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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report the case of a 20-year-old woman who presented with pure motor hemiparesis due to a deep hemispheric infarction after delivery of twins followed by marked blood loss and anemia. Echocardiography revealed
mitral valve prolapse
, which was regarded as the main determinant of her
stroke
, since detailed clinical and instrumental evaluation disclosed no other apparent causes. Careful analysis of predisposing factors is warranted in lacunar strokes, particularly if they occur in young patients.
...
PMID:Lacunar infarction in a puerpera with mitral valve prolapse. 321 53
In spite of two decades of research, the precise relationship of anatomic
mitral valve prolapse
(floppy valve) to the neuroendocrine disorder (
MVP
syndrome) remains unclear. In all likelihood they are two separate genetic disorders which travel together in some fashion.
Mitral valve prolapse
is a common disorder but progressive mitral regurgitation usually occurs late in life and in only a few patients. Other complications such as bacterial endocarditis,
stroke
, and sudden death are far less common but can occur at younger ages. The neuroendocrine syndrome in civilian life is mainly seen in young females (interestingly the peak incidence years correspond to peak female sex hormone output) but can be seen in males when subjected to unusual stress such as military service. More recent echocardiographic studies have questioned whether all prolapsing valves are truly abnormal. It has been shown that echographic prolapse can be produced in normal subjects by reducing venous return and impaired venous return may be present in some patients with the
MVP
syndrome. However, clicks and murmurs are apparently not heard when normal valves prolapse. It is our opinion that the presence of a click or typical murmur requires some anatomic abnormality of the mitral valve. One wonders if minimal valve abnormality (noted and dismissed by Davies) is the valve abnormality present in many young females with
MVP
syndrome, and that it may remain a mild abnormality throughout life. Recent psychiatric studies suggest that
MVP
is present in 30% of patients with Panic Disorder. It is not clear that this psychiatric syndrome is the same thing as the
MVP
syndrome. In Devereux's study, anxiety proneness was no different in the
MVP
cohort than in relatives without
MVP
. It is possible that diagnostic mixing of two similar but separate disorders has occurred, as has been the case since World War I. Perhaps the most important question is whether young patients with
MVP
syndrome and no echocardiographic criteria for "floppiness" will develop progressive mitral regurgitation or other complications in later life. In other words, how often is
MVP
syndrome in a young individual without echocardiographic evidence of a floppy valve a precourser to eventual progressive mitral regurgitation? Are there two different populations? Because of the long course of the disorder, several more years of observation (and, it is hoped, prospective longitudinal study) will be required to answer this question.
...
PMID:The mitral valve prolapse epidemic: fact or fiction. 330 18
In the past 20 years treatment appears to have had a major impact on all forms of cerebral vascular disease. Morbidity and mortality from strokes have declined nearly 50% in developed countries. Modern imaging techniques, methodology, and biostatistics have identified risk factors and refined clinical trials such that we question all previous studies of
stroke
management. Control of moderate and severe hypertension has significantly lowered
stroke
rates. In borderline and mild hypertension the decision to treat is influenced by other
stroke
risk factors including diabetes mellitus, cigarette smoking, ischaemic heart disease, plasma lipid levels, gout, haematocrit, and body weight. Current data indicate that anticoagulants are of no value, or hazardous, in atherothrombotic strokes; of unknown value in transient ischaemic attacks; of dubious value in evolving strokes; and beneficial in cardiac embolism. The cardiac causes, including mural thrombus, unstable arrhythmias, and
mitral valve prolapse
should be actively sought. Aspirin, as the prototype anti-platelet agent, holds promise in transient ischemic attacks and minor strokes at both small and moderate dosages. Ticlopine is now being critically evaluated in America. Use of cerebral vasodilators should be abandoned. Enthusiasm in the use of streptokinase and urokinase has been dampened by the conversion of ischemic infarcts into haemorrhagic infarcts. In subarachnoid haemorrhage epsilon-aminocaprioc acid is useful although hazardous, in preventing rebleeding. Certain calcium ion channel blockers are promising in the reduction of vasopasm. Since the November 1985 article in the new England Journal of Medicine on the failure of external-to-internal carotid arterial bypass to reduce the risk of ischemic
stroke
, the swing is back to conservative management.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Advances in the medical management of cerebral vascular disease. 331 47
It is not easy to evaluate the prognosis of
mitral valve prolapse
. First of all, a positive diagnosis is difficult: the clinical insufficiencies are ill-compensated by sonocardiography as it is less reliable than expected; the very existence of the "mitral valve prolapse" described by Barlow is being challenged. Secondly, the most severe complications of mitral prolapse are rare, with respect to its frequency. Some complications are currently well defined. Thus, severe mitral insufficiency, leading to valve replacement, affects elderly men more than young women, although the pathological lesions correspond to the same disease. Endocarditis is rare and only occurs when there is an audible murmur. Rhythm disorders are varied, with however, frequent junction tachycardias and a marked influence of catecholamines, which may explain the clinical effectiveness of beta-blockers. Unfortunately, severe complications are not as well known. Thus, the risk of sudden death and
cerebral vascular accident
cannot be figured out from large statistical studies. Only studies of some so called "risk" sub-groups, should allow a better knowledge of these two complications and a more effective prevention.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of the prognosis of mitral valve prolapse]. 332 56
Twenty-two patients with acute migraine-associated
stroke
were prospectively evaluated; 91% were female, and 23% had a prior history of presumed migrainous
stroke
. The incidences of major
stroke
risk factors and
mitral valve prolapse
were no higher for the study group than for the general population of similar age. Computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, or radionucleotide scanning of the brain was performed on all patients, and demonstrated ischemic or hemorrhagic infarction in 12 (55%). Cerebral arteriography revealed abnormalities related to the acute
stroke
in five (42%) of 12 cases overall, and in four (67%) of six studies performed within 72 hours of
stroke
onset; one patient (8%) suffered significant complications from arteriography. Although a variety of processes, alone or in combination, may contribute to migrainous
stroke
, extracranial and/or intracranial vasospasm appears to play a major role in at least some cases.
...
PMID:Migrainous stroke. 261 Jul 74
Because the cause of
stroke
during migraine is not known, we studied 22 (17 females, 5 males; mean age, 32.7 years) classic migraine sufferers who had an ischemic
stroke
during an attack of migraine, with CT, Doppler ultrasound, cerebral angiography, and two-dimensional echocardiography. We found no cardiac or arterial lesion in 91% of the patients, as compared with 9% of age- and sex-matched migraineurs with
stroke
remote from a migraine attack and 18% of age- and sex-matched nonmigraineurs with
stroke
(p less than 0.00001).
Mitral valve prolapse
, arterial dissection, and vasospasm were not significant causes of
stroke
during migraine. These patients had longer previous attacks of migraine and their infarct was more frequently in the territory involved during the attacks than the controls, supporting the hypothesis that a prolongation of the migrainous process beyond usual limits may explain most migraine strokes.
...
PMID:Migraine stroke. 334 Feb 83
Using transesophageal echocardiography, cardiac structures can be imaged with high resolution. The aim of our study was to evaluate whether transesophageal echocardiography is superior in detecting
mitral valve prolapse
and other cardiac abnormalities compared with transthoracic echocardiography in an age-matched control group and in young patients with cerebral ischemic events (patient group). Forty patients with cerebral ischemic events (mean age 35.2 years) and 29 controls (mean age 30.4 years) were examined using both methods. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography showed a significantly higher incidence of
mitral valve prolapse
in the patient group compared with the control group (p less than 0.001). By means of transesophageal echocardiography, it was possible to measure highly significant bulging in both the anterior and the posterior mitral leaflet in the patient group compared with the control group (p less than 0.001), and the thickness of the mitral leaflets was significantly higher in the patient group. In 9 of 20 (45%) patients with normal transthoracic echocardiograms, transesophageal echocardiography showed pathologic findings. We found transesophageal echocardiography to be a sensitive method for detecting
mitral valve prolapse
as well as valve changes and other cardiac abnormalities not detectable by conventional echocardiography. Our study underlines the role of
mitral valve prolapse
in young
stroke
patients as a relevant risk factor and emphasizes the importance of changed mitral valve morphology.
Stroke
1988 Mar
PMID:Transesophageal two-dimensional echocardiography in young patients with cerebral ischemic events. 335 20
The cause of ischemic
stroke
in younger adults is undefined in as many as 35 percent of patients. We studied the prevalence of patent foramen ovale as detected by contrast echocardiography in a population of 60 adults under 55 years old with ischemic
stroke
and a normal cardiac examination. We compared the results with those in a control group of 100 patients. The prevalence of patent foramen ovale was significantly higher in the patients with
stroke
(40 percent) than in the control group (10 percent, P less than 0.001). Among the patients with
stroke
, the prevalence of patent foramen ovale was 21 percent in 19 patients with an identifiable cause of their
stroke
, 40 percent in 15 patients with no identifiable cause but a risk factor for
stroke
, such as
mitral valve prolapse
, migraine, or use of contraceptive agents, and 54 percent in 26 patients with no identifiable cause (P less than 0.10). These results suggest that because of the high prevalence of clinically latent venous thrombosis, paradoxical embolism through a patent foramen ovale may be responsible for
stroke
more often than is usually suspected.
...
PMID:Prevalence of patent foramen ovale in patients with stroke. 2096 23
We evaluated 36 patients with cerebral ischemia and
mitral valve prolapse
and compared them with 36 age-matched controls with cerebral ischemia who had similar attributes but who did not have
mitral valve prolapse
. Stepwise logistic regression analysis revealed an inverse relation between cerebral ischemia in the presence of
mitral valve prolapse
and hypertension, diabetes mellitus, occlusive cerebrovascular disease, and completed
stroke
at p less than 0.01. We also found, by correlation analysis, a negative correlation between both hypertension and diabetes mellitus versus
mitral valve prolapse
at p less than 0.05. Overall, 10 study patients compared with two control patients had no risk factors for cerebrovascular disease detected (chi 2 = 4.9, p less than 0.05). These data indicate that the association of
mitral valve prolapse
and cerebral ischemia is of special importance in patients who do not have other detected risk factors for cerebrovascular disease.
Stroke
1988 Apr
PMID:Cerebral ischemia and mitral valve prolapse: case-control study of associated factors. 336 72
Because the cause and prognosis of ischemic
stroke
in adults younger than 30 years of age are not known, we observed 41 such patients (26 females and 15 males) using a standard protocol of investigations, including cerebral angiography and echocardiography.
Mitral valve prolapse
and arterial dissection accounted for 51% of infarcts, migrainous infarction was the likely cause in 15% of infarcts, and uncommon causes accounted for 34% of infarcts. Atherosclerosis played a role in only two patients. Two thirds of the women were taking oral contraceptives, which may have been the primary cause of
stroke
in one woman who had recurrent venous thromboses followed by thrombosis of the aortic arch. Three patients (7.3%) died of acute causes. During follow-up (mean, 46 months), the annual incidence of death (0.7%) and recurrent
stroke
(0.7%) was low. Eighty-one percent of the survivors could return to work. We conclude that cerebral angiography and echocardiography are indicated in all adults younger than 30 years of age. After the acute phase of
stroke
, prognosis is reasonable.
...
PMID:Ischemic stroke in adults younger than 30 years of age. Cause and prognosis. 357 57
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