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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We used positron emission tomography to study the cortical and cerebellar metabolic rates in 21 strictly selected patients with pure internal capsular infarct (n = 8), thalamocapsular hemorrhage (n = 6), or pure thalamic
stroke
(n = 7). Significant diffuse ipsilateral cortical hypometabolism relative to 62 controls free of cerebrovascular risk factors was frequently, although not consistently, found in the 13 patients with thalamocapsular or thalamic lesions and neuropsychological impairment but was absent from the eight patients with pure internal capsule infarct and free of neuropsychological deficit. These data suggest that damage to the thalamus or the thalamocortical projections is important in the development of ipsilateral cortical hypometabolism and that the latter may underlie the associated neuropsychological impairment. Significant contralateral cerebellar hypometabolism relative to 49 controls was found in three of six patients with pure internal capsule infarct, suggesting a pathogenetic role for the corticopontocerebellar system. However, the occurrence of hypometabolism in two of six patients with thalamic lesions indicates that this phenomenon may also result either from damage to the ascending cerebellothalamocortical system or indirectly from hypofunction of the cerebral cortex. No systematic association was observed between crossed cerebellar hypometabolism and ipsilateral
ataxia
.
Stroke
1990 Apr
PMID:Effects of capsular or thalamic stroke on metabolism in the cortex and cerebellum: a positron tomography study. 232 33
To assess the effects of moderate exercise [40-70% maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max)] on resting blood pressures, the presence of cerebrovascular lesions, and the life spans of
stroke
-prone hypertensive rats, nontrained and trained male and female rats were assigned to two experimental groups. The first (n = 48) were exercise trained after 38 days of age, whereas the second (n = 44) initiated exercise training when the animals were 134 days of age. To facilitate cerebrovascular lesions, the sodium concentrations in the rat chow and in the drinking solutions were increased. Symptoms utilized to denote the presence of cerebrovascular lesions were irritability, hyperresponsiveness,
ataxia
, lethargy, unwillingness to run, and combinations thereof. All brains were removed immediately after death, fixed, and evaluated grossly and microscopically for lesions. In the study with the younger animals, training was associated with a 7-9% increase in VO2max that was statistically significant only in animals with no histological evidence of cerebrovascular lesions. For the older animals, a significant 5-8% increase in VO2max was noted for animals with or without lesions. After 42 days of training for both groups, resting blood pressures for the trained groups with histological lesions were significantly lower. However, this trend did not continue, and the older trained rats appeared to have strokes earlier and to die sooner than their nontrained controls. Although 83% of the older animals had subjective evidence for a
stroke
before they died, the percentage of animals with lesions ranged from 42 to 58%, with the trained groups having higher percentages.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Exercise training and incidence of cerebrovascular lesions in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. 234 35
Seventeen adults with cerebellar
stroke
confirmed by computerized tomography were reviewed, and divided into two groups: the first group consisted of 10 patients with cerebellar softening, and the second one included 7 cases with cerebellar hemorrhage. The diagnostic rests primarily upon the symptoms and clinical signs. They consist of acute onset of vertigo, headache, nausea or vomiting,
ataxia
-disequilibrium, then progressing signs of brain stem compression with gaze palsy, cranial nerve palsies and a decreasing level of consciousness. The computerized tomography is the diagnostic test of choice. The interpretation of the scan and of the brain stem and its surrounding cisterns gives decisive help in accessing the indications for surgical treatment.
...
PMID:[Cerebellar infarcts and hemorrhages: differential diagnosis]. 242 23
A
stroke
with a somewhat unusual neurologic formula was correlated with a small linear high-intensity T2 focus in the lateral tegmentum of the lower third of the pons. The clinical features included dysarthria, staggering gait, incoordination of handwriting, right facial weakness, nystagmus, ocular overshoot, right appendicular
ataxia
, and left-sided dissociated sensory loss for pain and temperature. Lacunar lesions of the tegmentum in the region of the pontomedullary junction, while not uncommon, have not been studied pathologically and have not been reported in the magnetic resonance imaging literature, to my knowledge.
...
PMID:Lacunar infarct of the tegmentum of the lower lateral pons. 271 52
Right hemiparesis with an ipsilateral hypesthesia and
ataxia
developed in a 57-year-old man. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a left thalamic lacune bordering the medial portion of the posterior limb of the internal capsule. This finding implicated some pathogenetic mechanism of ataxic hemiparesis.
Stroke
1989 Jun
PMID:Hypesthetic ataxic hemiparesis in a thalamic lacune. 272 51
A 12-year-old boy with corticosteroid-responsive mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and
stroke
-like episodes (MELAS) is described. His mother proved to have an asymptomatic mitochondrial myopathy on examination of a muscle biopsy specimen. Three weeks after the onset of vomiting, headache,
ataxia
and visual and speech impairment, he presented with a background of somatic growth retardation, deafness and school failure. Examination revealed disorientation, dysphasia, dyspraxia, optic atrophy, hemianopia, hemiparesis and sensory inattention. A cranial computed tomographic scan disclosed a large, low-density area, which was consistent with infarction, in the left posterior hemisphere and marked calcification of the basal ganglia bilaterally. Within two weeks of the commencement of corticosteroid treatment, the neurological dysfunction resolved. Attempts to decrease the dosage of dexamethasone caused an exacerbation of symptoms repeatedly. Two weeks after ceasing corticosteroid therapy, the patient developed a serious neurological relapse and a new, large, low-density area, which resembled an infarction, in the right posterior hemisphere on a computed tomographic scan. The reintroduction of corticosteroid therapy again resulted in the rapid resolution of all symptoms. It became evident that the patient had an exquisitely sensitive corticosteroid dependency, whereby a reduction in the dexamethasone dosage of even 0.25 mg a day caused confusion, headaches and increasing lactic acidaemia. Although it is difficult to assess the impact of various therapies in MELAS because of the episodic natural course of the disease, this remarkable corticosteroid responsiveness also has been noted in four previously reported patients with MELAS syndrome; therefore, it would seem reasonable to suggest that corticosteroid therapy now should be considered as standard treatment for this condition. However, corticosteroid therapy in other forms of mitochondrial disorders still awaits careful evaluation.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with corticosteroid dependence. 273 98
A 61-year-old woman developed right hemiparesis with homolateral cerebellar-type
ataxia
. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated left corona radiata lesions, not present on magnetic resonance imaging 1 year earlier. No brainstem lesions were identified, suggesting that ataxic hemiparesis can result from lesions in the corona radiata.
Stroke
1989 Nov
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of ataxic hemiparesis localized to the corona radiata. 281 93
Identical twins developed myoclonic epilepsy in their teens. One twin remained mildly affected but the other went on to develop sensorineural deafness and
ataxia
with lactic acidosis and ragged red fibres leading to a diagnosis of mitochondrial encephalopathy. Multiple
stroke
-like episodes with hemiparesis followed, indicating progression from a MERRF to a MELAS phenotype. Biochemical studies revealed a severe deficiency of mitochondrial NADH-ubiquinone reductase and a moderate deficiency of cytochrome aa3. Western immunoblotting experiments using polyclonal antibodies raised against human placental cytochrome oxidase identified a similar profile of bands to those seen in controls, supporting the view that cytochrome aa3 deficiency in this case may be a secondary consequence of a failure of assembly related to a severe proximal respiratory chain defect.
...
PMID:Progression from MERRF to MELAS phenotype in a patient with combined respiratory complex I and IV deficiencies. 285 17
The intention of the present study was to characterize patients with central post-
stroke
pain (CPSP) with regard to type and location of the cerebrovascular lesion (CVL), the characteristics of the pain and the neurological symptoms and signs in addition to the pain. Twenty men and 7 women with a mean age of 67 years and a mean pain duration of 44 months were examined 9-188 (mean 53) months after their
stroke
. The clinical symptoms and signs and the CT scans indicated that the CVL were located in the lower brain-stem in 8 patients, involved the thalamus in 9 patients and were located lateral and superior to the thalamus in 6 patients. In the remaining 4 patients the location of the CVL could not be determined with certainty. The 3 identified hematomata were all located in the thalamus. The onset of the pain was immediate in 4 patients, within the first post-
stroke
months in 10 patients and delayed by 1-34 months in the rest. The pain was on the left side in 18 patients. Twenty patients had hemipain. Most patients experienced more than one type of pain. The most common qualities were burning, aching, pricking and lacerating, with some differences in the frequencies according to the location of the CVL. Burning pain was most common, except among the patients with thalamic CVL, in whom lacerating pain was more common. Aching and pricking pain were also frequent. All patients considered the pain to be a great burden and most rated the pain intensity as high on a visual analogue scale. The intensity was increased by external stimuli, the most common being joint movements, cold and light touch. Five patients reported aggravation by emotional stimuli. Besides pain, the only neurological symptom common to all patients was decreased temperature sensibility, as shown by quantitative methods. It is possible that pain sensibility was also abnormal in all. Hypersensitivities to cutaneous stimuli, including evoked dysesthesias were found in 88% of the patients, while the detection thresholds for touch and vibration were abnormal in only 52% and 41%, respectively. Similarly, low figures were found for paresis and
ataxia
, which were present in 48% and 62%, respectively. It is concluded that only a minority of patients with central pain after
stroke
have thalamic lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Central post-stroke pain--neurological symptoms and pain characteristics. 291 91
"Energy metabolism" is deranged in a wide variety of disorders of the nervous system. This term refers rather loosely to the pathways responsible for the utilization of the major substrates of brain. Primary disorders of energy metabolism are those in which the primary insult affects the cellular machinery required for energy metabolism. A typical example would be a defect in a gene coding for a mitochondrial protein. Biochemically, defects which appear to be hereditary and which lead to disease of the central nervous system have been described in each of the pathways of energy metabolism: glycogenolysis (the break-down of glycogen to glucose); glycolysis (the break down of glucose to pyruvate and lactate); the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (which oxidizes pyruvate to enter the Krebs tricarboxylic acid cycle); the tricarboxylic acid cycle itself (which completes the oxidation of carbohydrates and other substrates to carbon dioxide); electron transport (which carries out their oxidation to water); the pentose phosphate pathway (an alternate pathway for glucose oxidation); and several "minor" mitochondrial pathways. Clinically, the spectrum of syndromes associated with primary disorders of energy metabolism is wide. Common manifestations include psychomotor retardation, with associated lactic acidosis and/or hypoglycemia. The laboratory abnormalities may be intermittent. Syndromes which have been culled out include congenital lactic acidosis, Leigh disease, intermittent
ataxia
, Kearns-Sayre-Shy syndrome (KSS), myoclonus epilepsy with ragged red fibers (MERRF), and mitochondrial myopathy-encephalopathy-lactic acidosis-
stroke
(MELAS). As with other families of inborn errors, both clinical and biochemical heterogeneity occur. Patients with apparently similar clinical syndromes can turn out to have different inborn errors, and patients with abnormalities of the same gene product can have clinically distinguishable syndromes. Secondary disorders are those in which the derangements of energy metabolism are presumably secondary to some other insult but may still be important for the cellular pathophysiology. These include the metabolic encephalopathies and probably a number of well-known neurodegenerative disorders. In the hereditary ataxias, abnormalities of mitochondrial markers are common but do not correlate consistently with the disorders as conventionally classified; a new classification into axonal ataxias, multiple system degenerations, and ataxic encephalopathies may be easier to relate to the pathophysiology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Energy metabolism in disorders of the nervous system. 297 43
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