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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many of the drugs used in anesthesia and intensive care may cause blockade of the central cholinergic neurotransmission. Acetylcholine is of significance in modulation of the interaction among most other central transmitters. The clinical picture of the central cholinergic blockade, known as the central anticholinergic syndrome (CAS), is identical with the central symptoms of atropine intoxication. This behaviour consists of
agitation
including seizures,
restlessness
, hallucinations, disorientation or signs of depression such as stupor, coma and respiratory depression. Such disturbances may be induced by opiates, benzodiazepines, phenothiazines, butyrophenones, ketamine, etomidate, propofol, nitrous oxide, and halogenated inhalation anesthetics as well as by H2-blocking agents such as cimetidine. There is an individual predisposition for CAS--but unpredictable from laboratory findings or other signs. Reports of postanesthetic occurrence of the CAS requiring treatment are not unanimous, varying between 1 and 40%. Differential diagnosis of the CAS includes disorders of glucose and electrolyte metabolism, severe hormonal imbalance, respiratory disorders (hypoxia, hypercarbia), hypothermia, hyperthermia and neuropsychiatric diseases (cerebral hypoxia,
stroke
, catatony, acute psychosis). The CAS may considerably impair the postanesthetic period especially when
agitation
is prevalent, which may endanger the patient or the surgical results. The diagnosis is confirmed ex iuvantibus by the sudden increase in the acetylcholine level in the brain. This is achieved with physostigmine, a cholinesterase inhibitor able to easily cross the blood-brain barrier. Its peripheral muscarinic effects are minimal. Postanesthetic CAS can be prevented by administration of physostigmine during the anesthesia procedure. During intensive care (IC), agitated forms of CAS may occur in patients undergoing mechanical ventilation, particularly during prolonged high-dose sedation. Artificial ventilation of such patients becomes very difficult and muscle relaxation may be necessary. In these cases of IC-CAS, physostigmine is of value and has proven beneficial during weaning from mechanical ventilation. Dealing with the CAS for more than a decade has improved knowledge of the central cholinergic transmission. For example, it can be said that CAS occurs alongside general anesthesia, being no more than a frequent side-effect. Furthermore, acetylcholine is involved in nociception through the endorphinergic and the serotoninergic systems. There is a close relation between the central cholinergic transmission and actions of nitrous oxide. Moreover, cholinergic transmission is involved in withdrawal from (among others) alcohol, opiates, hallucinogens and nitrous oxide. In some intoxications with psychoactive agents, physostigmine is useful for reversal of the central nervous symptoms of the acute intoxication itself. In addition it can be used for prevention of some withdrawal states. In
...
PMID:Central anticholinergic syndrome (CAS) in anesthesia and intensive care. 268 49
In rats with chronically implanted intrathecal catheters, high concentrations of morphine (3 microliters of 50 mg/ml: 150 micrograms) yielded a reliable and striking syndrome of pain behavior that involved intermittent bouts of biting and scratching at the dermatomes innervated by levels of the spinal cord proximal to the catheter tip. In addition, during intervals between bouts of
agitation
, the animals displayed a clear, marked hyperesthesia where an otherwise innocuous stimuli (brush
stroke
) evoked significant signs of discomfort and consequent aggressive behavior. These effects were exaggerated rather than reversed by high doses of naltrexone. The effect, perfectly mimicked by a considerably lower dose of morphine-3-glucuronide (15 micrograms) or the glycine antagonist strychnine (30 micrograms), was not produced by equimolar concentrations of sodium sulfate, glucuronide, methadone, or sufentanil. In halothane-anesthetized cats, light brushing of the hindpaw and tail or low-intensity stimulation of the sciatic nerves resulted in prominent elevations in blood pressure and pupil diameter following the intrathecal administration of high concentrations (50 mg/ml; 0.1 ml) of morphine sulfate. This effect, exaggerated by naloxone, was produced by a lower concentration of intrathecal morphine-3-glucuronide (5 mg/ml; 0.1 ml) but not by intrathecal saline. These results suggest the possibility that the effects of high doses of morphine may be characterized by a nonopiate receptor-mediated effect that alters the coding of sensory information in the spinal cord. The authors speculate that high concentrations of spinal opiates, as may be employed in tolerant terminal-cancer patients, could exert an action that physiologically antagonizes the analgesic effects otherwise mediated by the action of morphine on the spinal opiate receptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:High dose of spinal morphine produce a nonopiate receptor-mediated hyperesthesia: clinical and theoretic implications. 293 24
We searched the
Stroke
Data Bank and personal files to find patients with CT-documented infarcts in the territory of the inferior division of the right middle cerebral artery. The most common findings among the 10 patients were left hemianopia, left visual neglect, and constructional apraxia (4 of 5 tested). Five patients had an agitated confusional state that was characterized by hyperactivity,
restlessness
, and easy distractibility. Motor and sensory abnormalities were not severe or persistent. The most common cause was cardiogenic embolism.
...
PMID:Infarcts of the inferior division of the right middle cerebral artery: mirror image of Wernicke's aphasia. 373 66
A 74-year-old woman with a history of cerebrovascular disease developed profound central nervous system (CNS) and respiratory depression, generalized hypotonia, sinus bradycardia, and urinary retention following an increase in dose of baclofen, an antispasticity agent. Before receiving baclofen therapy the patient had had minor urinary dysfunction associated with a remote
cerebrovascular accident
but no urinary retention. Cessation of baclofen therapy and the relief of the urinary obstruction improved mental status and normalized motor function within 24 hours. A withdrawal syndrome of
agitation
, hallucinosis, and convulsive activity persisted for eight days following discontinuation of the baclofen. Our experience suggests that patients with various forms of CNS disease states may be at risk of serious CNS depression with even small therapeutic doses of baclofen.
...
PMID:Aggravated CNS depression with urinary retention secondary to baclofen administration. 402
We observed acute onset of delayed psychosis in 8 patients 1 month to 11 years after right temporoparietooccipital (TPO)
stroke
or trauma. The psychotic disorder included hallucinations and, in some patients delusions and
agitation
. All patients had spatioconstructional difficulties. None had an earlier psychiatric disorder. Seven of eight patients had clinical seizures, often in close temporal relationship to the psychosis. The pathophysiology of the psychosis may be related to that of the epilepsy.
...
PMID:Delayed psychosis after right temporoparietal stroke or trauma: relation to epilepsy. 680 40
Dextrorphan HCl (Ro 01-6794/706) is an NMDA receptor antagonist with clinical potential for administration in an elderly population of acute ischemic
stroke
patients. In vivo experience with such patients demonstrated a consistent pharmacologic effect/adverse experience profile that is typical of an NMDA receptor antagonist (e.g., nystagmus, nausea, vomiting,
agitation
, somnolence, hallucinations and hypertension). For the most part, these pharmacologic effects were mild to moderate in severity; short-lived; reversible; not life-threatening and subjectively tolerated. The most serious pharmacologic effect produced by dextrorphan administration was hypotension, which occurred within a well-defined window of 90 minutes from the start of the loading dose infusion in patients who received 200 mg/hr or greater loading dose infusions. In all cases it was reversible without neurologic sequelae. Careful review of demographic and pharmacokinetic parameters did not demonstrate any overriding factor(s) to the production of hypotension other than the rate of the loading dose infusion. Severe hypotension, severe decreased levels of consciousness and respiratory depression should not be generally expected at loading doses less than 200 mg/hr. In summary, dextrorphan can be safely given to an elderly population of ischemic
stroke
patients as a loading dose rate below 200 mg/hr and as a maintenance dose rate between 50-90 mg/hr for 24 hours when patients are monitored carefully for pharmacologic effects.
...
PMID:Safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of the N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonist Ro-01-6794/706 in patients with acute ischemic stroke. The Dextrorphan Study Group and Hoffmann-La Roche. 748 11
Over fifty patients with severe head injury, and one hundred with
stroke
, have now been treated with the competitive NMDA antagonist CGS 19755 (selfotel). Preliminary analysis has shown possible evidence of benefit for both these clinical indications, and several other glutamate antagonists are now being evaluated for these indications in Phase II trials. The optimal dose of CGS 19755 (selfotel) for efficacy for severe head trauma has not yet been identified, but may be > 3 mg/kg, as at this dose there was evidence of an ICP lowering effect and improved CPP. For
stroke
, however, the maximal tolerated dose was 1.5 mg/kg, because these conscious patients developed hallucinations and
agitation
. There were no other significant drug-associated adverse events in either of these studies. It is difficult to determine the "neuroprotective" dose for this compound in humans. By extrapolating from animal studies the "best estimate" would be around 5 mg/kg in patients with severe head trauma. For
stroke
, behavioral side effects were the major limiting factor for dosing. Although several NMDA antagonists, including CGS 19755 (selfotel), are currently entering efficacy trials for
stroke
, based upon their tremendous potency in animal models, the problem of psychomimetic effects may necessitate the use of additional management strategies, e.g., more intensive monitoring and concomitant medications.
...
PMID:Strategies for neuroprotection with glutamate antagonists. Extrapolating from evidence taken from the first stroke and head injury studies. 748 13
The hemodynamic effects of 100, 200, and 300 mg of meperidine injected intravenously were studied in five chronically instrumented adult ewes. The maximum rate of increase of left ventricular pressure was decreased, respectively, by 27.4% +/- 3.9%, 37.5% +/- 5.6%, and 31.9% +/- 13.0%, and recovery occurred by 5, 8, and 0.5 min, respectively. Mild central nervous system stimulatory effects (
agitation
) were observed in three of five sheep at 200 mg and moderate effects (rigor and jumping movements) were observed in four of five sheep at 300 mg. These doses also produced increases in heart rate (43%-64%) and mean arterial blood pressure (17%-27%). At these doses, cardiac output was increased for 0.5 min by approximately 25% without changes in
stroke
volume and left ventricular
stroke
work. Coronary blood flow was increased by 44%-81% for 0.5 min. We conclude that, in unpremedicated sheep, meperidine has a brief direct negative inotropic effect on the myocardium, but that at larger doses this is overridden by stimulatory central nervous system (CNS) and indirect hemodynamic effects.
...
PMID:The hemodynamic effects of intravenous bolus doses of meperidine in conscious sheep. 810 58
Cocaine abuse surged in the 1980s, forcing reevaluation of its previously benign image. Snorted, smoked, and injected, the drug is more widely abused than ever and, the consequences are devastating. Medical complications are frequent and range from mild (eg, cough, itching, headache) to life-threatening (eg.
stroke
, seizure, cardiovascular failure). Behavioral disturbances constitute the most dramatic and widespread effects of intoxication and withdrawal. Psychopathologic responses may include perceptual disturbances (eg. hallucinations)
agitation
, aggression, delirium, confusion, and profound delusional ideation. The goals of treatment are abstinence, rehabilitation, and relapse prevention. Hospital care may be necessary in certain circumstances. Regardless of where treatment takes place, a comprehensive program of supportive care, behavioral therapy, urine monitoring, and often psychopharmacologic intervention is required.
...
PMID:The treatment of cocaine abuse. 831 99
We investigated the clinical profile, etiological factors, neuropsychological features and radiological characteristics of 17 cases of striatocapsular infarction (SCI). SCI was defined as the following CT criteria: the area of infarction included the internal capsule and striatum, the maximum diameter of the lesion exceeded 2.0 cm without cortical involvement. There were 9 men and 8 women with mean age of 58 years. Five patients had lesions mainly involving the caudate head (anterior type) and the other 12 had lesions mainly involving the putamen (lateral type), 6 with left side lesion and 6 with right side lesion. Motor weakness was observed in all patients, and the upper extremities were preferentially involved, while in 9 patients face, upper and lower extremities were simultaneously involved. Etiological investigation revealed that 8 patients were cardioembolic
stroke
, 2 were artery-to-artery embolism and 2 were MCA stem occlusive disease, while the remaining 5 were undetermined. When compared with patients with lacunar infarction (LI), patients with SCI had significantly more frequent cardioembolic sources (47% vs 17%, p < 0.05) and less frequent hypertension (41% vs 80%, p < 0.01). In acute phase, neuropsychological abnormalities were found in 15 patients. Anterior type patients had psychiatric symptoms such as abulia, depression and
agitation
, while left lateral type patients had aphasia and right lateral type patients had hemispatial neglect or anosognosia. These symptoms gradually improved, although in most patients subtle abnormalities lasted over chronic phase. In 11 out of 13 patients who underwent SPECT using 99mTc-HMPAO, blood flow was decreased in overlying cerebral cortex besides the infarcted area.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical investigation of striatocapsular infarction]. 833 92
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