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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Though major differences exist in subcategory mortality levels, cardiovascular disease remains a leading cause of death among both Asian Chinese and Westerners. This paper examines the possible relationship between cardiovascular mortality and biochemical, diet and lifestyle factors based on two surveys in China. Statistically significant associations indicate five variables negatively correlated: molybdenum, oleic acid, liquor consumption (males), legumes, and age at first pregnancy with ischemic heart disease; molybdenum, oleic acid (females) and age at first pregnancy with hypertensive heart disease; and legumes and age at first pregnancy with
stroke
. Five variables were positively correlated: triglycerides and
herpes
antibodies with ischemic heart disease; salt and phosphorus (females) with hypertensive heart disease; and only albumin (males) with
stroke
. Some findings confirm those observed in the West (salt, triglycerides,
herpes
, legumes, oleic acid, and liquor), but molybdenum and age at first pregnancy have not been emphasized previously. Still others significant in the West have not been observed here, such as cholesterol and smoking.
...
PMID:Diet and blood nutrient correlations with ischemic heart, hypertensive heart, and stroke mortality in China. 134 47
Separated lymphoid cells from patients suffering from multiple sclerosis (MS) were co-cultivated with various cell lines. Over 80% of such co-cultivations showed destruction of the tissue-culture monolayers, whereas less than 5% of "normal" blood co-cultivation behaved in the same manner. Because of the possible involvement of virus in the aetiology of MS, many positive co-cultivations were 1) examined electron-microscopically, but no virus particles were seen; and 2) tested for measles and
herpes
viruses using immunofluorescent techniques, but these also proved negative. Leukocytes from
stroke
patients showed monolayer destruction in about 50% of cases. Granulocyte contamination was high in the
stroke
blood samples. Reduction of granulocyte numbers to "normal" levels completely abrogated the effect in the
stroke
samples, but had no effect on the MS co-cultivations. Monolayer destruction by MS leukocytes also appeared not to be due to lymphotoxin.
...
PMID:Monolayer destruction by leukocytes from patients with multiple sclerosis. 699 97
This article reports a man who had
herpes
varicella zoster cervicalis with delayed
stroke
in the posterior circulation. Empiric treatment was acyclovir, methylprednisolone, and aspirin. Pontine infarction involving migration of the virus via cervicovascular innervation from C2 dorsal root ganglia to the vertebrobasilar circulation with attendant angiitis/angiopathy and thrombosis is proposed.
...
PMID:Cervical (C2) herpes zoster infection followed by pontine infarction. 762 29
This article addresses syndromes that clinically and/or radiologically resemble acute
stroke
. These syndromes generally fall into four categories. (1) Patients with acute neurological deficits with nonischemic lesions and no acute abnormality on diffusion-weighted images. These patients may have peripheral vertigo, migraines, seizures, dementia, functional disorders, amyloid angiopathy, or metabolic disorders. When these patients present, we can confidently predict that they are not undergoing infarction. (2) Patients with ischemic lesions with reversible clinical deficits. Nearly 50% of patients with transient ischemic attacks have lesions with restricted diffusion. Patients with transient global amnesia may have punctate lesions with restricted diffusion in the medial hippocampus, parahippocampal gyms, and corpus callosum. (3) Vasogenic edema syndromes that may mimic acute infarction clinically and on conventional imaging. These include eclampsia/hypertensive encephalopathy, other posterior leukoencephalopathies, human immunodeficiency virus encephalopathy, hyperperfusion syndrome following carotid endarterectomy, venous sinus thrombosis, acute demyelination, and neoplasm. These syndromes demonstrate elevated diffusion rather than the restricted diffusion associated with acute ischemic
stroke
. (4) Entities in which restricted diffusion may resemble acute infarction. These include pyogenic infections,
herpes
virus encephalitis, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, diffuse axonal injury, tumors with dense cell packing, and rare acute demyelinative lesions.
...
PMID:Diffusion-weighted imaging as a problem-solving tool in the evaluation of patients with acute strokelike syndromes. 1114 28
Studies utilizing gene delivery to the nervous system indicate that various strategies are protective following acute neurological insults such as seizure and
stroke
. We have found that inhibitors of apoptosis are protective against excitotoxicity and heat stress but not energetic impairment in vitro. Here we studied the neuroprotective efficacy in vivo of these mediators: viral genes (crmA, p35, gamma34.5 KsBcl-2) that have evolved to suppress suicidal host responses to infection, by inhibiting apoptosis. We investigated these effects by utilizing modified
herpes
vectors to deliver the anti-apoptotic agents intracerebrally and examined them in the face of excitotoxic and metabolic insults. We found that p35 and gamma34.5 reduced by 45% a hippocampal CA3 lesion caused by kainic acid, while crmA and KsBcl-2 did not. None of the inhibitors protected the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus following 3-acetylpyridine, a hypoglycemia model, but we found crmA to worsen the damage. These data are similar to our results in neuronal cultures where the inhibitors protected against the excitotoxin domoic acid, but not against the metabolic poison, cyanide. Together, the results suggest that inhibitors of various apoptotic elements are capable of protecting under acute insult conditions both in vitro and in vivo, suggesting possible future therapeutic applications.
...
PMID:HSV-mediated delivery of virally derived anti-apoptotic genes protects the rat hippocampus from damage following excitotoxicity, but not metabolic disruption. 1185 25
The role of chronic infections in the initiation of atherosclerotic lesions has been vividly discussed in recent years. A possible causal relationship between cardiovascular diseases and infections with, e. g., Chlamydia pneumoniae, Helicobacter pylori, or
herpes
viruses had also been established for chronic periodontitis, in particular after discovery of DNA of typical periodontal pathogens in atheromatous plaques. Especially in longitudinal epidemiologic studies, a low or moderate association between existing periodontitis and the development of, e. g., coronary heart disease or non-haemorrhagic
stroke
had been observed. In this article the respective literature is critically reviewed. In particular, the influence of incomplete or inappropriate adjustment for common risk factors for both diseases, i. e., cardiovascular disease and periodontitis should be analysed. In metaanalyses of prospective studies, in which the respective endpoint occurred after the investigation had commenced, relative risks of periodontitis of 1.12 (95 % confidence interval 0.95-1.33) for coronary heart disease and 1.73 (0.89-3.34) for ischaemic
stroke
were calculated. Whether chronic periodontitis actually represents an important risk for the development of cardiovascular diseases remains questionable. Already planned intervention studies appear to be premature and ethically highly problematic.
...
PMID:[Does chronic periodontitis play a role in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases?]. 1190 48
Identification deficits were investigated in ELM, a temporal lobe
stroke
patient with category-specific deficits. We replicated previous work done on FS, a patient with category specific deficits as a result of
herpes
viral encephalitis. ELM was tested using novel, computer generated shapes that were paired with artifact labels. We paired semantically close or disparate labels to shapes and ELM attempted to learn these pairings. Overall, ELM's shape-label confusions were most detrimentally affected when we used labels that referred to objects that were visually and semantically close. However, as with FS, ELM had as many errors when shapes were paired with the labels "donut," "tire," and "washer" as he did when they were paired with visually and semantically close artifact labels. Two explanations are put forth to account for the anomalous performance by both patients on the triad of donut-tire-washer.
...
PMID:Not all triads are created equal: further support for the importance of visual and semantic proximity in object identification. 1203 May 3
The room tilt illusion is a transient misperception of the visual image as tilted on its side or even upside down; in this case it has been termed acute upside down reversal of vision. We report on two cases of room tilt illusion as manifestation of VIII nerve neuritis (
herpes
-zoster infection) and cerebellar hemorrhage. Room tilt illusion has been reported in association with vertebrobasilar
stroke
, migraine, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and labyrinthine disorders. The pathophysiology of this rare visual illusion has been related to a lesion of the visual or vestibulo-otolith pathways. In animals the neurones of the parieto-insular vestibular cortex areas are multisensory. So, they can respond to somatosensory, optokinetic and visual stimuli. In humans the knowledge about vestibular cortex function and localization is less precise than in animals. However, we propose a disorder of multisensorial vestibular cortex, resulting from a lession of vestibular pathways or association cortex, as mechanism of this phenomenon.
...
PMID:[Room tilt illusion: Report of two cases and terminological review]. 2116 31
Drug-induced hypersensitivity syndrome is an uncommon but potentially life-threatening idiosyncratic drug reaction. In the literature, about five cases have been reported concerning hypersensitivity syndrome with lamotrigine. Most cases concern aromatic anticonvulsants but we report a case induced by lamotrigine which is a non aromatic anticonvulsant. A 73-year-old man was treated with lamotrigine for epilepsy due to a cerebrovascular
stroke
for 5 weeks. After 2 weeks with a single oral dose of 50 mg lamotrigine, the patient received 100 mg. Quickly thereafter fever, erythema and edema involving the periorbital area appeared. He was then admitted to hospital and lamotrigine was immediately discontinued. He developed acute hepatic and renal failure. During his hospital stay, he was treated with systemic and topical corticosteroids. After slow improvement, he was discharged 4 weeks later. Concerning this typical case, we review the characteristics of hypersensitivity syndrome and the different etiopathogenesis. The hypersensitivity syndrome typically develops two to six weeks after a drug is first administered, later than most other serious skin reactions. This syndrome manifests as rash, fever, tender lymphadenopathy, hepatitis and eosinophilia. The mechanism of hypersensitivity syndrome is unknown. Several theories have been proposed. The reaction is secondary to circulating antibodies or concerns toxic metabolities. On the other hand, association of human
herpes
virus 6 infection may play a role in the development of hypersensitivity syndrome. Hypersensitivity reactions to the aromatic antiepileptic drugs appear to have an immune etiology much like lamotrigine: bioactivation, detoxification, covalent adduct formation, processing and presentation of antigen to the immune system, and consequent formation of antibody and T-cell immune effectors. Another theory involves toxic metabolites; the aromatic antiepileptic agents are metabolised by cytochrome P-450 to an arene oxide metabolite. This is normally detoxified by epoxide hydrolase. This enzyme may be lacking or mutated in persons that develop the syndrome, and this is genetically determined. Lamotrigine is mainly metabolised by hepatic glucuronidation, but hypersensitivity may involve similar processes such aromatic antiepileptic drugs, except that the toxic metabolite has not yet been found. Because of slow evolution and clinical similarity to many infectious illnesses, the diagnosis of hypersensitivity syndrome may be delayed. Prompt recognition and withdrawal of the suspected drug is essential. The goal of research is to describe a "susceptibility profile" identifying individuals at risk for these forms of drug toxicity.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of hypersensitivity syndrome to lamotrigine: review of one case reported in the Regional Center of Pharmacovigilance of Nantes]. 1242 44
The sulfonamides constitute an important class of drugs, with several types of pharmacological agents possessing antibacterial, anticarbonic anhydrase, diuretic, hypoglycemic, and antithyroid activity among others. A large number of structurally novel sulfonamide derivatives have ultimately been reported to show substantial protease inhibitory properties. Of particular interest are some metalloprotease inhibitors belonging to this class, which by inhibiting several matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) show interesting antitumor properties. Some of these compounds are currently being evaluated in clinical trials. The large number of sulfonamide MMP inhibitors ultimately reported also lead to the design of effective tumor necrosis factor-alpha converting enzyme (TACE) inhibitors, potentially useful in the treatment of inflammatory states of various types. Since both MMPs and TACE contribute synergistically to the pathophysiology of many diseases, such as arthritis, bacterial meningitis, tumor invasion; the dual inhibition of these enzymes emerged as an interesting target for the drug design of anticancer/antiinflammatory drugs, and many such sulfonamide derivatives were recently reported. Human neutrophyl elastase (HNE) inhibitors of the sulfonamide type may also be useful in the treatment of inflammatory conditions, such as emphysema, cystic fibrosis, chronic bronchitis, ischemia reperfusion injury, and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Inhibition of some cysteine proteases, such as several caspase and cathepsin isozymes, may lead to the development of pharmacological agents effective for the management of several diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease, brain damage, and
stroke
. Another research line that progressed much in the last time regards different sulfonamides with remarkable antiviral activity. Some clinically used HIV protease inhibitors (such as amprenavir) possess sulfonamide moieties in their molecules, which are critical for the potency of these drugs, as shown by means of X-ray crystallography, whereas a very large number of other derivatives are constantly being synthesized and evaluated in order to obtain compounds with lower toxicity or augmented activity against viruses resistant to the such first generation drugs. Other viral proteases, such as those isolated from several types of
herpes
viruses may be inhibited by sulfonamide derivatives, leading thus to more effective classes of antiviral drugs.
...
PMID:Protease inhibitors of the sulfonamide type: anticancer, antiinflammatory, and antiviral agents. 1278 86
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