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

The characteristics of stroke in baboons produced by transcranial occlusion of the middle cerebral artery were studied by clinical examination and serial cinematographic studies, the animals being maintained for three years following the stroke. The characteristic deficit in all animals was an initial, fairly dense faciobrachial weakness with, in a few instances, some accompanying leg weakness for a few days, rapidly improving over the first few months. Some animals retained very evident arm weakness; most animals retained weakness of the face; the majority showed recovery of reaching and placing reactions and some movement in all joints of the upper limb, although fine movements of the fingers remained invariably impaired. Homonymous hemianopia, at least to attention, also appeared to be characteristic, but all of the animals recovered a normal gait and leaping was regained. The close correlation between this and human stroke appears to confirm that middle cerebral artery occlusion in the baboon is a reliable, repeatable and acceptable stroke model.
Stroke
PMID:The production and clinical features of a chronic stroke model in experimental primates. 117 53

The acute syndromes and CT findings are described in 26 cases of spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage. Occipital hemorrhage (11 cases) caused severe pain around the ipsilateral eye and dense hemianopia. Left temporal hemorrhage (7 cases) began with mild pain in or just anterior to the ear, fluent dysphasia with poor auditory comprehension but relatively good repetition, and a visual deficit subtending less than a hemianopia. Frontal hemorrhage (4 cases) caused a distinctive syndrome beginning with severe contralateral arm weakness, minimal leg and face weakness, and frontal headache. Parietal hemorrhage (3 cases) began with anterior temporal ("temple") headache and hemisensory deficit, sometimes involving the trunk to the midline. One patient had a right temporal hemorrhage. Spontaneous lobar hemorrhage and branch artery embolism in the same region produce similar clinical syndromes. Headache is a first and prominent symptom. A rapid but not instantaneous onset over several minutes, when combined with one of the typical syndromes, suggests lobar hemorrhage rather than other types of stroke. Ancillary investigations (including CT scanning, angiography in 11 patients, and autopsy in 4) disclosed 2 patients with bleeding diatheses due to warfarin, 2 with arteriovenous malformations, and 1 with metastatic tumor. Only 8 of the 26 patients had chronic hypertension (blood pressure greater than 130/85 mm Hg), suggesting that hypertension is not an etiological factor in most lobar hemorrhages.
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PMID:Lobar cerebral hemorrhages: acute clinical syndromes in 26 cases. 742 68

We present 3 cases of stroke due to arterial dissection following chiropractic manipulation: (1) a 31-year-old woman with left vertebral dissection developed a large cerebellar infarct, (2) a 64-year-old man developed a left parietal infarct due to left carotid dissection and (3) a 51-year-old man developed right Horner's syndrome, fluctuating dysarthria, left facial droop, and left arm weakness due to right carotid dissection. Imaging studies and the literature are reviewed.
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PMID:Stroke following chiropractic manipulation. Report of 3 cases and review of the literature. 1191 40

An experimental lesion in the primary motor or sensory cortices in monkeys leads to functional reorganization in areas surrounding the lesion or in contralateral homologous regions. In humans, task-dependent brain activation after motor stroke seems to be multifocal and bilateral. Although many active structures are seen after stroke, their roles are unclear. For instance, the uninjured primary motor cortex may play a significant role in recovery or may be associated with mirror movements. Other motor areas, particularly those outside the affected middle cerebral artery distribution, have also been thought to play such a role, including the medial pre-motor areas and both cerebellar hemispheres. The lateral pre-motor areas might also contribute but the demarcation of primary motor and pre-motor cortices is not trivial. It is not known from existing studies how brain activation relates to behavioural change over the time course of recovery. We used functional MRI (fMRI) to study 12 patients longitudinally over the first 6 months of stroke recovery. All subjects had acute stroke causing unilateral arm weakness and had some ability to move the impaired hand within 1 month. Each patient had both motor testing and fMRI during finger and wrist movements at four points during the observed period. Six of these patients showed good motor recovery, whereas the other six did not. The imaging results support a role for the cerebellum in mediating functional recovery from stroke. The data suggest that patients with good recovery have clear changes in the activation of the cerebellar hemisphere opposite the injured corticospinal tract. Patients with poor recovery do not show such changes in cerebellar activation. No other brain region had a significant correlation with recovery. Interestingly, activation in the cerebellum ipsilateral to the injury increases transiently after stroke, independently of the success of recovery. The present work suggests a possible link between cerebellar activation and behavioural recovery from hand weakness from stroke. The underlying mechanism is not known, but it could relate to haemodynamic changes such as diaschisis or to the postulated role of the cerebellum in motor skill learning.
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PMID:Cerebellar hemispheric activation ipsilateral to the paretic hand correlates with functional recovery after stroke. 1207 4

Noonan syndrome is an autosomal-dominant inherited syndrome with variable expression of multiple malformations including cardiovascular and craniofacial anomalies. While cerebrovascular insults due to cardiogenic emboli, coagulation abnormalities or cerebrovascular malformations have been documented before, intracerebral occlusive artery disease is not well recognized as a cause of stroke in this syndrome. A 6-year-old girl with Noonan syndrome presented with repetitive transient ischemic attacks consisting of dysphasia and right-sided central facial and arm weakness. Neuroimaging showed acute ischemic lesions in the left putamen and caudate nucleus. Multiple intracranial stenoses were found during transcranial Doppler examination and MR angiography. Although hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was documented by transesophageal echocardiography, a cardioembolic origin of the ischemic attacks was unlikely in this case. The symptoms resolved and did not recur after antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy was initiated. Stenoses of intracranial cerebral arteries should be considered among the causes of stroke in young patients with Noonan syndrome.
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PMID:Cerebral occlusive artery disease in Noonan syndrome. 1218 19

We present a 17-y-old male who presented to the emergency room with left arm weakness along with slurred speech. On physical examination, he had stable vital signs with left facial weakness suggestive of lower motor neuron seventh nerve palsy. He was also noted to have a small pulsatile mass in the right infraclavicular region. Further questioning revealed that 3 mo earlier he had suffered blunt chest wall trauma during a football game with fracture-dislocation of the right clavicular head, which was managed conservatively. MRI of the brain showed right frontal cortical changes suggestive of infarct versus vasculitis or edema. Chest CT revealed a 2.5- to 3-cm pseudoaneurysm arising from the brachiocephalic artery, with thrombus formation, along with a surrounding 3 x 4.5 cm hematoma. The patient underwent a successful repair of the pseudoaneurysm with no further neurological sequelae. Traumatic pseudoaneurysm with thrombus formation is an extremely rare cause of stroke. It has been reported in association with the carotid artery, but to our knowledge, this is the first reported case with isolated innominate artery pseudoaneurysm. This case highlights the need for a broad differential when evaluating young patients with neurological deficits.
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PMID:Traumatic brachiocephalic pseudoaneurysm presenting as stroke in a seventeen-year-old. 1981 75

Upper limb paresis after stroke greatly affects the performance of Activities of Daily Living (ADL). Unfortunately, rehabilitation for upper limb impairment can have poor results. The current robot-assisted devices are expensive and not readily accessible for homecare. This paper presents the development of a low-cost tabletop robotic device for upper limb rehabilitation. Conceptually, patients perform computer-based goal-directed tasks using the robotic platform. Their progress is monitored and intervention, in the form of assistance or resistance, is introduced accordingly. A prototype platform is described. Experiments demonstrate the ability of the device to provide the necessary forces during movement exercises, in relation to task completion progress, device and target location. Appropriate exercises need to be developed before clinical trials can proceed.
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PMID:Robotic arm skate for stroke rehabilitation. 2227 93

Upper limb paresis is a major source of disability in stroke survivors, and robotic aided exercise therapy is a promising approach to enhance motor abilities. Few devices have been available to provide robotic therapy to the fingers and hand. We report an open-label pilot study of 12 individuals with chronic moderate hemiparesis after stroke who underwent a six-week training program using a hand robotic device. Participants received a total of 18 hours of robotic therapy. Improvements were found in multiple measures of motor performance, including the Upper Extremity Fugl-Meyer, the Motor Activity Log, the Manual Ability Measure-36, and the Jebsen Hand Function Test. All subjects tolerated the treatment well and no complications were observed. We conclude that robotic therapy for hand paresis after stroke is safe and feasible, and that further studies of efficacy are justified by these preliminary results.
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PMID:A pilot study of robotic-assisted exercise for hand weakness after stroke. 2227 27

A patient (in their late 20s) was admitted with a right frontal stroke, left hemiparesis and hemianopsia, and a National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score of 11. CT perfusion imaging revealed an ischemic penumbra. A CT angiogram showed a Spetzler-Martin grade V arteriovenous malformation (AVM) in the right frontal lobe and a second, smaller AVM in the medial occipital region. Successful mechanical thrombectomy for middle cerebral artery thrombi improved flow from a Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction score of 0 to 2b. Following endovascular mechanical thrombectomy, the NIHSS dramatically improved from 11 to 2 and the patient was discharged home in 7 days. Evaluation 1 month after treatment disclosed a nearly complete recovery, with mild residual arm weakness (NIHSS 1). This case illustrates acute stroke intervention in the setting of an ipsilateral, large, high flow AVM in a young adult and is the first such reported case to our knowledge.
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PMID:Stroke intervention for middle cerebral artery thrombus in a young patient with an ipsilateral Spetzler-Martin grade V arteriovenous malformation. 2234 44

Carotid body tumour (CBT) surgery has a risk of stroke. A 57-year-old lady presented with lethargy and generalised limb pain secondary to a right parathyroid adenoma. CT scan demonstrated as an incidental finding of a left CBT. Intraoperatively the CBT was infiltrating the vessel wall. The carotid bifurcation was resected and reconstructed using a reversed saphenous vein graft. Postoperatively the patient developed right arm weakness. A CT scan showed a left hemispheric watershed infarct. On discharge (day 8 postoperatively) she had no functional deficit. Reconstruction of the internal carotid artery in patients with CBT is associated with an increased risk of stroke. This index case and literature research highlight the knowns and unknowns on stroke associated with CBT resection.
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PMID:The known unknowns of perioperative stroke during carotid body tumour resection. 2350 77


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