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

We determined the effect of hemodilution and hypertension on cerebral hemorrhage and brain injury in 32 rats subjected to 180 minutes of middle cerebral artery occlusion and 120 minutes of reperfusion. We divided the rats into four groups. In the control group (n = 8) neither hematocrit nor blood pressure was manipulated during occlusion, in the hemodilution group (n = 8) 5% albumin was administered to maintain a hematocrit of 30% during occlusion, in the hypertension group (n = 8) mean arterial blood pressure was increased to 30 mm Hg above baseline during occlusion with phenylephrine, and in the hemodilution/hypertension group (n = 8) albumin and phenylephrine were employed simultaneously during occlusion. We assessed the amount of cerebral hemorrhage (as concentration of extravasated hemoglobin) spectrophotometrically and the extent of ischemic injury (as percentage of the hemisphere with deficient staining) histochemically using 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride. Mean +/- SD hemoglobin concentration in the hemisphere ipsilateral to the occlusion in the hemodilution/hypertension group (71 +/- 14 micrograms/g brain tissue) was significantly (p less than 0.05) greater than that in the hemodilution and hypertension groups (25 +/- 5 and 29 +/- 7 micrograms/g, respectively), hemoglobin concentrations in these two groups were in turn significantly (p less than 0.05) greater than that in the control group (2 +/- 3 micrograms/g). Mean +/- SD percentage of the ipsilateral hemisphere with deficient staining was significantly (p less than 0.05) less in the hypertension and hemodilution hypertension groups (8 +/- 3% and 11 +/- 6%, respectively) than in the control and hemodilution groups (26 +/- 8% and 26 +/- 7%, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Stroke 1990 Sep
PMID:Hemodilution and hypertension effects on cerebral hemorrhage in cerebral ischemia in rats. 239 71

Cardiovascular, pulmonary, and behavioral effects of multiple doses of oxymorphone in 10 nonanesthetized, spontaneously breathing, healthy dogs were studied. Oxymorphone (0.4 mg/kg of body weight) was administered IV, and at 20, 40, and 60 minutes after the first injection was given, 0.2 mg of oxymorphone/kg was administered. Cardiovascular and pulmonary variables were measured before (base line) and at 5, 15, 35, 55, 75, 100, 120, 150, 180, 210, 240, 270, and 300 minutes after the first oxymorphone injection. Degree of sedation and behavioral effects also were recorded. Naloxone (0.04 mg/kg, IV) was administered 4.5 hours after the 4th oxymorphone injection, and behavioral changes were recorded. Oxymorphone induced mild respiratory depression. After transient apnea developed, respiratory rate increased to a pant, tidal volume decreased, and minute ventilation increased, but these values were not significantly (P = 0.05) different from base line. The PaCO2, physiologic dead space, and base deficit increased; alveolar tidal volume decreased; and alveolar minute ventilation did not change. The PaO2 decreased, hemoglobin and arterial O2 content increased, and O2 transport did not change. Venous admixture transiently increased. Oxymorphone induced minimal cardiovascular depression. Mean arterial blood pressure, stroke volume, central venous pressure, pulmonary artery pressure, and pulmonary wedge pressure increased. Heart rate decreased, systemic vascular resistance transiently increased, and cardiac output transiently decreased. Because the dogs moved spontaneously, responded to sound with sudden, vigorous movements, and breathed with excessive effort, oxymorphone alone was considered inadequate as a general anesthetic.
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PMID:Oxymorphone: cardiovascular, pulmonary, and behavioral effects in dogs. 244 2

Mortality and hospitalization rates for pneumonia have increased among older Americans during recent years (1979-86), despite a national commitment to the reduction of premature deaths from pneumonia. A prospective study of deaths and hospitalizations attributable to pneumonia was conducted among 5,474 subjects ages 55 and older who participated in the NHANES I Epidemiologic Followup Study. Prevalent chronic conditions, health behaviors, and nutritional status indicators, measured at baseline, were examined in relation to pneumonia hospitalization and death during 12 years of followup. Mortality and hospitalization rates for pneumonia were higher among men than women, and higher among those ages 65 and older than among those 55-64 of both sexes. Risk of pneumonia death was higher among subjects with a history of congestive heart failure, stroke, cancer, or diabetes. Risk of pneumonia hospitalization was higher among subjects with a history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and among men who were current smokers. Daily alcohol consumption did not increase risk of pneumonia in this study population. Four measures of nutritional status were examined taking age, prevalent chronic conditions, and cigarette smoking into account: body mass index, arm muscle area, and serum albumin and hemoglobin levels. Risk of pneumonia death was 2.6 times higher in men in the lowest quartile, compared with men in the highest quartile, of body mass index. Similarly, the risk was 4.5 times higher among men in the lowest quartile of arm muscle area. Risk of death from pneumonia was 3.6 times higher among women in the lowest quartile of serum albumin levels compared with women in the highest quartile. Relative risks for these nutritional status indicators remained elevated after adjusting for age and the medical history risk factors. These risk factors should be taken into account when designing and evaluating pneumonia vaccination trials and community prevention programs.
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PMID:Prospective study of pneumonia hospitalizations and mortality of U.S. older people: the role of chronic conditions, health behaviors, and nutritional status. 250 6

We conducted a prospective study of serial intravenous digital subtraction angiography to determine the relation of arterial disease risk factors and hemostatic variables with the presence of visible atheroma at the carotid bifurcation. Of the 492 patients with cerebrovascular disease or ischemic heart disease who entered the study, 354 had hematologic studies, including platelet aggregation in 230. Abnormal angiograms were associated with greater age, treated hypertension, current smoking, and lower hemoglobin levels but with higher uric acid, factor VIII, and fibrinogen concentrations. In patients presenting with isolated transient ischemic attacks, abnormal angiograms were also associated with higher levels of cholesterol and triglycerides. To study atheroma progression, the 230 patients with complete data at entry were recalled 2 years later. Repeat angiography in 209 patients showed progression of visible bifurcation disease in 13.4%. There was some evidence that progression was linked to higher age, hypertension, and more severe disease at entry, but further analysis was hampered by the small number of patients showing increased plaque size. The possible role of risk factors and hemostatic variables, especially fibrinogen, is discussed. Factors that did not correlate with progression of angiographically visible disease may also influence clinical end points by other mechanisms, such as thrombogenesis.
Stroke 1989 Nov
PMID:Arterial disease risk factors and angiographic evidence of atheroma of the carotid artery. 236 11

In order to investigate the risk factors of ischemic brain stroke (IBS) in diabetic patients, we analyzed 416 cases selected from 6239 diabetic patients admitted to Severance Hospital from Jan. 1983 to Dec 1987. Two hundred and eight cases had IBS. The other 208 cases without IBS were selected as a control group by a stratified random sampling method. The two groups were compared using various clinical characteristics of diabetes mellitus (DM) and known risk factors of IBS. In diabetics with IBS, the duration of DM was longer (9.2 +/- 7.1 years), hypertension was more frequently associated (68.2%) and the serum cholesterol level was higher (213.0 +/- 55.2 mg/dl) than in diabetics without IBS (7.6 +/- 7.1 years, 32.1% and 192.1 +/- 44.8 mg/dl, respectively). By means of Stepwise Logistic Regression Analysis (SLRA), it was found that the strong risk factors were hypertension and serum cholesterol level. The serum triglyceride level, type of DM and response to diabetes treatment were also thought to be risk factors of IBS by the retrial of SLRA of residuals after exclusion of hypertension and serum cholesterol level. IBS was not significantly related to the duration of DM, fasting blood glucose level, body weight, glycosylated hemoglobin value, and serum high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol level.
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PMID:Risk factors of ischemic brain stroke in Korean diabetic patients--a retrospective study. 258 65

Mental disability, variables associated with it and predictors of mental disability in late life were studied in 716 men from eastern and southwestern Finland in connection with the 25-year follow-up of the east-west study, which formed the Finnish part of the seven-countries study. The examinations were carried out in autumn 1984, when the men were 65-84 years of age. According to a 10-item mental status questionnaire, 95% of the men had normal mental capacities. There were no differences between the 2 areas. Old age, low educational level, low functional capacity, low body mass index, low serum cholesterol, low diastolic blood pressure, low alcohol or coffee consumption, low hemoglobin, low serum calcium, low serum triiodothyronine, high scores on the Zung Self-rating Depression Scale, and presence of transient ischemia or stroke were associated with mental disability in 1984. In the prospective analysis, low forced vital capacity, low forced expiratory volume in 0.75 s and high blood pressure in middle age predicted mental disability in old age.
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PMID:Mental disability among elderly men in Finland: prevalence, predictors and correlates. 259 44

The frequency of pulmonary hemorrhagic lesions in stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRSP) was higher in older than in younger rats. Hemoglobin and protein contents in pulmonary lavage fluid which may indicate alveolar hemorrhage showed an increase with the progress of age, but the difference of hemorrhagic levels was much more in older rats than that of younger ones. A strong relationship between hemoglobin and protein contents of pulmonary lavage fluid was observed. Morphologically, the most striking feature was fibrinoid degeneration of the vascular walls in the center of hemorrhagic lesions of the lung, not only in the capillaries but also in small arteries. In the early stage of hemorrhage, endothelial discontinuity exhibited intraluminal fibrin deposits in this area of the vessels. Erythrocytes and polygonal deposits of fibrin could also be seen within the same vascular walls. In the advanced stage, subendothelial spaces and medial layers of vascular walls contained an electron-dense amorphous material which was consisted to be a degradation product of fibrinogen. The occurrence of this substance was thought to be induced by the hemodynamic effects of hypertension, the results of increased permeability and the accumulation of blood components. From these results, we suggest that fibrinoid degeneration due to abnormal cellular permeability associated with hypertension in SHRSP may be in some way linked to the development of pulmonary hemorrhage.
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PMID:Vascular changes involved in pulmonary hemorrhage of stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats. 262 47

Whereas up to the end of the last century overweight reflected the privilege of the high society and her relative good health, the recent epidemiological studies have assessed the relations between body weight and general or cause specific morbidity and mortality. The major diseases associated with obesity are hypertension, atherosclerosis and diabetes, as well as certain types of cancer. Less well known complications include hepatic steatosis, gallbladder diseases, pulmonary function impairment, endocrine abnormalities, obstetric complications, trauma to the weight bearing joints, gout, cutaneous diseases, proteinuria, increased hemoglobin concentration and possibly immunologic impairments. From these wide epidemiological studies arise the definition of obesity: with an excess of 20% beyond the desirable weight, the complications bound to the overweight become statistically more frequent. Over there a U or J shaped curve illustrates the relation between the overweight and the degree of these various complications. An excess of 45 kg or more represents the critical level which defined "morbid obesity" with its own complications, the most important are sudden unexplained death, ventilatory disorders, circulatory congestion and functional limitations in activities of daily living and of course psychological consequences. When for certain complications, such as diabetes, the relationship with the overweight is evident, discrepancies between certain studies, especially for the cardiovascular diseases, had focused the attention on the regional patterns of fat distribution. Cross-sectional studies have shown abdominal obesity to be strongly associated with risk factors for cardiovascular disease, stroke and death independent of the total degree of obesity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The contribution of epidemiology to the definition of obesity and its risk factors]. 266 68

Now that both magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) have reached their decadic majority, appropriate questions may be asked as to their accomplishments and prognostications for the future. This article emphasizes the approach of the metabolic biologists/physiologists to magnetic resonance biochemistry as indicated by the currently available multinuclear localized approaches. The viewpoint is emphasized that MRS is a critical care instrument where precipitious changes of oxidative metabolism lead to the well-known stroke, heart failure, liver failure, kidney failure, etc. Generally, the gradation between the classical metabolic steady state of life and the pathway leading to cell death is a narrow one and magnetic resonance in some cases is too finely tuned to delineate the gradations of stability and instability of cell metabolism. To this point, magnetic resonance can be supplemented by other modalities that sense tissue distress. An example of a most useful and predictive measure of hypoxic stress is optical spectrophotometry which uses time resolved ranging methods to measure optical path lengths to quantitate hemoglobin deoxygenation in tissues. With such a complement, the two methods emerge as one of general importance in diagnostic procedures.
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PMID:What are the goals of magnetic resonance research? 270 5

Blood flow in a segment of the leg was determined by bioimpedance plethysmography in 47 diabetic patients and in 19 normal volunteers. The blood flow through the limb, expressed as stroke volume/m2 (SV/m2), was not significantly different in the two populations. SV/m2 showed significant negative correlation with the presence of peripheral vascular disease, fasting serum cholesterol concentration, glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) concentration, and the duration of diabetes. The presence or absence of retinopathy (27.7% of cases) or nephropathy (4.3% of cases) did not show strong association with the SV/m2. Neither the duration of the hypertension nor the systolic or diastolic blood pressure correlated significantly with blood flow in the extremity. These data suggest that only some of the parameters used to assess "control" of diabetic patients can be useful predictors of macrovascular as well as microvascular disease in diabetic patients.
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PMID:Correlation between macrovascular disease as assessed by bioimpedance plethysmography and various parameters used to assess diabetic "control". 273 45


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