Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0085631 (agitation)
12,064 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of moyamoya disease associated with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) was reported. A 26-year-old male patient was admitted on April 11, 1992, with sudden onset of right cerebral hemorrhage. Cerebral angiography revealed moyamoya disease and bilateral encephalo-duro-arterio-synangiosis (EDAS) was performed. In March, 1993, however, he suffered from left cerebral hemorrhage. Neurological examination on the second admission showed disturbance of consciousness, motor aphasia and right hemiplegia. Emergency operation for the hematoma removal was performed and neurological functions rapidly improved. However, on the day following the operation, he was in stupor and restlessness. Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia and severe thrombocytopenia were identified and he gradually sank into a comatose state. Systemic purpura, fever, renal dysfunction also appeared. CT scan 22 days after the onset demonstrated diffuse cerebral infarction in the region of the bilateral anterior and middle cerebral arteries, and cerebral angiography on the next day demonstrated the development of bilateral internal carotid stenosis. Though laboratory findings indicate gradual improvement, he has remained in very weak state. This is the first case of moyamoya disease associated with TTP. The etiology of both diseases was discussed.
...
PMID:[Moyamoya disease associated with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)]. 801 79

The prevalence and clinical picture of hypertensive urgencies and emergencies in an emergency department are poorly known. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the prevalence of hypertensive crises (urgencies and emergencies) in an emergency department during 12 months of observation and the frequency of end-organ damage with related clinical pictures during the first 24 hours after presentation. Hypertensive crises (76% urgencies, 24% emergencies) represented more than one fourth of all medical urgencies-emergencies. The most frequent signs of presentation were headache (22%), epistaxis (17%), faintness, and psychomotor agitation (10%) in hypertensive urgencies and chest pain (27%), dyspnea (22%), and neurological deficit (21%) in hypertensive emergencies. Types of end-organ damage associated with hypertensive emergencies included cerebral infarction (24%), acute pulmonary edema (23%), and hypertensive encephalopathy (16%) as well as cerebral hemorrhage, which accounted for only 4.5%. Age (67 +/- 16 versus 60 +/- 14 years [mean +/- SD], P < .001) and diastolic blood pressure (130 +/- 15 versus 126 +/- 10 mm Hg, P < .002) were higher in hypertensive emergencies than urgencies. Hypertension that was unknown at presentation was present in 8% of hypertensive emergencies and 28% of hypertensive urgencies. In conclusion hypertensive urgencies and emergencies are common events in the emergency department and differ in their clinical patterns of presentation. Cerebral infarction and acute pulmonary edema are the most frequent types of end-organ damage in hypertensive emergencies.
...
PMID:Hypertensive urgencies and emergencies. Prevalence and clinical presentation. 859 78

Cocaine use is associated with a variety of serious neurological complications, including cerebral infarction, intracerebral and subarachnoid hemorrhage, transient ischemic attacks, migraines, and seizures. We report two cases of intracerebral hemorrhage with biopsy-proven cerebral vasculitis associated with the use of cocaine. The first case involved a 32-year-old man who presented with headache, left-sided hemiparesis, and severe hypertension and who was found to have a large right putaminal hemorrhage on cranial tomographic (CT) scan. Cerebral angiography did not show vasculitic changes, but brain tissue obtained during hematoma evacuation revealed a nonnecrotizing leukocytoclastic angiitis of the small vessels. The second case involved a 20-year-old man who presented with headache, agitation, and speech difficulty that progressed to disorientation and dysphasia. He had a large left temporoparietal hematoma seen on CT scan. Cerebral angiography was consistent with vasculitis, and brain tissue obtained during hematoma evacuation revealed a small vessel vasculitis. In both cases, thorough clinical and laboratory investigations found no evidence of systemic vasculitis or an etiologic agent other than cocaine. We also critically reviewed the previously reported cases of cocaine-associated cerebral vasculitis and the relevant medical literature to discuss the "cocaine-associated vasculitis syndrome" in the context of more established vasculitidies, including hypersensitivity vasculitis. In addition, we outline a diagnostic and therapeutic approach to patients with possible cocaine-associated vasculitis.
...
PMID:Cocaine-associated cerebral vasculitis. 865 May 87

A report of a case of a patient with severe head trauma with pneumonia and cerebral infarction transported by helicopter. An eighty-year-old male was referred to our hospital because of dyspnea after a fall during sightseeing at Hiroshima. He was lucid at first, but, after two days presented restlessness due to brain contusional hemorrhage and edema. Moreover, he developed pneumonia and cerebral infarction during the period of his hospitalization. He was intubated and received central venous routing. While being transported, his consciousness showed moderate disturbance, aphasia and right hemiplegia. His family asked that therapy be continued near his house in Osaka. We selected transport by helicopter because of his bad general condition and because transport time would be much shorter. He was transported by helicopter to Osaka one month after admission. First, he was transported by ambulance to the airport of Hiroshima. He was carried to the helicopter at the airport. An oxygen cylinder was connected to the incubation tube via an ambu bag because direct connection between the oxygen cylinder and the intubation tube was impossible. Just before the take off, O2 saturation was checked by the pulse oximeter of the ambulance. In the helicopter, there were six men; two pilots, two rescue men, one doctor and the patient. Suction was applied only once and there was no trouble during the flight. The weather was fine and the helicopter experienced almost no rolling during the flight. The flight time was only one hour and twenty minutes. The helicopter safely landed at an emergency heliport in Osaka. The patient was carried to a waiting ambulance and transported to the hospital. Total transport time was only two hours and thirty minutes. This is a case showing a helicopter could safely transport a patient with severe brain damage over a long distance in a short time.
...
PMID:[Long distance air transport by helicopter of a patient with severe head damage]. 1134 9

The frequency, phenomenology, and risk factors of hallucinations and delusions were investigated in 64 consecutive inpatients with Parkinson's disease. Fifty patients were admitted to our hospital with symptoms related to Parkinson's disease: psychiatric problems 27 (psychosis 22; anxiety 2; depression 2; mania 1): motor symptoms, 20 (wearing-off 5; akinesia 4; freezing 4; postural instability 4; dyskinesia 2; tremor 2; dystonia 1), and sensory symptoms, 3. Fourteen patients were admitted with other medical problems (pneumonia 4; cerebral infarction 3; bone fracture 3; lumbago 2; seizure 1; cat bite 1). Totally 49 patients had psychiatric problems. Psychosis was present in 43 patients, dementia in 10, depression in 8, mania in 1, anxiety in 10, agitation in 6, stereotypy in 2, and hypersexuality in 2. Of the 43 patients with psychoses, 40 presented with visual hallucinations, 18 with auditory hallucinations, and 23 with delusions. To determine what the clinical correlates with the severity of psychosis were, we divided the patients into 3 groups: the severe group, 22 patients admitted because of psychotic symptoms; the mild group, 21 patients admitted because of problems other than psychosis but presenting psychotic symptoms; and the control group, 21 patients who had no psychotic symptoms. Incidences of auditory hallucinations and delusions were higher in the severe group as compared to the mild group. Patients in the severe group had higher Hoehn-Yahr stages, lower Mini-Mental State Examination scores, decreased H/M ratios of cardiac 123I-MIBG uptake, and lower frequencies of background activity on electroencephalograms. There were no differences in age at admission, age at onset of Parkinson's disease, duration of illness, amounts of levodopa and dopamine agonists received, Hamilton's depression rating scores, and brain MR findings, including atrophy and ischemic changes. Emergence of psychotic symptoms in parkinsonian patients appears to be clearly associated with impaired cognitive function. Therefore, it may be associated with the disease process itself. Terms such as dopaminomimetic or levodopa-induced psychosis may not be appropriate when describing psychosis in Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:[Psychoses in patients with Parkinson's disease; their frequency, phenomenology, and clinical correlates]. 1571 92

Hypertensive crises (76% urgencies, 24% emergencies) represented more than one fourth of all medical urgencies/emergencies. Hypertensive urgencies frequently present with headache (22%), epistaxis (17%), faintness, and psychomotor agitation (10%) and hypertensive emergencies frequently present with chest pain (27%), dyspnea (22%) and neurological deficit (21%). Types of end-organ damage associated with hypertensive emergencies include cerebral infarction (24%), acute pulmonary edema (23%) and hypertensive encephalopathy (16%), as well as cerebral hemorrhage (4.5%). The most important factor that limits morbidity and mortality from these disorders is prompt and carefully considered therapy. Unfortunately, hypertensive emergencies and urgencies are among the most misunderstood and mismanaged of acute medical problems seen today. The primary goal of intervention in a hypertensive crisis is to safely reduce BP. Immediate reduction in BP is required only in patients with acute end-organ damage (i.e. hypertensive emergency). This requires treatment with a titratable short-acting intravenous (IV) antihypertensive agent, while severe hypertension with no acute end-organ damage is usually treated with oral antihypertensive agents. Patients with hypertensive emergencies are best treated in an intensive care unit (ICU) with titratable IV hypotensive agents. The aim of this review is to summarize the details regarding the definition-impact, causes, clinical condition and management of hypertensive crises.
...
PMID:Hypertension crisis. 2050 42

A Japanese male showed gradually progressing dementia with psychiatric symptoms including abnormal behavior, night and day reversal, nocturnal delirium, loud shouting, agitation, resistance to care, and loud soliloquy. The patient had a history of right cerebral embolism due to atrial fibrillation 1 month before the onset of dementia. Head CT revealed widespread cerebral infarction in the right cerebral hemisphere with bilateral lateral ventricular dilatation. The patient died at the age of 83, 10 months after the onset of cerebral embolism. The clinical diagnosis was mixed-type dementia. On autopsy the brain weighed 1,160 g. Widespread cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) was observed, with distribution most severe in the cerebral cortical vessels and slightly milder in the leptomeningial and subarachnoid vessels. The artery, arteriole, and capillary walls were thickened by the deposition of amorphous, eosinophilic and beta-protein immunopositive amyloid. Abeta-deposition was more severe in capillaries and CAA tended to be more severe in the occipital regions. Multiple cortical microinfarcts were found, particularly in the crests of the cerebral gyri of watershed zones. Cerebral white matter, basal ganglia, thalamus, brainstem and spinal cord were relatively preserved from CAA. Infarction was not apparent, except for an embolic lesion in the right cerebral hemisphere and the cortical microinfarcts. We did not observe fibrinoid necrosis, granulomatous angiitis or giant cell reaction associated with CAA-vasculopathies. Rare instances were observed of neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques corresponding to Braak stages II and A, respectively. We thought the multiple cortical microinfarcts occurred due to chronic hypoperfusion associated with CAA-associated vasculopathies of capillaries in the cerebral cortex. We suspected that the dementia was influenced by the CAA with multiple cortical microinfarcts. Pathologic findings of the patient suggest that CAA without AD-related Abeta-deposition might exist and that capillary Abeta-deposition might be an important factor of hemodynamic perturbation.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of senile dementia suspected to be influenced by cerebral amyloid angiopathy with multiple cortical microinfarcts]. 2096 Sep 31

We report a case treated successfully by emergency carotid artery stenting(CAS)within 24 h after intravenous thrombolysis for acute ischemic stroke. An 80-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with disturbance of consciousness. Neurological examination on admission revealed severe right-sided motor weakness and motor aphasia. Magnetic resonance(MR)imaging showed cerebral infarction in the territory of the perforating artery and cortical branch of the left middle cerebral artery(MCA). MR angiography(MRA)revealed occlusion of the bilateral cervical internal carotid arteries(ICAs). Systemic intravenous injection of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator(iv rt-PA)was therefore performed 2.5h after onset. Following iv rt-PA therapy, neurological symptoms improved for 1h, but MRA and cerebral angiography revealed severe stenosis of the left cervical ICA, complete occlusion of the right cervical ICA and left MCA occlusion. Revascularization of the left cervical ICA was then performed using endovascular surgery(percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and CAS)3.5h after iv rt-PA therapy. Postoperative course was uneventful except for mild restlessness, and hyperperfusion syndrome(HPS)did not develop. Strict control of blood pressure under dexmedetomidine anesthesia allowed effective prevention of HPS. After 1 week, recanalization of the left MCA was recognized on MRA and <sup>123</sup>I-IMP-single photon emission computed tomography. The patient was discharged with no neurological deficit after 2 weeks.
...
PMID:[Emergency carotid artery stenting within 24 hours after intravenous thrombolysis for acute ischemic stroke: a case report]. 2382 51

Although aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) accounts for only 3-5% of all strokes, a high degree of morbidity has been reported in this relatively young subset of patients. Neuropsychiatric disturbance has often been neglected in these reports. We aimed to investigate the pattern and pathological factors of chronic neuropsychiatric disturbance in aSAH patients. This cross-sectional observational four-center study was carried out in Hong Kong. Neuropsychiatric outcome (Neuropsychiatric Inventory Chinese Version [CNPI]) assessments were conducted cross-sectionally 1-4 years after ictus. Pathological factors considered were early brain injury as assessed by admission World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies grade, aneurysm treatment (clipping versus coiling), delayed cerebral infarction, and chronic hydrocephalus. One hundred and three aSAH patients' spouses or caregivers completed the CNPI. Forty-two (41%) patients were reported to have one or more domain(s) of neuropsychiatric disturbance. Common neuropsychiatric disturbance domains included agitation/aggression, depression, apathy/indifference, irritability/lability, and appetite/eating disturbance. Chronic neuropsychiatric disturbance was associated with presence of chronic hydrocephalus. A subscore consisting of the five commonly affected domains seems to be a suitable tool for aSAH patients and should be further validated and replicated in future studies.
...
PMID:Neuropsychiatric disturbance after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. 2492 62