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

Previous workers have clearly established that the central core limbic structures of the brain are primarily concerned in the production of amnesia of the axial or mesial type. The blood supply to these structures derives primarily from the posterior cerebral circulation. This was the rationale for Benson's work on 'amnesic stroke' in patients with posterior cerebral artery occlusion. We have extended this concept to show that a similar axial amnesia, as demonstrated by a classical response on Wechsler Memory Scale testing, exists in patients with vertebrobasilar insufficiency. Relative permanency of the amnesic syndrome was demonstrated by repeat testing at may be of assistance in the diagnosis of vertebrobasilar insufficiency.
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PMID:Memory disorder in vertebrobasilar disease. 11 97

A review was performed of 114 patients with symptoms of vertebrobasilar insufficiency (VBI) alone, or in combination with carotid territory transient ischemic attacks or carotid territory completed stroke (cCS) with follow-up extending to ten years. The most frequent symptoms of VBI were visual changes (50%), dizziness (31%), and syncope (30%). Patients with symptoms of VBI and arteriographic evidence of intracranial disease, regardless of stump pressure, are at high risk for cerebral ischemia during endarterectomy. At late follow-up, ranging from one to ten years, 63% of the patients were alive; 88% were asymptomatic. Causes of death were mainly cardiac (44%) and stroke (36%), but patients with symptoms of VBI and cCS died earlier and from a second cerebrovascular accident. When a correct preoperative diagnosis was established, carotid endarterectomy produced relief of symptoms in 90% of the patients.
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PMID:Results of carotid endarterectomy for vertebrobasilar insufficiency: an evaluation over ten years. 70 58

Four patients with symptoms and signs of brain stem ischemia due to occlusive disease of the vertebrobasilar system and one patient with similar cerebrovascular disease who was thought to be prone to brain stem stroke underwent a microvascular anastomosis between the occipital artery and the caudal loop of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery. There was no morbidity of mortality and neurologically all patients improved. Post-operative angiograms showed patent anastomosis in all the patients and improved circulation in three. This new operation may prove beneficial in a selected group of stroke patients who suffer from vertebrobasilar insufficiency and cannot be treated with gross surgical techniques.
Stroke
PMID:Possible prevention of brain stem stroke by microvascular anastomosis in the vertebrobasilar system. 87 Oct 22

There is substantial evidence to support the concept that most transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) are caused by microemboli that originate in areas of atherosclerosis in the blood vessels of the neck. TIA's are important risk factors in the development of stroke. The most common clinical features of TIAs caused by carotid insufficiency are hemianesthesia and hemiparesis; other symptoms in these cases include headache, dysphasia, and visual field distrubance. By far the most common clinical manifestation of vertebrobasilar insufficiency is vertigo.
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PMID:Transient ischemic attacks: Pathophysiology and medical management. 126 82

From 1977 to 1989, 28 patients, 18 men and 10 women, underwent 29 proximal vertebral artery reconstructions. Indications were vertebrobasilar insufficiency in 17 patients and TIA or stroke in 6. Five were asymptomatic. Procedures performed were endarterectomy in 20, reimplantation in 5, venous bypass in 3, and decompression in 1 case. Concomitant procedures were coronary artery bypass grafting (6) and carotid, subclavian, or innominate artery revascularization (14). There was no operative mortality. There were 3 early reoperations for occlusion, bleeding, and lymph fistula, respectively. Except for 1 foreign patient recent clinical follow-up was complete. Mean follow-up was 85.6 months (range 17-146). During follow-up 10 patients died. Causes were mainly cardiac (3), carcinoma (3), and stroke (2). Seventeen patients were alive, 13 had no cerebrovascular symptoms, 2 sustained a hemispherical stroke, 1 was only slightly improved, and 1 had a drop attack 131 months after operation. Five and ten-year actuarial survival rates were 85% and 51% respectively. Follow-up with duplex scan was available in 26 patients and was complete in 24. Mean duplex follow-up was 78.6 months (range 3-146). Significant abnormalities were noted in 6 but with symptoms in only 1 patient. Mean time to restenosis was 77.3 months. Late angiographic control in 10 patients correlated well with duplex findings. Proximal vertebral artery reconstruction yields good clinical long-term results, and duplex scan is a useful tool in the follow-up of these patients.
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PMID:Long-term clinical and duplex follow-up after proximal vertebral artery reconstruction. 146 83

From 1980 to 1990, 18 patients underwent trans-sternal repair for occlusive disease of the brachiocephalic artery. The mean age was 57 years (43-72). Most of the patients were women (n = 10). All but two patients had one or more symptoms related to the stenosis of the brachiocephalic trunk: right-sided upper limb ischemia (n = 7), transient ischemic attacks (n = 8), vertebrobasilar insufficiency (n = 6), left sided minor stroke (n = 1). Only two patients were asymptomatic before operation. Angiography revealed a tight stenosis (n = 14) or an occlusion (n = 3); in one patient it concerned an ulcerated non-stenotic plaque of the brachiocephalic artery. Eleven patients had coexistent involvement of other supraaortic vessels. Angiographically, clinically and intraoperatively, there was evidence of Takayasu arteritis in three female patients. All patients had direct repair by trans-sternal approach. Six patients with short lesions had thromboendarterectomy with patch angioplasty of the innominate artery. In eleven cases, aorto-brachiocephalic bypass grafting was performed. In one patient, aortic calcification precluded proximal anastomosis, and a carotid-to-carotid bypass was done. In five patients, simultaneous revascularization of subclavian (n = 3), left common carotid (n = 2) or internal carotid artery (n = 2) completed the procedure. In one patient, concomitant coronary revascularization was done. There was no operative mortality. Postoperative morbidity was limited to pulmonary infection (n = 2), transient neurologic deficit (n = 1) and renal insufficiency (n = 1). All patients had relief of symptoms. Duplex echo scan confirmed patency of all reconstructions at a mean follow-up of 46 months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Brachiocephalic arterial reconstruction. 155 48

A retrospective review of 42 patients (mean age 61.4 years) with surgically managed symptomatic internal carotid artery occlusion is reported. A standardized surgical protocol aimed at restoration of flow in the vessel was used. Presenting symptoms included hemispheric transient ischemic attacks in 68% of patients, new fixed neurological deficits in 28%, amaurosis fugax in 28%, and stroke-in-evolution in 9%. Twenty-four arteries were successfully reopened. A proximal remnant angioplasty (stumpectomy) was performed alone in nine patients or in combination with an external carotid endarterectomy in nine. In four patients with persisting symptoms who failed to achieve primary restoration of flow, a superficial temporal-to-middle cerebral artery bypass procedure was performed. The permanent surgical morbidity rate was 2% and the surgical mortality rate was 0%. Transient postoperative deficits were present in three patients (7%). Follow-up review at a mean of 40 months was obtained in 39 patients (93%). Following surgical intervention, five patients died of unrelated causes, two had neurological events consistent with a transient cerebral ischemic attack, and two had vertebrobasilar insufficiency. No patient suffered from stroke. Of the 24 successfully reopened vessels, follow-up ultrasound evaluations were obtained in 17 (73%) at a mean of 28 months after surgery. In 15 patients (88%) the vessels were widely patent, one (5.8%) had stenosis greater than 70%, and one (5.8%) showed asymptomatic reocclusion. Reopening occluded internal carotid arteries in selected patients is associated with low surgical morbidity and mortality rates. Further studies are necessary to determine the impact of this surgical therapy on the natural history of this condition.
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PMID:Thromboendarterectomy of the symptomatic occluded internal carotid artery. 156 37

A 17-year-old boy was hospitalized with transient consciousness disturbance on extension of the neck. At seven years of age, the patient developed delayed-onset posterior circulation stroke after the door struck him a mild blow on his forehead. A computed tomography scan revealed right cerebellar infarction with unknown etiology. He had been followed up without stroke recurrence and CT change until this hospitalization. Cerebral angiography disclosed bilateral vertebral artery occlusion at the C-2 level with the well-developed muscular collateral artery bypassing the occluded left vertebral artery. A cervical X-ray showed a posterior atlanto-axial subluxation with os odontoideum. Compression of the vertebral arteries due to mild trauma aggravating an atlanto-axial subluxation may have caused the bilateral vertebral artery thrombosis resulting in occlusion, and disturbance of the muscular collateral circulation on extension of the neck may have led to the recurrence of vertebrobasilar insufficiency. This is the first report of the angiographically confirmed bilateral vertebral artery occlusion with an established etiology in childhood.
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PMID:[Bilateral vertebral artery occlusion associated with atlantoaxial dislocation due to os odontoideum]. 180 69

The surgical management of an emerging clinical entity, namely disabling transient cerebral ischemic attacks, is described. A series of 19 patients treated in a 2-year period (12 with anterior circulation dysfunction and seven with posterior insufficiency) met the following criteria: 1) stereotypical recurrent episodes of transient neurological dysfunction related to the anterior or posterior circulation distribution; 2) failure of maximum medical therapy to control the transient neurological dysfunction; 3) four-vessel cerebral angiography demonstrating an isolated vascular territory corresponding to patient symptoms; 4) inhalation xenon cerebral blood flow studies with at least three of eight probe-pairs showing significant asymmetries in the initial slope index, localizing an area of relative oligemia to the symptomatic hemisphere (anterior circulation only); and 5) severe restriction of lifestyle due to transient ischemic attacks (TIA's). Seventeen patients underwent surgical bypass therapy: deep sylvian superficial temporal artery (STA)-middle cerebral artery (MCA) bypass in nine; surface STA-MCA bypass in three; STA-superior cerebellar artery bypass in three; STA-posterior cerebral artery bypass in one; and aorta-carotid artery bypass in one. There was one perioperative death and four perioperative strokes (two ipsilateral and two contralateral to the operated side). The average follow-up period was 14 months. Of the 16 surviving surgically treated patients, 13 (81%) have had an excellent to good outcome with complete resolution of TIA's and minimal neurological deficits. Three patients had a poor outcome with either a significant persistent neurological deficit or continued TIA's. The two patients not treated surgically continue to have vertebrobasilar insufficiency episodes while receiving oral anticoagulation medication. The overall mortality rate (5.5%) and stroke morbidity rate (22.2%) of surgical therapy for disabling TIA's are high in this neurologically unstable group of patients, but are associated with an 81% excellent to good response. Although the natural history of disabling TIA's is not known, these patients present with significant to total disability due to their symptoms. It is concluded that disabling TIA's respond to surgical revascularization and may represent an indication for cerebral revascularization surgery.
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PMID:Disabling cerebral transient ischemic attacks. 183 11

Between 1979 and 1989, 133 carotid artery reconstructions were performed in 130 patients with contralateral internal carotid artery occlusion. These 133 reconstructions represent 7.3% of 1815 revascularizations of the internal carotid artery for atheromatous lesions performed during the same period. There were 113 men (87%) and 17 women (13%) whose mean age was 64.8 years (range 38 to 83 years). Forty-two patients (32%) had coronary artery disease and 77 (59%) were hypertensive. Nineteen patients (14%) were asymptomatic; 16 (12%) had symptoms of isolated vertebrobasilar insufficiency; 19 (14%) had ipsilateral carotid symptoms (on the side of operation); 67 (51%) had contralateral symptoms (on the side of occlusion); and 12 (9%) had bilateral carotid symptoms. All procedures were performed under general anesthesia without the use of a shunt. Nine patients (6.8%) died in the postoperative period (eight of neurologic and one of respiratory causes). Twelve patients (9%) sustained a cerebral vascular accident (eight ipsilateral and four contralateral). Four of these cerebral vascular accidents were diagnosed upon awakening, the remaining eight occurred after an initial uneventful recovery. Combined neurologic mortality and morbidity was 9.8%. Patients with occlusive lesions of the contralateral carotid artery undergoing internal carotid artery reconstruction are at high risk for postoperative cerebral vascular accidents. It is in this group of patients that the various methods of monitoring and cerebral protection should be evaluated.
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PMID:Surgical reconstruction of the internal carotid artery with contralateral occlusion without use of shunt. 199 77


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