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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serial determinations of beta 2-microglobulin, lactoferrin and lysozyme in
CSF
were performed in 14 patients with acute cerebrovascular lesions. Marked elevations were noted in patients with cerebral bleeding or hemorrhagic infarction. Patients with infarction without signs of bleeding or with cerebrovascular lesions undetectable by computed tomography also had an increase in these proteins. The increases in
CSF
of beta 2-microglobulin, lactoferrin and lysozyme could not be explained by a damaged blood-brain barrier but was believed to be a local product of the central nervous system. Peak levels of lactoferrin and lysozyme were noted on day 2-3 after onset of symptoms. Lactoferrin then declined while lysozyme remained elevated for another few days. beta 2-microglobulin gradually increased reaching peak levels on day 4-5 and remained elevated even 2 weeks after the onset of symptoms. We suggest that the increases of lactoferrin, lysozyme and beta 2-microglobulin reflect various inflammatory reactions mediated by granulocytes, macrophages and lymphocytes, respectively.
Stroke
PMID:Lactoferrin, lysozyme, and beta 2-microglobulin in cerebrospinal fluid. Elevated levels in patients with acute cerebrovascular lesions as indices of inflammation. 616 35
The immune system may interfere with brain function. The central nervous system may also influence the activity of the immune system. The central nervous system is functionally protected by the blood-brain barrier. The central nervous system is functionally protected by the blood-brain barrier. The endothelial cells of the brain capillaries are linked by tight junctions, resulting in an almost continuous interior wall which restricts the transfer of plasma proteins. The barrier function is modified by inflammatory meningeal lesions,
stroke
and epileptic seizures. Antigenic material may penetrate the barrier and enter the nerve tissue. The phagocytic cells in the central nervous system are mainly of haematogenous origin. The number of such cells in the brain is very low. There are also few lymphocytes under normal circumstances. These cells circulate from the blood, through the vessel walls and into the perivascular spaces, along the perivascular channels and to the
CSF
and back to the blood. This circulation may increase enormously during inflammatory conditions. In multiple sclerosis, the number of T-lymphocytes in the
CSF
is increased, corresponding to a preponderance of T-lymphocytes in the perivascular cell infiltrates in and around the lesions. Thus, the individual elements of the immune system are all present in the brain, which is only partially immunologically privileged. The mechanisms underlying the brain's immunological privilege may be of a non-immunological nature. As yet there are only few data which indicate that auto-immunity is a prominent feature in diseases of the human brain. The central nervous system also exerts a modulating influence upon the immune response. This may take place both by secretion of hormones and by a nervous/neurotransmitter influence upon the immune system.
...
PMID:The immune system and the nervous system. 619 Oct 6
Cerebrospinal fluid enzyme levels of creatine kinase (CK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase (GOT) and angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) were studied in 40 acute
stroke
patients comprising 20 lacunar strokes and 20 cortical strokes. A marked elevation of at least one of the enzymes CK, GOT or LDH was seen in 80% of cases of cortical strokes. No elevation was seen in lacunar
stroke
with CK, GOT or ACE and only a slight elevation with LDH. Within the cortical group, there was a correlation between the site, size of infarction seen on CT scan and enzyme level. These findings may help to explain the previously noted unpredictability of rises in
CSF
enzymes in
stroke
patients. In certain instances, a study of
CSF
enzymes may be of use to distinguish cortical from lacunar
stroke
. A precise diagnosis of lacunar infarction is important for management purposes, entry into
stroke
treatment trials or description of new syndrome types.
Stroke
PMID:CSF enzymes in lacunar and cortical stroke. 630 Nov 13
Considerable experimental evidence has accumulated to indicate that brain ischemia or
stroke
-like events will lead to rapid losses of brain potassium, magnesium, ATP, creatine phosphate and glucose. These events are usually followed by an uptake of sodium and calcium ions. Increased uptake or excess Ca2+ uptake in neuronal cells is thought to be the prime cause of neuronal death in the brain. Mg2+ deficiency is known to produce a host of neurological disturbances in man; experimentally, Mg2+ deficiency leads to excess uptake of Ca2+ in the brain.
Strokes
and transient ischemic attacks also are known to be associated with neurological disturbances and ionic changes in the brain.
Stroke
patients have been reported to exhibit deficits in serum and
CSF
[Mg]. Acute Mg or K deficiency can produce cerebrovasospasm, at least experimentally. The lower the extracellular concentration of either Mg2+ or K+, the greater the magnitude of cerebral arterial contraction. These cerebrovascular contractions induced by lowering either the [Mg2+]0 or [K+]0 cannot be antagonized or attenuated by known pharmacologic antagonists. The cerebrovasospasms produced upon lowering [Mg2+]0 can be modulated by [K+]0 and vice versa; e.g. the lower the [K+]0, the greater the degree of vasospasm upon withdrawal of [Mg2+]0 and vice versa. Lowering [Mg2+]0 in situ and in vitro results in increased uptake of Ca2+ in the brain and the cerebral arteries. Cerebrovasospasms induced by substances that are known to be released in the brain on injury, such as prostanoids and serotonin, are relaxed dramatically by addition of [Mg2+]0. Infusions of MgSO4 into the brain via the internal carotid artery produces dose-dependent lowering of systolic and diastolic blood pressure as well as dose-dependent vasodilatation of arterioles (17-30 micron) and venules (18-40 micron) in the cerebral microcirculation, as observed by direct in situ high-resolution TV image-intensification microscopy. In clinical studies, infusion of MgSO4 has been reported to alleviate cerebrovasospasms. Epidemiological evidence is accumulating to suggest that consumption of fruit and vegetables (foodstuffs relatively high in K and Mg, and low in Na) is associated in certain geographic regions with a lower than normal incidence of strokes, particularly that of cerebral hemorrhage. On the basis of such data, and the findings reported herein, we believe one must consider that certain types of cerebrovascular accidents, transient ischemic attacks and 'classical' migraine attacks may be associated with a 'true' Mg deficiency and altered fluxes of K+ ions in the brain and
CSF
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Interactions of Mg and K on cerebral vessels--aspects in view of stroke. Review of present status and new findings. 639 42
We studied a patient with action-induced rhythmic dystonia that followed a
stroke
. Postmortem studies showed an infarct in the right posterolateral ventral part of the thalamus. Electrophysiologic analysis indicated that the eliciting factor of the involuntary movement was an impulse, promoting voluntary contraction of muscle.
CSF
5-HIAA content was low, and HVA was high. Administration of 5-HTP and clonazepam abolished the involuntary movements.
...
PMID:Action-induced rhythmic dystonia: an autopsy case. 660 63
Using a HPLC method the concentrations of oxypurines were simultaneously measured in
CSF
of patients with acute cerebrovascular lesions (CVL) and global cerebral ischemia (GCI) in an attempt to study disturbed brain metabolism during cerebral oxygen deprivation. In cerebral infarction both hypoxanthine and xanthine gradually increased from normal levels at admission to pathologically increased on the fourth day from onset of symptoms. There was no correlation between these substances and the clinical score but the maximum
CSF
-hypoxanthine concentration was significantly correlated to the maximum lesion volume determined by computerized tomography. In GCI the hypoxanthine-xanthine concentrations were considerably increased less than 20 hours from onset of unconsciousness but the initial levels did not predict the final outcome. These findings suggest that the end products of nucleotide degradation accumulate rapidly in acute cerebral hypoxia but more gradually in CVL probably due to growing local edema with subsequent local hypoxia. In controls and patients with CVL the
CSF
-urate concentrations were positively correlated to those of
CSF
-albumin. However, in CVL the increase of urate was relatively much more pronounced than the increase of albumin indicating that urate is a sensitive marker of dysfunction of blood-brain barrier.
Stroke
PMID:Oxypurines in cerebrospinal fluid as indices of disturbed brain metabolism. A clinical study of ischemic brain diseases. 665 6
The extent of edema related to infarction assessed by computed tomography was compared with the
CSF
-lactate concentration in patients with middle cerebral artery (MCA) infarction on the first, third and seventh day following the
stroke
. A linear correlation between the extent of infarction edema and
CSF
-lactate level was most distinct on the third day.
CSF
-lactate concentration on the third day can be considered as a measure of the extent of the accompanying edema which in our study reached its maximum at this time in comparison to the first and seventh day.
Stroke
PMID:CSF lactate and CT findings in middle cerebral artery infarction. A comparative study. 665 1
The usefulness of pulmonary-artery cineangiocardiography (PACAC) to demonstrate intracardiac thrombi in patients with cerebral infarctions of possible embolic origin has been explored. PACAC was performed in 60 patients (mean age 74 years) with sudden onset of permanent neurological deficits in whom CT scan and
CSF
analyses had excluded intracerebral hemorrhage. Opacification of the left atrium was excellent in 52 (87%) investigations, acceptable in 7 and poor in 1. Among 33 patients with chronic atrial fibrillation, an atrial thrombus was demonstrated in 8 (24%) and a suspected thrombus in 3. Atrial clot was also demonstrated in a patient with intermittent atrial fibrillation. In 4 out of 14 patients with previous myocardial infarction, a ventricular thrombus was demonstrated. Ventricular clots were detected in 2 of 46 patients without known previous myocardial infarction. No major complications occurred during the investigation. PACAC can be to used in the search for atrial or ventricular thrombi when cardiac source of a cerebral embolus is suspected. About 1 out of 3 patients with atrial fibrillation has remaining intracardiac thrombus after
stroke
.
...
PMID:Pulmonary-artery cineangiocardiography to demonstrate cardiac thrombi in patients with cerebral infarction. 670 17
A 67-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with the diagnosis of vascular
stroke
. Fever and an atypical beginning of the patient being disorientated let us suspect an encephalitis. In the
CSF
grew listeria monocytogenes. Treatment with Ampicillin intravenously was followed by a sudden relief of the neurological signs. Symptoms and treatment are discussed in referring to the literature.
...
PMID:[Listeria monocytogenes meningoencephalitis as a possible differential diagnosis of apoplexy]. 671 99
In patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage, particularly hemorrhage due to aneurysmal rupture, there was a positive significant relation between angiographic vessel constriction and vessel pathology (angiopathy). Furthermore, there was a positive relationship between post-hemorrhage survival time and the severity of angiopathy. Factors such as age, sex, operations, steroid and
CSF
pressure seemed to have little affect on angiopathy following hemorrhage. Pathological changes were primarily limited to the involved major cerebral vessels themselves, with their branches rarely being affected. While intramural vascular hemorrhage was a common pathological feature in vessels showing severe pathology, the mere presence of blood surrounding an artery seemed to have little influence on vessel alterations.
Stroke
PMID:The angiopathy of subarachnoid hemorrhage: angiographic and morphologic correlates. 683 50
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