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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This is a case report on a patient with MELAS (mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis and
stroke
-like episodes). This study documents, by CT scan, the progression of the disease for 7 years. The first CT scan was normal; all subsequent CT scans were pathological. In addition, one MRI study was done.
...
PMID:[The MELAS syndrome. Computed tomographic documentation of its course and magnetic resonance tomography]. 319 17
Six alcoholic patients developed extensive cerebral hemispheric hemorrhages with both intraventricular and subarachnoid blood. All patients had evidence of liver damage, low platelet counts, and abnormal prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times. Four patients presented with seizures; in two of the four, these seizures were initially diagnosed as alcohol withdrawal seizures. Four patients were comatose with lateralizing neurologic deficit; two patients were comatose without lateralizing neurologic deficit, suggesting a metabolic
encephalopathy
. In one patient there was delayed neurologic deterioration. In all six patients, computed tomography showed large diffuse cerebral hemispheric hemorrhages, prominent intraventricular blood, and breakthrough into the subarachnoid spaces, which was confirmed by necropsy findings. There was marked mass effect but minimal surrounding edema. All six patients died. In three, autopsy showed no evidence of aneurysm, vascular malformation, neoplasm, or amyloid angiopathy and no arteriolar hypertensive changes.
Stroke
1988 Dec
PMID:Alcoholic intracerebral hemorrhage. 320 17
Two patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (MEP) serve to emphasize the variability of this group of diseases. Cerebral insults, mitochondrial cardiopathy, relapsing ileus, cerebral angioma, ataxia, and myoclonic seizures characterized the first case of an adult man with similar diseases in his family, interpreted as transitional form between mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis and
stroke
-like episodes (MELAS) and myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged red fibers (MERRF). The second patient, a floppy infant with cardiomyopathy and myoclonism, statomotoric and mental retardation showed combined defects in mitochondrial respiratory chain at NADH-CoQ reductase and cytochrome c oxidase and a deficiency of carnitine. In both patients neuropathologically criteria of Leigh's syndrome could be demonstrated in the cerebral cortex, in case 2 also clinically. The classificatory problems of the relationships between KSS, MELAS, MERRF, Leigh's as well as Alpers' syndromes are discussed.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial myopathies with necrotizing encephalopathy of the Leigh type. 322 73
Two patients are reported with mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis, and
stroke
-like episodes in whom CT documented massive focal brain swelling with midline shift concurrent with exacerbations of their conditions. Brain swelling producing mass effect should be recognized as a feature of MELAS.
...
PMID:Massive focal brain swelling as a feature of MELAS. 324 75
The terms Binswanger's disease and arteriosclerotic subcortical
encephalopathy
are often applied to elderly patients with dementia and a diffuse hypodensity of the white matter on CT scan (or increased signal on MRI). Recently, similar white matter abnormalities have been reported in non-hypertensive patients with Alzheimer's disease and in elderly healthy people, casting doubt upon Binswanger's disease as an entity. These findings also suggest that the descriptive term leukoaraiosis meaning rarefied white matter is more appropriate than the term leucoencephalopathy. Nevertheless, within the group of patients with an ischemic
stroke
, several data suggest that leukoaraiosis is not a fortuitous finding and does not simply reflect ageing. Actually, these patients have a particular clinical profile, with intellectual deterioration, chronic hypertension, usually patent carotid arteries, and a deep location of the presenting infarct. Moreover hypertension seems to be still more strongly associated with leukoaraiosis than with a deep location of the infarct (lacunar infarction).
...
PMID:[Leukoencephalopathy, leukoaraiosis and cerebral infarction]. 327 83
Blood flow velocity of the middle cerebral artery was monitored during cardiopulmonary bypass procedures by means of transcranial Doppler ultrasonography. Our investigation was carried out in a group of 16 patients with severe carotid stenosis or occlusion and in a control group of 42 patients with no or stenosis of less than 50% local diameter reduction. After onset of cardiopulmonary bypass, both groups showed a short unstable phase followed by increased blood flow velocity (10% increase ipsilateral to the obstruction, 27% increase in the control group). Just before rewarming, blood flow velocity was still comparable to (control group -3%) or higher than (ipsilateral to obstructions +14%) prebypass values. Analysis of three patients with postoperative diffuse
encephalopathy
did not reveal reduced blood flow during cardiopulmonary bypass as a relevant factor. Two of the three showed luxury perfusion. Reduced perfusion due to carotid obstruction was not observed during cardiopulmonary bypass and therefore cannot be considered a significant risk factor for the development of intraoperative
stroke
.
Stroke
1988 Jun
PMID:Transcranial Doppler ultrasonography during cardiopulmonary bypass in patients with severe carotid stenosis or occlusion. 328
MELAS is a distinctive syndrome manifested by mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis, and recurrent
stroke
-like episodes such as seizures, alternating hemiparesis, hemianopsia, or cortical blindness. Pathologically the disorder is characterized by multiple, solitary or continuous foci of necrosis (infarct or softening), varying in size and stage, predominantly involving the bilateral cerebral cortices and to a lesser degree cerebral white matter, basal ganglia, brainstem and cereblum. The distribution of the lesions does not correspond to vascular territories, suggesting that they are not due to usual thrombotic or embolic process. The exact nature and pathogenesis of these lesions with characteristic distribution pattern remain to be elucidated. We studied systematically cerebral blood vessels from two autopsied patients with MELAS by electron microscopy. All the main cerebral arteries including anterior, middle and posterior cerebral, basilar and vertebral arteries were examined at their proximal portions at the cerebral base and at their peripheral portions at the cortical surface as well as within brain parenchyma. We found marked accumulation of mitochondria in the cell bodies of smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells and numerous smooth muscle cells showing degeneration or necrosis, sporadically or in clusters in the tunica media. These abnormalities were most prominent in the walls of pial arterioles and small arteries up to 250 mu in diameter, and less frequent and severe in the larger pial arteries and intracerebral arterioles and small arteries. These vascular changes are different from any of those described in various disorders known to involve the cerebral blood vessels and are thus characteristic to the cerebral blood vessels of MELAS. We think that these peculiar vascular changes called mitochondrial angiopathy are caused by primary mitochondrial dysfunction in the vascular smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells themselves, as is the same in the skeletal and cardiac muscles in this disease, and that they constitute the pathogenic base of the brain lesions with unusual distribution pattern and nature in MELAS.
...
PMID:[Mitochondrial angiopathy in the cerebral blood vessels of MELAS (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and strokelike episodes)]. 337 Jan 63
A 19-year-old woman with long-standing sensorineural deafness, bilateral cataracts and mild clumsiness, presented with acute focal edema in the left temperoparieto-occipital area which required surgical decompression as a life-saving measure. Investigation revealed a persistent lactic acidemia and evidence of many ragged red fibres in a skeletal muscle biopsy specimen, suggesting a diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis and
stroke
-like episodes (MELAS) syndrome. The patient developed two further
stroke
-like episodes over a short period. One sibling died at the age of 14 years with a progressive neurological illness characterised by seizures, bilateral optic atrophy, ataxia, myoclonus and progressive dementia. The diagnosis of MELAS syndrome should be considered in young people presenting with
stroke
-like episodes that fail to conform to a given vascular territory, particularly if they have long-standing minor neurological abnormalities or a family history of obscure early onset neurological disease. The different clinical pictures in the two affected siblings in this family suggest that MELAS syndrome is part of a spectrum of inherited mitochondrial cytopathies rather than a discrete disease entity.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS): adolescent onset with severe cerebral edema. 339 2
Basing on the example of two cases, the clinical and morphological variability of mitochondrial encephalomyopathies is demonstrated. Both patients were of short build, and the clinical signs and symptoms were dementia, ataxia, epilepsy and hardness of hearing, whereas signs of myopathy were very mild or absent. Computed tomography showed infratentorial pronounced atrophy of the brain and basal ganglia calcifications, in one case additionally ischemic infarctions, as can be seen in "mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis and
stroke
-like episodes syndrome" (MELAS). A CT follow-up over 8 years with a progression of the abnormalities parallel to the progressive clinical course is demonstrated. Besides typical "ragged red fibres-myopathy" different abnormalities of mitochondria were seen by the electron microscope. One of the patients died; he had exceptional pathological-anatomical findings with mitochondrial cardiomyopathy, angioma and necrotising
encephalopathy
of Leigh's type. The two case reports show that in patients with such multisystemic neurological signs and CT-findings mitochondrial encephalomyopathy should be considered and a muscle biopsy should be performed.
...
PMID:[Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy: clinical aspects, CT morphology and neuropathology]. 339 29
Morphological study of the choroid plexuses of two patients with mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis, and
stroke
-like episodes (MELAS) revealed an enormously increased number of mitochondria with structural abnormalities in almost all of the choroidal epithelial cells. The majority of the cells also showed loss of microvilli and collapsed or attenuated apical cytoplasmic processes with increased electron density and lysosome-like dense bodies. The blood vessels of the choroid plexus showed the features of mitochondrial angiopathy previously described in the pial arteries of the same patients. These findings are interpreted as the morphological expression of a primary biochemical defect of the mitochondrial function in the choroid plexus, and as the probable explanation for increased CSF lactate and pyruvate levels in this disease.
...
PMID:Involvement of choroid plexus in mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (MELAS). 343 8
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