Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although a number of reports are available on the occurrence of headache in patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease, most studies have recorded the frequency but not the specific sites of the pain. We report 18 patients who underwent balloon inflation in the distal internal carotid artery and middle cerebral artery stem during embolization therapy for intracerebral arteriovenous malformations. Eleven patients had reproducible patterns of headache during balloon inflation. Inflation in the proximal middle cerebral artery stem produced pain primarily in the ipsilateral temple, that in the middle of the middle cerebral artery stem produced pain referred primarily retro-orbitally, and inflation in the distal middle cerebral artery stem produced pain referred primarily to the forehead. Experimental studies have demonstrated similar patterns of referred pain. The fact that these areas of referred pain are so reproducible is of potentially great clinical importance in the approach to management of patients with cerebrovascular disease.
Stroke 1990 Apr
PMID:Focal headache during balloon inflation in the internal carotid and middle cerebral arteries. 232 36

Somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were studied in 27 patients with central post-stroke pain and in 19 controls. A scoring system for SEP was used, in which increasing abnormalities rendered increasing scores. SEPs evoked by electrical stimulation of the median and tibial nerves were compared to perception thresholds for touch, vibration, innocuous and noxious temperature. All patients had reduced temperature sensibility, while the threshold for touch and vibration was abnormal in only 52% and 41%, respectively. Decreased touch and vibration sensibility had a high correlation with high SEP scores, while no correlation was found between reduced temperature sensibility and SEP. The patients with thalamic lesions had the most severely affected SEPs, the ones with lower brain-stem lesions were the least affected. The results support the notion that the SEP is dependent on the lemniscal pathways and that lesions of the spinothalamic pathways are crucial for the development of CPS.
Pain 1990 Jan
PMID:Central post-stroke pain--somatosensory evoked potentials in relation to location of the lesion and sensory signs. 233 15

Twenty-four patients with stroke were studied (a) to determine the interrater reliability of a clinical measurement of shoulder subluxation, (b) to confirm the interrater reliability of the Ritchie Articular Index (Bohannon & LeFort, 1986) for measuring shoulder pain, (c) to establish the relationship between the Ritchie index scores and shoulder lateral rotation range of motion measured at the point of pain (SROMP), and (d) to determine the relationship between shoulder subluxation and shoulder pain. The agreement between the two examiners' (the authors) measurements of subluxation was "almost perfect" (Landis & Koch, 1977, p. 165). The agreement between the two examiners' Ritchie index measurements was "substantial" (Landis & Koch, 1977, p. 165). The Ritchie index and SROMP measurements correlated significantly. Neither the Ritchie index nor the SROMP measurements correlated significantly with subluxation. Although the measurements used in this study were reliable, they did not support the association of shoulder subluxation with shoulder pain in stroke patients. Clinicians wishing to reduce shoulder pain in stroke patients should direct their treatment accordingly.
...
PMID:Shoulder subluxation and pain in stroke patients. 235 19

Pain or tenderness of an abdominal aortic aneurysm is widely believed to signify acute expansion and imminent rupture. To assess the potential benefit of emergency operation for the group of patients with an acutely expanding aneurysm, the clinical course of 19 patients with a symptomatic but unruptured expanding abdominal aortic aneurysm was compared with 117 patients undergoing elective abdominal aortic aneurysm resection, and 69 patients having operation for a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. Postoperative morbidity was high in the patients with an expanding abdominal aortic aneurysm, and included a 21% incidence of myocardial infarction, a 10% incidence of stroke, a 37% risk of ventilatory failure, and a 31% incidence of acute renal failure, which was not statistically different from the results in patients having ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm resection. Patients undergoing elective abdominal aortic aneurysm resection had only an 8% risk of myocardial infarction, and only a 2% risk of stroke, ventilatory failure, or renal failure. The mortality rate for expanding abdominal aortic aneurysm resection was 26% compared to 35% for ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (p = 0.31). Both emergency operations had a mortality rate more than five times greater than the 5.1% after elective procedures (p = 0.008). Our findings emphasize the need for early and aggressive treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysm in the elective setting, even in the patient at high risk, and suggest that the preoperative assessment and modification of risk factors is important to prevent the cardiac, cerebrovascular, pulmonary, and renal complications seen accompanying an emergency operation of this magnitude.
...
PMID:Clinical management of the symptomatic but unruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. 235 91

Shoulder pain is a frequent and debilitating problem in hemiplegic patients, and its etiology remains poorly understood. The role played by hemineglect in the appearance of shoulder pain was studied. During two years, 94 hemiplegic subjects were involved in a rehabilitation program after cerebrovascular accidents. Their average age was 68 years; 45 (47.9%) subjects had shoulder pain, and 24 subjects (22.5%) had hemineglect. The subjects with shoulder pain were compared to those without pain (the control group) with respect to gender, age, diabetes, heart failure, cardiac ischemia, scapulohumeral arthritis, and calcified tendinitis of the rotator cuff. We were unable to demonstrate a relationship between hemineglect and shoulder pain in the hemiplegic (X2 (1) = 2.03, p = .15), although pain was significantly more frequent in subjects with right hemispheric cerebrovascular accident (X2 (1) = 5.0, p less than .025). The subjects with shoulder pain had significantly more spasticity of the affected limb (X2 (1) = 26.3, p less than .01), less sensitivity to pinprick of the upper paralyzed extremity (X2 (1) = 10.8, p less than .01), and a more severe subluxation of the affected shoulder (t(51) = 14.0, p less than .01).
...
PMID:Painful shoulder in the hemiplegic and unilateral neglect. 237 73

One of the causes for shoulder pain associated with hemiplegia is thought to be vigorous range of motion to the involved upper extremity. The objective of this study was to analyze the occurrence of pain in patients treated with one of the three exercise programs commonly used in the rehabilitation of hemiplegia: 1) range of motion by the therapist, 2) skate board and 3) overhead pulley. Of the 48 hemiplegic patients evaluated, 28 were assigned to one of the three exercise groups. Comparing the number of patients who developed pain in each group, there was a significant difference, with 8% of the patients in the range of motion by the therapist group, 12% of the patients in the skate board group and 62% of the patients in the overhead pulley group developing pain (chi 2 = 8.44) (P = 0.014). The three groups did not differ in the side of involvement (P = 0.57), extent of hemiplegia (P = 0.25) or presence of subluxation (P = 0.84). Use of overhead pulley has the highest risk of developing shoulder pain and should be avoided during rehabilitation of stroke patients.
...
PMID:Shoulder pain in hemiplegia. The role of exercise. 238 82

A prospective, stratified, randomized clinical trial of the safety and efficacy of four general anesthetic agents (enflurane, fentanyl, halothane, and isoflurane) was conducted in 17,201 patients (study population). Patients were studied before, during, and after anesthesia for up to 7 days. Nineteen patients died (0.11%), and in seven of these (0.04%) the anesthetic may have been a contributing factor. The rates of death, myocardial infarction, and stroke in the study population were so low (less than 0.15%) that no conclusions regarding the relative rates of these outcomes among the four anesthetic agents could be reached. The rates of 16 of 66 types of adverse outcomes in the study population were significantly different among the four study agents. Most of these outcomes were minor. However, severe ventricular arrhythmia (P less than 10(-6)) was more common with halothane, severe hypertension (P less than 10(-6)) and severe bronchospasm (P = 0.028) were more common with fentanyl, and severe tachycardia (P = 0.001) was more common with isoflurane. Recovery from anesthesia during the first 30 min was slowest in those patients who received halothane (P less than or equal to 0.001). In addition, patients who received fentanyl experienced less pain during the first hour in the recovery room (P less than 10(-6)). In conclusion, clinically important differences do exist for some outcomes among the four study agents.
...
PMID:Multicenter study of general anesthesia. II. Results. 164 64

A double-blind, 3-phase, cross-over, placebo-controlled trial of the pain-relieving effect of amitriptyline and carbamazepine was carried out in 15 patients with central post-stroke pain (CPSP) but without signs of depression. Treatment was given, in randomized order, for periods of 4 weeks, separated by 1 week wash-out. The final doses were 75 and 800 mg/day, respectively, for amitriptyline and carbamazepine. The treatment effects were assessed by daily ratings of pain intensity on a 10-step verbal scale and at the end of each treatment period by a global rating of the analgesic effect on a 5-step verbal scale. For the assessment of depression the Comprehensive Psychopathological Rating Scale (CPRS) was used. Amitriptyline produced a statistically significant reduction of pain when compared to placebo. According to the global rating, 10 of the 15 patients were responders to this drug. The effect could already be noticed during the second treatment week and it appeared to be correlated to the plasma concentration, since the median total ami- and nortriptyline concentrations were 497 and 247 nmol/l, respectively, for responders and non-responders. The early onset, together with the fact that the patients were not depressed, nor did they obtain reduced scores on ratings of depressive symptoms and signs, provides strong support for the conclusion that the pain relief was not caused by an antidepressive effect. Five of the 14 patients treated with carbamazepine reported some pain relief, but the effect did not reach statistical significance when compared to placebo. No correlation was found between effect and plasma concentration. In general, the patients tolerated the planned final dose of amitriptyline well. No final dose reduction was necessary. Carbamazepine caused more side effects and the final dose had to be reduced in 4 patients. However, only 1 patient had to be taken off medication, on day 25, due to drug interaction.
Pain 1989 Jan
PMID:Central post-stroke pain--a controlled trial of amitriptyline and carbamazepine. 246 30

Cervical spinal cord stimulation (cSCS) has been employed as a treatment for intractable pain for the past 20 years. Recently, we reported that cSCS increased regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in cats and humans. The present study was designed to examine the effects of cSCS on experimental cerebral strokes, using a cat middle cerebral artery occlusion model (MCAO). A total of 31 cats were randomly assigned to three groups; Group 1: control, Group 2: sham operation, Group 3: cSCS. Mortality of the control group was 92% as long as 4 days after MCAO. Groups 2 and 3 showed a prolongation of survival rate (44% and 56%, respectively). CSCS reduced the rate of death within 24 hours after MCAO. There was no alteration of infarct size, which was estimated by the TTC method and measured by computer technique (PDP-11/23), was found in dead cats of all groups. In cats that survived in Group 3, however, drastic prevention of an infarct progression was found, compared to Group 2. The results provide a clinical application of cSCS for stroke patients, although no evident mechanism was obtained.
...
PMID:The effects of cervical spinal cord stimulation (cSCS) on experimental stroke. 247 58

Six hundred and eighty cadavers and 307 patients with gallstones who presented over a three-year period at a WA teaching hospital were studied to assess the prevalence, morbidity and mortality of cholelithiasis. In particular, the outcome of surgical treatment compared with that of conservative treatment was assessed. In the post-mortem series, 17.9%, of men and 29.7% of women either had gallstones or had undergone a cholecystectomy previously. In 12 patients (1.8% of patients over all or 10% of those patients with gallstones), the gallstones were responsible for the death of the patient. In the clinical series, of the 248 patients who were treated surgically, 68 patients suffered one or more non-specific postoperative complications and 10 patients suffered specific postoperative complications. However, only one (0.4% operative mortality) postoperative death occurred, the result of a stroke in a patient with previously-known cerebrovascular disease. Of the 59 patients whose gallstones were treated conservatively, 16 patients developed further complications of cholelithiasis with one patient dying of renal failure that was subsequent to biliary pancreatitis. This study shows that to perform cholecystectomy at an early stage in patients with biliary pain is safe and can abort the progression to more-serious complications.
...
PMID:Cholelithiasis in a teaching hospital: a review of clinical and post-mortem experiences. 249 8


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>