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

The effects of chronic tolbutamide treatment were examined in a diabetic animal model in which abnormal myocardial function and composition have previously been demonstrated. Eight diabetic dogs were given tolbutamide 250 mg/day orally and compared with seven untreated diabetics, five healthy dogs receiving tolbutamide, and eight normal controls. After one year, resting hemodynamic studies in the intact anesthetized state showed that treated diabetic dogs had a significantly higher left ventricular end-diastolic pressure of 12.1+/-1.3 mm Hg associated with normal end-diastolic volume, compared to 6.1+/-0.8 mm Hg in untreated diabetics (P less than 0.01) and 6.3+/-0.5 in normals. Stroke work and ejection fraction were similar to normals. Acute volume expansion revealed a larger rise of left ventricular end-diastolic pressure in treated and untreated diabetics than normals, without a significant stroke volume response in treated diabetics. Enhanced stiffness of myocardium appeared to be related to interstitial accumulation of periodic acid-Schiff staining material, further intensified in treated diabetics by triglyceride accumulation observed on electron microscopy and by chemical analysis. Thus treatment of diabetes with tolbutamide, despite improved glucose tolerance, effected further reduction of left ventricular function and altered morphology of myocardium.
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PMID:The effects of tolbutamide on the myocardium in experimental diabetes. 83 Feb 9

A 25-year-old man was previously healthy until he contracted acute Propionibacterium acnes meningitis. Comparison with previous reports of de novo diphtheroid meningitis suggests that this entity can appear with features that are not characteristic of acute bacterial meningitis, including (1) stroke-like syndromes, (2) an afebrile course, and (3) a cerebrospinal fluid with a mononuclear pleocytosis and normal glucose level. The appropriate choice and dosage of antimicrobial agent must be guided by more than in vitro sensitivity data to prevent relapse and possible chronic meningitis. Although diphtheroids are as a rule exquisitely sensitive to penicillin, predictably high tissue levels of drug in diphtheroid meningitis are best achieved with chloramphenicol treatment. In the appropriate settling, the isolation of diphtheroids from cerebrospinal fluid should not be discounted as a "contaminant."
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PMID:Propionibacterium acnes meningitis in a previously normal adult. 87 34

An epidemiological study was conducted of geographic differences in stroke mortality between the following areas within the United States; Savannah, Georgia (high stroke rates), Hagerstown, Maryland (intermediate stroke rates) and Pueblo, Colorado (low stroke rates). Population samples 35--54 years of age of the three cities were drawn for interview and examination to determine medical conditions and living habits of these populations. The population samples were compared with emphasis on possible risk factors for stroke: serum cholesterol and glucose tolerance test determinations, weight and height measurements, blood pressure and cigarette smoking. The gradient of increasing prevalence of stroke-related risk factors from low to intermediate to high for the three cities was present for blood pressure in black females and white males and for glucose tolerance tests in whites and nonwhites. No other consistent pattern of increasing prevalence of risk factors for stroke was evident.
Stroke
PMID:Three-area epidemiological study of geographic differences in stroke mortality. II. Results. 90 54

To identify metabolic and other concomitants of a single important type of atherosclerotic cerebrovascular disease, 75 patients with angiographically and surgically proven internal carotid stenosis were compared with age and sex matched control subjects with respect to plasma cholesterol, triglycerides and glucose. They were also compared for blood pressure, cigarette smoking, evidence of ischemic heart disease, peripheral vascular disease and for a family history of these diseases. Patients with carotid stenosis had higher systolic and diastolic blood pressures and higher plasma cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations than the control groups. They had, as well, a far greater likelihood of being cigarette smokers and a greater likelihood of having diabetes mellitus and previous evidence of coronary and peripheral vascular disease. Patients with carotid stenosis were far more likely to have 2 or more of these common concomitants of atherosclerosis than were the control subjects. The data suggest that the precursors of carotid stenosis are similar to those of coronary atherosclerosis and raise the hope that modification of these factors may decrease the incidence of this highly prevalent form of cerebrovascular disease.
Stroke
PMID:Concomitants of atherosclerotic carotid artery stenosis. 92 53

The study was conducted in 80 patients with ischaemic and 29 with haemorrhagic cerebral stroke. Lactate, pyruvate, the lactate/pyruvate ratio and glucose were determined in the arterial blood and lumbar CSF. A high prognostic value of the CSF lactate content was found in cases of ischaemic stroke. According to the data obtained, an elevation of the CSF lactate concentration above 4.0 mEq/l should be considered life-threatening. Haemorrhagic stroked was found to be accompanied by a reduced CSF glucose level and an elevated lactate content, as well as by a significant proportional elevation of the lactate and red blood cells count in the CSF. The conducted calculations demonstrated that 1/4 to 1/3 of the CSF lactate is formed at the expense of the glycolytic metabolism in the CSF erythrocytes. This constitutes the main reason of the discordance between the CSF lactate content in haemorrhagic stroke and the routine criteria of prognosis in ischaemic stroke. The lactate/pyruvate ratio in the CSF is of no prognostic importance in both forms of cerebral stroke.
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PMID:[The prognostic value of the lactate concentration and lactate/pyruvate ratio in cerebrospinal fluid following acute cerebral circulatory disorders]. 93 57

Initial and follow-up fasting serum glucose levels following acute stroke were evaluated retrospectively in 392 selected hospitalized patients. Transitory reactive hyperglycaemia was observed in a large number of patients (28% of the total series) without a history of diabetes prior to the acute cerebrovascular event. The data from this group suggest a possible relationship between the impairment of carbohydrate metabolism and the type and location of stroke since both the frequency and severity of the hyperglycaemic response were higher in patients with haemorrhagic stroke and brainstem infarction as compared with cerebral infarction. The incidence and degree of the reactive hyperglycaemia were also related to the severity of the acute stroke. There were more comatose patients in the group showing this phenomenon. Initial serum glucose levels in the latter group were higher in unconscious patients than in alert ones. In addition, hospital mortality was significantly higher in these patients. Transitory reactive increases of serum glucose levels were also observed in the majority of patients with a history of overt diabetes prior to the acute stroke. The hyperglycaemic reaction following acute stroke may be attributed to several underlying mechanisms. These include: a non-specific reaction to acute stress and tissue injury with the associated autonomic, hormonal and metabolic alterations; uncovering of underlying latent diabetes by the acute stroke; increased secretion of growth hormone due to stroke-induced hypothalamic dysfunction; and irritation of the glucose regulatory centres in the hypothalamus and brain stem by blood-laden cerebrospinal fluid or local ischaemia.
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PMID:Reactive hyperglycaemia in patients with acute stroke. 97 11

Cerebral blood flow was measured by means of a ten channel cerebrograph. This investigation was done after a corotid angiography; 2 to 3 miCi of Xenon133 was injected in the internal carotid artery. Beside CBF we measured arterial bloodpressures, heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output, central venous pressures, blood gases and glucose in arterial blood, blood gases and glucose in the bulbus of the internal jugular vein and blood gases in mixed venous blood. In most regions CBF decreased significantly after Etomidate. The other parameters did not change. Only the heartrate slowed significantly.
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PMID:Influence of etomidate, a new short acting anesthetic agent, on cerebral blood flow in man. 101 17

The effect of intravenous infusion of 10 per cent glycerol on regional cerebral blood flow (using hydrogen bolus and Xenon-133 (133Xe) clearance methods) and metabolism was investigated in 57 patients with recent cerebral infarction. Hemispheric blood flow (HBF) increased, together with increase in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and cerebral blood volume (rCBV), in foci of brain ischemia. Hemispheric oxygen consumption (HMIO2) decreased together with hemispheric respiratory quotient. Systemic blood levels of glucose, lactate, pyruvate, and triglycerides also increased after glycerol while free fatty acids (FFA) and inorganic phosphate (Pi) decreased. Hemispheric glucose consumption was unaltered after glycerol so that hemispheric glucose to oxygen ratio tended to rise. Pyruvate and lactate production by brain was unchanged. Glycerol moved across the blood brain barrier into brain and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Release of FFA and Pi from infarcted brain was reversed by glycerol. Total phosphate balance was maintained actoss brain both before and after glycerol infusion. Triglycerides increased in CSF after glycerol, originating either from cerebral blood or as a result of lipogenesis in cerebral tissue. The EEG Recording and neurological status of the patients improved despite decreased brain oxygen consumption. Results of this study suggest that after intravenous infusion of 10 per cent glycerol in patients with recent cerebral infarction, glycerol rapidly enters the CSF and brain compartments and favorably affects the stroke process in two ways: first, by redistribution of cerebral blood flow with increase in rCBF and rCBV in ischemic brain secondary to reduction in focal cerebral edema; and second glycerol may become an alternative source of energy either by being directly metabolized by the brain, or indirectly, by enhancing lipogenesis, or by both processes. Involvement of glycerol in lipogenesis with esterification to accumulated FFA might lead to improved coupling of oxidative phosphorylation, a hypothesis that fits the finding of improved neuronal function despite further decrease in cerebral hemispheric oxygen consumption.
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PMID:Circulatory and metabolic effects of glycerol infusion in patients with recent cerebral infarction. 109 Mar 93

A retrospective study of 141 patients whith ischemic brain stem infarction admitted to the Department of Neurology, University of Helsinki, during 1966 to 1973 was performed. The patients were contacted by mail in January and February, 1974; in case of death, the death certificates were procured. The follow-up period was from 4 to 99 months (median 46.5 months), during which a total of 39 patients had died. A life table analysis gave a 50% probability of a seven-year survival after the stroke. Survival was similar for men and women, and age appeared to have little influence on the prognosis with only a slightly higher case fatality in old age. Soft palate paralysis, disturbed sensorium, need of special treatment measures (feeding by gastric tube intravenous infusions, etc.) during the acute phase, abnormalities in the ECG (T-wave negativity, S-T segment depression), fasting blood glucose 100 mg/100 ml or higher, and an abnormal eeg (slowing down of alpha rythm alone or in association with paroxysmal and/or focal disturbances) were all associated with high case fatality. Preceding TIAs, blood pressure level, serum cholesterol and triglyceride values, and aortic arch angiogram findings, on the other hand, had no effect upon the prognosis. The effects of body build on prognosis remained obscure.
Stroke
PMID:Characteristics and survival of patients with brain stem infarction. 115 70

In isolated guinea pig hearts performing a defined stroke work, the influence of heart work and substrate uptake on the interconversion of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) was studied. When hearts from fasted animals are perfused with a salt solution containing 10mM glucose, an increase in cardiac output and aortic pressure effects an increase in active PDH from 50 to 74% of total PDH activity and a decrease in tissue content of energy-rich phosphates. Pyruvate turnover calculated from oxygen consumption corresponds with PDH activity. Under these experimental conditions, PDH activity might either represent the rate limiting step of oxidative glucose breakdown, or it might be adjusted to a flux rate controlled by other factors. In fed animals, PDH activity exceeds the pyruvate turnover. However, an increase of heart work raises the active PDH from 76 to 95%. Addition of 10 mM acetate to the perfusion medium decreases PDH activity and glucose uptake. In fed animals, an increase of heart work raises the active PDH from 43 to 59% only, whereas in fasted animals this effect is abolished. The effect of changes in heart work on PDH interconversion might be explained by changes in energy-rich phosphate concentrations. However, substrate uptake and nutritional state may interfere or even abolish this effect.
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PMID:[Influence of heart work and substrate uptake on the regulation of pyruvate dehydrogenase activity in isolated guinea pig hearts (author's transl)]. 117 27


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