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

Several coagulation assays identify lupus anticoagulants, but there is no uniform opinion regarding minimum criteria for the diagnosis or the most sensitive procedure to be used to screen for lupus anticoagulants. Based on test availability and the cumulative literature, a sensitive activated partial thromboplastin time appears to be the most appropriate screening test. The dilute Russell's viper venom time may be used as both a screening and a confirmatory procedure. The platelet neutralization procedure is the most sensitive and specific of the confirmatory procedures that use an increased amount of phospholipid to either "bypass" or "neutralize" the lupus anticoagulant.
Stroke 1992 Feb
PMID:Coagulation assays for the lupus anticoagulant: review and critique of current methodology. 156 67

Antiphospholipid antibodies are heterogeneous. A subset of these antibodies is associated with arterial and venous thrombosis and recurrent pregnancy loss. This subset is best diagnosed by the lupus anticoagulant and solid-phase anticardiolipin tests. Solid-phase anticardiolipin tests use an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay employing cardiolipin or other negatively charged phospholipids as the antigen. Patients with antiphospholipid antibodies who have experienced thrombotic disorders often have an IgG isotype, persistent at high levels for prolonged periods. The anticardiolipin test has been standardized so that antibody isotype and level can be determined reproducibly. Standardized serological tests to measure antiphospholipid antibodies will enable uniform identification of patients at risk for thrombosis and will help elucidate the origin and mechanisms of action of these antibodies.
Stroke 1992 Feb
PMID:Serological detection of antiphospholipid antibodies. 156 72

Sneddon syndrome is know as the association of idiopathic livedo reticularis and cerebrovascular lesions. The most characteristic trait of this syndromes is a non-inflammatory arteriopathy in medium caliber vessels. The pathogenic role of antiphospholipid antibodies in this disease is not clear. Clinical characteristics and etiopathogenic features of eight patients with Sneddon's syndrome are reviewed, specially regarding its relationship with primary antiphospholipid syndrome. A female predominance was found (3:1) as well as a relationship with hypertension (five patients suffered hypertension), but no relation was found with contraceptive use. Three patients showed evidence of antiphospholipid antibodies, present as anticardiolipin antibodies with significative titers in three cases and lupus anticoagulant in one. Digital artery biopsy performed in four patients showed in all of them the pathologic features characteristic of this disease. Seven patients were treated with platelet activity inhibitors and one with oral anticoagulants. Six of them have had a year and half follow-up without showing any new ischemic stroke. The main etiopathogenic factor on Sneddon's syndrome is the presence of a non-inflammatory arteriopathy in medium caliber vessels. Blood hypertension and antiphospholipid antibodies could play a role in the development of cerebrovascular lesions in some cases. No relationship has been found with oral contraceptives in this series of patients. Medium term prognosis with platelet activity inhibitors therapy seems benign.
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PMID:[Sneddon's syndrome: its clinical characteristics and etiopathogenic factors]. 846 57

The antiphospholipid syndrome was diagnosed in 19 of 1078 patients treated between 1987 and 1991. All patients with antiphospholipid syndrome had either anticardiolipin antibody (16/19) or lupus anticoagulant (10/19); three patients had thrombocytopenia, eight patients had a prolonged partial thromboplastin time, and 10 patients had an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate. The most common site of involvement was the cerebral circulation (nine patients), manifested by transient ischemic attacks or stroke. Eight patients had upper extremity disease, characterized by symptoms of Raynaud's phenomenon, with angiographic lesions involving the brachial, radial, ulnar, and/or digital arteries. Lower extremity disease occurred in seven patients, with clinical presentations similar to those of atherosclerosis and varying angiographic patterns. In comparison with the population having atherosclerosis, patients with arterial manifestations of antiphospholipid syndrome were more likely to be women (13 of 19 versus 411 of 1078, p less than 0.02), were significantly younger (46.2 years versus 63.6 years, p less than 0.0001), did not smoke (1 of 19 patients versus 700 of 1078, p less than 0.0001), had a higher percentage of upper extremity involvement (8 of 18 versus 13 of 1078, p less than 0.0001), and had a higher incidence of early graft failure (9 of 12 grafts versus 13 of 371 grafts, p less than 0.0001). The syndrome is associated with the repetitive failure of vascular reconstructions and occlusion of native vessels. Antiphospholipid syndrome should therefore be suspected in young, female, nonsmokers with vascular disease, especially those with involvement of the upper extremity, cerebrovascular disease with normal findings on extracranial carotid angiography, and premature graft failure.
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PMID:Vascular disease in the antiphospholipid syndrome: a comparison with the patient population with atherosclerosis. 172 74

New details have been added to the description of the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. These include quantitation of risk of stroke; delineation of an associated acute occlusive vasculopathy syndrome, including its pathology; increased awareness of the association of adrenal insufficiency with antiphospholipid antibody; new demonstration of placental pathology in cases of fetal death; and new details on the persistence or transience of antibody in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. There are several animal models for the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. Assay standardization and reproducibility issues, more for the lupus anticoagulant than for the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for antiphospholipid antibody, remain as important barriers to progress. Antibody characteristics of activity, isotype, and subclass must be considered in assay interpretation; antigen characteristics of fatty acid chain and lipid phase are also important variables. Other circulating proteins may have clinical importance. Several laboratories have commented that antiphospholipid antibody interferes with protein C. A cofactor, apolipoprotein H, enhances binding of some antiphospholipid IgG antibodies. Other phospholipid-binding proteins are known. Isolation, purification, and perhaps cloning of many of these factors should lead to a better understanding of the pathogenesis of the syndrome.
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PMID:Antiphospholipid antibody and antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. 183 43

An association between anti-phospholipid antibodies and different disorders of the central nervous system has been described recently. We used an ELISA technique and detected anti-cardiolipin antibodies of the IgG or IgM variety in a series of 10 patients: 4 had occlusive stroke, 2 brain hemorrhage, 2 chorea, 1 a Sneddon syndrome and 1 vascular cephalea. The diagnosis of primary anti-phospholipid syndrome was suggested after ruling out systemic lupus in all patients.
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PMID:[Anticardiolipin antibodies and primary antiphospholipid syndrome of the central nervous system: report of 10 clinical cases]. 184 51

The central nervous system (CNS) is clinically involved in approximately 40% of all systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE) patients. Minor psychiatric symptoms and abnormalities on neuropsychological testing are being detected with increasing frequency. This review summarizes current thinking concerning the diagnosis and pathogenesis of CNS lupus. The main symptoms of CNS lupus can be diffuse (generalized seizures, psychosis) or focal (stroke, peripheral neuropathies). Neuropsychiatric symptoms often occur in the first year of SLE, but are rarely the presenting symptoms of the disease. In studies on the pathology of CNS lupus, vasculopathy, infarcts and haemorrhages are often observed, whereas vasculitis is rare. Endocardial lesions and mural thrombi have also been reported in 33-50% of CNS lupus patients. In diagnostic imaging of the CNS, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans often provide evidence for edema or small infarcts, both in focal and diffuse CNS lupus, whereas computerized tomography (CT) scans only show gross abnormalities. The first reports on position emission tomography (PET) scans in CNS lupus patients show decreased glucose uptake in the brain. The cerebral blood flow decreases during active diffuse and focal CNS lupus. The blood-brain barrier is somewhat more frequently impaired in diffuse CNS lupus. Intrathecal IgG and IgM production is observed in 25-66% of all CNS lupus patient. Various specificities of autoantibodies have been observed in CNS lupus. Of these, anticardiolipin (ACA) antibodies show a well-documented association with focal involvement of the CNS in SLE. These antibodies could cause thrombosis by interfering with the protein C pathway of fibrinolysis. In addition, they are associated with endocardial and valvular heart disease, which is often observed in SLE and which could cause embolism. The relation between ACA and diffuse CNS lupus is not yet clear. Low-avidity anti-DNA antibodies are also found in CNS lupus, possibly because of their cross-reaction with cardiolipin. Antineuronal antibodies and lymphocytotoxic antibodies have been associated with diffuse CNS lupus and abnormalities on neuropsychological testing. However, the population of these antibodies is rather heterogeneous and it has not been possible to assess a common target antigen. Therefore, it is still obscure whether there is also a second immune-mediated mechanism responsible for the development of the diffuse form of CNS lupus.
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PMID:Diagnosis and pathogenesis of CNS lupus. 186 69

A 65-year-old white female without lupus developed concurrent thrombocytopenia and disturbed arterial circulation to the brain and lower leg (a minor stroke and lower leg gangrene, necessitating amputation). Laboratory studies disclosed high levels of anticardiolipin antibodies. Anticoagulant treatment restored circulation in the remaining leg and also normalized platelet levels. This case emphasizes the importance of searching for anticardiolipin antibodies in unexplained thrombotic events.
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PMID:Large vessel occlusion, cerebral infarction and thrombocytopenia in the "primary" antiphospholipid syndrome. Response to anticoagulation. 190 98

Neurologic manifestations, afflicting up to 70% of SLE patients, include psychosis, seizures, chorea, neuropathies, and stroke. MRI is useful in evaluation of lupus patients and several reports have documented cerebral atrophy or focal hyperintensities. We report an unusual MRI appearance in a 56-year-old woman with SLE, diagnosed on the basis of pleuritis, lymphopenia, anti-DNA antibodies, and neurologic involvement. She reported recent onset of Raynaud's phenomenon and generalized macular rash. She presented after two months of gradual deterioration with memory loss, flattened affect, dysphagia, dysarthria, anomia, and somnolence, without focal neurologic signs. Investigations included elevated ESR, reduced complement, normal CSF without oligoclonal bands, negative viral serology, normal hormone and vitamin levels, normal renal and hepatic function. Neuropsychologic testing showed widespread impairment (WAIS-R: FSIQ-63; WMS-69; DRS-98; RCPM-14; WAB AQ-78.8). CT was normal but MRI showed strikingly symmetric, confluent hyperintensities extensively involving cerebral and cerebellar white matter on T1 and T2 weighted scans. Basal ganglia and subependymal and subcortical white matter were spared. Treated with prednisone, the patient made a gradual, but incomplete, recovery. These MRI findings may reflect widespread vasculopathy or direct immunologic brain insult with or without immunologic blood-brain barrier disruption.
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PMID:Dementia with leukoencephalopathy in systemic lupus erythematosus. 191 71

We investigated the anticardiolipin antibody (ACA) in a series of patients with cerebral infarction without systemic lupus erythematosus (SLA). Clinical and laboratory data were assessed from a series of 250 non-SLE patients with cerebral infarction who visited our clinic from 1988 to 1990. The concentration of anticardiolipin IgG antibody was measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay technique. An elevated ACA level was defined as one which was greater than 3 standard deviations above the mean level for normal controls. We examined the CT findings and risk factors for stroke such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia and cardiac disease. Laboratory data such as the platelet count, the presence of lupus anticoagulant and a biologic false-positive test for syphilis were also investigated. Among the 250 patients with infarction, IgG ACA was detected in 22 (8.8%). There was no significant difference in incidence of ACA between the patients with cerebral thrombosis and those with cerebral embolism. On CT scan, multiple cerebral infarcts were noted in 18 of the 22 patients. As regards the location of the infarct, the cerebral cortex together with the basal ganglia was more common than isolated lesions of the cortex or basal ganglia. Concerning the risk factors for stroke, hypertension was noted in 12, diabetes mellitus in 2, hyperlipidemia in 2 and cardiac disease in 2. Lupus anticoagulant and thrombocytopenia were not detected in any of the cases. A biologic false-positive test for syphilis was observed in one case. Dementia was present in 12 of the 22 patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Anticardiolipin antibody in cerebral infarction]. 191 23


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