Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0038454 (stroke)
147,016 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To determine whether chronic static exercise would alter resting caudal artery systolic blood pressure (RSBP) in stroke-prone hypertensive rats (SP-SHR), a 20- to 21-wk experimental study was initiated with 24 male and 16 female rats. In addition, eight rats were cannulated for heart rate and blood pressure measurements and implemented with Doppler flow probes (mesenteric and iliac arteries) for determination of the acute responses. The rats were trained to perform static exercise by forelimb hanging over an electrical grid (3-5 mA) activated with a high-frequency sound (2.5-10kHz) of 60 dB. Acute forelimb hanging by nontrained rats caused a 70-mmHg elevation in mean blood pressure, 115-beat/min increase in heart rate, and 71% decrease in mesenteric blood flow. The procedure for chronic forelimb hanging included increasing the number of sets per session from one to three, maintaining the number of repetitions between 6 and 10 and the hang time within 7-10 s/hang, while increasing the amount of weight supported per set from 0 to 12% of body weights for males and 30% for females. Two performance tests, one for endurance (no weights) and one for "strength" (weights), demonstrated that the hanging animals increased their endurance ability by 103% and their strength by 115%. RSBP was not significantly increased in either the male or female trained populations when evaluated by analysis of variance or trend-analysis procedures. Food and water consumption, sodium and potassium excretion, and blood volume measurements exhibited no group differences that had statistical significance. Five animals had evidence for previous strokes, with four being associated with the nonhanging animals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Response of hypertensive rats to acute and chronic conditions of static exercise. 327 24

The objective of this study was to determine if 1,3-butanediol would reduce a neurologic deficit in rats exposed to ischemic-hypoxia (Levine rats). Age and weight matched male Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized with 2% halothane. The right common carotid and external jugular vein were ligated and cannulated and EEG screws were implanted followed by a 2 hour recovery period. Thirty minutes prior to exposure the rats received either 1,3-butanediol (47 mmole/kg i.v.; n = 11) or an equal volume of saline (n = 10). The rats were then exposed to 4.5% O2 until mean arterial blood pressure fell to 70 mm Hg. The oxygen level was then increased to 8% for 30 minutes, after which the rats were returned to room air. Posture, hemiparesis, circling, shuffling, activity, and ability to hang on to a vertical screen were scored 1 (normal) to 5 (severe deficit) at 2 and 20 hours after insult. The time to 70 mm Hg was extended from 7.9 +/- 0.9 min for saline treated rats to 19.0 +/- 2.3 min for the 1,3-butanediol treated rats (p less than 0.001). All eleven 1,3-butanediol treated rats survived the hypoxic insult; 90% (9/10) saline treated rats died. In an attempt to reduce the insult, six additional saline treated rats were switched to 8% O2 at 75 mm Hg and still 4/6 died. The mean score at 20 hours for three surviving saline treated rats was 3.4. A significantly better (p less than 0.002) mean 20 hour score for the surviving 8/11 1,3-butanediol treated rats was 1.2. 1,3-butanediol increases survival and decreases the neurologic deficits associated with this ischemic-hypoxic insult.
Stroke
PMID:Reduction of neurologic deficit by 1,3-butanediol induced ketosis in levine rats. 404 49

The painful shoulder in the paralysed stroke patient, is a great problem in the field of physical medicine. Certain pathological changes are taking place in the patients with extensive paralysis in the upper limb. These changes are: (1) lesions or rupture of the rotatorcuff, (2) displacement of caput humeri in a caudal direction, (3) neuropathy of plexus brachialis with peripheral paresis. Careless handling of the patients' arm and the passive pull of the heavy, paralytic arm are claimed to be the main cause for these lesions. Correct handling of the patient and support of the shoulder is necessary to prevent these injuries from taking place. The different arm-slings used for this purpose, are not good enough. The article describes an orthosis which supports the shoulder joint and reposition caput humeri (if this has been luxated). It also gives the patient a better balance by straightening the trunk and letting the arm hang extended and slightly abducted along the side of the body. The orthosis is only tested in a few patients. Further development and testing on several patients are now being planned.
...
PMID:Upper extremity orthoses for stroke patients. 745 Sep 56

Many reports indicate that GM1 ganglioside is effective in reducing CNS ischemic injury in animal models. These models employ invasive surgery to induce ischemic damage in otherwise healthy animals. The purpose of this study was to determine if the beneficial effects of GM1 could be generalized to Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats-Stroke Prone (SHRSP). The SHRSP strain develops a pathology similar to those observed in patients with stroke. The SHRSP have "risk" factors that include hypertension, fibrinoid necrosis, and sensitivity to diet. Female SHRSP were randomly assigned to GM1- or saline-treatment conditions. Rats were fed a stroke-inducing diet. Daily body weights, weekly blood pressure, time of stroke onset, and age at death were recorded. Spontaneous activity and performance on a tail-hang test were assessed thrice weekly. The results indicate that GM1 treatment did not delay the time of stroke onset or death. GM1 did reduce hyperactivity in the initial stages of the ischemic pathology, but did not prevent the marked decline in behavioral activity observed at later time points. There were no differences in weight loss, performance on the tail-hang test, or number of CNS injury-related symptoms observed. These findings suggest that GM1 was not as effective in decreasing mortality, weight loss, or behavioral deficits in SHRSP as previously reported using other animal models of ischemia. Distinguishing between those animal models in which GM1 is more and less effective may be useful in determining under which clinical situations GM1 is likely to be most suitable.
...
PMID:GM1 ganglioside treatment of spontaneously hypertensive stroke prone rats. 815 30

Occlusion of the rodent middle cerebral artery by embolism, using an intraluminal filament, produces behavioral alterations which resemble many symptoms associated with stroke. This model has been used to examine treatment interventions for the disease, however, variable success rate in completely blocking the middle cerebral artery may present inconclusive interpretation of the data. To detect successful occlusion of the middle cerebral artery, we demonstrate here sensitive and reliable behavioral parameters including the elevated body swing test, the postural tail-hang test, the spontaneous rotational test, and the forelimb akinesia test. These assays provide a criterion for identifying animals with incomplete occlusion which could promote host-related spontaneous recovery and might confound true effects of experimental therapies on ischemia-induced dysfunctions. From a practical standpoint, the early reliable identification of partial cerebral ischemia aids in immediate and efficient adjustments of the surgical procedure to create a complete and stable ischemia stroke animal model.
...
PMID:Early assessment of motor dysfunctions aids in successful occlusion of the middle cerebral artery. 985 69

The purpose of this study was to describe the experience of transition for a daughter caregiver of a stroke survivor. A phenomenologic, longitudinal case study of a woman in her late twenties provided the means by which the lived experience of transition could be studied and understood. The eleven unstructured, audiotaped interviews took place approximately every two weeks over a six and a half month period. They began six weeks after her mother's stroke and lasted until three months after her mother returned home, when life became more organized and predictable for a time. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed according to a modified version of Colaizzi's descriptive phenomenologic methodology. Since there was a temporal consideration, a time-ordered matrix was used to identify themes over time. The themes that emerged over time included: (a) changing relationships, (b) becoming a caregiver then stepping back, (c) enduring emotional turbulence, (d) taking one day at a time and (e) struggling to hang onto hope. Integration of the themes provided an exhaustive description. The experience of transition was a process that involved disruptions in close relations and daily living. The connection to a network of relationships changed to disconnection, and the fabric of interrelated lives began to unravel. The many sensations experienced were different and conflicting, revealing a rapidly changing perception of the world. An unknown future threatened to become overwhelming. Focusing on the present helped to quell the turbulent sensations experienced. An unknown future temporarily provided the opportunity to hope that daily life could once again become familiar and comfortable. The extent and object of hope changed over time. A pattern of chaos exemplified the process of transition. The passage of time revealed that life as it was known before the transition had changed. A new way of being in the world was experienced.
...
PMID:The experience of transition for a daughter caregiver of a stroke survivor. 1020 28

Rodents have been extensively used for experimental stroke research with rat and gerbil the preferred species. With the advent of transgenesis and gene targeting the number of mutant mouse strains is rapidly increasing. Thus, mouse models of stroke will be of great importance in the analysis of genetic factors affecting stroke. Demonstrating long-term functional recovery is of paramount importance for the pharmacological evaluation of putative stroke therapies. In the present paper we induce mild focal cerebral ischemia by tandem occlusion of the right middle cerebral artery (MCA), via craniotomy, together with the common carotid artery for 45 min in C57BL/6 strain of mice. The effects of ischemia were evaluated acutely by MRI and long-term (> 3 weeks) sensorimotor functional deficits were analyzed using a number of behavioral paradigms including the rotorod, wire hang, horizontal surface approach, eye-closure reflex, and T-maze tests. Although the induced brain damage is mild we show that it leads to clearly detectable and significant sensorimotor defects associated with fine motor coordination, balance, and postural and sensory reflexes. We conclude that the applied behavioral tests will be useful in the analysis of stroke in mutant mice.
...
PMID:Transient focal cerebral ischemia induces sensorimotor deficits in mice. 1068 Jul 58

Rodent models of stroke are often used to investigate the mechanisms that lead to ischemic neuronal damage. In this study, we used a model of cerebral hypoxia with ischemia to produce unilateral damage in C57Bl/6 mice. Lesion volume, ascertained by TTC staining, increased with longer durations of hypoxia. Additionally, cresyl violet, TUNEL, and FluoroJade staining showed a statistically significant increase in cellular damage in the ipsilateral cortex, CA1 pyramidal layer, and dentate gyrus of the hippocampus of ipsilateral hypoxic/ischemic tissue versus sham tissue. Astrocyte reactivity, determined by GFAP staining, was significantly higher in the ipsilateral H/I cortex and contralateral hippocampus compared to sham cortex and hippocampus, respectively. Increased microglia activation was evident in the H/I-treated cortex and hippocampus versus sham cortex and hippocampus, particularly within areas undergoing degeneration. To examine whether this model produces motor deficits, a battery of tests were administered before and after hypoxia. Following 45 min H/I, locomotor activity, rotarod performance and performance on an inverted wire hang test were all significantly decreased. These data indicate that the histological evidence of neuronal damage is consistent with functional deficits and suggest that this model may be useful for investigating strategies designed to protect neurons from hypoxia/ischemia-induced damage.
...
PMID:Characterization of cellular and neurological damage following unilateral hypoxia/ischemia. 1554 86

The Wartenberg (pendulum) test is commonly used in a variety of studies involving healthy subjects, patients with CP, stroke patients, and other neurological conditions. There is some evidence that the Wartenberg test may be able to differentiate healthy people from patients with spasticity. The aim of the study was to explore the within-session repeatability of primary outcome measures, i.e. relaxation indices derived from the Wartenberg test when test was performed by single investigator. Patients were lying supine, thigh along the horizontal line. The lower legs were allowed to hang freely over the table edge, and the knee motion in response to leg drop from the horizontal position was measured using motion system VICON with external markers attached to each leg at greater trochanter, lateral knee epicondyle, and lateral malleolus. Data from four consecutive trials were collected at 1 min intervals. The set of relaxation indices and maximum velocity was calculated for each trial. Data of 21 children (42 limbs) who underwent the evaluation due to spasticity problem were analysed. The repeated measure ANOVA test, one way analysis of variance, coefficients of correlation and determination were used to determine the repeatability of the relaxation indices, the association between the indices in time, and influence of the spasticity origin on the variability. The results show that relaxation indices, did not differ between the trails in statistically significant way in our group of patients with spasticity, however they exhibited high within-session variability in the individual patients (16-90%). Therefore the variability of the relaxation indices may restrict the clinical usefulness of the indices to monitor the changes of spasticity over time. Further, our findings do not seem to conform to the earlier reports demonstrating a systematic, time-dependent, change in the relaxation indices when repeated measures were taken within a session. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that although the Wartenberg test is repeatable in groups of patients, it does not provide us with repeatable measures in individual patients, thus if it is to be used as a replacement for other clinical tests of spasticity further investigations are needed to explain the substantial variability of the indices.
...
PMID:Quantifying repeatability of the Wartenberg pendulum test parameters in children with spasticity. 1918 63

Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) accounts for 20% of all strokes and is the most devastating form across all stroke types. Lymphocytes have been shown to potentiate cerebral inflammation and brain injury after stroke. FTY720 (Fingolimod) is an immune-modulating drug that prevents the egress of peripheral lymphocytes from peripheral stores. We hypothesized that FTY720 would reduce peripheral circulating lymphocytes, resulting in reduced brain injury and improved functional outcomes. CD-1 mice were anesthetized and then injected with collagenase into the right basal ganglia. Animals were divided into three groups: sham, ICH+Vehicle, and ICH+FTY720, by the intra-peritoneal route at 1 h after ICH induction. Brain water content was measured at 24 and 72 h. Neurobehavioral tests included corner test, forelimb use asymmetry, paw placement, wire-hang test, beam balance test, and a Neuroscore. FTY720 significantly reduced brain edema and improved neurological function at all time points tested. Lymphocyte modulation with FTY720 is an effective neuroprotective strategy to reduce brain injury and promote functional recovery after ICH.
...
PMID:FTY720 is neuroprotective and improves functional outcomes after intracerebral hemorrhage in mice. 2172 58


1 2 Next >>