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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We developed a monkey model of 16 minutes global brain ischemia (GBI) resulting in reproducible, severe, permanent functional neurologic deficit with long term (7 days) postischemic (PI) survival made possible by standardized intensive care with 24 hour coverage by trained personnel. Quantitated neurologic deficit (ND) and brain histopathological examinations were developed. Fifteen minutes GBI resulted in rapid recovery within12--24 hours PI without residual neurologic sequelae. Twenty minutes GBI caused severe neurologic deficit and within 4 days PI, a delayed Cushing response eventually leading to cardiac arrest. Sixteen minutes GBI resulted in severe neurologic deficit (monkeys unable to
sit
, stand, walk, or feed themselves), but with long term survival. Brain histopathological analyses revealed a combination of cortical and brainstem lesions. Severest changes were observed in the occipital (calcarine) cortex with less severe damage in the frontal and temporal regions. Oculomotor nuclei and medial longitudinal fasciculus in the midbrain were regularly affected. With this model we can test the efficacy of promising therapies in terms of clinically relevant variables.
Stroke
PMID:Global brain ischemia: a reproducible monkey model. 41 Jan 21
Many common devices can be used as biofeedback devices. The feedback use of the bathroom scale in rehabilitation medicine (physical therapy) has been explored with
stroke
patients. These patients used two scales, one under each foot, to relearn their sense of weight distribution. In addition, the scale was used to teach patients to shift their weight distribution from their knees to their hands as they learned to crawl, and from their feet to their buttocks and the chair as they learned to
sit
down.
...
PMID:Biofeedback use of common objects: the bathroom scale in physical therapy. 99 Mar 52
Distribution of body weight on the two legs while rising and sitting down was examined in 42 subacute
stroke
patients and 16 healthy adults during both spontaneous movement and following instruction directed at even weight distribution. Vertical floor reaction forces were measured by two force plates. There was a difference between patients and controls in the tested motor tasks--the patients favoured their nonparetic leg. However, body weight distribution was less asymmetric when patients tried to rise and
sit
down evenly compared to spontaneous rising/sitting down (p less than 0.001). Patients' own estimation of distribution of body weight documented on a visual analogue scale, correlated with actual body weight distribution while rising (rs = 0.36) but not while sitting down. To motivate
stroke
patients to pay attention to their ability to distribute body weight evenly while rising and sitting down and to create and use adequate self-reports seems a necessary commitment in a rehabilitation programme in order to avoid the learned nonuse syndrome.
...
PMID:Body weight-bearing while rising and sitting down in patients with stroke. 160 64
Chronic experiments of the electrohydraulic ventricular assist system with a linear motor actuator were performed in two goats weighing 54 kg and 56 kg, and the system was used for more than 30 days. The actuator was designed to be fixed on the goat's back with a saddle. The pump was connected between the left atrium and descending aorta and placed paracorporeally on the chest wall. Linear action of an actuator bellows was delivered by silicone oil in a U-shaped polyvinylchloride tube to activate the pump. The maximum output in the 56 kg goat was 5.0 L/min. Goats could stand and
sit
freely. The first goat with a pusher-plate type pump died on the fifth day because of thromboembolism, but the second goat with a diaphragm type pump survived for 42 days. Blood chemistries remained within normal limits. Pump control was easy in both the duty-control mode and the
stroke
-control mode. With the automatic negative pressure control (ANPC) to prevent atrial wall sucking, the left atrial pressure was kept within +/- 10 mmHg, although left atrial pressure sometimes went below -80 mmHg without ANPC. Considering reliability, automaticity, and portability, the electrohydraulic ventricular assist system has become another choice for a practical, electrically driven ventricular assist system.
...
PMID:Chronic in vivo evaluation of a portable electrohydraulic ventricular assist system with a linear actuator. 225 79
Eight young men (group A) underwent 5 h of quiet sitting, preceded by 30 min of recumbency, 20 min of standing, and 20 s of walking, and five other young men (group B) underwent 70 min of sitting, preceded by recumbency only, to determine the effects of prolonged sitting and previous posture on hemodynamic responses (measured by impedance plethysmography). Group A showed more calf blood pooling and a decrease in thigh blood flow during sitting in comparison with the control group, but after 1 h of sitting hemodynamic responses of the two groups were similar. Sitting for 5 h (1st vs. 5th h) resulted in an increase in calf venous pooling (17%) and a decrease in calf BF (13%), a reduction in gravitational pooling in the thigh (corresponding to increased pooling in the calf), increases in diastolic and mean arterial pressures (6 and 7.3 mmHg, respectively), and minor changes in heart rate,
stroke
volume, and cardiac output. The results show that it is necessary to
sit
for 1 h before hemodynamic responses can be assessed in this position, regardless of the posture maintained previously. The main effect of prolonged sitting is pooling in the calf, which is compensated for by an increase in peripheral resistance.
...
PMID:Hemodynamic responses during prolonged sitting. 687 92
When possible, the management of acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema should be started before the patient reaches the hospital. Simple measures such as having the patient
sit
up with the legs dependent, administering oxygen by nasal prongs, giving sublingual nitroglycerin and small doses of morphine, and rotating tourniquets on the limbs may reduce the need for more intensive procedures. Digoxin and other inotropic agents, aminophylline, furosemide, and vasodilators are given as appropriate during hospitalization. A minority of patients need endotracheal intubation and pressure monitoring with a Swan-Ganz catheter. If the arterial PO2 cannot be maintained at 60 mm Hg or more during face mask ventilation, the PCO2 rises, and the arterial pH declines, the patient should be intubated. Pressure monitoring with a Swan-Ganz catheter is indicated if the patient does not immediately respond to treatment or in special situations such as cardiogenic shock with pulmonary edema. Pulmonary edema caused by diastolic dysfunction is managed differently than that caused by systolic dysfunction. The cause and precipitating factors of the acute pulmonary edema should be sought and treated as early as possible to prevent recurrences.
Heart Dis
Stroke
PMID:Treatment of acute pulmonary edema. 792 65
A high speed electric
rasp
was used to remove fibrous thickening from the aortic valve in conjunction with aortic valve commissurotomy in ten patients. All patients had moderate rheumatic aortic valve disease combined with severe mitral valve disease, and were treated by mitral valve replacement and aortic valve repair. All patients survived the operative procedure. There were no deaths or complications during hospitalization related to the valve repair process. The transaortic valve gradient was relieved from an average of 21.0 +/- 8.6 mmHg to 5.6 +/- 4.0 mmHg (catheterization), and from moderate to less-than-mild stenosis (echocardiography). Aortic valve regurgitation was reduced from an average of 2.2+ to 0.7+ on a scale of 0 to 4+ (aortography), and from an average of 2.5+ to 1.1+ on a scale of 0 to 4+ (echocardiography). During the follow-up period, no patients were reoperated on because of aortic valve dysfunction. Follow-up echocardiographic study demonstrated that the transaortic pressure gradient and valvular regurgitation had not progressed, and immediate postoperative conditions were maintained. There were two late deaths not related to the aortic valve. One patient died of prosthetic valve endocarditis in the mitral prosthesis 14 months postoperatively, and the other of a
cerebrovascular accident
21 months postoperatively. Based on these data, we believe that aortic valve repair with a high speed electric
rasp
can effectively relieve aortic stenosis, reduce valvular regurgitation, and provide an excellent hemodynamic result at early and mid-term follow-up.
...
PMID:A new modification of debridement valvuloplasty for acquired aortic valve disease. 801 95
A model was developed for evaluation of cardiovascular parameters in conscious baboons exposed to altered gravitational environments. Baboons were trained to
sit
quietly in a confinement chair of unique design which allowed a range of normal physical activity. They were then instrumented with high-fidelity blood pressure transducers in the aorta and left ventricle, electromagnetic flow probes encircling the proximal ascending aorta, left and right atrial fluid catheters, left ventricular sonomicrometer crystals in a 3-axis configuration, and a hydraulic occluder cuff encircling the inferior vena cava. Catheters and transducer wires were exteriorized at the midscapular region of the back. Viability of percutaneous exit sites was enhanced by use of velour cuffs on the transducer wires, providing a scaffold for wound healing. Pressure transducers and flow probes were calibrated and balanced during postoperative cardiac catheterization procedures. This instrumentation allowed measurement of beat-to-beat
stroke
volume and cardiac output not reliant on thermodilution techniques. Postoperative longevity was from 1 to 10 months. Instrumentation failure included endocardial trapping of ventricular pressure transducers, corrosion of ventricular sonomicrometer crystals, and catheter tip thrombosis. Acquisition of high quality data was possible with this model in several different environments of altered gravitational stress, allowing characterization of aortic flow and ventricular performance.
...
PMID:A conscious baboon model for evaluation of hemodynamics in altered gravity. 829 73
A force platform with an auditory output consisting of two electronic balances was used to reinforce symmetrical body-weight distribution in
stroke
patients. Forty patients randomly assigned to an experimental group or a control group practised rising and sitting down for 15 min, thrice daily, 5 days a week for 6 weeks. The experimental group but not the control group received ground reaction force feedback through the auditory output. Vertical ground reaction forces under each foot were measured with two force plates. Mean difference in improvement of body weight distribution on the paretic leg was 13.2 +/- 10.7 (M, SD) per cent total body weight in the experimental group and 5.1 +/- 6.7 per cent in the control group in rising (p < 0.01) and 12.7 +/- 7.5 per cent total body weight and 4.6 +/- 6.6 per cent in sitting down tests (p < 0.001). The patients in the experimental group achieved in average close to a symmetrical body-weight distribution while rising and sitting down. Improvements in physical performance and
sit
-stand tests were greater in the experimental group (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively). No differences were seen in improvement in performance of activities of daily living. Symmetry in body-weight distribution in rising and sitting down correlated with high scores in physical performance, motor function in rising, and with functional ability.
...
PMID:Vertical ground reaction force feedback to enhance stroke patients' symmetrical body-weight distribution while rising/sitting down. 846 64
This study was undertaken to explore whether we could provide supportive laboratory evidence for the clinical observations that a
stroke
patient has lost functional mobility/locomotion capability based on dynamic balance responses (center of force sway patterns) and motor control activities (electromyography patterns) during the motor task of
sit
-to-stand. A computerized controlled dynamic postural control assessment system was developed and used in this study. Various dynamic balance indexes were introduced and derived from center of force sway patterns expressed in four domains (space, time, force, and frequency). Motor control was assessed by multichannel surface electromyography of each side of the lower limb during the same motor task. The functional mobility capability was evaluated using the traditional FIM method. Fourteen
stroke
patients with right hemiplegia and nine healthy elderly individuals were recruited as the experimental and control groups, respectively. Muscle activity was recorded for quadriceps, hamstrings, anterior tibialis, and triceps surae muscles and was used for analysis. Center of force sway patterns and ground reaction forces were registered. All signals were synchronized at "seat-off." Surface electromyographic patterns of activities recorded during
sit
-to-stand and dynamic balance indexes computed from center of force sway patterns were categorized and compared with the functional mobility scores. Results show that both the motor control patterns and dynamic balance indexes correlated well to the extent of mobility impairment evaluated using the traditional FIM method. An important conclusion for rehabilitation medicine is that the functional mobility capability of
stroke
patients may be expressed numerically using dynamic balance indexes and visualized graphically through electromyographic motor patterns.
...
PMID:Comparison of balance responses and motor patterns during sit-to-stand task with functional mobility in stroke patients. 935 95
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