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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Time-compressed Fourier analysis of the electroencephalogram has proven to be a useful analytical procedure during anesthesia and surgery which simplifies data interpretation by presenting the EEG in a time-compressed frequency domain rather than the conventional time domain. This method of data analysis graphically accentuates the electroencephalographic correlates of ischemia-induced
cerebral dysfunction
and other cerebral oxygen consumption abnormalities. The ability to accentuate trends in frequency and power is derived from sequential plotting of spectra to produce a graph with three dimensional axes of frequency, time, and power. In carotid endarterectomies the system has proven more useful than the conventional EEG in assessing the need for a vascular shunt to maintain internal carotid flow during endarterectomy. In open-heart surgery time-compressed EEG spectral analysis has allowed early recognition of cerebral ischemia resulting from arterial hypotension and venous hypertension. Five cases are presented which demonstrate the ability of our system to reflect developing cerebral ischemia.
Stroke
PMID:Monitoring of cerebral perfusion during anesthesia by time-compressed Fourier analysis of the electroencephalogram. 32 37
A 57-year-old man with no personal or family history of manic-depressive disease developed symptoms of hypomania after a
cerebrovascular accident
and surgical trauma to the brain. The patient responded well to lithium carbonate treatment over a 2-year period. Although this therapy is contraindicated in cases of organic brain syndrome, the authors suggest that it should be considered in the management of hypomanic behavior following organic
brain dysfunction
.
...
PMID:Positive therapeutic response to lithium in hypomania secondary to organic brain syndrome. 116 80
A patient with diffuse and focal
cerebral dysfunction
was found to have absent peripheral pulses. Cerbral angiography revealed evidence of an arteritis with bilateral high grade carotid stenosis. When there was no laboratory confirmation of the arteritis, an iatrogenic etiology (ergotism) was suspected. This was later confirmed by the patient. The pertinent literature on ergotism is reviewed, and it is emphasized that ergotism may develop in patients on therapeutic doses of the drug.
Stroke
PMID:Cerebral manifestations of ergotism. Report of a case and review of the literature. 125 10
To determine whether hypertension, the predominant risk factor for
stroke
and vascular dementia, is associated with brain atrophy, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were performed to quantify brain volumes and cerebrospinal fluid spaces. Eighteen otherwise healthy, cognitively normal older hypertensive men (mean +/- SD age, 69 +/- 8 years, duration of hypertension 10-35 years) and 17 age-matched healthy, normotensive male control subjects were studied in a cross-sectional design. Axial proton-density image slices were analyzed using region-of-interest and segmentation analyses. The hypertensive subjects had significantly larger mean volumes of the right and left lateral ventricles (p less than 0.05, both absolute volume and volume normalized to intracranial volume) and a significantly smaller normalized mean left hemisphere brain volume (p less than 0.05) with a trend toward significance for a smaller normalized mean right hemisphere volume (p less than 0.09). Four hypertensive subjects and one healthy control subject were found to have severe periventricular hyperintensities on T2-weighted MRI images. When data for these subjects were removed from the analyses, the normalized lateral ventricle volumes remained significantly larger in the hypertensive group. Lateral ventricle enlargement was not related to age or use of diuretics in the hypertensive group nor to duration of hypertension between 10 and 24 years. Our findings suggest that long-standing hypertension results in structural changes in the brain. Longitudinal studies will determine whether MRI-associated changes are progressive and if such changes identify hypertensive subjects at increased risk for clinically apparent
brain dysfunction
.
...
PMID:Brain atrophy in hypertension. A volumetric magnetic resonance imaging study. 151 53
In the rat heat
stroke
model, established by heating to a climatic chamber temperature of 42 degrees C, the brain temperature was found to be consistently lower than the rectal temperature, suggesting efficient brain cooling mechanisms in the rat. In response to heating, with increasing brain temperature, the latencies of the somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) showed an initial decrease followed by an increase (inflection point). Studies were done on rats heated up to, before, or after the inflection point and then cooled. Reversibility with cooling of functional and structural changes induced by heat was evaluated by analysis of SEPs, survival time, brain blood perfusion and histopathology. The evidence from these studies demonstrated that the brain temperature at which the inflection in wave P2 latency occurred was critical, beyond which hyperthermia produced irreversible changes in the SEP, shorter survival time, relative reduction in brain blood perfusion and evidence of brain histopathological damage. The suggestion that endorphins may mediate
brain dysfunction
in hyperthermia was investigated. In rats heated and then cooled after wave P2 latency inflection naloxone, the endorphin antagonist, was injected (10 mg/kg, intravenously) just prior to the inflection. It produced reversibility of SEP changes as well as longer survival time (P less than 0.001) compared to saline-treated rats.
...
PMID:Effect of hyperthermia on somatosensory evoked potentials in the anaesthetized rat. 171 63
The relationship between depression and dementia is complex. Transient emotional disturbances and long-lasting depressive disorders may occur as psychological reactions to the loss of mental abilities or as behavioural manifestations of brain injury. On the other hand, major depressive disorder of late onset or of a recurrent type may be superimposed on dementing illness. Depression, particularly in elderly individuals, can manifest itself as a reversible syndrome of dementia that responds favourably to antidepressant treatment. It is not known whether the dementia syndrome of depression represents a quantitative intensification of minor cognitive impairments that can be observed in a large proportion of depressed patients. It also remains doubtful whether dementia in depressed patients has to be considered as an epiphenomenon of pervasive melancholic illness. An alternative explanation would look at such conditions as manifestations of a specific
brain dysfunction
. Major depression associated with cognitive impairment in
stroke
patients might be regarded as an example of a reversible dementia dysfunction.
...
PMID:Depressive disorders and dementia: the clinical view. 189 74
Much of the research related to cardiopulmonary bypass in recent years has been directed toward defining the changes in plasma and blood cells during bypass. In this review, recent information is reexamined for six areas of current interest. These areas are complement activation, immune response, anaphylactic reactions, coagulation, and
cerebral dysfunction
. Complement may be activated by either the classical or alternate pathway during cardiopulmonary bypass and protamine administration. Membrane oxygenators appear to diminish the degree of complement activation. Complement is a major factor in the whole body inflammatory response; which often accompanies cardiopulmonary bypass. A product of complement activation, C5a- desArg, causes activation and aggregation of granulocytes. Other products of complement activation lead to lysis of blood cells including granulocytes and red cells. Bubble oxygenators appear to have a distinct disadvantage compared to membrane oxygenators regarding infection. Airborne microorganisms are more likely to be entrained into circulating blood with bubble oxygenators than with membrane oxygenators. Bubble oxygenators cause a greater decrease in leukocyte number and function than membrane oxygenators. Anaphylactic reactions have been associated with use of antibiotics, blood products, protamine, and volume expanders during cardiopulmonary bypass. Protamine reactions may be on an immunological basis or due to direct toxicity of the drug. Free radicals including superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and the hydroxyl radical may be generated during cardiopulmonary bypass and reperfusion. Free radical scavengers including; vitamin E, coenzyme Q, vitamin C, mannitol, and glutathione have been studied. The avoidance of blood transfusion because of risk of transmitted infection including AIDS has become a major goal in cardiac surgery. Factors that correlate with increased transfusion requirement include low hematocrit, female gender, increased age, small body size, low ejection fraction, reoperation, and emergency operation. Heparin resistance due to antithrombin III deficiency is being recognized more commonly. Antithrombin III deficiency may be corrected with fresh frozen plasma. Patients with heparin induced thrombocytopenia may be difficult to manage. Several management protocols are suggested. The most straightforward appears to be the use of aspirin preoperatively and platelet transfusions postoperatively. The incidence of
cerebral dysfunction
after cardiopulmonary bypass depends on the sensitivity of the test or indicator used. Perioperative
stroke
is associated with intrinsic cerebrovascular disease and atherosclerosis of the ascending aorta. Retinal angiograms during cardiopulmonary bypass show that microemboli are very common. Cerebroplegia has been shown to extend the period of safe circulatory arrest in animals. Much of the new knowledge concerning cardiopulmonary bypass is the result of close collaboration between cardiac surgeons and nonsurgical scientists.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of cardiopulmonary bypass: current issues. 213 41
We examined plasma catecholamines and monoaminergic metabolites (3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylethyleneglycol [MHPG], homovanillic acid [HVA], and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid) in patients with
stroke
successively up to three weeks after the initiation of symptoms. Plasma levels of free catecholamines were significantly elevated in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). However, no significant differences in plasma catecholamines were found when the patients with SAH were subdivided into noncomatose and comatose groups. In contrast, plasma HVA, MHPG, and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid levels in comatose patients with SAH significantly increased as compared not only with normal controls but also with noncomatose patients with SAH, and the peak levels of HVA and MHPG occurred within seven days poststroke. Such trends as observed in SAH were not observed in patients with cerebral hemorrhage. Our results suggest the usefulness of plasma monitoring of possibly centrally originating monoaminergic metabolites for predicting the degree of
cerebral dysfunction
in patients with SAH.
...
PMID:Plasma monoaminergic metabolites and catecholamines in subarachnoid hemorrhage. Clinical implications. 243 72
Many possible complications are associated with cardiopulmonary bypass. They are similar to the risks accompanying most surgical procedures and include
stroke
, renal failure, and death. This potential for complication increases when bypass exceeds 2 hours and rises sharply when pump time is prolonged more than 3 to 4 hours. One group of serious complications is major neurologic disorders. The risk of significant
cerebral dysfunction
, that is, severe focal
stroke
or coma, is about 1%, and this risk increases with age and coexistent cardiovascular disease. This article focuses on the complication of coma and the possible role cardiopulmonary bypass plays in improving survival rates. A case study is presented illustrating the potential role of cardiopulmonary bypass in the unexpected neurologic recovery from coma.
...
PMID:Recovery from coma that results as a complication of cardiac arrest followed by cardiopulmonary bypass. 258 45
Records of perioperative complications following 407 consecutive carotid endarterectomies performed in 366 patients in the 18-year period have been presented. The complications are categorized according to the clinical stage of vascular disease, that is, according to the indications for the surgery. Out of the total number, 46 (11.3%) operations were done in the 1st, asymptomatic stage of disease, for the haemodinamically significant stenoses and ulcerated plaques; 173 (42.5%) in the 2nd clinical stage for hemispheral and nonhemispheral transient ishemic attacks (TIA) and reversible neurologic deficits (RIND); 3 (0.7%) in the 3rd stage which is a progressive cerebrovascular
stroke
and 185 (45.5%) in the 4th clinical stage of the disease, in patients with previous cerebral infarction and a permanent neurologic deficit. The rate of a temporary and permanent neurologic deficit, as well as mortality in the first stage of the disease equals zero. In the second stage of the disease, the rate of a temporary neurologic postoperative morbidity increases to 1.7%, of a permanent neurologic morbidity to 1.2%, while the rate of mortality is 1.2%. In the 3rd and 4th stage, those rates amount to 66.7%, 0% and 33.3%, and 1.1%, 3.8% and 1.6%, respectively. The rates of perioperative morbidity and mortality are in proportion to the scope of preoperative
brain dysfunction
. Results of this work suggest the necessity of categorization of patients, candidates for carotid endarterectomy, according to the clinical stage of the disease, which will enable a better comparison with other authors' results, give a more reliable view on the efficacy of the surgical treatment and justify the surgeons' attitude towards indications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Perioperative complications in carotid endarterectomy with respect to the stage of the cerebrovascular disease]. 263 89
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