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

37 patients below the age of 50 have been observed following acute 1st-time cerebrovascular lesion. Predisposing factors were found in nearly all cases. Hypertension was found to be present in about 1/2 of the patients suffering from cerebral hemorrhage and in 1/4 of those with cerebral infarction, 6 females were on oral contraceptives. Mortality within 1 month was 35% and was essentially caused by a very high mortality among patients with cerebral hemorrhage. A check after 30 months showed that 16 patients were still alive and 11 were able to perform some sort of work. A high incidence of diabetes and impaired glucose metabolism was exhibited among the survivors as seen from intravenous glucose tolerance tests. As compared with higher age groups, those younger stroke survivors have fairly good chances of going back to work. Health surveys, screening of the relatives of patients wi th hypertension or other vascular diseases, and rehabilitative resources are needed to trace possible stroke victims early and to rehabilitate those who have already been stricken.
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PMID:Stroke before fifty. Experiences from a five-year study. 120 88

Plasma cerebrosides were examined in 12 cases of multiple sclerosis which were compared to normal controls and patients with cerebrovascular accidents. A screening was performed so as to select patients with levels above to normal by means of thin-layer chromatography of the lipid extract. Glucose seems to be the only hexose to be found normally in plasma cerebrosides. The presence of galactocerebrosides may be a biological test for demyelination, as their presence seems to be related to the evolutionary state of multiple sclerosis. In a severe cerebrovascular accident, galactocerebrosides were also found.
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PMID:Plasma galactocerebrosides in multiple sclerosis. 123 38

Sixteen male patients with typical angina pectoris secondary to coronary atherosclerosis performed two daily standardized exercise tests during two consecutive days. Three hours before each exercise they received placebo or 400 mg practolol administered orally in double-blind fashion in order to complete a cross-over design. Practolol significantly prolonged the exercise duration by 30.6% and delayed the appearance time of ischaemic electrocardiographic changes by 67.7%. Maximal heart rate, systolic pressure, and pressure-rate product were also reduced after medication. In order to investigate further the effects of this beta blocking agent, myocardial function and metabolism at rest and during supine exercise were assessed in 12 male patients with coronary artery disease before and after practolol 30 mg, iv. At rest, practolol produced a decrease in tension-time index (18%), cardiac index (17%), heart rate (10%), and stroke index (7%). A significant reduction was also observed in resting stroke work index (14%) and systolic and mean aortic pressure (6%). Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure remained unchanged. During supine exercise, only time-tension index (12%), heart rate (12%), and cardiac index (10%) were significantly reduced after the beta blocking agent. Practolol did not significantly change the arterial glucose, lactate, inorganic phosphate, potassium, calcium, magnesium, pH, PCO2, or PO2. The beta blocking agent did not modify the myocardial extraction of any of these substrates at rest or during exercise. In the dosage used in both studies, practolol significantly improved the exercise tolerance and reduced the ischaemic manifestations. The efficacy of practolol in angina pectoris may result mostly from its ability to decrease heart rate and systolic pressure during exercise.
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PMID:Effects of practolol on exercise tolerance and cardiac haemodynamics and metabolism in patients with coronary artery disease. 125 93

Chronically catheterized dogs were studied awake and during anesthesia with high and low concentrations of halothane to assess the relationship between cardiac function and metabolism. Low concentrations of halothane (0.79 per cent endtidal) increased heart rate and decreased left ventricular stroke volume, stroke work, and dP/dt without producing other hemodynamic changes. However, similar heart rate increases produced by atrial pacing in awake animals increased aortic pressure and cardiac output and decreased left atrial pressure. Consequently, the halothane-induced tachycardia partially compensated for the negative inotropic effect of the halothane. High concentrations of halothane (1.74 per cent endtidal) further increased heart rate and elevated left atrial pressures. Cardiac output, stroke volume, stroke work, aortic pressure, LV dP/dt, myocardial blood flow and oxygen consumption were markedly decreased. Myocardial glucose extraction was also decreased. Myocardial oxygen extraction was unchanged, and lactate extraction rose with both concentrations of halothane. Consequently, the dose-dependent negative inotropic effect of halothane resulted in a decrease in cardiac oxygen demand which was equal to or greater than the decrease in oxygen delivery. Whether the same relationship would be seen in the ischemic heart is yet to be demonstrated.
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PMID:Myocardial function and metabolism in the conscious dog and during halothane anesthesia. 126 6

Eleven healthy volunteers were examined, as well a thirty-five diabetic subjects divided into three groups according to the presence or absence of macro-microvascular complications and according to whether or not these complications were chronic. The results of our study show a marked unfavorable in cell rheology in the diabetic subjects, as studied using the St. George filtrometer. In particular, polymorphonuclear (PMN) cells, in the diabetic subject showed a substantial decreases in viscosity and elasticity, reflected by decreased IrFr and increased CR values. These changes were most marked in the group of diabetics with acute vascular events, i.e., AMI and stroke. Rheological indexes studied appeared to be independent from the simultaneous blood glucose level.
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PMID:Rheological leukocyte indexes in diabetes mellitus type II. 130 Sep 12

Fifty-three patients with traumatic shock were injected 200-400 ml of a 10% solution of sodium chloride in combination with 100 ml of the 40% solution of glucose. The continuous, for 1-2 h, elevation of arterial pressure, increased minute blood circulation volume, cardiac index, stroke volume were noted. At the same time base deficiency in blood was growing. So, in the last 5 patients the infusion therapy at the prehospital stage was completed by injecting 200 ml of 3% sodium solution and the acid-base state in them was thus leveled. When using the "internal autotransfusion" lethality was reliably less than in patients who were treated by routine (polyglucon, gelatinole) infusion therapy.
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PMID:[The use of the "internal autotransfusion" method in complex shock-control measures at the prehospital stage]. 130 53

Oral contraceptives (OCs) were initially approved for unrestricted use in 1960 in the United States and have been used and studied extensively for 30 years. The initial formulations contained a fixed dose of estrogen and progestogen ingested for 21 days, with a seven-day pill-free interval. Subsequent formulations contained a sequential estrogen dose, a progestogen alone given daily, and variable doses of both progestogen and estrogen. Although the estrogen and progestogen doses employed in currently marketed OCs are markedly lower than those used in the OCs of the 1960s and 1970s, the excellent contraceptive efficacy of these compounds has not been compromised. The estrogen component produces a dose-related increase in serum globulin concentrations, triglycerides, and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, along with a decrease in low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, while the progestogen component causes peripheral insulin resistance, a decrease in HDL cholesterol, an increase in LDL cholesterol, and various androgenic effects. The effect of nicotine on thromboxane release acts synergistically with the elevated serum clotting factors to increase the incidence of both arterial and venous thrombotic events, particularly in women smokers over 35 years of age. However, there is no evidence of increased risk of myocardial infarction or stroke in healthy, nonsmoking women of any age who use OCs containing less than 50 micrograms estrogen. Likewise, the lower-dose estrogen/progestogen formulations do not have a clinically significant effect on glucose metabolism and have a neutral effect on lipoprotein metabolism. In addition, the many noncontraceptive health benefits associated with OCs are maintained with the lower-dose formulations. Thus, the low-dose formulations should improve the overall health of healthy, nonsmoking women as well as effectively prevent unwanted pregnancy.
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PMID:Oral contraception: past, present, and future perspectives. 134 21

We used a multitracer positron emission tomography (PET) approach to assess metabolic changes in infarcted and periinfarct tissue in acute ischaemic stroke. 16 patients were studied within 6-48 hours (mean, 23 h) after onset of symptoms from a first hemispheric stroke and again 13-25 days later (mean, 15.6 days). Regional cerebral metabolic rates of oxygen (CMRO2) and glucose (CMRGlc), blood flow (CBF) and blood volume (CBV) were measured and oxygen extraction (OEF) as well as glucose extraction (GEF) and microvascular transit time were calculated. PET images were three-dimensionally aligned using serial CT or MRI scans. Regions of interest on the side of the infarction were individually compared to contralateral mirror regions. In the infarction core CBF, CMRO2 and CMRGlc were significantly lower than on the contralateral side and did not change during time. In the periinfarct regions there was a decreased CMRO2 with progressive deterioration over time while CBF slightly increased. Only in a few ischaemic regions with initially increased OEF oxygen metabolism was preserved during the course of time.
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PMID:Metabolic derangement in viable periinfarct tissue in the course of acute ischaemic infarction: a multitracer positron emission tomography (PET) study. 135 84

Focal brain ischemia was produced in halothane-anesthetized Mongolian gerbils by occluding the right common and the left external carotid artery. Ninety minutes after vascular occlusion the following regional hemodynamic and metabolic parameters were evaluated in adjacent cryostat sections taken from seven different coronal planes of each brain: cerebral blood flow (CBF), glucose utilization (CMRG), and the tissue content of ATP and glucose. NADH fluorescence was recorded from the surface of the cryostat block. In addition, tissue slices were taken from each brain to determine the rate of phosphorylation of 2-deoxyglucose in ischemic and nonischemic regions. Depending on the density of ischemia, the following metabolic disturbances were observed. At CBF values below 35 ml x 100 g-1 x min-1 CMRG increased and at values below 25 ml x 100 g-1 x min-1 it declined sharply. Glucose content declined when CBF was below 35 ml x 100 g-1 x min-1 and ATP fell at CBF below 20 ml x 100 g-1 x min-1. At 10 ml x 100 g-1 x min-1 ATP was completely depleted. NADH fluorescence was found elevated at flow rates that caused an increase of glucose utilization and was maximal when CBF stopped. The ischemic thresholds for the initial increase in CMRG and the complete depletion of ATP content represent the metabolic equivalent of the penumbra zone and provide a basis for the evaluation of therapeutic procedures for the treatment of stroke.
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PMID:Threshold relationship between cerebral blood flow, glucose utilization, and energy metabolites during development of stroke in gerbils. 139 69

In spontaneously diabetic BB rats, the effect of chronically maintained blood glucose levels on the degree of energy failure and brain pH change during an ischemic insult, and on subsequent recovery after reperfusion, was studied with in vivo 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Short duration forebrain ischemia (10-min carotid occlusion plus hypotension of 50 mmHg) was induced in diabetic and nondiabetic male BB rats whose blood glucose levels were maintained with insulin. Spectra were obtained in 1-min blocks before, during, and for 1 h after ischemia. Before ischemia, hypoglycemic (blood glucose less than 3 mM) diabetic rats had an increased Pi peak intensity, with no significant pH change, compared with other groups. During ischemia, the rate and extent of hydrolysis of high-energy phosphate metabolites (as measured by an increase in Pi) decreased, and the severity of tissue acidosis increased as preischemia blood glucose concentration increased. Among hyperglycemic BB rats, similar ischemia-induced changes were found for subgroups with blood glucose levels of 13.7 +/- 1.2 and 20.3 +/- 0.6 mM, in keeping with the known decrease in hexose binding sites associated with chronic hyperglycemia. Decline in PCr level during ischemia was not significantly different between groups. With reperfusion, both Pi and pH values rapidly returned to preischemia values. PCr levels, however, did not recover in hyperglycemic diabetic animals, with the degree of residual impairment dependent on the preischemia glucose level. Results suggest that optimal management of diabetes may lessen the degree of injury within the ischemic penumbra in diabetic patients who suffer a stroke.
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PMID:Forebrain ischemia in diabetic and nondiabetic BB rats studied with 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy. 139 7


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