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

In contrast to intravenously-administered crystallene glucagon, which acts for 20 minutes only, the depot form, zinc protamine glucagon, shows a prolonged haemodynamic action. Fourteen patients with pre-existing heart failure received a single dose of 20 mg Zn protamine glucagon intramuscularly. The stroke volume and cardiac output were increased, whereas the mean and end-diastolic pulmonary pressure were decreased, indicating a positive inotropic action of the administered drug. Heart rate and mean arterial pressure remained almost unchanged. The haemodynamic changes started 60 minutes after intramuscular administration of the drug, reached a maximum effect at 3 hours and started to decrease after the fourth hour. Zn protamine glucagon can, therefore, be considered a beneficial drug in the treatment of digitalis-resistant heart failure on the basis of its long duration of action and easy route of administration.
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PMID:[Haemodynamic effects of depot zinc protamine glucagon in heart failure (author's transl)]. 43 80

Trace metal contents of cerebral vessels in age-matched and sex-matched subjects from three population groups were estimated. The trace metals included calcium, manganese, zinc, magnesium, copper and iron. The American blacks in Washington, D.C., who are ethnologically related to Nigerian Africans, have different patterns of trace metal contents in their cerebral vessels and the observed levels also differed in some respects from Minnesota Caucasians living in a similar environment. The greatest amounts of calcium, zinc, and copper were found in the vessels of American blacks while the greatest amount of magnesium was found in vessels of Minnesota Caucasians. There was no statistically significant difference in the manganese content of the cerebral vessels in three population groups. Nigerian Africans had the least amounts of copper and magnesium but had the highest iron content. A similar high level of iron was observed in the vessels of American blacks. Since it has been shown that American blacks have the most extensive and severe degree of atherosclerosis among the three population groups, it would appear that iron, calcium and manganese in the cerebral vessels may not directly relate to the severity of cerebral atherosclerosis. Relatively high levels of copper and magnesium, which were observed in the cerebral vessels of American blacks and Caucasians, may be of significance in the pathogenesis of cerebral atherosclerosis. The low levels of the trace metals in Nigerians may be protective. The possible role of zinc requires further studies.
Stroke
PMID:Trace metal content of cerebral vessels in American Blacks, Caucasians and Nigerian Africans. 119 34

The first generation of an integrated, totally implantable electrohydraulic total artificial heart was designed for long-term cardiac replacement. The system consists of an elliptical blood pump with an interatrial shunt, Medtronic-Hall 27 mm and 25 mm inflow and outflow valves, respectively, an energy converter consisting of an axial-flow, hydraulic pump driven by a brushless DC motor, and an electronics system with transcutaneous energy transmission and telemetry. Energy is supplied by internal nickel-cadmium rechargeable batteries that supply power for 20 min and external silver-zinc batteries that are designed to supply energy to run the system for 5 hr. The blood pump consists of a single layer diaphragm cast from Biolon, with joined right and left ventricles sharing a common base. The dynamic stroke volume is 84 ml, and maximum cardiac output is 9.2 L/min at a heart rate of 110 beats/min on the mock circulation. A 4.3 mm diameter interatrial shunt is used to balance the volumetrically coupled ventricles. The energy converter pumps hydraulic fluid alternately between ventricles, with controlled, active filling in one ventricle during the systolic phase of the other ventricle. Internal or external controllers adjust the heart rate and motor speed to maintain normal atrial filling pressures and full stroke. Electromagnetic induction is used to transfer energy through the skin and a bidirectional infrared data link incorporated within the transcutaneous energy transmission coils is used to transmit information. The entire system is being assembled and refined for long-term animal implant studies.
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PMID:Development of a totally implantable artificial heart. 145 55

The role of oxygen-derived free radicals, superoxide in particular, in the pathogenesis of neuronal cell death induced by glutamate was studied using cultured cortical neurons from transgenic mice overexpressing human copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase. Primary cortical neuron cultures were developed from 15-day-old fetuses of both transgenic mice and their normal littermates. Both human copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase and host mouse copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase activities in cultured neurons were identified by native gel electrophoresis followed by nitroblue tetrazolium staining. Cultured neurons grown for 10-12 days in vitro were exposed briefly to 0.5 mM glutamate for 5 minutes, followed by biochemical and morphological examinations at 2, 4, and 24 hours. Our data have demonstrated that glutamate neurotoxicity is significantly reduced in transgenic neurons at 2 and 4 hours following exposure to glutamate, as measured by the efflux of lactate dehydrogenase, the 3-O-methyl glucose space, and by phase-contrast and bright-field trypan blue staining. These data indicate that transgenic neurons containing twofold to threefold the normal amount of copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase activity as the result of expression of the human copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase transgene are protected against glutamate neurotoxicity in vitro. Our results suggest that oxidative stress, at least in part, plays an important role in the biochemical pathways amplifying N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor-mediated neurotoxicity.
Stroke 1990 Nov
PMID:Reduced neurotoxicity in transgenic mice overexpressing human copper-zinc-superoxide dismutase. 223 89

Stroke is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States with 250,000 cases per year. Cerebral ischemia is the largest category of stroke with cardiac arrest, profound hypotension, and vascular occlusion the principal causes. Traditional approaches to the treatment of ischemic stroke focus on maintaining cardiac output, blood pressure, cerebral blood flow, and on preventing thrombosis. Recently, attention has been focused on developing new therapies that are directed toward abnormal biochemical events at excitatory synapses. Ischemia causes impairment of brain energy metabolism and the release of excessive amounts of glutamate into the extracellular space. This process secondarily excites neurons and further depletes energy stores. The excitotoxic hypothesis of brain injury proposes that glutamate is a principal cause of damage in ischemia. Three components of this hypothesis have been tested and largely proved in experimental studies in tissue culture and in animal models of stroke. First, elevated concentrations of glutamate cause excessive excitation at a subset of glutamate receptors, the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor. Second, excitation at this receptor leads to excessive influx of sodium chloride and water which causes acute neuronal damage, and calcium which causes delayed and more permanent damage. Third, pharmacologic blockade at the NMDA receptor-ion channel complex prevents ischemic neuronal damage. Studies using specific pharmacologic compounds that block glutamate's action hold particular promise for treating stroke in humans, including competitive antagonists at the NMDA glutamate binding site (for example, 2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate, AP5), noncompetitive antagonists at the calcium channel (for example, MK-801, dextromethorphan, ketamine), and agents that might be directed at the glycine, zinc, and magnesium sites.
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PMID:Selective vulnerability of the brain: new insights into the pathophysiology of stroke. 254 55

A 29-year-old single woman had recurrent stroke-like episodes. She developed loss of consciousness, myoclonic seizures, and lactic acidosis. She died at the age of 30. A muscle biopsy study revealed mitochondrial myopathy, and the postmortem biochemical analysis demonstrated decreased cytochrome c oxidase activity in the skeletal muscles by 20% of normal control. The brain had multiple ischemic lesions in the cerebral cortex without major vascular occlusions. We present this case as an autopsy case of mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) with a partial deficiency of cytochrome c oxidase. The analytical electron microscopic study of the calcified small vessels in the globus pallidus revealed increased calcium, phosphorus and iron. No accumulation of chromium, nickel or zinc was noted in this case, which was different from the previously reported cases of basal ganglia calcification.
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PMID:An autopsy case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy: biochemical and electron microscopic studies of the brain. 284 99

The canine gastric response to acute dilatation, its correlation with selected systemic cardiovascular changes, and preliminary study of its modulation by membrane-stabilizing agents were studied in 21 Beagle dogs. Gastric mucosal damage and adverse cardiovascular sequelae were induced by inflation of an intragastric balloon to 60 mm of Hg in each anesthetized dog for 2.5 hours. At this time, dogs were given 1 of 4 treatments: control; lidocaine HCl, 2.2 mg bolus + 66 micrograms/min, IV; prednisolone succinate, 6.6 mg, IV; and zinc sulfate, 2.2 mg bolus + 66 micrograms/min, IV. After treatments were given, there was a 4-hour deflation period. Throughout the 6.5 hours, continuous measurements were made of stroke volume, arterial blood pressure, PaO2, PaCO2, and plasma HCO3- concentration. Gastric lesions, assessed by planimetric analysis of ulcer indices, were limited to the fundus and corpus and were significantly decreased by lidocaine administration. As seen by histopathologic examination, a sharply delineated transverse area bordering the corporeal-antral junction near the lesser curvature demonstrated minimal resistance to ulceration and showed mucus depletion. Plasma HCO3- concentration, base excess, and CO2 values were negatively correlated with development of gastric damage, indicating that plasma HCO3- concentration has a key role in mucosal resistance to ulcerogenesis.
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PMID:Topographic localization of gastric lesions and key role of plasma bicarbonate concentration in dogs with experimentally induced gastric dilatation. 310 3

Male rabbits received 20 micrograms/ml of cadmium in drinking water for nine months. At the end of the treatment aortic vascular resistance was increased, whereas maximum rate of increase in left ventricular pressure, aortic blood flow, stroke volume, cardiac output, left ventricular minute work, and left ventricular stroke work were reduced. Arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and the index of myocardial oxygen consumption were not modified. The exposed rabbits also showed reduced pressor responses to vagotomy, increased cardiovascular responses to angiotensin I and II and isoprenaline, and lower responses to serotonin and guanethidine; the bradycardia induced by clonidine was augmented; the cardiovascular effects of bilateral carotid occlusion, hexamethonium, phenylephrine, histamine, acetylcholine, tyramine, papaverine and verapamil were unaltered. In the treated rabbits cadmium was appreciably higher in the kidney than in the heart; however, renal concentrations of cadmium were lower than those reported as critical for workers exposed to cadmium. Zinc was increased in the kidney but not in the heart, whereas copper remained unchanged in the examined organs. In rabbits treated with cadmium the increased aortic vascular resistance and the reduced myocardial contractility contribute to preserve a haemodynamic equilibrium without alteration of blood pressure and heart rate; the question of whether a similar condition may be present in people exposed to cadmium with normal cardiovascular parameters is discussed.
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PMID:Mechanisms of cardiovascular regulation in male rabbits chronically exposed to cadmium. 375 11

Fifty-seven well-defined acute stroke patients were investigated for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of zinc (Zn), total protein, and albumin, as well as 6 patients with old infarctions. Significantly increased concentrations were found in patients with acute non-embolic and embolic infarctions and haemorrhage compared with patients having old infarctions or with the controls. The CSF-Zn concentrations in acute infarctions correlated significantly with the total protein and albumin concentrations of CSF. There was no significant difference in the CSF concentrations between the first and second lumbar puncture. The size of the infarctions on CT scan did not correlate with the CSF parameters. High CSF concentrations of Zn, total protein and albumin in acute infarctions related to a poor short-term prognosis. This study shows that CSF-Zn determinations in acute cerebrovascular diseases may be of diagnostic and prognostic value.
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PMID:Zinc, total protein, and albumin in CSF of patients with cerebrovascular diseases. 381 37

The increased production of reactive oxygen metabolites in the central nervous system may result in cellular damage and vascular-parenchymal injury. Vascular injury is also a cause of the vasoregulation deficiency. In this case report, a 60-year-old woman was admitted to the department of neurology, with a diagnosis of cerebrovascular accident. During 18 days of follow-up, the status of the antioxidant system was determined by measuring red cell superoxide dismutase and catalase activity. Red cell and plasma copper, zinc and magnesium concentrations were also measured. Red cell superoxide dismutase activity increased markedly by Day 2, reached a peak on Day 6 before decreasing to normal 18 days after the injury. Red cell catalase activity was below normal values during the whole of the 18-day study period and was at its lowest between days 6 and 7. Plasma copper, zinc and magnesium concentrations showed corresponding alterations.
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PMID:Antioxidant defence system in a patient with cerebrovascular accident. 885 93


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