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Query: UMLS:C0220723 (
PCA
)
4,687
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
College students (n = 22) engaged in thinking activities while simultaneous bilateral velocity (V) measures are obtained from their middle, anterior, and posterior cerebral arteries (
MCA
, ACA, and
PCA
). The study follows a 3 x 2 x 6 factorial design with repeated measures on artery insonated (
MCA
, ACA, and
PCA
), hemisphere (right and left), and six experimental phases, within which an initial 62-second baseline (BL) period is followed by five 31-second thinking tasks (short-term remembering, generating an image, making decisions, and solving language and math problems). VMCA is faster than BL during each thinking task (range, 4.9%-8.5%; p < 0.001), but changes in VACA, VPCA, and all hemispheric differences are not significant. A stronger degree of increase is present for VMCA than (1) both VACA and VPCA during short-duration remembering, making decisions, and working math problems, and (2) VACA, which in turn is stronger than VPCA when generating images and constructing new words. The authors' study shows that transcranial Doppler neuroimaging conveniently provides physiological indices of thinking from three cerebral arteries of the same subjects.
...
PMID:Blood flow velocities in three cerebral arteries in the same subjects modulate during thinking. 978 Aug 49
1. The IAP is used presurgically in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy to predict the effects on LTM and language of the planned temporal lobectomy. This prognosis presumes that a similar pattern of perfusion will result in anesthesia of the same cerebral regions in most patients. 2. Coinjection of Tc-99m HMPAO with the barbiturate during the IAP has been used to ascertain whether this actually is true, with variable results. Moreover, most studies document only unilateral IAPs and do not report on behavioral performance. 3. The authors coinjected Tc-99m HMPAO and amobarbital in 33 IAPs from 18 patients (15 injected bilaterally, 3 unilaterally) to clarify this and to evaluate the relationship of the perfusion pattern to behavioral performance; SPECT results were also compared to angiographic evaluation obtained at the time of catheter placement. 4. SPECT perfusion data was rated for presence/absence and intensity of perfusion to the ACA,
MCA
,
PCA
territories and to H, i or c to the injection site. V, STM and LTM were graded according to a standardized protocol. 5. MCAi was perfused in 100% of cases, ACAi in 91%, PCAi in 21% and Hi in only 6%. Cross-over flow was shown in 9 studies; 50% of the patients in whom both sides were injected (on different days) had crossover, involving the ACAc territory in 80% of cases. As expected, injection on the non-ES was associated with a significantly worse LTM performance than on the ES (p = 0.006). There was no relationship between the perfusion pattern and the V level of the patients (a potential confounding variable in memory/language evaluation) during IAP, nor between perfusion pattern and LTM. STM was significantly adversely affected by the presence of crossover perfusion. Angiography in general overestimated the extent of cerebral perfusion demonstrated by SPECT, most probably because of the markedly different injection conditions. 6. Despite the best efforts to standardize injections, the perfusion pattern has been mostly unpredictable in the patients. Moreover, it has little bearing on their behavioral performance, except for the prediction of poor STM performance (the clinical implications of this remaining dubious). Marked LTM alterations after non-ES injections confirm remote hippocampal effects in the presence of only rare direct perfusion of that region. Tc-99m HMPAO/Amobarbital coinjection was unhelpful from a clinical perspective, most probably because a large part of the effects of amobarbital arise from deafferentation of regions not directly perfused by the anesthetic agent.
...
PMID:Absence of correlation between amobarbital distribution as assessed with SPECT brain perfusion imaging and behavioral manifestations during the intracarotid amobarbital procedure (Wada test). 1036 68
To correlate cerebral blood flow (CBF) on xenon CT with the flow at common carotid artery (CCA) detected by color doppler ultrasonography, 82 patients (29 men, 53 women; 20-90 yrs) were examined. They included normal volunteers (n = 33), patients with cerebral infarction (n = 8), multiple lacunar infarcts (n = 12), dementia (n = 14), and parkinson disease (n = 15). Flow at the CCA was graded as extremely low (< 0.3 l/min), low (0.3-0.4), and normal (> 0.4). CBF was measured in the following distribution: anterior, middle, posterior cerebral arteries (ACA,
MCA
,
PCA
); white matter border zones (BZ); basal ganglia (BA), thalamus in two slices. CBF may be reduced in the BZ, cortical and deep gray matter with extremely low flow at CCA. We suggest that color doppler ultrasonography may aid in triage of patients for further CBF evaluation. As some overlap in CBF exists between normal and diseased groups with respect to low flow at CCA, color doppler ultrasonography must be evaluated in combination with xenon CT to reflect cerebral blood flow.
...
PMID:Cerebral blood flow on xenon CT: correlation with the blood flow detected at the common carotid artery on ultrasonography. 1075 Mar 41
The aim of the study was to evaluate the diagnostic potential of galactose-based microbubble suspension (Levovist) in patients with acute cerebrovascular disease and inadequate transtemporal acoustic window, when examined by transcranial Doppler (TCD). We studied 10 patients with either transient ischemic attack (no. = 3) or stroke (no. = 7). Inadequate transtemporal acoustic window was unilateral in 3 patients and bilateral in the remaining 7 patients. Signals from middle, anterior, and posterior cerebral arteries (
MCA
, ACA,
PCA
) were recorded after injecting Levovist 300 mg/ml. Six patients needed 3 injections of Levovist, 1 patient two, and 3 patients one. Mean +/- SD duration of optimal signal enhancement was 175.2 +/- 53.2 s, range 70-290 s. Doppler waveform analysis was possible in 14 (82.3%)
MCA
, 11 (65%) ACA, and 9 (53%)
PCA
. Levovist improved the reliability of TCD in patients with acute cerebrovascular disease and insufficient transtemporal insonation.
...
PMID:Contrast-enhanced transcranial Doppler sonography in patients with acute cerebrovascular diseases. 1139 66
To clarify the pathophysiological differences of the cerebrovascular reserve capacity in relation to cerebral cognitive impairments between vascular dementia (VaD) and persistent vegetative state (PVS), we evaluated acetazolamide (ACZ) vasoreactivity testing by transcranial harmonic perfusion imaging (HPI) and Doppler sonography (TCD). Sixteen patients (age: 29-85 years; mean: 62) were divided into three groups: 7 VaD, 4 PVS, and 5 nondementia patients. Mean velocity (Vm) in the middle and posterior cerebral artery (
MCA
,
PCA
) was measured, and time-intensity curves of the HPI were evaluated at three regions of interest-the bilateral temporal lobe (TL), basal ganglia (BG), and thalamus (Th). TCD and HPI were evaluated before (resting state) and after ACZ administration, and vasoreactivity was compared among the three groups in terms of resting values and relative changes (%Delta) of Vm, peak intensity (PI), area under curve (AUC), and mean transit time (MTT). Results of the resting state: Decreased Vm, PI, and AUC of the VaD and PVS groups were more obvious in the right side. Results of vasoreactivity: In the PVS group, %DeltaVm decreased in the left
PCA
and
MCA
; %DeltaPI and %DeltaAUC decreased in the left TL and bilateral BG. In the VaD group, %DeltaPI and %DeltaAUC decreased in the right TL; %DeltaMTT tended to increase in the left side. ACZ vasoreactivity tests by transcranial HPI and TCD allowed bedside, noninvasive quantitative evaluation of the pathophysiology of cognitive function impairment in relation to cerebrovascular reserve capacity in VaD and PVS.
...
PMID:Acetazolamide vasoreactivity in vascular dementia and persistent vegetative state evaluated by transcranial harmonic perfusion imaging and Doppler sonography. 1248 Jul 85
The reactivity of cerebral arteries have been examined in three groups of patients (young, middle and adult ages). The medium meanings of the blood flow velocity (V) and the pulsativity index (Pi) were registrated in
MCA
and
PCA
under hypercapnia, hyperventilation and light stimulation. It was revealed that the reactivity of cerebral arteries in middle and especially in adult groups was decreased.
...
PMID:[Decrease of reactivity of cerebral arteries at late stages of life]. 1257 94
The object of the study was to test the hypotheses that analysis of the anatomic zones affected by single anterior (A), posterior (P), and middle (M) cerebral artery (CA) infarcts, and by dual- and triple-vessel infarcts, will disclose (i) sites most frequently involved by each infarct type (peak sites), (ii) sites most frequently injured by multiple different infarct types (vulnerable zones), and (iii) anatomically overlapping sites in which the relative infarct frequency becomes equal for two or more different infarct types and/or in which infarct frequency shifts greatly between single and multivessel infarcts (potential border zones). Precise definitions of each vascular territory were adopted. CT and MRI studies from 20 ACA, 20
PCA
, three dual ACA-
PCA
, and four triple ACA-
PCA
-
MCA
infarcts were mapped onto a standard template (Part I). Relative infarct frequencies in each zone were analyzed within and across infarct types to identify the centers and peripheries of each infarct type, the zones most frequently affected by multiple different infarct types, the zones where relative infarct frequency was equal for different infarcts, and the zones where infarct frequency shifted markedly from single- to multiple-vessel infarcts. Zonal frequency analysis provided quantitative data on the relative infarct frequency in each anatomic zone for each infarct type. It displayed zones of peak infarct frequency for each infarct, zones more vulnerable to diverse types of infarct, peripheral "overlap" zones of equal infarct frequency, and zones where infarct frequency shifted markedly between single- and multiple-vessel infarcts. It is concluded that the hypotheses are correct.
...
PMID:Zonal frequency analysis of infarct extent. Part II: anterior and posterior cerebral artery infarctions. 1280 44
We tested the hypothesis that frequency analysis of the anatomic zones affected by single anterior (A), posterior (P), and middle (M) cerebral artery (CA), multivessel, and watershed infarcts will disclose specific sites (peak zones) most frequently involved by each type, sites most frequently injured by multiple different types (vulnerable zones), and overlapping sites of equal relative frequency for two or more different types of infarct (equal frequency zones). We adopted precise definitions of each vascular territory. CT and MRI studies of 50
MCA
, 20 ACA-
MCA
, three
PCA
-
MCA
, and 30 parasagittal watershed infarcts were mapped onto a standard template. Relative infarct frequencies in each zone were analyzed within and across infarct types to identify the centers and peripheries of each, vulnerable zones, and equal frequency zones. These data were then correlated with the prior analysis of 47 ACA,
PCA
, dual ACA-
PCA
, and ACA-
PCA
-
MCA
infarcts. Zonal frequency data for
MCA
and watershed infarcts, the sites of peak infarct frequency, the sites of vulnerability to diverse infarcts, and the overlapping sites of equal infarct frequency are tabulated and displayed in standardized format for direct comparison of different infarcts. This method successfully displays the nature, sites, and extent of individual infarct types, illustrates the shifts in zonal frequency and lesion center that attend dual and triple infarcts, and clarifies the relationships among the diverse types of infarct.
...
PMID:Zonal frequency analysis of the gyral and sulcal extent of cerebral infarcts. Part III: Middle cerebral artery and watershed infarcts. 1455 1
Nontraumatic arterial dissection of the anterior cerebral artery (NAD-ACA) is a relatively rare disease entity, although case reports have recently been increased. We treated 6 patients suffering from NAD-ACA from January 1996 to December 2003, and the neuroradiological findings together with the clinical courses were reviewed. There were 3 males and 3 females with a mean age of 57.7-year-old, ranging from 41 to 65. Five patients had a past history of hypertension and one diabetes mellitus. At the onset, all patients presented with clinical manifestations of cerebral ischemia. Among them, all exhibited contralateral hemiparesis with greater weakness of the lower extremity, and two patients exhibited headache. Initial angiography revealed the pearl and string sign in four patients and string sign, tapered occlusion in each one. Follow-up angiographies revealed sequential changes in all patients; four improved and two progressed. Main anatomic site of the lesion was as follows; five in the A2 and one in the A1 portion, in addition, one patient was complicated by saccular aneurysm, one by
PCA
dissection, and two had with saccular aneurysm contralateral ACA &
MCA
and VA dissection each other. Four patients were treated conservatively by intravenous administration of argatroban, one by intravenous administration of Dextrane and one by anti-platelet agent in the acute stage. All patients were treated by anti-platelet agents in the chronic stage. Good recovery was achieved in five patients, but one who suffered from severe subarachnoid hemorrhage in the chronic stage died. Our experience suggests that hypertension and/or the succeeding abnormal structural changes in the arterial wall may contribute to the occurrence of this disease. NAD-ACA showing clinical manifestations of cerebral ischemia could result in a relatively good prognosis; however, attention should be paid to patients treated conservatively with a very closed follow-up angiography to prevent a possibility of severe hemorrhage.
...
PMID:[Nontraumatic arterial dissection of the anterior cerebral artery: six cases report]. 1602 47
Cerebral aneurysms are treated by two methods: direct microsurgical clipping and endovascular coiling. Both are selected based on definite guidelines for clinicoradiological criteria as follows: Endovascular therapy comprising of GDC embolization, CSF wash-out with UK or TP A were performed in cases with Hunt and Kosnik grade 4 (GCS 7, 8), and grade 5 (without hydrocephalus or intracranial hemorrhage), age>70 years, subacute stage (4--14 days of vasospasm), basilar aneurysm and peripheral
MCA
/
PCA
aneurysms. Microsurgical clipping with a drainage procedure was performed in cases with Hunt and Kosnik grades 0--3, grade 4 (GCS 9--12), age less than 70 years, grade 5 with hydrocephalus or intracerebral hematoma and acute stage (0--3 days after bleed). The patient's outcome was measured using GOS (Glasgow outcome score) at the time of discharge. In our series of severe (poor grade) SAH cases, 120 cases underwent clipping and 59 cases underwent coiling. Although they accounted for 37.8 % and 48 % of total SAH cases, respectively, the outcome was satisfactory. Good recovery and moderate disability, together termed "favorable outcome" was found in 69.16 % of clipping cases and 44.06 % of coiling cases. Clipping had a better outcome than coiling in cases of acute severe SAH in our series. The golden hour resuscitation, pre-hospital care and the adjunctive treatment strategies like hypothermia are discussed. A critical appraisal of the ISAT of microsurgical clipping versus coiling is used for comparison of our results.
...
PMID:The effect of clipping and coiling in acute severe subarachnoid hemorrhage after international subarachnoid aneurysmal trial (ISAT) results. 1617 68
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