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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the current endovascular management of cerebral mycotic aneurysms. We report the retrospective evaluation of data of patients with cerebral mycotic aneurysms treated with endovascular approach. Thirteen consecutive patients with cerebral mycotic aneurysms were treated between April 2001 and March 2007. There were seven men and six women with ages ranging from 20 to 52 years (mean age 33 years.). All 13 patients had
rheumatic heart disease
(
RHD
) with endocarditis. The aneurysms were located within the distal cerebral circulation (n = 12) or in the circle of Willis (n = 1). All were ruptured aneurysms. Distal aneurysms were treated by parent vessel occlusion. Proximal saccular aneurysms were selectively treated. Endovascular treatment was technically successful in all patients. No patient had a rebleed after embolization during the clinical follow-up. Two patients deteriorated and died after endovascular treatment. Repeat CT scan showed increased mass effect because of earlier intracerebral bleed. The late clinical outcome in the other 11 patients was normal neurological status (n = 8) or permanent disability that was related to the initial
stroke
(n = 3). Endovascular approach is a reliable and safe technique for management of cerebral mycotic aneurysms.
...
PMID:Endovascular management of ruptured cerebral mycotic aneurysms. 1822 23
Prosthetic valve thrombosis is a dangerous and unfortunately not uncommon medical situation, often seen as a medical emergency. Patients with previously unseen and more confounding medical problems are presenting, making the decision regarding therapeutic options even more complicated. In this case report, we describe a complicated patient with mechanical mitral valve prosthesis placed secondary to
rheumatic heart disease
, with multiple co-morbidities including severe left ventricular dysfunction, permanent atrial fibrillation, left femoral deep vein thrombosis, and non-sustained ventricular tachycardia, who presented with acute valve thrombosis. The patient' history of hemorrhagic
stroke
and multiple acute ischemic strokes represented an absolute contraindication to more conventional forms of therapy such as intravenous systemic thrombolytics. In the following case report, we present an unprecedented approach to prosthetic valve thrombosis in this seemingly no-option patient.
...
PMID:Localized left atrial administration of tPA for the treatment of mechanical mitral valve thrombosis. 1865 16
The looming epidemic of
stroke
and other chronic non-communicable diseases associated with lifestyle and demographic transitions occurring all over the world is increasingly being acknowledged. However, the significance of these trends in the relatively young populations of the countries comprising Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is less certain and considerably overshadowed by attention given to the impact of human immunodeficiency virus and other infectious diseases. We undertook a literature review of the burden of
stroke
in SSA and provide recommendations for future research. Despite the paucity of high quality studies, the mostly hospital-based data and limited community surveys indicate there to be high and increasing rates of
stroke
affecting people at much younger ages in SSA than in developed countries. In general, awareness, diagnosis and management of
stroke
are poor, and the associated case fatality and residual disability are high. As elsewhere, elevated blood pressure is the major determinant of
stroke
but there are also high rates of strokes related to the complications of
rheumatic heart disease
and other infections. Given high attributable risks exposures in association with rapid ageing and urbanisation in SSA, the future is not bright. Population-based incidence studies are urgently needed to map the profile and outcome of
stroke
. Such data would provide the necessary evidence base to improve prevention and treatments for
stroke
alongside current efforts to bring infectious diseases under control in SSA.
Int J
Stroke
2006 Nov
PMID:The neglected burden of stroke in Sub-Saharan Africa. 1870 15
Mitral repair is feasible for patients with degenerative or ischemic heart disease, however, the appropriateness of repair for
rheumatic heart disease
remains controversial. We compared our outcomes for primary isolated mitral repair versus replacement in an elderly population. From November 1997 to July 2005, mitral repair (group I) was performed in 33 patients while 59 underwent replacement (group II). Survival and risk factors were evaluated by Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analysis. Mean age at operation for groups I and II was 49.7 +/- 13.2 versus 58.1 +/- 11.2 (P = 0.002). No statistically significant differences with regards to demographic parameters were observed except for there being fewer percutaneous transvenous mitral commissurotomy procedures and a lower severity of pulmonary hypertension in group I. Patients with a greater Wilkins score and more valvular calcification underwent replacement more often (P < 0.001). In-hospital mortality, ICU/hospital stay, and postoperative congestive heart failure functional class did not differ significantly. Major adverse cardiac events occurred in 13 and 19 patients, respectively (P = 0.50). There were 4 versus 6 late deaths (P = 0.74). Only two from group I underwent subsequent mitral reoperation. Kaplan-Meier overall survival and event-free survival at 5 years for groups I and II were 0.81 +/- 0.08 versus 0.81 +/- 0.06 (P = 0.90) and 0.52 +/- 0.10 versus 0.51 +/- 0.10 (P = 0.21), respectively. Old age, renal insufficiency, LVEF < 40%, and a history of
stroke
were poor predictors of patient survival. Compared with replacement, mitral repair for
rheumatic heart disease
was associated with a lower surgical mortality, higher repeat-surgery rate, and good survival. Rheumatic mitral valves should be repaired in select patients with appropriate valvular pathology.
...
PMID:Midterm outcomes of rheumatic mitral repair versus replacement. 1897 68
Hemorrhagic transformation (HT) of an ischemic
stroke
within 6 hours has never been documented. We reported a case of 65-year-old female experiencing sudden onset of slurred speech and right side weakness. Her past history disclosed
rheumatic heart disease
and atrial fibrillation. The National Institutes of Health
stroke
scale (NIHSS) score was 20. The brain computed tomography one hour after symptom onset revealed a faint hypodense lesion in the left striatum. The lesion, however, was transformed spontaneously into a large hematoma within 3 hours of symptom onset. This case thus developed a very early HT of a subcortical infarct of possible cardioembolic origin and high initial NIHSS score. Though rare, very early spontaneous HT does happen.
...
PMID:Very early hemorrhagic transformation of a subcortical infarction. 1928 Aug 72
Previous studies have demonstrated that following unilateral
stroke
, motor impairment occurs both contralateral, as well as ipsilateral, to the lesion. Although ipsilesional impairments can be functionally limiting, they can also provide important insight into the role of the ipsilateral hemisphere in controlling movement and the lateralization of specific motor control mechanisms, given that unilateral arm movements are thought to recruit processes in each hemisphere. The purpose of this study was to examine whether left and right hemisphere damage following
stroke
produces different ipsilesional deficits, and whether our dynamic dominance model of motor lateralization can predict such deficits. Specifically, the dynamic dominance model attributes control of multijoint dynamics to the left hemisphere, and control of steady-state position to the right hemisphere. Chronic
stroke
patients with either left or right hemisphere damage (LHD or
RHD
) used their ipsilesional arm, and the control subjects used either their left or right arm (LHC or RHC), to perform targeted reaching movements in different directions within the workspace ipsilateral to their reaching arm. We found that the LHD group showed deficits in controlling the arm's trajectory due to impaired multijoint coordination, but no deficits in achieving accurate final positions. In contrast, the
RHD
group showed deficits in final position accuracy but not in the ability to coordinate multiple joints during movement, thereby providing additional evidence for the hemisphere-specific nature of motor deficits. Furthermore, while both the LHD and
RHD
groups were functionally impaired to the same degree on the Jebsen Hand Function Test (JHFT), our results suggest that the underlying mechanisms for such impairment may be hemisphere-dependent.
...
PMID:Hemispheric specialization and functional impact of ipsilesional deficits in movement coordination and accuracy. 1957 44
The study investigated performance on pantomime and imitation of transitive and intransitive gestures in 80
stroke
patients, 42 with left (LHD) and 38 with right (
RHD
) hemisphere damage. Patients were also categorized in two groups based on the time that has elapsed between their
stroke
and the apraxia assessment: acute-subacute (n=42) and chronic (n=38). In addition, patterns of performance in apraxia were examined. We expected that acute-subacute patients would be more impaired than chronic patients and that LHD patients would be more impaired than
RHD
patients, relative to controls. The hemisphere prediction was confirmed, replicating previous findings. The frequency of apraxia was also higher in all LHD time post-
stroke
groups. The most common impairment after LHD was impairment in both pantomime and imitation in both transitive and intransitive gestures. Selective deficits in imitation were more frequent after
RHD
for transitive gestures but for intransitive gestures they were more frequent after LHD. Patients were more impaired on imitation than pantomime, relative to controls. In addition, after looking at both gesture types concurrently, we have described cases of patients who suffered deficits in pantomime of intransitive gestures with preserved performance on transitive gestures. Such cases show that the right hemisphere may be in some cases critical for the successful pantomime of intransitive gestures and the neural networks subserving them may be distinct. Chronic patients were also less impaired than acute-subacute patients, even though the difference did not reach significance. A longitudinal study is needed to examine the recovery patterns in both LHD and
RHD
patients.
...
PMID:Associations and dissociations of transitive and intransitive gestures in left and right hemisphere stroke patients. 2016 14
The aims of this study were first to further assess the role of the 3D trunk angular rotations as part of the kinematic chain for seated-reaching movements within arm's length in a large 3D workspace in healthy subjects and second, to assess if these degrees of freedom participate in the compensatory strategy in hemiparetic patients. Ten healthy subjects, eight patients with right, and eight patients with left hemiparesis following
stroke
were included. They performed seated reaching movements at a comfortable speed to nine targets positioned in a large 3D workspace within arm's length. An electromagnetic system was used to record kinematics of the trunk and hand. Trunk flexion, lateral flexion and torsion were analyzed as a function of target direction, distance and height. In both healthy subjects and patients, all three trunk rotations participated in the reaching movement (except for near targets in healthy subjects). Trunk flexion was greater in patients but followed a similar pattern to healthy subjects. Trunk torsion was more influenced by target distance in healthy subjects while in patients it was greatly influenced by direction. Trunk lateral flexion was similar between groups. Comparing the two patient groups, there was greater flexion to the external targets in the
RHD
group and different strategies in the use of torsion between groups. 3D trunk rotations thus seem to be tuned to the distance and direction of the target in the workspace in both healthy subjects and
stroke
patients for reaching movements within arm's length.
...
PMID:The trunk as a part of the kinematic chain for reaching movements in healthy subjects and hemiparetic patients. 2127 25
Following
stroke
, control of both the contralesional (paretic) and ipsilesional (less affected) arms is altered. The purpose of this study was to analyse the consequences of
stroke
on joint rotations of both shoulder girdles, that is, glenohumeral (GH) and scapula motion. Because of hemispheric specialization, we hypothesized that changes would relate to the side of hemisphere damage. Nine
stroke
patients with left, and 9 with right hemisphere damage (LHD and
RHD
) and 9 healthy subjects were included. Reaching movements to targets positioned close, far and high in three directions were recorded using an electromagnetic system. Initial and final postures of the scapula, GH and elbow joint were evaluated. Inter-joint rotations throughout the movements were analysed using principal component analysis (PCA). The main finding was that initial and final postures of the contralesional and ipsilesional shoulders differed depending on the side of brain lesion. On the contralesional side, there was less scapula protraction and GH lateral rotation for both groups. Scapula tilt was less anterior in LHD patients, and GH elevation was greater in
RHD
patients. On the ipsilesional side, GH lateral rotation was reduced in both groups, and scapula protraction was reduced only for LHD patients. PCA confirmed that postures of both shoulders of the LHD group were substantially different to the healthy subjects, while only the contralesional arm of the
RHD
subjects differed. These results add to existing knowledge of hemispheric specialization, suggesting that the left hemisphere plays a greater role in bilateral joint postures than the right hemisphere.
...
PMID:Influence of the side of brain damage on postural upper-limb control including the scapula in stroke patients. 2233 Nov 68
Stroke
rates in middle-aged people are five to ten times higher in Pakistan, India, Russia, China, and Brazil, compared with the United Kingdom or United States. South Asia is home to 20% of the world's population and has one of the highest burdens of cardiovascular disease in the world. With an aging population, there is an expected increase in the number of
stroke
cases and a corresponding increase in the burden of
stroke
in developing countries including South Asian countries like Pakistan. Limited data from prior studies in developing countries indicate that
stroke
epidemiology differs between these and Western countries. These differences include a higher incidence of
stroke
at younger ages, a higher prevalence of hemorrhagic
stroke
, and higher age-specific prevalence rates of
stroke
in women. The reasons for these differences in
stroke
epidemiology in developing countries are not clear. This may be explained by higher prevalence of established
stroke
risk factors, or potential nontraditional risk factors such as water pipe smoking, use of daldaghee or naswaar, and paan chewing; hepatitis and
rheumatic heart disease
may also contribute to these differences. Acute and long-term
stroke
treatment has shown limited progress in Pakistan like other developing countries because of poor awareness of patients and general physician on
stroke
symptomatology, management of
stroke
risk factors, lack of specialized
stroke
units in the country, very low utilization of thrombolytic therapy because of financial constraints and, above all, poor knowledge of physicians on the role of rehabilitation and its different aspects in the management of post
stroke
disability.
Int J
Stroke
2013 Oct
PMID:Growing burden of stroke in Pakistan: a review of progress and limitations. 2275 92
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