Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cerebral ischemia
was produced by a combination of vascular occlusion and mild systemic hypotension in 2 groups of rabbits. Arterial blood pressure, arterial pH, arterial blood gases, blood glucose and PCV were monitored and recorded before, during and for 3 hours after reperfusion. Return of EEG activity, vasomotor control, spontaneous ventilation and corneal reflex were also recorded. At 4, 8, 12, 24 and 48 hours after reperfusion, the rabbits' neurologic status was assessed according to an arbitrary scale based on motor function. The 2 groups differed in return of reflexes and motor function. Eighty percent of the rabbits ischemic for 20 minutes and 75% of the rabbits ischemic for 30 minutes survived. The graduated response of motor function to
cerebral ischemia
is attributed to the ventilatory and circulatory support given the rabbits for the first 3 hours after reperfusion. The graduate response of motor function to ischemia supports the suggestion that motor function can be used as an index of neurologic damage.
Stroke
PMID:Survival of rabbits after prolonged cerebral ischemia. 3 15
Dopamine (DA), serotonin (5-HT), tryptophan (TRP), 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5-HIAA), and GABA were assayed spectrofluorometrically in various regions of 16 human post-mortem brains with acute and old cerebral infarction. In both recent and older strokes a total depletion of DA and 5-HT in the necrotic tissue was associated with mild reduction of these compounds in remote non-ischemic areas of the injured, and less of the contralateral cerebral hemispheres. 5-HIAA was significantly reduced in acute ischemic necrosis, while the perifocal edema zone showed considerable accumulation of both 5-HT and 5-HIAA. Marked elevation of the 5-HT precursor TRP and of GABA was present in both the necrotic center and perifocal edema of acute infarcts, which also showed a mild reduction of total proteins. The degradation zone surrounding old infarcts showed a mild decrease of both 5-HT and 5-HIAA with normal TRP levels, indicating normalization of the previously increased 5-HT metabolism and turnover after decrease of acute cerebral edema. These data which confirm previous studies in experimental
cerebral ischemia
and
stroke
indicate that disorders in the metabolism of brain monoamines and other putative neurotransmitters contribute to the development of postischemic brain damage and the complicating cerebral edema. They are also in keeping with the concept that unilateral focal ischemia produces bilateral effects on brain monoamines.
...
PMID:Changes of some putative neurotransmitters in human cerebral infarction. 3 76
Circulating platelet aggregates formed in vivo were serially measured, and platelet-aggregation thresholds were determined in vitro in 82 patients with acute
cerebral ischaemia
. The percentage of aggregated platelets was increased in 53 patients with completed
stroke
(30.9% +/- 2.0) and in 29 patients with transient ischaemic attacks (34.1% +/- 2.3), all studied within 10 days of the acute event. These values were higher (P less than 0.001) than levels of aggregated platelets in 30 patients with non-vascular neurological disease (16.8% +/- 2.3). The percentage of aggregated platelets returned to normal 10 days to 6 wk after acute
cerebral ischaemia
. Aspirin and dipyridamole did not affect either the increase in or subsequent normalisation of circulating-platelet-aggregate levels in these patients. Platelet-aggregation sensitivity to adenosine diphosphate and adrenaline was also increased in patients with acute
cerebral ischaemia
, but this abnormally resolved during convalescence. Platelet activation is abnormal in acute
cerebral ischaemia
but usually returns to normal with or without anti-platelet therapy. This activation of platelets may contribute to the clinical manifestations of occlusive vascular disease.
...
PMID:Platelet activation in acute cerebral ischaemia. Serial measurements of platelet function in cerebrovascular disease. 6 34
Experimental regional
cerebral ischemia
was produced in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory in primates (M. mulatta) by macrosphere embolization. Determinations of percentage tissue dry weight and tissue sodium and potassium concentrations were obtained in samples from the ischemic and non-ischemic hemispheres at various time from 12 to 48 hours after the onset of
cerebral ischemia
. Samples from the cortex normally supplied by the occluded MCA showed maximal accumulation of edema fluid with fluxes in sodium and potassium in reciprocal directions at 12 hours and similar edematous changes in putamen at 24 hours after embolization By 48 hours after MCA occlusion and despite the presence of infarction, partial reversal was observed in the redistribution of water and electrolytes in these gray matter structures. In contrast to cerebral cortex and putamen, the adjacent subcortical white matter showed progressive increases in water content from 12 to 48 hours and definite increases in tissue sodium with decreases in potassium were not observed until 48 hours after MCA occlusion. This late severe white matter edema associated with cerebral infarction appears to be a major factor responsible for the hemispheric swelling observed at this state.
Stroke
PMID:Experimental regional cerebral ischemia in the middle cerebral artery territory in primates. Part 3: effects on brain water and electrolytes in the late phase of acute MCA stroke. 9 10
With a closed head primate
stroke
model, acute
cerebral ischemia
limited to the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory was produced by macrosphere embolization of the internal carotid artery bifurcation. Measurements of the oxygen tension (PO2) at the cerebral cortical surface were obtained by continuous on-line mass spectrometry. Percentage of dry weight and tissue sodium, potassium, and chloride concentrations from ischemic and nonischemic hemispheres were determined at various times. With this preparation, we registered the precise onset of cortical surface PO2 depletion, which showed an exponential downward trend (fast component from 0 to 5 minutes, t 1/2 = 0.8 minute, rate of change = 89% per minute; slow component from 5 to 240 minutes, t 1/2 = 285 minutes, rate of change = 0.3% per minute). After the onset of
cerebral ischemia
, there was an immediate fall of the cortical surface PO2 with reductions of more than 45% at 5 minutes before definite hemiparesis and electroencephalographic abnormalities were recognized. During the secondary phase from 5 to 240 minutes the cortical surface PO2 fell by only an additional 23% of the steady state. Even so, when cortical surface PO2 was maintained at this critically low level, the earliest cerebral cortical edema was evident 180 minutes after MCA occlusion. Thereafter, progressive accumulation of edema fluid in the cortex (90 to 170.8 microliters per g of tissue) and in the white matter (19 to 46.2 microliter per g of tissue) was detected by the end of 240 minutes of
cerebral ischemia
.
...
PMID:Alterations in cortical oxygen tension during the development of ischemic cerebral edema in primates (Macaca mulatta). 11 Nov 52
Many authors have postulated that angulation of the carotid artery is a cause of
stroke
and recommend corrective operation. Symptoms attributed to such lesions are often nebulous and unrelieved by the operation, and proof is lacking that unselected patients who have this condition have a risk of
stroke
exceeding operative risk. A review of 282 cerebral angiograms showed an incidence of elongation and potential angulation of 43 percent in children and 20 percent in adults. Acutal angulation was not found in children, however, and no child was suspected of having
cerebral ischemia
. Of 47 adults with potential angulation, 17 were suspected of having
cerebral ischemia
, the remainder having a variety of other lesions, such as tumors, aneurysm, and intracranial hemorrhage. Of the 17 having suspected
cerebral ischemia
, all had alternative explanations for their symptoms (hypertension, intracranial atherosclerosis), except one whose symptoms were completely inappropriate to the carotid distribution. A single patient had a completed
stroke
, demonstrable angulation, and only mild hypertension. Elongation and potential angulation of the carotid artery is common but usually coexists with other lesions. If the finding is postulated as the cause for neurologic morbidity the surgeon must be assured that symptoms are clearly neurologic, that no other cause exists, that angulation reduces the carotid lumen significantly and reproduces symptoms, and that the risk of operation is less than the expected risk of
stroke
in untreated patients.
...
PMID:The significance of elongation and angulation of the carotid artery: a negative view. 16 14
Adouble-blind trial of aspirin for the treatment of
cerebral ischemia
was begun in 1972 and continued for 37 months. This was accomplished despite difficulties in controlling a long-term study of a drug which has widespread availability and consumption. The study design, criteria for selection of patients, follow-up surveillance, and methods of data analysis are presented. We report only subjects without carotid surgery before randomization. Patients (178) who had carotid transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) were randomly allocated to aspirin or placebo and followed to determine the incidence of subsequent TIAs,death, cerebral infarction or retinal infarction. Analysis of the first six months of follow-up revealed a statistically significant differential in favar of aspirin when death or cerebral or retinal infarction and the occurrence of TIAs were grouped and considered together as end points. Significance in favor of aspirin treatment was mainly revealed in patients with a history of multiple TIAs and was most evident in those individuals having carotid lesions appropriate to the TIA symptoms. It cannot be inferred from this study that aspirin prevents
stroke
because when end points were restriced to death or cerebral or retinal infarction, there was no statistically significant differential between the aspirin and placebo treatments.
Stroke
PMID:Controlled trial of aspirin in cerebral ischemia. 32 36
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
Selective embolization of the internal carotid artery bifurcation (ICA bifurcation) was performed in monkeys (Macaca mulatta) to study acute regional
cerebral ischemia
in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory with minimum surgical intervention in the neck under sedated conditions. The anthropomorphic similarity in angio-anatomy of the carotid system of monkeys and the use of silastic spheres, as artificial emboli, of the critical diameter of 1.2 to 1.4 mm resulted in the overall success rate of 87% in localizing the site of embolization to the ICA bifurcation, producing ischemia in the whole middle cerebral artery territory. All the animals with ICA-bifurcation embolization had contralateral deep motor weakness and conjugate eye deviation with nystagmus toward the site of embolization. Simultaneous EEG recording showed flattening of the basic background activities over the affected MCA area and cerebral arteriograms showed definite retrograde filling of the proximally occluded MCA. Clinical recovery was observed in a few animals within two to five hours of embolization. Gross ischemic swelling in the affected MCA territory, particularly in the gray matter, became obvious in six of eight animals which were exposed to four to five hours of ischemia. The angio-anatomical study of the carotid system of this experimental animal as a background for this MCA
stroke
model confirmed the previous observations of other investigators that the extremely abundant leptomeningeal anastomoses would be one of the major factors leading to the variability in the clinicopathological pictures seen in the models of proximal MCA occlusion. In addition, the pre-parenchymal anastomoses in the base of brain between the medial striate arteries from the proximal anterior cerebral (ACA) and lateral lenticulostriate arteries from the MCA were observed and described as a possible functional collateral to the basal ganglia in case of proximal MCA occlusion.
Stroke
PMID:Experimental regional cerebral ischemia in the middle cerebral artery territory in primates. Part 1: Angio-anatomy and description of an experimental model with selective embolization of the internal carotid artery bifurcation. 40 41
Acute regional
cerebral ischemia
was produced in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory in monkeys (Macaca mulatta) by selective embolization of the internal carotid (ICA) bifurcation with minimum surgical intervention in the neck under sedated conditions. Two of five hours after embolization, brain water (measurement of dry weight) and tissue concentration of sodium and potassium were determined in the tissues of the sylvian cortex, putamen and subcortical white matter in the affected MCA territory. As early as three hours, initial increase in brain water was detected in the samples of the putament without noticeable change in tissue electrolytes in two of three animals. Gross ischemic swelling of the gray matter, in both the sylvian cortex and putamen, became obvious in six of eight animals after four to five hours. This swollen gray matter showed marked increase in brain water (up to 36% swelling), increase in tissue sodium (up to 100% of the control value), and decrease in tissue potassium (down to 55%). On the other hand, edema in the white matter, if present at all, was minimal without detectable change in tissue electrolytes and was always accompanied by much greater ( greater than two to seven times) edema in the gray matter. Thus, the gray matter edema, in both the deep subcortical structures and the cortex, appeared to play the major role in the development of hemispheric swelling of the brain which may begin within hours of the onset of the MCA
stroke
in monkeys. Microscopically, the swollen gray matter which showed more than 10% swelling with a definite shift of tissue sodium and potassium content appeared to be dead tissue. However, early edema in the gray matter which showed less than 10% swelling without detectable change in electrolytes might be caused by simple diffusion of water through the dysfunctional capillary wall or cell membrane with or without a permeability gradient between the intravascular cerebrospinal fluid and cerebral tissue compartment and might possibly be reversible.
Stroke
PMID:Experimental regional cerebral ischemia in the middle cerebral artery territory in primates. Part 2: Effects on brain water and electrolytes in the early phase of MCA stroke. 40 42
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>