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

Eighty-eight percent of arteries in patients with amaurosis fugax or hemispheric transient ischemic attacks had angiographically demonstrable lesions at the carotid bifurcation. Eighty-one percent had stenoses or occlusions at the carotid bifurcation; 7 percent had ulcerative lesions without stenoses at this site. Forty-nine percent of arteries in these patients demonstrated ulcerative lesions with or without stenosis at the carotid bifurcation. There was no significant difference in the incidence or types of ulcerations between those patients with amaurosis fugax and those with hemispheric transient ischemic attacks. Eighty-eight percent of arteries examined in this series were amenable to surgical reconstruction. Amaurosis fugax and hemispheric transient ischemic attacks were of equal value in predicting the possibility of a surgically treatable lesion at the carotid bifurcation.
Stroke
PMID:Relationship of transient ischemic attacks and angiographically demonstrable lesions of carotid artery. 89 45

Amaurosis fugax (transient monocular blindness) is a symptom of retinal ischemia just as contralateral hemiparesis and sensory loss are symptoms of cerebral ischemia. These symptoms are produced by atherosclerotic stenosis of the carotid vessels at the ipsilateral carotid bifurcation and emboli from these areas causing focal, repetitive, retinal ischemia. A study of 31 endarterectomy patients was undertaken to see if eight patients with amaurosis fugax (25%) could be differentiated from 22 patients with transient cerebral ischemia. The patients with amaurosis fugax were found to be younger. They all had 75% or greater stenosis of the internal carotid artery at the bifurcation on the symptomatic side. They all had unilateral visual symptoms and these symptoms were relieved by surgery. The patients with amaurosis fugax were devoid of cardiac disease, while 45% of the cerebral ischemic patients had documented myocardial disease. Amaurosis fugax (transient monocular blindness) in the setting of clinically significant atheroslerosis of the carotid vessels is an indication for carotid endarterectomy.
Stroke
PMID:Amaurosis fugax: a clinical comparison. 117 55

A 10 year retrospective study of 103 patients with amaurosis fugax was done. Sixty-two patients with symptoms of amaurosis fugax underwent arteriography, which demonstrated ulcerated carotid plaque in 36 and hemodynamically significant stenoses (greater than 75% diameter reduction) in 26. These 62 patients underwent carotid endarterectomy. The other 41 patients who had proven ulcerated plaque (33 patients) or hemodynamic stenoses (eight patients) were not treated surgically and served as a control series. No strokes or deaths occurred in the immediate postoperative period. Follow-up of the 62 operated patients extending to 10 years (mean 4.2 years), revealed one (1.6%) patient with recurrent amaurosis fugax symptoms, two (3.2%) with transient ischemic attacks, and one (1.6%) with a stroke in the operated hemisphere. In the nonoperated group, despite aspirin or warfarin treatment, four (9.7%) patients had ongoing amaurosis fugax symptoms, and two (4.8%) developed transient ischemic attacks that led to carotid endarterectomy. One (2.4%) other patient developed sudden, permanent monocular blindness, and two (4.8%) suffered hemispheric strokes, one of which was fatal. The cumulative morbidity (ongoing ocular or transient ischemic attack symptoms, perioperative and late stroke) in the operated group was 6.4% (four patients), while the cumulative morbidity in the nonoperated group was significantly higher at 21.9% (nine patients) (p = 0.02). When patients present with symptoms of amaurosis fugax and have demonstrable carotid bifurcation disease, carotid endarterectomy is recommended. Amaurosis fugax should be regarded as a harbinger of monocular blindness and stroke.
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PMID:Amaurosis fugax: is it innocuous? 161 Jun 60

Amaurosis fugax and retinal artery occlusion are mainly caused by emboli originating from the carotid arteries and the heart. Ischemic ophthalmopathy is the result of severe carotid or ophthalmic artery stenosis. Retinal vein occlusions probably develop if the venous outflow is hampered or if blood viscosity is increased. Optic nerve infarction is now regarded as a localized disease of the small vessels. In all circulatory disorders of the retina and the optic nerve a careful medical and neurologic-angiologic work-up is mandatory. For arterial occlusions of the retina or the optic nerve, no therapy is available so far that has unequivocally proven effective. In retinal vein occlusion it has been definitely shown that photocoagulation can prevent ocular complications. The hemodilution therapy for arterial or venous circulatory disorders is as yet not generally accepted since studies are lacking that fulfill the hard criteria of modern therapeutic trials. New data about the risk of cerebral ischemia and survival of patients with ocular circulatory disorders, as well as a critical analysis of the risk and benefit of vascular surgery, have led to a considerable decrease in surgery and favor the medical prevention of stroke.
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PMID:[Circulatory disorders of the retina and optic nerve]. 208 15

Amaurosis fugax, or transient monocular blindness, was first associated with carotid bifurcation disease in 1951. Although amaurosis fugax is often considered by vascular surgeons to be premonitory for cerebral stroke, recent studies indicate that this disease process may be more benign than previously thought. A total of 97 patients presented with amaurosis fugax to our vascular laboratory from November 1983 to January 1988. There were 81 males and 16 females, mean age 67.2 years. The common, internal and external carotid arteries were imaged in standard longitudinal and cross-sectional views. Repeat scans were performed at six months and 12 months after the first visit, then yearly thereafter. Out study confirms the correlation between heterogeneous, complex carotid plaques and the development of amaurosis fugax. Endarterectomy can safely be performed in this group of patients, preventing further symptoms or development of stroke. We advocate duplex scanning to assess the carotid bifurcation and allow non-invasive follow-up of disease progression.
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PMID:Amaurosis fugax: the importance of carotid plaque morphology. 324 77

Sudden, transient loss of vision in one eye (amaurosis fugax) is associated frequently with atherosclerosis of the internal carotid artery in adults and may herald a stroke. Thus, cerebral angiography is often performed. Amaurosis fugax in children is uncommon and an underlying cause is rarely demonstrated. Recurrent episodes of amaurosis fugax occurred in five adolescents. A characteristic evolution and pattern of visual loss, consistent with choroidal ischemia as the underlying mechanism, was described by four of them. Although none of the episodes were accompanied by headache, four patients had a history of common migraine at other times or a family history of migraine. These episodes of visual loss may represent a migraine variant, and cerebral angiography is not indicated in adolescents with such a history.
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PMID:Amaurosis fugax in teenagers. A migraine variant. 334 21

Amaurosis fugax is considered an ocular transient ischemic attack with an ominous prognosis. One hundred twenty-eight patients with amaurosis fugax as the presenting symptom underwent carotid endarterectomy at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) and Scripps Clinic between 1970 and 1985 with one death (0.8%) and one postoperative permanent stroke (0.8%). Subsequently, these patients were followed up for 6 to 160 months (mean 45.3 months). Only two subsequent late strokes were documented (at 2 and 5 years after operation). These results were significantly better (p less than 0.01) by life-table analysis than the late stroke rate after carotid endarterectomy performed to treat anterior motor transient ischemic attacks at both UCSD and Scripps Clinic, as well as the reported late follow-up for all transient ischemic attacks after carotid endarterectomy in the literature (1.8% per year, 17 publications, 1980 operations). Thus amaurosis fugax appears to be a particularly favorable indication for carotid endarterectomy. Left untreated, this event carries a high risk of stroke; after carotid endarterectomy, which has a low operative risk, there is a very low postoperative stroke rate (two strokes in 448 patient-years of follow-up).
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PMID:Late results after carotid endarterectomy for amaurosis fugax. 365 82

Certain types of stroke, TIAs and Amaurosis Fugax can result from atheroembolism from the Carotid bifurcation. This study was undertaken to establish qualitative and quantitative baseline criteria in an animal model for future studies evaluating the effectiveness of thrombolytic and cholesterol emulsifying agents which could eliminate or reduce experimentally induced occlusive atheroembolic lesions. Sixteen male NZW rabbit received sublethal intracarotid injections of human atheroma. After 24 hours the animals were sacrificed, having their brains fixed by cardiac perfusion. Each left hemisphere was coronally sliced anteroposteriorly at 3 mm intervals, and paraffin or methacrylate sections were taken from each slice and stained with H & E or Toluidine Blue. Samples from infarcted tissue were processed for TEM observation. Each section was projected onto the digitizing tablet of a Microplan II image analysis system. The perimeter length, area and maximum diameter were measured for each infarct. The regional distribution of each infarct per section level was recorded on stereotaxic atlas diagrams. The vascular lesions were characteristic of cerebral atheroembolic occlusions. The infarcts were distributed primarily in the cortical and subcortical regions, and were largest in the distribution territory of the Middle Cerebral artery. The morphometric parameters of the infarcts were highly variable at all slice levels.
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PMID:An assessment of the extent and distribution of experimentally induced cerebral atheroembolic vascular occlusions and infarcts. 378 23

Carotid artery disease is often implicated in primary ischemic stroke secondary to thrombosis or embolism and may indicate concurrent cardiovascular disease. Atherosclerosis is the underlying cause of the majority of strokes. It is highly correlated with carotid artery disease because it occurs most often at the bifurcation of the common carotids. Transient ischemic attacks are an important clinical syndrome in the diagnostic evaluation of patients with carotid insufficiency. Amaurosis fugax is typically the most common ocular symptom. In addition to a careful history and physical examination, definitive diagnosis and appropriate management of carotid disease mandates defining the location and extent of stenosis. Noninvasive duplex scanning is an ideal technique for determining which patients should proceed with invasive arteriography and carotid endarterectomy. Clinical trials have now officially established the value of endarterectomy in patients with carotid artery disease.
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PMID:Carotid artery disease. 791 91

Amaurosis fugax has been grouped together with other forms of transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) in the neurologic literature in analyses of prognosis. Although episodes of transient visual loss (TVL) are presumed to be due to ischemia, the prognosis with respect to subsequent stroke and myocardial infarct (MI) appears to differ from cerebral TIAs. We reviewed the clinical course of 73 patients above the age of 45 years who presented to our clinics with a distinct history of TVL. With an average follow-up period of 38 months, the incidence rates of cerebrovascular accident, cerebral TIA and MI following presentation with TVL were 1%, 4% and 7% respectively. Although there was a trend toward fewer episodes of amaurosis with use of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), the difference was not statistically significant. In addition, ASA did not appear to offer a benefit with respect to future ischemic events. Patients with monocular TVL appeared more likely to experience a TIA, whereas those with binocular TVL appeared more likely to experience an MI.
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PMID:Amaurosis fugax: prognosis and the role of acetylsalicylic acid. 792 49


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