Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We performed a prospective, controlled study of kinetic therapy in acute, severe stroke. This therapy involved continuous mobilization of a bedridden patient by means of a specially designed rotating bed. All patients with acute stroke presenting to the Neurology Service over an 18-month period were screened, and those that qualified were assigned to confinement in either a routine hospital bed or a rotating bed. We found that the most common complication of stroke with bed confinement of 4 days or longer was bacterial infection consisting of either pneumonia, sepsis, or urinary tract infection. The two variables found to be of greatest significance in affecting the rate of infection were length of bed confinement, especially for greater than 13 days (2.3-fold increased risk, p less than 0.04), and placement in a routine hospital bed (2.9-fold increased risk, p = 0.023).
Stroke
PMID:Evaluation of kinetic therapy in the prevention of complications of prolonged bed rest secondary to stroke. 359 Feb 57

We prospectively studied 18 patients with septic shock prior to and during volume infusion in order to evaluate their hemodynamic response to fluid repletion. Fluid challenge increased left heart filling pressure from 7.7 +/- 0.5 to 15.4 +/- 0.6 mm Hg (P less than .01). The increases in left ventricular filling were associated with significant increases in stroke volume index from 25.4 +/- 2.5 to 35.7 +/- 2.5 ml/min/M2 and cardiac index from 2.49 +/- 0.19 to 3.32 +/- 0.16 L/min/M2. However, at the end of fluid challenge, the patients exhibited depressed left ventricular performance as evidenced by a left ventricular stroke work index of 29.5 +/- 2.6 g X m/M2. Over the next 24 hours of maintenance fluid infusion, the left ventricular stroke work index increased to 36.8 +/- 4.2 g X m/M2 (not significant). These data suggest that volume infusion restores ventricular filling in patients with sepsis. Although fluid repletion increases stroke and cardiac output, depressed left ventricular performance appears to be an early finding in septic shock.
...
PMID:Hemodynamic response to fluid repletion in patients with septic shock: evidence for early depression of cardiac performance. 360 3

A synthesis of the postulated sequence of events for development of the inappropriate response of the myocardium to a demand for increased cardiac index is schematically represented in Fig. 10. In sepsis, bacteremia and/or the release of endotoxin activate the macrophages which release a spectrum of mediators. Some of these mediators (and possibly also endotoxin itself) have a negative influence on myocardial contractile function either directly and/or through altering cellular calcium flux. This results in impaired myocardial function manifested initially by decreased stroke volume. Subsequently, stroke volume will be either partially or completely restored to normal through the action of circulating catecholamines, the concentration of which is markedly elevated due to the presence of endotoxin and/or macrophage-produced mediators. Endotoxin and/or these mediators also act on the SA node increasing its sensitivity to beta-adrenergic stimulation. This will result in elevated heart rates. The latter, combined with the restored stroke volume, will yield an increased cardiac index which is the hallmark of the hyperdynamic phase of sepsis. In the cecal ligation and puncture model of sepsis, where cardiac index is maintained at the original level, the partially restored stroke volume and the elevated heart rate will combine to maintain cardiac index. Although this mechanism of increasing cardiac index through tachycardia is not energy efficient, the myocardium is able to cope with these changes and also to maintain its high energy phosphate concentrations, since the utilization of the three major myocardial substrates (fatty acids, lactate and glucose) is not affected by sepsis. Although this putative sequence of events is consistent with the observed experimental findings, further work is needed to substantiate its applicability to the etiology of myocardial dysfunction in man during sepsis.
...
PMID:Myocardial dysfunction in sepsis. 361 52

Patients undergoing open heart surgery who have had recent cardiogenic embolic stroke or have central nervous system dysfunction pose a difficult management problem. There is always the risk that cardiopulmonary bypass and heparinization may exacerbate the neurologic injury. There is no clear data indicating what is a safe interval of time from the onset of neurologic symptoms to the time of surgery. Since 1982 we have operated on 15 patients with recent (2 to 28 days, mean 12.7 +/- 7.9 days) neurologic injury. Indications for surgery included recurrent embolization, sepsis, and hemodynamic deterioration. Three patients were comatose with no focal neurologic signs at the time of surgery, and 12 patients had focal neurologic deficits. All patients had preoperative computed tomographic scans. Embolic cerebral infarctions were documented in 12 patients, one patient had evidence of intracranial hemorrhage, and one patient had a subdural hematoma. Fourteen patients had native or prosthetic valvular endocarditis and one patient had a left atrial myxoma. All patients underwent corrective cardiac surgery. One patient died in the postoperative period from multisystem failure; all other patients have been followed since discharge (6 months to 4 years). All surviving patients demonstrated improvement in their neurologic symptoms and eight patients had complete neurologic recovery. The results of this study indicate that open heart surgery can be safely performed in patients with recent neurologic injury.
...
PMID:Results of open heart surgery in patients with recent cardiogenic embolic stroke and central nervous system dysfunction. 366 7

A canine sepsis model that simulates the human cardiovascular response to septic shock was produced in 10 conscious unsedated dogs by implanting an Escherichia coli-infected clot into the peritoneum, resulting in bacteremia. By employing serial, simultaneous measurements of radionuclide scan-determined left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF) and thermodilution cardiac index (CI), the end-diastolic volume index (EDVI) was calculated (EDVI = stroke volume index divided by EF). By using three different methods of quantifying serial ventricular performance (EF, shifts in the Starling ventricular function curve using EDVI vs. stroke work index, and the ventricular function curve response to volume infusion), this study provides evidence (P less than 0.01) that septic shock produces a profound, but reversible, decrease in systolic ventricular performance. This decreased performance was not seen in controls and was associated with ventricular dilatation (P less than 0.01); the latter response was dependent on an adequate volume infusion. Further studies of EDVI and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during diastole revealed a significant, though reversible, shift (P less than 0.001) in the diastolic volume/pressure (or compliance) relationship during septic shock.
...
PMID:Gram-negative bacteremia produces both severe systolic and diastolic cardiac dysfunction in a canine model that simulates human septic shock. 372 79

In order to evaluate a new thoracic electrical bioimpedance (TEB) system for measurement of stroke volume based on the Sramek-Bernstein equation, 391 paired values of cardiac output were measured simultaneously with the standard thermodilution method. These values were obtained from 16 patients selected for having the most severe illness during a 6-month period; the intent was to evaluate the bioimpedance method in the worst possible situations. The correlation coefficient (r) was 0.83, slope was 0.87, intercept was 1.53, and the mean difference between the two methods was 16.2 +/- 11.8 (SD)% in the total series. In 285 paired samples where satisfactory conditions were met, r was 0.90, slope was 0.98, intercept was 0.34, and the mean difference was 11.8 +/- 8.9%. The data indicate satisfactory correlations between these two methods. When the TEB waveform is satisfactory, the agreement between TEB and thermodilution is as good as the agreement between serial thermodilution methods. Difficulties may arise with dysrhythmias, tachycardia (heart rate greater than 150 beat/min), metal in the chest or chest wall, sepsis, hypertension, and extremely oily skin. Mechanical ventilation did not appear to be a problem.
...
PMID:Comparison of measurements of cardiac output by bioimpedance and thermodilution in severely ill surgical patients. 376 4

The use of conventional open-port catheters in total artificial heart (TAH) research shortens the survival time of recipients owing to sepsis and embolism caused from the catheters. Valuable data are lost when an open-port catheter clots off, and transducer position must be keyed to the level of the atria for accuracy. The need for an accurate, easily obtainable, noninvasive method for measuring atrial pressure is of obvious value. Such a method has been developed in vitro using a device that measures the stroke volume of a pneumatic ventricle. The stroke volume is obtained by quantifying the amount of air exiting a pneumatic TAH in diastole. Using this information ventricular filling rates can be calculated by the stroke volume measurement device, and these rates are correlated to measured atrial pressures. There is no need to continually adjust transducer levels in relation to the atria with this system. The data show an average percentage error of 2.4 of full scale (25 mm Hg) or 0.6 mm Hg. The method of measurement is accurate, without limitations on driving parameters. The information is available without any additional prosthetic fabrication or surgical intervention than that already needed for basic TAH implantation. This method of measuring atrial pressures now needs to be proved effective in vivo.
...
PMID:The artificial heart: pursuit of a noninvasive method for determining atrial pressures. 380 Jul 6

We describe 20 adult patients with malignant lymphoma with primary presentation in the spleen. The most common presenting symptoms were fever, malaise, and weight loss. Physical examination revealed prominent splenomegaly without palpable lymphadenopathy. Small lymphocytic lymphoma was the most frequent histologic type (11/20), followed by large cell lymphoma and mixed cell lymphoma (3/20 each). Bone marrow involvement was found in ten of 17 patients. At laparotomy, lymph node involvement, usually retroperitoneal, was found in six of 13 patients. There was liver involvement in seven of 15 patients. Follow-up has been relatively short, with an average of 24 months (range, one to 48 months). Four patients died as a result of progressive disease, one died of sepsis after splenectomy, and one died two years after diagnosis of a stroke. The prognosis in primary splenic lymphoma appears to be similar to that in nodal lymphoma.
...
PMID:Malignant lymphoma with primary presentation in the spleen. A study of 20 patients. 384 Sep 80

In anesthesized pigs, hemodynamic measurements and gated bloodpool scintigraphy were performed during and after infusion of live Escherichia coli (2 X 10(8)/kg). Ejection fractions (EF) as well as the relation between end-diastolic volumes (EDV) and stroke work (SW) were used to evaluate changes in left (LV) and right ventricular (RV) function. Porcine E. coli sepsis proved to be characterized by pulmonary vascular hypertension (PVH) and systemic arterial hypotension, accompanied by a reflex increase in heart rate. Systemic flow remained essentially unchanged. E. coli infusion resulted in pronounced and opposite changes in LV and RV preload. RVEDV increased initially and then returned to the value observed before E. coli infusion. LVEDV showed a continuous decrease during the observation of 3 hours. Alterations in LVSW and RVSW appeared to parallel the changes in LVEDV and RVEDV. No significant changes in LVEF and RVEF were found. It is concluded that porcine E. coli sepsis might be a suitable model for human sepsis complicated by PVH. In this animal model no clear signs of myocardial depression or evidence of right heart failure were observed.
...
PMID:Left and right ventricular function in porcine Escherichia coli sepsis. 388 76

We studied the effects of systemic sepsis on peripheral microcirculatory fluid exchange by examining changes in flow (Qlymph) and lymph-to-plasma [L/P] total protein and albumin ratios from lymph draining, the efferent duct of a prefemoral lymph node in sheep, before and during surgically-induced peritonitis. After baseline study, peritonitis was produced by cecal ligation, perforation, and devascularization. By 24 hours blood cultures revealed a polymicrobial bacteremia. The hemodynamic response to the septic insult during the 72-hour study period was characterized by an increase in heart rate and an initial fall in stroke volume index; yet, the mean blood pressure remained unchanged from baseline levels throughout the study protocol. The intrapulmonary shunt fraction increased (p less than 0.05) by 48 hours, as did both the Qlymph (2.6 +/- 1.9 ml/hr to 6.8 +/- 4.6 ml/hr; p less than 0.05) and the calculated lymph albumin clearance (1.6 +/- 1.2 ml/hr to 3.1 +/- 1.7 ml/hr; p less than 0.05). Although the calculated serum to interstitial colloid osmotic pressure gradient fell (F = 4.37; p less than 0.04), both the [L/P] total protein and albumin ratios were unchanged from baseline throughout 72 hours of study. Further, [L/P] total protein ratios were unrelated to Qlymph (r = -0.20); as Qlymph (experimental/baseline) increased with sepsis, [L/P] total protein ratio (experimental/baseline) did not fall (r = +0.62). We therefore conclude that systemic sepsis, as represented by this model of bacterial peritonitis, results in increased peripheral microcirculatory fluid flux that is primarily a consequence of an increase in permeability of the peripheral microvascular exchanging membrane.
...
PMID:Peripheral lymph flow in sheep with bacterial peritonitis: evidence for increased peripheral microvascular permeability accompanying systemic sepsis. 389 Feb 43


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>