expressed exons representing six genes (ADD1, NINJ2, PCSK9, PEMT, SMARCA4, WNK1) decreased in males and increased in females. Results demonstrate alternative splicing and sexually dimorphic expression of most putative risk genes in
stroke
patients' blood. Since expression was also often cause-specific, sex, and etiology are factors to consider in
stroke
treatment trials and genetic association studies as society trends toward more personalized medicine.
...
PMID:Alternative Splicing of Putative Stroke/Vascular Risk Factor Genes Expressed in Blood Following Ischemic Stroke Is Sexually Dimorphic and Cause-Specific. 3319 47
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