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)

Two cases of fatal heat stroke, concerning a 20 year-old soldier and a 44 year-old psychiatric patient, treated with neuroleptics, are reported. The clinical picture, starting suddenly with coma and hyperthermia, was quite identical for both. Secondarily, while hyperthermia decreases and the conscience improved partially, an hemorrhagic syndrome similar to a consumption coagulopathy, acute renal insufficiency and acute hepatic failure appear. Death occurred after aggravated neurological disorders and respiratory distress. The anatomical lesions spread on all the viscera include tubular nephritis, and hepatic centro-lobular necrosis and an interstitial and alveolar oedema with hemorrhages and hyaline membranes in the lungs.
...
PMID:[Heat stroke and disseminated intravascular coagulation. Apropos of 2 cases]. 21 8

In adult normothermic cats cerebral blood flow was interrupted for 1 hour by clamping the innominate and subclavian arteries. Following ischemia the brains were recirculated with blood, and the coagulation system was investigated by measuring coagulation times and blood content of fibrinogen and platelets. Ischemia induced progressive consumption coagulopathy with an increase in coagulation times and a decrease of platelets and fibrinogen by more than 40%. Coagulopathy was accompanied by a respiratory distress syndrome with a significant increase in the alveolar-arterial carbon dioxide gradient from --3.3 to --13.5 mm Hg. A correlation was found between plasma fibrinogen concentration, cerebral blood flow and electrophysiological function, indicating that a relationship exists between the severity of postischemic coagulopathy and functional recovery following prolonged cerebral ischemia.
Stroke
PMID:Coagulopathy following experimental cerebral ischemia. 84 91

Cardiac output and pulmonary wedge pressure (PWP) were used to evaluate the end point of fluid resuscitation in 20 patients suffering from multiple trauma and shock. Eleven patients received crystalloid resuscitation and nine patients received colloid resuscitation. Fifteen of 20 patients had an adequate cardiac output at the termination of resuscitation, but but only six of these patients had a PWP above 10 mm Hg. There was no significant correlation between left ventricular stroke work index and PWP in these patients, either at the completion of resuscitation or during the following three days. Five patients did not achieve adequate cardiac output and four of these patients died, suggesting that cardiac output was the most important criterion for adequate resuscitation. If the goal of fluid resuscitation is to achieve an adequate cardiac output, then PWP was not a reliable guide. Furthermore, using both cardiac output and PWP as a guide to fluid resuscitation of our patients, we found that the type of fluid (crystalloid or colloid) for resuscitation did not influence the course of respiratory distress in these patients up to three days following resuscitation.
...
PMID:Cardiac output and pulmonary wedge pressure. Use for evaluation of fluid replacement in trauma patients. 90 60

We studied a family with a myopathic form of complex I deficiency with regard to the clinical symptoms, usefulness of the exercise tolerance test with an ergometer for screening of mitochondrial abnormalities, pathological findings in biopsied muscles and genetics. In this family, none of the members had disorders of the central nervous system, such as convulsions, mental deterioration or stroke-like episodes. In the two affected generations, three mothers and three children had mitochondrial abnormalities. Two children were diagnosed as having complex I deficiency. One of them, an 8-year-old girl with normal psychomotor development during infancy, began to experience easy fatigability at about 3 years of age. At the age of 5 years, she experienced respiratory distress and became unconscious. Thereafter, she had similar episodic respiratory problems with lactic acidosis. Ragged-red fibers and respiratory chain enzyme defects were detected in the biopsied muscle. Another child, a 15-year-old boy with easy fatigability but no muscle weakness, had normal respiratory chain enzyme activities and a normal oxysogram: oxygen consumption showed a normal responses when malate and pyruvate were added as substrates for the isolated mitochondria. His muscle pathology revealed rare ragged-red fibers and abnormal subsarcolemmal mitochondrial aggregation. An investigation with an ergometer showed elevated serum lactate and pyruvate levels. Only one mother had muscle weakness and hyper-lactic acidemia. The other two mothers had no muscle symptoms, but abnormal results were obtained with the ergometer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Ergometric and pathologic study of a family with complex I deficiency]. 173 24

Two young children, 5 and 30 months of age, developed acute transient dyskinesias. The novel features of these patients were classic orobuccal-lingual dyskinesias, their young ages, and the association with asthma and theophylline. The movements resembled tardive dyskinesias of older patients on neuroleptics, but neither patient had any exposure to neuroleptic drugs. Choreiform movements were moderately severe and remitted several hours after discontinuation of theophylline or over days in the patient who remained on the drug. No symptomatic treatment of dyskinesia was required. Both infants otherwise had normal neurologic examinations with no clinical evidence of meningoencephalitis, seizures, or stroke. Both infants required hospitalization for respiratory distress, but not intensive care. The highest theophylline levels measured in these patients were 22 and 25 micrograms/ml and levels determined closest to the appearance of dyskinesias were lower. Urine toxicology screen for other drugs and routine blood work were normal. The infants, examined subsequently for 1 1/2-2 years for asthma, have demonstrated no reappearance of dyskinesias or other neurologic abnormalities. We propose an interaction of theophylline, hypoxemia, or other factors related to asthma in the pathophysiology of reversible dyskinesia in our patients.
...
PMID:Acute dyskinesias in young asthmatics treated with theophylline. 158 Sep 64

A 7-year-old girl with normal psychomotor development during infancy began to have easy fatigability about 3 years of age. At the age of 5 years, she developed respiratory distress and became unconscious when the serum lactate and pyruvate levels were markedly elevated and a blood gas analysis showed respiratory and metabolic acidosis. Thereafter, she had similar episodic respiratory problems with lactic acidosis. Her muscle biopsy showed a myopathic pattern and numerous ragged-red fibers in an approximately half of muscle fibers. Lipid droplets were slightly to moderately increased in amount mostly in the ragged-red fibers. A biochemical analysis on the isolated mitochondria from the biopsied sample showed markedly decreased NADH cytochrome c reductase activity with no specific but rather uniformly decreased subunits of complex I by the immunoblotting method. She was diagnosed as having the myopathic form of complex I deficiency because she and her relatives with similar muscle symptoms had no central nervous system symptoms such as progressive mental deterioration, convulsions and stroke-like episodes. Diagnosis of complex I deficiency was further confirmed by an oxograph study; the oxygen consumption was not detectable when malate and pyruvate were added as the substrates in the isolated mitochondria. Although stroke-like episodes and convulsions are commonly seen in complex I deficiency, episodic respiratory distress as seen in the present patient has not been described in the literature.
...
PMID:[A case of complex I deficiency with episodic respiratory distress]. 211 95

Prostaglandin manipulation has been shown to improve pulmonary dysfunction in animal models of acute respiratory distress syndrome. Using our previously reported porcine model of Pseudomonas-induced respiratory failure, we examined the therapeutic effects of a vasodilating prostaglandin, PGE1, and a reversible cyclooxygenase inhibitor, ibuprofen. Forty-two animals were randomized to seven groups: I--ibuprofen; II--PGE1; III--ibuprofen + PGE1; IV--Pseudomonas + ibuprofen; V--Pseudomonas + PGE1; VI--Pseudomonas + ibuprofen + PGE1; VII--Pseudomonas. Ibuprofen significantly improved pulmonary vasoconstriction, pulmonary hypertension, and hypoxemia, as well as increased survival slightly. PGE1 had no effect on pulmonary dysfunction, but prevented the rise in systemic vascular resistance that occurred in untreated, infected animals and animals treated with ibuprofen alone. Combination therapy improved stroke volume index, a measure of nonpulmonary organ function.
...
PMID:Ibuprofen plus prostaglandin E1 in a septic porcine model of adult respiratory distress syndrome. 249 56

Reports are contradictory about the value of high-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) in the treatment of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) [10, 11, 18 - 1, 2, 22, 25]. In a preliminary study on rabbits with healthy as well as surfactant deficient lungs, caused by lung lavage, at a constant mean airway pressure (MAP) and 20% inspiration time, the influence of the jet ventilation frequencies of 1, 3, 5, 10, 15 and 20 Hz (cycles per second) on the pressure oscillations along the airways as well as on blood gas and cardiac parameters were investigated. It was presumed that the breathing level, e.g. functional residual capacity plus 50% of the tidal volume is the same at constant MAP. The results during HFJV are compared to those of conventional mechanical ventilation (CMV). With increasing frequency the peak airway pressure (PAP) clearly decreased on both groups, while the self controlled positive end-expiratory pressure (AUTO-PEEP) increased. That means, the amplitude of the pressure oscillations became smaller and smaller, indicating that the danger of mechanical lesions might be reduced by this mode of ventilation. The arterial oxygenation (PaO2) increased with frequency. A threefold higher PaO2 could be obtained at 10 Hz in the animals with RDS lungs. The arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) increased nearly linear with the frequency in both groups. The inverse course of the arterial pH showed that it is possible to obtain at lower frequencies a respiratory alkalosis and at higher frequencies an acidosis. Optimal gas exchange could be obtained at about 10 Hz. Decreasing cardiac output with increasing frequency showed a good correlation to the pH in both groups. The effect was more influenced by the heart frequency than by the stroke volume especially in the RDS-group.
...
PMID:Increase of the oxygenation and decrease of the intrapulmonary peak pressure at constant mean airway pressure using high-frequency jet ventilation in adult rabbits with lavage-induced severe respiratory distress syndrome compared to conventional mechanical ventilation. 250 37

The administration of interleukin 2 (IL-2) and lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells can mediate the regression of cancer. Treatment with IL-2 is associated with significant cardiorespiratory effects, as well as a leaky capillary syndrome requiring careful fluid management. A mild reversible depression of cardiac function is also associated with IL-2 treatment. All patients treated with recombinant IL-2 alone, with transfer of LAK cells, or with cyclophosphamide between December 1984 and September 1987 (total of 423 treatment courses in 317 total patients) were evaluated as to the development of significant cardiorespiratory toxicity. Of the 423 treatment courses, only 1.8% were associated with severe peripheral edema and only 2.8% and 3.1% respectively, were associated with significant ascites or pleural effusions. Thirty-nine of 423 patients (9.2%) had severe respiratory distress and 27 patients required intubation (6.4%). Cardiovascular effects included tachycardia and hypotension requiring vasopressor administration in 65% and intravenous (IV) fluid administration. Weight gain greater than or equal to 10% of body weight was noted in 32% of the 423 patients. Arrhythmias were primarily supraventricular (9.7%) and responded well to conventional medical treatments. Angina or ischemic changes were noted in 2.6% of patients and myocardial infarction in 1.2%. IL-2 caused peripheral vasodilation, with a significant decrease in peripheral vascular resistance (2,254 +/- 398 v 1,303 +/- 351 dyne.s.cm-5, P less than .0001), and an increase in heart rate (66.2 +/- 10 v 104.3 +/- 9.6 beats/min, P less than .0001). There was also evidence of mild cardiac dysfunction, with a significant decrease in the left ventricular stroke work (LVSW) index (P less than .0001) and ejection fraction (LVEF) (from 58% +/- 10% to 52% +/- 9%, P less than .03). A repeat LVEF performed after 1 to 3 months, had returned to baseline values (60% +/- 10%). A mean 64% increase in the rate of disappearance of radioactive iodine (125I) albumin (P less than .05) consistent with the development of a leaky capillary syndrome was noted. Patients with underlying cardiorespiratory diseases may be at greater risk during IL-2 administration and should not be selected to undergo this treatment.
...
PMID:Cardiorespiratory effects of immunotherapy with interleukin-2. 278 38

Because determining cardiac output is difficult in premature infants, little is known about the hemodynamic effects of PEEP in this age group. We used pulsed-wave Doppler echocardiography to assess the hemodynamic effects of PEEP increments in ten premature infants with respiratory distress syndrome. At a PEEP of 4 cm H2O, the systemic and pulmonary blood flow and the right (SVRV) and left (SVLV) ventricular stroke volume decreased slightly, while the systemic vascular resistance (Rs) increased slightly. At a PEEP of 8 cm H2O, cardiac performance was impaired significantly, with a profound decrease of the systemic and pulmonary blood flow, SVRV and SVLV and a reflectory increase of the Rs. Surprisingly, the heart rate and mean arterial BP remained constant. The effective left ventricular afterload, which takes into account the changing intrathoracic pressure, increased slightly with increasing PEEP.
...
PMID:Influence of positive end-expiratory pressure on cardiac performance in premature infants: a Doppler-echocardiographic study. 329 90


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