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

The association of ischemic cerebrovascular lesions with livedo reticularis is known as Sneddon syndrome. It affects young subjects, primarily women, and its neurological manifestations are TIAs, ischemic stroke, progressive dementia and epileptic seizures. Its etiopathogenesis has still to be clarified. Some authors have associated it with an antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. Recently it has been assumed that a defect in blood coagulation may be involved in its pathogenesis. Here we report a case in which both an increase in coagulation factor VII activity and a deficiency in free protein S were documented.
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PMID:Cerebral ischemia and livedo reticularis in a patient with impairment of coagulation factor VII and free protein S. 142 96

Marked advances in the treatment of neurological disorders which affect the elderly have been established in recent years. Cerebrovascular disorders including stroke and vascular dementia are still among the most frequent diseases in the Japanese elderly. For treatment of hypertensive patients with or without a history of stroke, slight decrease of blood pressure (BP) is recommended since recent PET studies have revealed that an excessive drop of BP markedly decreases cerebral blood flow. Furthermore, 24-hour-monitoring of BP revealed that physiological fluctuation of BP consisting of high daytime BP and low nocturnal BP disappears in hypertensive patients with vascular dementia and those with non-symptomatic vascular lesions on MRI. Recommendable BP levels for the hypertensive elderly must be established. The efficacy of both aspirin and ticlopidine for prevention of stroke has been established. Recent multi-centric trials have revealed that ticlopidine is more effective in preventing stroke but has more dangerous adverse effects than aspirin. Aspirin is reported to improve both the intellectual scale and cerebral blood flow in vascular dementia. In Parkinson's disease (PD), L-DOPA therapy, usually in combination with a dopa decarboxylase inhibitor, is common. Other dopaminergic drugs including bromocriptine, lisuride and pergolide are used clinically or are being studied. Recently selective monoamine oxidase (MAO) B inhibitors have been used in order to slow clinical progression of the disease, in addition to an attempt to increase the potential of dopamine through inhibition of MAO. Neural transplants to the striatum of PD were first applied using autografts of the adrenal medulla in 1985, but resulted in transient or only slight improvements.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Recent therapeutic advances in geriatric neurology]. 143 48

Dementia is in addition to cerebral haemorrhage major symptom of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAa). In order to explore the pathological basis for dementia in CAa-related conditions, we made a clinicopathological analysis of CAa, with special attention to dementia. Among 150 patients (mean age 78.6 years) with autopsy-proven intracranial haemorrhage in Tokyo Metropolitan Geriatric Medical Center, CAa with cerebral haemorrhage accounted for 8.0% (12 cases), associated with hypertension and metastatic brain tumour. Among 38 patients with lobar haemorrhage, CAa represented the second most common cause (21.1%) of intracranial haemorrhage after hypertension. A total of 20 patients with CAa (mean age 82.5 years) were studies clinically and pathologically. Hypertension was present in 50%. Thirteen had a history of stroke and others had either ill-defined or no strokes. The average number of strokes 2.9. Fifteen patients (75%) had dementia. Based on the clinicopathological grounds for dementia, CAa-related conditions could be divided into three subtypes: "haemorrhagic", "dementia-haemorrhagic" and "dementia" type. Haemorrhagic type (30%, 6 cases) showed multiple recurrent lobar haemorrhages caused by CAa. Hypertension was present in only 1 patient. The incidence of senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles was generally correlated with age. Only 1 patient had dementia. The dementia-haemorrhagic type (40%, 8 patients) had recurrent strokes with cerebral haemorrhage after preceding dementia. There were two different neuropathological subsets: CAa with atypical senile dementia of Alzheimer type (SDAT) and CAa with diffuse leucoencephalopathy. Patients with CAa with atypical SDAT had multiple cerebral haemorrhages caused by CAa combined with atypical Alzheimer-type pathology. Patients with CAa with diffuse leucoencephalopathy had cerebral haemorrhages in combination with diffuse white matter damage like Binswanger's subcortical vascular encephalopathy (BSVE). The incidence of senile changes correlated with age. Patients with the dementia type (30%, 6 patients) showed progressive dementia with or without haemorrhage. All had hypertension. They had a combined condition of Alzheimer-type pathology with conspicuous CAa with BSVE. Dementia in CAa-related conditions may be responsible for multiple factors including not Alzheimer-type degeneration, but also diffuse leucoencephalopathy like Binswanger's disease. We also found an asymptomatic type, an ischaemic type, a vasculitis type and an hereditary type in this condition.
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PMID:Dementia in cerebral amyloid angiopathy: a clinicopathological study. 144 72

Eighty-four patients with ischaemic stroke aged 18-50 years were analysed. They had been treated in the years 1985-1989. Forty-five of them were followed up. In a high proportion of cases stroke was a result of thrombosis. Many risk factors were found in this group, mainly hypertension. In most cases stroke was serious, in several cases post-stroke epilepsy and poly-infarction dementia developed.
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PMID:[Ischemic stroke in patients under 50 years of age with special reference to its etiology and risk factors]. 145 19

Fifty-nine elderly patients who had been hospitalized more than six months in five hospitals in the city of Mino in Osaka Prefecture, were studied to clarify the factors influencing prolonged hospital stays by the elderly. Their mean age was 82.2 years, and women accounted for 86% of the patients. One-third had suffered a stroke. As for ADL, 44% were completely dependent when walking, eating, bathing and dressing. Moreover, 36% had severe dementia, 19% suffered from decubitus ulcers, 66% were undergoing rehabilitation, 58% were receiving venous infusion therapy, 36% used a urethral catheter, and 10% were receiving tube feeding. The subjects were divided into two groups according to the likelihood of discharge assessed by the doctors in charge: one group consisted of 27 patients who might be discharged and the other of 32 patients with an ongoing need for inpatient care. Multivariate analyses using Hayashi's quantification method II indicated that use of a urethral catheter and not undergoing rehabilitation were the main factors associated with the need for inpatient care, while being a woman, being of advanced age and not having one's own room at home were the non-medical factors which made it difficult for the patients to be discharged from the hospital. As use of a urethral catheter was the factor most strongly related to prolonged hospital stay, multivariate analyses were applied to the 45 patients with urinary incontinence, who were divided into one group of 21 patients with, and one of 24 without a urethral catheter. The factors associated with use of a urethral catheter were then investigated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Factors influencing prolonged hospital stays by elderly patients: problems in medical management including use of urethral catheters]. 146 52

Nuclear medicine has a place in the study of brain trauma, brain tumours, stroke, dementia epilepsy and depression. The development of new tracers labelled with widely available radionuclides, such as technetium-99m (99Tc) and iodine-123, has played a key role here. Practical methodology can now be implemented in the routine setting. Additional applications are reviewed in the context of brain death, encephalitis, post-viral fatigue syndrome, Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia.
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PMID:The role of nuclear medicine in neurology and psychiatry. 146 80

Urinary managements of 332 stroke patients in the chronic phase were performed at Bobath hospital. Cerebrovascular accidents (CVA) were caused by cerebral infarction in 178 (53.6%), intracerebral hemorrhage in 123 (37.1%) and subarachnoid hemorrhage in 31 (9.3%). Voluntary urination appeared in 124 patients before treatment, however in 29 of them occasional incontinence were observed. One hundred forty-three patients used diapers and 64 were controlled by indwelling catheters. The remaining one patient was treated by intermittent catheterization. Sixty-two patients who seemed to have communicative abilities in daily living were assessed with regard to their cerebrovascular dementia by Hasegawa's Dementia Rating Scale. After treatment 235 patients (70.8%) were able to urinate voluntarily, and only 15 of them remained incontinent and could use small pads successfully. TURP was effective for the stroke patients with benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH) or bladder neck sclerosis (BNS). Fifty-three patients (16.0%) with persistent urinary incontinence were managed by diapers or a system of condom drainage. Thirty-nine patients (11.7%) were kept dry with intermittent catheterization at home, and long-standing use of indwelling catheters were required in the remaining 5 patients (1.5%). These results indicate that the lower level of activity, mobility and mental state tended to prevent the stroke patients from improvement of urinary disorders.
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PMID:[Urinary managements of 332 stroke patients in the chronic phase]. 147 11

The use of tracers is an important technique available for studying cerebral function. Changes in 'signal' are large, but as a result of its photon limited nature, the measurement of this signal is limited: spatially, temporally and in terms of accuracy. The most commonly used single photon (SPECT) system (as apposed to positron) is that with a rotating gamma camera, although multi-headed devices and special purpose rings are now also commonly available. The problems of obtaining good functional information are however identical. Firstly the devices need to be optimised in terms of resolution and sensitivity. Secondly several sources of error, notably those associated with scatter, attenuation and limited spatial resolution, need to be corrected, with the aim of obtaining quantitative estimates of radioactivity concentration. Finally such quantitative estimates need to be converted into meaningful estimates of physiological variables by use of an appropriate model. The general aim of many SPECT measurements is to estimate blood flow for example using Tc-99m labelled HMPAO as a tracer. Good results have been obtained in many clinical conditions: stroke, dementia, tumour and epilepsy, for example. Many other tracers are also available, for example to measure density of receptor sites. The use of SPECT in conjunction with other techniques after image registration is suggested as being an essential tool in extracting maximal clinical information.
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PMID:Functional imaging of the brain using single photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT). 148 40

A retrospective study was performed to determine the incidence of perioperative stroke in patients with previous history of cerebrovascular disease (CVD). One hundred and seventy eight out of 20048 patients who underwent anesthesia and surgery during the period of 1985 to 1989 had history of prior CVD. Of them, 137 patients were managed with general anesthesia and 41 with regional anesthesia. Factors analyzed were interval between the prior CVD and the operation, intraoperative hemodynamic changes, perioperative changes in the hematocrit and urinary output, and postoperative neurological complications. Postoperative neurological complications occurred in 31 of the patients given general anesthesia (delayed awakening in 26, dementia syndrome in 6 and deterioration of paralysis in 1), whereas only one patient developed dementia syndrome postoperatively in those given regional anesthesia. None of the patients developed a postoperative stroke. There was no direct relationship between the factors analyzed and the incidence of postoperative neurological complications. Further studies are needed to identify more precisely factors contributing to the occurrence of cerebrovascular complication in a high risk patients.
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PMID:[Anesthesia and postoperative stroke in patients with previous cerebrovascular disease]. 149 73

We compared the extent of documentation of the diagnoses, vascular dementia and stroke, on inpatient (hospital) medical records and death certificates among 23 multi-infarct dementia index cases and 14 multi-infarct controls without cognitive dysfunction who were enrolled in a hospital-based case-control study and were followed longitudinally. Both the inpatient medical records and the death certificates markedly under-diagnosed vascular dementia when compared to the case-control study diagnosis. Furthermore, the diagnosis of stroke was grossly underdiagnosed on the death certificates. In lieu of the lack of medical record and death certificate documentation of vascular dementia, studies that utilize such information may be in considerable error. Clarification of the criteria for the diagnosis of vascular dementia and greater physician and public awareness of vascular dementia are needed.
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PMID:Vascular dementia: a clinical and death certificate study. 149 74


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