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

A total of 34 Italian patients (15 males and 19 females) suffering from Moyamoya disease (MMD) and selected by a questionnaire survey in 12 neuropediatric and neuroradiologic departments were studied in a multicentric study. The onset of the disease appeared either in childhood (27 patients, aged 0-16 years, mean 5.4 years) or in adulthood (seven patients, aged 25-55 years, mean 35 years). The early clinical symptoms consisted of transient ischemic attacks and/or stroke (20 cases), recurrent migraine-like headaches (seven cases), seizures (six cases) and hemorrhage (one case). A total of four familial cases were found. The final diagnosis was based in all cases on the conventional angiographic findings and more recently also on the magnetic resonance angiography (ten patients). The mean lag time between the first clinical manifestation and the angiographic diagnosis was about 2 years. A medical treatment (vasodilators, antiplatelet agents, calcium channel blockers) was followed by 21 patients, while five cases underwent a surgical revascularization. The follow-up ranges from 1 to 15 years (mean 6 years): A motor (16 cases) and/or mental impairment (14 cases) was detected especially in the childhood onset MMD; only one patient died. In nine cases the long-term outcome persisted without neurological deficit.
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PMID:Clinical and neuroradiological findings of moyamoya disease in Italy. 940 6

To improve cerebral hypoperfusion in the ischemic type of Moyamoya disease, we have applied superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery (STA-MCA) double anastomoses in combination with encephalo-myo-synangiosis (EMS) for 19 hemispheres of 10 children (age from 5 to 11 years at surgery). Two branches of the STA were anastomosed to the two cortical arteries which were selected in the watershed area of the cerebral hemisphere estimated as a hypoperfusion area on the preoperative angiograms. Before surgery transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) developed from every month to every 6 months in association with hyperventilation or sobbing. No perioperative completed stroke or wound complications was observed, although single TIA developed in four patients within 1 month after surgery. Postoperative angiogram demonstrated that, not only the preoperative watershed area, but also the most of the middle cerebral artery territory was oppacified via the 2 branches of the STA in all 19 hemispheres. In a mean follow-up period of 4 years, no ischemic episode was induced by hyperventilation, and there was no mental or neurological deterioration. STA-MCA double anastomoses, to the cerebral watershed area, in combination with EMS are safe and effective even for younger children with Moyamoya disease.
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PMID:Direct extracranial-intracranial bypass for children with moyamoya disease. 940 22

We describe four children with moyamoya disease who developed neurologic deterioration following revascularization surgery. In all cases, anesthesia was smoothly induced and the intraoperative course was uneventful. Emergence from anesthesia was prompt and no new neurological deficit was observed. However, the children suffered strokes on 2, 4, 5, and 10 days, postoperatively, respectively. Dehydration and crying were thought to be closely associated with the stroke in each case. This report suggests that attention should be paid during entire the perioperative period to avoid stroke in patients with moyamoya disease.
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PMID:Postoperative neurological deterioration following the revascularization surgery in children with moyamoya disease. 943 18

Two cases of moyamoya disease observed in two children are reported. The two cases recall the frequency of ischemic strokes, transient ischemic attacks, and seizures revealing the disease. Diagnosis is made by cerebral arteriography showing carotid stenosis and the dense deep arterial collateral as seen in these two cases. Magnetic resonance imaging makes it possible to identify this vascular disease as it reveals vascular varicosities in the basal ganglia, as in case 1. Strokes can sometimes be prevented by constructing an anastomosis between the superficial temporal artery and the middle cerebral artery, as demonstrated in case 1. Thus, the diagnosis of moyamoya disease has been improved by magnetic resonance imaging and there is now a surgical treatment to prevent ischemic stroke.
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PMID:Moyamoya disease in children. A review of the clinical and radiological features and current treatment. 945 75

The efficacy of encephalo-myo-synangiosis (EMS) using muscle free flap was evaluated for the treatment of ischemic cerebrovascular disease in adult patients. Three patients with adult moyamoya disease and three patients with atherosclerotic ischemic cerebrovascular disease were treated. EMS used four latissimus dorsi muscles and two serratus anterior muscles. Postoperative selective angiography showed collateral circulation from the transferred muscle to the brain in four of the six patients. The other two patients showed patent nutrient artery of the transferred muscle flap. Cerebral blood flow study disclosed postoperative improvement of perfusion reserve capacity in all sides. One patient suffered a perioperative stroke by hemoconcentration due to poor control of diabetes mellitus. The mean follow-up period was 23 months. EMS using muscle free flap is a possible procedure in selected patients with impaired cerebral perfusion reserve capacity due to multiple stenosis or occlusion of cerebral arteries including moyamoya disease or who required cerebral blood flow augmentation in the anterior and/or posterior cerebral artery territories due to internal carotid artery occlusion.
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PMID:Cerebral revascularization using muscle free flap for ischemic cerebrovascular disease in adult patients. 978 Jun 43

Moyamoya disease (MMD) is a chronic occlusive cerebrovascular disease of unknown etiology reported mainly in the Japanese. Most cases occur in children. The disease is rare in non-Oriental adults manifesting itself mostly as intracerebral hemorrhages. We describe MMD in 2 non-Oriental young adults and one adolescent that developed cerebral infarctions. The adults were medicated with aspirin and no medication was given to the adolescent. All patients did not deteriorate in a follow-up period from 1 to 4 years. Although rare, MMD is an important cause of stroke in young individuals and may well be underreported: only 18 patients have been reported till 1997 in Brazil. Neurologists should include MMD in differential diagnosis of ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes in young adults.
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PMID:Moyamoya disease. Report of three cases in Brazilian patients. 1045 Mar 41

Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) can virtually affect any organ, presenting most frequently with "cafe au lait" spots and neurofibromas. Vasculopathy is a known complication of NF1, but cerebrovascular disease is rare. We report the case of a 51-year-old man admitted to the hospital with a history of stroke four months before admission. On physical examination, he presented various "cafe au lait" spots and cutaneous neurofibromas. Neurologic examination demonstrated right-sided facial paralysis, right-sided hemiplegia, and aphasia. Computed tomography scan of head showed hypodense areas in the basal ganglia and centrum semiovale. Radiographs of cranium and cervical spine showed basilar impression. Angiography revealed complete occlusion of both vertebral and left internal carotid arteries, and partial stenosis of the right internal carotid artery. A large network of collateral vessels was present (moyamoya syndrome). It is an uncommon case of occlusive cerebrovascular disease associated with NF1, since most cases described in the literature are in young people, and tend to spare the posterior cerebral circulation. Basilar impression associated with this case may be considered a pure coincidence, but rare cases of basilar impression and NF1 have been described.
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PMID:Neurofibromatosis, stroke and basilar impression. Case report. 1045 Mar 58

A diagnosis of moyamoya disease was made in three children aged five, eight and 13 years (including two Turkish sisters). Clinical presentation was recurrent episodes of cerebral ischemia and stroke. CT scans and MRI showed infarcts in various distributions. Angiography revealed anterior bilateral stenosis of the circle of Willis and development of Moyamoya collateral pathways. In one case there was coagulopathy with protein C deficiency. To increase transdural collateral flow, revascularisation with encephalo-duro-arterio-synangiosis was attempted in all three children. Outcome was clinically and angiographically satisfactory and none of the children developed further neurological complications. The current state of study on Moyamoya disease is also presented.
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PMID:[Moyamoya disease: advantage of early diagnosis and survival treatment. Review of three cases]. 1058 42

A 67-year-old man was referred to us for tonic-clonic convulsions. A review of his history revealed that he had been hospitalized for loss of consciousness, hypotension, and suspected apoplexy at age 67. He had experienced prior tonic-clonic convulsions at age 72 and age 74. He had malaria and tuberculosis in his history but had been otherwise generally well. Physical examination was normal, and his blood pressure was 100/80 mmHg. Laboratory findings were normal except alcalinephosphatase (292 U/l) and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase(60 U/l). Neurological examination showed alert consciousness, mild upper gaze palsy, slight right-side hemiparesis and left Babinski signs was present. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging showed no abnormality, but cerebral angiography revealed bilateral carotid artery occlusion. There were abundant leptomeningeal anastomoses, and the posterior communicating artery was supplied by the left vertebral artery. Electroencephalography showed a spike wave in the temporal lobe and rebuild-up phenomenon in the right hemisphere. Brain atrophy in the anterior and temporal lobes progressed, and the patient experienced gradual disorientation, delirium and hypobulia. He was eventually bedridden. He also demonstrated repetitive tonic-clonic convulsions. After one convulsion, he remained unconscious and died of pneumonia. Autopsy revealed thickening of the intima and internal elastic lamina in the occluded internal carotid artery. The anterior and middle cerebral arteries showed the same pathological changes. Multiple small infarctions restricted to grey matter were present in the cerebral cortex and may have caused the progressive brain atrophy. There was no myelin pallor in the white matter of the cerebrum. Atherosclerotic changes, senile plaque, and neurofibrillary tangles were seen but were within normal limits. These pathological findings were strongly suggestive of moyamoya disease.
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PMID:[An autopsy case of bilateral carotid artery occlusion with repetitive epilepsy and brain atrophy in a senile patient]. 1068 97

This paper describes 59 patients, 3 months to 16 years of age, who were seen consecutively in the same center for cerebral arterial infarction. It focuses on the mechanism of stroke. The pathophysiologic process could be established for 78% of the children. Arteriopathic stroke (31 patients, or 53%) was the most common. The arteriopathies were either progressive (moyamoya in 4 patients, or 7%) or nonprogressive (27 patients, or 46%). The latter form occurred in two patterns: dissection of cervicocephalic arteries (12 patients, or 20%) and transient cerebral arteriopathy of unknown origin but probably angiitis (15 patients, or 25%). Cardiac or transcardiac embolic stroke occurred in 12% of the series and systemic diseases in 14%. There was a favorable outcome in 70% of patients having stroke due to nonprogressive arterial disease and stroke due to unidentified mechanisms. In contrast, only 26% of patients with embolic stroke, systemic disease, or moyamoya had a favorable outcome. Recurrences were more frequent and severe in this latter group. It is concluded that it is important to determine the mechanism of childhood stroke, because it strongly influences outcome, the recurrence risk, and treatment choice.
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PMID:Stroke in childhood: outcome and recurrence risk by mechanism in 59 patients. 1083 Jan 94


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