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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
99mTc-HM-PAO was used to evaluate regional cerebral blood flow in a 26-year-old woman with
Moyamoya disease
. This patient had an 18-month history of recurrent neurologic deficits and had angiographic evidence of
Moyamoya disease
. She had used oral contraceptives and cigarettes, but had no other risk factors for
stroke
. Single photon emission computed tomographic images showed bilateral and asymmetric reductions in blood flow to anterior and lateral brain regions. These findings correlated better with clinical symptomatology and suggested more extensive brain involvement than did computed tomography.
...
PMID:SPECT imaging of moyamoya disease using 99mTc-HM-PAO. Comparison with computed tomography findings. 326 30
Cerebral rCBF, rOEF, rCMRO2, and rCBV in
moyamoya
disease were studied by means of positron emmission tomography (PET), using 15O as a tracer. Steady-state methods with C15O2 and 15O2 were used to obtain the functional images of rCBF, rCMRO2, and rOEF. The 15O single-inhalation method was used to obtain the rCBV image. Five children (two boys and three girls) with mean age of 11 years and eight normal volunteers with mean age of 31 years were included in the study. The symptoms of
moyamoya
disease were due to cerebral ischemia, such as transient ischemic attack (TIA), reversible ischemic neurological deficit (RIND), and minor
stroke
. The interval between the latest ictus and PET scan ranged from 3 days to 3 years 6 months. Physiological parameters (rCBF, rCMRO2 etc.) in cerebral gray matter, cerebral white matter and basal ganglia were calculated from the single functional images. Any, low density areas appearing in X-ray-CT performed just prior to the PET study were carefully excluded from the analysis. The parameters of
moyamoya
disease were statistically compared with normal control parameters. Though the value of rCBF was slightly higher in
moyamoya
disease, this difference was not statistically significant. On the other hand, in
moyamoya
disease rCBV increased significantly in gray matter, white matter, and basal ganglia. The ratio of CBF to CBV is considered to be the index of perfusion pressure and reciprocal of cerebral mean transit time under the normal autoregulation of CBF. This ratio was calculated and compared with the normal value for each tissue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cerebral circulation and oxygen metabolism in moyamoya disease of ischemic type in children. 326 63
Moyamoya disease
occurring in Chinese has been inadequately described. Here we report 13 cases of this disease identified by review of 3,200 cerebral angiograms performed between August 1979 and March 1986. Nine were males and four were females; there were 12 adults (aged 34-51 years) and one child (aged 11 years). All had hemorrhagic strokes with one exception, a patient with an occipital infarction. Intraventricular hemorrhage was noted by computed tomography in 10; five of these emanated from the caudate nucleus. A localized hematoma without intraventricular hemorrhage was found in two. All 13 angiograms had smokelike basal anastomoses with various degrees of stenosis or occlusion of the anterior portion of the circle of Willis; the involvement was bilateral in 12 and unilateral in one. Aneurysms were found in two patients, one in the anterior communicating artery and the other in the left anterior choroidal artery. Eleven patients recovered from the initial
stroke
, but two died with recurrent hemorrhage. This series differs from the series reported in Japan by the predominance of adult males. The high incidence of intraventricular hemorrhage and intracerebral hematoma is not in keeping with the previous Chinese series, in which subarachnoid hemorrhage was suspected to be the major clinical manifestation.
Stroke
1988 Jan
PMID:Moyamoya disease in Taiwan. 333 2
Eleven cases of
moyamoya
disease refractory to indirect non-anastomotic revascularization, including encephalomyosynangiosis in two, encephaloduroarteriosynangiosis in seven, and encephalomyoarteriosynangiosis in two, are described. The patients suffered from recurrent cerebral ischemic symptoms, and further operative intervention, including superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery anastomosis and intracranial omental transplantation, was performed. The choice of operative maneuver depended on the availability of scalp arteries and on the nature of the ischemic symptoms. Although indirect non-anastomotic revascularization procedures have the advantage of technical ease and most patients respond to these procedures alone, there are some patients like the 11 presented here who are not cured by such procedures. In such cases, direct anastomotic revascularization is necessary for the prevention of
stroke
.
...
PMID:Pitfalls in the surgical treatment of moyamoya disease. Operative techniques for refractory cases. 335 81
Authors review 53 children, aged 0 to 14 years, affected with cerebrovascular ischemic strokes. Largest aetiological groups were: a) congenital heart disease, 16 patients; b) arteritis of unknown cause, 11; c) idiopathic arterial occlusion without arteritis images on angiography, 7; d)
moyamoya
disease, 6; and d) local or systemic infections, 5. The mode of onset was as completed
stroke
in 72% and
stroke
in evolution in 24%. After acute stage 17.6% of patients presented other definitive strokes, 11.7% suffered only transient ischemic strokes (TIA), and 4% reversible ischemic neurologic deficits (RIND). Mean follow-up was 4.36 years, 9.8% of patients died, 11.8% recovered completely and 52.9% improved after initial
stroke
. Poor global evolution was associated with heart disease (p less than 0.05) and with onset of strokes before age 2 (p less than 0.05). Most important sequelae, besides motor impairment, were epilepsy (49%) and mental retardation (50% got less than IQ 80). Late epilepsy was associated with seizures at onset (p less than 0.05). Clinical factors of adverse mental development were: a) seizures at onset, b) late epilepsy and c)
stroke
before age 2. 66% of cases had two or more arterial lesions in the same or in different arterial trees. Therefore, embolic and arteritic factors probably play an important role in infancy and childhood
stroke
.
...
PMID:[Ischemic cerebrovascular accidents in childhood]. 340 Sep 36
Eighteen patients were studied for cerebral blood perfusion abnormalities using N-isopropyl I-123 p-iodoamphetamine (IMP) and rotating dual gamma camera emission computed tomography (ECT). All were
stroke
patients, 10 with cerebral vasospasm after an aneurysmal rupture, 3 with an occlusion of the middle cerebral artery, 2 with an occlusion of the internal carotid artery (IC), one with an IC stenosis, one with
Moyamoya disease
and one with RIND. Four patients had extracranial-intracranial (EC-IC) bypass operations. In three of them, CBF studies were done before and after bypass surgery. An arterial line was placed in the left radial artery and connected to a Harvard pump. IMP (1.5-3 mCi) was injected into an arm vein while at the same time an arterial blood sample was withdrawn at a constant speed for 5 minutes. Scanning was started 35 minutes after IMP injection. After a scan, multiple transverse, coronal and sagittal section images were reconstructed with a minicomputer. We determined the values of regional CBF in the regions of interest using an image. Transmission computed tomography (CT) studies were performed on the same day. In eight patients, CBF study by 133Xe inhalation method (NOVO cerebrograph) was done. ECT showed diffuse low perfusion in two patients and focal low perfusion in 16 patients while CT showed abnormalities in 9 patients (50%). ECT abnormalities were more extensive than CT abnormalities. The values of rCBF in the superficial brain determined by ECT were similar to those examined by the inhalation method (ISI). Significant increase in rCBF was observed after the bypass operations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Cerebral blood flow studies using N-isopropyl I-123 p-iodoamphetamine in cerebral ischemic lesions]. 348 81
A case of
moyamoya
disease in a young white adult is described. The patient presented at the age of 27 years with a
cerebrovascular accident
and over subsequent years has suffered several cerebrovascular accidents and, more recently, transient ischaemic attacks. Serial angiographic studies have demonstrated the development of the classical radiological findings of
moyamoya
disease. This case illustrates a rare cause of cerebrovascular disease in a non-Japanese individual.
...
PMID:Moyamoya disease causing recurrent cerebrovascular episodes in a young adult. 356 Dec 95
Stroke
prophylaxis in patients with
moyamoya
disease has not been described previously in Australia. Two cases are presented in which superficial temporal to middle cerebral arterial bypass has been successful in halting the progress of the disease. The presentation, investigation and management of this occlusive vasculopathy are discussed.
...
PMID:Moyamoya disease: presentation and treatment of two cases by surgery. 356 Dec 96
The cause of
stroke
in a young adult can usually be ascertained with proper workup. One of the most common causes is atherosclerotic cerebrovascular disease, and cigarette smoking is an important risk factor in young adults. Several types of nonatherosclerotic cerebral vasculopathy can also result in premature cerebral infarction; these include cervicocephalic arterial dissection, nonpenetrating traumatic arterial disease,
moyamoya
disease, fibromuscular dysplasia, vasculitis, and migraine. Cardiac embolism may play a more important role than was previously thought, and hematologic disorders (eg, sickle cell disease, polycythemia rubra vera, coagulation problems) are known to predispose patients to
stroke
. A careful history of risk factors and a thorough neurologic and cardiovascular examination followed by adequate testing, including angiography, are essential to diagnosis.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of stroke in young adults. 356 68
Stroke
before the age of 40 years is unusual and its etiology often different from that in older people. In a 29-year-old man the cause of a
stroke
was revealed to be bilateral vascular malformations at the base of the brain, an example of the
moyamoya
syndrome, rare among Europeans and published in German-speaking countries only in a few single case reports.
...
PMID:[Differential diagnosis of juvenile stroke. A case of moyamoya]. 360 46
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