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

Central hemodynamics was studied by means of echocardiography in 7 patients suffering from neurocirculatory dystonia with a high cardiac index but normal arterial pressure, and in 41 patients with essential hypertension prior to, and after treatment. Two groups of patients suffering from essential hypertension were distinguished: with a hyperkinetic type of circulation and with a normal cardiac index. In the first group there was a statistically significant increase in the stroke index and the index of diastolic left ventricular diameter with a normal ejection fraction. The increase in the cardiac index in the hyperkinetic type of essential hypertension is caused by an increase in the stroke output according to the Frank--Starling law. The authors believe that the increase in peripheral resistance is the principal pathogenetic mechanism of hypertension with any level of the minute volume.
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PMID:[Hemodynamic types of hypertensive disease according to echocardiographic data]. 72 44

The presented results illustrate the study of the cardiovascular system by means of radiocardiography conducted in normal individuals working in contact with sources of ionizing radiation. The study includes 51 persons in the test group and 42 in the control group that was similar to the test one in terms of age, sex and type of work performed, with the only exception that these in the control group had no contact with ionizing radiation. Persons working under the effect of ionizing radiation displayed a moderate increase in the stroke and minute index and the circulating blood volume, with the blood flow rate somewhat decelerated. The changes were deeper in those with over 5 years of service, and in those with functional changes in the nervous system, like neurocirculatory dystonia. The moderate level of these reactions and their reversibility permit to interpret them as an adaptative reaction to the effect of low doses of ionizing radiation.
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PMID:[State of hemodynamics, according to radiocardiographic data, in persons working in contact with ionizing radiation sources]. 119 39

Cavinton was used for 10 years in 967 patients with different cerebrovascular diseases. The highest effect was seen in patients with early forms and primarily chronic forms: vegetovascular (neurocirculatory) dystonia, initial manifestations of brain blood supply insufficiency, circulatory encephalopathy in the first and second stages. Improvement of the subjective status and a decrease of the intensity of vestibulocerebellar disorders were recorded by the end of the treatment in 75-85% of such patients. In ischemic brain stroke, regress of general cerebral and focal symptoms was more rapid and significant in the adequate reaction type of cerebral hemodynamics to cavinton administration (a rise of pulse blood content of the brain and a reduction of the vascular tone according to the REG data) and was less noticeable in the hypertonic and, in particular, in the hypotonic type. Cavinton should not be used in severe general cerebral hypertensive crises, as well as in elderly or senile patients with acute cardio-cerebral or cerebro-cardiac syndrome, postinfarction cardiosclerosis, marked disorders of heart rhythm.
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PMID:[10-year experience with using Cavinton in cerebrovascular disorders]. 131 51

Dystonia is a syndrome characterized by sustained muscle contraction, provoking twisting and repetitive movements or abnormal postures. It may be classified according to etiology, as idiopathic or symptomatic. We studied 122 Brazilian patients with a dystonic syndrome. Of these, 46 (37.7%) had symptomatic dystonia. The most frequent cause was tardive dystonia (34.8%) followed by perinatal cerebral injury (30.4%). Other causes were stroke (13.0%), encephalitis (6.5%) and Wilson's disease (4.3%). Cranial trauma, mitochondrial cytopathy and psychogenic, were the least frequent causes with one patient in each category. The etiology in two patients could not be established. Perinatal cerebral injury and postencephalitic dystonia were seen in the younger age group, while post-stroke and tardive dystonia were seen in the older age group.
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PMID:Symptomatic dystonia: clinical profile of 46 Brazilian patients. 142 47

We investigated the effectiveness of botulinum toxin in 17 patients with limb dystonias (10 with occupational cramps, three with idiopathic dystonia unrelated to activity, and two each with post-stroke and parkinsonian dystonia) in a placebo-controlled, blinded study. We identified affected muscles clinically and by recording the EMG from implanted wire electrodes at rest and during performance of tasks that precipitated abnormal postures. There were three injections given with graded doses of toxin (average doses, 5 to 10, 10 to 20, and 20 to 40 units per muscle) and one with placebo, in random order. Subjective improvement occurred after 53% of injections of botulinum toxin, and this was substantial in 24%. Only one patient (7%) improved after placebo injection. Subjective improvement occurred in 82% of patients with at least one dose of toxin, lasting for 1 to 4 months. Response rates were similar between clinical groups. Objective evaluation failed to demonstrate significant improvement following treatment with toxin compared with placebo. The major side effect was transient focal weakness after 53% of injections of toxin.
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PMID:Botulinum toxin therapy for limb dystonias. 154 27

The clinical courses and long-term prognoses in 16 young patients with infarctions of the basal ganglia were evaluated and the recent magnetic resonance imaging findings in 9 of them were examined. Only 5 of 14 patients (35%) had motor sequelae, 4 had hemiparesis, and 1 had gait disturbance. Secondary dystonia occurred in 1 patient. Magnetic resonance imaging disclosed a circumscribed lesion in the basal ganglia, as reflected by T2 high- and T1 low-intensity signals, in all patients. The abnormal region on T2-weighted images usually was more extensive than that observed on T1-weighted ones. The hemiplegic patients each had an area of abnormal intensity in the internal capsule or corona radiata with relatively high signals on the T2- and proton-density-weighted images. Mild to moderate asymmetric atrophy of the midbrain on the side ipsilateral to the stroke lesion was observed in 8 of 9 patients. The mechanism involved may be remote transsynaptic neuronal death of the substantia nigra, as well as Wallerian degeneration of the pyramidal tract.
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PMID:Prognosis and MRI after ischemic stroke of the basal ganglia. 158 Sep 52

Eleven healthy male volunteers, aged 45-55 years, with neurocirculatory dystonia of the hypertensive type were exposed to 7-day dry immersion. The following parameters were measured: central and peripheral hemodynamics (by the method of rheography), linear blood flow velocity, and orthostatic tolerance before and after immersion. During an acute period of adaptation to immersion the test subjects developed: centralization of blood filling of the head and lungs, decrease of stroke volume and cardiac output, increase of linear blood flow velocity in forearm arteries and its decrease in leg arteries, drastic decline of orthostatic tolerance.
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PMID:[Orthostatic tolerance and the status of central and peripheral hemodynamics during 7-day "dry" immersion in persons with neurocirculatory asthenia of the hypertensive type]. 259 10

Three patients with hemichorea and ten with dystonia of vascular origin are reported. Five were secondary to ischemic infarcts, two to lacunar infarcts, three to intraparenchymal hematoma, and in the remaining three the type of lesion could not be determined. The patients with chorea, as opposed to those with dystonia, presented abruptly immediately after the stroke, and had a regressive evolution and good therapeutic response. The type of dyskinesia was not useful to identify the precise localization of the lesion or to determine its nature. In addition, in 5 patients multiple lesions were found and 5 had release of archaic reflexes or cortical atrophy in CT; this shows the importance of the overall functional impairment and focal lesions in the genesis of dyskinesia. There were sensory deficits in 7 patients. In 2 patients lesions were not found in the CT in spite of the presence of previous hemiparesis; this suggests that this technique has limitations to discover focal cerebral lesions in patients with focal or hemicorporal dyskinesia.
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PMID:[Abnormal movements of vascular origin]. 263 96

Experimental and clinical data clearly demonstrate that calcium antagonists (CA) may have an action on the central nervous system (CNS). The cerebrovascular action of CA justifies their use in cerebral ischaemia, vasospasm and hypoxia. Several clinical trials have demonstrated such beneficial effects. On the other hand a number of reports indicate that CA may have a direct neuronal effect, although most of such trials have not been verified or are mere case reports. In addition, the large number of conditions susceptible to being corrected by CA is impressive: epilepsy, pain, dystonia, dyskinesia, psychiatric conditions, etc. Other papers are disconcerting that report extrapyramidal disorders induced by flunarizine and cinnarizine in the elderly, whereas nicardipine does not produce such side effects and may even alleviate some parkinsonian symptoms. In various experimental models (e.g. stroke, oedema), pharmacological effects have been shown to vary from one compound to the other. Two main questions are yet to be answered: 1) has the direct neuronal effect of CA been clearly established? 2) are the multiple clinical effects on the CNS really linked to calcium antagonism?
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PMID:Clinical neuropharmacology of calcium antagonists. 269 95

Reciprocal inhibition of H reflexes in the forearm flexor muscles was examined in a group of 16 patients with writer's and other occupational cramps. The early disynaptic phase of reciprocal inhibition was normal. However, there was a reduction in the amount of later, presynaptic inhibition, when compared with age-matched normal subjects. Similar findings were seen in 2 patients with symptomatic hemidystonia in whom structural brain lesions were present. However, this reduction in presynaptic inhibition was not specific to patients with dystonia. In a further group of 13 patients with hemiparesis or hemiplegia due to stroke, abnormalities of both early and later phases of reciprocal inhibition were found. The patients with spasticity exhibited less disynaptic inhibition than those with normal tone or flaccid limbs. The changes in the presynaptic phase of reciprocal inhibition did not correlate with the clinical signs of spasticity and increased muscle tone. These results provide objective evidence of a physiological basis for the action or task-specific focal dystonias such as writer's cramp.
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PMID:Reciprocal inhibition between forearm muscles in patients with writer's cramp and other occupational cramps, symptomatic hemidystonia and hemiparesis due to stroke. 273 Oct 27


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