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

The aim of this study was to determine the effect of mood disorders, including psychological distress and depression, on stroke outcome. Male Fischer rats were exposed to immobilisation stress, an animal paradigm of psychological stress, major depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. Either a subacute (1 h for 7 days) or a chronic (6 h for 21 days) exposure to stress was applied 24 h before permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO). Stroke outcome was assessed by measurement of infarct size and behavioural characterisation. Serum glutamate and brain ATP levels as well as brain glutamate transporter function and expression were studied in the search for the molecular mechanisms involved. Subacute stress exposure increased infarct size and decreased behavioural scores after stroke. On the contrary, chronic stress exposure decreased infarct size. Peak serum glutamate levels correlated with infarct size after MCAO. Expression of glutamate transporters was decreased by subacute stress, whereas the expression of EAAT1, a glial glutamate carrier, was increased after the chronic stress protocol. Our results indicate that distinct patterns of stress determine different stroke outcomes, and that expressional changes of brain glutamate transporters, able to affect glutamate release after stroke, are involved.
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PMID:Effect of subacute and chronic immobilisation stress on the outcome of permanent focal cerebral ischaemia in rats. 1285 May 80

In the article are two frequently misused notions are defined: climiacterium and menopause. Menopause-related disorders can appear 2 to 6 years before and continue for 2 to 6 years after menopause, with their duration up to 20 years. An attempt of qualitative approach to menopausal ailments is the point scale by Kupperman. The diversity of the symptoms encountered in women in perimenopausal period is the reason to seek medical advice from experts in various disciplines: internal medicine, cardiology, gynaecology, neurology, rheumatology, and least frequently psychiatry, as it is fairly common for women to perceive life problems or mental stress as somatic disorder. In Poland, middle-aged women constitute 30% of all women. Medical approach to their health problems is focused on somatic diseases like myocardial infarction, cerebral stroke, and cancer, which are likely to contribute to shortening of life expectancy. Growing awareness of the problem of depression among doctors non-psychiatrists may contribute to desirable change in doctors' and patients' attitude to this disease. The average prevalence of depression is estimated to be about 17% of the total population. Depression is thrice more frequent among women than among men. The peak of incidence is seen among middle-aged patients. In this article clinical forms of affective disorders are discussed according to the current DSM IV classification, main symptoms suggesting depression are given, and masked depression, the most common and most difficult to detect form of the disease is discussed. Risk factors for depression are presented, and attention is paid to the dramatic fact that depression may not only decrease the quality of life, but may also stand behind the patient's loss of full functional capacity or even death. Suicidal thoughts are experienced by 60% of depressive patients, while as many as 15% of them do actually commit suicide. Collective analysis of the depression risk factors and concomitant somatic disorders in a given patient will surely increase the likelihood of correct diagnosis.
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PMID:[Depression in perimenopausal period]. 1291 10

The prognostic significance of the white-coat effect (WCE) is unclear. Knowledge of the predictors of the WCE may help illuminate the clinical significance of this phenomenon. The purpose of this study was to (i) compare characteristics of subjects demonstrating a WCE, those not demonstrating a WCE, and those demonstrating a reverse WCE and (ii) determine clinical features that may influence the size of the WCE. Forty-one subjects with normotension or mild hypertension who had never been treated with antihypertensive medications were recruited for the study. All subjects underwent a battery of anthropometrical measurements and clinic blood pressure (BP) measurements. To calculate arterial compliance, impedance cardiography was used to measure resting stroke volume in each subject. All subjects performed a laboratory mental stress protocol to determine the size of the BP reactivity. Ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) profiles were studied in each subject with the use of an oscillometric ABP recorder. White-coat effect was determined by subtracting the awake period of the ambulatory systolic blood pressure (SBP) from the clinical SBP. Subjects were grouped according to the size of their WCE. Those who showed a WCE of 5 mmHg and above were assigned to the WCE group; those who showed a WCE of between -5 and 5 mmHg were assigned to the no white coat effect (NWCE) group; those who exhibited a WCE of -5 mmHg and lower were assigned to the reverse white-coat effect (RWCE) group. Subjects with a positive WCE had significantly higher body mass index (BMI) than those without a WCE and those with a RWCE. The WCE group had significantly higher clinic SBP and heart rate (HR) than the RWCE group. Arterial compliance was significantly lower in the WCE group as compared to the NWCE group and the RWCE group. The three groups had comparable ABP profiles. In terms of BP variability, the increase in SBP in response to mental stress did not differ among the three study groups nor did the 24-hour and awake BP variability. For the sample as a whole, clinic HR and clinic-ambulatory SBP difference were higher and arterial compliance were lower in women than in men. Furthermore, clinic SBP significantly correlated with the systolic WCE (r = 0.40, P = 0.009). When men and women were analyzed separately, the correlation between clinic SBP and the systolic WCE was significant in women (r = 0.63, P = 0.001) but not in men (P = 0.95). Multiple linear regression showed that sex (P = 0.013) and clinical SBP (P = 0.003) were the only two variables that significantly influenced the systolic WCE. These two variables together accounted for 29% of the variation in the systolic WCE. In conclusion sex and clinic BP are two major determinants of the WCE. The results of this study indicate that WCE is not related to higher stress reactivity or higher BP variability.
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PMID:Determinants of the white-coat effect in normotensives and never-treated mild hypertensives. 1459 68

To identify unique cardiovascular responses to stressors in a population at genetic risk of hypertension, we studied haemodynamic responses in initial reactivity to, subsequent adaptation to, and final recovery from repeated active mental stress in young, normotensive individuals stratified by hypertension parental history (PH). Two groups (n=21/group) of normotensive white males underwent stress testing. One group (N+PH) had a hypertensive parent, while the other group (N-PH) did not. Cardiovascular response was measured before, during, and after repeated serial-subtraction math. Initial reactivity was measured as the difference between baseline and initial stress response, subsequent adaptation as the difference in response to repeated trials, and final recovery was assessed by the difference between baseline and postbaseline levels. The influence of PH on reactivity, adaptation, and recovery was assessed by repeated measures ANOVA for stroke volume, cardiac output, pre-ejection period, total peripheral resistance, mean successive heartbeat time difference, blood pressure, and heart rate. Multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) determined the effect of PH on overall reactivity, adaptation, and recovery. As compared to the N-PH group, initial reactivity was higher in the N+PH group for cardiac index (P<0.05) and pre-ejection period (P<0.05). Subsequent adaptation in the N+PH group was significantly slower for pre-ejection period (P=0.03). Finally, the N+PH group showed delayed recovery in heart rate (P=0.03), diastolic blood pressure (P<0.05), and pre-ejection period (P=0.007). In conclusion, the heightened reactivity, lack of adaptation, and delayed recovery occur in the sympathetic system of normotensive subjects at genetic risk of hypertension, specifically in beta-adrenergic responses (pre-ejection period). The parasympathetic response (mean successive heartbeat time difference) was not different. Increased cardiac output reactivity in the N+PH group (P<0.05) thus precedes any difference in blood pressure reactivity (P<0.99). Delayed recovery of diastolic blood pressure is also found in the N+PH group (P<0.05), which suggests lower baroreceptor sensitivity. Since delayed recovery in heart rate (P=0.03), and diastolic blood pressure (P<0.05) occur in N+PH subjects even before the corresponding changes in reactivity (P>0.10) or adaptation (P>0.07) are seen, these recovery impairments may be among the earliest precursors to the development of essential hypertension in this population. Finally, PH group haemodynamic differences suggest that these traits (reactivity, adaptation, and recovery) may constitute early 'intermediate' phenotypes in the pathogenesis of hypertension.
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PMID:Cardiovascular haemodynamic response to repeated mental stress in normotensive subjects at genetic risk of hypertension: evidence of enhanced reactivity, blunted adaptation, and delayed recovery. 1470 27

Caffeine increases blood pressure (BP). In men, acute BP elevations after caffeine intake are due to an increase in vascular resistance, with no change in cardiac output. The hemodynamic effects of caffeine have not been studied in women. Accordingly, BP and hemodynamic responses to caffeine were measured in a double-blind trial comparing age-matched men and women at rest and during mental stress. Caffeine (3.3 mg/kg, equivalent to 2 to 3 cups of brewed coffee) or placebo was given to separate groups of women (n = 21 and 21) and men (n = 16 and 19) (mean ages 29 and 27 years, respectively). BP, cardiac output, and vascular resistance were observed at rest, during a stressful public-speaking simulation, reading aloud, and recovery. Caffeine caused nearly identical systolic and diastolic BP elevations in women (4.5 and 3.3 mm Hg, respectively) and men (4.1 and 3.8 mm Hg, respectively). Men given caffeine versus placebo showed the expected elevation in vascular resistance throughout the remainder of the protocol (p <0.001), with no difference in cardiac output. In contrast, women responded to caffeine with increases in stroke volume (p <0.001) and cardiac output (p <0.001), with no difference in vascular resistance from women taking placebo. Men and women have similar BP responses to caffeine, but the BP responses may arise from different hemodynamic mechanisms. Women who consume a dietary dose of caffeine showed an increase in cardiac output, whereas men showed increased vascular resistance.
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PMID:Cardiovascular effects of caffeine in men and women. 1546 97

Motor imagery (MI), a mental simulation of voluntary motor actions, has been used as a training method for athletes for many years. It is possible that MI techniques might similarly be useful as part of rehabilitative strategies to help people regain skills lost as a consequence of diseases or stroke. Mental activity and stress induce several different autonomic responses as part of the behavioral response to movement (e.g., motor anticipation) and as part of the central planning and preprogramming of movement. However, the interrelationships between MI, the autonomic responses, and the motor system have not yet been worked out. The authors compare a number of autonomic responses (respiration, heart rate, electro skin resistance) and motoneuron excitability (soleus H-reflex) in elite and nonelite speed skaters during MI. In contrast to the nonelite athletes, MI of elite speed skaters is characterized by larger changes in heart rate and respiration, a greater reliance on an internal perspective for MI, a more vivid MI, a more accurate correspondence between the MI and actual race times, and decreased motoneuron excitability. Two observations suggest that the changes in the autonomic responses and motoneuron excitability for the elite speed skaters are related to the effects of central motor programming: (1) there was no correlation between the autonomic responses for MI and those recorded during mental arithmetic; and (2) mental arithmetic did not significantly alter motoneuron activity. It is suggested that in elite speed skaters, the descending neural mechanisms that reduce motoneuron excitability are activated even when full, vivid MI is performed internally. These inhibitory responses of the motor system may enhance actual motor performance under conditions of remarkably high mental stress, such as that which occurs in the Olympic games.
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PMID:Autonomic nervous system activities during motor imagery in elite athletes. 1537 47

The interaction between central opioid activity, sex hormones, and the cardiovascular reactivity to stress is unknown. Twenty-eight healthy postmenopausal women, 16 without, and 12 with hormone replacement therapy (HRT) participated in this randomized, double-blind, cross-over study. The opioid receptor antagonist naloxone or placebo was administered intravenously on 2 different days and mild mental stress was induced by the Stroop Color-Word Test. Cardiovascular responses were assessed noninvasively by impedance cardiography. Stress significantly increased stroke volume, cardiac output, blood pressure, and heart rate, which was not influenced by opioid receptor blockade. Whereas naloxone increased cortisol plasma concentrations irrespective of HRT status, luteinizing hormone concentrations, which were higher in non-HRT compared with HRT women, were increased by naloxone in women with HRT only. These data suggest that the opioidergic tone of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis persists in postmenopausal women, irrespective of HRT use, while the opioidergic tone on the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal axis seems to depend on an estrogenic milieu. Naloxone does not alter cardiovascular mental stress reactions in postmenopausal women independent of their hormone substitution status.
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PMID:Naloxone does not influence cardiovascular responses to mild mental stress in postmenopausal women. 1599 52

Novel and diverse functions of glial cells are currently the focus of much attention [A. Volterra and J. Meldolesi (2005) Nature Rev. 6, 626-640]. Here we present evidence that rat astroglia release acetylcholinesterase (AChE) as part of their response to hypoxic damage. Exposure of astroglia to tert-butyl hydroperoxide, and hence oxidative stress, subsequently leads to a switching in mRNA from the classical membrane-bound T-AChE to a preferential increase in the splice variant for a soluble form, R-AChE, This change in expression is reflected in increased perinuclear and reduced cytoplasmic AChE staining of the insulted glial cells, with a concomitant and marked increase in extracellular secretion that peaks at 1 h post-treatment. An analogous increase in R-AChE, over a similar time scale, occurs in response to psychological stress [D. Kaufer et al. (1998) Nature 93, 373-377], as well as to head injury and stroke [E. Shohami et al. (1999) J. Neurotrauma 6, 365-76]. The data presented here suggest that glial cells may be key chemical intermediaries in such situations and, perhaps more generally in pathological conditions involving oxidative stress, such as neurodegeneration.
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PMID:Astroglia up-regulate transcription and secretion of 'readthrough' acetylcholinesterase following oxidative stress. 1690 48

Implicit learning is durable over time, robust under psychological stress and shows specificity of transfer; characteristics that may be beneficial in stroke rehabilitation. The purpose of this study was to investigate implicit sequence learning processes in unilateral stroke using an extended number of trial blocks in a serial reaction time task (SRTT). Previous research, using a SRTT, has produced equivocal results that may be associated with the small number of trial blocks used. Seven adults, at least one year after stroke, and eight controls performed 54 blocks of a modified SRTT over two weeks. Participants responded with a finger key press during acquisition and retention and with a whole arm movement during transfer. Response times in milliseconds were used to measure learning. The stroke group performed more slowly than the controls during all experimental phases. Response times for both groups decreased with practice of the repeating sequence, increased with introduction of a random sequence, and decreased when reintroduced to the repeating sequence of the SRTT. Both groups demonstrated delayed retention of knowledge of the sequence over a two-week period and exhibited specificity of transfer. These data suggest that with extended practice people with unilateral stroke are able to learn implicitly.
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PMID:Implicit sequence learning processes after unilateral stroke. 1747 60

Physical and psychological stress induced by catastrophic events such as earthquakes can lead to sudden death, acute coronary syndrome, stroke, and other cardiovascular diseases. We investigated the impact of the earthquake that occurred in Niigata, Japan, on pulmonary embolism. Pulmonary embolism increased to 9 cases in the 4 weeks after the earthquake, compared to 1 case in the 4 weeks before the earthquake, 2 cases in the corresponding 8 weeks in 2003, and 1 case in 2002. The first case occurred two days after the initial earthquake and new cases were reported for 27 days thereafter. Six of 9 patients (67%) took refuge in their automobiles before the onset of pulmonary embolism. Sudden death also increased after the earthquake and 7 of 22 cases (32%) spend night(s) in automobile. In conclusion, pulmonary embolism should be attended after disasters and prolonged immobilization in automobiles may increase risk of pulmonary embolism and sudden death.
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PMID:Impact of earthquakes on risk for pulmonary embolism. 1765 31


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