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

Using the 10-item Spielberger Trait Anger Scale, the authors interviewed 145 patients with stroke regarding inability to control anger or aggression (ICAA). Poststroke depression and emotional incontinence were also assessed. ICAA was present in 47 patients (32%) and was closely related to motor dysfunction, dysarthria, emotional incontinence, and lesions affecting frontal-lenticulocapsular-pontine base areas. ICAA seems to be one of the major behavioral symptoms in patients with stroke.
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PMID:Inability to control anger or aggression after stroke. 1194 Jul 3

There is increasing evidence that environmental and neuropharmacologic treatments enhance stroke recovery. Functional magnetic resonance imaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation have significantly broadened our understanding of the neuroanatomic relationships involved in recovery from brain injury due to stroke. These tools have also demonstrated the role for pharmacologic enhancement of cortical plasticity coupled with behavioral interventions. Robot-assisted therapy and partial body weight-supported treadmill gait training have demonstrated the role for technologic intervention in the modern neuro-rehabilitation setting. Current research using hemi-field ocular prisms and patching techniques suggest a role in the rehabilitation of hemianopsia and visual neglect. Finally, many advances have been made in the understanding of common stroke complications, such as depression, dysphagia, venous thromboembolic disease, incontinence, and spasticity.
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PMID:New developments in stroke rehabilitation. 1205 78

Although post-stroke emotional incontinence (EI) often occurs after lenticulocapsular strokes, what factors determine the development of EI in these patients has not been identified. I prospectively studied the development of EI in 25 patients (13 men and 12 women, mean age 58.5 years) with single, unilateral, first-ever stroke (24 infarcts and one hemorrhage) of < or = 2 cm in diameter at 2-6 months after the stroke. The patients with major depression were excluded. The lesion location was analysed by CT and/or MRI. The results showed that 13 patients (52 %) had post-stroke EI. The presence of EI was not related to age, gender, the presence of motor or sensory dysfunction, Barthel index score or the size and the laterality of the lesion. Among the lesions involving mainly the globus pallidus, dorsally located lesions were more often associated with EI than ventrally located ones. I conclude that EI is frequent in the patients with small lenticulocapsular stroke, more often associated with the lesions affecting the dorsal than the ventral part of the globus pallidus. The findings appear to be consistent with alleged chemical neuroanatomy that serotonergic fibers are particularly abundant in the internal globus pallidus.
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PMID:Post-stroke emotional incontinence after small lenticulocapsular stroke: correlation with lesion location. 1214 Jun 60

Studies have shown significant variation in stroke case fatality across Europe. These variations suggest the need to explore whether differences in physiological support in acute stroke exist across Europe. Data were collected in four European centres over 6 months. These included clinical status and management of acute physiology (hydration, oxygenation, nutrition, hypertension, hyperglycaemia and temperature in the first week of ischaemic stroke) and survival at 3 months. Differences in acute supportive care between centres were adjusted for case mix. Patients admitted to centres in London (n = 106), Dijon (n = 95), Erlangen (n = 91) and Warsaw (n = 72) were studied. There were significant differences in incontinence, dysphasia, dysphagia, conscious level, pyrexia, hyperglycaemia and comorbidity between centres. After adjusting for case mix, there were significant differences in intravenous fluid use (P = 0.04), enteral feeding (P = 0.003), initiation of new antihypertensive therapy (P = 0.0006) and insulin therapy (P = 0.004) between centres, with the London centre having the lowest uptake of interventions. Three-month case fatality rates varied from 10 to 28%. This pilot study shows significant variation in acute physiological support in acute stroke across four European centres, which remains unexplained by case mix. Further research is required to link variation in acute care with stroke outcome, to identify which interventions appear to be the most effective.
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PMID:Variation in the management of acute physiological parameters after ischaemic stroke: a European perspective. 1253 89

Economic restructuring in the health services industry in the USA exemplifies general patterns of economic change propelled by neoliberalism, especially industry privatization, diminished social services, and dependence on "flexible" labor and management regimes. Combined with the widespread entry of women into the labor force, an aging population, and minimal assistance for high quality long-term care at the end of life, these economic and social conditions raise a set of difficult policy questions for health services planning. Set in these broad contexts, this paper situates access to and experience of health services in the home, the hospital, and nursing facility, to demonstrate how economic changes have relocated and redefined health services in ways that distinctively impact how people experience the places where they receive care. This place switching of health services externalizes costs of subacute and "daily life care" (the so-called custodial care) to the sphere of the individual, their family, and communities. The theoretical analysis uses current geographical and philosophical approaches to place and space, and considers the tensions between institutionally managed health care space, and the patient's experience of receiving health services in place. The place/space dilemma of health services provision is examined through several interrelated subjects: long-term care at the end of life, gendered characteristics of care giving, the limitations of Medicare and Medicaid, historical changes in hospital length of stay, the restructuring of nursing practices, and the "no-care zone". The analysis is based on examples of stroke and incontinence care to demonstrate the importance of considering place and space issues in health care planning.
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PMID:From home to hospital and back again: economic restructuring, end of life, and the gendered problems of place-switching health services. 1271 82

Of the many people who experience a stroke each year, a significant proportion experience urinary incontinence as a consequence. This article considers the causes of incontinence following a stroke and the impact this has on the individual. The practice of assessing and promoting continence is then examined, together with the management of incontinence in these patients.
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PMID:Urinary continence after a cerebrovascular accident. 1283 34

The high rates of hospitalization in nursing home residents are as well known as the hazards of in-hospital treatment especially in this group of frail older people. Moreover, hospital admissions cause considerable costs. The objective of the study was to analyze why nursing home residents are admitted for in-hospital geriatric care, and to form hypotheses of how to prevent these admissions without loss of quality of care. Reason of admission, comorbidity, competence and length of in-hospital stay were assessed in all nursing home residents referred to the Geriatric Centre at the University Hospital of Heidelberg over 12 months. There were 245 admissions of 231 nursing home residents (83.1% female; age 84.2 +/- 7.10 years). Comorbidity was substantial (77% urinary incontinence, 69% dementia, 40% stool incontinence, 22% pressure ulcers), and 56% of residents needed assistance in using the toilet before admission. Mean length of in-hospital stay was 32.6 days (median 29 days). Out of a total amount of 7983 days of in-hospital care, 3627 (45%) were caused by falls and fractures, 2039 (26%) by cardiovascular events (mainly ischemic stroke), 835 (11%) by infections and 495 (6%) by problems concerning nutrition. Most of the leading causes of admission of nursing home residents to in-hospital geriatric care might be affected by improvements in nursing home care. Thus, data suggest that hospitalization rates might be substantially reduced by targeted prevention and therapy as well as by structural measures to improve case management in the nursing homes. Such interventions should be developed and proved in controlled studies.
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PMID:[Causes for in-hospital treatment of nursing home residents]. 1293 32

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of pelvic floor muscle training in women with urinary incontinence after ischemic stroke measured by quality of life (QoL) parameters. Three hundred thirty-nine medical records of stroke patients were searched. Twenty-six subjects were randomised to a Treatment Group or a Control Group in a single blinded, randomised study design. The intervention included 12 weeks of standardised pelvic floor muscle training. The outcome was measured by the Short Form 36 (SF-36) Health Survey Questionnaire and The Incontinence Impact Questionnaire (IIQ). Twenty-four subjects completed the study. The SF-36 and IIQ did not show significant difference between the two groups. Despite the high prevalence of stroke with urinary incontinence, it is difficult to include these patients in such studies. The samples were too small to detect any significant differences. Development of specific instruments for QoL in stroke patients with urinary incontinence can be recommended.
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PMID:Can quality of life be improved by pelvic floor muscle training in women with urinary incontinence after ischemic stroke? A randomised, controlled and blinded study. 1501 39

Vascular parkinsonism has not been well defined and the clinical correlation of vascular parkinsonism is still not clear. The aim of the study was to estimate prevalence of occurrence of vascular parkinsonism, analysis of risk factors leading to its development and to identify clinical features that suggest a vascular origin. 214 patients with Parkinson's disease were examined. Their ages ranged from 37 to 88 years (median 66.4 years). Evidence of vascular parkinsonism was assessed using a vascular rating scale previously described by Winikates and Jankovic. Statistical analysis was performed with Mann-Whitney U test, chi 2 Pearson test, chi 2 Yates test, Spearman rank correlation and Student's t test. Out of 214 patients 8 were proved to have developed Parkinson's disease due to vascular disease, what gave 3.74%. Out of risk factors for stroke 5 patients had hypertension, 3 had diabetes mellitus, 2 suffered from heart disease, 2 had infarctus myocardii, 1 had hyperlipidemia, 1 had atrial fibrillation. Additionally, those patients had neuroimaging (CT or MRI) evidence of vascular disease in one or more vascular territories. Patients with vascular parkinsonism were older, had shorter duration of disease, were more likely to present rigidity rather than tremor. Dementia and incontinence were more common in vascular group than in Parkinson's disease group. Patients with vascular parkinsonism were also significantly more likely to have corticospinal findings. Proving that Parkinson's disease had vascular etiology is extremely difficult. The test results are inconclusive.
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PMID:[Clinical correlation of vascular parkinsonism]. 1509 42

Of the few studies published on poststroke emotional incontinence (PSEI), none has investigated a consecutive stroke cohort in a Chinese patient population. The objective of this study was to examine the frequency and the clinical and radiological correlates of PSEI in Chinese stroke patients in Hong Kong. Three months after their admission, a psychiatrist interviewed 127 stroke patients who were consecutively admitted to the medical wards of a university-affiliated regional hospital. The presence of PSEI was defined according to both Kim's and House's criteria. The frequency of PSEI was 17.9% according to Kim's criteria and 6.3% according to House's criteria. The kappa between the two sets of criteria was 0.34. Univariate analysis found that PSEI was associated with a younger age, previous history of depression, a higher National Institute of Health Stroke Scale total score and cortical infarcts. Multivariate logistic regression suggested that past history of depression and cortical infarcts were independent predictors for PSEI. In conclusion, PSEI is relatively common among Chinese stroke survivors. A previous history of depression or cortical lesions were independent predictors for PSEI. There is a need for a revision of the diagnostic criteria for PSEI.
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PMID:Emotional incontinence in Chinese stroke patients--diagnosis, frequency, and clinical and radiological correlates. 1525 91


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