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52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Stress-induced cardiomyopathy or Takotsubo cardiomyopathy is an uncommon disorder characterized by apical ballooning. The etiology and pathophysiology of this syndrome has not been fully evaluated. This case series examined the clinical characteristics and outcomes of 10 patients with confirmed stress-induced cardiomyopathy. We identified 10 cases of stress-induced cardiomyopathy. All exhibit characteristic apical ballooning and basal hyperkinesia except one with an "inverted Takotsubo" pattern. Coronary angiography excluded coronary artery stenoses as a cause of cardiomyopathy. Patient characteristics, cardiac function, follow-up echocardiography and outcomes were determined. 60% of cases were female and 70% of cases had ST-segment elevations. Identified precipitants included severe emotional stress, subarachnoid haemorrhage and sepsis. None of the cases had angiographically significant coronary stenosis. One patient had an "inverted Takotsubo" pattern with mid-ventricular ballooning. Stress-induced cardiomyopathy is a clinical spectrum which can present with a classical "Takotsubo" or "inverted Takotsubo" pattern. Presentation is varied but characterized by recovery to normal cardiac systolic function. Study of this syndrome may enhance further understanding of the "brain-heart" relationship.
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PMID:Diverse clinical spectrum of stress-induced cardiomyopathy. 1819 Sep 84

Three patients were referred to a national neurosurgical centre following CT evidence of subarachnoid haemorrhage. The three patients, who were referred from different institutions within a seven week period, were Fisher grade 3 and WFNS Grade I at all times. Angiography showed a PCOM aneurysm in one case, a ruptured Basilar tip aneurysm and an unruptured ACOM aneurysm in another case, and an ACOM aneurysm in the third case. It was decided that the aneurysms were suitable for endovascular coiling. These patients had unremarkable intraoperative catheterizations and coiling but subsequently deteriorated post-operatively due to mesenteric ischaemia. Two patients required colectomy for mesenteric ischaemia, and the third arrested secondary to sepsis from bowel perforation. We discuss the various causes that may explain this association, and we alert the neurosurgical community for this complication which has not been reported before.
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PMID:Mesenteric ischaemia after endovascular coiling of ruptured cerebral aneurysms. 1827 35

Shunt infections are a common complication of ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunts, but the formation of a brain abscess related to a shunt system is very rare. A 44-year-old woman had a VP shunt inserted for hydrocephalus secondary to a subarachnoid hemorrhage. She suffered an episode of meningitis and sepsis 8 months after the shunt operation. After recovering from the meningitis, she complained of a loss of cognitive function. An enhancing mass was found in the frontal lobe, around the frontal horn of the lateral ventricle, and the ventricular catheter was embedded inside the mass. The ventricular catheter and cerebral abscess were removed using neuroendoscopy. We present an interesting case of a shunt-related brain abscess which illustrates the usefulness of neuroendoscopy.
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PMID:Delayed cerebral abscess as a shunt complication and endoscopic removal of the ventricular catheter and abscess. 1909 36

A 64-year-old man with acute myelogenous leukemia (FAB classification, M7) in remission received consolidation chemotherapy with mitoxantrone/cytosine arabinoside. WBC counts decreased to 0/microl on day 14, and fever (39.3 degrees C) and epigastralgia developed on day 15. Cefozopran was instituted for febrile neutropenia; however, on day 16, he was found to be in cardiac arrest. CT scan on day 16 revealed subarachnoid hemorrhage. Gram-positive rods were isolated from blood cultures on day 15, and were later identified as B.cereus. He recovered transiently, but eventually died on day 19. Postmortem examination demonstrated many colonies of B. cereus in the cerebrum, cerebellum, lung, and liver. Hepatocyte necrosis was also observed in the liver. Bacterial aneurysms or septic emboli were not identified in the arachnoid vessels, but necrosis of cerebral vessels was prominent, which was considered to be the cause of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Fatal subarachnoid hemorrhage has been reported to be associated with B. cereus sepsis, which developed at nadir following chemotherapy for leukemia patients. Because of the aggressive clinical course of B. cereus sepsis, including the risk for subarachnoid hemorrhage, early treatment with effective antibiotics for B. cereus sepsis would be important in the management of leukemia patients after chemotherapy.
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PMID:[Bacillus cereus sepsis and subarachnoid hemorrhage following consolidation chemotherapy for acute myelogenous leukemia]. 1940 24

Ventriculo-atrial shunt infection (VASI) may lead to sepsis and/or nephritis, making early diagnosis critical. VASI is usually diagnosed by cerebrospinal fluid culture conducted after ventricular puncture or shunt removal, both of which are invasive. Non-invasive attempts at diagnosis, however, present a nonspecific clinical picture unless shunt dysfunction is present. A 57-year-old woman treated with ventriculo-atrial shunt 10 months earlier due to hydrocephalus following subarachnoid hemorrhage developed a fever but evidenced no infected organs in general examination although Staphylococcus epidermidis was isolated several times upon blood culture. Enhanced brain computed tomography (CT) showed neither abnormal findings nor changes in ventricular size and no shunt dysfunction was demonstrated clinically. In cerebrospinal fluid examination, the protein level was 137 mg/dL and cell count and bacteriological findings were normal. 10 days later, however, the cell count and bacteriological findings were normal but protein was 180 mg/dL. The cerebrospinal fluid protein increase indicated VASI, and the shunt was removed. The woman's fever was immediately alleviated and Staphylococcus epidermidis was detected in the cerebrospinal fluid culture of the specimen from the shunt tip and its periphery. Blood culture is useful for identifying bacterial etiology of VASI if neither cerebrospinal fluid cell count increases nor abnormal bacteriological findings are observed, provided that cerebrospinal fluid protein increase are observed in serial measurement.
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PMID:[A case of ventriculo-atrial shunt infection diagnosed by blood culture and serial cerebrospinal fluid protein measurement]. 1986 Feb 61

A successful renal transplantation service was started in Nepal at the Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital in August 2008, and a continuing regular service is being provided currently to needy people. We report here our experience in thirty five end stage renal disease patients who received kidneys from close relatives during a one year period. The mean age of donors was 46.7 years. Seventeen (49%) donations were from parents, 13 (37%) from spouses, four (11%) between siblings and one (3%) between mother and daughter in law. Although the left kidney was given preference, right sided donor nephrectomy was needed in five (14%) cases. Six (17%) donors had minor postoperative problems. The mean age of recipients was 33.2 years, four (11%) of whom had pre-emptive renal transplantation. Recipients were immunosuppressed with dacluzimab, prednisolone, mycophenalate, and cyclosporine or tacrolimus. The average time taken for graft implantation was 137 minutes. The mean cold ischemia time and second warm ischemia time were 133 and 36 minutes respectively. Four (11%) patients developed urinary tract infection, three (9%) had significant hematuria, one (3%) developed a peri-transplant abscess, and one (3%) had ureteric ischemia and urine leak which required re-exploration in the early post-operative period. Four patients (11%) developed acute rejection of which three were cell-mediated rejection and one was antibody-mediated. There were two (6%) deaths, one due to transplant-related sepsis and the other due to subarachnoid hemorrhage following rupture of a posterior communicating artery aneurysm. No kidney has been lost otherwise.
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PMID:Renal transplantation in Nepal: the first year's experience. 2042 94

Statins are drugs used to control cholesterol disorders and prevent cardiovascular diseases. Their denominated pleiotropic effects have demonstrated a broad action spectrum that might profit some neurological and neurosurgical diseases. These effects are correlated to dose and kind of statin. We accomplished a systematic review in PubMed and MEDLINE about studies of statins and main neurosurgical diseases. If statins are administered after subarachnoid hemorrhage, a significant lower incidence of vasospasm as well as delayed ischemic deficits and decreased mortality could be found; the results of a large multicenter trial are expected. In other complex diseases as intracerebral hemorrhage or traumatic brain injury, the evidence for positive effects of a treatment with statin increased. Additionally, promising experimental results indicate that high statin doses are able to promote cell death in tumor cells, especially in gliomas. Moreover, experimental and observational studies suggest the ability of statins to modulate the immune system, by that they can reduce incidence and severity of sepsis. The origin of these multiple effects from neuroprotection to tumoral apoptosis is not totally explained so far. Recent data in literature are discussed in this review. More trials in humans are urgently required to finally determine if statins could contribute to the current management of neurosurgical diseases.
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PMID:The role of statins in neurosurgery. 2042 22

The middle hepatic vein may be included in right liver living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) to optimize hepatic venous outflow. We studied the graft's ability to relieve portal hypertension and accommodate portal hyperperfusion with portal manometry and ultrasonic flowmetry. Surgical outcomes with respect to portal hemodynamometry were also investigated. The ages of the recipients and donors for 46 consecutive LDLT procedures were 50 (range, 16-66 years) and 31 years (range, 18-54 years), respectively. The graft to standard liver volume ratio was 47.4% (range, 32.4%-69.0%). The hospital mortality rate was 4.4% as 2 recipients died from a subarachnoid hemorrhage and sepsis. The portal pressure dropped by 8 mm Hg (range, -7 to 19 mm Hg) from 23 (range, 8-37 mm Hg) to 14 mm Hg (range, 10-26 mm Hg) after graft implantation. The portal inflow positively correlated with the portal pressure before native liver hepatectomy (R(2) = 0.305, P = 0.001) and not with the graft size. The portal inflow increased from 81 mL/minute/100 g (range, 35-210 mL/minute/100 g) before donor right hepatectomy to 318 mL/minute/100 g (range, 102-754 mL/minute/100 g) after graft implantation. The graft portal inflow had a positive linear correlation with the recipient portal pressure before native liver total hepatectomy (R(2) = 0.261, P = 0.001) but not after graft implantation, and it had a negative correlation with the graft to standard liver volume ratio (R(2) = 0.247, P = 0.001). Only 1 of the graft biopsies showed moderate sinusoidal congestion. Twelve recipients had Clavien grade 2+ complications that were not related to the portal inflow and pressure or graft size. Right liver LDLT including the middle hepatic vein effectively lowered the recipient portal pressure by allowing unimpeded venous outflow.
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PMID:Portal inflow and pressure changes in right liver living donor liver transplantation including the middle hepatic vein. 2128 Jan 83

Stress-related cardiomyopathies can be observed in the four following situations: Takotsubo cardiomyopathy or apical ballooning syndrome; acute left ventricular dysfunction associated with subarachnoid hemorrhage; acute left ventricular dysfunction associated with pheochromocytoma and exogenous catecholamine administration; acute left ventricular dysfunction in the critically ill. Cardiac toxicity was mediated more by catecholamines released directly into the heart via neural connection than by those reaching the heart via the bloodstream. The mechanisms underlying the association between this generalized autonomic storm secondary to a life-threatening stress and myocardial toxicity are widely discussed. Takotsubo cardiomyopathy has been reported all over the world and has been acknowledged by the American Heart Association as a form of reversible cardiomyopathy. Four "Mayo Clinic" diagnostic criteria are required for the diagnosis of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: 1) transient left ventricular wall motion abnormalities involving the apical and/or midventricular myocardial segments with wall motion abnormalities extending beyond a single epicardial coronary artery distribution; 2) absence of obstructive epicardial coronary artery disease that could be responsible for the observed wall motion abnormality; 3) ECG abnormalities, such as transient ST-segment elevation and/or diffuse T wave inversion associated with a slight troponin elevation; and 4) the lack of proven pheochromocytoma and myocarditis. ECG changes and LV dysfunction occur frequently following subarachnoid hemorrhage and ischemic stroke. This entity, referred as neurocardiogenic stunning, was called neurogenic stress-related cardiomyopathy. Stress-related cardiomyopathy has been reported in patients with pheochromocytoma and in patients receiving intravenous exogenous catecholamine administration. The role of a huge increase in endogenous and/or exogenous catecholamine level in critically ill patients (severe sepsis, post cardiac resuscitation, post tachycardia) to explain the onset of myocardial dysfunction was discussed. Further research is needed to understand this complex interaction between heart and brain and to identify risk factors and therapeutic and preventive strategies.
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PMID:Stress-related cardiomyopathies. 2193 74

Significant effort has been focused on reducing neuronal damage from post-traumatic brain injury (TBI) inflammation and blood-brain barrier (BBB)-mediated edema. The orexigenic hormone ghrelin decreases inflammation in sepsis models, and has recently been shown to be neuroprotective following subarachnoid hemorrhage. We hypothesized that ghrelin modulates cerebral vascular permeability and mediates BBB breakdown following TBI. Using a weight-drop model, TBI was created in three groups of mice: sham, TBI, and TBI/ghrelin. The BBB was investigated by examining its permeability to FITC-dextran and through quantification of perivascualar aquaporin-4 (AQP-4). Finally, we immunoblotted for serum S100B as a marker of brain injury. Compared to sham, TBI caused significant histologic neuronal degeneration, increases in vascular permeability, perivascular expression of AQP-4, and serum levels of S100B. Treatment with ghrelin mitigated these effects; after TBI, ghrelin-treated mice had vascular permeability and perivascular AQP-4 and S100B levels that were similar to sham. Our data suggest that ghrelin prevents BBB disruption after TBI. This is evident by a decrease in vascular permeability that is linked to a decrease in AQP-4. This decrease in vascular permeability may diminish post-TBI brain tissue damage was evident by decreased S100B.
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PMID:Ghrelin prevents disruption of the blood-brain barrier after traumatic brain injury. 2193 91


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