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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 65-year-old man had four drop attacks in several days and then a fixed
stroke
with quadriplegia. At autopsy infarction in the lower pons and upper medulla affected principally the corticospinal tracts. Tegmental destruction included reticular formation nuclei with rostral projections, but spared the lateral reticular formation nuclei, from which arise the descending reticulospinal tracts. This case is the first detailed autopsy report of a patient with drop attacks, and supports the view that at least some drop attacks are caused by transient
ischemia
of the corticospinal tracts.
...
PMID:The pathology of drop attacks: a case report. 57 1
Twenty-seven patients undergoing open-heart surgery were divided into three groups, i.e., control, intermittent aortic crossclamping and coronary perfusion groups. Myocardial oxygen extraction, lactate extraction, arterial-coronary sinus hydrogen ion difference, potassium difference and glucose difference were determined during the operation, as well as, postoperative
stroke
and cardiac indices and comparisons were made. When the ascending aorta was not crossclamped, myocardial metabolism was well preserved during and after the perfusion at a flow rate of 2.0 L./min/m2. Intermittent aortic crossclamping for 15 minutes alternating with a period of perfusion for five minutes at 30 degrees C was sufficient to protect the myocardium from
ischemia
. Perfusion of the left coronary artery alone at a flow rate of six per cent of total body perfusion (150 to 200 ml per minute) at 30 degrees C was sufficient to protect the myocardium when the aorta was opened. Since intermittent perfusion of the left coronary artery may produce myocardial derangement, coronary perfusion should be continuous. Otherwise topical cardiac cooling or other means of myocardial protection should be used.
...
PMID:Myocardial protection during open-heart surgery: intermittent aortic crossclamping versus coronary perfusion. 60 90
A new method of determining the rate of glucose utilization in brain regions of individual rats has been used to measure the dose dependency of the reduction of the metabolic activity of the cerebral cortex by pentobarbital. Cerebral cortical glucose utilization is depressed to a basal level of 44% of the control rate when cerebral pentobarbital levels exceed 50 microgram per g of tissue. The major portion of this effect occurs between the cerebral pentobarbital range of 10--20 microgram per g, which can be achieved by 1/5 to 1/10 the normal anesthetic intraperitoneal dosage. If a depression of brain metabolism is responsible for the previously reported protection of the brain from ischemic damage, these data suggest a substantial reduction of brain metabolic rate is achieved in the rat at a barbiturate dosage which may be therapeutically relevant in the human after acute brain
ischemia
.
Stroke
PMID:Dose dependent reduction of glucose utilization by pentobarbital in rat brain. 62 38
A simple implanted device was used to occlude acutely the left middle cerebral artery (MCA) of 16 conscious cats. Eight received no treatment and 8 were given intravenous mannitol (1.2 gm/kg) at the time of occlusion. The initial neurological findings in both groups were similar, that is, agitation, forced circling, and right hemiparesis. The treated cats remained alert but the untreated cats became lethargic and drowsy. Perfusion with a mixture of colloidal carbon and buffered paraformaldehyde was carried out from 30 minutes to 6 hours following MCA occlusion. Results of morphological examination of brains from the treated and untreated groups suggested that mannitol had a protective effect upon cerebral tissue during the primary phase of acute focal
ischemia
. Light microscopic analysis of neuronal alterations demonstrated considerable preservation of neurons in brains of treated cats. Beneficial effect of mannitol was attributed partly to prevention of capillary narrowing and suppression of ischemic cerebral edema.
Stroke
PMID:Modification of acute focal ischemia by treatment with mannitol. 62 43
Dilated episcleral vessels associated with ipsilateral internal carotid artery occlusions have been previously reported though not widely appreciated. These ocular changes have been presumed to be manifestations of ocular
ischemia
. The authors have recently encountered this sign in seven patients and in none was there evidence of ocular
ischemia
. In addition to an ipsilateral internal carotid artery occlusion, arteriograms demonstrated that the major source of blood supply to the homolateral cerebral hemisphere was by retrograde flow through markedly enlarged ophthalmic arteries filled in retrograde fashion from dilated external carotid collateral channels in the orbit. This association of dilated episcleral arteries as a sign of increased orbital blood flow and the major source of collateral blood supply to the homolateral cerebral hemisphere has not been previously reported. We reemphasize the importance of a careful examination of the episcleral vessels in patients suspected of having internal carotid artery occlusions.
Stroke
PMID:Dilated episcleral arteries--a significant physical finding in assessment of patients with cerebrovascular insufficiency. 62 44
The reaction of brain parenchymal vessels in areas of no-reflow following
ischemia
in cats was evaluated. A method was devised by which brain biopsies following
ischemia
were quickly frozen at -170 degrees C, sections were cut and stained and vessel internal and external diameter measured. Vessels in the no-reflow areas had smaller internal and external diameters and thicker walls when compared to adjacent reflow areas as well as to normal control animals. By utilizing a 2-way analysis of variance in which reflow versus no-reflow vessel diameters were compared by region the differences were found to be statistically significant (p less than 0.05). The data raise the possibility that there may exist normal regional differences in the size of cerebral vessels.
Stroke
PMID:Vascular spasm in cat cerebral cortex following ischemia. 62 46
The effect of brief periods of regional
ischemia
upon left ventricular pump performance was studied in nine dogs standing quietly at rest and during running exercise on a treadmill. Transient occlusions of the left circumflex coronary artery resulted in increase in heart rate at rest (+30 beats/min) but not during exercise. Other changes due to occlusion were similar at rest and during exercise and included decreases in
stroke
volume (-25% standing, -23% running); in dP/dt max, the maximum first derivative of the left ventricular pressure (-20% standing or running); and in left ventricular peak systolic pressure (-13% standing, -21% running); and rises in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (+4.5 mmHg standing, +6.3 mmHg running). Cardiac output was unchanged by occlusions at rest but fell (-18%) during occlusions while the dogs were running. Propranolol reduced absolute levels of cardiac performance during exercise occlusions but had no effect at rest. Inotropic agents with
ischemia
had some effects at rest but did not alter exercise hemodynamics. It is concluded that integrated left ventricular function during
ischemia
is not impaired by exercise, probably because of beta-adrenergic stimulation of nonischemic myocardium.
...
PMID:Effect of regional myocardial ischemia on cardiac pump performance during exercise. 62 17
Hemodynamic and regional myocardial blood flow responses were studied 5 seconds (early) and 30 seconds (late) after abrupt proximal aortic constriction in chronically instrumented awake dogs. During the early phase, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) increased and
stroke
volume (SV) decreased significantly. During the late phase, there was a positive inotropic response manifested by a decrease in LVEDP and increase in SV (Anrep effect). The late inotropic response was closely associated with a recovery from subendocardial underperfusion. Hemodynamic and regional flow responses after beta-adrenergic blockade with propranolol (0.4 mg/kg) were similar to those observed during control. Studies during coronary vasodilation induced by adenosine (0.75--1.0 mg/kg per minute) showed that, if subendocardial flow was elevated during the early phase, the early increase of LVEDP and decrease of SV were less than control; however, if subendocardial flow did not change from control in the early phase and did not subsequently increase, there was no late inotropic response. These data suggest that the Anrep effect in the awake dog is closely related to a recovery from subendocardial
ischemia
.
...
PMID:Regional myocardial blood flow after sudden aortic constriction in awake dogs. 62 49
One hundred twenty-two carotid endarterectomies were done in 100 patients in various clinical states of occlusive disease (4 with asymptomatic bruit, 61 with transient
ischemia
attacks, 35 following
stroke
) with an overall operative mortality of 3.27%. The 4 deaths all occurred among patients who had existing deficits when operated on. Among 82 operations done for transient
ischemia
or asymptomatic bruit there were no deaths; 2 transient but no permanent deficits resulted. Surgical management is described. During long-term follow-up, 3 patients in the transient
ischemia
group acquired deficits (4.6%), but no strokes occurred among the patients with asymptomatic bruits. Six cerebral deaths are reported (both early and late); 5 of them occurred among poststroke patients and the sixth was related to an unoperated, diseased carotid artery.
...
PMID:Carotid endarterectomy: results in 100 patients. 62 33
Study of the blood platelet functional activity and intensity of hemolysis in 41 patients with transient disorders of cerebral circulation and comparison of the results with the corresponding indices in healthy individuals, in 40 patients with hypertensive disease free of crisis, and in 25 patients with cerebral atherosclerosis led to the conclusion that the character of cerebral
stroke
is already determined in the pre-
stroke
period. It depends on the functional state of the blood platelets in many respects. In patients with hypertensive disease in a period clear of crisis, for instance, there is a tendency towards hypoaggregation possible associated with the presence of latent hemolysis. Platelet hypofunction progresses in the period of hypertensive encephalopathy and still more during its transformation into hemorrhagic
stroke
. On the contrary, in patients with atherosclerosis but no symptoms of cerebral ischemia the adhesion-aggregation activity of the platelets does not differ essentially from that in healthy individuals. With the development of signs of
ischemia
of the brain, the platelet activity grows considerably, particularly when transient cerebral circulatory disorders transform into ischemic
stroke
.
...
PMID:[Importance of the thrombocytes and hemolytic syndrome in the pathogenesis of transient cerebral circulatory disorders in hypertension patients]. 63 13
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