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

The relationship between increase in water content in ischemic brain and levels of regional blood flow has been studied in 11 primates. Flows were recorded using the method of hydrogen (2-minute) clearance, from a total of 128 electrodes in cortex and white matter, and a gradation of ischemia was produced by middle cerebral occlusion transorbitally. The flows were reduced in the area of densest ischemia from control levels of 12.0 +/- 12.0 ml/100g/min to 7.0 +/- 5.4 ml/100g/min, with lesser decreases over the remainder of the ischemic hemisphere. Water content was measured in cortex and white matter, in regions topographically related to those of flow measurements, by densitometric assessment using precalibrated kerosene/bromobenzine columns. The average water content of cortex in regions remote from ischemia was 797.4 +/- 5.8 mg/gm and in white matter 708.5 +/- 8.2 mg/gm. Significant increases in water content (comparing corresponding regions of the two hemispheres) of up to 11.4 +/- 7.5 mg/gm were demonstrated in the most ischemic cortical areas. A gradient of water increase was evident in the ischemic hemisphere, increases water content being greatest in the opercular zone and least in the parasagittal area. Significant differences in white matter water content between the 2 hemispheres were demonstrated only in the most densely ischemic areas in the current experiments where ischemia was limited to 93 +/- 20 mins in the 11 animals without reperfusion. The relationship between ischemic density and water content increase showed that significant increases in water content occurred in regions where terminal flows had been below 20 ml/100g/min, indicating that accumulation of water in ischemic brain begins at flow values comparable to those associated with the failure of synaptic transmission, higher than those associated with failure of the ionic pump of the cell. Possible pathophysiological mechanisms are discussed.
Stroke
PMID:Ischemic brain edema following middle cerebral artery occlusion in baboons: relationship between regional cerebral water content and blood flow at 1 to 2 hours. 10 19

The Collaborative Study Group for the Study of Stroke in Young Women studied 598 women from age 15 to 44 years with cerebrovascular disease. They found that the use of oral contraceptives was significantly more prevalent in women who had suffered a thrombotic stroke than in women who had not had strokes. The risk of thrombotic stroke was estimated to be nine times greater in users of oral contraceptives than in nonusers. We report a case in which a previously healthy man who was using an oral contraceptive drug developed middle cerebral artery occlusion. In the absence of other predisposing factors in this case, it appears that the cerebrovascular occlusion was related to estrogen administration. The occurrence of persistent severe headaches in patients using estrogenic hormones may be a clue to impending cerebrovascular occlusion.
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PMID:Cerebrovascular occlusion in a transsexual man taking mestranol. 71 32

The autoregulatory capacity of areas of the cerebral circulation subjected to ischemia by acute middle cerebral occlusion has been assessed in experimental primates. Autoregulation was tested to a rise in blood pressure induced by aramine, and to a fall in blood pressure induced by exsanguination. Whole hemisphere autoregulation was substantially disturbed due to both increased blood pressure and lowered blood pressure, but fractionation of this response indicated that autoregulation to increased blood pressure was preserved in the parasagittal and intermediate zones of the hemisphere, and totally lost in the region of the sylvian opercula where middle cerebral occlusion had produced the most dense ischemia. In relation to reduced perfusion pressure, autoregulation was again widely impaired and assessment of the degree of impairment by areas indicated no significant difference between the areas of the sylvian opercula and the remainder of the lateral aspect of the hemisphere studied. Where the degree of ischemia in each individual electrode was assessed, however, it appeared that the degree of auto-regulatory loss to decreased perfusion pressure was dependent upon the intensity of ischemia, and autoregulation was partially preserved in electrodes whose immediate post-occulsion flow values were greater than 40% of basal flow. Retransfusion following exsanguination in animals with acute middle cerebral occlusion indicated that there was a linear relationship between the degreee of reperfusion achieved by retransfusion and the intensity of ischemia induced by exsanguination following middle cerebral occlusion. Thus there was some support for the no-reflow phenomenon in intensely ischemic areas.
Stroke
PMID:Autoregulation in acute focal ischemia. An experimental study. 82 33

Unilateral cerebrovascular occlusion was produced in heparinized rats within seconds after injection of microgram quantities of sodium arachidonate into the internal carotid artery. Electroencephalographic activity over the affected cerebral hemisphere became attenuated, and cerebral blood flow decreased by half. A neurologic syndrome, including ipsilateral blindness and contralateral sensorimotor deficits, resulted from occlusion of the microvasculature by platelet thrombi. Although aspirin strongly inhibited arachidonate-induced platelet aggregation in vitro, the drug offered little protection against arachidonate-induced stroke.
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PMID:Arachidonate-induced cerebrovascular occlusion in the rat. The role of platelets and aspirin in stroke. 94 86

A technique for analysis of dynamic radionuclide studies of the cerebral circulation is described. This technique permits objective classification of observed radionuclide distribution patterns. Variation in the time-to-peak activity, and in the maximum attained activity as determined by region-of-interest analysis of cerebral hemispheric activity, was defined for a normal population. Application of these normal values permits classification of observed hemispheric radionuclide distribution patterns in anaplastic gliomas and in occlusive cerebrovascular disease. Radionuclide activity in gliomas may be normal, decreased, or increased in the region of the tumor. In cerebrovascular occlusion, decreased activity, associated with a delay in time-to-peak activity, is frequently demonstrated in the affected hemisphere.
Stroke
PMID:Characterization of malignant gliomas and cerebrovascular disease by cerebral dynamic studies. 112 19

This report describes three patients, with acute cerebral arterial occlusion, treated with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA). In one patient with basilar artery occlusion thrombolytic treatment was initiated 12 h after onset of the symptoms. In two patients with angiographically verified occlusion of the middle cerebral artery, the treatment was initiated approximately 4.5 h after onset of the symptoms. Recombinant tissue plasminogen activator 80-120 mg, was infused intra-arterially over 90-100 min via a catheter the tip of which was close to the occlusion. This regimen resulted in recanalization in all the patients; however, in two patients it was verified by repeat CT scan only. In two patients the thrombolytic treatment was successful (the patients improved clinically); the third patient died of massive cerebral infarct-related oedema. In none of the patients did significant bleeding or other obvious side-effects occur. From this preliminary report it is concluded that angiographically proven thrombolytic recanalization in acute cerebrovascular occlusion is possible with rt-PA. In some patients, however, the treatment is initiated too late. Further investigation of the possible indication for thrombolytic therapy in stroke is needed.
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PMID:Thrombolytic therapy of cerebral arterial occlusion with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator. 197 4

Brain oedema is an important aspect of infarction from cerebrovascular occlusion. In a cat stroke model where the middle cerebral artery (MCA) was reversibly or permanently occluded, we analyzed the incidence of fatal hemispheral oedema in 35 normo- (6 mM) and 35 hyperglycaemic (20 mM for 6 hours) animals, with (N = 45) and without (N = 25) restoration of blood flow with clip release at 4 and 8 hrs of occlusion. Fatal hemispheral oedema occurred in 23% of cats (16/70) while hyperglycaemia, for one, and restoration of blood flow, for another, each quadrupled its occurrence. Further, evidence of remote oedema in the form of posterior cingulate cortical pressure atrophy from transtentorial herniation was found in animals that were allowed to survive for 2 weeks and that exhibited infarcts that affected 12 to 95% of the MCA territory. Thus, hemispheral oedema in association with MCA occlusion developed sufficiently markedly as to cause transtentorial herniation in 47% of all cats (33/70). We carried out biochemical analyses in 14 hyper- and 10 normoglycaemic cats after 4 hrs of MCA occlusion for ATP, phosphocreatine (PCr), lactate, glucose and glycogen. The biochemical findings then were correlated with the occurrence of reperfusion oedema following clip release after 4 hrs of occlusion point-by-point in the brains. Linear regression analyses of the brain metabolic and pathologic data revealed highly significant (p less than 0.001) correlations of acute oedema with brain tissue ATP and PCr reductions less than 1.5 microM/g, with lactic acid accumulation greater than 20 microM/g and with the extents of reduction in brain tissue glucose concentrations in the ischaemic territories.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Determiners of fatal reperfusion brain oedema. 208 2

Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) dissolves intravascular thrombus and restores blood flow after thromboembolic vascular occlusion. The utility of this agent for treatment of stroke in humans may be limited by post-reperfusion hemorrhagic complications. We studied tPA-mediated thrombolysis in an animal model of cerebrovascular occlusion in order to determine what factors, if any, predispose tPA-treated animals to suffer hemorrhage. Small blood clot emboli were injected into the internal carotid arteries of rabbits. Angiograms confirmed occlusion of the middle cerebral artery or internal carotid artery in 100% of subjects. tPA or saline was administered as a 30-minute infusion at various times after embolization. Hemorrhage rates were similar in all groups regardless of treatment. tPA increased the prothrombin time and the thrombin time but not the partial thromboplastin time. There was no correlation between these changes in blood coagulation and the finding of cerebral hemorrhage. We observed a significant association between stroke severity and cerebral hemorrhage. We conclude that tPA treatment successfully causes thrombolysis of cerebral emboli without causing an increase in the incidence of cerebral hemorrhage in rabbits.
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PMID:Tissue plasminogen activator-mediated thrombolysis of cerebral emboli and its effect on hemorrhagic infarction in rabbits. 249 32

Cortical blood flow was evaluated at the time of surgery with a thermal diffusion flow probe in 25 extracranial-intracranial bypass operations. The procedures were performed 14 times for carotid occlusion, 6 times for inaccessible carotid stenosis, on 3 occasions for middle cerebral occlusion, once for basilar occlusion and once for middle cerebral stenosis. Fifty-seven different cortical regions were evaluated before and after completion of the anastomosis. During temporary occlusion of the cortical vessel, no significant changes in cortical blood flow were identified. The mean flow pre-bypass was 58 ml/100 g/min and postbypass was 66. This was a significant difference. When initial ischemic areas were evaluated, flows increased from 36 ml/100 g/min to 52 ml/100 g/min. These postbypass flows were statistically different than the flow values in the nonischemic areas of 75 ml/100 g/min. Blood pressure and arterial carbon dioxide tension did not vary significantly. Extracranial-intracranial bypass increases cortical flow in ischemic areas although this does not bring the flow into the normal range.
Stroke
PMID:Cortical blood flow during extracranial-intracranial bypass surgery. 647 34

In 400 patients who have had neurosurgical microvascular bypass operations by one surgeon for problems of cerebrovascular occlusion disease, the results are encouraging, particularly in those who had transient ischemic attacks with hemodynamic lesions previously considered inoperable or inaccessible. The permanent neurologic morbidity rate is 2 percent and the present operative mortality is 2.5 percent. The incidence of stroke to date on the side of a functioning bypass is 0.9 percent per year. Average duration of follow-up is 43 months.
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PMID:Results of neurosurgical microvascular extracranial-intracranial bypass for stroke: a decade of experience. 686 76


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